Ladies and gentlemen, we made it. It’s early July, but we have a football game this month as the Detroit Lions and Los Angeles Chargers clash in the Hall of Fame Game.
To get you prepped for such a wonderful season, our latest 2026 NFL Mock Draft brings you the top prospects to watch, with a draft order set by a full-season simulation on the PFSN 2025-2026 NFL Playoff Predictor, along with insights from the PFSN Mock Draft Simulator.
1) New York Giants
Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami
With the assumption that Arch Manning won’t declare for the 2026 NFL Draft, I can’t justify taking any of the quarterbacks No.1, especially with the New York Giants taking Jaxson Dart in the first round just a few months ago. With that being said, the franchise certainly doesn’t need another edge rusher. That’s the one position they are loaded at.
This means the choice here for the Giants is my top right tackle, Francis Mauigoa. Mauigoa is 6’6″ 315 pounds, and moves really well. While I have Proctor slightly higher on my board, Mauigoa fits the Giants better as he is a natural right tackle who will go opposite of Andrew Thomas. He allowed just one sack and ranked 51st among 241 offensive tackles in pressures allowed per snap, according to TruMedia.
2) Cleveland Browns
LaNorris Sellers, QB, South Carolina
The Cleveland Browns are taking a gamble here on LaNorris Sellers. With all his faults, Sellers still ranked 82nd of 156 in adjusted completion percentage at 74.6% — something neither Josh Allen nor Anthony Richardson even came close to hitting as full-time starters.
With a more accurate starting point and that same freak athleticism, the Browns can risk it for the biscuit with a potentially franchise-changing pick.
If they don’t succeed? They remain in the same awful position they have been for the last two decades, but get to watch plays like this:
If anything, the Browns’ struggles should allow them to be even more risk-loving than other teams. The obvious caveat is that I can’t get fired as a fake general manager conducting a 2026 NFL Mock Draft, but Andrew Berry can.
3) Miami Dolphins
Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana
If the Miami Dolphins are picking this high, it’s time to say goodbye to Tua Tagovailoa. The Mike McDaniel experiment is also very likely over, and with that, the Dolphins’ new head coach gets to bring in his choice at quarterback. In this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, the franchise hires Joe Brady as the new head coach and he wants Fernando Mendoza running his offense.
Brady’s offense relies heavily on 11 and 12 personnel as well as a strong run game.
In 2024 at Cal, Mendoza ranked ninth in EPA (expected points added) per dropback in 12 personnel and was above average on play-action passes as well. Mendoza’s 32nd fastest time to throw of 2.59 seconds also matches the typical timing-based Miami offenses, meaning the rest of the team shouldn’t have to adjust too much.
4) Tennessee Titans
T.J. Parker, EDGE, Clemson
The Clemson Tigers’ defensive line is stacked again. One of the stars is T.J. Parker, who had 11 sacks and six forced fumbles last season. He’s got the size and tools to thrive in Tennessee, where he would show his versatility as both a pass rusher and run defender.
While Parker doesn’t have much experience in a 3-4 scheme, his 265-pound frame and monster run defense pose an interesting fit with the Titans. They could move Jeffrey Simmons inside to a 3-tech alongside nose tackle T’Vondre Sweat.
With Sebastian Joseph-Day already moonlighting as a true defensive end despite being over 300 pounds, Parker would complete the four-man defensive line.
5) New York Jets
Drew Allar, QB, Penn State
The New York Jets are another team, like the Browns, where quarterbacks go to die. Unfortunately for them, it’s the most important position in the game of football, and you aren’t going to sniff a Super Bowl without an elite one or a stellar surrounding cast.
They have neither. So with the fifth overall pick in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, they take Drew Allar.
Through all of his faults, he has a strong arm and the ideal size. He is comfortable managing a pocket and ranked 22nd in EPA per dropback on play-action throws — something the Jets need to lean heavily on with such a talented running back in Breece Hall.
While he wouldn’t provide the Jets with much mobility, them taking fifth means Justin Fields didn’t work out so it makes sense for them to go in the opposite direction.
6) New Orleans Saints
Cade Klubnik, QB, Clemson
The college football world has high expectations for Cade Klubnik with Clemson expected to dominate in 2025. While I personally have Klubnik as the fourth-ranked ranked QB in the class, it would be very easy for him to shoot up. His accuracy and play-making are solid and he has all the tools, he just needs to put it together with his decision-making on a more consistent basis.
He ranked 43rd in adjusted completion percentage, and showed some really solid tools outside the pocket. Unfortunately, he took the fifth-most sacks outside the pocket in the FBS in 2024 with 13. With that being said, it’s hard to deny the talent.
The New Orleans Saints hired Doug Nussmeier as offensive coordinator for the 2025 season. Since 2020, he has worked as the quarterbacks coach for the Dallas Cowboys, Los Angeles Chargers, and Philadelphia Eagles.
These three quarterbacks aren’t particularly close in playing-style which gives me confidence that Nussmeier can coach up Klubnik and help speed up his development.
7) Pittsburgh Steelers (From IND)
Garrett Nussmeier, QB, LSU
TRADE! The Pittsburgh Steelers receive the seventh overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft; the Indianapolis Colts receive the 10th overall pick in 2026 and a 2027 NFL Draft first-round pick.Â
As much as you hate to see it, the Pittsburgh Steelers selecting 10th overall means the Aaron Rodgers experiment failed and despite the “all chips in” approach, Mike Tomlin likely doesn’t survive the apocalypse that comes in 2026.
With that being said, the Steelers have no future at quarterback and are still competent at the majority of positions meaning they need one quickly.
Insert Garrett Nussmeier and maybe the Steelers have a fighting chance. Nussmeier’s best skills are accuracy and pocket management. His 9.8% pressure to sack ratio ranked 12th among FBS quarterbacks last season and his adjusted completion percentage was top-half.
While his decision-making puts him as my fifth best quarterback in 2025, I still think there is some upside with this pick and the Steelers are honestly left with no choice.
8) Carolina Panthers
Peter Woods, DL, Clemson
The Carolina Panthers opt-in to one more year of Bryce Young before giving up. This gives them the chance to bolster the defensive line with an absolute stud in Peter Woods.
Woods lines up all over the place for the Clemson Tigers defense. 9% of his snaps as a 0 or 1-tech, 48% as a 2, 2i, or 3-tech, and head-up or outside the tackle as a true defensive end on 43% of his snaps.
At 6’3″ 315 pounds, Woods has the ability to completely clog up the run while also showing potential in pass-rushing opportunities as well.
Playing alongside Derrick Brown who spent 43% as a 3-tech and 53% as a defensive end should bode well for Woods. This gives Carolina lots of flexibility scheme-wise up front.
9) Las Vegas Raiders
Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State
The Las Vegas Raiders get a slam dunk pick here with an absolute play-maker that can do it at all levels of the game. Caleb Downs is a great play-maker, good in coverage, and an incredible tacker with unreal instincts.
This punt return against Indiana shows you everything you need to know about Downs’ big-play abilities.
His 7.8% missed tackle rate against the run ranked 31st among 261 safeties in FBS last season. This is on top of also ranking 30th in passer rating allowed and 32nd in total tackles. Downs truly has the do-it-all skill set and would only last to ninth overall because of positional value.
10) Indianapolis Colts (From PIT)
Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee
TRADE! The Pittsburgh Steelers receive the seventh overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft; the Indianapolis Colts receive the 10th overall pick in 2026 and a 2027 NFL Draft first-round pick.
Trading down for an extra 2027 first-round pick is great for Indianapolis because it gives them plenty of draft capital to go after Arch Manning and fulfill what feels like destiny.
As a Colts fan, I understand this will force PTSD upon all of us as we all have seen Chris Ballard and company trade down year after year after year while not having an answer at quarterback since Andrew Luck retired in 2019.
Luckily for Indianapolis, this happens to be the right decision with five quarterbacks going in the first seven picks and plenty of high upside options to choose from in the later rounds. They also happen to get a really, really good defender to bolster the defense in the meantime.
Jermod McCoy was a lockdown corner in 2024, allowing just 31 catches on 62 targets, putting up four interceptions (11th), breaking up six passes, and giving up a 39th-ranked passer rating of 53.6 when targeted. Just about every single receiver not named Jeremiah Smith had one of their worst games against McCoy.
He held Kevin Concepcion to just one catch for seven yards on two targets, Elijah Badger and Eugene Wilson III out of Florida combined for one catch and 18 yards on four targets, and Alabama star Ryan Williams had one catch for 12 yards against McCoy, while he also had an interception in that outing.
11) Los Angeles Chargers
Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State
The Chargers select PFSN’s number one ranked analytical darling at wide receiver in Jordyn Tyson of Arizona State. His 3.09 yards per route run ranks 16th among 946 FBS wide receivers with over 100 routes run in 2024.
Perhaps the most appealing thing about Tyson is that he lined up in the slot just 42.6% of the time. Pair this up with his 66.7% contested target rate, and you start to see the hype with the 6’2″ Arizona State wideout.
This bodes well for a guy catching passes from a guy like Justin Herbert, who is absolutely not afraid to laser throws in tight spaces and let the receiver go up and get it. In fact, I’d argue that’s Herbert’s M.O..
Nevertheless, the Chargers hype train gets back on track after a disappointing season leaves them picking 11th and in need of some help on the outside.
12) Arizona Cardinals
Rueben Bain Jr., EDGE, Miami
Reuben Bain Jr. is a popular selection for the Arizona Cardinals, especially because them picking in the early teens likely means they struggle to get after the quarterback in the 2025 NFL season.
After ranking 25th in pressure rate, they took Walter Nolen in the 2025 NFL Draft raft to help the interior pressure. Now they add to the edge position by adding Rueben Bain Jr. who is a proven run defender (44 tackles for a “stop” as constituted by PFF) and has potential as a pass rusher.
13) Chicago Bears
Kadyn Proctor, LT, Alabama
If you’re a Chicago Bears fan, you need to be praising the lord for Kadyn Proctor somehow falling to 13th overall in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft.
With only a handful of teams above them in need of a left tackle but in much more dire need of other positions, the Bears get the steal of the draft and continue to fortify the offensive line for what could be a dangerous 2026 football team. Picking 13th overall doesn’t mean failure for Chicago, considering how stacked the NFC North is.
Regardless, the Bears now shore up the left side of the line with a 6’7″ 360-pound giant who moves incredibly well for his size. He is an absolute mauler in the run game, and this shows up very clearly statistically as well as on film.
By isolating runs in the direction that Proctor is directly responsible for and most impactful in, I calculated the difference in Alabama’s run game between those runs and others.
The Crimson Tide averaged an absurd 9.8 yards per carry behind Proctor’s direct responsibilities versus 5.1 yards per attempt elsewhere. Their success rate also goes from 60% behind Proctor to 30% everywhere else. Both of these results were statistically significant at the 5% level as well
Not only this, but also vastly improved from 2023 to 2024 and allowed just three sacks and 15 pressures on 323 pass-blocking snaps. If he continues to develop in 2025 like a 20-year-old should, Proctor could easily become a unit for the Bears’ offensive line.
14) New England Patriots
Spencer Fano, OT, Utah
Spencer Fano is one of two stud offensive tackles for the Utah Utes this season. His 93.6 PFF run-blocking grade ranked second out of 1,260 offensive linemen, and he allowed just one sack and 14 pressures on 424 pass-blocking snaps. Even more impressive, he played all of 2023 at left tackle and all of 2024 on the right side, showing how flexible he can be.
The New England Patriots need all the help they can get along the offensive line, as they ranked ninth-highest in quick pressure rate allowed last season. Morgan Moses will be 35 entering the 2026 season, so giving Drake Maye bookend tackles in both Will Campbell and Fano should provide him with enough time to find the open man downfield.
15) Los Angeles Rams (From ATL)
Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson
The Rams get the 15th pick in this scenario after the Atlanta Falcons narrowly miss the NFL Playoffs.
Meanwhile, the Rams actually did make the postseason, and Matthew Stafford is still playing good football. This allows them to take a “best player available” approach while stockpiling future draft picks using their second first-rounder to prepare for Stafford’s succession.
They wait for the second first-rounder to do this because Avieon Terrell was on the board. They get an outside cornerback who specializes in zone coverage, ranking 19th in the nation in forced incompletion percentage. This fits well with a Rams defensive scheme that ran the fourth-most zone coverage in 2024.
16) Dallas Cowboys
Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame
The Dallas Cowboys ranked 25th in runs of 10 or more yards and tied for last in rushing attempts of 20 or more yards last season.
Insert Jeremiyah Love, who is a big-run machine, ranking 20th in breakaway percentage, 16th in missed tackles forced (despite a limited number of attempts), seventh in yards per attempt, and eighth in rushing touchdowns for the Fighting Irish in 2024.
FREE: Build Your Own Prospect Rankings With the 2026 NFL Big Board Builder
The Cowboys’ inability to run the ball in Dallas meant Dak Prescott saw more defenders in coverage than he needed to, as advertised by their ranking of 26th in the number of plays against a stacked box.
Love’s big play prowess means we should see a Prescott who gets to let it rip more successfully. The Cowboys go from 13th in passing EPA (expected points added) to 28th against stacked and unstacked boxes.
17) Washington Commanders
David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech
The Washington Commanders have recently switched to a 3-4 defense as their base unit, going from rushing the passer with four on the 12th-most plays in 2023 to the 30th-most (third least) in 2024. This means they should be looking for a stand-up edge type in the 2026 NFL Draft.
They can look no further than Texas Tech edge David Bailey. Bailey has spent the majority of his time as a stand-up edge rusher wreaking havoc in backfields for Stanford.
In 2024, Bailey finished with seven sacks and an absurd pressure rate of 21.9%, which ranks second in the nation out of 436 defenders with over 200 pass-rushing snaps.
At 250 pounds, Bailey could stand to improve on run-defense, missing on 20.7% of his tackles but you absolutely take an edge with those kind of pass-rushing chops in the first round.
18) San Francisco 49ers
Isaiah World, LT, Oregon
In my recent article about transfer offensive linemen ready to explode in draft talks, the first one on my list was left tackle Isaiah World. The San Francisco 49ers can see the writing on the wall when it comes to Trent Williams. He is reaching that age where, if they don’t find his future replacement, they could be in big trouble when he finally decides to hang it up.
Insert World, who ranked 17th amongst FBS tackles last season in pressures allowed per pass-blocking snap. Not only this, but World was a strong run-blocker too, paving statistically meaningful holes for the Nevada running backs in 2024.
While the competition will be stiffer at Oregon, I think World is setting himself up to become a first-round pick.
19) Cleveland Browns (From JAX)
LT Overton, EDGE, Alabama
The Browns have a lot of holes to fill on this roster but luckily, the Jaguars gifted them an extra first rounder in exchange for Travis Hunter, one of those rare deals where I think both sides won. The Browns get to bolster their defensive line while also grabbing Sellers earlier in the first round.
Having 6’5″ 280-pound LT Overton playing with and learning from Myles Garrett is quite a scary idea. The Alabama edge ranked 26th in pressure rate last season and was 22nd in pressure rate after 2.5 seconds to throw, showcasing his relentless motor and willingness to get after it even after an initial loss.
Overton lines up in an edge rusher position on most of his snaps, which is rare for someone of his size.
20) Cincinnati Bengals
Domani Jackson, CB, Alabama
The Cincinnati Bengals hired 2024 Notre Dame defensive coordinator Al Golden which means they will definitely be needing a man-heavy corner in the draft.
Golden’s Fighting Irish ranked second in the FBS in man-coverage percentage and saw lots of success with it. Domani Jackson might not be on most people’s radars as a first-round pick but I liked what I saw from him at Alabama last season.
Jackson ranked 10th in the FBS in passer rating allowed in man coverage (11.3) and allowed just eight catches on 21 targets. He also had five pass break-ups, two interceptions, and only a single touchdown allowed all year.
If the Bengals want to keep their superstar offensive players happy, it starts with hitting on defensive players.
21) Houston Texans
Jake Slaughter, C, Florida
Unless something drastically changes, there is no debate that the Houston Texans will be selecting an offensive lineman in the 2026 NFL Draft.
With fourth-round center Jake Andrews slated to start as a rookie, you can’t help but wonder if the Texans go after a more talented center in the first round like Jake Slaughter.
Slaughter has been an absolute unit for the Florida Gators in the past two seasons, allowing just three sacks and 18 pressures in 730 pass-blocking snaps. The Gators also had tremendous success rushing behind Slaughter in the A-gap, running for 5.56 yards per carry on such plays.
22) Detroit Lions
Keldric Faulk, EDGE, Auburn
Keldric Faulk is a 6’6″, 280+ pound force for Auburn. He recorded seven sacks and 45 pressures in 2024. His size also lets him kick inside, having played 3-tech on about 8% of his snaps, showing real versatility.
Playing him opposite Aidan Hutchinson gives the Lions the secondary pass rusher that elite defenses need to take that next step.
The other obvious pick here was stolen by Houston. After Ragnow retired, it would have been great to see Slaughter fall to Detroit, but fear not, Lions fans; there are still two more rounds in this mock!
23) Buffalo Bills (From LAR)
Elijah Sarratt, WR, Indiana
TRADE! The Buffalo Bills receive pick 23; the Los Angeles Rams receive the 32nd pick of this 2026 NFL Mock Draft and 171, 218, and a 2027 NFL Draft third-round selection.
According to Drafttek’s trade value chart, picks 32, 171, and 218 are equal to 616.8 in draft value, while the 23rd overall pick is worth 760. To sweeten the deal for the Rams, the Bills throw in a third-round pick in the 2027 NFL Draft.
This would be worth roughly 50 points if you assume the Bills make the playoffs again and discount by one round. That should be enough to entice the Rams, as they are analytically inclined and realize that future picks are discounted all too much, but that is an argument for another time.
After trading up, the Bills get my No. 2-ranked wide receiver. Elijah Sarratt was tied for 12th in the nation in 20+ yard touchdowns among 250+ wide receivers in the NCAA. Sarratt thrived on the outside, playing in the slot on an absurdly low 11.5% of his snaps.
This means Buffalo gets another outside weapon to go along with Keon Coleman, which allows Khalil Shakir to play primarily out of the slot.
I know that it seems a bit rich for Buffalo to draft another wide receiver in the first round after taking one in 2024. Still, you can never have enough good players on rookie contracts, and you can never have enough skill position players either.
Josh Allen and the offensive line is strong enough to lift your baseline level running so adding another playmaker in the pass game is that much more effective.
Besides, I am not in love with the corners still on the board, so it doesn’t make sense for them to reach here when they are absolutely good enough to take best player available.
24) Green Bay Packers
Chandler Rivers, CB, Duke
While Buffalo was in a position to ignore the cornerback market, the Green Bay Packers are not. After losing Jaire Alexander, they must find a reliable zone corner for the outside. While man coverage is great, they run the ninth-least man and the eighth-most zone.
Chandler Rivers fits the mold. Though a bit undersized, he ranked 44th out of 533 defenders in passer rating allowed in zone. He also showed solid ball skills with three interceptions and five pass breakups. Even more impressive, Rivers was only flagged once across 2023 and 2024.
25) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Tyreak Sapp, EDGE, Florida
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers go edge rusher here with Tyreak Sapp. The 274-pound Florida Gators product amassed eight sacks this season playing a balanced amount of both interior defensive line and edge rusher. Sapp will replace an aging Haason Reddick, and the Bucs will look to the later rounds to find a linebacker that fits their play style more than Anthony Hill Jr.
26) Seattle Seahawks
Aamil Wagner, OT, Notre Dame
The Seattle Seahawks need help at right tackle, and Aamil Wagner played well for Notre Dame last year at the position. A much better run-blocker than pass-blocker, Wagner has the arm length and athleticism to improve in that category and make an immediate impact for Sam Darnold and Seattle.
27) Denver Broncos
Antonio Williams, WR, Clemson
Despite registering a poor 4.5 yards per reception after the catch, I think Antonio Williams possesses an elite ability to make defenders miss in open space. Part of what could be hindering his YAC numbers is the overwhelming number of contested targets he had.
Granted, Williams was solid on contested catches, hauling in 11 of 19 targets, but I think he’s at his best when he has space to work with.
Williams finished with 12 catches for 371 yards and six touchdowns on passes of 20+ yards last season. Despite playing in a crowded room, he met the threshold for dominator rating, registering over 30% of the team’s total yards and touchdowns from scrimmage.
This fits well with what the Denver Broncos like to do on offense. The Broncos ranked 12th in passes of 20 or more yards, and Williams can help them crack the top 10.
28) Baltimore Ravens
Makai Lemon, WR, USC
If the Baltimore Ravens are picking 28th in the NFL Draft, they fell short in the playoffs again. At this point, their roster is pretty stacked, but other than Zay Flowers, I think their wide receiver room could use some improvement.
Despite being 5’9″, Flowers actually only received 34% of his snaps last season from the slot.
This allows them to draft Makai Lemon out of USC, who finished with an 85.1% slot percentage. Lemon’s best ability was getting open and making the best of his opportunities. He caught 77.6% of his targets in 2024, ranking 181st of 946 in that category, and registered a ridiculously impressive one drop on 67 catches, good for 1.9% (51 of 520).
29) Philadelphia Eagles
Dillon Thieneman, S, Oregon
With Cooper DeJean excelling in the slot and Reed Blankenship playing deep, Dillon Thieneman gives the Philadelphia Eagles an explosive option at box safety. In 2023, Thieneman ranked fifth in FBS in coverage snaps per target, with just 12 passes thrown his way in 438 coverage snaps.
In two seasons at Purdue, he racked up 210 tackles with just 31 misses. Even if they move on from Blankenship after 2025, Thieneman has more experience playing deep than in the box; he could do either.
30) Kansas City Chiefs
Caleb Banks, DL, Florida
Caleb Banks is a traditional DT who was solid as a pass rusher in 2024, with four sacks and 29 pressures on 233 pass-rush snaps. At 6’5″, 325 pounds, Banks surprisingly played a lot more 3-tech than expected. With that size on the interior, the Kansas City Chiefs should be pretty stout at stopping the run.
31) Minnesota Vikings
Zane Durant, DT, Penn State
I think the Minnesota Vikings might have the best roster in football, pound-for-pound. Assuming J.J. McCarthy is at least halfway decent, the Vikings’ picking 31 means they lost in the Super Bowl and need one more piece to get over the hump.
MORE: Create Your Own Mock With the Free PFSN NFL Mock Draft Simulator
Zane Durant is a true, every-down, 3-tech who can disrupt the run and get after the quarterback. Among 340 defensive tackles with 100+ run snaps, Durant ranked 68th in tackle rate. Putting him in rotation with Javon Hargrave and Harrison Phillips should give Minnesota’s defensive line enough juice to dominate the interior.
32) Los Angeles Rams
Anthony Hill Jr., LB, Texas
TRADE! The Buffalo Bills receive pick 23, 171, 218, and a 2027 NFL Draft third-round selection; the Los Angeles Rams receive the 32nd pick of this 2026 NFL Mock Draft.
The Rams hold off on taking a quarterback for just one more year as they continue to bolster an unbelievably young and talented defense. If Jared Verse takes the next step and competes for Defensive Player of the Year, like I think he will, the Rams defense should be tiptoeing around elite status this time next season.
Then you add Anthony Hill Jr to join Omar Speights as the inside linebackers for this team, and they get that much more deadly. Hill ranked 44th among 2,447 defenders in tackles that constituted a “stop”, according to PFF. He can also blitz really well, racking up 23 pressures and six sacks from inside the box.
2026 NFL Mock Draft | Round 2
33) New York Giants
A.J. Harris, CB, Penn State
34) Cleveland Browns
Iapani Laloulu, C, Oregon
35) Miami Dolphins
Nyck Harbor, WR, South Carolina
36) Tennessee Titans
Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama
37) New York Jets
Michael Taaffe, S, Texas
38) New Orleans Saints
Dani-Dennis Sutton, EDGE, Penn State
39) Indianapolis Colts
Caleb Lomu, LT, Utah
40) Carolina Panthers
Max Klare, TE, Ohio State
41) Las Vegas Raiders
Taurean York, LB, Texas A&M
42) Pittsburgh Steelers
Denzel Boston, WR, Washington
43) Los Angeles Chargers
Emmanuel Pregnon, LG, Oregon
44) Arizona Cardinals
Blake Miller, RT, Clemson
45) Chicago Bears
Matayo Uiagalelei, EDGE, Oregon
46) New England Patriots
Eric Singleton Jr., WR, Auburn
47) Atlanta Falcons
Ar’Maj Reed-Adams, G, Texas A&M
48) Dallas Cowboys
Harold Perkins Jr., LB, LSU
49) Houston Texans (From WAS)
Mikail Kamara, EDGE, Indiana
50) San Francisco 49ers
Tim Keenan III, DT, Alabama
51) Jacksonville Jaguars
Nicholas Singleton Jr., RB, Penn State
52) Cincinnati Bengals
Malik Muhammad, CB, Texas
53) Houston Texans
Derrick Moore, EDGE, Michigan
54) Detroit Lions
Sam Leavitt, QB, Arizona State
55) Los Angeles Rams
KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M
56) Green Bay Packers
Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois
57) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Austin Romaine, LB, Kansas State
58) Seattle Seahawks
Joshua Josephs, EDGE, Tennessee
59) Denver Broncos
Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt
60) Baltimore Ravens
Aaron Graves, DT, Iowa
61) Philadelphia Eagles
Rayshaun Benny, DL, Michigan
62) Kansas City Chiefs
D’Angelo Ponds, CB, Indiana
63) Minnesota Vikings
Jonah Coleman, RB, Washington
64) Buffalo Bills
Makhi Hughes, RB, Oregon
2026 NFL Mock Draft | Round 3
65) Houston Texans (from NYG)
Austin Barber, OT, Florida
66) Cleveland Browns
Malachi Fields, WR, Notre Dame
67) Miami Dolphins
Dontay Corleone, DL, Cincinnati
68) Tennessee Titans
Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State
69) Philadelphia Eagles (from NYJ)
Terrance Carter Jr., TE, Texas Tech
70) New Orleans Saints
Parker Brailsford, C, Alabama
71) Indianapolis Colts
John Mateer, QB, Oklahoma
72) Carolina Panthers
Jaden Greathouse, WR, Notre Dame
73) Las Vegas Raiders
Aaron Anderson, WR, LSU
74) Pittsburgh Steelers
Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU
75) Los Angeles Chargers
Justin Joly, TE, NC State
76) Arizona Cardinals
Carson Beck, QB, Miami (FL)
77) Chicago Bears
Jaydn Ott, RB, Oklahoma
78) New England Patriots
Darius Taylor, RB, Minnesota
79) Atlanta Falcons
DJ McKinney, CB, Colorado
80) Indianapolis Colts (From DAL)
CJ Baxter, RB, Texas
81) Washington Commanders
Bray Hubbard, S, Alabama
82) San Francisco 49ers
Josh Moten, CB, Southern Mississippi
83) Jacksonville Jaguars
Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
84) Cincinnati Bengals
Connor Lew, C, Auburn
85) Miami Dolphins (From HOU)
Bud Clark, S, TCU
86) Jacksonville Jaguars (From DET)
Whit Weeks, LB, LSU
87) Los Angeles Rams
Dante Moore, QB, Oregon
88) Green Bay Packers
Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State
89) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Tacario Davis, CB, Washington
90) Seattle Seahawks
Taylen Green, QB, Arkansas
91) Denver Broncos
DeMonte Capehart, DT, Clemson
92) Baltimore Ravens
RJ Maryland, TE, SMU
93) Philadelphia Eagles
Eugene Wilson III, WR, Florida
94) Kansas City Chiefs
Drayk Bowen, LB, Notre Dame
95) Minnesota Vikings
Keon Sabb, S, Notre Dame
96) Buffalo Bills
Logan Jones, IOL, Iowa
97) Pittsburgh Steelers
Riley Mahlman, OT, Wisconsin
98) Jacksonville Jaguars
Will Lee III, CB, Texas A&M
99) Philadelphia Eagles
Fa’alili Fa’amoe, OT, Wake Forest
100) Minnesota Vikings
Christian Gray, CB, Notre Dame

