The Washington Commanders have completed their 2025 draft, selecting five players.

Round 1 – #29 – Josh Conerly Jr, OT, Oregon

Round 2 – #61 – Trey Amos, CB, Ole Miss

Round 4 (via HOU) – #128 – Jaylin Lane, WR, Virginia Tech

Round 6 – #205 – Kain Medrano, LB, UCLA

Round 7 (from DEN via PHI) – #245 – Jacory Croskey-Merritt, RB, Arizona

This brings the offseason roster to 81 players. The offseason limit is 91 players, including the team’s International Pathway Program player, former rugby player-turned-defensive-end T.J. Maguranyaanga, which means that Washington will be looking to add ten more players to fill out the training camp roster.

The addition of undrafted college free agents will be the immediate priority, but those signings won’t be officially announced for a few more days. Rumors and reports of UDFA signings are notoriously unreliable, but Hogs Haven will keep you abreast of reports as they surface and will publish the official list of UDFAs when the team makes the announcement later this week.

The updated offseason roster/depth chart

The numbers that appear beside some players’ names are 2025 cap hits per Over the Cap. I have not included cap hits below $1.5m.

The Commanders currently have 35 defensive players, 41 offensive players and 3 special teams players.

Please note that assigned positions and color coding are my own personal opinions. They do not necessarily represent the thinking of Washington’s coaches or front office, nor are they necessarily consistent with fan consensus. This chart represents my personal interpretation, and may not reflect the thoughts of other writers on Hogs Haven. Finally, when it comes to backup players, I don’t put much effort into making sure that they are on the right or left or behind the specific player that they backup. I mostly just try to fit everyone on the chart efficiently as the goal is to visually represent the offseason roster and not predict regular season usage.

There are a number of position groups that have major questions that will not be answered until the second preseaon game or later. Most prominent among these is the offensive line where the only two positions that seem to have clear starters are center and left tackle. Last year’s starting left guard, Nick Allegretti could hold onto that role or could be relegated to backup duty. The team’s starting right guard, Sam Cosmi, tore his ACL in the playoffs and it’s impossible to know when he’ll play again, but it won’t be soon. Three players — Andrew Wylie, Brandon Coleman and 1st round draft pick Josh Conerly — have the opportunity to earn the starting right tackle role, but each could also compete for either starting guard spot.

Normally, I don’t list drafted rookies ahead of established veterans, but in this case, I plugged Conerly in as the starting right tackle, with Coleman shown as the permanent starting LG ahead of Allegretti and Wylie as the temporary stand-in for the injured Cosmi. This is not a prediction; it’s simply the final result of my efforts to graphically represent the team’s roster in the most meaningful way with each player listed only one time. I changed the arrangement of this position group on the chart about two dozen times between the time that Conerly was selected in the draft and now. We likely won’t know until late-August or early September which of these players will fill in the starting and backup roles — as we all know, AP and DQ are all about competition.

Cornerback offers similar challenges since AP and DQ have both been vague about the plans for Mike Sainristil, Jonathan Jones, and Noah Igbinoghene. AP was clear that the rookie Trey Amos will play on the outside, but he’ll have to earn a starting role in camp if he can.

In any event, a lot of the fun between now and the start of the season will be watching the training camp battles that will answer all of the current roster questions.

We won’t have to wait for training camp for the process to begin, however. The offseason conditioning program for veterans began on April 22nd and rookie minicamp is scheduled for May 8-11.