With the 11th pick in the 2026 NFL draft, the Miami Dolphins select . . .

The Dolphins are expected to take a cornerback, edge rusher or offensive lineman with their top pick in next week’s first round. But they have several other holes to fill with their 11 picks in the draft.

Miami has two first-round picks (Nos. 11 and 30), one second (No. 43), four in the third (Nos. 75, 87, 90 and 94), one fourth (No. 130), one fifth (No. 151), and two seventh-rounders (Nos. 227 and 238).

Here is the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s analysis of how the Dolphins may address each position in the draft.

Quarterback

The Dolphins have their starter with Malik Willis, the free-agent signee from Green Bay. And they have a backup candidate in Quinn Ewers. The big question is whether Miami drafts a quarterback in the first three rounds. Even after signing Willis to a three-year, $67.5 million contract, with $45 million guaranteed, it’s still not out of the question — and may even be probable — that the Dolphins draft another quarterback.

Wide receiver

Miami acquired Jalen Tolbert and Tutu Atwell and returns promising youngster Malik Washington, and together they form the top WRs. But they are all, at best, probably No. 3 WRs. The Dolphins need a No. 1 and No. 2 WR, at least, after moving on from Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle. WR must be addressed early in next week’s NFL draft.

Running back

Miami has drafted a running back in each of the past three years among De’Von Achane, Jaylen Wright and Ollie Gordon II. On the other hand, the current regime didn’t draft Wright or Gordon, and both showed decent but not great things last season.

Tight end

The Dolphins have two starting candidates at tight end — Greg Dulcich, the receiver (26 receptions, 335 yards, 1 TD last season), and Ben Sims, the blocker (581 career snaps in three years for Green Bay and Minnesota). But neither is an experienced starter so general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan and coach Jeff Hafley will almost certainly seek training camp competition for each role.

Offensive line

Miami returns four starters (center Aaron Brewer, left guard Jonah Savaiinaea, left tackle Patrick Paul and right tackle Austin Jackson), signed at least one candidate for the fifth starter in Jamaree Salyer, and has backup center Andrew Meyer. Still, the Dolphins will look for a starting right guard and possible competition to start at right tackle and left guard.

Defensive back

The Dolphins need it all — outside cornerbacks, nickel/slot cornerbacks and safeties — and they need both starters and reserves.

Inside linebacker

Miami is OK at starting inside linebacker. The Dolphins return Jordyn Brooks, an All Pro, and Tyrel Dodson, the “green dot” player, meaning the guy with the green dot on the back of his helmet, signifying he gets the play calls from coaches.

Edge rusher/outside linebacker

The Dolphins could definitely use a top-notch edge rusher or two as well as depth. Right now, Chop Robinson, Josh Uche and David Ojabo are the best ones on the roster.

Defensive tackle

The Dolphins drafted three DTs last year — Kenneth Grant, Jordan Phillips and Zeek Biggers — to play beside veteran Zach Sieler and Matthew Butler. This crew will probably be deemed good enough that there’s no need for urgency in adding help in this year’s draft.