Cummings’ 7-Round 2026 NFL Mock Draft: Contender Trades Up for Carnell Tate, Jeremiyah Love Falls Out of Top-5

PFSN's final seven-round 2026 NFL mock draft is here, and it features several contenders making aggressive trades to go get their guy.

Day 1 of the 2026 NFL Draft kicks off tonight at 8 p.m. ET, which means it’s time for PFSN’s final seven-round mock draft. After months of evaluating players and dissecting team needs, it’s finally time for teams to make some key decisions that will shape their future.

Where might top prospects like Arvell Reese, Carnell Tate, Jeremiyah Love, and Rueben Bain Jr. come off the board? Which teams will get aggressive and trade up? Using PFSN’s NFL Mock Draft Simulator, let’s predict every pick and trade. Tonight, be sure to tune in for PFSN’s live 2026 NFL Draft Show at 8 p.m. ET!


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1) Las Vegas Raiders

Fernando Mendoza, Indiana | QB

Fernando Mendoza earned an elite PFSN CFB QB Impact Score of 93.3 in 2025, along with an EPA per Clean Dropback figure of 0.56, per TruMedia.

In structure, Mendoza has the prototypical size, arm talent, swift processing ability, accuracy, and poise to thrive for the Las Vegas Raiders.

2) New York Jets

David Bailey, Texas Tech | EDGE

David Bailey achieved an excellent 92.9 PFSN EDGE Impact Score, 14.5 sacks, and a pressure rate over 22% in 2025, per TruMedia.

At 6-foot-4, 251 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Bailey has an excellent power profile, and his explosion, twitch, and motor can overwhelm.

3) Dallas Cowboys (via ARI)

Arvell Reese, Ohio State | OLB

Cowboys receive pick No. 3, pick No. 65
Cardinals receive pick No. 12, pick No. 20, 2027 second-round pick

My final 2026 NFL mock draft has the Dallas Cowboys packaging picks to acquire Arvell Reese. What Christian Parker does with Reese is up for debate.

Reese gives Dallas an impact outside linebacker right away, but also has the burst, power, and bend to develop at EDGE.

4) Tennessee Titans

Sonny Styles, Ohio State | LB

Jeremiyah Love has been commonly mocked here, but it’s hard to imagine Robert Saleh, who enjoyed the early years of Fred Warner’s career, would pass on a near-generational LB prospect like Sonny Styles. Styles gives the Tennessee Titans size, speed, versatility, and intelligence.

5) Kansas City Chiefs (via NYG)

Carnell Tate, Ohio State | WR

Chiefs receive pick No. 5, pick No. 145
Giants receive pick No. 9, pick No. 40

The Kansas City Chiefs hosted Carnell Tate on a visit, and they could easily make an aggressive move up if they fall in love with a wide receiver.

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Tate has the length, elite separation ability, and elite catch-point prowess to earn Andy Reid’s allure.

6) Cleveland Browns

Monroe Freeling, Georgia | OT

Monroe Freeling doesn’t grade this high on my personal board; his hand usage, in particular, can be further refined.

But at 6-foot-7, 315 pounds, with near-35″ arms and hyper-elite testing athleticism, he’s exactly the kind of tackle the Cleveland Browns would covet in Round 1.

7) Washington Commanders

Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame | RB

The Washington Commanders have expressed confidence in Jacory Croskey-Merritt, but if a running-back prospect of Love’s caliber falls, it’s hard to see them passing.

Love has the explosive second-level athleticism, twitch, and finishing physicality of a prime Ahman Green.

8) New Orleans Saints

Rueben Bain Jr., Miami (FL) | EDGE

At 6-foot-2, 275 pounds, with sub-31″ arms, Rueben Bain Jr. is an unorthodox EDGE prospect.

But despite his lack of length, he acquits himself with explosiveness, strength, power, finishing flexibility, and a sharp rushing nuance, making him an impact starter for the New Orleans Saints.

9) New York Giants (via KC)

Caleb Downs, Ohio State | S

The selection of Tyler Nubin hasn’t panned out as the New York Giants had hoped, and John Harbaugh knows firsthand how valuable a multi-tool can be on the back end.

Caleb Downs is as advertised on film, with single-high, two-high, box, and off-man nickel versatility.

10) New York Giants

Francis Mauigoa, Miami (FL) | OL

With the second of their back-to-back picks in this 2026 NFL mock draft, the Giants take Francis Mauigoa: a 6-foot-6, 330-pound blocker with great functional athleticism, leveraging skills, and a stifling anchor, who projects well at guard and can play RT down the line.

11) Miami Dolphins

Mansoor Delane, LSU | CB

Mansoor Delane is the definition of lockdown. In 2025, he earned a 93.7 PFSN CFB CB Impact score, which was good for first place in the FBS.

Als, per TruMedia, he achieved a forced incompletion percentage of 31.4%, and allowed an opposing QB rating of just 31.3 on targets.

12) Arizona Cardinals

Spencer Fano, Utah | OL

For the Arizona Cardinals, who have needs at right tackle and guard, a position-diverse lineman like Spencer Fano is the ideal option in Round 1.

Fano needs to improve his anchor, but he’s a top-shelf athlete with rangy, physical run game ability and excellent pass-down upside.

13) Los Angeles Rams

Makai Lemon, USC | WR

Yes, the Los Angeles Rams have a dynamic duo in Puka Nacua and Davante Adams, but Adams is on a short-term deal, and the Rams’ lack of needs enables them to go bold.

Makai Lemon can feast as a super-powered slot with quickness and clutch value in Sean McVay’s offense.

14) Baltimore Ravens

Kenyon Sadiq, Oregon | TE

The Baltimore Ravens could easily go offensive line here, but with Mauigoa and Fano both off the board, they instead play the value of the class and add Kenyon Sadiq to develop as an uber-explosive pass-game weapon alongside veteran Mark Andrews.

15) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Akheem Mesidor, Miami (FL) | EDGE

Akheem Mesidor is 25 years old and has sub-33″ arms. That pairing doesn’t normally play in Round 1, but Mesidor is an explosive, twitched-up rusher with untethered energy, compact power, and a full rush arsenal.

He’s worth it for a Tampa Buccaneers team that needs pass-rush help.

16) New York Jets

Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State | WR

Jordyn Tyson could go top-10 on talent alone if teams clear his medicals. But there’s also a chance he falls to this point.

The New York Jets have reason to take a chance in mid-Round 1; if healthy, Tyson is a perfect WR2 to Garrett Wilson, with electric movement-Z appeal.

17) Detroit Lions

Blake Miller, Clemson | OT

Blake Miller checks all the boxes for a desirable first-round OT. He’s 6-foot-7, 317 pounds, with 34″ arms, an elite athletic profile, and he started 54 career games at a high-prestige program.

Penei Sewell can move to left tackle, while Miller holds down the right side.

18) Minnesota Vikings

Jermod McCoy, Tennessee | CB

With no medical flags, Jermod McCoy is a borderline top-10 prospect.

How teams will value him will vary from room to room, but the Minnesota Vikings have a rationale to gamble on his high-end CB1 upside. McCoy’s hip fluidity, closing speed, and playmaking bring echoes of Darius Slay.

19) Carolina Panthers

Dillon Thieneman, Oregon | S

There are a lot of potential picks for the Carolina Panthers, but Dillon Thieneman is my favorite.

He’s a perfect fit as a ball-hawking single-high safety alongside Tre’von Moehrig, but he also has the versatility and physicality to play nickel and as a box rover in Ejiro Evero’s scheme.

20) Arizona Cardinals (via DAL)

Keldric Faulk, Auburn | EDGE

At 6-foot-6, 278 pounds, with over 34″ arms, Keldric Faulk has a lab-built frame, with the explosiveness, power, leverage acquisition, and motor to not only insulate his run defense profile, but also imbue him with exciting and alignment-versatile pass-rush upside.

21) Pittsburgh Steelers

Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State | OG

If he’s available, Olaivavega Ioane feels like the obvious choice for the Pittsburgh Steelers.

DK Metcalf and Michael Pittman Jr. ease the need at WR, and the secondary was addressed in free agency. Ioane has a strong center of gravity, square power, and football IQ to flourish.

22) Los Angeles Chargers

Zion Young, Missouri | EDGE

Zion Young is the type of high-motor, high-upside gamble Jim Harbaugh would entertain.

At 6-foot-6, 262 pounds, with explosive athleticism and over 33″ arms, he has an ideal power profile, a ready-made run defense profile, and the skill set to cave in pockets as a rusher.

23) Philadelphia Eagles

Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana | WR

There’s too much smoke around a potential A.J. Brown departure from the Philadelphia Eagles that WR should be prioritized in the early rounds.

Omar Cooper Jr. isn’t quite as heavy, but his zone-splicing explosiveness, contact balance, and catch-point acrobatics echo Victor Cruz.

24) Cleveland Browns

KC Concepcion, Texas A&M | WR

The Cleveland Browns feel like a lock to draft an OT and a WR in some order in Round 1. They picked Freeling earlier in this 2026 NFL mock draft, so their second pick naturally shifts to WR.

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KC Concepcion is a natural multi-level separator and ultra-dynamic RAC threat all in one.

25) Chicago Bears

Peter Woods, Clemson | DT

There’s a stark enough difference between Peter Woods’ 2024 and 2025 film to invite questioning, but at his best, Woods is an incredibly disruptive 3-tech with natural leverage, burst, and violent hand engagement, and he raises the Chicago Bears’ floor inside on Day 1.

26) Buffalo Bills

Malachi Lawrence, UCF | EDGE

The Buffalo Bills have a need at EDGE, and they may toy with the idea of blending together finesse and power with a prospect like Malachi Lawrence.

At 6-foot-4, 251 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Lawrence has a power profile to mold, but is also explosive, flexible, and nuanced.

27) San Francisco 49ers

Caleb Lomu, Utah | OT

The San Francisco 49ers reached a resolution with Trent Williams, but it’s still prudent to have a succession plan given Williams’ age as the ultimate variable.

Caleb Lomu can sit and add mass, and his athleticism, flexibility, and keen sense of timing are reminiscent of Jake Matthews.

28) Houston Texans

Kadyn Proctor, Alabama | OG

The Houston Texans did some work on the offensive line in free agency, but the guard spots remain in need of additional attention.

At 6-foot-7, 360 pounds, Kadyn Proctor has the heavy hand power, anchor strength, short-range explosion, and physicality to excel inside a phone booth.

29) Kansas City Chiefs

Chris Johnson, San Diego State | CB

Chris Johnson is of average size, but his 4.4 speed corroborates his ability to contend on the vertical plane, and he was one of the best CBs in the nation last season.

His 89.7 CBi metric was near-elite, and he allowed just a 16.1 passer rating.

30) Miami Dolphins

Denzel Boston, Washington | WR

Denzel Boston’s ceiling will be debated among analysts, but his floor as a fluid, explosive zone-glider with vice-grip hands and masterful catch-point instincts is extremely appealing on its own. With him, the Miami Dolphins get a Michael Pittman Jr.-esque presence.

31) New England Patriots

Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Toledo | S

At 6-foot-4, 201 pounds, with over 32″ arms, Emmanuel McNeil-Warren’s blend of size, length, explosiveness, fluidity, and physicality will compel teams.

He’s capable in split-field looks, but at his peak, he can be a combined enforcer and ball-hawk in the Adrian Wilson mold.

32) Seattle Seahawks

Gabe Jacas, Illinois | EDGE

Gabe Jacas is 6-foot-3, 260 pounds with 33″ arms. He was a captain, a two-time wrestling champion in high school, and a four-year collegiate starter.

His 10-yard split is in the 95th percentile, and he has a 14% pressure rate in 2025. In this class, he should be a Round 1 sleeper.

Round 2 | 33) New York Jets

CJ Allen, Georgia | LB

The green dot for Kirby Smart’s defense at Georgia, CJ Allen is a touch undersized, but he has the range, physicality, and elite football IQ to be the commander of New York’s unit.

34) Arizona Cardinals

Ty Simpson, Alabama | QB

If Ty Simpson makes it to Round 2, the Cardinals feel like the clear favorite to secure his services. He’s polarizing, but he has the combined processing and raw talent floor worth investing in.

35) Tennessee Titans

Chase Bisontis, Texas A&M | OL

Chase Bisontis can slot right in at guard for Tennessee and function as a quality starter, but he also has the size, athleticism, and flexibility to potentially experiment at center.

36) Las Vegas Raiders

Christen Miller, Georgia | DT

At 6-foot-4, 321 pounds, with 33″ arms and 10″ mitts for hands, Christen Miller is built to overwhelm inside, and the shock he brings at contact can reset gaps entirely.

37) New York Giants

Kayden McDonald, Ohio State | DT

Kayden McDonald doesn’t have the same disruptive ability as Dexter Lawrence, but he’s a high-quality nose tackle with throttling linear power, imposing core strength, and a hot motor.

38) Houston Texans

Keylan Rutledge, Georgia Tech | OL

Keylan Rutledge played primarily at guard in college, but the 6-foot-4, 316-pound blocker could shift inside to center for the Texans. He’s explosive, well-leveraged, and truly relentless.

39) Cleveland Browns

Oscar Delp, Georgia | TE

Harold Fannin Jr. is a high-quality H-back tight end and big-slot for the Browns, but Oscar Delp gives Cleveland true 12 personnel viability with his elite size-speed profile and blocking utility.

40) New York Giants (via KC)

Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech | LB

Jacob Rodriguez isn’t physically imposing at 6-foot-1, 231 pounds, but he’s a gnat in all phases with his elite sideline-to-sideline range, processing speed, contact willingness, and fluid coverage ability.

41) Cincinnati Bengals

Treydan Stukes, Arizona | DB

At 24 years old, Treydan Stukes is an older prospect, but for a Bengals team clinging to a win-now window with Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase, his versatility to play nickel and safety at a high level can’t be understated.

42) New Orleans Saints

Chris Bell, Louisville | WR

In this 2026 NFL mock draft, Tyler Shough reunites with Chris Bell: a 6-foot-2, 227-pound RAC dynamo who shows glimpses of quality independent separation and catch-point dominance.

43) Miami Dolphins

Max Iheanachor, Arizona State | OT

The board didn’t fall well on the interior for Miami, but Max Iheanachor can be a quality successor for Austin Jackson with his athleticism, length, clean pass sets, and power.

44) New York Jets

Colton Hood, Tennessee | CB

Colton Hood is one of the best value acquisitions in this 2026 NFL mock draft, with the reactive coil, physicality, and playmaking flashes to grow into a long-term starter.

45) Baltimore Ravens

Gennings Dunker, Iowa | OG

A collegiate tackle, Gennings Dunker projects best at guard with his explosive linear athleticism, heavy-set power profile, and finishing zeal in the run game.

46) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Brandon Cisse, South Carolina | CB

On paper, CB may not seem like a big need for Tampa Bay, but Zyon McCollum and Benjamin Morrison both left more to be desired in 2025. Brandon Cisse’s coverage mobility and processing underlie immense upside.

47) Indianapolis Colts

Anthony Hill Jr., Texas | LB

The peak reps on Anthony Hill Jr.’s tape are jaw-dropping. Consistency remains key, but at a long 6-foot-2, 238 pounds, Hill has the size, range, coverage and blitzing acumen to thrive.

48) Atlanta Falcons

D’Angelo Ponds, Indiana | CB

D’Angelo Ponds’ size will take him off some teams’ boards, but Jeff Ulbrich is one defensive coordinator who’s shown a willingness to use undersized CBs with other elite traits to compensate.

49) Minnesota Vikings

Lee Hunter, Texas Tech | DT

Defensive tackle is quietly a very pressing need for Minnesota. Alongside Jalen Redmond, Lee Hunter can function as a double-team splitting, pass-rush infusing nose tackle.

50) Detroit Lions

T.J. Parker, Clemson | EDGE

T.J. Parker could be a first-round pick off talent alone, but his 2025 downturn bears noting. If he’s all-in at the next level, he can be a solid starter in the mold of Shaun Phillips.

51) Carolina Panthers

Antonio Williams, Clemson | WR

Bryce Young needs a quick separator in his weapons core, and Antonio Williams is exactly that: a fluid, twitched-up route technician with toughness and RAC ability.

52) Green Bay Packers

Kaleb Proctor, SE Louisiana | DT

At 6-foot-2, 291 pounds, with 33″ arms, logic-defying testing athleticism, and tantalizing lower-body flexibility, Kaleb Proctor passes the Packers’ thresholds and grants rare upside.

53) Pittsburgh Steelers

Skyler Bell, UConn | WR

Metcalf and Pittman make a great 1-2 combo, but Skyler Bell completes the outfit as a versatile movement-Z with effervescent athleticism and true three-level appeal.

54) Philadelphia Eagles

Jalon Kilgore, South Carolina | S

At 6-foot-1, 210 pounds, with 33″ arms, Jalon Kilgore has the athletic profile and physicality to play the slot, but he can just as soon operate in two-high looks or as a seam-runner.

55) Los Angeles Chargers

Emmanuel Pregnon, Oregon | OG

At 6-foot-4, 314 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Emmanuel Pregnon is built to bully inside the lines with his mass, proportional length, explosive linear athleticism, and mauling urge.

56) Jacksonville Jaguars

Gracen Halton, Oklahoma | DT

Gracen Halton is a popular fit for Jacksonville in mocks, and for good reason: He’s the rare explosive, sawed-off 3-tech who holds up well in run defense with his strong lower body.

57) Chicago Bears

Dani Dennis-Sutton, Penn State | EDGE

Dani Dennis-Sutton isn’t the most flexible, but the Bears favor power over bend at EDGE, and at 6-foot-6, 256 pounds, with over 33″ arms and elite athletic testing, Dennis-Sutton has power to spare.

58) San Francisco 49ers

Germie Bernard, Alabama | WR

The 49ers added Mike Evans, but Germie Bernard profiles well in Kyle Shanahan’s scheme as a strong WR2/3 capable of separating, generating RAC, and doing dirty work.

59) Houston Texans

Caleb Banks, Florida | DT

At this value, Caleb Banks is worth the risk for a Texans team that needs disruption inside. At 6-foot-6, 335 pounds, with 35″ arms, he can be a game-wrecker with more development.

60) Chicago Bears

Sam Hecht, Kansas State | C

Garrett Bradbury is a short-term fix for the Bears at center after Drew Dalman’s retirement. Sam Hecht gives Chicago an eventual long-term starter with range and a sturdy anchor.

61) Los Angeles Rams

Josiah Trotter, Missouri | LB

Run defense is becoming increasingly valuable amid the new two-high evolution, and Josiah Trotter is one of the best run-defending LBs in the class, thanks to his instincts, explosion, and take-on ability.

62) Denver Broncos

Eli Stowers, Vanderbilt | TE

Eli Stowers won’t provide much value in the run game, but in Sean Payton’s offense, his 99th-percentile testing athleticism and 2.7 yards per route run figure are emblematic of his receiving upside.

63) New England Patriots

Cashius Howell, Texas A&M | EDGE

The Patriots like having speed and finesse coming off the edge. Cashius Howell not only has those qualities, but maximizes them with sharp pass-rush nuance, angle IQ, and motor.

64) Seattle Seahawks

Jadarian Price, Notre Dame | RB

Jadarian Price helps the Seahawks replace Kenneth Walker III with his low center of gravity, creative feel, and explosive open-field burst and range.

Round 3 | 65) Dallas Cowboys (via ARI)

Keionte Scott, Miami (FL) | DB

A versatile and dynamic nickel defender, Keionte Scott can excel in Christian Parker’s scheme thanks to his elite closing speed, play recognition, and attack physicality.

66) Tennessee Titans

Ted Hurst, Georgia State | WR

At 6-foot-4, 206 pounds, Ted Hurst is built like an X-receiver, and he flashes the requisite quickness, hip sink, and reduction ability, and nuance to separate independently on the outside.

67) Las Vegas Raiders

Genesis Smith, Arizona | S

Genesis Smith needs to clean up his tackling, but the 6-foot-2, 202-pound safety has the range, coverage instincts, and playmaking ability to be a terrifying single-high presence in Las Vegas.

68) Philadelphia Eagles

Derrick Moore, Michigan | EDGE

Derrick Moore needs to further refine his rush pallet, but the 6-foot-4, 255-pound edge defender has the elite explosiveness and power element to factor into Philadelphia’s rotation.

69) Houston Texans

Domonique Orange, Iowa State | DT

The Texans already added Banks at DT, but he’s an alignment-versatile disruptor. Domonique Orange is a pure nose tackle with the anchor and motor to deliver value.

70) Cleveland Browns

Kamari Ramsey, USC | DB

At 6-foot, 202 pounds, Kamari Ramsey has the smooth coverage mobility, versatility, and quick response in run support to help Cleveland hedge for long-term uncertainty in the secondary.

71) Washington Commanders

Chris Brazzell II, Tennessee | WR

Chris Brazzell II is a true field-stretcher for Jayden Daniels at 6-foot-4, but he also has the fluidity and bend to sustain a full route tree, and his 16.5% catch rate over expectation speaks to his conversion ability.

72) Cincinnati Bengals

Avieon Terrell, Clemson | CB

If Avieon Terrell falls in light of subpar athletic testing, he’ll be a steal in the Day 2 range for a team like Cincinnati, which could use his boundary-nickel versatility and two-phase playmaking.

73) New Orleans Saints

Logan Taylor, Boston College | OG

At 6-foot-7, 314 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Logan Taylor has the size, athleticism, leverage acquisition, and powerful hands to help solidify one guard spot for the Saints.

74) Kansas City Chiefs

Caleb Tiernan, Northwestern | OT

At 6-foot-8 with sub-33-inch arms, Caleb Tiernan has an unorthodox build, but he has the athleticism, leverage acquisition, strength, power, and technique to compensate.

75) Miami Dolphins

Max Klare, Ohio State | TE

Max Klare gives the Dolphins an immediate two-phase asset as a TE2 with his multi-level receiving value and blocking utility, and he can become a quality starter in time.

76) Pittsburgh Steelers

Kaleb Elarms-Orr, TCU | LB

At 6-foot-2, 237 pounds, with 4.47 speed, Kaleb Elarms-Orr can kickstart the transition away from Patrick Queen with his range, downhill physicality, and blitzing utility.

77) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Jake Golday, Cincinnati | LB

At 6-foot-4, 240 pounds, Jake Golday has the size, range, and physicality to make an impact as a downhill defender in Tampa Bay, and he has measured coverage upside.

78) Indianapolis Colts

Jaishawn Barham, Michigan | EDGE

Though Jaishawn Barham has only played one season as a full-time EDGE, he has the rare explosiveness, lean power element, and stacking physicality to project well in the pros.

79) Atlanta Falcons

Kendrick Law, Kentucky | WR

At 5-foot-11, 203 pounds with 4.45 speed, hyper-elite explosion, and enthralling RAC, Kendrick Law can be a spark right away, and his flexibility implies greater separation upside.

80) Baltimore Ravens

A.J. Haulcy, LSU | S

A.J. Haulcy doesn’t quite have elite long speed, but he compensates with expert-level spatial management, route recognition, playmaking ability, and physicality at 215 pounds.

81) Jacksonville Jaguars

Mike Washington Jr., Arkansas | RB

Mike Washington Jr.’s 4.33 speed at 6-foot-1, 223 pounds is what sells his profile the most, but he has the vision, pacing, pressing IQ, and finishing physicality to be a true volume back.

82) Minnesota Vikings

Bud Clark, TCU | S

A veteran ball-hawk with split-field utility and single-high range, as well as the quickness and fluidity to play the slot on a situational basis, Bud Clark can be an asset for Minnesota.

83) Carolina Panthers

Keith Abney II, Arizona State | CB

While Thieneman roams in space and mans the slot against tight ends, Keith Abney II can lock down the boundary opposite Jaycee Horn with his quickness, fluidity, and reactive intelligence.

84) Green Bay Packers

Ephesians Prysock, Washington | CB

Tacario Davis is often mocked before Ephesians Prysock, but Prysock checks every physical box the Packers look for. Davis is a better catch-point playmaker, but Prysock is more fluid and is extremely physical in support.

85) Pittsburgh Steelers

Romello Height, Texas Tech | EDGE

With his electric athleticism, angle IQ, and rush arsenal, Romello Height can function as a dangerous designated pass rusher for the Steelers if Nick Herbig moves on post-2026.

86) Los Angeles Chargers

Davison Igbinosun, Ohio State | CB

Davison Igbinosun has the tools to eventually lock down one side of the field with his length, explosion, recalibration quickness, and zeal, and his versatility bodes well in Los Angeles’ scheme.

87) Miami Dolphins

Joshua Josephs, Tennessee | EDGE

While Joshua Josephs is under 240 pounds, he has excellent proportional length with 34-inch arms, paired with explosive athleticism, bend, arc-running speed, and run-defense utility.

88) Jacksonville Jaguars

R Mason Thomas, Oklahoma | EDGE

At mid-Round 3 value, the Jaguars opt to add a dynamic designated pass rusher in R Mason Thomas, whose cornering ability and volcanic burst can leave tackles lurching.

89) Chicago Bears

Zakee Wheatley, Penn State | S

Zakee Wheatley doesn’t have elite full-field range or speed, but he compensates with size, processing ability, coverage mobility, and sure tackling coming downhill.

90) Miami Dolphins

Julian Neal, Arkansas | CB

At 6-foot-2, 203 pounds, with near-33-inch arms and 4.5 speed, Julian Neal gives Miami a long, agile, and support-savvy CB across from new starter Delane.

91) Buffalo Bills

Darrell Jackson Jr., Florida State | DT

Jim Leonhard’s defense functions best with an immovable force at nose tackle, and Darrell Jackson Jr.’s presence will allow Deone Walker and Ed Oliver to play with more freedom.

92) Dallas Cowboys

Keyshaun Elliott, Arizona State | LB

At 6-foot-2, 231 pounds, with 4.57 speed and high-level football intelligence, Keyshaun Elliott has all of the hallmarks of a future starter, along with an over 60% win rate on blitzing reps.

93) Los Angeles Rams

Connor Lew, Auburn | C

Connor Lew isn’t overly powerful, but he’s athletic, incredibly sound, balanced, and light on his feet at the fulcrum, and he can properly succeed Coleman Shelton in 2027.

94) Miami Dolphins

Jalen Farmer, Kentucky | OG

Standing at 6-foot-5, 312 pounds, with over 34″ arms and 4.93 speed, Jalen Farmer has an elite physical skill set at guard, and flashes uncommon core and stacking strength working in gaps.

95) New England Patriots

Ja’Kobi Lane, USC | WR

Ja’Kobi Lane can give Drake Maye a larger catch radius to work with on seam and back-shoulder passes, and he has the smooth mobility and zone feel to operate as a separator.

96) Seattle Seahawks

Will Lee III, Texas A&M | CB

At 6-foot-1 1/2, 189 pounds, with near-33-inch arms and high-level explosiveness, Will Lee III strengthens Seattle’s depth as a scheme-versatile CB with playmaking chops and a chippy competitive EDGE.

97) Minnesota Vikings

De’Zhaun Stribling, Ole Miss | WR

At 6-foot-2, 207 pounds, with near-32″ arms and sub-4.4 speed, De’Zhaun Stribling passes the eye test thoroughly, and he’s a diverse movement-Z with catch-point authority, RAC value, and blocking tenacity.

98) Philadelphia Eagles

Travis Burke, Memphis | OT

Towering at 6-foot-9, 325 pounds, with over 34″ arms, Travis Burke is an Odyssean monolith with unmatched power capacity and point-of-attack tenacity, and he gets to learn behind Lane Johnson in Philadelphia.

99) Pittsburgh Steelers

VJ Payne, Kansas State | S

At 6-foot-3, 206 pounds, VJ Payne has the size-athleticism profile the Steelers like on the back end, and while his support game needs work, he’s quietly fluid and sound in coverage.

100) Jacksonville Jaguars

Bryce Lance, North Dakota State | WR

At 6-foot-3, 204 pounds, with blistering 4.34 speed, Bryce Lance can give Trevor Lawrence and the Jaguars a dynamic, field-stretching element that’s been sorely lacking.

Round 4

101) Tennessee Titans
Emmett Johnson, Nebraska | RB

102) Las Vegas Raiders
Elijah Sarratt, Indiana | WR

103) New York Jets
Febechi Nwaiwu, Oklahoma | OL

104) Arizona Cardinals
DeMonte Capehart, Clemson | DT

105) New York Giants
Zachariah Branch, Georgia | WR

106) Houston Texans
Deion Burks, Oklahoma | WR

107) Cleveland Browns
Kyle Louis, Pittsburgh | LB

108) Denver Broncos
Rene Konga, Louisville | DT

109) Kansas City Chiefs
Justin Joly, NC State | TE

110) Cincinnati Bengals
Eli Raridon, Notre Dame | TE

111) Denver Broncos
Aiden Fisher, Indiana | LB

112) Dallas Cowboys
Malik Muhammad, Texas | CB

113) Indianapolis Colts
Dametrious Crownover, Texas A&M | OT

114) Philadelphia Eagles
Dallen Bentley, Utah | TE

115) Baltimore Ravens
Tacario Davis, Washington | CB

116) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Matthew Hibner, SMU | TE

117) Las Vegas Raiders
Drew Shelton, Penn State | OL

118) Detroit Lions
Landon Robinson, Navy | DT

119) Carolina Panthers
Nick Barrett, South Carolina | DT

120) Green Bay Packers
Jude Bowry, Boston College | OT

121) Pittsburgh Steelers
Garrett Nussmeier, LSU | QB

122) Atlanta Falcons
Jager Burton, Kentucky | C

123) Los Angeles Chargers
Michael Taaffe, Texas | S

124) Jacksonville Jaguars
Kendal Daniels, Oklahoma | LB

125) New England Patriots
Austin Barber, Florida | OT

126) Buffalo Bills
Louis Moore, Indiana | S

127) San Francisco 49ers
Parker Brailsford, Alabama | C

128) Detroit Lions
Hezekiah Masses, California | CB

129) Chicago Bears
Andre Fuller, Toledo | CB

130) Miami Dolphins
Jadon Canady, Oregon | DB

131) New England Patriots
Brian Parker II, Duke | OL

132) New Orleans Saints
Chandler Rivers, Duke | CB

133) San Francisco 49ers
Jonah Coleman, Washington | RB

134) Las Vegas Raiders
Devin Moore, Florida | CB

135) Pittsburgh Steelers
Charles Demmings, Stephen F. Austin | CB

136) New Orleans Saints
Delby Lemieux, Dartmouth | OL

137) Philadelphia Eagles
Logan Jones, Iowa | C

138) San Francisco 49ers
Keyron Crawford, Auburn | EDGE

139) San Francisco 49ers
Uar Bernard, Nigeria (IPP) | DL

140) New York Jets
Drew Allar, Penn State | QB

Round 5

141) Houston Texans
Joe Royer, Cincinnati | TE

142) Tennessee Titans
Matt Gulbin, Michigan State | C

143) Arizona Cardinals
Keagen Trost, Missouri | OL

144) Tennessee Titans
Nadame Tucker, Western Michigan | EDGE

145) Kansas City Chiefs (via NYG)
Seth McGowan, Kentucky | RB

146) Cleveland Browns
Markel Bell, Miami (FL) | OT

147) Washington Commanders
Jakobe Thomas, Miami (FL) | S

148) Kansas City Chiefs
Anthony Lucas, USC | EDGE

149) Cleveland Browns
Carver Willis, Washington | OL

150) New Orleans Saints
Sam Roush, Stanford | TE

151) Miami Dolphins
Tyler Onyedim, Texas A&M | DT

152) Dallas Cowboys
Kaelon Black, Indiana | RB

153) Philadelphia Eagles
Daylen Everette, Georgia | CB

154) Baltimore Ravens
Jake Slaughter, Florida | C

155) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Deven Eastern, Minnesota | DT

156) Indianapolis Colts
Cole Wisniewski, Texas Tech | S

157) Detroit Lions
Kage Casey, Boise State | OG

158) Carolina Panthers
Dae’Quan Wright, Ole Miss | TE

159) Carolina Panthers
Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest | RB

160) Green Bay Packers
Jayden Loving, Wake Forest | DT

161) Pittsburgh Steelers
Brenen Thompson, Mississippi State | WR

162) Baltimore Ravens
Jordan van den Berg, Georgia Tech | DT

163) Minnesota Vikings
Cole Payton, North Dakota State | QB

164) Jacksonville Jaguars
Isaiah World, Oregon | OT

165) Buffalo Bills
Deontae Lawson, Alabama | LB

166) Jacksonville Jaguars
Nate Boerkircher, Texas A&M | TE

167) Houston Texans
Bryce Boettcher, Oregon | LB

168) Buffalo Bills
Malik Benson, Oregon | WR

169) Kansas City Chiefs
Harold Perkins Jr., LSU | LB

170) Denver Broncos
Kaytron Allen, Penn State | RB

171) New England Patriots
Will Kacmarek, Ohio State | TE

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

173) Baltimore Ravens
Malachi Fields, Notre Dame | WR

174) Baltimore Ravens
Tristan Leigh, Clemson | OL

175) Las Vegas Raiders
Chris McClellan, Missouri | DT

176) Kansas City Chiefs
Zane Durant, Penn State | DT

177) Dallas Cowboys
Wydett Williams Jr., Ole Miss | S

178) Philadelphia Eagles
Beau Stephens, Iowa | OG

179) New York Jets
Kevin Coleman Jr., Missouri | WR

180) Dallas Cowboys
J.C. Davis, Illinois | OL

181) Detroit Lions
Dalton Johnson, Arizona | S

Round 6

182) Buffalo Bills
Jeremiah Wright, Auburn | OG

183) Arizona Cardinals
Roman Hemby, Indiana | RB

184) Tennessee Titans
Jack Endries, Texas | TE

185) Las Vegas Raiders
Cyrus Allen, Cincinnati | WR

186) New York Giants
Thaddeus Dixon, North Carolina | EDGE

187) Washington Commanders
LT Overton, Alabama | EDGE

188) Seattle Seahawks
Caden Barnett, Wyoming | OG

189) Cincinnati Bengals
George Gumbs Jr., Florida | EDGE

190) New Orleans Saints
DeShon Singleton, Nebraska | S

191) New England Patriots
Joe Fagnano, UConn | QB

192) New York Giants
Trey Zuhn III, Texas A&M | OL

193) New York Giants
Diego Pounds, Ole Miss | OT

194) Tennessee Titans
Aaron Hall, Duke | DT

195) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Taurean York, Texas A&M | LB

196) Minnesota Vikings
Michael Trigg, Baylor | TE

197) Philadelphia Eagles
Collin Wright, Stanford | CB

198) New England Patriots
Bryson Eason, Tennessee | DT

199) Cincinnati Bengals
Karson Sharar, Iowa | LB

200) Carolina Panthers
Jack Strand, MSU Moorhead | QB

201) Green Bay Packers
J. Michael Sturdivant, Florida | WR

202) New England Patriots
TJ Hall, Iowa | CB

203) Jacksonville Jaguars
Billy Schrauth, Notre Dame | OG

204) Los Angeles Chargers
Rayshaun Benny, Michigan | DT

205) Detroit Lions
Jimmy Rolder, Michigan | LB

206) Cleveland Browns
Taylen Green, Arkansas | QB

207) Los Angeles Rams
Nicholas Singleton, Penn State | RB

208) Las Vegas Raiders
Aamil Wagner, Notre Dame | OT

209) Washington Commanders
Devon Marshall, NC State | CB

210) Kansas City Chiefs
Jaeden Roberts, Alabama | OG

211) Baltimore Ravens
Xavian Sorey Jr., Arkansas | LB

212) New England Patriots
Max Tomczak, Youngstown | WR

213) Detroit Lions
Carsen Ryan, BYU | TE

214) Indianapolis Colts
Jeff Caldwell, Cincinnati | WR

215) Atlanta Falcons
Mason Reiger, Wisconsin | EDGE

216) Pittsburgh Steelers
Riley Mahlman, Wisconsin | OT

Round 7

217) Arizona Cardinals
Eric Rivers, Georgia Tech | WR

218) Dallas Cowboys
Jordan Hudson, SMU | WR

219) Las Vegas Raiders
Marlin Klein, Michigan | TE

220) Buffalo Bills
Max Llewellyn, Iowa | EDGE

221) Cincinnati Bengals
Dontay Corleone, Cincinnati | DT

222) Detroit Lions
Tyre West, Tennessee | DL

223) Washington Commanders
James Brockermeyer, Miami (FL) | C

224) Pittsburgh Steelers
Devan Boykin, Indiana | DB

225) Tennessee Titans
Alex Wollschlaeger, Kentucky | DT

226) Cincinnati Bengals
Harrison Wallace III, Ole Miss | WR

227) Miami Dolphins
Josh Cameron, Baylor | WR

228) New York Jets
Albert Regis, Texas A&M | DT

229) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Caleb Douglas, Texas Tech | WR

230) Pittsburgh Steelers
DJ Rogers, TCU | TE

231) Atlanta Falcons
Cameron Ball, Arkansas | DT

232) Los Angeles Rams
John Michael Gyllenborg, Wyoming | TE

233) Jacksonville Jaguars
Kapena Gushiken, Ole Miss | S

234) Minnesota Vikings
Jaydn Ott, Oklahoma | RB

235) Minnesota Vikings
Fa’alili Fa’amoe, Wake Forest | OL

236) Green Bay Packers
Khordae Sydnor, Vanderbilt | EDGE

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

238) Miami Dolphins
Erick Hunter, Morgan State | LB

239) Chicago Bears
Jack Kelly, BYU | LB

240) Jacksonville Jaguars
Carson Beck, Miami (FL) | QB

241) Chicago Bears
Cam’Ron Stewart, Temple | EDGE

242) New York Jets
Tanner Koziol, Houston | TE

243) Houston Texans
Evan Svoboda, Wyoming | TE

244) Minnesota Vikings
Michael Heldman, Central Michigan | EDGE

245) Jacksonville Jaguars
Brandon Cleveland, NC State | DT

246) Denver Broncos
Jalen Huskey, Maryland | S

247) New England Patriots
Jackson Kuwatch, Miami (OH)

248) Cleveland Browns
Daniel Sobkowicz, Illinois State | WR

249) Indianapolis Colts
Noah Whittington, Oregon | RB

250) Baltimore Ravens
Cian Slone, NC State | EDGE

251) Los Angeles Rams
Alan Herron, Maryland | OT

252) Los Angeles Rams
Luke Altmyer, Illinois | QB

253) Baltimore Ravens
Chip Trayanum, Toledo | RB

254) Indianapolis Colts
Caleb Offord, Kennesaw State | CB

255) Green Bay Packers
Jaden Dugger, Louisiana | LB

256) Denver Broncos
Anez Cooper, Miami (FL) | OG

257) Denver Broncos
Brent Austin, California | CB

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