We'll take a daily look at some of the most talked about prospects in the 2015 NFL Draft and tell you whether they're worth the hype or not.

We start this series with a prospect that many didn't know about until his pro day, Central Florida wide receiver Breshad Perriman. If you did know him before his pro day, it was likely due to a Hail Mary catch he made to defeat East Carolina last year.

If you knew Perriman before that, it was likely due to the attention Central Florida received two years ago during their Fiesta Bowl run with Blake Bortles at quarterback. If you knew him before that, then you watch a lot of American Athletic Conference football or must be a Central Florida fan.

He's also the son of Brett Perriman, who was drafted in the second round in 1988 and spent 10 seasons in the NFL.

By the Numbers:

Freshman (14 games): 26 receptions, 388 yards, three touchdowns

Sophomore (12 games): 39 receptions, 811 yards, four touchdowns

Junior (13 games): 50 receptions, 1,044 yards, nine touchdowns

That would be an average of 20 yards per catch in both his sophomore and junior seasons. While he was without Bortles, who went to the NFL last year, Perriman became the first receiver in school history with 1,000 yards since 2006 as a junior. He's clearly a big play threat with good size at 6-2 and 212 pounds.

Combine/Pro Day results:

40-yard dash: 4.24 and 4.27 seconds

Bench press (225 pounds): 18 reps

Vertical: 36 ½ inches

Broad jump: 10 feet, 7 inches

Perriman had the most talked about pro day this year. His name blew up last month due to a reported 4.24 and 4.27 40-yard dash times. That would've tied running back Chris Johnson's 4.24 as the fastest combine 40-yard dash time. Speed kills, guys.

The Film
Bad hands are a killer, too. Look, you didn't need to see Perriman in tights and a compression shirt to see that he's fast. On go routes, he was consistently on top of the defender, even if his tape was mainly against AAC opponents. He can fly down the field, but he has a tough time catching the ball.

Per Pro Football Focus, Perriman had a 14 percent drop rate. That's my problem with the draft evaluation process and draft analysts. You raise a player from a Day 2 pick into the first round, and in ESPN's Mel Kiper's case in the top 10 of your latest mock draft, because he ran fast at his pro day. But how much are you docking for all those drops, you know the most important element of playing wide receiver?

The concerning part is that Perriman is open on these drops. If he's struggling with that against mainly AAC talent, how will fare with a NFL cornerback all over him? It doesn't mean anything if you can burn by a cornerback but can't catch the ball. This sounds so obvious but yet it gets overlooked somehow.

Perriman is like a few other big name receivers in the draft, like West Virginia's Kevin White and Arizona State's Jaelen Strong, that has raw ability and will need to improve significantly as a route runner. Perriman might be a one-trick pony during his first season as he attempts to put it all together in the NFL but his inconsistency is a red flag for me.

If a team seeks a deep threat in this draft, I'd take Ohio State's Devin Smith over Perriman. Smith is quick with good hands and does a great job locating the ball in the air on deep passes. While Kiper thinks of him as a top 10 player currently, he's not a top five wide receiver in this draft in my book. There's some other solid receivers in this draft to take such a gamble on Perriman, especially if he does actually fall in the first round.

But, hey, speed kills right?

Verdict: Don't believe the hype.