We’re just one round into the 2025 NFL Draft, and there’s plenty more prospective action to unpack on Day 2 and Day 3 of the event. Skipping ahead to the start of the second day, here’s how the board might continue to fall once the event resumes.
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33) Cleveland Browns
Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado
Shedeur Sanders didn’t go in Round 1 as expected, but he shouldn’t fall too far in Round 2. The 23-year-old is the most accurate of the QB prospects remaining, and he’d be properly insulated by Kevin Stefanski’s scheme. At this point, it’s all about value, and his is rising.
34) Houston Texans (from NYG)
Jonah Savaiinaea, OG, Arizona
The Texans traded out of Round 1 and acquired extra capital, which they can now use to overhaul their offensive line. Jonah Savaiinaea presents exciting value to start as an explosive, physical interior blocker with the leverage and power to provide an upgrade.
35) Tennessee Titans
Luther Burden III, WR, Missouri
The Titans met with Luther Burden III at the Combine and on a Top-30 visit, so there might be interest in adding him to their receiving room as a new weapon for Cam Ward. At 6’0″, 206 pounds, Burden can be Tennessee’s modern version of Chris Chambers alongside Calvin Ridley and Tyler Lockett.
36) Cleveland Browns (from JAX)
TreVeyon Henderson, RB, Ohio State
With a need at RB, the Browns take in-state product TreVeyon Henderson to supplant Jerome Ford on the depth chart. At 5’10”, 202 pounds, Henderson has the dynamic burst, speed, and forward-pressing physicality to start early, and he’s a superb third-down back.
37) Las Vegas Raiders
Shavon Revel, CB, East Carolina
Shavon Revel is still recovering from a torn ACL and will be a 24-year-old rookie, but he has all the tools a defensive mind like Pete Carroll would covet on the boundary: size, length, explosiveness, long speed, twitch, fluidity, vision, playmaking, and splicing physicality.
38) New England Patriots
Kyle Williams, WR, Washington State
The Patriots met with Kyle Williams, and he is one of the few who might fit Josh McDaniels’ vision for a universal separator in Drake Maye’s care. Williams can be a terrific movement-Z alongside Stefon Diggs, and an easy outlet and safety valve on Day 1.
39) Chicago Bears (from CAR)
Kaleb Johnson, RB, Iowa
The Bears have an athletic line built to win blocks on the move and sustain displacement energy, and Kaleb Johnson is a zone-centric runner who can eat behind their blocks. A supersized glider with smooth instincts, he gives Chicago the ability to control games.
40) New Orleans Saints
Jalen Milroe, QB, Alabama
Kellen Moore and the Saints hosted Jalen Milroe for a private workout, and there’s a chance Moore saw some of the same tools that underpinned Jalen Hurts’ developmental profile. Milroe has a longer way to go than Hurts did, but his athleticism and arm are both elite.
41) Chicago Bears
Kevin Winston Jr., S, Penn State
With Jaquan Brisker’s long-term future uncertain, the Bears take a young safety with an extremely high floor in run support and existing yet untapped potential as a coverage defender. Kevin Winston Jr. can pay dividends early with his range and all-out physicality.
42) New York Jets
Jaylin Noel, WR, Iowa State
WR2 is quietly a major need for the Jets, and Jaylin Noel solves it. At 5’10”, 191 pounds, with sub-30″ arms, he’ll never be a catch radius receiver, but he’s an absolute powder keg in the RAC phase with supercharged stop-and-start, separation potential, and vertical juice.
43) San Francisco 49ers
Darius Alexander, DT, Toledo
Darius Alexander will be a 25-year-old rookie, but teams are sure to fall in love with his power profile and hot motor. At 6’4″, 305 pounds, with 34″ arms, he’s a tree trunk in contact situations, with the power capacity to plow through anchors and pry into gaps.
44) Dallas Cowboys
Will Johnson, CB, Michigan
Will Johnson’s knee injury was bad enough to keep him out of Round 1 entirely, but the Cowboys are one team that could take a chance on him if the price is right. A CB trio of Johnson, Trevon Diggs, and DaRon Bland would be scary for opposing offenses.
45) Indianapolis Colts
Carson Schwesinger, LB, UCLA
For the second round in a row, Chris Ballard and the Colts let a supreme value fall into their laps with Carson Schwesinger. He is a 6’2″, 242-pound read-and-response linebacker with high-end range, gap instincts, coverage mobility and feel, and tackling ability at the point.
46) Los Angeles Rams (from ATL)
Trey Amos, CB, Ole Miss
Trey Amos is a first-round value on my board, and yet, the Rams get him in the middle of Round 2. At 6’1″, 195 pounds, with 32″ arms, Amos is smart and scheme-versatile, but also fast, explosive, fluid, agile, and a natural, effortless playmaker at the catch point.
47) Arizona Cardinals
Nic Scourton, EDGE, Texas A&M
The Cardinals are almost done revamping their defensive line after taking Walter Nolen. Nic Scourton can further the mission at the EDGE spot opposite Josh Sweat. Scourton has impressive finesse and hand usage at 6’3″, 257 pounds, and he’s still trending up.
48) Miami Dolphins
Nick Emmanwori, S, South Carolina
Nick Emmanwori is a polarizing prospect, but the Dolphins feel like a team that would take a chance on him at the right value. At 6’3″, 220 pounds, his coverage mobility and closing speed are uncommon traits, and he has exciting role versatility for the creative coordinator.
49) Cincinnati Bengals
T.J. Sanders, DT, South Carolina
At 6’4″, 297 pounds, with over 33″ arms, T.J. Sanders’ heavy hands and sturdiness as a run defender should sell the Bengals on early downs, and he flashes an impressive blend of power, prying strength, explosion, and gap-shading agility as a pass-rushing threat.
50) Seattle Seahawks
Jared Wilson, OC, Georgia
The Seahawks added Grey Zabel as their focal point on the interior, but they shouldn’t be done there yet. Jared Wilson profiles nicely at center with his well-leveraged frame, explosive athleticism, and high football IQ, and he allows Zabel to settle at guard.
51) Denver Broncos
Quinshon Judkins, RB, Ohio State
The Broncos — still in need of a volume back to become the engine of Sean Payton’s offense — take Quinshon Judkins in this mock draft. Judkins isn’t as versatile as other options, but he has the speed, bend, vision, and brawling toughness to take volume.
52) Seattle Seahawks (from PIT)
Tre Harris, WR, Ole Miss
Klint Kubiak has two high-quality and versatile receivers in Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Cooper Kupp. Tre Harris is the versatile X-receiver who can complete the puzzle around those two. Harris can free them up to make plays, all while giving Sam Darnold a downfield target.
53) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Donovan Ezeiruaku, EDGE, Boston College
This may seem low for Donovan Ezeiruaku, but his lack of an overarching power element is a concern, even in spite of his production. Nevertheless, he’s incredibly bendy and slippery as a pass-rusher, and his pass-rush bag is one of the deepest in the entire class.
54) Green Bay Packers
Darien Porter, CB, Iowa State
After adding to their playmaking core in Round 1, the Packers now infuse their CB room with top-end physical ability alongside Nate Hobbs. At 6’3″ and 195 pounds, Darien Porter has easy speed and explosion, with natural zone feel and disruptive upside in man coverage.
55) Los Angeles Chargers
Terrance Ferguson, TE, Oregon
At 6’5″ and almost 250 pounds, Terrance Ferguson checks almost all the boxes. He’s big, with a wide catch radius. He’s an elite athlete. He’s a fluid, efficient, and well-versed route runner. He can make easy RAC catches or box out DBs. And he can work up the seam.
56) Buffalo Bills (from MIN)
Alfred Collins, DT, Texas
At 6’6″, 332 pounds, with nearly 35″ arms, Alfred Collins is a mountain of a man who might be able to take the reins from DaQuan Jones inside. Collins doesn’t have much pass-rush value to speak of, but he’s a stack-and-shed machine who can erase double teams.
57) Carolina Panthers (from LAR)
Oluwafemi Oladejo, EDGE, UCLA
Someone is going to take a chance on Oluwafemi Oladejo sooner rather than later. A former off-ball LB turned EDGE, he has size, length, and mass at 6’3″, 258 pounds, along with explosiveness, speed-to-power, and pursuit range. All the tools are there to mold.
58) Houston Texans
Jalen Royals, WR, Utah State
The Texans hope to get production from Christian Kirk in the twilight of his career, but they still need a quality WR2 for Nico Collins. With his frame, contact balance, route-running ability, and explosive, energized athleticism, Jalen Royals profiles very well in that role.
59) Baltimore Ravens
Aireontae Ersery, OL, Minnesota
The Ravens will have to address the guard spot at some point on Day 2 of the 2025 NFL Draft. Though he played tackle in college, Aireontae Ersery projects well at guard with his massive 6’6″, 330-pound frame, elite explosive athleticism, and gnawing physical edge.
60) Detroit Lions
Miles Frazier, OG, LSU
Miles Frazier feels like a player who could go earlier than expected. He was a three-year starter at LSU, a plus athletic tester at 6’6″, 317 pounds, and a stalwart interior blocker with synergetic technique, suffocating anchor, and heavy hands on the attack.
61) Washington Commanders
J.T. Tuimoloau, EDGE, Ohio State
Washington passed up available EDGE talent for OL in Round 1, but a need still exists on the defensive side. J.T. Tuimoloau is a Dan Quinn-style edge rusher. He has the desired size and power at 6’4″, 265 pounds, but is also explosive and rangy, with a nose for the ball.
62) Buffalo Bills
Landon Jackson, EDGE, Arkansas
There might not be a better, more obvious Day 2 fit than Landon Jackson to the Bills. Buffalo met with him twice this year. At 6’6″, 264 pounds, he has the length and athleticism they covet. It remains to be seen if he’ll make it here, but it’s an easy pick if he does.
63) Kansas City Chiefs
Xavier Watts, S, Notre Dame
With Bryan Cook’s long-term future unclear, the Chiefs would do well to add a player like Xavier Watts in Round 2. At 6’0″, 204 pounds, Watts isn’t an elite athlete, but he’s fluid, strong, incredibly instinctive, and versatile between coverage and support roles.
64) Philadelphia Eagles
Mason Taylor, TE, LSU
The Eagles once again play the 2025 NFL Draft board and achieve supreme value with Mason Taylor in Round 2. A prospective Dallas Goedert replacement, Taylor brings efficient route running, soft hands, strong RAC athleticism, and the right blocking want-to.
Round 3: 65) New York Giants
Marcus Mbow, OL, Purdue
After selecting Jaxson Dart, the Giants need to invest more in the future of their OL. They’ve shown interest in Marcus Mbow, and given Mbow’s experience at both guard and right tackle, he makes sense as an athletic hand-fighter with early utility at multiple spots.
66) Kansas City Chiefs (from TEN)
Wyatt Milum, OL, West Virginia
Wyatt Milum feels like a Chiefs selection at this juncture. He has the size they covet, he’s athletic enough, with power and torque, and he’s a technically-sound, endlessly physical blocker with a promising projection at guard. Josh Simmons and Milum can lock down the left.
67) Cleveland Browns
Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State
Both Greg Newsome and Martin Emerson Jr. are entering contract years. The Browns could hedge for this by adding Azareye’h Thomas, a CB who profiles similarly to Emerson. At 6’2″, the 20-year-old maximizes his smothering length and physicality with quick, efficient feet.
68) Las Vegas Raiders
Elic Ayomanor, WR, Stanford
Elic Ayomanor still has room to attain a greater level of operational consistency, but at 6’2″, 210 pounds, with a stellar size-speed profile and elite blocking utility, he can be a valuable two-phase presence right out of the gate for Pete Carroll and Co., with WR2 upside.
69) New England Patriots
Kyle Kennard, EDGE, South Carolina
The Patriots met with Kyle Kennard twice throughout the process and could have him circled as their Day 2 EDGE target. At 6’4″ and 254 pounds, with 34″ arms, Kennard offers a dazzling speed-to-power profile but also has apex-clearing burst and ankle flexion.
70) Jacksonville Jaguars
CJ West, DT, Indiana
James Gladstone comes from the Los Angeles Rams school of finding mid-round gems at DT (see: Kobie Turner). The candidate to fulfill that description for the Jaguars is CJ West — a versatile 1-tech/3-tech with leverage, twitch, compact power, and high football IQ.
71) New Orleans Saints
Jordan Burch, EDGE, Oregon
At around 6’4″, 280 pounds, Jordan Burch fits Mickey Loomis’ traditional profile at EDGE with his size, mass, and length. He also has the fleet-footed athleticism and build-up explosion to fit either as a stand-up EDGE or a 3-point rusher in Brandon Staley’s scheme.
72) Chicago Bears
Bradyn Swinson, EDGE, LSU
The Bears have a solid EDGE duo in Montez Sweat and Dayo Odeyingbo, but Bradyn Swinson provides an added flavor and provides additional security beyond Odeyingbo. At 6’3″, 255 pounds, Swinson has burst, bend, speed-to-power, and strength in the run game.
73) New York Jets
Elijah Arroyo, TE, Miami (FL)
Still in need of a replacement at the TE spot, the Jets take Elijah Arroyo in this mock draft. At 6’5″, 250 pounds, with 33″ arms, Arroyo has an ideal receiving skill set, with vertical and seam-busting athleticism, smooth instincts, and some long-striding RAC.
74) Carolina Panthers
Jonas Sanker, S, Virginia
Having met with Jonas Sanker twice, the Panthers have a need and a desire to fill it with a player like the Virginia safety. Sanker is a high-level alley runner with efficient coverage mobility and a relentless edge at contact, and he can outplay his draft slot.
75) San Francisco 49ers
Benjamin Morrison, CB, Notre Dame
Benjamin Morrison’s medicals may continue to push him down the board, but he’d be a nice fit in San Francisco. He has the route vision and snappy corrective athleticism to play in off-man and zone, and his ability to match in press-man is well documented.
76) Dallas Cowboys
Damien Martinez, RB, Miami (FL)
The Cowboys met with Damien Martinez twice in the lead-up to the 2025 NFL Draft. Assuming they target an RB on Day 2, he should be one of their top options. Despite his appearance as a volume back, Martinez has fluidity and savvy to go with his physicality.
77) New England Patriots (from ATL)
Dylan Sampson, RB, Tennessee
In the immediate timeline, the Patriots are set with Rhamondre Stevenson and Antonio Gibson, but Dylan Sampson is a pick for the present and the future. The Patriots met with the dynamic RB twice this cycle, affirming their interest in his slashing speed through gaps.
78) Arizona Cardinals
Tate Ratledge, OG, Georgia
The Cardinals focused on defense early in the 2025 NFL Draft, but both offensive guard spots remain potential problem areas. Tate Ratledge helps solve one of those issues. Though his injuries invite uncertainty, he’s athletic, experienced, and highly imposing.
79) Houston Texans (from MIA)
Ty Robinson, DT, Nebraska
At 6’5″ and almost 300 pounds, Ty Robinson has a unique blend of size, searing explosiveness, and snap-to-whistle motor urgency. He should fit well as a disruptive 3-tech on Houston’s line, with both penetration and displacement-reducing upside.
80) Indianapolis Colts
Shemar Turner, DT, Texas A&M
With room to keep improving their interior defensive line depth, the Colts add a high-upside player here with Shemar Turner. At 6’3″, 290 pounds, with 33″ arms, Turner combines a narrow, compact frame with elite explosiveness, agility, and competitive zeal.
81) Cincinnati Bengals
Charles Grant, OL, William & Mary
At 6’5″, 310 pounds, with nearly 35″ arms, Charles Grant has the physical tools to be molded into a stalwart guard. He can be a little stiff on sharper direction changes, but he’s an explosive reach block and gap operator who flashes inspiring execution in pass protection.
82) Seattle Seahawks
Princely Umanmielen, EDGE, Ole Miss
Though Princely Umanmielen is mainly a finesse rusher at this stage of his career, he has tools worth molding in Mike Macdonald’s scheme. His first step is utterly volcanic, and he has the gravity-defying bend to dip beneath the apex while sustaining speed.
83) Pittsburgh Steelers
Tyler Shough, QB, Louisville
Tyler Shough would present great value for the Steelers in Round 3, and in fact, he could be a starter not too far into his rookie campaign. He has starter-level tools, and if he can control his high-risk gunslinger propensity, he could surprise with his production later on.
84) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Andrew Mukuba, S, Texas
Andrew Mukuba’s sub-190-pound frame will turn some teams away, but turn on the tape, and you see one of the best football players in the class. The safety is explosive, endlessly fluid, versatile, and tenacious. He’d be a superb fit next to Antoine Winfield Jr.
85) Denver Broncos
Jayden Higgins, WR, Iowa State
The Broncos’ receiving core is well off as is, but there’s room to raise the ceiling even more. With Courtland Sutton as Bo Nix’s WR1, Sean Payton can employ Jayden Higgins as a movement-Z and power-slot receiver with target-funnel upside over the middle.
86) Los Angeles Chargers
Tory Horton, WR, Colorado State
Given Jesse Minter’s ability to coach up defensive personnel, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the Chargers kick off the draft with an offensive hat trick. Tory Horton would be a pristine WR2 alongside Ladd McConkey with his size, speed, versatility, and conversion.
87) Green Bay Packers
Tyler Baron, EDGE, Miami (FL)
Tyler Baron is more of an early Day 3 value on the PFSN Big Board, but he fits the Packers’ desired physical thresholds to a tee, and he showed growth as a pass-rusher in 2024. With his optimal two-phase projection and power-finesse duality, he’s a worthwhile investment.
88) Jacksonville Jaguars (from MIN)
Devin Neal, RB, Kansas
The Jaguars have Travis Etienne and Tank Bigsby, but arguably neither is long for Jacksonville. Devin Neal has the agility, elusiveness, and creative instincts that Liam Coen will value, and his well-rounded profile should enable him to contribute early in his career.
89) Houston Texans
Mike Green, EDGE, Marshall
The fact that Mike Green fell out of Round 1 shows that perhaps NFL teams are taking his off-field allegations more seriously than expected. Someone will have to be willing to sign off on him, and the Texans are one such franchise that could ultimately do so.
90) Los Angeles Rams
Ozzy Trapilo, OT, Boston College
Quietly, Rob Havenstein is entering a contract year. If he leaves, it’ll be good to have a 6’8″, 330-pound behemoth like Ozzy Trapilo waiting in the wings. Despite his size, Trapilo is mobile, acquires leverage well, can torque through contact, and has great two-phase utility.
91) Baltimore Ravens
Smael Mondon Jr., LB, Georgia
A high-upside sub-package linebacker who met with the Ravens, Smael Mondon Jr. could be an exciting piece alongside Roquan Smith. He’s excellent in coverage, underrated in run defense, and he has the size-athleticism combination to grow into a three-down player.
92) Seattle Seahawks (from DET)
Chase Lundt, OT, UConn
The Seahawks met with Chase Lundt and could have a vision for one of the class’ best moving blockers in Klint Kubiak’s scheme. Lundt is a special athlete at right tackle, with eye-popping range and angle IQ in space, and he’s also well-balanced as a pass protector.
93) New Orleans Saints (from WAS)
Tai Felton, WR, Maryland
Tai Felton’s lacking catch radius and physicality may scare some teams away, but with his fluid, explosive athleticism, slippery RAC, and vertical ability, he’s a tailor-made WR2 or WR3 for the Saints alongside Chris Olave, with early schematic comfort in the short range.
94) Cleveland Browns (from BUF)
Harold Fannin Jr., TE, Bowling Green
The Browns have shown interest in Harold Fannin Jr. this offseason, and could look to add him as a prospective David Njoku successor. Fannin doesn’t have Njoku’s size or athleticism, but he’s a savvy multi-level receiving threat in the mold of Jordan Reed.
95) Kansas City Chiefs
DJ Giddens, RB, Kansas State
If the Chiefs want more juice at the RB position, they can get it from DJ Giddens — a local product with blistering vertical speed and burst at 6’0″, 212 pounds, and a slashing, instinctive style as a creator in space. With Kansas City’s OL, Giddens can produce early.
96) Philadelphia Eagles
Dylan Fairchild, OG, Georgia
A multi-year starter on a championship-caliber Georgia line, Dylan Fairchild feels like a player who’ll be coveted toward the end of Round 3. He’s not an elite athlete, but he’s mobile enough, strong enough, powerful enough, and he plays square and physical.
97) Minnesota Vikings
Nohl Williams, CB, California
Nohl Williams is one of the most productive playmakers in the 2025 class, having amassed 7 INTs and 9 PBUs in 2024. At 6’0″, 199 pounds, he has schematic versatility between press-man, off-man, and zone, and his fluidity, twitch, and physicality mesh well together.
98) Miami Dolphins
Jackson Slater, OG, Sacramento State
Taking a gamble on a FCS prospect on the interior seems like risky business for the Dolphins, but Jackson Slater has the tools to deliver. At 6’3″, 310 pounds, with elite athleticism, natural leverage, and pop in his hands, he’s well-built to withstand NFL rigors.
99) Houston Texans (from NYG)
Brashard Smith, RB, SMU
A local prospect, Brashard Smith could be an ideal target for the Texans, especially now that they have an excess of mid-round capital. Smith is a former WR with dynamic speed and elusiveness as a creator, and he can expand the offense’s potential as a spark at RB2.
100) San Francisco 49ers
Omarr Norman-Lott, DT, Tennessee
The 49ers already invested in their interior line in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft with Darius Alexander, but Omarr Norman-Lott compounds the momentum and provides a different skill set: A unique pass-rush proficiency at 6’2″, 290 pounds, with 34″ arms.
101) Atlanta Falcons (from LAR)
Jacob Parrish, CB, Kansas State
At some point, the Falcons need to invest in the 2025 NFL Draft CB group. Jacob Parrish isn’t the biggest defender, but he’s twitched-up, feisty, explosive on the attack, and competitive at the catch, and he has ideal slot-boundary versatility next to AJ Terrell.
102) Detroit Lions
Jack Bech, WR, TCU
Jack Bech won’t be able to replace Jameson Williams’ speed if the latter is traded, but Bech profiles as an exceptional WR3 with his play strength, catching consistency, and quickness as a route runner at 6’1″ and 214 pounds. His versatility should play well in Detroit.

