The NFL draft concluded this past Saturday with the Commanders adding six new players to the team. Adam Peters entered the draft with just two top 100 picks and Washington didn’t make any trades and instead chose to stand pat and pick at each selection.

Below is my review of our selections followed by my grades on the pick and my overall draft grade.

Balancing value vs. need:

Washington came into the draft with very few immediate needs than in previous seasons thanks to an incredibly smart and aggressive free agency by general manager Adam Peters. This allowed them to sit back and let the board come to them and not have to reach on players like we have seen in the past.

The chart below shows how our picks ranked in value versus the consensus big board. The Commanders hold the top spot here.

With just two picks in the top 100, it was important for Peters to get immediate contributors from those two picks while filling in the roster with high-upside players later on who can either be in a competition to earn significant playing time or become complimentary pieces on this roster.

RD1 (pick 7) – Sonny Styles

I had Sonny Styles in a tie as my second “realistic” player on my big board (tied with Caleb Downs). However, when the Chiefs (who traded up with the Browns to pick 6) made their selection, I tweeted out this…

Heading into the evening, I didn’t think Syles would make it past the Giants at pick 5. When he did, and seeing the trade-up was not for him, I was pretty pumped up!

Here is what I had to say about Styles in my 2026 Adam Peters’ Draft Tells article:

Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State

Besides not participating in the Senior Bowl (and I’m sure it was not for a lack of an invite), Sonny Styles checks off every other box on this list. He is an athletic freak who got better each year at Ohio State after switching from safety to inside linebacker heading into his junior year. He was a team captain who called the defense in 2025 for Matt Patricia, garnering All-American honors along the way. He has met multiple times with the Commanders including a top 30 visit.

With Styles, Washington is getting an immediate contributor in the front seven who can impact every level of the field and wear the green dot. With his rare blend of size, speed and instincts, he may be the best overall off-the-ball linebacker prospect the NFL has seen in over a decade!

RD3 (pick 71) – Antonio Williams

Antonio Williams was a fourth-round prospect on my big board and his rating was a bit low on my end because I valued bigger outside receivers versus guys who could operate out of the slot. This is what I had to say when he was picked.

The comments I made above were not directed at Williams’ talent, but more who was available at the time of the pick who I felt would fit well in this offense.

Chris BrazzellChris BellTed HurstMalachi FieldsJa’Kobi Lane

Williams is a route technician who creates separation with ease and can make things happen in the open field after the catch. He ran a 4.41 40 and jumped 39.5” at the NFL combine. He had an outstanding 2024 season at Clemson leading the team with 75 receptions, 904 yards and 11 touchdowns. He also added 101 rushing yards and a touchdown on the ground. His production in 2025 wasn’t as prolific, as he finished the season with 55 receptions for 604 yards and four touchdowns over 10 games.

Although Peters has commented on his inside/outside versatility, I see him as a true slot receiver who will provide Daniels with a steady target in the intermediate areas of the field. Although he may be motioned out wide and provide some field-stretching ability, he hasn’t shown consistency on film to beat press coverage and stack defensive backs with regularity.

According to many of the draft boards, he was viewed as a second-round talent that Adam got at pick 71, so the value is certainly there.

RD5 (pick 147) – Joshua Josephs

I had Josephs as a fringe-third/fourth round prospect on my big board, so I saw incredible value to get him at pick 147.

I love Josephs first step and length. It’s right up there with the best prospects in this EDGE class. He may not have stuffed the stat sheet in his four years at Tennessee, but much of that was how he was asked to play in their scheme versus his talent alone. He also is a turnover machine forcing six fumbles and recovering four over the past two seasons.

He’s the type of guy I expect to be a much better professional than he was as a collegiate player once he gets the coaching he’s been lacking these last few seasons. He’s a tremendous upside prospect who should be a nice rotational piece as a rookie, with future starting ability.

Some talk about EDGE not being a top need, but Armstrong is entering the last year of his deal and Chaisson is playing on a one-year deal. Oweh is the only EDGE with proven production who is signed for multiple years.

RD6 (pick 187) – Kaytron Allen

Allen is a prospect I am intimately familiar with as I had the pleasure of watching him play for the past four years at Penn State.

Fatman left Penn State as the school’s all-time leading rusher and despite teammate Nick Singleton garnering most of the headlines during their first three years, it was Allen who was always the better overall player.

He’s an absolute bowling ball with exceptional vision and contact balance between the tackles and he has enough speed to turn the corner and explode into the secondary – where he’s constantly looking to punish anyone coming up to tackle him. He’s not going to be a big receiving threat out of the backfield, but he does do well on screens where his vision and power make him tough to bring down.

He should have an immediate effect in short-yardage and goal line situations.

RD6 (pick 209) – Matt Gulbin

Center was a big need for Washington, and I thought the mid-to-later rounds of the draft had some really good prospects who could fit this new offense. I was very pleased to see Peters use one of our picks on the position.

Gulbin played in over 40 games at Wake Forest, seeing time at both guard and center. He transferred to Michigan State in 2025 and started 11 games at center while serving as a team captain.

He does a nice job anchoring in pass protection and climbing to the second level and sealing off defenders in the run game. He’ll need to work on hand-placement in the NFL.

He offers interior versatility and could push veteran Nick Allegretti during camp for the starting center role.

Round 7 (pick 223) – Athan Kaliakmanis

In many of my mock leading up to the draft, I had Washington selecting a quarterback with a later pick. Although I didn’t have Kaliakmanis on my radar, the need was there.

I didn’t spend a lot of time scouting Kaliakmanis, so I had to go back and watch some games over the weekend.

What stood out to me is his arm strength and accuracy improvement in 2025. He seemed to go through his progressions well and delivered the ball on time. What I didn’t see is a ton of was off-platform ability – which I believe is very important in the NFL.

He has a chance to make the roster if Washington keep three quarterbacks, but the practice squad as a developmental prospect is the most likely scenario.

Overall, despite only having two top 100 picks, I feel Adam Peters did real nice job getting a blue-chip prospect in Sonny Styles and getting great value with some picks in the mid-to-later rounds.

This was a very unique draft in that it lacked blue-chip talent at premium positions, but for us to have a top player fall to us at pick 7 (one I doubted would be there) was a true blessing.

There was a lot of attention put on defense this offseason, so I was not surprised to see four of our six picks go towards the offense – including wide receiver, which was one of the top needs on the team.