2027 NFL Mock Draft: Dante Moore Goes Ahead of Arch Manning, Browns Land Myles Garrett and Shedeur Sanders’ Replacements

Here's the latest mock draft, which features Dante Moore getting picked ahead of Arch Manning; the Steelers and Browns landing new franchise QBs.

After some time to think it over, I still think a trade for Leonard Moore will be made, but not by Minnesota. I also think the Titans take a chance on another explosive weapon for Cam Ward to try and take their offense to the next level.

Here at PFN, it’s never too early to start evaluating draft talent and projecting what teams will look to do to improve their roster in the 2027 NFL Draft. Using PFN’s NFL Mock Draft Simulator, let’s predict the draft order and what the first round will look like next year.


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1) Arizona Cardinals

Dante Moore, QB, Oregon

Dante Moore came back to Oregon with something to prove, and the Ducks look primed to improve on what turned out to be a disappointing finish to the 2025-26 season.

Moore is a smooth operator off-platform and out of structure, with nimble mobility and impressive arm elasticity. As an operator, he showcased notable growth in 2025. He’s a competent pre-snap processor who can discern coverage styles and depths, and post-snap, he’s shown he can bait safeties out of position with his eyes, as well as sift through two-on-one spacing and throw receivers open with proper placement.

He has flashed massive potential at times and shown why another year in college could be a valuable experience for him. I think he will put in the necessary work and win some more important games this season, which will only further solidify his position atop the 2027 NFL Draft.

2) Miami Dolphins

Jeremiah Smith, WR, Ohio State

A player rarely comes into college with as much hype as Jeremiah Smith. Ever since he was a blue-chip high school prospect, he has answered the bell time and time again. He has already won a national championship, and he has little to prove on the field. Through his first two collegiate seasons, Smith has totaled 163 catches for 2,558 yards and 27 touchdowns.

Smith is impressively fluid and sudden for his size, with a natural nuance and feel for spatial manipulation that exceeds his years. Smith isn’t as consistent as a RAC threat, and there’s still room to reach a higher echelon as an intermediate stem artist on comebacks and curls, but he looks born to be a true WR1, offensive alpha, and blue-chip weapon in the NFL.

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3) New York Jets

Arch Manning, QB, Texas

At 6’4″, 226 pounds, Arch Manning is an elite creative threat with high-level arm talent and platform freedom, and he flashes exciting operational comfort, with glimpses of impressive pocket maneuverability, navigation, pre-snap discernment, and coverage diagnosis.

Manning’s 2025 season was a massive step in the right direction, and the Round 1 buzz that was premature last summer is now truly warranted. To me, this looks like the New York Jets get their next great quarterback, along with some solid offensive weapons, to be a force sooner rather than later.

4) Tennessee Titans (via Proposed Trade With CLE)

Cam Coleman, WR, Texas

Cam Coleman was a five-star recruit out of high school and has a highlight reel oozing with potential. Coleman was affected by poor quarterback play during his first two collegiate seasons at Auburn. However, his film still had him in the first-round conversation, and now he has an incredible opportunity as Manning’s WR1 at Texas.

At around 6’3″, 200 pounds, with near-33″ arms, Coleman has the build of an X-receiver, and the athletic profile of one, too. He’s a venerable long-strider in the vertical plane but is also an impressive short-area athlete with excellent quickness, twitch, deceleration capacity, and hip fluidity for his size.

If he can improve on his drop rate from a season ago, he will be not only a blue-chip prospect for the Longhorns but a star in the NFL.

5) New Orleans Saints (via Proposed Trade With LV)

Leonard Moore, CB, Notre Dame

The New Orleans Saints move up to pick No. 5 to land Notre Dame CB Leonard Moore. In a draft with very few true No. 1 cornerbacks and a multitude of teams needing to invest in the position, I expect the Saints to trade up to get their guy. Moore projects as a scheme and alignment-diverse CB1 with All-Pro upside.

At 6’2″, 197 pounds, Moore is long and lean, with a compelling mix of long-strider explosiveness, reactive quickness and twitch, and swivel fluidity. He has a natural mirror-motor and instant reaction in press, and perfectly blends the line between patient, disciplined, and physical.

Meanwhile, in zone coverage, he has excellent two-on-one route awareness and spatial reasoning, and he is explosive on the click-and-close overtop breaks. At the catch point, Moore resembles a wide receiver with truly elite ball skills and catch-point control; he has 7 career INTs to date, along with a career forced incompletion percentage of almost 20%.

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6) Atlanta Falcons

Jordan Seaton, OT, LSU

The Atlanta Falcons have a pair of injury-prone lefties under center, but I don’t think the story is fully written on Michael Penix Jr. quite yet. A wise investment for Penix and Bijan Robinson would be a premier offensive tackle to solidify the offensive line for the next decade. That’s where Jordan Seaton comes in.

Seaton is an explosive, twitched-up, and rangy athlete at his size, and doubles as a heavy-handed combatant with excellent elbow load and force efficiency on punches. In pass protection, Seaton has a stellar synergetic feel and patient, nuanced hands; he can latch and anchor rushers with well-timed circle punches after matching, or flash hands to bait extensions before gathering. And in the run game, Seaton is angle-sound and adaptable. He is a high-motor player with all the tools to be a franchise cornerstone.

7) Cleveland Browns (via Proposed Trade With TEN)

Dylan Stewart, EDGE, South Carolina

At a listed 6’5″, 245 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Stewart’s explosiveness off the line is more akin to teleportation. He’s exceedingly twitchy and light on his feet, with elite hip fluidity, ankle flexion, and torso reduction for his size, and his combination of explosion, length, and consistent lower-body load can yield overwhelming power.

Stewart’s sheer physical potential is the core of his evaluation; he has a near-unmatched blend of explosiveness, lateral agility, quickness, bend, length, and relentless motor, and there are glimpses of proper pass-rush execution with angle manipulation, stunt efficiency, upper-lower synergy, and power production.

Overall, Stewart has room to keep expanding his counter arsenal and improve his hand precision, and he has room to add a bit more mass and supplement his play strength as well. I think Stewart’s upside, with a determined Jared Verse, could have Cleveland be very disruptive up front.

8) Carolina Panthers

Tae Johnson, S, Notre Dame

Tae Johnson could provide the Carolina Panthers with a true leader on and off the field that they haven’t had since Luke Kuechly retired. Johnson offers range and versatility to a defense that has shown promise at times, but clearly needs an impact player.

Johnson allowed just 0.4 yards per coverage snap, a measly opposing QB rating of 51.7, missed just 6.5% of his tackles, and forced an incompletion on 17.6% of targets. The numbers are elite, and the film follows suit. At 6’2″, 200 pounds, Johnson is long, well-built, and athletic, with a tantalizing blend of short-area quickness, foot speed on recalibration, swivel fluidity, and explosive long-strider range.

9) Las Vegas Raiders (via Proposed Trade With NO)

Trevor Goosby, OT, Texas

The way to keep your franchise quarterback’s career as long as possible is to make sure he is protected and has the time to execute. Trevor Goosby has the kind of potential to protect his blind side for a very long time.

Goosby has a strong sense of patience, timing, and upper-lower sync as a pass protector, but can improve at adapting, replacing his hands, and incorporating more counter strategies when rushers change the picture mid-rep. To that end, his tendency to grab against apex rushers who attain superior leverage renders him penalty-prone at times. Nevertheless, Goosby has an impact-starter projection at a premium position, with two-phase security and left-right flex.

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10) New York Giants

David Stone, DT, Oklahoma

The New York Giants have always valued having a dominant force in the middle, and they are really good at developing said players. Even though they traded Dexter Lawrence II, I bet even he would agree that the environment fostered his potential. David Stone is a perfect match for a Giants defense that can both collapse pockets and stop the run.

At 6’3″, 315 pounds, with near-elite proportional length, Stone has a lab-built combination of natural leverage, compact mass, and power capacity, all of which is magnified by his otherworldly first-step explosiveness off the line.

With his explosiveness, size, power profile, and unhinged motor, he’s a double-team magnet and can draw attention from 0-tech to 3-tech and 4i. He’s a consistent pocket pusher on the attack with a devastating bull-rush, and his line-resetting power serves as an asset in run defense, where he can both puncture gaps and reverse displacement in its tracks.

11) Washington Commanders

Colin Simmons, EDGE, Texas

Washington’s offense will be excited to see another year of Jayden Daniels’ development, but its defense could definitely use a weapon like Simmons. While he’s often considered slightly undersized, that didn’t stop him from posting a PFN EDGE Impact Score of 86.9 (fourth-best in the nation) and earning First Team All-SEC and Second Team All-American honors.

He’s a banshee on the rush with an insatiable playmaking motor, and those central qualities are magnified by his hyper-elite first-step explosiveness, long-track acceleration, tight cornering ability, effervescent twitch, and lateral explosive range.

Even at his size, tackles still need to respect his speed-to-power, which opens up opportunities for Simmons to manipulate and exploit timing and angle advantages. Simmons has the rush intelligence to bait tackles out of position with initial rush angles, stutter steps, and feints. His propulsive explosion, bend, and power pose devastating threats once out of position.

12) New York Jets

Austin Siereveld, OG, Ohio State

At 6’5″, 325 pounds, Siereveld has impressive mass, and while his proportional length is closer to average, he compensates with high-level compact power, rotational torque at contact, and overwhelming leg drive post-contact.

He’s a born displacer in the run game with elite contact authority and a tough, gritty play style. And in pass protection, he’s relatively synergetic, acquires leverage well, naturally plays with controlled lean, and has shown he can erode opposing extensions with snatches and heavy-handed chops.

13) Minnesota Vikings

Ellis Robinson IV, CB, Georgia

The Vikings get their guy here, grabbing a big-time corner who has lots of big-game experience. He is athletic, has ideal size and ball skills, and he has shown he can do it at the highest levels of Division I college football in the SEC.

At 6’0″, 180 pounds, Robinson is light and lean but possesses decent proportional length to go along with exceptional explosiveness, long speed, and elite coverage mobility. Robinson possesses snappy, short-area fluidity, the ability to recalibrate his base on demand, the ability to sink, malleability on breaks, and a reactive coil that instantly recovers leverage in read-and-react situations.

14) Pittsburgh Steelers

Drew Mestemaker, QB, Oklahoma State

After years of messing around with veterans and holding out for Aaron Rodgers’ plans, the Pittsburgh Steelers finally find their franchise quarterback in Drew Mestemaker, the impressive transfer from North Texas, who I think could be the best pick in the draft if he lands in this range.

In 14 games started, Mestemaker led the Mean Green to a record of 12-2, while passing for an FBS-leading 4,379 yards, 34 touchdowns, and 9 interceptions, at nearly 70% completion rate and nearly 10 yards per attempt, and he added 5 additional scores on the ground. Mestemaker seems like the prototypical new-age quarterback and would be a great get for the Steelers.

15) New York Jets

Justin Scott, DT, Miami (FL)

Not too long after trading Quinnen Williams, the Jets look to develop another gifted and disruptive player on defense. If he were to land here, Scott would give them a powerful presence up front, making life easier for everyone around him and continuing a pipeline for defensive linemen that has existed for years.

Projecting as a scheme-diverse DT with vast alignment versatility, elite run defense utility, stunting and slanting value, and independent pass-rush upside, Scott has immediate impact NFL starter potential right off the bat.

16) Chicago Bears

Ahmad Moten Sr., DT, Miami (FL)

Missing out on Dexter Lawrence will not stop Chicago from addressing the trenches, as I think they go with Ahmad Moten Sr. out of Miami. Moten adds size and explosiveness to the Bears’ line, an area they have been looking to address.

It was a wise decision for Moten to return to Miami for another season, as now he gets a chance to shine without Rueben Bain Jr. as the leader of the defensive line, but rather as a two-headed, disruptive duo of Moten and Justin Scott, who are getting all the buzz.

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17) Cincinnati Bengals

Jamari Johnson, TE, Oregon

After bringing in Dexter Lawrence II this past offseason, the Cincinnati Bengals give their MVP-caliber quarterback Joe Burrow another dynamic weapon.

Oregon’s Jamari Johnson is the full package, in terms of blocking and receiving, and in an offense with players like Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, he should get opportunities in space to show off his impressive athleticism.

18) Jacksonville Jaguars

Kewan Lacy, RB, Ole Miss

In what seemed like a move that made sense for both sides, the Jacksonville Jaguars moved on from Travis Etienne Jr. this offseason and will run with a decently unproven backfield for the 2026-27 season.

After this season, I expect them to select the first running back off the board, Kewan Lacy. Lacy is explosive, dynamic, and can bring it in the passing game, too. I think Lacy has the potential to be an elite back in this league, and this is a great spot for him to thrive immediately.

19) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Zabien Brown, CB, Alabama

With a combination of speed and a nose for the big play, Zabien Brown has all of the tools to become a Pro Bowler at cornerback with the right coaching. He has the speed to keep up with just about any receiver, and he also adds value as a returner, so he seems like a really solid get this late in the first round. Brown is battle-tested in SEC play, and his play remained solid. I think this would be one of the best scheme-fit picks of this draft.

20) Denver Broncos

KJ Bolden, S, Georgia

KJ Bolden projects as a defensive leader and “glue guy” whose role and phase versatility, physicality, football IQ, and range yield impact starter upside. As a mover, he operates at a controlled pace that sometimes masks his top-end athleticism. But in quick-reaction and chase scenarios, his short-area twitch, swivel fluidity, hip sink, springy explosion, and long-strider speed shine.

In support, he’s patient yet decisive, angle-disciplined, and a sure solo tackler despite his leaner frame. In coverage, he’s intelligent, incredibly natural in managing spacing and hip alignment in zone, smooth and effortless on his pedal, and quick to close gaps off his plant-and-drive once passers commit.

21) Houston Texans

Omarion Miller, WR, Arizona State

While the Houston Texans selected C.J. Stroud No. 2 overall in the not-too-distant past, I personally don’t think they have pulled the right strings in terms of setting him up for success. That isn’t for a lack of effort, but I think Omarion Miller would go a long way to stabilize the offense for him.

Miller would be the second high-upside wideout to come out of ASU in two years, offering similar traits in size and the ability to stretch defenses. I don’t think Miller is as polished as Jordyn Tyson was when he entered the NFL, but he has all the traits to be successful.

22) Philadelphia Eagles

Quincy Rhodes Jr., EDGE, Arkansas

Quincy Rhodes Jr. had the opportunity to enter the draft or transfer to Oklahoma or Kansas State. Still, he ultimately decided to return to Arkansas for one more year, and that may be just what the doctor ordered to get him into the first round. He is 6’6″ with elite length to keep tackles off him, allowing him to generate a ton of pressure.

The Eagles have shown the ability to maximize the talent they bring in, have a player with a very high ceiling, and have room to grow.

23) Detroit Lions

Matayo Uiagalelei, EDGE, Oregon

If you have seen my mock drafts over the last year, this is a pick that has made sense for an extremely long time. I respect that Matayo Uiagalelei went back to school to handle some unfinished business, but when that is done, he can be a force on a Dan Campbell-led Detroit Lions team.

24) Los Angeles Chargers

A’Mauri Washington, DT, Oregon

A’Mauri Washington would go a long way to enhance the physicality in the middle of the Los Angeles Chargers’ defensive line, a trait that Jim Harbaugh covets in his defenses.

Washington is a clogger; he takes manpower, strength, and skill to overcome, and in doing that, he leaves opportunities for his teammates. But that isn’t all he is good for. He has been an impactful interior defender for Oregon and has an extremely high floor, along with Pro Bowl upside.

25) New England Patriots

Ahmad Hardy, RB, Missouri

The Patriots have never been afraid to go off the board to get their guy, and I think Hardy could be a franchise back for them, possessing home run ability on any run. With the franchise quarterback solidified and a pretty sound team around him, I expect them to make the offense even more dynamic through Hardy.

This pick may surprise some at this stage of scouting, but I think Hardy has an elite skill set that could take the New England offense to the next level.

26) San Francisco 49ers

Kade Pieper, C, Iowa

Even though the center position doesn’t always get the first-round love it may deserve, the 49ers are always very scheme-aware when drafting their linemen, and always make sure to bring high football IQ guys into the building. He is impactful against both the pass and the run, and I see him as a day-one player, with upside to be a very reliable piece for a very long time.

27) Dallas Cowboys

Ashton Hampton, CB, Clemson

Ashton Hampton coming to Dallas would provide them with the perfect solution to the league’s ever-increasing offensive athleticism. Hampton is long to go along with said athleticism and isn’t afraid to take chances in coverage, hawking the ball and trying to make a game-changing play. He is a perfect fit in Dallas and would help bring the level of defense closer to that of their lead elite offense, which could result in them going on a deep run come playoff time.

28) Kansas City Chiefs

Mario Craver, WR, Texas A&M

With the constant uncertainty around Rashee Rice and no other proven option who can play consistently outside, Mario Craver is a great fit as Patrick Mahomes’ next big weapon. With respect to Xavier Worthy, I view him more as a slot guy who can also be moved around, but Craver’s presence would add value to everyone in the WR room.

Craver boasts explosiveness and separation skills that I think fit perfectly in Kansas City, as the Chiefs know how to get the most out of their offensive weapons with top-notch creativity.

29) Baltimore Ravens

Jadan Baugh, RB, Florida

With King Henry beginning to look human and the team needing to maintain that power run style of play, I expect the Ravens to take Baugh here. The hope is always to have a physical back to counter Lamar Jackson’s elite athleticism, so they can wear down opposing defenses and then run all over them.

30) Seattle Seahawks

Cayden Green, OG, Missouri

After a Super Bowl win, the Seattle Seahawks lost their top rusher and immediately replaced him in the first round with an extremely talented back. A year later, I expect them to solidify the offensive front to continue their perfect balance between a consistent run game and solid pass protection. Cayden Green is a perfect fit for this role, as an experienced and powerful guard who could be a force for years.

31) Buffalo Bills

Nick Marsh, WR, Indiana

With a combination of size and speed, Nick Marsh transferred to Indiana, and it shouldn’t be long before he is catching passes from an NFL quarterback. He fits the build that the Buffalo Bills like to draft, and he has an impressive catch radius. I am expecting a breakout season and for him to take what he learns from Curt Cignetti and cash in come draft time.

32) Cleveland Browns

CJ Carr, QB, Notre Dame

CJ Carr has immense upside and is very poised and mature in his progressions. If he needs to make athletic plays, he can. Carr is extremely accurate, and having the option to keep him for the fifth-year option gives them time to avoid rushing his development before fully giving him the keys to the offense.

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