The 2026 NFL Draft will be heavily influenced by when and where the wide receiver and edge rusher runs begin. In this mock draft, both positions fly off the board quickly, pushing down value to teams with multiple picks in the early rounds.


© MICHAEL CLUBB/SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The 2026 NFL Draft is here. The A to Z Sports NFL scouting staff has been hard at work on the 2026 NFL Draft class for well over a year now, and the verdicts are in on all the top prospects for this cycle.

Using data from every mock draft since the beginning of December, our A to Z Sports NFL Draft projections, and well over a year’s worth of scouting this class, I built out what should be an industry-wide best guess at all seven rounds of the 2026 NFL Draft.

Enjoy! And if you think I got some of it (perhaps all of it) wrong, make sure to let me know @FF_TravisM on X.

Key Facts, Stats, and Odds for the 2026 NFL Draft

Five NFL teams hold multiple first-round selections going into the 2026 NFL Draft: Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys, Kansas City Chiefs, New York Giants, New York Jets

The Chicago Bears, Cleveland Browns, Houston Texans, Jacksonville Jaguars, Kansas City Chiefs, Las Vegas Raiders, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, New Orleans Saints, New York Jets, Philadelphia Eagles, Pittsburgh Steelers, and San Francisco 49ers all have at least five picks in the first four rounds (including compensatory projections)

Indiana QB and Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza, Ohio State LB Arvell Reese, Texas Tech EDGE David Bailey, Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love, and Ohio State LB Sonny Styles Jr. are the consensus top five players in the 2026 NFL Draft according to most every sportsbook and mock draft data site.

Round 1 of the 2026 NFL Draft

1. Las Vegas Raiders: Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana

Fernando Mendoza is one of the safest first overall pick projections in the last several years. Heisman Trophy winner. National Championship winner. Nearly 50 total touchdowns scored in his final season. Nearly 40 games played throughout his career. His ceiling might not be as high as a few recent first overall pick quarterbacks, but Mendoza could become the best passer in franchise history fairly early with a fast start.

2. New York Jets: Arvell Reese, LB, Ohio State

Arvell Reese posted a 97th percentile speed score at the NFL Combine. He is an absolute freak of an athlete who stands taller than 6-4 and weighs 241 pounds. Reese will likely become an every-down edge rusher and off-ball linebacker hybrid defender for the Jets thanks to his versatility. He’s still raw as a pass rusher, but he showed flashes of potential greatness there early in the 2025 college football season with eight sacks in his first eight games. Reese has phenomenal instincts. If he just gains a little more experience, he could become one of the best defensive stars in the NFL.

3. Arizona Cardinals: Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami (FL)

The sportsbooks think the Cardinals are just going to take Reese, David Bailey, or Jeremiyah Love here, but if they don’t get their offensive line right, the future looks bleak. The Cardinals are obviously tanking for Arch Manning (the projected first overall pick in the 2027 NFL Draft), but if they don’t have the right pieces to protect him that won’t do them any good. Landing a five-star talent in Francis Mauigoa with a solid balance of pass pro, run-blocking power, and first round physical traits is an extremely good bet.

4. Tennessee Titans: Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame

Taking a running back this early never feels great, but Jeremiyah Love proves too talented to drop below the Titans here in this final mock draft. Love piled up over 3,000 yards from scrimmage and 40 touchdowns, carrying Notre Dame’s offense two years in a row. Love has verified sprinter speed (4.36-second forty-yard dash), elite contact balance (displayed best in his Penn State playoff game from two years back), and dual-threat ability to catch passes too. Total package.

5. New York Giants: Sonny Styles Jr., LB, Ohio State

Sonny Styles Jr. is a near-perfect modern-game linebacker. He’s 6-5 with great length, speed, and agility to cover in space and in man-t0-man against most opponents. He’s instinctual and powerful enough to force his way into the backfield consistently. Can he over-pursue and get out of his gap in muddy run fronts? Yes, but the upside is unimaginably high here. The Giants shoot for the stars with this pick.

6. Cleveland Browns: David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech

David Bailey is without a doubt the best pure pass-rushing edge defender in the 2026 NFL Draft. He can struggle against the run in spurts, but Bailey has everything NFL teams really want. According to every scout and teammate I’ve spoken to, Bailey is just built different. He’s posted three straight seasons with a pressure rate over 20%. He finished this past season with 15 sacks too. The Browns already have a good pass rush, but given the state of their roster they just need to continue adding the best players available to them. They’ll add offense later in this draft.

7. Washington Commanders: Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State

The Commanders have several needs, and most of them just got taken before this pick. The good news is that Caleb Downs is still on the board, and he’s likely the best overall defensive back in the class. Downs was an All-American from the get-go in college, and only improved from there. Over 250 tackles in three seasons. Three-time All-American (if we include his Freshman All-American status) talent. Nearly 20 passes defended. Downs can do anything the Commanders defense asks him to do.

8. New Orleans Saints: Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State

Carnell Tate disappointed at the NFL Combine, running a 4.53-second forty-yard dash, but that hasn’t deterred NFL decision-makers from targeting the best wide receiver in the class. Tate found a way to consistently shine at Ohio State, despite splitting targets with first round picks like Marvin Harrison Jr., Emeka Egbuka, and Jeremiah Smith (top-five pick in the 2027 NFL Draft). He’ll do it again for the Saints, who badly need better playmakers at wide receiver.

9. Kansas City Chiefs: Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU

Chiefs fans should be pumped if Brett Veach selects Mansoor Delane. After parting ways with Trent McDuffie, the Chiefs need to address cornerback, perhaps more than any other position, so they might as well add the CB1 of the 2026 NFL Draft class. Delane defended nearly 20 passes in his last two seasons combined, allowed a passer rating just over 30 in 2025 (a rating below that of a standard incomplete pass), and grew into one of the best tackling corners in the game too.

10. New York Giants: Makai Lemon, WR, USC

Makai Lemon won the Biletnikoff Award (for best wide receiver in college football) in 2026. He led all power conference wide receivers in receiving yards through the end of the regular season last fall. He has a crazy edge to his game on the field, playing more physically and aggressively than one might expect from a player of his size. Lemon wins with burst off the line, but can finish at the point of the catch too. The Giants give Jaxson Dart another phenomenal weapon to target.

11. Miami Dolphins: Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State

Jordyn Tyson spent much of his college career banged up with injuries, missing significant time in every single season. However, now that his medicals have checked out (confirmed via multiple sources following the NFL Combine), Tyson is fully expected to be an early first-round pick. The Dolphins could go offensive line or cornerback here, but the value pick is clearly Tyson. The Dolphins must get better at wide receiver after moving on from Jaylen Waddle this offseason.

12. Dallas Cowboys: Rueben Bain, EDGE, Miami (FL)

Rueben Bain’s arm length and recently reported off-field incidents (mostly with vehicles) have already been discussed exhaustively. One or both of those issues likely push him down the board for many NFL teams. Still, the Cowboys need a dynamic edge rusher, and getting a talent like Bain to drop this far is rare. Bain tallied more than 80 pressures and a dozen sacks last season. He’s been a potential first-round talent since his true freshman season. The Cowboys recognize the risks and outlier arm length, but decide Bain is worth the shot.

13. Los Angeles Rams (via ATL): Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia

Monroe Freeling gave up far too many pressures in 2024 (his first year starting), but he was a completely different player in 2025. Freeling allowed just two sacks on the season, and manhandled opposing edge rushers for the vast majority of last year. The Rams need to protect Matthew Stafford in his final season(s) if they want another shot at a Super Bowl. Losing Rob Havenstein to retirement this offseason left an obvious gap open on their offensive line. Freeling fixes that immediately.

14. Baltimore Ravens: Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon

Kenyon Sadiq is the most athletic tight end to test at the NFL Combine since Vernon Davis in 2006. Sadiq ran the fastest forty-yard dash time ever for a tight end (4.39 seconds). He posted a 99th percentile burst score thanks to his ridiculous vertical and broad jump. On top of that, he was dynamic enough as a receiver last season to operate as Oregon’s de facto WR1 for much of the year. The Ravens love the tight end position, and just lost Isaiah Likely this offseason. Why not grab another elite receiving tight end in Sadiq?

15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Olaivavega Ioane, IOL, Penn State

Olaivavega Ioane is the best overall offensive line prospect in the 2026 NFL Draft. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers could likely go defense here instead, but the truly elite edge defender and linebacker options are off the board. Instead, they go with Ioane. He hasn’t given up a sack in the last two years for Penn State because he’s too big, too powerful, and far more agile than expected at 320 pounds. The Buccaneers set up the future of their interior offensive line and likely go defense later.

16. New York Jets (via IND): Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee

Jermod McCoy was the best cornerback in the country back in 2024. It’s hard to debate that given his production and schematic versatility. Unfortunately, he missed all of 2025 with an injury, and now he still may need additional work to get ready for the 2026 NFL season. The Jets are fine being patient, as it’s obvious they won’t be competing this year, so they target the best talent on the board, regardless of injury concerns.

17. Detroit Lions: Spencer Fano, OT, Utah

The Lions sprint to the podium here to take Spencer Fano. Detroit let go of Taylor Decker this spring, which leaves a massive hole in the offensive line. Fano fits the need perfectly, boasts a near-perfect pass blocking skill set (zero sacks allowed last season), and tested out like a top-tier athlete this spring too. No-brainer selection if he does drop this far.

18. Minnesota Vikings: Dillon Thieneman, S, Oregon

Harrison Smith is nearing the conclusion of his Hall of Fame career and the Minnesota Vikings need to find his replacement. Dillon Thieneman is the perfect answer. He confirmed his elite athleticism at the NFL Combine by running a 4.35-second forty-yard dash and leaping out of the building with a 41-inch vertical jump. That explosion didn’t just show up in Indianapolis either. He shows every bit of that closing speed and burst on the field. Thieneman grabbed eight interceptions in just three seasons of college action. Even more impressive, he became a true enforcer in the run game, tallying over 300 career tackles. This might feel early for a safety in most draft classes, but Thieneman is worth it.

19. Carolina Panthers: Keldric Faulk, EDGE, Auburn

Keldric Faulk didn’t finish his career with the most impressive sack production for Auburn, but he still looks and plays like a first-round pick. Faulk tallied nine sacks in 2024, and showcased his skills as perhaps the best run-defending edge player in the SEC back then. The entire Auburn roster struggled last year as they fired their coach, but Faulk still proved to be a shutdown run defender who could dominate from most any pre-snap alignment. His versatility, length, and strength could take the Panthers defense to the next level.

20. Dallas Cowboys (via GBP): Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson

The Dallas Cowboys had the worst pass defense in the NFL last season, ranking 32nd (dead last) in defensive passing yards and net yards per pass attempt allowed. They added the pass rusher in Rueben Bain to help the front end. Avieon Terrell is the cornerback to seal the back end. He’s a feisty, physical corner who plays bigger than his stature. Terrell can slide into the slot when needed, but he can also play on the outside extremely well too.

21. Pittsburgh Steelers: KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M

KC Concepcion is nearly a perfect prospect at the wide receiver position, and the Steelers need more help there. Early breakout performance as a freshman. More than seven yards after the catch per reception this past year. He learned to stretch the field and win in the intermediate and deep portions of the field last season for Texas A&M. And on top of that, he returned two punts for touchdowns. All-around weapon.

22. Los Angeles Chargers: Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah

Caleb Lomu isn’t as experienced as some of the other top offensive tackles in the class, so he may slide a bit down the board in round one, but the Chargers stop him here. They have a huge need to build around Justin Herbert and Lomu’s pass protection this past season was near perfection. He’s a top-tier athlete with a 95th percentile A to Z Sports Athletic Composite with room to continue growing.

23. Philadelphia Eagles: Kadyn Proctor, OT, Alabama

The Eagles are going to have to replace Lane Johnson very soon, so they might as well grab an offensive tackle with similarly high upside. Kadyn Proctor’s hands and feet were terribly slow when he began his time with Alabama. The good news? Proctor has sped things up in the last year or so, finally living up to his five-star pedigree this past season. He’s played mostly left tackle throughout his career, but Proctor might actually be best suited to utilize his power on the right side long term for the Eagles, given his monstrous 6-7, 352-pound frame.

24. Cleveland Browns (via JAX): Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama

The football world needs to stop acting like Shedeur Sanders is anything more than a fifth-round pick who threw 10 interceptions and took 23 sacks in seven starts last season. If the Browns are serious about winning, they’ll keep taking swings at the most important position in football. This time, they go with Ty Simpson of Alabama. The upside is clearly there based on his ridiculously effective play from early last fall. However, the question is, which Simpson is the NFL going to see? The unstoppable one from last September and October? Or the one who struggled through injury and couldn’t complete downfield passes accurately later in the season.

25. Chicago Bears: Akheem Mesidor, EDGE, Miami (FL)

Akheem Mesidor is old, but he’s extremely productive. The Bears were terrible along the defensive front last season and Mesidor gives them both size to help stop the run, and pass-rush skills to crumble the pocket consistently. If anything leads to him falling below this point in the NFL Draft it will be that he’s already 25 years old, but some teams are fine taking a shot on one-contract positional premium plays like this.

26. Buffalo Bills: Caleb Banks, DT, Florida

Caleb Banks missed significant time this year due to injury, but when healthy he is the best defensive tackle in the 2026 NFL Draft class. He’s solid against the run, but his specialty is pass rush. Banks more than doubled the positional expectation in pass-rush pressure rate (12% compared to 6% FBS average) back in 2024. Banks struggled a bit with tackling consistency last fall in limited action, but at 6-6, 327 pounds, he is a mountain of a man that should help the Bills dominate the trenches.

27. San Francisco 49ers: Peter Woods, DT, Clemson

Peter Woods never completely lived up to his early career hype at Clemson, but he still has all goods to become a special defensive tackle in the NFL. He underwhelmed at the NFL Combine and his pro day this spring, but his on-film abilities still suggest he’s an early-round player. The 49ers need to improve their defensive front, so Woods becomes a pretty nice value here this late in the first round. Woods was considered a potential top-ten talent for quite some time.

28. Houston Texans: Blake Miller, OT, Clemson

Blake Miller has risen quickly throughout the 2026 NFL Draft process, posting a 93rd percentile A to Z Sports Athletic Composite, and checking most every meaningful physical threshold that pro teams like to see. Thanks to his fast start with Clemson way back when he was just a freshman, Miller already has nearly 4,000 snaps of experience. The Texans desperately need more offensive linemen that fit Miller’s mold.

29. Kansas City Chiefs (via LAR): T.J. Parker, EDGE, Clemson

The Chiefs already fixed the back end of their defense with a cornerback early in round one. Now they snag a pass-rush specialist here to round out the defense. Parker needs to add more moves than his trademark long-arm technique, but he wins at a high clip. He was supposed to be a top-ten pick (long considered an elite raw talent), so getting him near the end of round one feels like a steal.

30. Miami Dolphins: Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo

The Dolphins need to completely overhaul their defensive secondary, and Emmanuel McNeil-Warren helps them start that process. It’s tough to get first round capital coming from a non-power conference school anymore, but McNeil-Warren’s consistency, motor, and high-level instincts make this a strong pick for the Dolphins late in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft.

31. New England Patriots: Denzel Boston, WR, Washington

Denzel Boston has the pedigree (son of former first round WR David Boston), the prototypical “X” wide receiver build at 6-4, 200+ pounds, two proven seasons of production, and excellent ball skills. The Patriots need to add wide receiver help in a major way, so grabbing the last true WR1 candidate of the top options in this class should be considered a huge win here.

32. Seattle Seahawks: CJ Allen, LB, Georgia

CJ Allen is a leader of men who should become the anchor of the Seahawks defense for the next decade. He’s not the most freaky athlete at the position in the 2026 NFL Draft class. That’s not his calling card. However, he can rush the passer well off delays and zone blitzes, cover running backs out of the backfield, and plays with great discipline against the run.

Ohio State Buckeyes wide receiver Carnell Tate (17) celebrates a touchdown Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025, during the Big Ten football championship against the Indiana Hoosiers at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

NFL Draft

Round 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft

New York Jets: Cashius Howell, EDGE, Texas A&M

Arizona Cardinals: R Mason Thomas, EDGE, Oklahoma

Tennessee Titans: Zion Young, EDGE, Missouri

Las Vegas Raiders: Omar Cooper Jr., WR, Indiana

New York Giants: Kayden McDonald, DT, Ohio State

Houston Texans: Chase Bisontis, IOL, Texas A&M

Cleveland Browns: Max Iheanachor, OT, Arizona State

Kansas City Chiefs: Christen Miller, DT, Georgia

Cincinnati Bengals: Colton Hood, CB, Tennessee

New Orleans Saints: Emmanuel Pregnon, IOL, Oregon

Miami Dolphins: Chris Johnson, CB, San Diego State

New York Jets: Chris Bell, WR, Louisville

Baltimore Ravens: Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: D’Angelo Ponds, CB, Indiana

Indianapolis Colts: Chris Brazzell, WR, Tennessee

Atlanta Falcons: Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina

Minnesota Vikings: Anthony Hill Jr., LB, Texas

Detroit Lions: Malachi Lawrence, EDGE, UCF

Carolina Panthers: Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt

Green Bay Packers: Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State

Pittsburgh Steelers: Gennings Dunker, OT, Iowa

Philadelphia Eagles: Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois

Los Angeles Chargers: Treydan Stukes, S, Arizona

Jacksonville Jaguars: AJ Haulcy, S, LSU

Chicago Bears: Jacob Rodriguez, LB, Texas Tech

San Francisco 49ers: Derrick Moore, EDGE, Michigan

Houston Texans: Gracen Halton, DT, Oklahoma

Chicago Bears: Germie Bernard, WR, Alabama

Los Angeles Rams: Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati

Denver Broncos: Josiah Trotter, LB, Missouri

New England Patriots: Domonique Orange, DT, Iowa State

Seattle Seahawks: Jadarian Price, RB, Notre Dame

NFL Draft

Round 3 of the 2026 NFL Draft

Arizona Cardinals: Garrett Nussmeier, QB, LSU

Tennessee Titans: Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State

Las Vegas Raiders: Caleb Tiernan, OT, Northwestern

Philadelphia Eagles: Kamari Ramsey, S, USC

Houston Texans: Connor Lew, IOL, Auburn

Cleveland Browns: Antonio Williams, WR, Clemson

Washington Commanders: Dani Dennis-Sutton, EDGE, Penn State

Cincinnati Bengals: Keylan Rutledge, IOL, Georgia Tech

New Orleans Saints: Jaishawn Barham, EDGE, Michigan

Kansas City Chiefs: Max Klare, TE, Ohio State

Miami Dolphins: Keionte Scott, CB, Miami (FL)

Pittsburgh Steelers: Drew Allar, QB, Penn State

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Kyle Louis, LB, Pittsburgh

Indianapolis Colts: Joshua Josephs, EDGE, Tennessee

Atlanta Falcons: Keith Abney, CB, Arizona State

Baltimore Ravens: Romello Height, EDGE, Texas Tech

Jacksonville Jaguars: Mike Washington Jr., RB, Arkansas

Minnesota Vikings: Jonah Coleman, RB, Washington

Carolina Panthers: Bryce Lance, WR, North Dakota State

Green Bay Packers: Darrell Jackson Jr., DT, Florida State

Pittsburgh Steelers: Malik Muhammad, CB, Texas

Los Angeles Chargers: Deion Burks, WR, Oklahoma

Miami Dolphins: Dametrious Crownover, OT, Texas A&M

Jacksonville Jaguars: Jake Slaughter, IOL, Florida

Chicago Bears: Brian Parker, OT, Duke

Miami Dolphins: LT Overton, EDGE, Alabama

Buffalo Bills: Malachi Fields, WR, Notre Dame

Dallas Cowboys: Nicholas Singleton, RB, Penn State

Los Angeles Rams: Carson Beck, QB, Miami (FL)

Miami Dolphins: De’Zhaun Stribling, WR, Ole Miss

New England Patriots: Kage Casey, OT, Boise State

Seattle Seahawks: Jalon Kilgore, S, South Carolina

Minnesota Vikings: Julian Neal, CB, Arkansas

Philadelphia Eagles: Zachariah Branch, WR, Georgia

Pittsburgh Steelers: Samuel Hecht, IOL, Kansas State

Jacksonville Jaguars: Daylen Everette, CB, Georgia

Jan 1, 2026; Pasadena, CA, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide quarterback Ty Simpson (15) passes against the Indiana Hoosiers in the first half of the 2026 Rose Bowl and quarterfinal game of the College Football Playoff at Rose Bowl Stadium.

NFL Draft

Round 4 of the 2026 NFL Draft

Tennessee Titans: Will Lee III, CB, Texas A&M

Las Vegas Raiders: Jalen Farmer, IOL, Kentucky

New York Jets: Logan Jones, IOL, Iowa

Arizona Cardinals: Genesis Smith, S, Arizona

New York Giants: Devin Moore, CB, Florida

Houston Texans: Zakee Wheatley, S, Penn State

Cleveland Browns: Bud Clark, S, TCU

Denver Broncos: Kaleb Proctor, DT, SE Louisiana

Kansas City Chiefs: Elijah Sarratt, WR, Indiana

Cincinnati Bengals: Keyron Crawford, EDGE, Auburn

Denver Broncos: Oscar Delp, TE, Georgia

Dallas Cowboys: Harold Perkins Jr., LB, LSU

Indianapolis Colts: Jude Bowry, OT, Boston College

Philadelphia Eagles: Michael Trigg, TE, Baylor

Baltimore Ravens: Trey Zuhn, OT, Texas A&M

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Anthony Lucas, EDGE, USC

Las Vegas Raiders: Dontay Corleone, DT, Cincinnati

Detroit Lions: Chandler Rivers, CB, Duke

Carolina Panthers: Keyshaun Elliott, LB, Arizona State

Green Bay Packers: Tyreak Sapp, EDGE, Florida

Pittsburgh Steelers: Emmett Johnson, RB, Nebraska

Atlanta Falcons: Skyler Bell, WR, UConn

Los Angeles Chargers: Parker Brailsford, IOL, Alabama

Jacksonville Jaguars: Tim Keenan III, DT, Alabama

New England Patriots: Billy Schrauth, IOL, Notre Dame

Buffalo Bills: Michael Taaffe, S, Texas

San Francisco 49ers: Brenen Thompson, WR, Mississippi State

Detroit Lions: Kaytron Allen, RB, Penn State

Chicago Bears: Zane Durant, DT, Penn State

Miami Dolphins: Cole Payton, QB, North Dakota State

New England Patriots: Kaleb Elarms-Orr, LB, TCU

New Orleans Saints: Zxavian Harris, DT, Ole Miss

San Francisco 49ers: Isaiah World, OT, Oregon

Las Vegas Raiders: Tacario Davis, CB, Washington

Pittsburgh Steelers: Jadon Canady, CB, Oregon

New Orleans Saints: Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama

Philadelphia Eagles: Charles Demmings, CB, SF Austin

San Francisco 49ers: Sam Roush, TE, Stanford

San Francisco 49ers: Ja’Kobi Lane, WR, USC

Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love (4) runs with the ball during the first half of a NCAA football game against Navy at Notre Dame Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025, in South Bend.

NFL Draft

Round 5 of the 2026 NFL Draft

New York Jets: Domani Jackson, CB, Alabama

Houston Texans: Hezekiah Masses, CB, California

Tennessee Titans: Kevin Coleman, WR, Missouri

Arizona Cardinals: Caden Curry, EDGE, Ohio State

Tennessee Titans: Ephesians Prysock, CB, Washington

New York Giants: Austin Barber, OT, Florida

Cleveland Browns: Ahmari Harvey, CB, Georgia Tech

Washington Commanders: TJ Hall, CB, Iowa

Kansas City Chiefs: Louis Moore, S, Indiana

Cleveland Browns: DeMonte Capehart, DT, Clemson

New Orleans Saints: Drew Shelton, OT, Penn State

Miami Dolphins: Landon Robinson, DT, Navy

Dallas Cowboys: Tyler Onyedim, DT, Texas A&M

Green Bay Packers: Jack Endries, TE, Texas

Baltimore Ravens: Aiden Fisher, LB, Indiana

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Rayshaun Benny, DT, Michigan

Indianapolis Colts: Chris McClellan, DT, Missouri

Detroit Lions: Beau Stephens, IOL, Iowa

Carolina Panthers: VJ Payne, S, Kansas State

Carolina Panthers: Taylen Green, QB, Arkansas

Green Bay Packers: Max Llewellyn, EDGE, Iowa

Pittsburgh Steelers: J.C. Davis, OT, Illinois

Baltimore Ravens: Keagen Trost, IOL, Missouri

Minnesota Vikings: Eli Raridon, TE, Notre Dame

Jacksonville Jaguars: Justin Joly, TE, NC State

Buffalo Bills: Markel Bell, OT, Miami (FL)

Jacksonville Jaguars: Taurean York, LB, Texas A&M

Houston Texans: Justin Jefferson, LB, Alabama

Buffalo Bills: Tanner Koziol, TE, Houston

Kansas City Chiefs: Bryce Boettcher, LB, Oregon

Denver Broncos: Jeremiah Wright, IOL, Auburn

New England Patriots: Dallen Bentley, TE, Utah

New Orleans Saints: Ar’maj Reed-Adams, IOL, Texas A&M

Baltimore Ravens: Jeff Caldwell, WR, Cincinnati

Baltimore Ravens: Logan Taylor, IOL, Boston College

Las Vegas Raiders: Jager Burton, IOL, Kentucky

Kansas City Chiefs: Adam Randall, RB, Clemson

Dallas Cowboys: Joshua Cuevas, TE, Alabama

Philadelphia Eagles: Nadame Tucker, EDGE, Western Michigan

New York Jets: Dalton Johnson, S, Arizona

Dallas Cowboys: Josh Cameron, WR, Baylor

Detroit Lions: Trey Moore, EDGE, Texas

Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love (4) runs with the ball during the first half of a NCAA football game against Navy at Notre Dame Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025, in South Bend.

NFL Draft

Round 6 of the 2026 NFL Draft

Buffalo Bills: Pat Coogan, IOL, Indiana

Arizona Cardinals: Nick Barrett, DT, South Carolina

Tennessee Titans: Jaydn Ott, RB, Oklahoma

Las Vegas Raiders: Jakobe Thomas, S, Miami (FL)

New York Giants: Cyrus Allen, WR, Cincinnati

Washington Commanders: Marlin Klein, TE, Michigan

Seattle Seahawks: Joe Royer, TE, Cincinnati

Cincinnati Bengals: Febechi Nwaiwu, IOL, Oklahoma

New Orleans Saints: Nate Boerkircher, TE, Texas A&M

New England Patriots: Mikail Kamara, EDGE, Indiana

New York Giants: Bishop Fitzgerald, S, USC

New York Giants: Le’Veon Moss, RB, Texas A&M

Tennessee Titans: Fernando Carmona, IOL, Arkansas

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: John Michael Gyllenborg, TE, Wyoming

Minnesota Vikings: Reggie Virgil, WR, Texas Tech

Philadelphia Eagles: DJ Campbell, IOL, Texas

New England Patriots: Demond Claiborne, RB, Wake Forest

Cincinnati Bengals: CJ Daniels, WR, Miami (FL)

Carolina Panthers: Matt Gulbin, IOL, Michigan State

Green Bay Packers: Aamil Wagner, OT, Notre Dame

New England Patriots: Diego Pounds, OT, Ole Miss

Jacksonville Jaguars: Robert Spears-Jennings, S, Oklahoma

Los Angeles Chargers: J’Mari Taylor, RB, Virginia

Detroit Lions: Cade Klubnik, QB, Clemson

Cleveland Browns: Fa’alili Fa’amoe, OT, Wake Forest

Los Angeles Rams: Sawyer Robertson, QB, Baylor

Las Vegas Raiders: Albert Regis, DT, Texas A&M

Washington Commanders: Skyler Gill-Howard, DT, Texas Tech

Kansas City Chiefs: Tyren Montgomery, WR, John Carroll

Baltimore Ravens: Carver Willis, OT, Washington

New England Patriots: George Gumbs Jr., EDGE, Florida

Detroit Lions: J. Michael Sturdivant, WR, Florida

Indianapolis Colts: Lander Barton, LB, Utah

Atlanta Falcons: Cole Wisniewski, S, Texas Tech

Pittsburgh Steelers: Vincent Anthony Jr., EDGE, Duke

3 A to Z Sports draft analysts share their top 10 prospects at each position ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft

NFL Draft

Round 7 of the 2026 NFL Draft

Arizona Cardinals: Devon Marshall, CB, NC State

Dallas Cowboys: Red Murdock, LB, Buffalo

Las Vegas Raiders: Eli Heidenreich, RB, Navy

Buffalo Bills: Roman Hemby, RB, Indiana

Cincinnati Bengals: Xavian Sorey, LB, Arkansas

Detroit Lions: David Gusta, DT, Kentucky

Washington Commanders: Kaelon Black, RB, Indiana

Pittsburgh Steelers: Kaden Wetjen, WR, Iowa

Tennessee Titans: Eric Gentry, LB, USC

Cincinnati Bengals: Rene Konga, DT, Louisville

Miami Dolphins: Jimmy Rolder, LB, Michigan

New York Jets: Quintayvious Hutchins, EDGE, Boston College

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Barion Brown, WR, LSU

Pittsburgh Steelers: Seth McGowan, RB, Kentucky

Atlanta Falcons: Scooby Williams, LB, Texas A&M

Los Angeles Rams: Riley Nowakowski, TE, Indiana

Jacksonville Jaguars: Mason Reiger, EDGE, Wisconsin

Minnesota Vikings: Travis Burke, OT, Memphis

Minnesota Vikings: Andre Fuller, CB, Toledo

Green Bay Packers: Jaeden Roberts, IOL, Alabama

Pittsburgh Steelers: Jalen Stroman, S, Notre Dame

Miami Dolphins: Dae’Quan Wright, TE, Ole Miss

Chicago Bears: Caden Barnett, IOL, Wyoming

Jacksonville Jaguars: Robert Henry, RB, UTSA

Chicago Bears: Kendal Daniels, S, Oklahoma

New York Jets: Jamarion Miller, RB, Alabama

Houston Texans: Jalen Huskey, S, Maryland

Minnesota Vikings: Bryson Eason, DT, Tennessee

Jacksonville Jaguars: Nolan Rucci, OT, Penn State

Denver Broncos: Eric McAlister, WR, TCU

New England Patriots: Deven Eastern, DT, Minnesota

Cleveland Browns: Colbie Young, WR, Georgia

Indianapolis Colts: Kobe Baynes, IOL, Kansas

Baltimore Ravens: Matthew Hibner, TE, SMU

Los Angeles Rams: Thaddeus Dixon, CB, North Carolina

Los Angeles Rams: Caleb Douglas, WR, Texas Tech

Baltimore Ravens: Xavier Nwankpa, S, Iowa

Indianapolis Colts: Luke Altmyer, QB, Illinois

Green Bay Packers: James Thompson Jr., DT, Illinois

Denver Broncos: Desmond Reid, RB, Pittsburgh

Denver Broncos: RJ Maryland, TE, SMU

A look at who 8 NFL Scouts around the NFL have graded as the top player at every position in the 2026 NFL Draft class

NFL Draft

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