The 2025 regular season is in its twilight phase, and 2026 NFL Mock Draft exercises are starting to become commonplace. It’s never too early to look to the future, but with most teams now eliminated, there truly is no better time to look at the 2026 NFL Draft board.
Where do things stand with the 2026 NFL Draft at this current moment? Let’s go through the whole board, all 257 picks, to see what kind of talent your team can come away with.
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1) Cleveland Browns
Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana
Projected trade: Browns receive No. 1 pick; Giants receive No. 3 pick, No. 28 pick, 2027 first-round pick, 2027 third-round pick
Fernando Mendoza won the Heisman. He helped lead the Indiana Hoosiers to their first Big Ten Championship win since 1967. He nearly led the nation with an incredible PFSN QB Impact score of 93.2 and a blue-chip draft evaluation grade.
This is what a franchise quarterback looks like. This is worth trading whatever it takes for the Browns.
There was hope that perhaps Shedeur Sanders would run with his opportunity as a starter, but instead, he’s been a bottom-tier starter, with only fleeting glimpses of promise. His 56.6 PFSN NFL QB Impact grade is second-worst, only above Dillon Gabriel.
The bottom line is, the Browns have a chance to add a prototypical franchise QB with a much higher evaluation grade: A gunslinger with a rocket arm and the requisite pocket mobility, who also has high-level pre- and post-snap discernment, poise under pressure, leverage IQ, and accuracy.
Cleveland can’t afford to settle or be cautious. It’s been far too long since they’ve had stability at the most crucial position in sports, and they’re in a position to solve it this April.
2) Las Vegas Raiders
Dante Moore, QB, Oregon
Mendoza goes No. 1 overall in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, but Dante Moore is right there with him in the QB1 race on my board. Both passers have blue-chip grades, and while Moore’s PFSN QB Impact score is a bit lower at 85.9, he still passes the evaluation check with flying colors.
At 6’3″, 208 pounds, Moore is a smooth athlete and a cool operator both in-structure and off-platform. For a younger quarterback (one-and-a-half years younger than Mendoza), he displays impeccable opportunity recognition, spatial processing, and situational precision, all magnified by his effortless velocity generation and angle freedom.
Moore’s profile is incredibly similar to that of C.J. Stroud, who was my QB1 in the 2023 NFL Draft cycle. He brings dual-sided distribution and creation elements that insulate his value across all situations. For Las Vegas, he’d represent the turning of the page to a more hopeful era of growth.
3) New York Giants (via CLE)
Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State
Projected trade: Browns receive No. 1 pick; Giants receive No. 3 pick, No. 28 pick, 2027 first-round pick, 2027 third-round pick
After trading down with the Browns, the Giants select Carnell Tate to pair him with Jaxson Dart and Malik Nabers. Tate has separated himself as the clear WR1 on my 2026 NFL Draft board. At 6’3″, 195 pounds, he boasts an unnatural blend of separation and catch-point skills.
Per TruMedia, Tate logged 3.48 yards per route run in 2025, as well as a mind-boggling 28.2% catch rate over expectation.
4) New York Jets
Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State
Medical questions may mar Jordyn Tyson’s evaluation down the stretch. Still, as long as his health checks out, he’s a WR prospect worthy of top-end capital, especially for a Jets offense that has desperately needed a movement-Z with his rapid releases, zone-splicing feel, elite catch-point playmaking, and dynamic RAC alongside Garrett Wilson.
5) Arizona Cardinals
Spencer Fano, OT, Utah
This is a touch high for Spencer Fano on my board, but the 6’6″, 302-pound blocker has the raw building blocks to be a dominant bookend, and in 2025, he visibly improved his anchor as a pass protector. He’s an S-tier athlete with alien-size adjusted quickness, excellent knee bend, crisp and efficient hands, and a dominant power drive in the run game.
6) Tennessee Titans
Arvell Reese, OLB, Ohio State
Arvell Reese is still somewhat of a projection as a pass rusher, but the tools are such that it’s a comfortable projection to make. At his peak, he can be a game-wrecker.
At an incredibly lean and compact 6’4″, 243 pounds, with hyper-elite explosiveness, short-area correction, and cornering ability, Reese has the athletic tools to torture opposing blockers, as well as the raw, unhinged power to stack-and-shed, reverse run game displacement, and plow through shoulders with bull-rushes and long-arms.
7) Washington Commanders
David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech
With their first-round pick in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, the Washington Commanders take an edge rusher in David Bailey, whom I compare to a former Washington great: Brian Orakpo.
At around 6’3″, 250 pounds, with hyperactive short-area quickness and lethal long-track explosion, searing bend, and the proportional length to drive incredible power, Bailey fills a significant need for Washington, providing a dynamic pass-rush and tools infusion.
8) New Orleans Saints
Makai Lemon, WR, USC
Ever wonder what it would look like if Derrick Mason played in the modern era as a power slot? Here you go.
Makai Lemon, who scored a near-elite 85.1 PFSN WR Impact grade in 2025, doesn’t have elite size or testing speed at 5’11”, 195 pounds, but he’s an energized short-area mover with a tremendous feel for stem and catch-point leverage, timing gravity-defying body control, and undaunted contact balance after the catch.
The best way to know what you have in Tyler Shough is to give him the weapons and support he needs to reach his ceiling, and Lemon’s acquisition works toward just that.
9) Cincinnati Bengals
Rueben Bain Jr., EDGE, Miami (FL)
Rueben Bain Jr. is one of the more perplexing evaluations in the 2026 NFL Draft. At around 6’3″, 275 pounds, he’s certifiably explosive and powerful, but also lumbering at times, with a potential outlier arm length measurement that enables longer blockers to throw off his timing at times.
Bain still grades as a Round 1 prospect for me, and while he’s not at the height of efficiency as a quick-pressure generator and finisher, he has shown he can routinely compress the pocket, disrupt QB rhythm, and serve as an amoeba-like absorbent threat against run game displacement. For the Bengals, he’s worth it.
10) Miami Dolphins
Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee
Jermod McCoy hasn’t played since 2024, but that 2024 tape was good enough for him to still field first-round capital even without an encore. McCoy’s coverage mobility is truly special. In particular, his acute angle freedom and 270-degree hip sink and transition efficiency overtop breaks are eerily similar to those of Darius Slay.
11) Los Angeles Rams
Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami (FL)
With Rob Havenstein set to hit free agency, the Rams will have to re-up at the right tackle spot. At 6’6″, 335 pounds, Francis Mauigoa is a natural RT with elite athleticism, rotational torque, and anchor strength.
Mauigoa’s short arms will be the source of much discussion leading up to April, but he’s sound and balanced in all facets, and the Rams are one team that doesn’t have harsh thresholds when it comes to size.
12) Kansas City Chiefs
Keldric Faulk, EDGE, Auburn
Keldric Faulk’s pass-rush production will continue to be scrutinized, and reasonably so. Still, few prospects have the kind of explosion, quickness, and finishing flexibility that he has at around 6’6″, 285 pounds. And he’s as dominant a run defender as you’d expect with his size and explosive power element.
He’s a clear Steve Spagnuolo defensive end who presents tantalizing upside and a high floor where it matters.
13) Dallas Cowboys
Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State
In truth, we need to talk about Sonny Styles more as a safe top-ten prospect in the 2026 NFL Draft. At 6’4″, 243 pounds, he’s a relentless gap pursuit threat, a formidable stack-and-shed technician, an explosive and rangy attacker on the boundary, and he has expert zone feel in coverage as a former safety. He’s exactly what Dallas needs.
14) Baltimore Ravens
Peter Woods, DT, Clemson
The Ravens’ defensive woes down the stretch in 2025 started up front with the unfortunate loss of Nnamdi Madubuike. If Madubuike’s career is threatened, Peter Woods compares him favorably to him with his elite explosive element, compact mass and power, line-resetting force, and pass-rush arsenal.
15) Minnesota Vikings
Caleb Downs, SAF, Ohio State
The Vikings snagged my highest-graded prospect with the 15th overall pick in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. Talk about grand larceny. Caleb Downs is the consummate “glue guy”, with an unfathomably pro-ready skill set that features high-end coverage mobility, route recognition, role versatility, ball skills, targeted physicality, and flawless tackle finishing.
16) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Caleb Banks, DT, Florida
The board fell poorly at linebacker and edge rusher for the Buccaneers in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, so I addressed a looming future need at DT. Caleb Banks’ small sample size and injury concerns will cloud his stock, but with his inhuman burst and quickness at 6’6″, 330 pounds, he could very well be Chester McGlockton reincarnate.
17) Detroit Lions
Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah
The Lions recently extended Taylor Decker, but nagging injury discomfort down the stretch has fueled retirement speculation. With Decker in the twilight of his career, Caleb Lomu serves as a worthy successor, boasting athleticism, nuanced pass blocking, enhanced run game power, and hyper-elite flexibility as a failsafe.
18) New York Jets
Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama
Ty Simpson’s stock is not where it was in the middle of the year. There was a slight stretch where Simpson was genuinely making a case for QB1 contention. Still, his accuracy and down-to-down consistency declined during a late-season streak that included Alabama’s loss to Oklahoma.
Credit where credit is due: Simpson rebounded in the CFB Playoffs, against a Sooners defense at even greater strength. He still has more to prove if he wants to get back into the top ten, but as of now, an extremely sparse QB class stands to elevate him into mid-to-late Round 1 territory if he declares.
Simpson still has a solid QB Impact score of 85.3, and the strongest elements of his profile remain evident. He’s a plus processor with a willingness to test middle-field windows, as well as excellent mechanical congruence and correction on release.
My comparison for Simpson remains the same as it has been since the beginning of the cycle: Marc Bulger. He possesses both mechanical congruence and processing, as well as non-elite physical talent and inferior down-to-down precision.
Bulger was an above-average starter and a Pro Bowler at his best, and Simpson can get there, too. That kind of QB is worth this kind of capital for the Jets. But to be a bona fide franchise QB prospect and top-ten pick, Simpson still has work to do.
19) Dallas Cowboys
Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU
You can make a case for this being one of the best value additions of the first round in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. Mansoor Delane took home the highest PFSN CB Impact grade in the nation with a score of 96.8. He sets himself apart with crisp fluidity, plant-and-drive quickness, instant reaction to stimulus, and infallible playmaking ability.
20) Houston Texans
Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame
Jeremiyah Love ended the 2025 season with an elite 92.1 PFSN RB Impact grade, and his 89.68 draft grade on my scale places him near blue-chip territory. He’s a complete multi-level dynamic weapon, with the combined explosiveness, quickness, and terse physicality to resemble Ahman Green.
21) San Francisco 49ers
KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M
The 49ers might need a hard reset at WR in 2026 to supplement Brock Purdy in Kyle Shanahan’s offense. KC Concepcion is the best value target in this range. At 5’11”, 190 pounds, he can play outside or inside with his speed, lateral agility, and nuance, and his RAC ability is deadly.
22) Los Angeles Chargers
Olaivavega Ioane, OG, Penn State
The Chargers’ interior offensive line is the most glaring hole on the roster, and it’s one they can target aggressively by adding Olaivavega Ioane: An explosive, overwhelming hand fighter with incredible square power, anchor strength, and a resolute finishing edge.
23) Buffalo Bills
Denzel Boston, WR, Washington
The Bills thought highly of Keon Coleman’s upside as an X-receiver, but it hasn’t panned out. They were on the right track with his size, but Denzel Boston has the smooth off-setting ability and spatial manipulation that Coleman lacked, and he’s more consistent and controlling at the catch.
24) Los Angeles Rams
Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson
Avieon Terrell is one of the easiest prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft to stand on a table for. He possesses the quickness and discipline to play press, expertly orients in off-man situations, and manages route relationships in zone coverage. He plays the ball with precision, and he’s an elite support presence with a peanut-punching proficiency.
25) Carolina Panthers
TJ Parker, EDGE, Clemson
TJ Parker regressed to start the year, but played well enough down the stretch to resurrect Round 1 talks in a weaker EDGE class. My comp for him is Shaun Phillips: A steady pro without elite traits, but with functional burst, bend, strength, and power, who can remain productive in both phases of the game.
26) Pittsburgh Steelers
Kayden McDonald, DT, Ohio State
Derrick Harmon is emerging as a potential successor to Cameron Heyward. Kayden McDonald can be the dominant nose tackle he needs beside him. McDonald routinely resets the line with his linear explosion and power, and he can violently stack and shed to secure stops.
27) Philadelphia Eagles
Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
Dallas Goedert has played well enough to force a tough decision from the Eagles, but if they can add Kenyon Sadiq at this value, they simply have to do it. Sadiq has elite receiving and RAC upside, and is a rangy, tenacious blocker who plays above his frame.
28) New York Giants (via NYG)
Kadyn Proctor, OL, Alabama
With their second first-round pick in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, acquired from the Browns, the Giants strengthen their line with Kadyn Proctor. My comparison for Proctor is Leonard Davis: A college tackle who transitioned to guard and ascended to Pro Bowl status.
29) Chicago Bears
Kenyatta Jackson Jr., EDGE, Ohio State
If Keldric Faulk is an EDGE1 candidate in the 2026 NFL Draft, then Kenyatta Jackson Jr. can’t be far behind. At 6’6″, 265 pounds, Jackson has the hyper-explosive, long-levered, and well-leveraged power profile to dominate 1-on-1 at multiple alignments, and he’s developed at a steady pace as a pass-rusher.
30) New England Patriots
Colton Hood, CB, Tennessee
Of all the CBs in a strong 2026 class, few can match Colton Hood’s reactive coil. Hood’s technique can still be refined, but as his 87.3 PFSN CB Impact grade reflects, he’s an explosive closer, an instinctive space manager, and a proactive playmaker.
31) Denver Broncos
Chris Bell, WR, Louisville
Chris Bell’s torn ACL unfortunately clouds his stock, but in a weaker first-round class, there’s a chance he still goes high based on his tape. At 6’2″, 220 pounds, he’d provide an explosive RAC threat and a steely 50-50 weapon for Bo Nix.
32) Seattle Seahawks
Keith Abney II, CB, Arizona State
Keith Abney II finished the 2025 season with the fourth-highest PFSN CB Impact grade in the nation, with an elite score of 92.9. He’s a click-and-close savant in off-man, with quickness, fluidity, and feisty two-phase mentality all reminiscent of Jaylon Johnson.
Round 2 | 33) Las Vegas Raiders
Blake Miller, OT, Clemson
With his hyper-elite range and landmark IQ at 6’6″, 315 pounds, Blake Miller enables the Raiders to do new and exciting things with their run game, and he’s improved his anchor as a pass protector.
34) New York Giants
Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina
Brandon Cisse can improve his spatial discipline in press-man, but he’s an explosive, agile mover with easy hip sink, transition freedom, and a competitive edge that underpins his game.
35) New York Jets
CJ Allen, LB, Georgia
With Quincy Williams’ time in New York growing short, CJ Allen can carry the torch as a well-rounded three-down LB with sharp processing, eager attack urgency, and playmaking ability on the rush.
36) Arizona Cardinals
Emmanuel Pregnon, OG, Oregon
Emmanuel Pregnon is an explosive linear athlete with excellent proportional length and knockback power, which he can use to drive run defenders and slab unsuspecting stunters.
37) Tennessee Titans
Germie Bernard, WR, Alabama
Germie Bernard’s evaluation is simple: He’s going to be a good pro. He’s a savvy separator at 6’1″, 209 pounds, an explosive RAC threat, and he can convert in challenging catching situations.
38) Cleveland Browns
Trevor Goosby, OT, Texas
Trevor Goosby still bends at the waist a bit too much, but at a lean 6’7″, 315 pounds, he’s a bounding athlete with excellent range, flexibility, length, and finishing physicality in both phases.
39) Houston Texans
Chase Bisontis, OG, Texas A&M
At 6’5″, 315 pounds, Chase Bisontis is a balanced and heavy-handed pass protector with great knee bend, who also brings explosive range, flexibility, and power in the run game.
40) Cincinnati Bengals
Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech
At around 6’3 1/2″, 330 pounds, Lee Hunter is a blocky, explosive nose tackle who compares favorably to prime Eddie Goldman with his point-of-attack strength and pass-rush juice.
41) New Orleans Saints
Chris Johnson, CB, San Diego State
At 6’0″, 185 pounds, Chris Johnson is a bit lighter than preferred, but he nonetheless sizes up well in run defense, and he’s an incredibly savvy and quick-firing cover man from depth.
42) Atlanta Falcons
D’Angelo Ponds, CB, Indiana
D’Angelo Ponds is a massive size outlier at 5’9″, 170 pounds, but he grades so highly as an athlete, technician, and catch-point competitor that he’s a top-50 prospect on my board, regardless.
43) Kansas City Chiefs
Skyler Bell, WR, UConn
The Chiefs need a role-versatile wide receiver who can provide reliable short and intermediate separation, as well as make tough catches amidst contact. Enter Skyler Bell.
44) Miami Dolphins
Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, SAF, Toledo
At around 6’3″, 209 pounds, with imposing length and physicality, Emmanuel McNeil-Warren doubles as a combined run support dynamo and a split-field, red-zone bandit in coverage.
45) New York Jets
Malachi Lawrence, EDGE, UCF
At 6’4″, 261 pounds, with 35″ arms, Malachi Lawrence is one of the best-kept secrets in the 2026 NFL Draft. He’s an early-round prospect on my board, with size, bend, power, and a boundless counter arsenal.
46) Minnesota Vikings
Emmett Johnson, RB, Nebraska
Emmett Johnson is a creative prodigy with sixth-sense peripheral vision and acute cutting flexibility, who would feast behind the Vikings’ physical blocking front.
47) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Cashius Howell, EDGE, Texas A&M
The Buccaneers have a yearly need for a pass-rush infusion on the edge. Cashius Howell quenches that need with his speed, bend, and imbalance-inducing nuance and timing.
48) Baltimore Ravens
Austin Siereveld, OL, Ohio State
Austin Siereveld could ultimately return to school, but he has top-50 appeal as a potential guard convert with his menacing play strength and pummeling finishing torque.
49) Detroit Lions
Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State
Davison Igbinosun has improved his discipline with targeted physicality in 2025, and he has the size, length, speed, quickness, and fluidity to be a true CB1 in time.
50) Indianapolis Colts
Matayo Uiagalelei, EDGE, Oregon
Matayo Uiagalelei is relatively raw with his precision and weight transfers, but he flashes brilliance as a power generator and run defender, and his motor always runs hot.
51) Green Bay Packers
Julian Neal, CB, Arkansas
At around 6’2″, 200 pounds, Julian Neal has the length, quickness, and recovery range the Packers like, and he’s arguably the best run support cornerback in the 2026 NFL Draft.
52) Houston Texans
Isaiah World, OL, Oregon
The Texans’ offensive front has shown improvement, but Houston still needs more raw talent and increased power output. Isaiah World has both in spades and can be an asset opposite Aireontae Ersery.
53) San Francisco 49ers
Christen Miller, DT, Georgia
Christen Miller is still trending up as a pass rusher at 6’4″, 315 pounds, but he’s a twitched-up lateral mover with cinder blocks for hands, insulating his run defense value.
54) Buffalo Bills
A’Mauri Washington, DT, Oregon
At 6’3″, 339 pounds, A’Mauri Washington can reset the line purely with his compact mass and hyper-elite explosiveness, and his arrow is trending up as a two-phase operator.
55) Los Angeles Rams
AJ Haulcy, SAF, LSU
Alongside Kamren Kinchens, AJ Haulcy can thrive as a split-field robber, and he’s an absolute hoss in support with his compact mass, play pace, and willing physicality.
56) Los Angeles Chargers
Matt Gulbin, OC, Michigan State
With Iapani Laloulu returning to school, the 2026 NFL Draft center class took a major hit. One prospect who could rise amidst the scarcity is Michigan State’s Matt Gulbin.
At 6’4″, 312 pounds, Gulbin is a good-not-great athlete without exceptional size, but he has solid quickness and lateral range, a sturdy center of gravity, excellent angle IQ in the run game and alertness against stunts, and his core strength is near-elite.
57) Carolina Panthers
Kamari Ramsey, DB, USC
Kamari Ramsey is a high-quality nickel defender with effortless transition balance and fluidity, who also has the spatial IQ and downhill trigger to rotate back to safety.
58) Pittsburgh Steelers
Max Iheanachor, OT, Arizona State
If Broderick Jones’ future proves fleeting in Pittsburgh, Max Iheanachor possesses the athleticism, mass, proportional length, balance, and recovery freedom to present an upgrade eventually.
59) Philadelphia Eagles
Malik Muhammad, CB, Texas
Malik Muhammad’s play took a significant leap in 2025. At 6’0″, 190 pounds, he has the smooth athleticism, route intelligence, and ball-hawking ability to fit the Eagles’ zone-heavy scheme.
60) Jacksonville Jaguars
Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia
At 6’7″, 315 pounds, with a verified seven-foot wingspan, Monroe Freeling combines elite size with elite athleticism and high-end flexibility, and he can be an impact starter in time.
61) Chicago Bears
Caleb Tiernan, OT, Northwestern
The Bears could give Ozzy Trapilo more time, but investing at OT is a worthwhile venture. Caleb Tiernan has the size, athletic floor, power, and technical savvy to be a quality starter.
62) New England Patriots
Genesis Smith, SAF, Arizona
Genesis Smith can still improve his consistency as a support presence. Still, he’s a bird of prey in single-high coverage, thanks to his keen route intelligence, length, fluidity, and playmaking range.
63) Denver Broncos
LT Overton, DL, Alabama
At 6’2 1/2″ and 274 pounds, with over 33″ arms, Overton has the profile to potentially shift inside, where his explosiveness and well-leveraged power output would project well.
64) Seattle Seahawks
Anthony Hill Jr., LB, Texas
Mike Macdonald has proven his worth in developing elite athletes, and Anthony Hill Jr. is a pure offensive Pandora’s box, with his overwhelming full-field range and attack aggression.
Round 3 | 65) Houston Texans
Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati
DeMeco Ryans can work wonders with Jake Golday: A 6’4″, 240-pound run-and-chase linebacker with great range, reaction, and physicality.
66) Las Vegas Raiders
Ja’Kobi Lane, WR, USC
Ja’Kobi Lane is a fluid and savvy multi-level separator for his 6’4″, 195-pound frame, and he has truly otherworldly body control at the catch, to pair with spidery hands.
67) Arizona Cardinals
Jonah Coleman, RB, Washington
At this point, it’s hard to set expectations for Trey Benson. Jonah Coleman, a former Arizona Wildcats favorite, gives the Cardinals a reliable volume skill set to work with.
68) Tennessee Titans
Will Lee III, CB, Texas A&M
The Titans need to rebuild their cornerback room, and Will Lee III can help set the tone with his gritty physicality, size, length, quickness, and recovery speed.
69) Cleveland Browns
Chris Brazzell II, WR, Tennessee
Chris Brazzell II hails from the same school as Cedric Tillman, but supersedes his fellow alumnus with his vertical speed at 6’5″, fluidity, and catch-point consistency.
70) Philadelphia Eagles
Keylan Rutledge, OG, Georgia Tech
At 6’4″, 330 pounds, with urgent leg drive and the torque to channel and maximize power exertions, Keylan Rutledge can solve the Eagles’ problems generating movement inside.
71) Washington Commanders
Elijah Sarratt, WR, Indiana
What he lacks in burst and speed, Elijah Sarratt makes up for with his foot quickness, and he’s a nuanced route operator with truly 1-of-1 catch point authority and control.
72) New Orleans Saints
Anthony Lucas, EDGE, USC
If he can put it all together, Anthony Lucas has an astronomical ceiling with his burst, energized twitch, and power capacity at 6’5″, 272 pounds, with over 33″ arms.
73) Cincinnati Bengals
Gennings Dunker, OL, Iowa
Gennings Dunker provides Cincinnati insurance on the line as a capable, reliable tackle who also projects well inside at guard with his upper-body power, torque, and mauler’s edge.
74) Kansas City Chiefs
Hezekiah Masses, CB, California
Hezekiah Masses has the length and swarming physicality Steve Spagnuolo covets at cornerback, and he has a penchant for making plays on the ball at the catch point.
75) Miami Dolphins
R Mason Thomas, EDGE, Oklahoma
R Mason Thomas falls into a similar “undersized” category to Howell. Still, his hyper-elite burst and bend are lethal for opposing tackles, and he has shown he can convert speed into power.
76) Atlanta Falcons
Eric Singleton Jr., WR, Auburn
If he declares, Eric Singleton Jr. is an uber-dynamic three-level threat with second-level teleportation, the quickness to offset and beat press, and uncanny body control downfield.
77) Pittsburgh Steelers
Tacario Davis, CB, Washington
Tacario Davis has the size and length the Steelers crave, standing at 6’3″ with 33″ arms, and he possesses the versatility to press up, orient in off-man coverage, or manage route relationships in zone.
78) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama
Deontae Lawson needs to add a bit more mass to his frame, but he’s an explosive, instinctive, and well-rounded LB with excellent coverage mobility and rush value.
79) Minnesota Vikings
Dametrious Crownover, OT, Texas A&M
Brian O’Neill is getting older and is a free agent in 2027. Dametrious Crownover possesses the domineering size and linear explosiveness to develop into a developmental OT.
80) Baltimore Ravens
Joshua Josephs, EDGE, Tennessee
Joshua Josephs has more theoretical upside than immediate pass-rush consistency, but with his burst, bend, natural leverage, and length, there’s a very high ceiling to reach.
81) Jacksonville Jaguars
Jadarian Price, RB, Notre Dame
If Travis Etienne walks, Jadarian Price can help infuse the Jaguars’ RB room with a new wave of vertical explosiveness, short-area creation, and compact contact resilience.
82) Indianapolis Colts
Drew Shelton, OL, Penn State
Drew Shelton is a light-footed athlete with active, nuanced hands, and although his middling arm length may force him inside, he possesses the quickness and natural leverage to develop further.
83) Green Bay Packers
Anthony Smith, DL, Minnesota
At an ultra-lean 6’6″, 285 pounds, Anthony Smith’s size echoes Colby Wooden, but Smith has the finesse and power drive to provide more of a pass-rush presence outside.
84) Miami Dolphins
Brenen Thompson, WR, Mississippi State
Brenen Thompson is undersized, but he has the speed, quickness, and intelligence to be maximized in Mike McDaniel’s scheme, and his catching instincts are legitimate.
85) San Francisco 49ers
Akheem Mesidor, EDGE, Miami (FL)
Though he’ll be a 25-year-old rookie, Akheem Mesidor is a ready-made pass-rush menace for a playoff competitor, with size, burst, upper-lower synergy, and finishing power.
86) Los Angeles Rams
Oscar Delp, TE, Georgia
With just Terrance Ferguson locked down long-term, Oscar Delp gives the Rams an immediate two-phase blocking asset with elite RAC and seam-busting upside.
87) Los Angeles Chargers
Taurean York, LB, Texas A&M
Taurean York may be undersized, but he compensates with his quality compact mass, high-end burst and range, elite football IQ and post-snap recognition, and tenacious zeal.
88) Buffalo Bills
Dillon Thieneman, SAF, Oregon
Dillon Thieneman is an “every-man” at safety, who’s proven his mettle at single-high, two-high, and as a box rover, and he makes a sturdy imprint in run support.
89) Carolina Panthers
Antonio Williams, WR, Clemson
Antonio Williams provides Bryce Young and the Panthers with a boundary-slot flex receiver who can reliably create separation, use targeted physicality, and generate RAC in space.
90) Pittsburgh Steelers
Omar Cooper Jr., WR, Indiana
At 6’0″, 205 pounds, with hyperactive burst and twitch, Omar Cooper Jr. can offset DBs, threaten vertical, make tough catches, and be schemed RAC alongside DK Metcalf.
91) Miami Dolphins
Garrett Nussmeier, QB, LSU
Someone has to fill the massive QB void past Round 1. Garrett Nussmeier could potentially be elevated into Round 3 due to his experience and mental acuity.
Nussmeier doesn’t have the trademark accuracy Mike McDaniel desires in his scheme, but he’s a high-floor processor with crafty creative elements in the pocket.
92) Jacksonville Jaguars
Darrell Jackson Jr., DT, Florida State
Darrell Jackson Jr. is a tree stump at 6’5″, 340 pounds with over 35″ arms, and he can dominate blocks with his hyper-elite play strength and violent disposition.
93) Chicago Bears
Ahmad Moten, DT, Miami (FL)
A thick, squatty 6’3″ defensive lineman, Ahmad Moten has the energized athleticism to provide rush value from 0 and 1-tech, and he prevents displacement against the run.
94) New England Patriots
Eli Raridon, TE, Notre Dame
Eli Raridon is a monolithic seam splicer at 6’7″, 251 pounds, with the burst and bend to find soft spots in the zone, and he’s also a high-quality blocking presence with in-line ability.
95) Denver Broncos
Amare Ferrell, SAF, Indiana
With Brandon Jones nearing a contract year, Amare Ferrell hedges for his departure as a well-sized, rangy safety with dual-sided coverage and support appeal.
96) Seattle Seahawks
Parker Brailsford, OC, Alabama
Parker Brailsford may be a bit undersized at 6’2″, 295 pounds, but he can infuse the Seahawks’ interior line with high-end athleticism, leverage play, and physicality.
97) Minnesota Vikings
Devin Moore, CB, Florida
Specializing in off-man and zone, Devin Moore is exceedingly fleet-footed, fluid, and balanced for his 6’3″ frame, and he has the long-strider recovery range to close gaps.
98) Philadelphia Eagles
Keyron Crawford, EDGE, Auburn
Keyron Crawford has shorter arms, but he’s a high-level designated pass rusher who combines exceptional fluidity and bend with upper-body and lower-body synergy and rush intelligence.
99) Pittsburgh Steelers
Xavier Scott, DB, Illinois
Xavier Scott’s outlook is muddy after missing most of 2025, but if he declares, he’s a high-quality nickel DB with fast feet, instincts, and physicality.
100) Jacksonville Jaguars
Max Klare, TE, Ohio State
Max Klare functions as a high-quality TE2 right away with his vast receiving and blocking versatility, and he’s still climbing toward his ceiling.
Round 4
101) Las Vegas Raiders
Keionte Scott, DB, Miami (FL)
102) New York Giants
Bray Hubbard, SAF, Alabama
103) Tennessee Titans
Chandler Rivers, CB, Duke
104) Cleveland Browns
Alex Harkey, OL, Oregon
105) New York Jets
LJ Martin, RB, BYU
106) Arizona Cardinals
Cole Payton, QB, North Dakota State
107) Houston Texans
Sam Hecht, OC, Kansas State
108) Cincinnati Bengals
Preston Hodge, DB, Colorado
109) Denver Broncos
Michael Trigg, TE, Baylor
110) Miami Dolphins
Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State
111) Atlanta Falcons
Tristan Leigh, OT, Clemson
112) Kansas City Chiefs
Raleek Brown, RB, Arizona State
113) Dallas Cowboys
Tao Johnson, SAF, Utah
114) Baltimore Ravens
Brian Parker II, OL, Duke
115) Jacksonville Jaguars
Romello Brinson, WR, SMU
116) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Taylen Green, QB, Arkansas
117) Detroit Lions
Zachariah Branch, WR, Georgia
118) Indianapolis Colts
Ian Strong, WR, Rutgers
119) Green Bay Packers
Chris McClellan, DT, Missouri
120) Houston Texans
Dae’Quan Wright, TE, Ole Miss
121) San Francisco 49ers
Fa’alili Fa’amoe, OL, Wake Forest
122) Los Angeles Chargers
Deven Eastern, DT, Minnesota
123) Buffalo Bills
Derrick Moore, EDGE, Michigan
124) Chicago Bears
Demond Claiborne, RB, Wake Forest
125) Carolina Panthers
PJ Williams, OT, SMU
126) Pittsburgh Steelers
Justice Haynes, RB, Michigan
127) Philadelphia Eagles
Lance Heard, OT, Tennessee
128) Las Vegas Raiders
Logan Wilson, OC, Iowa
129) New England Patriots
Domonique Orange, DT, Iowa State
130) New England Patriots
Clev Lubin, EDGE, Louisville
131) Denver Broncos
Jack Kelly, LB, BYU
132) New Orleans Saints
Treydan Stukes, DB, Arizona
133) Pittsburgh Steelers
Eric Rivers, WR, Georgia Tech
134) Detroit Lions
Dani Dennis-Sutton, EDGE, Penn State
135) Las Vegas Raiders
Devon Marshall, CB, NC State
136) Philadelphia Eagles
Aiden Fisher, LB, Indiana
137) New Orleans Saints
Justin Joly, TE, NC State
138) San Francisco 49ers
Kaytron Allen, RB, Penn State
139) San Francisco 49ers
Jake Slaughter, OC, Florida
140) San Francisco 49ers
Malachi Fields, WR, Notre Dame
Round 5
141) New York Giants
Bryce Foster, OC, Kansas
142) Cleveland Browns
Joe Royer, TE, Cincinnati
143) Cleveland Browns
Caden Barnett, OG, Wyoming
144) Tennessee Titans
Zion Young, EDGE, Missouri
145) Arizona Cardinals
Cooper Barkate, WR, Duke
146) Tennessee Titans
Austin Barber, OT, Florida
147) Washington Commanders
Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt
148) New Orleans Saints
Tim Keenan III, DT, Alabama
149) Cleveland Browns
Isaiah Sategna III, WR, Oklahoma
150) Philadelphia Eagles
DeMonte Capehart, DT, Cincinnati
151) Kansas City Chiefs
Lander Barton, LB, Utah
152) Miami Dolphins
Sam Roush, TE, Stanford
153) Dallas Cowboys
Jude Bowry, OT, Boston College
154) Minnesota Vikings
Red Murdock, LB, Buffalo
155) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Tanner Koziol, TE, Houston
156) Baltimore Ravens
De’Zhaun Stribling, WR, Ole Miss
157) Detroit Lions
Bud Clark, SAF, TCU
158) Indianapolis Colts
Dontay Corleone, DT, Cincinnati
159) Green Bay Packers
Josh Cameron, WR, Baylor
160) Houston Texans
Nick Barrett, DT, South Carolina
161) Jacksonville Jaguars
Al’Zillion Hamilton, CB, Fresno State
162) Buffalo Bills
Harold Perkins Jr., LB, LSU
163) Los Angeles Rams
Jalon Kilgore, DB, South Carolina
164) Baltimore Ravens
Jacob Rodriguez, LB, Texas Tech
165) Carolina Panthers
TJ Hall, CB, Iowa
166) Pittsburgh Steelers
DeShon Singleton, SAF, Nebraska
167) Carolina Panthers
Jalen Huskey, SAF, Maryland
168) Jacksonville Jaguars
Zxavian Harris, DT, Ole Miss
169) Chicago Bears
Zakee Wheatley, SAF, Penn State
170) New England Patriots
Jaeden Roberts, OG, Alabama
171) Denver Broncos
Adam Randall, RB, Clemson
172) New Orleans Saints
Cayden Green, OG, Missouri
173) Las Vegas Raiders
Febechi Nwaiwu, OG, Oklahoma
174) Baltimore Ravens
Xavier Chaplin, OT, Auburn
175) Baltimore Ravens
John Michael Gyllenborg, TE, Wyoming
176) Kansas City Chiefs
Kage Casey, OT, Boise State
177) Dallas Cowboys
Bryce Lance, WR, North Dakota State
178) New York Jets
Daylen Everette, CB, Georgia
Round 6
179) Las Vegas Raiders
Nicholas Singleton, RB, Penn State
180) New York Giants
Tyler Onyedim, DT, Texas A&M
181) Las Vegas Raiders
Romello Height, OLB, Texas Tech
182) Arizona Cardinals
Michael Taaffe, SAF, Texas
183) Tennessee Titans
Dillon Wade, OL, Auburn
184) Seattle Seahawks
Beau Stephens, OG, Iowa
185) Washington Commanders
Wydett Williams Jr., SAF, Ole Miss
186) Cincinnati Bengals
Max Llewellyn, EDGE, Iowa
187) New Orleans Saints
Roman Hemby, RB, Indiana
188) New England Patriots
CJ Daniels, WR, Miami (FL)
189) New York Giants
Justin Jefferson, LB, Alabama
190) Atlanta Falcons
Marlin Klein, TE, Michigan
191) New York Giants
Lewis Bond, WR, Boston College
192) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Domani Jackson, CB, Alabama
193) Tennessee Titans
Brandon Cleveland, DT, NC State
194) New England Patriots
Eli Heidenreich, WR/RB, Navy
195) Cincinnati Bengals
Jakobe Thomas, SAF, Miami (FL)
196) Jacksonville Jaguars
Isaiah Glasker, LB, BYU
197) Green Bay Packers
Jacarrius Peak, OT, NC State
198) Los Angeles Rams
Jaishawn Barham, OLB, Michigan
199) Washington Commanders
Jalen McMurary, DB, Tennessee
200) Los Angeles Rams
Cade Klubnik, QB, Clemson
201) Los Angeles Chargers
Wesley Williams, EDGE, Duke
202) Cleveland Browns
Arion Carter, LB, Tennessee
203) Carolina Panthers
Nate Boerkircher, TE, Texas A&M
204) New England Patriots
Caden Curry, EDGE, Ohio State
205) Houston Texans
Vincent Anthony Jr., EDGE, Duke
206) Detroit Lions
Jadon Canady, DB, Oregon
207) Cleveland Browns
Ephesians Prysock, CB, Washington
208) New England Patriots
Joe Fagnano, QB, UConn
209) Baltimore Ravens
Cian Slone, EDGE, NC State
210) Detroit Lions
Tyreak Sapp, DL, Florida
211) Philadelphia Eagles
Louis Moore, SAF, Indiana
212) Pittsburgh Steelers
VJ Payne, SAF/LB, Kansas State
213) Pittsburgh Steelers
Trey Zuhn, OL, Texas A&M
214) Indianapolis Colts
Kaleb Elarms-Orr, LB, TCU
Round 7
215) Cincinnati Bengals
Thaddeus Dixon, CB, North Carolina
216) Las Vegas Raiders
Antonio Watts, LB, Louisville
217) Arizona Cardinals
Jeffrey M’ba, DT, SMU
218) Tennessee Titans
Tomas Rimac, OG, Virginia Tech
219) Detroit Lions
CJ Fite, DT, Arizona State
220) Buffalo Bills
Collin Wright, CB, Stanford
221) Washington Commanders
Eric Gentry, LB, USC
222) Pittsburgh Steelers
Jack Strand, QB, MSU Moorhead
223) Cincinnati Bengals
Carson Beck, QB, Miami (FL)
224) Miami Dolphins
Gracen Halton, DT, Oklahoma
225) Atlanta Falcons
Jamarion Miller, RB, Alabama
226) Kansas City Chiefs
Damonic Williams, DT, Oklahoma
227) Buffalo Bills
Mike Washington Jr., RB, Arkansas
228) Los Angeles Rams
Deion Burks, WR, Oklahoma
229) Minnesota Vikings
Sawyer Robertson, QB, Baylor
230) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Noah Whittington, RB, Oregon
231) Jacksonville Jaguars
Jalen Walthall, WR, Incarnate Word
232) Indianapolis Colts
Charles Demmings, CB, SF Austin
233) Green Bay Packers
McKale Boley, OL, Virginia
234) Minnesota Vikings
Reggie Virgil, WR, Texas Tech
235) Houston Texans
Zane Durant, DT, Penn State
236) New York Jets
Albert Regis, DT, Texas A&M
237) New York Jets
Chase Roberts, WR, BYU
238) Jacksonville Jaguars
Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois
239) Minnesota Vikings
Aaron Hall, DT, Duke
240) Pittsburgh Steelers
Desmond Purnell, LB, Kansas State
241) Chicago Bears
Marcus Allen, CB, North Carolina
242) Minnesota Vikings
Cameron Ball, DT, Arkansas
243) Chicago Bears
Landon Robinson, DT, Navy
244) San Francisco 49ers
Chris Adams, OT, Memphis
245) Denver Broncos
Caleb Douglas, WR, Texas Tech
246) Cleveland Browns
Chip Trayanum, RB, Toledo
247) Jacksonville Jaguars
Isaiah Nwokobia, SAF, SMU
248) Los Angeles Rams
Malik Benson, WR, Oregon
249) Indianapolis Colts
Behren Morton, QB, Texas Tech
250) Los Angeles Rams
Robert Henry Jr., RB, UTSA
251) Baltimore Ravens
Eni Falayi, TE, Wake Forest
252) Indianapolis Colts
Jaden Nixon, RB, UCF
253) Denver Broncos
Skyler Gill-Howard, DT, Texas Tech
254) Denver Broncos
Jordan Davis, OL, South Alabama
255) Baltimore Ravens
J’Mari Taylor, RB, Virginia
256) New York Jets
Kaleb Proctor, DT, SE Louisiana
257) New York Jets
J’Mond Tapp, EDGE, Southern Miss