The 2026 NFL Draft is just over two months away, and on the heels of the All-Star circuit, it’s time for another mock draft. Fernando Mendoza has emerged as the clear favorite to go No. 1 overall, but beyond that point, the rest of the draft board feels wide open.
1) Las Vegas Raiders
Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana
Fernando Mendoza won the Heisman. He helped lead the Indiana Hoosiers to their first Big Ten Championship win since 1967 and their first National Championship in school history. He nearly led the nation with an incredible PFSN QB Impact score of 93.2 and a blue-chip draft evaluation grade.
The Raiders have other needs as well, but when they can get this caliber of QB prospect without giving up additional capital, they need to take advantage of the opportunity. Failing to do so could bring the Raiders back to the QB purgatory they’ve struggled to avoid.
Mendoza is 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. And time and time again in 2025, when his clutch gene needed to show up in high-pressure moments, it did.
The Raiders have enough assets to begin building around Mendoza, and ultimately, he’s a culture-setter who’s too dangerous for Las Vegas to pass on.
2) New York Jets
Rueben Bain Jr., EDGE, Miami (FL)
Rueben Bain Jr.’s journey to the 2026 NFL Draft as a prospect has already been a tumultuous one. He started the year incredibly strong, then fell off enough in production to raise concern about his arm length.
Then, just as quickly, he quelled those concerns with a truly dominant CFB Playoff stretch, notching five sacks and eight tackles for loss over that four-game span.
At 6’3″, 275 pounds, Bain is an incredibly rare player type for his position. He’s best operating from wider alignments as a pass-rusher, but he has hyper-elite hand power and strength, and he can just as soon encumber double-teams from 4i as he can obliterate tackles’ balance with long-arms and clubs.
For the Jets, he provides the game-wrecking upside, as well as the NFL-translatable play strength and power they’ve been missing too long on the edge.
3) Cleveland Browns (via ARI)
Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State
Projected trade: Browns receive No. 3 pick, No. 65 pick ; Cardinals receive No. 6 pick, No. 39 pick, No. 70 pick
In a gutsy trade-up, the Browns maneuver to select local product Carnell Tate. In his three years at Baltimore, new Browns head coach Todd Monken never had a true WR1. He’s intent to change that quickly in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft.
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.
As a RAC threat, Tate won’t give you as much as Tyson, Lemon, or Concepcion, but in the most essential phases of WR play, separation and catch-point conversion, he’s as good as any prospect over the past five cycles, and beyond that undaunted universal utility, he has the speed, stemming IQ, and body control to take the top off just like George Pickens.
4) Tennessee Titans
David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech
No pass-rusher terrorized the opposition more than David Bailey in 2025. The Stanford transfer emerged as a devastating, disruptive force at Texas Tech, racking up 14.5 sacks, 19.5 TFLs, and three forced fumbles, earning All-American honors in the process.
At around 6’3″, 250 pounds, with electrified short-area quickness, lethal arc-running speed and burst, searing bend, and the proportional length to drive incredible power, Bailey fills one of Tennessee’s most pressing needs in the early days of the Robert Saleh era.
Bailey will need to cut down on lapses in discipline after the whistle, and his run defense can still be more consistent, but on the rush, he combines an overwhelming physical skill set with unhinged tenacity, angle IQ, and a rush move arsenal that keeps OTs guessing.
5) New York Giants
Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State
Medical questions may mar Jordyn Tyson’s evaluation down the stretch, and that’s not necessarily ideal for a Giants team with a careful eye on Malik Nabers’ recovery.
Still, as long as his health checks out, Tyson is a WR prospect worthy of top-end capital, especially for a Giants offense that needs more support and playmaking firepower for 2025 first-round pick Jaxson Dart.
A movement-Z with rapid releases, zone-splicing feel, elite catch-point playmaking, and dynamic RAC ability, Tyson fits the three-level threat framework to perfection, and he gives New York the two-man tug-of-war effect they’ve always needed at WR.
6) Arizona Cardinals (via CLE)
Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami (FL)
In a stronger QB class, the Cardinals and Mike LaFleur might’ve addressed the most important position here. But with no clear options worthy of top-ten capital, Arizona’s best course of action is to strengthen a roster that remains addled with middling talent and depth deficiencies, specifically on the offensive line.
Francis Mauigoa, a former five-star recruit, was one of Miami’s stars in the CFB Playoffs, but not for his flashy plays. Instead, Mauigoa earned national respect from scouts and onlookers alike for his consistently steady, balanced play.
That steadiness will be invaluable for Arizona at right tackle, or at guard if Mauigoa eventually shifts inside. But despite his lack of arm length, he has the athleticism, sturdy center of gravity, patience, timing, and anchor strength to stick outside.
7) Washington Commanders
Arvell Reese, LB/EDGE, Ohio State
Arvell Reese is still very much 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. That’s upside the Commanders need to invest in if he’s there at the No. 7 overall pick.
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.
8) New Orleans Saints
Spencer Fano, OL, Utah
This 2026 NFL Mock Draft put the Saints in a tough spot. All three of the top EDGE prospects were off the board, as were Tyson and Tate at WR. New Orleans could’ve gone with Makai Lemon or Caleb Downs, but with Tyler Shough’s development in the balance, I decided to address the interior line.
The 6’6″, 302-pound Spencer Fano has the tools to stick at tackle in the NFL, but for New Orleans, he’d be of particular value inside with his S-tier athleticism, alien-size adjusted quickness, knee bend, crisp and efficient hands, and dominant run-game power.
Of course, the Saints aren’t limited to Fano at guard. They could keep Fano at tackle and shift Taliese Fuaga inside. This pick simply gives the Saints flexibility and raises their floor and ceiling across the board on the offensive front.
9) Kansas City Chiefs
Caleb Banks, DT, Florida
Just how high can Caleb Banks go in the 2026 NFL Draft? That’s the golden question this year. He has a medical history to vet, he doesn’t have a large sample size of production, and his pad level can be inconsistent. But at the end of the day, pit him against other noteworthy prospects, and his superlative physical tools make the difference.
At the Senior Bowl, Banks eviscerated ill-suited athletes in 1-on-1s with his hyper-elite explosiveness, off-setting agility and twitch, and forceful hand power at 6’6″, 335 pounds, with 35″ arms.
Banks is the rare elite-sized threat who can be used all across the formation, and in Kansas City, he might function better from 3-tech and outside, where he’ll have longer runways to acquire leverage and gear up. And in the long term, he provides insurance for Chris Jones, who turns 32 this offseason.
10) Cincinnati Bengals
Caleb Downs, DB, Ohio State
The Bengals just need defense. Whichever position comes first is anyone’s guess, and it ultimately depends on how the board falls in each 2026 NFL Mock Draft. In this mock, DT talent is still available, but on my rankings, no one has a higher grade than safety Caleb Downs.
Caleb Downs is the consummate “glue guy”, with an unfathomably pro-ready skill set that features high-end coverage mobility, truly uncommon football intelligence, route recognition, role versatility, ball skills, targeted physicality, and flawless tackle finishing.
For Cincinnati, he can immediately rotate back into two-high and single-high looks, as well as play off-man nickel and roam in the box, and his presence as an “iron curtain” safety blanket allows every other defensive back to play more freely, with more confidence.
11) Miami Dolphins
Makai Lemon, WR, USC
Makai Lemon scored a near-elite 85.1 PFSN WR Impact Score in 2025, hinging his success on energized short-area motion, tremendous feel for stem and catch-point leverage, timing, gravity-defying body control, and undaunted contact balance after the catch.
Lemon won’t blow the doors off in the 40-yard dash, and his lacking length and size can impact his success against press and early physicality, but as a power-slot alongside Jaylen Waddle, he can tear through opposing defenses as a modern-age Derrick Mason.
12) Dallas Cowboys
Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State
The Dallas Cowboys are in a position where they can feasibly select the best defensive player available in the 2026 NFL Draft, outside of defensive tackle. In this 2026 NFL Mock Draft and the last one, that player has been Sonny Styles: My 2nd overall prospect.
Positional value will be a talking point with Styles, but his film is one of the best in the class. 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.
13) Los Angeles Rams
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. The medical check at the NFL Combine is the biggest remaining hurdle for McCoy, but if he passes that test, there’s no reason he can’t go top-15.
McCoy distinguishes himself as a playmaker and turnover threat at the catch, but his coverage mobility is truly special. In particular, his acute angle freedom, 270-degree hip sink, and transition efficiency overtop breaks echo the prime Darius Slay.
14) Baltimore Ravens
Olaivavega Ioane, OG, Penn State
This is a touch high for Olaivavega Ioane, who currently ranks as my 24th overall prospect. Still, he carries a clear first-round grade, and allows Baltimore to aggressively attack one of their most pressing deficiencies from the 2025 season: The guard spot.
Baltimore’s 2025 tape is rife with poor leverage, poor power drive, and a simple lack of consistency inside, and it percolated throughout the offense. That all changes with Ioane, who provides rock-solid anchor strength, hand power, balance, and technical composure at 6’4″, 330 pounds, and can also block on the move in the run game.
15) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Peter Woods, DL, Clemson
Ideally, the Buccaneers’ first-round pick would be either a linebacker like Styles or an edge rusher. Styles is off the board, and while there are EDGE prospects available, they either come with age and medical red flags or a lack of pass-rush utility that doesn’t fit Tampa Bay’s timeline.
Thus, I went a little unorthodox and selected Peter Woods. While Woods played at 310 pounds in 2025, he appeared more fluid and agile when trimmed down in 2024. For Tampa Bay, the best course might be to get him back below 300 pounds and let him feast as an alignment-versatile game-wrecker from 3-tech to 7-tech.
16) New York Jets
Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame
This isn’t going to be a popular pick for Jets fans, but hear me out: New York has two picks near the top of Round 2 to compensate, and the board didn’t fall very well at WR or DT here. Ty Simpson is a slight reach, and he likely isn’t a Frank Reich QB. Breece Hall is a free agent, and the offensive line is ready for run-game production right now.
We’ll make up for it at WR and DT soon, but at this pick, the Jets go best-player-available and take Jeremiyah Love. With his combined explosiveness, quickness, vertical speed, creative IQ, and terse physicality, he brings shades of Ahman Green.
17) Detroit Lions
Keldric Faulk, EDGE, Auburn
Keldric Faulk is one of the most polarizing prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft. At 6’6″, 285 pounds, he truly is a rare physical specimen, with unique explosive athleticism and hip flexibility for his size, as well as the expected raw power. But his stagnation in pass-rush is undeniably concerning.
For the Lions, who need elite raw talent before anything else across from Aidan Hutchinson, Faulk is a worthwhile investment at this stage. He’s a high-level run defender right out of the gate, with actionable alignment versatility, and the flashes of linear and rotational power as a pass-rusher are tantalizing.
18) Minnesota Vikings
Kayden McDonald, DT, Ohio State
Defensive tackle is an under-the-radar need for the Vikings. The signings of veterans Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave sputtered to uninspiring results in 2025, and while Jalen Redmond’s emergence has been a godsend, Minnesota needs someone to be a force multiplier at the fulcrum.
In the 2026 NFL Draft, Kayden McDonald is the best fit. The Vikings’ 2025 first-round pick Donovan Jackson will be able to vouch for McDonald, having played across from him in practices at Ohio State. At 6’3″, 326 pounds, McDonald has the leveraging, linear power, shedding strength, and relentless urgency to make an immediate impact.
19) Carolina Panthers
Akheem Mesidor, EDGE, Miami (FL)
Akheem Mesidor will be a 25-year-old rookie, but the Panthers can’t let ageism get in the way of adding a much-needed pass-rushing boost to their EDGE rotation. Mesidor is arguably the most refined rusher in the class, with a ready-made NFL disruption profile.
At 6’3″, 270 pounds, Mesidor has a unique volume of lean mass to pair with natural leverage, wicked explosion, and counter-attuning agility, and his rush pallet is incredibly diverse. He can drive raw power from two-point stances, stack forklift-swims, execute swipe-rips, and run down QBs with his speed and motor.
20) Dallas Cowboys
Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina
Part of this pick is about avoiding repetition; I gave Dallas Styles and Mansoor Delane in my previous mock. Delane has the higher grade on my board, but Brandon Cisse also has the best athletic marks of any CB in the 2026 NFL Draft. What if Dallas values that more?
Cisse most stands to improve as a catch-point playmaker and a targeted physicality merchant in press, and his technique is still developing, but his propulsive explosion, sink, and reactive twitch are out-of-this-world. His quick processing underlies his developmental potential, and he’s an extremely willing participant in run support.
21) Pittsburgh Steelers
Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama
There was a very brief stretch in 2025 where Simpson was genuinely throwing his hat into the QB1 conversation. But his accuracy and down-to-down consistency declined down the stretch, and while he rebounded in a CFB Playoff win against Oklahoma, the Indiana defense exposed his flaws once again, on a national stage.
Simpson still has a solid QBi of 85.3, and the strongest elements of his profile remain evident. He’s a plus processor with good pre-snap command and 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 solid processing, but also 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 with an experienced coach, Mike McCarthy, setting a stable floor. But the question with Simpson is the ceiling, and he’ll have to continually answer to it.
22) Seattle Seahawks (via LAC)
Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU
Projected trade: Seahawks receive No. 22 pick, No. 123 pick; Chargers receive No. 32 pick, No. 96 pick, 2027 second-round pick, 2027 third-round pick
Seeing that Mansoor Delane was falling down the board in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, the Seahawks decided to take advantage and make an aggressive trade up. The move costs the Seahawks heavily in 2027 but also locks down a long-term area of turnover on defense.
If there’s any reason Delane falls in the draft, it’s because he’s not quite the same size-adjusted athlete, but he’s an elite technician and a swarming catch-point playmaker, who forces cornered QBs to choose between him, Nick Emmanwori, and Devon Witherspoon.
23) Philadelphia Eagles
Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah
Caleb Lomu slides in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, but his fall ends in an exciting location. The Philadelphia Eagles capitalize on Lomu’s value here, adding him as a potential successor for either Jordan Mailata or Lane Johnson, the latter of whom is approaching twilight faster.
At 6’6″, 304 pounds, Lomu enthralls with his athleticism and overarching flexibility, and those two foundational traits have always underlain his ability as a staunch pass protector. In 2025, however, he showed marked improvement as a run blocker and power driver.
Now that the Eagles have lost Jeff Stoutland, they need to invest in low-risk, high-quality OL talent at the outset to offset developmental uncertainty. Lomu helps with that.
24) Cleveland Browns
Max Iheanachor, OT, Arizona State
If there’s any offensive lineman who’s going to ride the Senior Bowl to first-round capital this cycle, it’s Arizona State’s Max Iheanachor. Iheanachor had a rough first day, but rebounded on Days 2 and 3 with much-improved strike timing, synergy, balance, and finishing power in team drills. He carried that momentum through the game as well.
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At around 6’6″ and 325 pounds, with 34 1/2″ arms, Iheanachor has all of the desired athletic and physical tools, and for an OT who never played in high school, he’s unnaturally refined with his pass set footwork. Iheanachor is trending up fast, and he has all the hallmarks of a potential impact NFL starter.
25) Chicago Bears
Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech
The Bears lay claim to the first “Fridge”, William Perry. So it only makes sense that the second iteration of The Fridge also graces the corridors of Halas Hall: Texas Tech DT Lee Hunter.
A 6’4″, 330-pound monolith with 34″ arms, Hunter backs up his nickname with every ounce of his physical profile, and it rings true: He holds up well against opposing power at 0-tech and 1-tech, and can split double-teams with ease. What’s more, he’s the most dynamic pass-rushing nose tackle in the class, with uncanny agility and initial burst.
The Bears need to reinvest in the defensive line, given that Andrew Billings’ future is unclear. Hunter can not only take the reins from Billings but also provide an upgrade as a three-down defender.
26) Buffalo Bills
KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M
The Bills’ transition under Joe Brady will be successful if they can do one thing on offense: Acquire WRs who can actively separate independently against press coverage. That’s been Buffalo’s worst offensive deficiency, and it’s something KC Concepcion can assist with.
Concepcion is undersized at around 5’11”, 190 pounds, but he’s an uber-explosive and twitched-up pass-catching threat with refined first-level separation skills, sharp stemming and football IQ, and dynamic RAC ability. If he can cut down on occasional focus drops, he has impact starter ability.
27) San Francisco 49ers
Zion Young, EDGE, Missouri
Zion Young was another notable riser from the Senior Bowl. He made a menacing early impression in 1-on-1s and was productive throughout the week. The 6’5″, 262-pound EDGE flashed promise in 2025, but the Senior Bowl put his elite physical talent on display against the best of the best.
Young’s character evaluation will require vetting, as he has a DWI arrest on his record from this past winter. But physically, he has the lean mass, explosion, and length to underscore massive developmental upside, and his motor runs hot in both phases of the game.
28) Houston Texans
Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
Dalton Schultz is past his prime and will be a free agent after the 2026 season. The Texans are picking in a spot where value doesn’t line up particularly well at running back or on the offensive line. Thus, it stands to reason that Kenyon Sadiq is a viable selection here.
At 6’3″, 250 pounds, Sadiq is a bit undersized, but he’s nevertheless an explosive and hyper-dense offensive weapon with great zone-splicing skills, body control at the catch, and dynamic RAC ability, and he provides immediate run-down value as a blocker, too.
29) Los Angeles Rams
Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia
Rob Havenstein remains an impending free agent, and the Rams have reason to get younger and more talented at the tackle position. The NFC West continues to size up in the trenches with each passing year, and the Rams need to stay ahead as NFL MVP Matthew Stafford grows older.
At 6’7″, 315 pounds, with an 84″ wingspan, Monroe Freeling’s pure physical framework is enthralling, and he also brings elite functional athleticism and flexibility. His hand usage is rudimentary in pass protection, but he can cover ground and reach landmarks in the run game, and his finishing power can be too much to handle.
30) Denver Broncos
Omar Cooper Jr., WR, Indiana
Admittedly, Omar Cooper Jr. was a late re-grade for me, as he declared when Senior Bowl preparation was on the forefront. But returning to Cooper’s tape after his declaration, he inspires awe with his raw talent and astronomical upside as a three-level threat.
At 6’0″, 205 pounds, Cooper boasts an elite explosive element, along with jaw-dropping hip fluidity, bend, and angle freedom. His strong 83 WRi reflects his efficient production.
TruMedia breaks it down just as well: In 2025, Cooper logged 0.76 EPA per target, 2.78 yards per route run, a 13.2% catch rate over expectation, and an incredible 2.42 yards of RAC over expectation.
Cooper’s analytics profile is glowing, and his evaluation passes scrutiny at all three levels. He’s a budding separator with bend, stemming IQ, vertical-pressing gravity, and easy deceleration; he’s a clutch and acrobatic catch-point presence, and he’s a deadly RAC weapon. Sean Payton and Bo Nix, meet your skeleton key.
31) New England Patriots
Kadyn Proctor, OT, Alabama
The Patriots were ahead of schedule in 2025, but they need to keep investing in the offensive line. Drake Maye took 15 total sacks through the first three weeks of the NFL Playoffs. The line is young and will grow, but there’s also more work to do.
At this stage, Kadyn Proctor presents optimal value, either as a right tackle or an eventual guard convert. At 6’7″, 366 pounds, he’d benefit greatly from learning behind Morgan Moses, but has the power, latch strength, and technical feel to start early in his career.
32) Los Angeles Chargers (via SEA)
Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson
Don’t worry, Chargers fans. We’ll hit the interior offensive line heavily over the next two rounds, but seeing how the board fell in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, it felt right to go best-player-available and draft for the near-future by adding Avieon Terrell, especially with Donte Jackson’s contract expiring next offseason.
Losing Jesse Minter, the Chargers will need defenders who are schematically versatile and don’t need to be insulated by the structure. That’s Terrell to a tee: A technical savant, elite processor, and stingy two-phase playmaker who can man the boundary or the slot.
Round 2 | 33) New York Jets
Denzel Boston, WR, Washington
At the top of Round 2 in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, the Jets take a WR who has a fringe first-round grade on my board. At 6’4″, 209 pounds, Boston is a fluid zone-beater and a masterful catch-point controller who finally gives Garrett Wilson a quality complement.
34) Arizona Cardinals
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. For Arizona, he profiles as an impact starter and a massive upgrade.
35) Tennessee Titans
Chris Bell, WR, Louisville
Chris Bell’s torn ACL complicates his stock, but in Round 2, he’s a great buy-low add for Cam Ward. At around 6’2″, 227 pounds, he’s an elite explosive RAC threat, an actionable separator on slants and in-breakers, and boasts iron-clad catch-point composure.
36) Las Vegas Raiders
Sam Hecht, OC, Kansas State
Assuming Klint Kubiak is hired as the Raiders’ coach, Sam Hecht will be a very important part of his offensive line rebuild. Hecht has the elite athleticism, flexibility, and angle IQ to thrive in Kubiak’s wide-zone scheme, and he’s steady and balanced in pass protection.
37) New York Giants
Emmanuel Pregnon, OG, Oregon
Emmanuel Pregnon is an explosive linear athlete with excellent proportional length, anchor strength, and knockback power, which he can use to drive run defenders and slab unsuspecting stunters.
38) Houston Texans
Gennings Dunker, OL, Iowa
At 6’5″, 320 pounds, with 34″ arms, Gennings Dunker has the pure measurements of a tackle, but hip stiffness and middling arc range will likely force a move to guard in the pros. For Houston, that’s no issue; his mauling physicality projects perfectly inside.
39) Arizona Cardinals (via CLE)
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-32 prospect on my board, regardless. For Arizona, he brings immediate impact, starter utility, and boundary-nickel flex.
40) Kansas City Chiefs
Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State
At 6’3″, 207 pounds, with 33″ arms, Ted Hurst is the exact kind of size threat and coverage-diverse separator the Chiefs need. He’s smooth, explosive, and quick to sink and retract on breaks, and at the Senior Bowl, he acquitted himself well against press coverage.
41) Cincinnati Bengals
Keionte Scott, DB, Miami (FL)
After adding Downs in Round 1, the Bengals stack the momentum with nickel defender Keionte Scott in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. Scott is older, but he’s a top-20 talent on my board, with elite explosive athleticism, instincts, physicality, and exciting role versatility.
42) New Orleans Saints
T.J. Parker, EDGE, Clemson
T.J. Parker had a very strong first day at the Senior Bowl, before trailing off later in the week. Consistency with effort and execution will be sticking points for Parker, but at this point, he’s a must-have value acquisition with his power profile and raw two-phase upside.
43) Miami Dolphins
Keith Abney II, CB, Arizona State
Keith Abney II may get dinged for his below-average size and non-elite vertical athleticism, but underneath those flaws, he’s an incredibly complete prospect with standard-bearing coverage mobility, plant-and-drive efficiency, reaction speed, and catch-point authority.
44) New York Jets
Christen Miller, DT, Georgia
The Jets need new interior talent that can reset the line in the run game more than anything. Christen Miller fits this mold perfectly with his kettlebell hands, strength, and menacing attack power, and he flashed promise as a pass-rusher late in 2025.
45) Baltimore Ravens
Gracen Halton, DT, Oklahoma
Gracen Halton was excellent at the Senior Bowl, and a return to the tape reveals potential Round 2 talent. At 6’2 1/2″ and 293 pounds with over 34″ arms, Halton has a picture-perfect leverage-length combo to pair with elite explosion, power, and counter quickness.
46) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
CJ Allen, LB, Georgia
Though CJ Allen is undersized, he’s one of the most well-rounded LBs in the 2026 NFL Draft with his explosiveness, range, willing physicality, and route vision working short zones. His coverage outlook isn’t elite, but he’s a stellar three-down presence in spite of this.
47) Indianapolis Colts
Blake Miller, OT, Clemson
With his hyper-elite range and landmark IQ at 6’6″, 315 pounds, Blake Miller gives the Colts an immediate run-game catalyst, and he’s improved his anchor as a pass protector.
48) Atlanta Falcons
Treydan Stukes, CB, Arizona
Treydan Stukes can play the boundary or nickel at a high level. At the very least, he hedges for Billy Bowman Jr.’s uncertain recovery, but across from AJ Terrell, Stukes has impact starter ability with his burst, fluidity, instincts, and two-phase playmaking.
49) Minnesota Vikings
Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, SAF, Toledo
Emmanuel McNeil-Warren is my 41st-ranked prospect and a top safety in the class, who brings uncanny spatial navigation instincts, coverage mobility, and route vision at 6’3″, 209 pounds, along with the expected run support, gravity, and contact physicality.
50) Pittsburgh Steelers (via DET)
Colton Hood, CB, Tennessee
Projected trade: Steelers receive No. 50 pick, No. 155 pick; Lions receive No. 53 pick, No. 99 pick
Colton Hood still needs more consistent discipline, but the Steelers have always been willing to take chances on that type of prospect, and Hood has the athleticism and reactive quickness in both press-man and zone that Pittsburgh will crave.
51) Carolina Panthers
Josiah Trotter, LB, Missouri
Josiah Trotter is relatively limited in coverage, but the 6’2″, 239-pound second-level presence is one of the best support defenders in the class with his explosiveness, quick gap processing, targeted physicality, and reliability at the tackle point.
52) Green Bay Packers
Malik Muhammad, CB, Texas
At 6’0″, 183 pounds, with 32″ arms, vertical speed, and malleable coverage mobility, Malik Muhammad has an extremely enticing profile, and he’s a sharp route reader in zone. Jonathan Gannon will value his ability to play any technique with a physical edge.
53) Detroit Lions (via PIT)
A.J. Haulcy, SAF, LSU
With Kerby Joseph and Brian Branch both returning from major injuries, Detroit can’t play it safe at safety. If Branch gets back to full health, Detroit can move him to nickel again while employing A.J. Haulcy as a split-field bandit and stalwart support presence.
54) Philadelphia Eagles
Chris Johnson, CB, San Diego State
Chris Johnson took his lumps in Mobile, but the 6’0″, 195-pound CB projects better in off-man and zone, where the Eagles would use him most. Working with cushion, Johnson is instinctive, disciplined, quick-firing downhill, and is one of the class’ best disruptors.
55) Los Angeles Chargers
Keylan Rutledge, OG, Georgia Tech
At 6’4″, 330 pounds, with urgent leg drive and the torque and physicality to channel and maximize power exertions, Keylan Rutledge can help the Chargers control the point of attack consistently.
56) Jacksonville Jaguars
Devin Moore, CB, Florida
At 6’3″, 198 pounds, Devin Moore is the unique long-limbed CB who defies expectation with his hip fluidity, reactive coil, and plant-and-drive efficiency in off-man and zone, as well as his matching ability and discipline in press-man.
57) Chicago Bears
Malachi Lawrence, EDGE, UCF
At 6’4″, 247 pounds, with 33 1/2″ arms, Malachi Lawrence combines lean mass, length, explosiveness, twitch, and bend to compile an extremely appealing physical skillset, and the flashes of pass-rushing nuance and counter work are enthralling.
58) San Francisco 49ers
Elijah Sarratt, WR, Indiana
With Jauan Jennings set to hit free agency, Elijah Sarratt can carry the torch as a non-elite athlete who nonetheless compensates with size, expert-level route nuance and catch-point positioning, and holds his own as a blocker.
59) Houston Texans
Mike Washington Jr., RB, Arkansas
Mike Washington Jr. was one of the Senior Bowl’s biggest risers. At 6’1″, 228 pounds, he has an extremely compelling mix of north-south explosiveness, vision, efficient footwork, hip fluidity, physicality, and pass-game value.
60) Buffalo Bills
Darrell Jackson Jr., DT, Florida State
In Jim Leonhard’s scheme, a non-negotiable is having an ultra-imposing, space-eating nose tackle. Darrell Jackson Jr. suffices with his overwhelming power and strength at 6’5″, 328 pounds, with 35″ arms and 11″ clubs for hands.
61) Los Angeles Rams
Dillon Thieneman, SAF, Oregon
With Kam Curl entering free agency, Dillon Thieneman can serve as an upgrade at strong safety alongside Kamren Kinchens, thanks to his versatility, processing, ball skills, and tackling reliability.
62) Denver Broncos
Justin Joly, TE, NC State
Justin Joly showed promise at the Senior Bowl after a productive college career. At 6’3″, 251 pounds, with 33″ arms, he has the natural receiving instincts, separation nuance, and all-encompassing play strength to upgrade Sean Payton’s TE outlook.
63) New England Patriots
Cashius Howell, EDGE, Texas A&M
Mike Vrabel has shown he’s willing to take chances on smaller edge rushers in his scheme, and the 6’2″, 248-pound Cashius Howell has the explosion, bend, arc-running speed, rush intelligence, and motor to prove he belongs.
64) Seattle Seahawks
Emmett Johnson, RB, Nebraska
Emmett Johnson is a creative prodigy at 5’11”, 200 pounds, with sixth-sense peripheral vision, elite pressing IQ, and acute cutting flexibility, who would thrive in the Seahawks’ zone-heavy attack.
Round 3 | 65) Cleveland Browns (via ARI)
Trinidad Chambliss, QB, Ole Miss
Trinidad Chambliss’ eligibility waiver was denied, and while his lawyers will keep fighting, it’s looking increasingly likely that he’ll be part of the 2026 NFL Draft class.
As of now, Chambliss grades out as a Day 2 prospect on my board. His arm is limited, but in the right setting, he has the swift pre-snap processing, accuracy, creative IQ, and athleticism to potentially become a quality starter.
66) Tennessee Titans
Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State
At 6’2″, 192 pounds, with near-33″ arms, Davison Igbinosun has a tantalizing size-speed profile, to go along with exciting coverage versatility, fluid reactive coil, and two-phase playmaking.
67) Las Vegas Raiders
Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois
Gabe Jacas is a motor monster at 6’3″, 260 pounds, with near-33″ arms, whose pass-rush nuance, hand power, natural leverage, and alignment versatility make him a potentially invaluable piece.
68) Philadelphia Eagles
Oscar Delp, TE, Georgia
If the Eagles bring back Dallas Goedert, Oscar Delp can be a high-quality TE2 right away with his RAC athleticism and elite blocking utility, and he has impact starter upside down the line.
69) Houston Texans
Anthony Hill Jr., LB, Texas
Anthony Hill Jr. still needs to improve his consistency as a gap processor and block deconstructor, but his elite athleticism at 6’3″, 238 pounds gives DeMeco Ryans a ball of clay to mold.
70) Arizona Cardinals (via CLE)
Jacob Rodriguez, LB, Texas Tech
At 6’1″, 233 pounds, Jacob Rodriguez is undersized, but the 2025 Lombardi and Nagurski Award winner compensates with high-level functional athleticism, coverage instincts, processing speed, and willingness in pursuit.
71) Washington Commanders
Skyler Bell, WR, UConn
Skyler Bell was a dominant producer in 2025; with 10″ mitts at 5’11”, 187 pounds, he’s a strong-handed pass-catcher with energized, explosive athleticism and high-end separation ability from all alignments.
72) Cincinnati Bengals
Chris McClellan, DT, Missouri
At 6’3″, 315 pounds, with 34″ arms, Chris McClellan has an incredibly unique profile. He’s a high-mass, long-levered interior lineman with the explosiveness to penetrate gaps and supplement power.
73) New Orleans Saints
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. With Shough, he’d be dangerous.
74) Kansas City Chiefs
Kaytron Allen, RB, Penn State
The Chiefs need a new volume back, and Kaytron Allen fits the profile at 5’11”, 220 pounds. Though he’s not overly explosive, he’s instinctive, physical, and flexible, with excellent footwork, balance, and lower-body load.
75) Miami Dolphins
Derrick Moore, EDGE, Michigan
At 6’3 1/2″ and 254 pounds, with over 34″ arms, Derrick Moore has one of the highest ceilings in the class with his hyper-elite explosiveness and power drive on the attack.
76) Pittsburgh Steelers
Germie Bernard, WR, Alabama
Germie Bernard profiles as a high-quality WR2 alongside DK Metcalf with his size, zone-beating bend, burst, and spatial IQ, strong hands, explosive RAC, and blocking ability.
77) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
R Mason Thomas, EDGE, Oklahoma
R Mason Thomas is undeniably undersized, but his hyper-elite burst and bend are lethal for opposing tackles, and he has shown he can convert speed into devastating power.
78) Indianapolis Colts
Domonique Orange, DT, Iowa State
The Colts need to think beyond Grover Stewart at nose tackle. Domonique Orange provides immediate depth, and he can fully succeed Stewart in 2027 when Stewart’s contract expires.
79) Atlanta Falcons
Kevin Coleman Jr., WR, Missouri
The 5’11”, 174-pound Kevin Coleman Jr. was one of the stars of the Senior Bowl. He’s not big, but he gets open better than almost anyone with his quicks and bend, and he defies his size with his steely catch-point instincts.
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
Genesis Smith, SAF, Arizona
Genesis Smith can still improve his consistency in support. Still, with his keen route intelligence, length, fluidity, and playmaking range, he’s an elite turnover threat and coverage disguiser in Anthony Campanile’s scheme.
82) Minnesota Vikings
Connor Lew, OC, Auburn
Provided he returns to full health after his midseason ACL tear, Connor Lew has the athleticism, natural leverage, angle IQ, and clean technique to take the reins from Ryan Kelly.
83) Carolina Panthers
Louis Moore, SAF, Indiana
Louis Moore bears similarity to Seahawks Pro Bowler Julian Love, as a compact-built ball-hawk and diverse zone cover man with actionable click-and-close quickness and physicality in support.
84) Green Bay Packers
Brian Parker II, OC, Duke
The Packers need to steady their center position, and Brian Parker II can get the job done with his stout anchor, stifling core strength, menacing rotational torque, and over-arching awareness.
85) Pittsburgh Steelers
Kamari Ramsey, DB, USC
Kamari Ramsey could file in at nickel with his inherent coverage mobility, while Jalen Ramsey moves back to safety, but the USC product also has split-field utility operating in space.
86) Los Angeles Chargers
Febechi Nwaiwu, OC, Oklahoma
Febechi Nwaiwu is currently my 65th overall player and one of the top centers on my board; at 6’4″, 324 pounds, with near-34″ arms, he’s well-leveraged, powerful, strong on his anchor, and exceedingly intelligent.
87) Miami Dolphins
Isaiah World, OL, Oregon
Isaiah World’s modest hip stiffness and technical deficiencies could dictate a move to guard, but inside, he has the crippling hand power, strength, pulling athleticism, and physicality to thrive.
88) 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.
89) Chicago Bears
Dametrious Crownover, OT, Texas A&M
Standing at 6’7″, 331 pounds, with near-36″ arms, Dametrious Crownover is an overwhelming physical force who flashed a balanced pass set and people-moving power in Mobile, while shifting between the left and right side in team drills.
90) Miami Dolphins
Dallen Bentley, TE, Utah
At 6’3″, 262 pounds, with near-33″ arms, Dallen Bentley is a tank, with ideal play strength at TE to pair with natural route running instincts, fluidity, RAC utility, and blocking value.
91) Buffalo Bills
Jalon Kilgore, DB, South Carolina
Jalon Kilgore trimmed down ahead of the Senior Bowl and thrived in coverage drills. At 6’1″, 211 pounds, with 33 1/4″ arms, he can supersede Taron Johnson as a big-nickel mismatch piece.
92) San Francisco 49ers
Chris Brazzell II, WR, Tennessee
Chris Brazzell II can replace some of the explosive firepower lost with Brandon Aiyuk’s injury, and he’s quietly a very fluid and nuanced separator at a long 6’5″, 200 pounds.
93) Los Angeles Rams
Brenen Thompson, WR, Mississippi State
Brenen Thompson may be undersized at 5’9″, 170 pounds, but he’s a blistering speed threat and an instinctive stem artist who can fill Tutu Atwell’s role to perfection.
94) Denver Broncos
LT Overton, DL, Alabama
At 6’2 3/4″ and 278 pounds, with near-34″ arms, LT Overton has the profile to potentially shift inside, where his explosiveness and well-leveraged power output would project well.
95) New England Patriots
Max Klare, TE, Ohio State
Max Klare gives the Patriots a unique blend of natural three-level receiving instincts and universal blocking utility at the TE position, and can keep ascending with added mass.
96) Los Angeles Chargers (via SEA)
Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati
The Chargers don’t have a long-term starter besides Daiyan Henley. Jake Golday can change that with his range, instincts, and downhill physicality at 6’4″, 240 pounds.
97) Minnesota Vikings
Antonio Williams, WR, Clemson
The Vikings can’t skimp on WR3 with Jordan Addison’s continued off-field issues. Antonio Williams has the route-nuance, quickness, and multi-phase toughness to thrive under Kevin O’Connell.
98) Philadelphia Eagles
Fa’alili Fa’amoe, OG, Wake Forest
At 6’5″, 311 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Fa’alili Fa’amoe was one of the stars of the Shrine Bowl, and he projects well at guard with his heavy-handed power and finishing mentality.
99) Detroit Lions (via PIT)
Matt Gulbin, OC, Michigan State
Matt Gulbin falls under the radar at times, but the 6’4″, 316-pound center profiles as a quality starter at the fulcrum with his anchor strength, lateral mobility, and power.
100) Jacksonville Jaguars
Zachariah Branch, WR, Georgia
Zachariah Branch gives the Jaguars a truly elite return threat, and he has the hyper-elite explosion, twitch, and agility to be weaponized as a designed touch threat on offense.
Round 4
101) Tennessee Titans
Jonah Coleman, RB, Washington
102) Las Vegas Raiders
Julian Neal, CB, Arkansas
103) New York Jets
Cole Payton, QB, North Dakota State
104) Arizona Cardinals
Taylen Green, QB, Arkansas
105) New York Giants
Parker Brailsford, OC, Alabama
106) Houston Texans
Drew Shelton, OL, Penn State
107) Cleveland Browns
Caleb Tiernan, OL, Northwestern
108) Denver Broncos
Taurean York, LB, Texas A&M
109) Kansas City Chiefs
Michael Trigg, TE, Baylor
110) Cincinnati Bengals
Charles Demmings, CB, Stephen F. Austin
111) Miami Dolphins
Garrett Nussmeier, QB, LSU
112) Dallas Cowboys
Dani Dennis-Sutton, EDGE, Penn State
113) Indianapolis Colts
Kendal Daniels, LB, Oklahoma
114) Atlanta Falcons
Deven Eastern, DT, Minnesota
115) Baltimore Ravens
Eli Raridon, TE, Notre Dame
116) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Kaelon Black, RB, Indiana
117) Jacksonville Jaguars
Landon Robinson, DT, Navy
118) Detroit Lions
Jude Bowry, OT, Boston College
119) Carolina Panthers
Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt
120) Green Bay Packers
Tristan Leigh, OL, Clemson
121) Pittsburgh Steelers
Beau Stephens, OG, Iowa
122) Philadelphia Eagles
Anthony Lucas, EDGE, USC
123) Seattle Seahawks (via LAC)
Kage Casey, OL, Boise State
124) Las Vegas Raiders
Tyren Montgomery, WR, John Carroll
125) New England Patriots
Bud Clark, SAF, TCU
126) Buffalo Bills
Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama
127) San Francisco 49ers
Austin Barber, OT, Florida
128) Houston Texans
Zane Durant, DT, Penn State
129) Chicago Bears
Zakee Wheatley, SAF, Penn State
130) Denver Broncos
Kyle Louis, LB/DB, Pittsburgh
131) New England Patriots
Hezekiah Masses, CB, California
132) New Orleans Saints
Will Lee III, CB, Texas A&M
133) San Francisco 49ers
Seth McGowan, RB, Kentucky
134) Las Vegas Raiders
Tyler Onyedim, DT, Texas A&M
135) Pittsburgh Steelers
Nick Barrett, DT, South Carolina
136) New Orleans Saints
Demond Claiborne, RB, Wake Forest
137) Philadelphia Eagles
Michael Taaffe, SAF, Texas
138) San Francisco 49ers
Logan Jones, OC, Iowa
Round 5
139) Cleveland Browns
Harold Perkins Jr., LB, LSU
140) Tennessee Titans
Chandler Rivers, CB, Duke
141) Arizona Cardinals
Lewis Bond, WR, Boston College
142) Tennessee Titans
Nate Boerkircher, TE, Texas A&M
143) New York Giants
Kaleb Elarms-Orr, LB, TCU
144) Cleveland Browns
Jalen Huskey, SAF, Maryland
145) Washington Commanders
VJ Payne, SAF, Kansas State
146) Kansas City Chiefs
Thaddeus Dixon, CB, North Carolina
147) Cleveland Browns
Carver Willis, OL, Washington
148) New Orleans Saints
Josh Cuevas, TE, Alabama
149) Miami Dolphins
Malachi Fields, WR, Notre Dame
150) Dallas Cowboys
Keagen Trost, OT, Missouri
151) Philadelphia Eagles
Josh Cameron, WR, Baylor
152) Baltimore Ravens
Preston Hodge, CB, Colorado
153) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Sam Roush, TE, Stanford
154) Indianapolis Colts
Bryce Lance, WR, North Dakota State
155) Pittsburgh Steelers (via DET)
Romello Height, EDGE, Texas Tech
156) Minnesota Vikings
Devon Marshall, CB, NC State
157) Carolina Panthers
Cyrus Allen, WR, Cincinnati
158) Green Bay Packers
Dontay Corleone, DT, Cincinnati
159) Pittsburgh Steelers
Aaron Anderson, WR, LSU
160) Baltimore Ravens
Jordan Hudson, WR, SMU
161) Carolina Panthers
Tacario Davis, CB, Washington
162) Jacksonville Jaguars
Delby Lemieux, OL, Dartmouth
163) Chicago Bears
Lander Barton, LB, Utah
164) Jacksonville Jaguars
Nadame Tucker, EDGE, Western Michigan
165) Houston Texans
Vinny Anthony II, WR, Wisconsin
166) Buffalo Bills
Vincent Anthony Jr., EDGE, Duke
167) Los Angeles Rams
Jack Endries, TE, Texas
168) Denver Broncos
Adam Randall, RB, Clemson
169) New England Patriots
Aiden Fisher, LB, Indiana
170) New Orleans Saints
Kaden Wetjen, WR, Iowa
171) San Francisco 49ers
Jalen Farmer, OG, Kentucky
172) Baltimore Ravens
Domani Jackson, CB, Alabama
173) Baltimore Ravens
Alex Harkey, OL, Oregon
174) Las Vegas Raiders
DeShon Singleton, SAF, Nebraska
175) New York Jets
Red Murdock, LB, Buffalo
176) Kansas City Chiefs
JC Davis, OL, Illinois
177) Dallas Cowboys
Skyler Thomas, SAF, Oregon State
178) New York Jets
Wydett Williams Jr., SAF, Ole Miss
179) Philadelphia Eagles
Owen Heinicke, LB, Oklahoma
Round 6
180) Las Vegas Raiders
Nolan Rucci, OT, Penn State
181) Arizona Cardinals
Jaeden Roberts, OG, Alabama
182) Tennessee Titans
Max Llewellyn, EDGE, Iowa
183) Las Vegas Raiders
Kijon Owens, RB, Florida International
184) New York Giants
TJ Hall, CB, Iowa
185) Washington Commanders
Dan Villari, TE, Syracuse
186) Seattle Seahawks
Keyron Crawford, EDGE, Auburn
187) Cincinnati Bengals
Tim Keenan III, DT, Alabama
188) New Orleans Saints
Caden Barnett, OL, Wyoming
189) New England Patriots
Eli Heidenreich, WR/RB, Navy
190) New York Giants
Aamil Wagner, OT, Notre Dame
191) New York Giants
DJ Rogers, TE, TCU
192) Tennessee Titans
Keyshaun Elliott, LB, Arizona State
193) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Fernando Carmona Jr., OL, Arkansas
194) Jacksonville Jaguars
Alan Herron, OT, Maryland
195) Atlanta Falcons
Marlin Klein, TE, Michigan
196) New England Patriots
Reggie Virgil, WR, Texas Tech
197) Cincinnati Bengals
Tanner Koziol, TE, Houston
198) Carolina Panthers
Cade Klubnik, QB, Clemson
199) Green Bay Packers
Jack Strand, QB, MSU Morehead
200) New England Patriots
James Brockermeyer, OC, Miami (FL)
201) Houston Texans
Jake Slaughter, OC, Florida
202) Los Angeles Chargers
Mason Reiger, EDGE, Wisconsin
203) Detroit Lions
Eric Rivers, WR, Georgia Tech
204) Cleveland Browns
Ephesians Prysock, CB, Washington
205) Los Angeles Rams
Jager Burton, OL, Kentucky
206) Cleveland Browns
Joe Royer, TE, Cincinnati
207) Washington Commanders
Tyreak Sapp, EDGE, Florida
208) Los Angeles Rams
Kaleb Proctor, DT, SE Louisiana
209) Baltimore Ravens
Wesley Williams, EDGE, Duke
210) New England Patriots
Nyjalik Kelly, EDGE, UCF
211) Detroit Lions
Ceyair Wright, CB, Nebraska
212) Detroit Lions
Seydou Traore, TE, Mississippi State
213) Pittsburgh Steelers
Matthew Hibner, TE, SMU
214) Pittsburgh Steelers
Jaden Dugger, LB, Louisiana
215) Dallas Cowboys
Jadon Canady, DB, Oregon
216) Indianapolis Colts
Robert Henry Jr., RB, UTSA
Round 7
217) Arizona Cardinals
James Thompson Jr., DT, Illinois
218) Tennessee Titans
Rayshaun Benny, DT, Michigan
219) Las Vegas Raiders
Caleb Douglas, WR, Texas Tech
220) Buffalo Bills
Anez Cooper, OG, Miami (FL)
221) Cincinnati Bengals
Marvin Jones Jr., EDGE, Oklahoma
222) Detroit Lions
Logan Taylor, OL, Boston College
223) Washington Commanders
Nicholas Singleton, RB, Penn State
224) Pittsburgh Steelers
Devan Boykin, DB, Indiana
225) Dallas Cowboys
Roman Hemby, RB, Indiana
226) Cincinnati Bengals
Kendrick Law, WR, Kentucky
227) Miami Dolphins
Cameron Ball, DT, Arkansas
228) Buffalo Bills
Isaiah Nwokobia, SAF, SMU
229) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Fred Davis II, CB, Northwestern
230) Indianapolis Colts
Dillon Wade, OG, Auburn
231) Atlanta Falcons
Diego Pounds, OT, Ole Miss
232) Los Angeles Rams
Joe Fagnano, QB, UConn
233) Jacksonville Jaguars
Riley Nowakowski, TE/FB, Indiana
234) Minnesota Vikings
Jack Kelly, LB, BYU
235) Minnesota Vikings
Riley Mahlman, OT, Wisconsin
236) Green Bay Packers
Aaron Hall, DT, Duke
237) Pittsburgh Steelers
Xavian Sorey Jr., LB, Arkansas
238) New York Jets
Quintayvious Hutchins, EDGE, Boston College
239) Chicago Bears
Trey Zuhn III, OL, Texas A&M
240) Minnesota Vikings
John Michael Gyllenborg, TE, Wyoming
241) Chicago Bears
Deion Burks, WR, Oklahoma
242) New York Jets
Chris Hilton Jr., WR, LSU
243) Houston Texans
Sawyer Robertson, QB, Baylor
244) Minnesota Vikings
Drew Allar, QB, Penn State
245) Jacksonville Jaguars
Will Kacmarek, TE, Ohio State
246) Denver Broncos
Luke Altmyer, QB, Illinois
247) San Francisco 49ers
Ahmaad Moses, SAF, SMU
248) Cleveland Browns
Harrison Wallace III, WR, Ole Miss
249) Baltimore Ravens
Carson Beck, QB, Miami (FL)
250) Los Angeles Rams
Bryun Parham, LB, UConn
251) Denver Broncos
Chris Adams, OL, Memphis
252) Baltimore Ravens
Eric Gentry, LB, USC
253) Indianapolis Colts
Athan Kaliakmanis, QB, Rutgers
254) Green Bay Packers
Romello Brinson, WR, SMU
255) Denver Broncos
Avery Smith, CB, Toledo
256) Los Angeles Rams
Al’zillion Hamilton, CB, Fresno State
257) Green Bay Packers
Eni Falayi, TE, Wake Forest


Browns are far from being one player away. No way they give up that much draft capital in a receivers heavy draft.