The Pittsburgh Steelers reportedly have interest in West Virginia wide receiver prospect David Sills.

He is a 22-year-old receiver who possesses intriguing size at 6-3 and 211 pounds. In his three years at West Virginia, he caught 132 passes for 2,097 receiving yards and 35 touchdowns.

At the combine, he ran a 4.57 second 40-yard dash. Although he ran a slower 40 time than expected, he is still one of the better prospects in the draft. In other combine drills, he did really well. He benched 14 reps, had a 37.5-inch vertical jump, 117-inch broad jump, 6.97 second three-cone drill, 4.28 second 20-yard shuttle, and an 11.69-second 60-yard shuttle.

He is currently projected to be a late third-rounder to early third-day draft pick. He remains a sleeper even after performing well at the Reese's Senior Bowl.

After trading Antonio Brown to the Oakland Raiders, the Steelers have been in search for a receiver to play opposite JuJu Smith-Schuster. They signed Donte Moncrief in free agency, but he is only a short-term answer. The other receivers on the roster include 2018 second-round pick James Washington, Eli Rogers, Ryan Switzer, Trey Griffey, Tevin Jones, Diontae Spencer, and Ka'Raun White.

Here's a look at the Steelers general manager Kevin Colbert and head coach Mike Tomlin with Sills and another West Virginia prospect, Gary Jennings.

Here is what NFL.com had to say about Sills:

“Tall, thin target with below-average play strength and separation ability, but very impressive ball skills to compete when it's in the air,” NFL.com wrote of Sills. “Sills won't see as many free releases and easy long balls on the next level. He needs to get stronger and more efficient with his press release technique and dig into the craft of route-running to make himself a more viable first- and second-level target. He should continue to improve, but the transition to the pros could be challenging early on.”