Cummings’ 3-Round 2027 NFL Mock Draft: Arch Manning Lands in Major Market, Dante Moore Heads Southwest

In this way-too-early three-round 2027 NFL mock draft, Arch Manning heads to a big market, while Jeremiah Smith becomes the Dolphins' WR1.

The 2027 NFL Draft is now less than 12 months away, which means it’s time for a way-too-early three-round projection for the 2027 class.

Where will quarterbacks Arch Manning and Dante Moore go, and how do potential blue-chippers like Jeremiah Smith and Colin Simmons project? Using PFSN’s NFL Mock Draft Simulator, let’s do our best to predict next year’s draft board.


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1) Arizona Cardinals

Dante Moore, Oregon | QB

At 6’3″, 206 pounds, Dante Moore is a prototypical passer with easy velocity and drive, both downfield and outside the numbers. He’s a smooth operator off-platform and out-of-structure with nimble mobility and impressive arm elasticity, and 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.

All this being said, there’s an echelon of post-snap operator and anticipator that Moore still has yet to reach, and his relative turnover propensity is a product of late triggers, at-times forced decisions under pressure, and undiagnosed underneath defenders in zone.

Moore is still growing, but with another year of development, he can challenge for first overall capital as a QB in the mold of C.J. Stroud. For Arizona, he’s the franchise QB they’ve been impatiently waiting for. Carson Beck garnered a late Day 3 grade from me, and in my opinion, he doesn’t preclude Arizona from spending top-end capital on a QB who can truly elevate the roster.

2) Miami Dolphins

Jeremiah Smith, Ohio State | WR

At 6’3″, 223 pounds, Jeremiah Smith has the size, length, and frame density to echo the brawling X-receivers of a WR era long past.

He’s strong, explosive, physical, and an absolute hoss at the catch point, with an inherently proactive catch-point style that yields a near-20% catch rate over expectation. Past the domineering surface-level skill set, however, Smith is quietly a complete WR.

He has a high level of deceptive intelligence and footwork efficiency as a route runner, which he weaponizes through a solid release package and route tree. He’s 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 for Malik Willis.

3) New York Jets

Arch Manning, Texas | QB

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 2026 season was a massive step in the right direction, and the future Round 1 buzz that was premature last summer is now truly warranted. Having said this, Manning still needs to stack development if he wants to claim the QB1 mantle outright.

Manning’s situational precision remains somewhat inconsistent, a product of ongoing lapses in shoulder alignment and mechanical synergy. Additionally, while he’s a very good processor from the pre-snap phase to his first read, inter-progression speed and anticipation remain areas of needed improvement.

That lack of consistent anticipation over the middle of the field can render throws late and opportunities untested, and it’s something he’ll need to keep improving ahead of any NFL ascent. Still, Manning’s processing is assuredly developing fast, and he’s an excellent pocket navigator with poise, toughness, and tools.

4) Cleveland Browns

Leonard Moore, Notre Dame | CB

Leonard Moore’s PFSN CB Impact score of 93.8 ranked third in the nation in 2025, behind only first-round picks Mansoor Delane and Chris Johnson. Moore looks destined to follow in his counterparts’ footsteps as a Round 1 prospect, and the film affirms his status.

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, Moore has excellent two-on-one route awareness, spatial reasoning, and is explosive on the click-and-close overtop breaks.

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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%.

There are still areas for Moore to improve, nonetheless. While he’s an intelligent and physical support player, a 15.4% missed tackle rate in 2025 hints at a need for more conversion consistency, and he might not have elite speed or fluidity.

In spite of this, Moore projects as a scheme and alignment-diverse CB1 with All-Pro upside, and helps a Browns team that may need boundary help sooner rather than later with Denzel Ward under contract only through 2027.

5) Las Vegas Raiders

Cam Coleman, Auburn | WR

Cam Coleman is a former 5-star recruit who has been impacted by poor QB play through the first two years of his career, but has nonetheless put up film worthy of first-round consideration.

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 on the vertical plane, but is also an impressive short-area athlete with excellent short-area quickness, twitch, deceleration capacity, and hip fluidity for his size.

That athletic profile imbues him with a high degree of route-running upside. He’s admirable for his intentionality in attempting to manipulate route leverage with stem work and throttle control, and he has a natural instinct for getting defenders to freeze before quickly regaining his stride.

He’s still learning how to be his most efficient self as a separator, with later hip tells and less upfield drift at route breaks. And as a near-7% drop rate in 2025 indicates, Coleman does have room to be a bit more consistent preventing passes from entering his body over the middle of the field.

Nevertheless, Coleman is a high-level athletic talent with a compelling size profile, a swarming catch radius on high-difficulty throws, flashes of vice-grip hand strength through contact, and a natural feel for space creation in the separation phase.

At his maximum, Coleman can be a blue-chip WR1 for Fernando Mendoza.

6) Atlanta Falcons

David Stone, Oklahoma | DT

The Atlanta Falcons’ roster is slowly coming together, but the 2026 season could expose a need for an orbit DT alongside Zach Harrison and Brandon Dorlus. In the 2027 NFL Draft, David Stone is the best candidate to fill the gap.

At 6’3″, 310 pounds, Stone plays with violent intentions, and his long-limbed, well-sized frame, and explosive athleticism adheres to that style. His raw power can be overwhelming on bull-rushes and sledges in the run game, and his strength in one-on-one situations is almost impossible to match.

Stone still has room to seek greater consistency as a pass-rusher, but he’s the type of raw physical talent and competitor who earns premium capital on the interior.

7) Tennessee Titans

Dylan Stewart, South Carolina | EDGE

As an athlete and mover, the suspicions are true: Dylan Stewart moves different. 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 twitched-up and light on his feet, with elite hip fluidity, ankle flexion, and torso reduction at his size, and his combination of explosion, length, and consistent lower-body load can yield overwhelming power exertions.

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. Nevertheless, at his maximum, Stewart is a blue-chip EDGE for Robert Saleh’s defense.

8) Carolina Panthers

Colin Simmons, Texas | EDGE

A dominant attack defender, Colin Simmons earned a near-elite PFSN EDGE Impact score of 86.9 in 2025, while accumulating 12 sacks, 15.5 TFLs, and 3 forced fumbles, and fielding first-team All-SEC and second-team All-American honors.

At a listed 6’3″, 245 pounds, Simmons is slightly undersized, but has excellent proportional length to compensate. 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, and that opens up opportunity for Simmons to manipulate and exploit timing and angle advantages.

Simmons has the rush intelligence to bait tackles out of positioning with initial rush angles, stutter-steps, and feigns, and his propulsive explosion, bend, and power pose devastating threats once out of position.

In run defense, Simmons’ flaws show up more; he doesn’t have the play strength to consistently set the edge and compress gaps. Additionally, he’ll void his gap to get upfield through over-aggression at times, and he can be inconsistent processing options.

Still, as a pass-rush catalyst in odd and hybrid-front schemes, with a respectable run defense floor, Simmons has the upside to be a game-changing presence, and in Ejiro Evero’s scheme, he’d be a picture-perfect fit.

9) New Orleans Saints

Ellis Robinson IV, Georgia | CB

The New Orleans Saints made progress with their 2026 NFL Draft class, but one position they weren’t able to address until later was cornerback. In the 2027 NFL Draft, they’ll be able to add playmaking talent on the back end, and a prime contender is Ellis Robinson IV.

While Robinson is lighter at 6’0″, 180 pounds, he’s one of the most natural cover men in the 2027 class, with explosive long-striding athleticism, a fluid pedal, elastic correction quickness, and inch reset ability in zone and off-man, and an elite turnover-generating gene that comes as a product of his range, reaction speed, vision, and ball skills.

10) New York Giants

Tae Johnson, Notre Dame | S

The New York Giants will give the combination of Jevon Holland and Tyler Nubin one more go in 2026, but if Nubin isn’t able to rebound, John Harbaugh and Co. could be in the market for a replacement at the position. In the 2027 NFL Draft, Tae Johnson is my early top safety.

In 2025, Johnson’s PFSN Safety Impact score of 95.8 was the highest in the entire nation, even over 2026 first-round picks Caleb Downs and Dillon Thieneman.

At 6’2″, 200 pounds, Johnson is a rangy, elastic mover with single-high, two-high, robber, and big-nickel versatility. He’s disciplined and quick to process overlapping route concepts, he’s heady and instinctive in playmaking situations, and he’s a physical, urgent support defender.

11) Washington Commanders

Charlie Becker, Indiana | WR

There’s still some projection involved with Charlie Becker, who needs to fill the void left by Omar Cooper Jr. and Elijah Sarratt in 2026. Becker also won’t have Fernando Mendoza throwing to him, but for Josh Hoover, Becker can be a Round 1-caliber asset.

Turning on the film, Becker has all of the desired qualities of a WR1. He has size and length at 6’4″, 207 pounds. He’s an explosive, flexible long-strider with vertical gravity, but he also possesses the throttle control and malleability to underlie a full route tree, and his catch-point skills amaze.

For Jayden Daniels, Becker brings a vertical element that’s been lacking in Washington, alongside Terry McLaurin and another young, up-and-coming player in Antonio Williams.

12) New York Jets

Kewan Lacy, Ole Miss | RB

While it’s close between him and Jadan Baugh, Kewan Lacy enters the 2027 NFL Draft cycle as my preliminary RB1. And for a New York Jets squad with multiple first-round picks in 2027 and an impending need at the position if Breece Hall walks, Lacy profiles as a worthy successor.

At around 5’11”, 205 pounds, Lacy is close to average size, and he visibly lacks the power element of other volume backs. Where Lacy excels, however, is with his hyper-elite creative IQ, anticipatory vision, snappy change-of-direction, and seam-splitting long-strider burst.

At his best, Lacy brings shades of James Cook, and he has the upside to be a difference-maker at the RB position.

13) Minnesota Vikings

Jordan Seaton, Colorado | OT

Having allowed a true dropback pressure percentage of just 2.3% in 2025, Jordan Seaton’s NFL Draft ascent has been heavily anticipated. Now, he’ll get to prove himself against SEC competition as LSU’s blindside blocker.

In terms of traits, Seaton has what is coveted. He’s a touch light at 307 pounds, but sports a lean 6’5″ frame with good dimensions and proportional length. He’s 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 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. Still, Seaton is far from a finished product. He plays with inconsistent knee bend and a relatively high center of gravity, and needs to improve his hand and core strength.

Additionally, in pass protection, he can be baited into over-setting or prematurely turning his hips and opening counter lanes, and his high-energy motion can yield inefficiency.

Nonetheless, Seaton is an elite physical talent with certain soft skills that bode well for his development into a franchise cornerstone, and for a team nearing a junction point with veteran Brian O’Neill, he could be the right player to carry the torch.

14) Pittsburgh Steelers

Ahmad Moten, Miami (FL) | DT

Derrick Harmon is a long-term asset for the Pittsburgh Steelers, but a Keeanu Benton contract decision will need to be relatively soon, and Cameron Heyward isn’t getting any younger. Pittsburgh may need a DT with nose tackle and 3-tech versatility, and Ahmad Moten offers that.

At around 6’3″, 310 pounds, Moten’s first step is truly lethal, and that explosiveness, combined with his length and compact mass, affords him rare raw power capacity. Moten has the unique alignment versatile gap disruption and point-of-attack authority that brings shades of David Onyemata.

15) New York Jets

Austin Siereveld, Ohio State | OL

Austin Siereveld has played tackle with the Buckeyes, but he’ll likely transition inside to guard at the NFL level with shorter arms and measured hip stiffness.

Having said this, Siereveld has all of the qualities needed to be an impact player at the guard spot. At 6’5″, 325 pounds, he has ideal size and mass, to go along with functional athleticism, grating raw power, core strength and rotational strength, and terse finishing physicality.

16) Chicago Bears

Quincy Rhodes Jr., Arkansas | EDGE

Quincy Rhodes Jr. still has room to keep developing in 2026, but his 2025 film was enough to fuel NFL Draft consideration. He logged a stellar PFSN EDGE Impact grade of 86.4, while generating pressure on over 11% of his pass-rush reps.

At 6’6″, 277 pounds, Rhodes has the size and power profile that Dennis Allen covets in his defensive linemen, along with slant, stunt, and alignment versatility. He’s explosive, agile, and hard to corral working across-face with swims and spins, and he has a hot motor in run defense.

17) Cincinnati Bengals

Trevor Goosby, Texas | OT

The Cincinnati Bengals may need a new tackle opposite Amarius Mims within two years, and in the 2027 NFL Draft, Texas’ Trevor Goosby stands out as one of the more compelling options.

At 6’7″, 325 pounds, Goosby has a lab-built frame with excellent lean mass, length, and power capacity. He’s long-limbed with the reach to wall off the apex and channel power in the run game, and while he can be a waist-bender at times, his explosive short-range athleticism makes him difficult to catch out of positioning.

18) Jacksonville Jaguars

Blake Frazier, Michigan | OT

The Jacksonville Jaguars may need a successor for Walker Little in the near future, and while the 2027 NFL Draft offensive tackle class doesn’t have impressive early-round depth at OT at first glance, Blake Frazier is a prospect who could emerge.

Though Frazier is a bit light at 6’6″, 295 pounds, he brings truly elite athleticism, foot speed, and matching ability to the fold, along with easy recovery mobility, effortless knee bend, and balance on engagement.

Working with Kyle Whittingham and his renowned offensive line staff, Frazier has a chance to follow in the footsteps of Spencer Fano and Caleb Lomu this coming cycle.

19) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Jamari Johnson, Oregon | TE

The Oregon Ducks had a first-round TE in the 2026 NFL Draft with Kenyon Sadiq, and there’s a chance they keep the streak alive with the next man up: Jamari Johnson.

At 6’5″, 257 pounds, Johnson shows glimpses of freakish three-level athleticism with his gliding long speed and explosiveness, as well as his fluidity through breaks and transitions, and he has high-level body control and coordination at the catch point.

Cade Otton was re-signed by the Buccaneers, but he likely maxes out as a quality TE2 or replacement-level TE1. By the 2027 offseason, if they can add an elite talent at TE, there’s a chance they’ll be firmly in the running.

20) Denver Broncos

Ashton Hampton, Clemson | CB

Patrick Surtain II is a lockdown CB1 for the Broncos, but Riley Moss is due for a new contract soon, and there’s a chance the Broncos move on for a younger option in the 2027 NFL Draft. The Clemson secondary houses yet another candidate in Ashton Hampton.

At 6’2″, 200 pounds, Hampton earned a stellar 85.8 PFSN CB Impact grade in 2026, while allowing just 0.8 yards per coverage snap. For his size, he’s relatively quick and fluid, with the physicality to play up to his frame.

21) Houston Texans

Mario Craver, Texas A&M | WR

The Houston Texans have an exciting WR duo in Nico Collins and Jayden Higgins, and at the very least, Jaylin Noel functions as a quality rotational player. That said, if Tank Dell’s return in 2026 doesn’t go as planned, Houston could be in the market for a new slot WR.

At 5’9″, 165 pounds, Craver is smaller and lighter, but he compensates by being a truly electric athlete. He has the speed and stop-and-start ability to give DBs nightmares as a route runner, and his RAC ability in open space can be an asset for C.J. Stroud.

22) Philadelphia Eagles

Mateen Ibirogba, Texas Tech | DT

After the 2026 season, the Philadelphia Eagles will need to make a decision on the future of former seventh-round pick Moro Ojomo. Ojomo has developed into a high-quality player, but turnover could be on the way, and Mateen Ibirogba is a quality replacement if that happens.

At around 6’3″, 292 pounds, Ibirogba has one of the most dangerous explosive elements in the 2027 DT class. His first-step is volcanic, and he flashes overwhelming power capacity when drawing from that lower-body explosion. His gap discipline can be inconsistent, but his disruptive upside is extraordinary.

23) Detroit Lions

Kenyatta Jackson Jr., Ohio State | EDGE

The Lions added a potential complement to Aidan Hutchinson in Derrick Moore in Round 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft, but odds are, they’ll still need more in their defensive line rotation by the time the 2027 NFL Draft comes around.

Kenyatta Jackson Jr. is an enticing add for Detroit for multiple reasons. He assuredly has an elite explosive and power element with a long 6’6″, 265-pound frame, but he also has valuable alignment versatility as a power rusher from interior alignments.

24) Los Angeles Chargers

Omarion Miller, Arizona State | WR

At a listed 6’2″, 210 pounds, Omarion Miller has great height and mass to go along with decent proportional length, but even more potent is his athleticism. Miller boasts elite explosiveness, short-area agility, and foot speed, to go along with rare hip fluidity, impressive angle freedom on sharper route breaks, and smooth ankle mobility on curved transitions.

His burst, bend, and play strength make him a venerable RAC threat, as evidenced by his 6.4 YAC per reception figure in 2025, which featured over 2 whole yards of RAC beyond expectation. But he’s also a budding separator with an inspiring foundation, route tree, and release arsenal.

Miller does need to improve at the catch point. While he flashes quality reaction speed and extension ability, his 7.8% drop rate was too high in 2025, and he isn’t the most consistent at playing catch-point positioning, using timing and angles to create late-snap spacing for himself.

Still, if Miller can reach his ceiling, Round 1 capital is on the table, as a dynamic movement-Z with three-level threat appeal. And for a Los Angeles Chargers team with Quentin Johnston trade rumors clouding overhead, Miller could be the ideal successor for Justin Herbert.

25) New England Patriots

KJ Bolden, Georgia | S

The New England Patriots came out of the 2026 NFL Draft without a long-term solution at the safety spot alongside Craig Woodson, but the 2027 NFL Draft will give them a second chance in that regard. Specifically, at this value, KJ Bolden could go on to be a steal.

Bolden was one of the best defensive backs in the nation last season. His 91.6 PFSN Safety Impact grade was certifiably elite, and he allowed a mere 46.2 QB rating in coverage and missed just 6.8% of his tackle attempts.

At 6’0″, 195 pounds, Bolden is agile, fluid, and versatile, with role flexibility between single-high, two-high, nickel, and robber assignments, and his two-phase solidity fulfills the “safety blanket” designation to a tee.

26) San Francisco 49ers

Kade Pieper, Iowa | C

With Jake Brendel set to be a free agent after the 2026 season, the San Francisco 49ers will need to seek out a new long-term starter at the center position. Luckily for them, the 2027 NFL Draft appears to have a tailor-made schematic fit in Iowa’s Kade Pieper.

At 6’4″, 290 pounds, Pieper is an elite athlete with swarming pulling and second-level range, and though he has shorter arms, he’s surprisingly strong for his size, with the core strength to keep defenders within his frame and drive through for punishing finishes.

27) Dallas Cowboys

Cole Sullivan, Oklahoma | LB

The Dallas Cowboys entered the 2026 NFL Draft with a pressing need at off-ball linebacker, and one could argue they didn’t address it. Jaishawn Barham has off-ball experience, but he projects better at EDGE, opening the door for LB being a need again in 2027.

Cole Sullivan is an upside pick at this stage, but at 6’4″, 230 pounds, he’s an explosive, agile, and fluid athlete with very willing physicality coming downhill, blitzing versatility, bend and depth discipline in coverage, and the range to chase sideline-to-sideline.

In Brent Venables’ scheme this year, Sullivan has a chance to become a true X-factor, and in doing so, can magnify his Round 1 appeal.

28) Kansas City Chiefs

Niki Prongos, Stanford | OT

Niki Prongos isn’t quite graded as a Round 1 prospect at this juncture on my board, but by the time he comes out for the 2027 NFL Draft, he has the potential to be one of the more coveted offensive line prospects on the board.

For the Kansas City Chiefs, in particular, who displayed a preference for athleticism with their selection of Josh Simmons, Prongos has that raw talent in spades. At around 6’7″, 315 pounds, he’s an explosive, agile, and fluid athlete with eye-catching apex range, recovery freedom, and second-level range.

Prongos still has room to get stronger and play with a more consistent anchor, but his blend of size, athleticism, and natural leverage acquisition is exhilarating.

29) Baltimore Ravens

Zabien Brown, Alabama | CB

Marlon Humphrey is entering the twilight of his career, and the same can be said for Chidobe Awuzie, who has been a dutiful veteran starter. Soon, the Baltimore Ravens will need to reinvest at CB, and Zabien Brown offers ideal value at his point.

At around 6’0″, 192 pounds, Brown is close to average size, without elite burst or explosiveness. But Brown compensates by being an extremely pro-ready player. He’s agile, fluid, technically sound and technically variable, and he’s an incredibly sound support defender with slot-boundary versatility.

30) Seattle Seahawks

Matayo Uiagalelei, Oregon | EDGE

Since 2024, Matayo Uiagalelei has amassed 16.5 sacks and 21 tackles for loss, and he could be primed for his best season yet, with all of Oregon’s starting defensive line returning. Another year of development could also catapult him to Round 1 status.

At 6’5″, 272 pounds, Uiagalelei is a compelling size-athleticism specimen, with the burst to threaten the arc and the length and power profile to erode his opponent’s center of gravity and drive through with power. His finesse element is still a work-in-progress, but he projects as a dynamic rotational presence for Mike Macdonald’s rush.

31) Buffalo Bills

A’Mauri Washington, Oregon | DT

The Buffalo Bills still need a line-resetting force at nose tackle, and A’Mauri Washington returns to college as one of the best in the eligible NFL Draft pool.

At 6’3″, 339 pounds, Washington is rumored to have a 36″ vertical and a max speed near 21 MPH, per The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman. That freakish linear explosion shows up on film, and it helps him channel power, crack double teams like fortune cookies, and stop down and base blocks in their tracks.

Alongside Ed Oliver and Deone Walker, Washington would be the perfect orbit DT with his sheer explosive gravity and leverage game, and he has additional disruptive upside if he can keep refining his pass-rush arsenal.

32) Los Angeles Rams

Jadan Baugh, Florida | RB

This is admittedly a luxury pick for the Los Angeles Rams, who still have Kyren Williams under contract through 2027. But Blake Corum has just two years left on his rookie deal and Williams’ efficiency took a step back in 2025. At this value, Jadan Baugh is too good to pass up.

Upon recent updates, Baugh has climbed my board as a Round 1-caliber RB, and the only RB behind Kewan Lacy on my board. At a listed 6’1″, 230 pounds, Baugh has a near-elite size profile to go along with awe-inspiring explosiveness, agility, bend, reactive instincts, and finishing physicality.

Baugh has room to be more consistent as a creative threat and space controller, but he’s a tantalizing volume back who also quietly has an impressive route tree, catch-point ability, and elite pass blocking utility.

Round 2

33) Arizona Cardinals
PJ Williams, SMU | OT

34) Miami Dolphins
Jelani McDonald, Texas | S

35) New York Jets
Sammy Brown, Clemson | LB

36) Cleveland Browns
Drew Mestemaker, Oklahoma State | QB

37) Las Vegas Raiders
William Echoles, Ole Miss | DT

38) Atlanta Falcons
Braelin Moore, LSU | C

39) Tennessee Titans
Cayden Green, Missouri | OG

40) Carolina Panthers
Peter Clarke, Temple | TE

41) New Orleans Saints
Princewill Umanmielen, Ole Miss | EDGE

42) New York Giants
Bear Alexander, Oregon | DT

43) Washington Commanders
Terry Moore, Ohio State | S

44) Indianapolis Colts
Toby Anene, Colorado | EDGE

45) Minnesota Vikings
Eric Singleton Jr., Florida | WR

46) Pittsburgh Steelers
Darian Mensah, Miami (FL) | QB

47) Dallas Cowboys
Brice Pollock, Texas Tech | CB

48) Chicago Bears
Ahmad Hardy, Missouri | RB

49) Cincinnati Bengals
Xavier Scott, Illinois | DB

50) Jacksonville Jaguars
Christian Alliegro, Ohio State | LB

51) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Elijah Green, Tulsa | CB

52) Denver Broncos
Rasheem Biles, Texas | LB

53) Houston Texans
Anthonie Knapp, Notre Dame | OL

54) Philadelphia Eagles
Samson Okunlola, Miami (FL) | OG

55) Detroit Lions
Tao Johnson, UCLA | S

56) Los Angeles Chargers
Trevor Lauck, Iowa | OL

57) New England Patriots
Nick Marsh, Indiana | WR

58) San Francisco 49ers
Bray Hubbard, Alabama | S

59) Green Bay Packers
Ryan Wingo, Texas | WR

60) Kansas City Chiefs
Trey’Dez Green, LSU | TE

61) Baltimore Ravens
Iapani Laloulu, Oregon | C

62) Seattle Seahawks
Koi Perich, Oregon | S

63) Buffalo Bills
Brandon Baker, Texas | OL

64) Los Angeles Rams
Greg Johnson, Minnesota | OL

Round 3

65) Arizona Cardinals
Will Heldt, Clemson | EDGE

66) Miami Dolphins
Yhonzae Pierre, Alabama | EDGE

67) New York Jets
Anthony Smith, Minnesota | EDGE

68) Cleveland Browns
Kyngstonn Viliamu-Asa, Notre Dame | LB

69) Las Vegas Raiders
Davaughn Patterson, Wake Forest | S

70) Atlanta Falcons
Ryan Coleman-Williams, Alabama | WR

71) Tennessee Titans
LJ Martin, BYU | RB

72) Carolina Panthers
Bryce Thornton, Florida | S

73) New Orleans Saints
Alani Noa, USC | OL

74) New York Giants
Wyatt Young, Oklahoma State | WR

75) Washington Commanders
Taylor Wein, Oklahoma | EDGE

76) Indianapolis Colts
Zach Lutmer, Iowa | DB

77) Minnesota Vikings
Jayden Bellamy, UCF | CB

78) Pittsburgh Steelers
Ben Roberts, Texas Tech | LB

79) Dallas Cowboys
Tyrique Tucker, Indiana | DT

80) Chicago Bears
Lance Heard, Kentucky | OT

81) Cincinnati Bengals
Brody Foley, Louisville | TE

82) Jacksonville Jaguars
Raleek Brown, Texas | RB

83) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Trinidad Chambliss, Ole Miss | QB

84) Denver Broncos
Anthony Donkoh, Penn State | OL

85) Houston Texans
Anto Saka, Texas A&M | EDGE

86) Minnesota Vikings
Marcus Neal, Penn State | S

87) Detroit Lions
Kayin Lee, Tennessee | CB

88) Los Angeles Chargers
Kip Lewis, Oklahoma | LB

89) New England Patriots
Chris Cole, Georgia | LB

90) San Francisco 49ers
Xavier Atkins, Auburn | LB

91) Green Bay Packers
A.J. Holmes Jr., Texas Tech | DT

92) Kansas City Chiefs
T.J. Moore, Clemson | WR

93) Baltimore Ravens
Mario Landino, Indiana | DT

94) Seattle Seahawks
Malachi Breland, Arkansas | OG

95) Buffalo Bills
Peyton Bowen, Oklahoma | S

96) Kansas City Chiefs
Teitum Tuioti, Oregon | EDGE

97) Cincinnati Bengals
James Smith, Ohio State | DT

98) Philadelphia Eagles
Benjamin Brahmer, Penn State | TE

99) Los Angeles Chargers
Kelley Jones, Mississippi State | CB

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