We have just one opportunity left to conduct a 2025 NFL Mock Draft, so let’s waste no time. With Rounds 4 through 7 left in the 2025 NFL Draft, how might the board fall for the rest of the event? Here’s a look at who’s still on the board and where they might go.

2025 NFL Draft Round 4 | 103) Tennessee Titans
Jalen Royals, WR, Utah State
Jalen Royals is a top-50 prospect on my board, but likely fell due to medical concerns. Assuming he can reach 100% again, he’s a dynamic multi-level WR2 in the mold of Pierre Garçon.
104) Jacksonville Jaguars (From CLE)
CJ West, DT, Indiana
CJ West would be a phenomenal value addition at this stage for a Jacksonville Jaguars team that still needs to improve its defensive tackle rotation. West is a twitched-up hybrid 1/3-tech with exciting three-down potential.
105) New York Giants
Marcus Mbow, OL, Purdue
The New York Giants showed interest in Marcus Mbow in the pre-draft process. While he’s undersized, he’s athletic, a brutal hand-fighter, and has valuable versatility between guard and right tackle.
106) New England Patriots
Kyle Kennard, EDGE, South Carolina
The New England Patriots haven’t taken an EDGE yet, and they met with Kyle Kennard twice pre-draft. At 6’4″, 250 pounds, with 34″ arms, Kennard could be an excellent fit in Mike Vrabel’s defense with his speed-to-power and unyielding motor.
107) Jacksonville Jaguars
Que Robinson, EDGE, Alabama
Que Robinson profiles more as a rotational EDGE out of the gate, but at 6’4″, 243 pounds, with near-34″ arms, he has the lean, nimble athleticism and projectable skill set to earn mid-round capital.
108) Las Vegas Raiders
Will Howard, QB, Ohio State
Yes, you read it right. The Las Vegas Raiders are passing on Shedeur Sanders again, this time for another quarterback. Will Howard makes sense, however. He’s big, smooth, accurate, and played his best ball last year with the Raiders’ new offensive coordinator Chip Kelly.
109) Chicago Bears (From CHI via BUF)
Tyler Baron, EDGE, Miami (FL)
The Chicago Bears still need additional EDGE depth behind Montez Sweat and Dayo Odeyingbo, and Tyler Baron is a perfect candidate at this juncture with his 6’5″, 258-pound frame, explosiveness, power, alignment versatility, and budding finesse profile.
110) New York Jets
Elic Ayomanor, WR, Stanford
Elic Ayomanor still has room to reach greater levels of consistency as an operator, but he’s quick, sudden, and explosive at 6’2″, 210 pounds, with high-end body control and immediate utility as a blocker.
111) Philadelphia Eagles (From CAR via DEN)
Bradyn Swinson, EDGE, LSU
It’s unclear why Bradyn Swinson has fallen this far, but the Philadelphia Eagles are a team that could scoop him up. At 6’3″, 255 pounds, with over 33″ arms, Swinson has a great amalgamation of tools: Burst, bend, speed-to-power, and strength as an edge-setter.
112) New Orleans Saints
Tory Horton, WR, Colorado State
Tory Horton was a top-75 prospect on my final big board and serves incredible value to the New Orleans Saints at this point. A simultaneously smooth and sparky athlete at 6’3″, with 4.4 speed, Horton has the vertical ability, route-running chops, hands, and agility to exceed his capital.
113) San Francisco 49ers
Bryce Cabeldue, OL, Kansas
At 6’4 1/2″ and 308 pounds, with elite functional athleticism, blocking range, and projectability across all five offensive line spots, Bryce Cabeldue feels like a player the San Francisco 49ers could take sooner than expected.
114) Carolina Panthers (From DAL)
Jordan Hancock, DB, Ohio State
At 6’0″, 195 pounds, with 4.41 speed and hyper-elite attack explosiveness, Jordan Hancock is one of the class’ biggest sleepers at the nickel DB spot. He’s rangy, twitchy, incredibly physical, and his coverage IQ and fluidity can make him an asset.
115) Arizona Cardinals
Logan Brown, OL, Kansas
At 6’6″, 311 pounds, Logan Brown is one of the most prolific athletes in the 2025 OL class. He has a well-proportioned frame, with elite explosiveness that can help with channeling high-end power. For Arizona, he can play guard or right tackle.
116) Miami Dolphins
Korie Black, CB, Oklahoma State
A physical enforcer downhill with coverage versatility, 4.35 speed, and elite explosiveness, Korie Black has the athletic gifts and tenacity to be a gem in the Day 3 range.
117) Indianapolis Colts
Miles Frazier, G, LSU
The Indianapolis Colts have played with fire skipping the guard position until now, but Miles Frazier is a starter-in-waiting at 6’6″, 320 pounds, with great anchor strength, stunt vision, and punishing hand power.
118) Atlanta Falcons
Jackson Slater, OL, Sacramento State
At 6’3″, 311 pounds, Jackson Slater is a stellar athlete and a well-built interior blocker who projects favorably at center, if the Atlanta Falcons decide to experiment with him there.
119) Cincinnati Bengals
Ty Robinson, DT, Nebraska
Ty Robinson could have gone Day 2, and he’s a steal for the Cincinnati Bengals here. Alongside Tedarrell Slaton, Robinson can be an incredibly disruptive 3-tech. At 6’5″, 290 pounds, he has an incredible 9.91 RAS (Relative Athletic Score), and his burst is overwhelming.
120) Tennessee Titans (From SEA)
Chris Paul Jr., LB, Ole Miss
Chris Paul Jr. is an outlier with his sub-30″ arms, and that’s a likely reason for his fall into the Day 3 range. Nevertheless, he can beat the odds with his high-level sideline-to-sideline range, gap instincts, and finishing ability at contact.
121) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Rylie Mills, DT, Notre Dame
A high-motor defender with a forklift power profile at 6’5″, 291 pounds, Rylie Mills could eventually replace Logan Hall alongside Vita Vea and Calijah Kancey.
122) Carolina Panthers (From DEN)
Jaylen Reed, S, Penn State
Jaylen Reed profiles well as a robber and strong safety alongside Tre’von Moehrig with his size, efficient short-area motion, route matching instincts, and downhill physicality.
123) Pittsburgh Steelers
Andrew Armstrong, WR, Arkansas
With some uncertainty regarding George Pickens’ future, the Pittsburgh Steelers could stand to add a well-sized WR like Andrew Armstrong, who bears similarity to Josh Reynolds as a prospect.
124) Green Bay Packers
Tommi Hill, CB, Nebraska
Tommi Hill’s foot injury is a concern, but if he can get fully healthy, he’s a high-end athlete at 6’0″, 213 pounds, with 33″ arms. He could be one of the class’ best value deals.
125) Los Angeles Chargers
Craig Woodson, S, California
With Alohi Gilman entering a contract year, Craig Woodson could be a great replacement — and maybe even an upgrade. Woodson has great size, speed, and fluidity. He’s instinctive and well-versed in coverage, and he can cover ground and tackle in support.
126) Cleveland Browns (From MIN via JAX)
Tez Johnson, WR, Oregon
Tez Johnson becoming a Tank Dell-esque weapon is his best-case outcome. He’s not as fast as Dell, but he’s just as quick and sudden, and reuniting him with Dillon Gabriel could help.
127) Los Angeles Rams
Zy Alexander, CB, LSU
Zy Alexander isn’t a high-end size-speed athlete, but he’s quick, fluid, and savvy for his size, and he has a playmaking imprint in both phases that the Los Angeles Rams will love.
128) Washington Commanders (From HOU)
David Walker, EDGE, Central Arkansas
David Walker isn’t as big as Dan Quinn’s preferred EDGE mold, but he can be a valuable pass-rush specialist in Washington with his ruthless speed-to-power and natural leverage.
129) Baltimore Ravens
Thomas Fidone II, TE, Nebraska
This is a Baltimore Ravens pick all the way. The long-term futures of both Mark Andrews and Isaiah Likely are uncertain, and Thomas Fidone II is a top-flight athlete with a long wingspan, receiving upside, and early blocking utility.
130) Philadelphia Eagles (From DET via DEN)
Gunnar Helm, TE, Texas
A smooth receiving threat with good route running, natural RAC, and soft hands, Gunnar Helm could be an effective replacement for Dallas Goedert once the latter is traded.
131) New Orleans Saints (From WAS)
Jalen Rivers, OL, Miami (FL)
At 6’6″, 320 pounds, with near-35″ arms, Jalen Rivers is a mountainous blocker with devastating hand power and clean technique. He could be a Day 1 starter at guard.
132) Buffalo Bills
DJ Giddens, RB, Kansas State
At 6’0″, 212 pounds, DJ Giddens can be a leggy mover sometimes, but he’s good insurance for James Cook with his suddenness, cutting flexibility, and staggered strides in fluctuating environments.
133) Kansas City Chiefs
Bhayshul Tuten, RB, Virginia Tech
The Kansas City Chiefs want more juice at RB. No running back in the 2025 class has more juice than Bhayshul Tuten: A 5’9″, 206-pound bowling ball with 4.32 speed and an instant turbo button in space.
134) Denver Broncos (From PHI)
Smael Mondon Jr., LB, Georgia
Smael Mondon Jr. will only be a sub-package linebacker early on, but he’s arguably the best coverage linebacker in the entire class, with the athletic makeup to provide blitzing utility.
135) Las Vegas Raiders (From MIA)
Billy Bowman Jr., S, Oklahoma
Pete Carroll generally likes size and length at safety, but at this value, Billy Bowman Jr. is difficult to pass up as a single-high and two-high bandit with elite ball skills.
136) Baltimore Ravens
Zemaiah Vaughn, CB, Utah
Zemaiah Vaughn gets slept on at times, but at almost 6’3″, with 32″ arms and 4.45 speed, he has the quickness and smothering length to play man, and the range to thrive in zone.
137) Seattle Seahawks
Chase Lundt, OT, UConn
An elite athlete at 6’7″ and over 300 pounds, Chase Lundt profiles well as a future starter at right tackle for Klint Kubiak, assuming Abraham Lucas’ availability issues persist.
138) San Francisco 49ers
Joshua Farmer, DT, Florida State
At 6’3″, 305 pounds, with massive 35″ levers for arms, Joshua Farmer has the menacing burst and power profile to fit nicely alongside nose tackle Alfred Collins.
Round 5 | 139) Minnesota Vikings (From CLE)
R.J. Mickens, S, Clemson
R.J. Mickens is an intriguing value addition at this stage. He has size, length, explosiveness, and fluidity, and he can manage space in coverage as well as he can pursue downhill.
140) Carolina Panthers (From NYG)
Jalen Travis, OT, Iowa State
The Carolina Panthers may need to plan for life beyond Taylor Moton at right tackle, and the 6’8″, 339-pound Jalen Travis has the size, length, and high-end athleticism to develop.
141) Tennessee Titans
Ty Hamilton, DT, Ohio State
The Tennessee Titans have a respectable unit up front on defense with Jeffrey Simmons and T’Vondre Sweat. Ty Hamilton improves their depth with his run defense reliability.
142) Minnesota Vikings (From JAX via HOU)
Cobee Bryant, CB, Kansas
The Minnesota Vikings have shown a willingness to bet on lighter cornerbacks in Brian Flores’ scheme. Cobee Bryant could pay it back for them with his speed and turnover generation.
143) Miami Dolphins (From LV)
Malachi Moore, S, Alabama
Malachi Moore isn’t a superlative athlete, but he’s an incredibly versatile defensive back with single-high, two-high, nickel, and box ability, and he can be a very good pro.
144) New England Patriots
Garrett Dellinger, G, LSU
At 6’4″, 325 pounds, Garrett Dellinger excels at matching rushers and playing square. He’s not overly powerful or versatile, but he can slot in as a quality starter at guard in time.
145) New York Jets
Warren Brinson, DT, Georgia
At 6’5″, 310 pounds, Warren Brinson has one of the most appealing physical profiles in the 2025 DT class as an even-front tackle, and he’s still trending up with his technique.
146) New England Patriots (From CAR)
Dorian Strong, CB, Virginia Tech
Dorian Strong isn’t as dynamic on the vertical plane as one would hope, but he has incredibly smooth coverage mobility and recalibration quickness at his size.
147) San Francisco 49ers (From NO via WAS)
Cameron Williams, OT, Texas
Cameron Williams is still very raw, with just one year as a starter at the collegiate level. but he has the athleticism and temperament to mold at 6’6″, 320 pounds, with near-35″ arms.
148) Chicago Bears
Dylan Sampson, RB, Tennessee
At 5’8″, 200 pounds, with blistering speed and angle-breaking bend, Dylan Sampson can be a dangerous seam-weaving runner in Ben Johnson’s scheme, with his reworked OL.
149) Dallas Cowboys
Damien Martinez, RB, Miami (FL)
Damien Martinez is a running back I would’ve taken at least two rounds earlier. And in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, the Dallas Cowboys get their new volume back in Round 5, at incredible value.
150) Miami Dolphins
Jaydon Blue, RB, Texas
At a certain value, Mike McDaniel is sure to enter the running for Jaydon Blue: An electric change-of-pace back with searing 4.29 speed and tantalizing pass-game upside.
151) Indianapolis Colts
Teddye Buchanan, LB, California
Teddye Buchanan’s gap instincts can be very inconsistent, but at 6’2″, 233 pounds, with 4.6 speed, he’s a high-upside project at LB, who already has solid coverage ability and range.
152) Arizona Cardinals
Jaylin Lane, WR, Virginia Tech
At 5’10”, 191 pounds, with 32″ arms, 4.34 speed, and elite explosiveness and agility, Jaylin Lane has the combined dynamic athleticism, separation, and catch radius to be a potential WR3.
153) Cincinnati Bengals
Lathan Ransom, S, Ohio State
Lathan Ransom doesn’t have the ideal playmaking ability in coverage, but he’s a well-built athlete with two-phase upside and a proven punisher in run support.
154) New York Giants (From SEA)
Dont’e Thornton Jr., WR, Tennessee
Brian Daboll has long had an affinity for size-speed athletes at WR, and the 6’5″ Dont’e Thornton Jr. — with his 4.3 speed — can be Jaxson Dart’s new big-play threat.
155) Miami Dolphins (From DEN)
Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, DL, Georgia
At 6’5″, 276 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins is an alignment-versatile defender who can attack from different angles.
156) Pittsburgh Steelers
Zah Frazier, CB, UTSA
At 6’3″, 186 pounds, with 33″ arms and sub-4.4 speed, Zah Frazier is the perfect Day 3 developmental CORNERBACK to sit and learn behind Darius Slay Jr. in 2025.
157) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
J.J. Roberts, S, Marshall
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers met with J.J. Roberts, and could eye him on Day 3. He’s as elite as athletes come with his speed, burst, and agility, and he has exciting coverage versatility on the back end.
158) Los Angeles Chargers
Jack Sawyer, EDGE, Ohio State
It seems wrong for former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh to pick the face of Ohio State’s championship defense, but Jack Sawyer has the strength and all-out motor the Los Angeles Chargers will like.
159) Green Bay Packers
Fadil Diggs, EDGE, Syracuse
At 6’4″, 257 pounds, Fadil Diggs has all the tools: Size, burst, bend, and agility. He’s relatively underdeveloped with his power and run defense, but his upside is immense.
160) San Francisco 49ers (From MIN)
Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado
At last, Shedeur Sanders’ slide ends in the 2025 NFL Draft. His fall has been the draft’s biggest storyline, but there’s a simple explanation. He simply wasn’t a first-round talent, and his makeup as a leader and field general further compounded teams’ concerns.
For the 49ers, Sanders would be a quality QB3 who could succeed Mac Jones as the primary backup in 2027. Kyle Shanahan is one coach who’d perhaps be able to temper Sanders’ personality and play him to his strengths within the scheme.
161) Philadelphia Eagles (From HOU)
Jared Harrison-Hunte, DT, SMU
At 6’3″, 290 pounds, with 33″ arms, 4.86 speed, and a 32″ vertical, Jared Harrison-Hunte is a similar upside gamble to Milton Williams coming out. His speed-to-power is undeniable.
162) New York Jets (From LAR via PIT)
Barrett Carter, LB, Clemson
The NFL seems lower on Barrett Carter with his hot-and-cold instincts and his lighter frame, but he has the swarming range and role versatility to be maximized with Aaron Glenn.
163) Carolina Panthers (From BAL)
Aeneas Peebles, DT, Virginia Tech
At 6’0″, 282 pounds, with 4.94 speed and wicked burst, Aeneas Peebles gives Carolina the sawed-off interior disruptor they desperately need in their DT rotation.
164) Kansas City Chiefs (From DET via CLE and PHI)
Jordan Phillips, DT, Maryland
The Chiefs already added a disruptor in Omarr Norman-Lott. Jordan Phillips can be their new nose tackle. He’s young and underdeveloped but undeniably athletic at 6’2″, 320 pounds.
165) Philadelphia Eagles (From WAS)
Jermari Harris, CB, Iowa
Jermari Harris will be a 25-year-old rookie. But at 6’1″, 191 pounds, with near-32″ arms, he has the size, fluid athleticism, and keen eyes to be a fit in Vic Fangio’s zone-heavy scheme.
166) Cleveland Browns (From BUF via HOU)
Denzel Burke, CB, Ohio State
Dipping into the Ohio State CB well as they’ve done before, the Cleveland Browns add a former WR with quality coverage versatility and run support chops in Denzel Burke.
167) Tennessee Titans (From KC)
Mitchell Evans, TE, Notre Dame
The Titans don’t have a dependable two-phase TE, but Mitchell Evans can change that. He’s an ultra-reliable hands catcher who brings great energy, tenacity, and power as a blocker.
168) Philadelphia Eagles
Konata Mumpfield, WR, Pittsburgh
At 5’11”, 186 pounds, with a blistering 6.77 three-cone, Konata Mumpfield is a sleeper who could fill the Eagles’ WR3 role with his easy change-of-direction and agility as a separator.
169) Buffalo Bills
Zeek Biggers, DT, Georgia Tech
At 6’6″, 320 pounds, with near-35″ arms and eye-popping explosiveness, Zeek Biggers can be the nose tackle complement to 3-tech T.J. Sanders, and a DaQuan Jones successor.
170) Buffalo Bills (From DAL)
Joshua Gray, OL, Oregon State
At 6’5″ and 299 pounds, Joshua Gray will have to add more mass to his frame, but he’s an athletic, well-leveraged depth piece with all-encompassing positional flexibility.
171) New England Patriots (From DAL)
Bilhal Kone, CB, Western Michigan
Still in search of a larger candidate at the nickel cornerback spot, Bilhal Kone could be a late-round target in that mold for New England. He’s fast, fluid, and instinctive at 6’1″.
172) Seattle Seahawks
Brashard Smith, RB, SMU
A dynamic former WR-turned-RB who lit up his league in 2024, Brashard Smith could function well as a change-of-pace and receiving back in Kubiak’s scheme.
173) Buffalo Bills
Dan Jackson, S, Georgia
Dan Jackson will be mainly a depth player and special-teams asset early on, but at 6’0″, 191 pounds, he’s a fiery competitor with burning speed and some coverage flexibility.
174) Dallas Cowboys
Cody Simon, Ohio State
Cody Simon is well-built, athletic, and was extremely productive in his final season against Power Four competition. He’s a linebacker the Cowboys could circle on Day 3.
175) Seattle Seahawks
Drew Kendall, C, Boston College
A three-year starter at center with high-end range and agility at 6’4″, 308 pounds, Drew Kendall provides great insurance at the fulcrum behind Olusegun Oluwatimi.
176) Baltimore Ravens
Deone Walker, DT, Kentucky
Deone Walker’s leverage liabilities and back issues greatly cloud his projection, but he’s a size-speed freak who could find his stride as an attacker next to Travis Jones.
Round 6
177) Buffalo Bills (from NYG)
Kain Medrano, LB, UCLA
178) Tennessee Titans
Quincy Riley, CB, Louisville
179) Houston Texans (from CLE)
JJ Pegues, DT, Ole Miss
180) Las Vegas Raiders
Elijah Roberts, DL, SMU
181) Los Angeles Chargers (from NE)
Thomas Perry, OL, Middlebury
182) Detroit Lions (from JAX)
Elijah Ponder, EDGE, Cal Poly
183) Baltimore Ravens (from CAR)
Daniel Jackson, WR, Minnesota
184) New Orleans Saints (from NO via WAS)
Elijah Simmons, DT, Tennessee
185) Pittsburgh Steelers (from CHI via SEA)
Jordan Williams, OL, Georgia Tech
186) New York Jets
Ajani Cornelius, OL, Oregon
187) Houston Texans (from SF via MIN)
Dalton Cooper, OT, Oklahoma State
188) Tennessee Titans (from DAL)
Ollie Gordon II, RB, Oklahoma State
189) Indianapolis Colts
Clay Webb, OL, Jacksonville State
190) Los Angeles Rams (from ATL)
Corey Kiner, RB, Cincinnati
191) Philadelphia Eagles (from ARI via DEN)
Caleb Etienne, OT, BYU
192) Cleveland Browns (from MIA via CHI)
Tyler Batty, EDGE, BYU
193) Cincinnati Bengals
Kyle Monangai, RB, Rutgers
194) Jacksonville Jaguars (from SEA)
Devin Neal, RB, Kansas
195) Los Angeles Rams (from PIT)
Jack Kiser, LB, Notre Dame
196) Detroit Lions (from TB)
Cam Skattebo, RB, Arizona State
197) Denver Broncos
Joe Huber, OL, Wisconsin
198) Green Bay Packers
Danny Stutsman, LB, Oklahoma
199) Los Angeles Chargers
Cam Horsley, DT, Boston College
200) Jacksonville Jaguars (from MIN via CLE)
Oronde Gadsden II, TE, Syracuse
201) Los Angeles Rams
Hunter Wohler, S, Wisconsin
202) Los Angeles Rams (from HOU via PIT and CHI)
Simeon Barrow Jr., DT, Miami (FL)
203) Baltimore Ravens
Trevor Etienne, RB, Georgia
204) Dallas Cowboys (from DET via CLE and BUF)
Chimere Dike, WR, Florida
205) Washington Commanders
Elijhah Badger, WR, Florida
206) Buffalo Bills
Kyle McCord, QB, Syracuse
207) New York Jets (from KC)
Xavier Restrepo, WR, Miami (FL)
208) Carolina Panthers (from PHI via DEN)
Seth McLaughlin, C, Ohio State
209) Los Angeles Chargers
Carter Runyon, TE, Towson
210) Baltimore Ravens
Ryan Fitzgerald, K, Florida State
211) Dallas Cowboys
Tonka Hemingway, DT, South Carolina
212) Baltimore Ravens
Branson Taylor, OL, Pittsburgh
213) Las Vegas Raiders
Jackson Hawes, TE, Georgia Tech
214) Los Angeles Chargers
Trikweze Bridges, CB, Florida
215) Las Vegas Raiders
Glendon Miller, DB, Maryland
216) Houston Texans (from CLE)
Jonah Monheim, C, USC
Round 7
217) Dallas Cowboys (from TEN via NE)
Jah Joyner, EDGE, Minnesota
218) Atlanta Falcons (from CLE via LAC)
Alijah Huzzie, CB, North Carolina
219) New York Giants
Hollin Pierce, OT, Rutgers
220) New England Patriots
Maxen Hook, S, Toledo
221) Jacksonville Jaguars
Thor Griffith, DT, Louisville
222) Las Vegas Raiders
Eli Pancol, WR, Duke
223) Seattle Seahawks (from NO via PHI and PIT)
Da’Quan Felton, WR, Virginia Tech
224) Miami Dolphins (from CHI)
Max Brosmer, QB, Minnesota
225) Arizona Cardinals (from NYJ via KC)
Jailin Walker, LB, Indiana
226) Kansas City Chiefs (from CAR)
KeAndre Lambert-Smith, WR, Auburn
227) San Francisco 49ers
Benjamin Yurosek, TE, Stanford
228) Detroit Lions (from DAL)
Jared Ivey, DL, Ole Miss
229) Pittsburgh Steelers (from ARI via PHI)
Riley Leonard, QB, Notre Dame
230) Detroit Lions (from ARI via CAR and DEN)
Gavin Bartholomew, TE, Pittsburgh
231) Miami Dolphins
Isas Waxter, DB, Villanova
232) Indianapolis Colts
Quinn Ewers, QB, Texas
233) Chicago Bears (from CIN)
Kitan Crawford, S, Nevada
234) Seattle Seahawks
RJ Oben, EDGE, Notre Dame
235) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Johnny Walker Jr., EDGE, Missouri
236) Jacksonville Jaguars (from DEN via PHI, WAS, and HOU)
Rayuan Lane III, S, Navy
237) Green Bay Packers
Kyonte Hamilton, DT, Rutgers
238) New England Patriots (from LAC)
Nick Nash, WR, San Jose State
239) Dallas Cowboys (from GB via TEN)
Tommy Mellott, QB/WR, Montana State
240) Buffalo Bills (from MIN via CLE and CHI)
Roc Taylor, WR, Memphis
241) Houston Texans
LeQuint Allen, RB, Syracuse
242) Los Angeles Rams (from LAR via ATL)
Jack Henderson, DB, Minnesota
243) Baltimore Ravens
Carson Vinson, OT, Alabama A&M
244) Detroit Lions
Fentrell Cypress II, CB, Florida State
245) Washington Commanders
Malik Verdon, S, Iowa State
246) New York Giants (from BUF)
Jake Majors, C, Texas
247) Dallas Cowboys (from KC via CAR)
Marques Sigle, S, Kansas State
248) New Orleans Saints (from PHI via WAS)
Barryn Sorrell, EDGE, Texas
249) San Francisco 49ers
Arian Smith, WR, Georgia
250) Green Bay Packers
Woody Marks, RB, USC
251) Kansas City Chiefs
Cody Lindenberg, LB, Minnesota
252) San Francisco 49ers
Jack Nelson, OT, Wisconsin
253) Miami Dolphins
Moliki Matavao, TE, UCLA
254) New Orleans Saints
Joshua Simon, TE, South Carolina
255) Houston Texans (from CLE)
Caden Prieskorn, TE, Ole Miss
256) Los Angeles Chargers
Antwaun Powell-Ryland, EDGE, Virginia Tech
257) Kansas City Chiefs
Donovan McMillon, S, Pittsburgh