"Receivers seem to be found anywhere in the draft."
So do QBs.
By NFL numbers, Hurns as a starting WR ... , was reasonably priced at $6M a year. That's Zeke's annual pay as a #4 pick on his rookie contract..
When NFL teams see a 1st, 2nd, or 3rd round WR they believe is as good as their starter, they draft them. It's like NBA teams drafting shooting guards, it's the dollars. Besides, when you need points, you don't call the SLB. And points matter most..
But there are a bunch of human beings WR size, so it is harder to find a truly exceptional one, that don't mean you stop drafting them, or developing them. Yeah, high draft picks are better spent on big guys in my little opinion, because there are few of them. But the dollars ...
Gallup for example, as a R3 pick he's cheaper than vets starters like Hurns or (late round pick) and Williams (2nd round pick). And looks to be better than both.
BTW, it just stuns me how Gallup was not gone before R3. He's one of the few players you'll ever see who can actually play all 3 WR spots and dominate at any. After the 2017 debacle I went looking for speed WR in the draft. With the ball in his hands Gallup's as fast any of them, and arguably has the best hands of the bunch. Not much of a run blocker, I hope competing with Williams will fix that. But any way I cut it, he was a top 5 WR in this draft, and a great fit for this system.
If you were shopping for a guy who could separate any point in the route tree, with great hands, and finishing speed ... you'd have a hard time finding better. His 4 year $3.5M contract is dirt cheap vs what equal vet talent would cost.