2026 NFL Mock Draft Day 3: Jermod McCoy’s Freefall Finally Ends, Fernando Mendoza Gets Weapons

In this mock draft of Day 3 of the 2026 NFL Draft, Jermod McCoy's slide finally ends, while Garrett Nussmeier finds a new home in the loaded NFC.

The first three rounds of the 2026 NFL Draft are officially in the books.

This final Day 3 mock draft using PFSN’s NFL Mock Draft Simulator examines how the rest of the draft board might progress, and where prospects like Jermod McCoy and Garrett Nussmeier might land.


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Round 4 | 101) Buffalo Bills

Kamari Ramsey, USC | S

Kamari Ramsey is incredibly smooth, fluid, and composed working overtop routes and managing route relationships, and his high-level football IQ assists in maintaining discipline.

On the attack, Ramsey is explosive and physical, and on the vertical plane, he scarcely gets outrun. His lacking ball production does shed light on his inconsistent catch-point precision and eye discipline, and he has room to improve as a playmaker. But overall, he’s a complete nickel prospect with actionable split-field safety versatility, who could outplay his draft capital.

102) Las Vegas Raiders

Bryce Lance, North Dakota State | WR

At 6’3″, 209 pounds, Bryce Lance’s primary mode is as an explosive vertical threat who can attack seams and take the top off the defense, and in the FCS, he feasted within that role.

He still needs to improve at proactively attacking the football and controlling catch-point positioning, and inconsistent hand technique can be the source of drops, but he nonetheless has the size, speed, stemming ability, body control, and underlying quickness to earn mid-round interest as a deep threat and RAC weapon.

103) New York Jets

Logan Taylor, Boston College | OG

At 6’7″, 314 pounds, with 34″ arms, 10 1/2″ hands, and elite explosion numbers, Logan Taylor passes the eye test with his mobility, point-of-attack power, and long-levered anchor strength.

For his size, Taylor also has good flexibility, which aids in leverage acquisition, weight distribution, and pad level maintenance, and he’s a tenacious finisher who flashes overwhelming rotational torque and leg drive.

104) Arizona Cardinals

Dani Dennis-Sutton, Penn State | EDGE

At 6’6″, 256 pounds, Dani Dennis-Sutton has ideal frame density and length, to go along with great explosiveness, arc-running speed, venerable raw power, and an underlying urgency that never dies.

Dennis-Sutton’s fluidity is a major concern, as he doesn’t have the bend or ankle mobility to consistently reduce or make quick transitions, and he still lacks a consistent pass-rush plan.

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Nevertheless, Dennis-Sutton’s motor and power profile ensures he can contend at contact when operating on the attack, and those same traits, in tandem with his motor, make him a force to be reckoned with in run defense and pursuit.

105) Los Angeles Chargers

Jalon Kilgore, South Carolina | DB

At 6’1″, 210 pounds, with sprawling length and charged-up explosion, Jalon Kilgore has taken reps at boundary CB, nickel, box safety, and field safety.

Kilgore’s versatility is a testament to his intelligence, vision, and football IQ, all traits that he used in tandem with his physical gifts to rack up 3 TFLs, 5 INTs, and 5 PBUs in 2024. And in 2025, he followed up his breakout season with 2 INTs and 10 pass breakups, along the way earning an elite PFSN DB Impact score of 91.6.

106) Houston Texans

Sam Hecht, Kansas State | C

At a lean 6’4″, 300 pounds, Sam Hecht doesn’t have domineering size or power, but instead wins with hyper-elite athleticism, positioning, and flexibility.

In the run game, Hecht has the fleet-footed, explosive range to effortlessly traverse gaps and reach landmarks, and he has the hip flexibility to flip around and seal while keeping control.

Meanwhile, in pass protection, Hecht is balanced, well-leveraged, patient, and synergetic, with the ability to play square and keep positioning, as well as pick up stunts.

107) San Francisco 49ers

Jude Bowry, Boston College | OT

At 6’5″, 314 pounds, with plus proportional length, Jude Bowry’s elite raw power component stands out, as does his powerful explosion and energized athletic ability in close quarters. Bowry has a potentially dominant physical profile, which he maximizes with his all-out mauler mentality.

His game still needs refinement, as his knee bend, pad level, lower-body action, stunt vision, and angle discipline can all be inconsistent. Nevertheless, he can be a quality Day 1 swing OT, with starting upside and schematic versatility.

108) Denver Broncos

Justin Joly, NC State | TE

For a slightly undersized TE at 6’3″, 251 pounds, Justin Joly isn’t as quick or twitched-up as desired, and slight hip stiffness limits his ultimate separation upside.

Still, in spite of these modest limitations, he’s a fairly nuanced separator with an affinity for sensing voids in zone and making himself available, as well as using his long-strider burst and speed to work up seams.

109) Kansas City Chiefs

Skyler Bell, UConn | WR

The 6’0″, 192-pound Skyler Bell has one of the most complete three-level threat frameworks in the 2026 class. He’s explosive and energized as a mover, with a full route tree, vertical splicing, steely ball tracking, and dynamic RAC chops.


Focus drops were an issue in 2024, but he’s even cleaned that up, making his profile one of the most well-rounded in the upcoming group. He’ll be an older rookie, but he compensates by posing as an immediate starter with inside-outside versatility.

110) Cincinnati Bengals

Aiden Fisher, LB | Indiana

Aiden Fisher has good baseline burst, quickness, and fluidity, but what makes him different is his instant reactive quickness, pre-snap and post-snap processing, gap aggression and take-on physicality, well-versed coverage ability, and blitzing versatility.

Fisher’s football IQ pits him against the smartest defenders in the class, and he attacks both phases with a technically-sound voracity that underscores his projection.

Capable of playing a even-front MIKE or odd-front ILB role, Fisher’s ceiling is slightly capped by non-elite tools, but he still has the makings of a quality starter.

111) Denver Broncos

Kaleb Elarms-Orr, TCU | LB

At 6’2″, 234 pounds, Kaleb Elarms-Orr has good size and lean mass, to package with blistering 4.47 speed and full-field range. On top of his explosive athleticism and long speed, Elarms-Orr also brings excellent baseline urgency and physicality, as well as power at contact crashing into gaps.

He can be over-aggressive on misdirections at times, and his processing and reactions can be a tick faster overall, but he has improved that part of his game since 2023. He checks the boxes as a gap attacker, he’s an ultra-competent blitz threat with impressive pass-rush efficiency.

112) Dallas Cowboys

Keith Abney II, Arizona State | CB

Keith Abney II doesn’t quite have elite burst or long speed, but he’s more than explosive enough, and he’s extremely fluid decelerating and redirecting overtop routes, with a sharp competitive focus and quick processing capacity that enables him to play passes with precision.

Abney can work in press-man with his hyper-disciplined mirror-motor, as well as pedal, plant, and drive with efficiency in off-man and zone, and he’s unusually consistent as a tackler for his size. Abney’s max outcome could be similar to Jaylon Johnson: a non-elite athlete and at times overlooked prospect.

113) Indianapolis Colts

Malik Benson, Oregon | WR

At 6’0″, 189 pounds, with around 32″ arms and 4.37 speed, Malik Benson fits the ideal profile of a vertical-stressing WR3 at the next level, with high-end WR2 upside at his ultimate ceiling.

He still has room to improve his route salesmanship and further expand his route tree past vertical-tracking concepts, but he has the necessary building blocks with his speed, burst, and hip fluidity, and he reliably makes plays at the catch point with smooth body control and steely focus.

114) Dallas Cowboys

Dametrious Crownover, Texas A&M | OT

At 6’7″, 319 pounds, with over 35″ arms, Dametrious Crownover is truly an overwhelming physical specimen, with the powerful explosion and force potential to plow defenders out of gaps. But beyond his run game utility, he’s visibly grown as a pass protector.

He has a clean pass set, good patience, and strong anchor footwork, and he seems destined to eventually start on the NFL stage. At his size, natural deficiencies in leverage acquisition and knee bend limit Crownover’s situational malleability at times, but he nevertheless presents compelling upside for teams that value superlative size and power at OT.

115) Baltimore Ravens

Jager Burton, Kentucky | OC

Jager Burton played in 51 career games with 47 starts, the final 12 of which came at center in 2025. He earned an invite to the East-West Shrine Bowl where he was a standout, then impressed at the NFL Combine by logging a 4.94 40-yard dash, 1.77 10-yard split, and 9’3″ broad jump at 312 pounds, with 32 1/2″ arms.

Burton’s physical profile hints at his overarching theme as a prospect: He’s relatively well-rounded in most categories, with excellent explosiveness and range, good hip flexibility, acceptable anchor strength, stellar two-phase awareness and angle IQ, synergetic footwork, and methodical hand usage.

116) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Kaleb Proctor, SE Louisiana | DT

At 6’2″, 291 pounds, with 33″ arms, Kaleb Proctor has an ideal blend of natural leverage, lean mass, and proportional length, and he’s near-100th percentile athlete at his size, with a 4.79 40-yard dash, a 1.68 10-yard split, a 33″ vertical, and a 9’5″ broad jump that all prove representative of his hyper-elite physical gifts.

On film, that athleticism is corroborated. Proctor is unnaturally explosive off the snap, twitched-up and agile when working across-face and off-setting blockers, and he has the flexibility to work around blocks while engaging and exerting power.

117) Houston Texans

Mike Washington Jr., Arkansas | RB

At around 6’1″, 225 pounds, Mike Washington Jr. is a big-bodied one-cut back with explosive north-south athleticism, the vision to quickly identify initial lanes, and the pressing IQ to bait defenders out of corridors while keeping speed.


Washington’s size and burst come at the cost of high-end short-area agility and hip fluidity, and he must improve his ball security at the next level. But he’s nonetheless an instinctive runner who knows how to maximize his skill set, and can finish runs with physicality and punishing leg churn.

118) Detroit Lions

Gracen Halton, Oklahoma | DT

At 6’2 1/2″ and 293 pounds, Gracen Halton has a picture-perfect leverage and lean mass profile, and in spite of his middling size and length, he has a strong, long-limbed lower body and elite explosive capacity.

Halton can reset the line, prevent displacement, and penetrate gaps quickly, and while his somewhat stiff high-cut frame impacts his counter flexibility at times, there are bright flashes of pass-rush execution on film, underscoring his impact starter upside as a disruptive 3-tech.

119) Carolina Panthers

Genesis Smith, Arizona | S

Genesis Smith declared as a true junior after registering an interception, 8 pass breakups, and a PFSN Safety Impact score of 84.7 in 2025.

At 6’2″, 204 pounds, Smith has rare range and long-strider speed as a center-fielder and single-high safety, and his playmaking instincts are stellar. But he’s not just a one-trick pony with his center-fielder skills. He can sink, redirect, and manage space in intermediate zones as well, and he’s a rocket reacting and closing on the ball.

As a pure coverage defender, Smith is one of the best safeties in the class with his coverage mobility, route vision, spatial reasoning, and playmaking range.

120) Green Bay Packers

Kendrick Law, Kentucky | WR

At 6’0″, 205 pounds, Kendrick Law is a compact and explosive athlete, whose personal best 100-meter dash time of 10.48 corroborates his long speed.

Combining elite explosion, hip fluidity, bend, long speed, and high-end contact balance, he functions as an uber-dynamic RAC presence with usage versatility. He’s sturdy and composed at the catch point when his number is called, and he has additional upside as a separator with his building blocks.

Right away, Law can serve as a dynamic WR3 in an NFL offense, with RAC and blocking utility, and he has true impact starter and three-level threat upside down the line.

121) Pittsburgh Steelers

Zakee Wheatley, Penn State | S

At almost 6’3″, 201 pounds, Zakee Wheatley is a long and lean defensive back with elite explosive athleticism and impressive propulsive hip sink for his size.

He’s capable of managing space and hovering overtop route concepts in two-high looks, and serves as a high-quality run support presence in the box with his quick processing, closing speed, and sure tackling.

As a playmaker, Wheatley is more consistent working top-down as an interception threat than he is as a deflection producer, and he maxes out in space over longer stretches. But as a split-field strong safety, Wheatley has the size, explosion, processing, half-field range, and support utility to be a quality starter.

122) Atlanta Falcons

Brian Parker II, Duke, OL

At 6’5″, 309 pounds, Brian Parker II has a densely-built frame with impressive overall mass and good proportions.

While he’s not close to the athlete that Graham Barton is, Parker still has enough functional athleticism to get out of his stance, reach landmarks, and swivel, and he can punish opponents with overwhelming rotational torque and driving power at the point.

At the very least, he’s a five-position flex lineman who provides immediate depth. At his best, he’s a long-term starter at center or guard.

123) Los Angeles Chargers

Will Lee III, Texas A&M | CB

At 6’1″, with arms near 32″ long, Will Lee III’s disruptive radius is a definite strength, and at his size, he’s quick-firing and surprisingly fluid, with venerable short-area twitch, reactive athleticism, and coil on redirections.

There’s still room for Lee to keep refining his technique, particularly with his footwork and positioning in press and on his pedal. And without elite long-track explosiveness and vertical speed, Lee’s technical margin for error is somewhat slimmer.

Nevertheless, he’s the kind of size-adjusted mover and competitor who has lockdown potential with his fluidity, fast recalibration, and competitive zeal.

124) Jacksonville Jaguars

Emmett Johnson, Nebraska | RB

Emmett Johnson was one of the breakout stars of the 2025 regular season. A lean but well-leveraged creator at 5’11”, 200 pounds, Johnson sets himself apart with his blistering foot speed, cutting flexibility, 360-degree vision and spatial feel, and explosiveness out of cuts.

He doesn’t have the mass to churn through contact and break tackles consistently, but his constant leg action enables him to keep his balance through crowds, and he’s an expert at managing space, pressing, manipulating defenders, and capitalizing with his hyper-elite creative profile.

On top of it all, he’s a competent receiving presence, too. Johnson is a future starter, with immediate spark-plug utility.

125) Buffalo Bills

Jalen Farmer, Kentucky | OG

At 6’5″, 317 pounds, Jalen Farmer has excellent lean mass, a thick and strong lower body, and good proportional length.

With his initial explosion, mass, length, and mean mauler mentality, he can slab interior defenders off the line, as well as torque through and seal off gaps with his core strength. And in pass protection, he has a naturally strong anchor and above-average leverage acquisition skills.

His game needs more refinement before he can reach his ceiling, but that ceiling is a quality starter.

126) Buffalo Bills

Elijah Sarratt, Indiana | WR

At 6’2″, 209 pounds, Elijah Sarratt fits a mold of WR that has been polarizing time and time again on the NFL Draft circuit.

He’s not the most explosive, nor does he have seam-stretching speed, but he has the necessary foot speed, sink, and tempo IQ to separate independently, and at the catch point, he’s a high-level convertor and a true late-hands master with extraordinary composure, timing sense, and body control.

That toughness and play strength translates in the RAC phase as well, and as a blocker, where Sarratt brings consistent effort and plays smart.

127) San Francisco 49ers

Delby Lemieux, Dartmouth | OL

Delby Lemieux is an elite athlete at the position, with high-level explosiveness, range in space, and corrective quickness when recalibrating his base.

Just as important, however, is Lemieux’s flexibility. Despite being just 305 pounds, his torso flexibility and free anchor swivel aids in power absorption and leveraging, his hip fluidity enables him to adjust his base alignment and transition freely on recovery, and he’s ultra-consistent at retaining leg action and using effervescent leg churn to maximize his lower-body power output and drive in the run game.

128) New York Jets

Kyle Louis, Pittsburgh | LB

At around 6’0″, 224 pounds, with 32″ arms, Kyle Louis fits an incredibly unique player mold that blends the line between linebacker and defensive back.

At Pitt, he excelled as an overhang LB and hybrid big-nickel, distinguishing himself with his explosive, energized athleticism, range in pursuit, natural coverage feel and depth discipline, instant reactive quickness, and voracity on conversion.

His lighter frame does correlate with lesser play strength and point-of-attack power, and he can be more consistent with his breakdown angles as a tackler. Nevertheless, as a big-nickel and dime LB, Louis presents quality starter upside, with an elite coverage profile and vast usage versatility on the attack.

129) Chicago Bears

Nick Barrett, South Carolina | DT

At 6’3″, 312 pounds, with 33 3/8″ arms and 10″ hands, Nick Barrett is an imposing, thickly-built interior defender with high hips and modest hip stiffness, but also the combined linear explosion and heavy hands to present some measured utility as a pass-rushing threat.

He has the elite motor and the functional first-step to provide measured juice as a pass-rusher, but his prime function in an NFL rotation will be as a tree stump on early downs, with the explosive hands and combative disposition to control interior gaps early and muddy opposing looks.

130) Miami Dolphins

Joshua Josephs, Tennessee | EDGE

Joshua Josephs is one of the more polarizing EDGE prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft. At around 6’3″, 234 pounds, Josephs is underweight, and he’ll need to add more mass at the next level.

Nevertheless, he’s able to contend in run defense and stack blocks with his over-34″ arms, and he also has a great feel for acquiring leverage and loading his base. Josephs’ high floor in run defense defies expectation, and his pass-rushing framework is theoretically sound.

Josephs is explosive, agile, and fluid at his size, with a clear understanding of upper-lower synergy, timing, and precision working the arc.

131) Los Angeles Chargers

Keyshaun Elliott, Arizona State | LB

At around 6’2″, 231 pounds, with 4.58 speed, Keyshaun Elliott is well-built and rangy tracking plays laterally, and he’s one of the best natural processors in the class, with elite processing, vision, and reaction-to-stimulus when encountering angle fluctuations.

There are elements of Elliott’s game that still demand improvement. An 18% missed tackle rate from 2025 is extremely concerning, and points to a length limitation as well as issues breaking down and maintaining tackling angles in pursuit.

Additionally, while Elliott has good coverage mobility and zone feel, his ball tracking and blind spot IQ leaves more to be desired. At 231 pounds, adding more mass to his frame will also be imperative. Having said all this, Elliott has the athletic and intangible qualities to be a potential Day 3 gem.

132) New Orleans Saints

Ephesians Prysock, Washington | CB

At 6’3″, 196 pounds, with over 33″ arms, Ephesians Prysock has a create-a-player mix of speed, quickness, fluidity, and length.

He’s flashed the ability to play inside and out, he processes well in space, and he can attack blocks with his length. Prysock’s floor as a starter is lower than average, but his scheme-versatile ceiling is compelling if he can tighten down his technique in contact and catch-point situations.

133) San Francisco 49ers

Louis Moore, Indiana | S

At around 5’11”, 191 pounds, Louis Moore is close to average size, with a below-average length profile, but he compensates with fluid athleticism, brisk closing speed, and an extremely calm, composed, and calculated intelligence that defines his game.

He’s one of the best in the class at managing positioning in zone, he reacts instantly to route breaks, and while his best plays come in space, he isn’t afraid to be physical at contact, either. Bearing similarity to Julian Love, Moore is an older prospect, but has impact starter upside as a versatile split-field and single-high safety.

134) Las Vegas Raiders

Rene Konga, Louisville | DT

At around 6’4″, 298 pounds, with over 33″ arms, Rene Konga has an impressively-built frame with good natural leverage, lean mass, and proportional length, and he also boasts rare athleticism.

At his pro day, he ran a 4.78 40-yard dash with a 1.63 10-yard split, and put up a 37″ vertical and 10’2″ broad jump. That inhuman explosiveness shows up on film, and it enables Konga not only to teleport across gap alignments and penetrate upfield, but also to siphon elite levels of raw power from his lower body and reset the contact point.

135) Indianapolis Colts

George Gumbs Jr., Florida | EDGE

At 6’4″, 245 pounds, with near-34″ arms, George Gumbs Jr. is long and lean with impressive dimensions, and he has high-end explosive athleticism, as corroborated by a 41″ vertical jump.

Gumb’s searing explosiveness, length, and lean mass combine to afford him venerable raw power capacity, and for a taller, longer EDGE, he has very good leverage acquisition skills and base engagement.

He excels at aligning his lower body and fully engaging with his length to set the edge and stack blocks in run defense, and when properly applied, his power profile and lower-body drive can generate push in the pass-rush phase.

136) New Orleans Saints

Kage Casey, Boise State | OG

At 6’6″, 310 pounds, with arms under 33″ long, Kage Casey is widely expected to transition inside to guard at the NFL level.

His wealth of experience at tackle has both reinforced his positional versatility and iron-forged his competence on an island, but his middling arm length, in tandem with a non-elite athletic profile and slight inconsistencies with pad level management and hand usage, has fueled talks of a position shift.

That said, at guard, Casey’s combination of baseline functional athleticism, hand power, anchor strength, steady footwork, hip flexibility, and finishing physicality would translate well.

137) Dallas Cowboys

Bryce Boettcher, Oregon | LB

At around 6’1″, 233 pounds, with sub-31″ arms, Bryce Boettcher has below-average size, and lacks quantifiably elite athleticism. Still, he has solid compact mass for his frame, as well as the requisite explosiveness, quickness, and range to manage to correct his positioning and chase at the second level.

In spite of his size, he’s incredibly physical and is willing to proactively engage downhill into contact, he’s a stellar processor with good pre-snap and post-snap recognition, and he’s a competent zone coverage defender with the ball tracking one would expect from a player with a baseball background.

138) Miami Dolphins

Travis Burke, Memphis | OT

Travis Burke’s 6’9″ size alone is menacing, but the Tigers product also takes it upon himself to menace opponents with ruthless point-of-attack physicality, finishing torque, and mauling resolve late in reps.

Burke relishes the physicality of the position, and routinely buries rushers and edge-setters when they give up leverage. He’s a true tone-setter and a natural obstructor, who also flashes solid pass sets for his size, as well as solid stunt and blitz awareness.

139) San Francisco 49ers

Matthew Hibner, SMU | TE

At 6’4″, 251 pounds, with 32 3/8″ arms, Matthew Hibner has decent size to pair with excellent functional athleticism. On film, he appears as a fluid and explosive mover, and his 4.57 40-yard dash and 37″ vertical corroborate this.

Even more beneficial for Hibner was his Senior Bowl showing. He was arguably the best TE in Mobile, showing off smooth vertical stemming ability, route running nuance, body control, and proactive hands. Hibner is a TE prospect who quietly checks almost all the boxes.

140) New York Jets

Jonah Coleman, Washington | LB

Jonah Coleman’s efficiency dipped a bit in 2025, but overall, he was an incredibly productive rusher across his four collegiate seasons. He totaled over 3,000 career yards and 34 touchdowns on the ground, and in 2025, he achieved a career-high 15 rushing scores, while also catching 31 passes for 354 yards and two scores.

At around 5’9″, 229 pounds, Coleman is a compact, hyper-dense, and well-leveraged runner with energized foot speed and angle recalibration as a setup operator. He’s not overly explosive, nor does he have a dangerous top gear in space, but he compensates with his size-adjusted quickness, cutting flexibility, vision, and spatial IQ, and he can work through contact with his engagement balance and physicality.

Round 5

141) Houston Texans
Kendal Daniels, Oklahoma | LB

142) Tennessee Titans
Febechi Nwaiwu, Oklahoma | OL

143) Arizona Cardinals
DeMonte Capehart, Clemson | DT

144) Chicago Bears
Anthony Lucas, USC | EDGE

145) Los Angeles Chargers
Jordan van den Berg, Georgia Tech | DT

146) Cleveland Browns
Cole Payton, North Dakota State | QB

147) Washington Commanders
Conner Lew, Auburn | OC

148) Cleveland Browns
Deontae Lawson, Alabama | LB

149) Cleveland Browns
Keionte Scott, Miami (FL) | DB

150) New Orleans Saints
Dalton Johnson, Arizona | S

151) Miami Dolphins
Michael Taaffe, Texas | S

152) Cleveland Browns
Dae’Quan Wright, Ole Miss | TE

153) Green Bay Packers
Drew Shelton, Penn State | OL

154) Baltimore Ravens
Aaron Hall, Duke | DT

155) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Jermod McCoy, Tennessee | CB

156) Indianapolis Colts
Deven Eastern, Minnesota | DT

157) Detroit Lions
Jadon Canady, Oregon | DB

158) Carolina Panthers
Joe Royer, Cincinnati | TE

159) Minnesota Vikings
Malik Muhammad, Texas | CB

160) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Dallen Bentley, Utah | TE

161) Pittsburgh Steelers
Jimmy Rolder, Michigan | LB

162) Baltimore Ravens
Devin Moore, Florida | CB

163) Minnesota Vikings
Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest | RB

164) Jacksonville Jaguars
Darrell Jackson Jr., Florida State | DT

165) Tennessee Titans
Seth McGowan, Kentucky | RB

166) Jacksonville Jaguars
Kevin Coleman Jr., Missouri | WR

167) Buffalo Bills
Harold Perkins Jr., LSU | LB

168) Buffalo Bills
Kaytron Allen, Penn State | RB

169) Kansas City Chiefs
Jack Endries, Texas | TE

170) Denver Broncos
Hezekiah Masses, California | CB

171) New England Patriots
Deion Burks, Oklahoma | WR

172) New Orleans Saints
Mason Reiger, Wisconsin | EDGE

173) Baltimore Ravens
VJ Payne, Kansas State | S

174) Baltimore Ravens
Jack Kelly, BYU | LB

175) Las Vegas Raiders
Chandler Rivers, Duke | Oklahoma

176) Kansas City Chiefs
Diego Pounds, Ole Miss | OT

177) Miami Dolphins
Andre Fuller, Toledo | CB

178) Philadelphia Eagles
Cole Wisniewski, Texas Tech | S

179) San Francisco 49ers
Garrett Nussmeier, LSU | QB

180) Miami Dolphins
Jayden Loving, Wake Forest | DT

181) Detroit Lions
Brenen Thompson, Mississippi State | WR

Round 6

182) Denver Broncos
Chip Trayanum, Toledo | RB

183) Arizona Cardinals
JC Davis, Illinois | OL

184) Tennessee Titans
Thaddeus Dixon, North Carolina | CB

185) Las Vegas Raiders
Riley Nowakowski, Indiana | TE/FB

186) New York Giants
DeShon Singleton, Nebraska | S

187) Washington Commanders
Wydett Williams Jr., Ole Miss | S

188) Seattle Seahawks
Beau Stephens, Iowa | OG

189) Cincinnati Bengals
Tanner Koziol, Houston | TE

190) New Orleans Saints
Eli Heidenreich, Navy | WR/RB

191) New England Patriots
Kapena Gushiken, Ole Miss | S

192) New York Giants
Xavian Sorey Jr., Arkansas | LB

193) New York Giants
Nicholas Singleton, Penn State | RB

194) Tennessee Titans
Landon Robinson, Navy | DT

195) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Carver Willis, Washington | OL

196) Carolina Panthers
Collin Wright, Stanford | CB

197) Philadelphia Eagles
Charles Demmings, Stephen F. Austin | CB

198) New England Patriots
Taurean York, Texas A&M | LB

199) Cincinnati Bengals
Parker Brailsford, Alabama | OC

200) Carolina Panthers
Matt Gulbin, OL, Indiana

201) Green Bay Packers
Karson Sharar, Iowa | LB

202) Los Angeles Chargers
Isaiah World, Oregon | OL

203) Jacksonville Jaguars
Jackson Kuwatch, Miami (OH)

204) Los Angeles Chargers
Cyrus Allen, Cincinnati

205) Detroit Lions
Billy Schrauth, Notre Dame | OG

206) Cleveland Browns
Caden Barnett, Wyoming | OG

207) Los Angeles Rams
Lewis Bond, Boston College | WR

208) Las Vegas Raiders
Roman Hemby, Indiana | RB

209) Washington Commanders
Adam Randall, Clemson | RB

210) Kansas City Chiefs
Lander Barton, Utah | LB

211) Baltimore Ravens
Taylen Green, Arkansas | QB

212) New England Patriots
Bryson Eason, Tennessee | DT

213) Detroit Lions
John Michael Gyllenborg, Wyoming | TE

214) Indianapolis Colts
Aamil Wagner, Notre Dame | OT

215) Atlanta Falcons
Uar Bernard, Nigeria (IPP) | DT

216) Seattle Seahawks
Nadame Tucker, Western Michigan | EDGE

Round 7

217) Arizona Cardinals
LT Overton, Alabama | DL

218) Dallas Cowboys
Josh Cameron, Baylor | WR

219) Las Vegas Raiders
Vinny Anthony II, Duke | WR

220) Buffalo Bills
Dontay Corleone, Cincinnati | DT

221) Cincinnati Bengals
Zane Durant, Penn State | DT

222) Detroit Lions
Cade Klubnik, Clemson | QB

223) Washington Commanders
Cian Slone, NC State | EDGE

224) Pittsburgh Steelers
Keyshawn James-Newby, New Mexico | EDGE

225) Tennessee Titans
Carsen Ryan, BYU | TE

226) Cincinnati Bengals
Jeff Caldwell, Cincinnati | WR

227) Miami Dolphins
Josiah Green, Duke | DT

228) New York Jets
James Brockermeyer, Miami (FL) | OC

229) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Joe Fagnano, UConn | QB

230) Pittsburgh Steelers
DJ Rogers, TCU | TE

231) Atlanta Falcons
Khordae Sydnor, Vanderbilt | EDGE

232) Los Angeles Rams
Justin Jefferson, Alabama | LB

233) Jacksonville Jaguars
Wesley Williams, Duke | EDGE

234) Minnesota Vikings
Max Llewellyn, Iowa | EDGE

235) Minnesota Vikings
Devan Boykin, Indiana | DB

236) Green Bay Packers
Toriano Pride Jr., Missouri | CB

237) Indianapolis Colts
Jaden Dugger, Louisiana | LB

238) Miami Dolphins
Jack Strand, MSU Moorhead | QB

239) Chicago Bears
Anterio Thompson, Washington | DT

240) Jacksonville Jaguars
Luke Altmyer, Illinois | QB

241) Chicago Bears
Tristan Leigh, Clemson | OT

242) New York Jets
Rayshaun Benny, Michigan | DT

243) Houston Texans
Jordan Hudson, SMU | WR

244) Philadelphia Eagles
Trey Moore, Texas | EDGE

245) Jacksonville Jaguars
Brent Austin, California | CB

246) Denver Broncos
Bishop Fitzgerald, USC | S

247) New England Patriots
TJ Hall, Iowa | CB

248) Cleveland Browns
Michael Heldman, Central Michigan | EDGE

249) Pittsburgh Steelers
James Thompson Jr., Illinois | DT

250) Baltimore Ravens
Michael Trigg, Baylor | TE

251) Los Angeles Rams
Devon Marshall, NC State | CB

252) Los Angeles Rams
Alex Wollschlaeger, Kentucky | OT

253) Baltimore Ravens
Max Tomczak, Youngstown State | WR

254) Indianapolis Colts
Caleb Offord, Kennesaw State | CB

255) Green Bay Packers
Zach Durfee, Washington | EDGE

256) Denver Broncos
Eric Rivers, Georgia Tech | WR

257) Denver Broncos
Tim Keenan III, Alabama | DT

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