Cummings’ 7-Round 2026 NFL Mock Draft: Makai Lemon Joins Jayden Daniels, Jeremiyah Love Moves to Music City

In this 2026 NFL Mock Draft released a month before the big event, Jeremiyah Love, Makai Lemon, and other playmakers are on the rise.

We’re less than a month away from the 2026 NFL Draft, which means it’s time for another full 7-round 2026 NFL Mock Draft using PFSN’s Mock Draft Simulator.

Fernando Mendoza is still the favorite to go first overall, but beyond that, it’s anyone’s guess what will happen on April 23 and beyond.


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1) Las Vegas Raiders

Fernando Mendoza, Indiana | QB

This pick feels like chalk at this point. The Raiders need a quarterback under head coach Klint Kubiak, and there’s only one QB worth picking No. 1 overall in the 2026 NFL Draft: Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza.

Mendoza has the prototypical size and arm talent. He’s an adept pre-snap and post-snap processor with an affinity for leverage awareness and break anticipation. And in clutch, high-pressure moments, he’s as tough, poised, and composed as can be.

2) New York Jets

David Bailey, Texas Tech | EDGE

For a team that needs a pass-rush infusion, there’s a case to make that David Bailey has the strongest pass-rush projection among 2026 NFL Draft prospects. He led the FBS with 14.5 sacks in 2025, while generating an incredible pressure rate.

At around 6-foot-4, 251 pounds, with near-34-inch arms and 4.5 speed, Bailey has the combined arc-running speed and burst, effervescent short-area twitch, and speed-to-power capacity to terrorize tackles. The scary part is that he’s still getting better.

3) Arizona Cardinals

Arvell Reese, Ohio State | OLB

Arvell Reese will be one of the most fascinating case studies from the 2026 NFL Draft. Evaluators are torn on whether or not his best future rests as an off-ball LB or EDGE, but if he’s commanding top-five capital, it’s likely his pass-rush upside is part of the equation.

At 6-foot-4, 243 pounds, with near-33-inch arms, Reese is light for an EDGE, but unnaturally strong for his weight class. His throttling stacking power and strength caved in base blocks on more than one occasion in 2025, and he has the burst, agility, power, and cornering to be a dangerous rusher in time.

4) Tennessee Titans

Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame | RB

The Tennessee Titans still aren’t quite good enough where a luxury pick, such as running back, is fully rationalized this early. But head coach Robert Saleh and Co. did invest heavily in free agency this offseason, freeing up the runway to add a dynamic talent like Jeremiyah Love.

There’ll be pressure on Love to make this pick “right,” and to his credit, he has the tools to do it. He’s an ultra-explosive vertical runner at 6-foot, 212 pounds, with the speed, transitionary burst, throttle control, and finishing physicality of a prime Ahman Green.

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5) New York Giants

Carnell Tate, Ohio State | WR

The Giants still have an abundance of needs as they prepare for quarterback Jaxson Dart’s second season, but the priority in the 2026 NFL Draft, particularly with wide receiver Malik Nabers coming back from a season-ending injury, should be insulating Dart with playmaking support.

At 6-foot-2, 193 pounds, Carnell Tate is my personal WR1 in the 2026 NFL Draft. He has the elite separation ability and catch-point conversion to be a true WR1, but he’s positioned even better with a player like Nabers stressing defenses across from him.

6) Cleveland Browns

Monroe Freeling, Georgia | OT

Cleveland brought in offensive tackle Tytus Howard in the 2026 offseason, but offensive tackle remains one of the team’s more pressing long-term needs. Investing in elite long-term potential is the Browns’ best course this cycle, and Monroe Freeling is arguably the most compelling buy.

At 6-foot-7, 315 pounds, with near-35-inch arms, 4.93 speed, a 1.71 10-yard split, 33.5-inch vertical, and 9-foot-7 broad jump, Freeling has a size-athleticism combination that would make any OL coach salivate. While he’s still growing, his flexibility is a failsafe he can rely on.

7) Washington Commanders

Makai Lemon, USC | WR

The Commanders gave themselves some modest flexibility at the seventh overall pick with their signings in free agency. Safety and EDGE are still on the table, but the barren wide receiver room looms large with quarterback Jayden Daniels needing a bounce-back season.

While Makai Lemon doesn’t have the size or vertical speed that some of Daniels’ past WRs have boasted, Lemon does have the elite leverage play and catch-point conversion to make Daniels’ job easy, while also boasting rare short-area energy, RAC, and separation freedom.

8) New Orleans Saints

Rueben Bain Jr., Miami (FL) | EDGE

Where Rueben Bain Jr. stands to go off the board remains one of the most compelling topics in the 2026 NFL Draft. Some boards may have him as high as the top five, but his sub-31-inch arms pose a challenging outlier quandary.

Bain easily counteracts any concerns regarding arm length with natural leverage, explosiveness, rotational torque, angle IQ, precision and nuance, and finishing flexibility. For New Orleans, he’s a needed boost at a position they can no longer skimp on.

9) Kansas City Chiefs

Sonny Styles, Ohio State | LB

The board didn’t fall very well for Kansas City in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. Bain was off the board, and while there are cornerbacks present, the Chiefs don’t normally invest in CBs this high. With another first-rounder later on, best-player-available feels like the move.

For defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, who relishes being an agent of chaos, Sonny Styles can be an X-factor, especially with linebacker Drue Tranquill in a contract year. Styles is an alien size-speed specimen, a masterful gap reader and block stacker, and he produced at a high rate on blitz reps in 2024.

10) Cincinnati Bengals

Dillon Thieneman, Oregon | S

Dillon Thieneman over Caleb Downs is sure to be the talk of this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. I have Downs rated slightly above Thieneman, but Thieneman is a top-ten prospect on my board, and if Downs’ knee is flagged medically, it could make a difference.

There’s a case to make that Thieneman’s film is almost as good as Downs’, and the testing is certifiably elite. Alongside safety Bryan Cook, Thieneman can exist in his element as a rangy, ball-hawking single-high safety, but he’s just as dangerous in two-high and in the box.

11) Miami Dolphins

Mansoor Delane, LSU | CB

Arguably, no one was more of a lockdown corner than Mansoor Delane in 2025. His PFSN CB Impact grade of 93.7 was elite. He consistently limited yards per coverage snap, allowed a low QB rating in coverage, and had a high forced incompletion percentage.

For the Dolphins, who need to completely re-stock their CB room, there’s no better way to start than with Delane. At 6-foot, 187 pounds, he’s average-sized, but he has excellent speed, burst, and fluidity to pair with razor-sharp instincts, a sticky mirror-motor, and swarming catch-point skills.

12) Dallas Cowboys

Caleb Downs, Ohio State | DB

With a second first-round pick waiting in the wings, the Cowboys opt to take the best player available in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. In defensive coordinator Christian Parker’s scheme, Caleb Downs can be a do-it-all player, with the versatility to play split-field or roam as a nickel in zone.

While Downs never did testing this cycle, it doesn’t take much exposure to the tape to know he’s the real deal. Downs’ coverage, mobility, and elite football IQ are the glues that fuse his game together. He dissuades targets in coverage and is rock-solid in support.

13) Los Angeles Rams

Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State | WR

Medicals may push Jordyn Tyson down the board, but at a certain point, the 6-foot-2, 200-pound pass-catcher is too talented to pass up if there are no degenerative issues. The Los Angeles Rams scoop him up here in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft.

For the Rams, Tyson is an extremely over-qualified WR3 in the immediate timeline. Over the long term, he can be a quality successor to wide receiver Davante Adams with his size, explosion, twitch, RAC ability, and glowing three-level threat profile.

14) Baltimore Ravens

Spencer Fano, Utah | OL

The Ravens brought back guard John Simpson as an interior offensive line starter after a short stint in New York, but new starters are still needed at the opposite guard spot and at center. Spencer Fano could function well as a “skeleton key” between both positions.

It’ll be up to the Ravens to determine if Fano projects better at guard or center, but either way, he has the tools to thrive inside. His anchor can be stronger, but Fano is incredibly rangy, flexible, well-leveraged, and physical, with size-defying compact power and leg drive.

15) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Akheem Mesidor, Miami (FL) | EDGE

For now, the Buccaneers are still clinging to their contention window with quarterback Baker Mayfield and head coach Todd Bowles. The pressure is on to produce playoff success in 2026, and that means that immediate help is needed at a position that’s been a thorn in Tampa Bay’s side: EDGE.

In the 2026 NFL Draft, few EDGE prospects line up better with Tampa’s needs than Akheem Mesidor. Though he’ll be a 25-year-old rookie, Mesidor provides an instant pass-rush infusion with his explosion, agility, and power at 6-foot-3, 259 pounds, and he’s a stellar run defender, too.

16) New York Jets

KC Concepcion, Texas A&M | WR

New York’s passing game was abysmal in 2025. A change at QB alone won’t solve that, especially with a past-his-prime quarterback Geno Smith commanding the ship. But the Jets can invest more at WR to ensure the QBs of the present and future are well-equipped.

In the 2026 NFL Draft, KC Concepcion stands out as a high-quality WR2 option. At 6-foot, 196 pounds, he’s sometimes billed as a slot-only WR, but he has true press-beating chops, exhilarating explosiveness, and extremely acute angle flexibility on route breaks.

17) Detroit Lions

Francis Mauigoa, Miami (FL) | OT

After offensive tackle Taylor Decker’s departure, the Lions desperately need a new starter at tackle opposite offensive tackle Penei Sewell. In this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, a borderline top-ten prospect falls to them at 17th overall, and the Lions are much obliged to capitalize, adding Francis Mauigoa.

A natural right tackle at around 6-foot-5 1/2 and 330 pounds, one of Mauigoa or Sewell will have to move to the left side. At either spot, Mauigoa has the size, anchor strength, hand power, functional athleticism, balance, footwork, and tenacity to stack quiet wins and violent pancakes.

18) Minnesota Vikings

Jermod McCoy, Tennessee | CB

Ideally, one of the top two safeties would be available for the Vikings, but that isn’t the case in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. Nevertheless, there still remains an opportunity to upgrade the secondary with Tennessee’s Jermod McCoy.

McCoy didn’t play in 2025 due to a protracted recovery timeline from a torn ACL, but his 2024 film is enough to keep him in Round 1 discussions. McCoy’s speed, sink, fluidity, and playmaking production all elicit echoes of Darius Slay.

19) Carolina Panthers

Kadyn Proctor, Alabama | OT

With offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonu’s availability in question as he recovers from a ruptured patellar tendon, and with offensive tackle Taylor Moton growing older, tackle is suddenly a pressing need for the Panthers. In this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, they quiet the calamity by taking Alabama’s Kadyn Proctor.

Under head coach Dave Canales, the Panthers have had a preference for heavier trench personnel; all of their current starters are at least 320 pounds. At 6-foot-7, 352 pounds, Proctor passes this threshold. He has the power and strength to match, and is an impressive athlete with a finishing edge.

20) Dallas Cowboys

Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech | LB

This may come as a surprise, but perhaps it shouldn’t. Yes, Jacob Rodriguez is undersized at 6-foot-1, 230 pounds, with sub-31-inch arms. But he won four defensive awards with elite production in 2025. He tested as one of the best athletes in the class, and he was one of the defensive stars of the Senior Bowl.

Aside from size and play strength, there aren’t too many holes to poke in Rodriguez’s game, and the Cowboys desperately need competent LB play. Rodriguez has the acumen to man the “green dot” role, but also has the range and fluidity to make plays in all phases.

21) Pittsburgh Steelers

Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State | OG

After losing guard Isaac Seumalo, the Steelers have a need at guard that still needs filling. In this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, they gladly take an in-state product, with the size and power to match the line’s identity: Penn State’s Olaivavega Ioane.

At 6-foot-4, 330 pounds, Ioane is built to pose a threat in a phone booth. He’s light enough on his feet to pull and climb, but he shines in tight spaces, where he can use his heavy hands, square power, and anchor strength to pummel opponents into submission.

22) Los Angeles Chargers

Keldric Faulk, Auburn | DL

Los Angeles was able to bring back outside linebacker Khalil Mack for another year, but they should have an eye on the future at EDGE. Keldric Faulk is a unique player because he can feasibly play outside or inside in a hybrid role. For the Chargers, he could bring value in both spots.

At 6-foot-6, 276 pounds, with over 34-inch arms, Faulk has the combined burst, length, mass, and leverage acquisition to punish down and base blocks from 4i, but he also flashes the size-adjusted flexibility and power to reduce and cave in pockets from wider alignments.

23) Philadelphia Eagles

Caleb Lomu, Utah | OT

Offensive tackle Lane Johnson’s age ticks a bit farther each offseason, and it’s almost time for the Eagles to tab a successor. At 6-foot-6, 313 pounds, with over 33-inch arms and elite testing athleticism, Lomu has the physical traits and operational composure to fit the bill.

Like Lomu, Johnson was under 315 pounds when he entered the league, but was able to bulk up and grow into a perennial All-Pro. The outcome I see for Lomu is more akin to offensive tackle Jake Matthews, but either way, that’s a solid two-phase starter year-over-year.

24) Cleveland Browns

Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana | WR

Head coach Todd Monken needs more alignment-versatile talent at WR to run his ideal offense in Cleveland, and Omar Cooper Jr. could be an excellent schematic fit. It remains to be seen if he’s a standalone WR1, but he has all of the tools to be a quality component.

Cooper has the explosiveness and bend to operate out of the slot, on the boundary, or on motions, and he’s just as potent as a RAC threat as he is making body-control grabs at the catch.

25) Chicago Bears

Kayden McDonald, Ohio State | DT

Kayden McDonald is on the Bears’ Top 30 visit list, and for good reason. The 21-year-old nose tackle is arguably the best of his archetype in the 2026 NFL Draft, and he can help catalyze an ever-important reworking of the Bears’ interior line.

At 6-foot-2, 326 pounds, McDonald is built to hold up strong at the fulcrum, and his linear explosiveness helps with matters. He’s a violent stack-and-shed artist, a capable two-gapper, and he flashes upside as a power rusher on passing downs.

26) Buffalo Bills

Christen Miller, Georgia | DT

An underrated need for the Bills is a defensive tackle who can fuse together the line between upstart defensive tackle Deone Walker and sawed-off disruptor defensive tackle Ed Oliver. Someone with 1-tech functionality in defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard’s scheme makes sense, and Christen Miller qualifies.

At 6-foot-4, 321 pounds, with 33-inch arms, Miller sports a wide, heavy-set frame and stone clubs for hands. He can reset the point and tear through blocks with startling force, he’s resilient against combo blocks and double-teams, and he flashes the twitch and burst to insulate pass-rush upside.

27) San Francisco 49ers

Blake Miller, Clemson | OT

Head coach Kyle Shanahan has insisted that the 49ers will find a way to keep offensive tackle Trent Williams around for 2026 and beyond, but even if they achieve a resolution, Williams is entering his age-38 season, and the cliff spares no man. Eventually, it will come, and San Francisco must be ready.

Blake Miller checks every box for a first-round tackle. He started 54 games at Clemson. He has stellar size at 6-foot-7, 314 pounds, with 34-inch arms. He tested as an elite athlete at the Combine, and he’s a perfect fit for San Francisco’s scheme that incorporates lots of wide zone and second-level action.

28) Houston Texans

Peter Woods, Clemson | DT

Peter Woods has become a more polarizing prospect as the cycle has drawn on, but it still feels unlikely that he falls out of Round 1. The Texans, with defensive tackle Tommy Togiai on a one-year deal and defensive tackle Sheldon Rankins growing older, have reason to keep tabs on him.

At 6-foot-2 1/2 and 298 pounds, Woods fits Houston’s desired mold at the DT position. He’s explosive and well-leveraged, with imposing compact power in both phases of the game, and his presence alongside defensive ends Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter could incite terror from opposing offenses.

29) Kansas City Chiefs

Kenyon Sadiq, Oregon | TE

The Chiefs got the luck of the board in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. Their first pick was BPA, and their second pick is arguably too. But this time, they also get to address a position of need by tabbing Kenyon Sadiq as tight end Travis Kelce’s successor.

At 6-foot-3, 241 pounds, with sub-32-inch arms, Sadiq doesn’t have Kelce’s size, but he supersedes Kelce with his vertical athleticism, and has the bend and fluidity to sear through zones, find soft spots in coverage, make body control grabs, and accrue RAC with his game-breaking speed.

30) Miami Dolphins

Denzel Boston, Washington | WR

After insulating their secondary with high-level talent with their first Round 1 selection, the Dolphins shift to the offensive side of the ball at 30th overall, adding Denzel Boston as a potential WR1 for new quarterback Malik Willis.

At 6-foot-4, 212 pounds, Boston is a somewhat polarizing player. He’s not quite as proficient as smaller receivers against man coverage, but he still has the requisite agility and fluidity to offset and separate, as evidenced by his 6.8 three-cone. At the catch point, he’s one of the best in the class.

31) New England Patriots

Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Toledo | S

After losing safety Jaylinn Hawkins in free agency, the Patriots have a pressing need at the safety position opposite safety Craig Woodson. They proved with Woodson that they can rely on rookie talent when needed, and Emmanuel McNeil-Warren is another who can step in right away.

At 6-foot-3 1/2 and 201 pounds, McNeil-Warren will draw misconceptions of being a box-only safety, but he’s much more multifaceted than that. He’s extremely fluid and efficient on his pedal in two-high looks, he’s intelligent in monitoring route combos, and he triggers fast on the attack.

32) Seattle Seahawks

Chase Bisontis, Texas A&M | OG

Guards don’t normally receive a ton of love in the Round 1 range, but Chase Bisontis is my 31st overall prospect in the 2026 NFL Draft. And for a Seahawks team that doesn’t have a ton of glaring needs, attacking the guard spot opposite guard Grey Zabel is a sensible path in 2026.

At 6-foot-5, 315 pounds, Bisontis is a stellar athlete with a hyper-dense frame, and he combines that physical talent with excellent pass protection technique and run block IQ. He’s synergetic, active with his hands, and quick to respond to stunts, and he offers range and physicality in the ground game.

Round 2 | 33) New York Jets

Ty Simpson, Alabama | QB

There’s no consensus regarding whether or not Ty Simpson is a QB who can elevate a roster, but he has enough quality film to earn Top 50 interest. The Jets, with an abundance of capital, could be the ones to take the risk.

My comp for Simpson is Marc Bulger: A mechanically-sound, mentally-competent QB capable of making positive plays, but one who lacks elite physical talent and can be prone to troubling bouts of volatility and freneticism.

34) Arizona Cardinals

Max Iheanachor, Arizona State | OT

A local prospect and Senior Bowl standout, Max Iheanachor has the easy athleticism, length, mass, strength, and power to man the right tackle spot for years on end.

35) Tennessee Titans

Gabe Jacas, Illinois | EDGE

At 6-foot-3, 260 pounds, with 33-inch arms, Gabe Jacas is built to withstand the rigors of the NFL and win leverage battles consistently, and he brings functional ability as a pass-rusher and run defender right away.

36) Las Vegas Raiders

Chris Bell, Louisville | WR

As long as Chris Bell recovers fully from his torn ACL, he’s a potential WR1 in waiting, with game-breaking speed at 6-foot-2, 220 pounds, separation upside, and awesome catch-point authority.

37) New York Giants

Keylan Rutledge, Georgia Tech | OG

Keylan Rutledge is a plus athlete with near-elite mass, who acquires leverage well, anchors well, can drive power, and doesn’t hesitate to bury opponents in the dirt.

38) Houston Texans

Emmanuel Pregnon, Oregon | OG

At 6-foot-4, 314 pounds, with near-34-inch arms, Emmanuel Pregnon is a powerful, long-limbed power producer who boasts devastating knockback and finishing force.

39) Cleveland Browns

Oscar Delp, Georgia | TE

The Browns have Harold Fannin Jr., but he’s not a consistent in-line presence. Oscar Delp gives Cleveland a truly dangerous 1-2 punch at TE. He’s excellent in-line, but also has dynamic receiving upside.

40) Kansas City Chiefs

TJ Parker, Clemson | EDGE

Consistent effort could be a sticking point for TJ Parker, but if Andy Reid and Steve Spagnuolo can get the most out of him, he’s capable of being a quality two-phase starter.

41) Cincinnati Bengals

Avieon Terrell, Clemson | CB

At this point in this 2026 NFL Mock draft, Avieon Terrell is a massive steal. A slot-boundary flex CB, Terrell is technically sound, endlessly diverse in coverage, and exceedingly capable in support.

42) New Orleans Saints

D’Angelo Ponds, Indiana | CB

D’Angelo Ponds may be undersized, but past the size, he’s an elite athlete with an elite technical skill set, a verifiable clutch gene, and projected slot-boundary versatility.

43) Miami Dolphins

Malachi Lawrence, UCF | EDGE

At 6-foot-4, 253 pounds, with near-34-inch arms, Malachi Lawrence has the explosiveness, speed, and power potential to mold, and the flashes of counter quickness as a pass-rusher are awe-inspiring.

44) New York Jets

CJ Allen, Georgia | LB

At this value, CJ Allen is a phenomenal addition for a Jets defense that needs to get younger and more consistent. A true green dot, Allen is explosive, physical, and ever-intelligent.

45) Baltimore Ravens

Chris Brazzell II, Tennessee | WR

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

46) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Anthony Hill Jr., Texas | LB

While Anthony Hill Jr. needs to keep refining his misdirection awareness and take-on technique, he’s a tantalizing athlete at 6-foot-2, 238 pounds, with run-and-chase value and coverage feel.

47) Indianapolis Colts

Josiah Trotter, Missouri | LB

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

48) Atlanta Falcons

Colton Hood, Tennessee | CB

Opposite A.J. Terrell, Colton Hood is an ideal fit with man-zone versatility, vertical speed, crisp fluidity, and corrective twitch, and a playmaking propensity at the catch point.

49) Minnesota Vikings

A.J. Haulcy, LSU | S

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

50) Detroit Lions

Zion Young, Missouri | EDGE

While Zion Young’s off-field profile must be vetted, his red-hot motor could endear him to Detroit, and he has the explosive power profile at 6-foot-6, 262 pounds to wreak havoc opposite Aidan Hutchinson.

51) Carolina Panthers

Treydan Stukes, Arizona | DB

Though Treydan Stukes will be an older rookie, he can be an immediate impact starter for an emerging Carolina team, boasting actionable nickel-safety versatility across phases.

52) Green Bay Packers

Chris Johnson, San Diego State | CB

Chris Johnson’s arms may fall below Green Bay’s length threshold, but he hits every other category with his speed, explosiveness, agility, coverage variability, and playmaking volume.

53) Pittsburgh Steelers

Jake Golday, Cincinnati | LB

At 6-foot-4, 240 pounds, Jake Golday has the size, range, and physicality to make an impact on the second level of Pittsburgh’s defense, should Patrick Queen eventually be released.

54) Philadelphia Eagles

Joshua Josephs, Tennessee | EDGE

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

55) Los Angeles Chargers

Gennings Dunker, Iowa | OG

A 6-foot-5, 320-pound barrel-chested brute, Gennings Dunker projects well at guard with his power output, attack explosion, and mauling physicality all the way through contact.

56) Jacksonville Jaguars

Lee Hunter, Texas Tech | DT

Accurately nicknamed “the Fridge,” Lee Hunter has the frame density, stacking strength, and relentless motor to man the fulcrum with aplomb in odd and hybrid-front alignments.

57) Chicago Bears

Sam Hecht, Kansas State | C

At 6-foot-4, 303 pounds, with a blistering 1.73 10-yard split, Sam Hecht has the explosiveness and range to fulfill run assignments in Ben Johnson’s scheme, and his anchor is sound.

58) San Francisco 49ers

Antonio Williams, Clemson | WR

At 5-foot-11, 190 pounds, Antonio Williams has the look of a pure slot WR, but in truth, he has the burst, agility, full route tree, release package, and contact resilience to take reps anywhere.

59) Houston Texans

Skyler Bell, UConn | WR

Past Nico Collins and Jayden Higgins, the Texans quietly lack guarantees at WR. Skyler Bell can insert right away as a high-level movement-Z with true three-level appeal.

60) Chicago Bears

Jadarian Price, Notre Dame | RB

With D’Andre Swift’s contract expiring after 2026, the Bears draft for the future and replace his open-field dynamism, creative authority, and running leverage with Jadarian Price.

61) Los Angeles Rams

Matthew Hibner, SMU | TE

A sleeper in the 2026 NFL Draft TE class, Matthew Hibner has the requisite size, vertical athleticism, stem IQ, blocking ability, and RAC chops to earn a place alongside Terrance Ferguson.

62) Denver Broncos

Gracen Halton, Oklahoma | DT

Gracen Halton can help fill the void left by John Franklin-Myers’ departure with his elite explosion, lower-body power, and natural leverage at 6-foot-2, 293 pounds.

63) New England Patriots

Cashius Howell, Texas A&M | EDGE

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

64) Seattle Seahawks

Mike Washington Jr., Arkansas | RB

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

Round 3 | 65) Arizona Cardinals

Emmett Johnson, Nebraska | RB

The Sean McVay tree has shown deference toward elite creators before elite athleticism at RB. Emmett Johnson’s creative proficiency at 5-foot-10, 202 pounds falls right into that wheelhouse.

66) Tennessee Titans

Connor Lew, Auburn | C

After releasing Lloyd Cushenberry, the Titans need a new starting center. Connor Lew isn’t overly powerful, but is incredibly sound, balanced, and light on his feet at the fulcrum.

67) Las Vegas Raiders

Brandon Cisse, South Carolina | CB

The Raiders have an established grouping at cornerback, but Brandon Cisse projects well as a long-term nickel with his hyper-elite explosion, urgency, and willing physicality.

68) Philadelphia Eagles

Kamari Ramsey, USC | S

At 6-foot, 202 pounds, Kamari Ramsey is a prime candidate to fill Reed Blankenship’s role, on account of his smooth coverage mobility, versatility, and quick response in run support.

69) Houston Texans

Jager Burton, Kentucky | C

At 6-foot-4, 312 pounds, with 4.94 speed, Jager Burton is a riser to know at center. His pad level needs work at times, but he’s rangy, instinctive, and has a respectable anchor.

70) Cleveland Browns

Keith Abney II, Arizona State | CB

The Browns are set at cornerback for now, but Denzel Ward is almost 30 years old, and more depth is needed. Keith Abney II can start in a pinch and play inside or outside.

71) Washington Commanders

Parker Brailsford, Alabama | C

At 6-foot-2, 290 pounds, Parker Brailsford is a bit undersized, but he compensates with excellent natural leverage, explosive range, core strength, and finishing physicality.

72) Cincinnati Bengals

Caleb Banks, Florida | DT

Caleb Banks’ medicals are a minefield, but at this point, the 6-foot-6, 335-pound DT is worth the investment with his inhuman burst, quickness, and alignment-diverse disruption potential.

73) New Orleans Saints

Ted Hurst, Georgia State | WR

Ted Hurst is among the Saints’ Top 30 visits, and he fills a need at the WR2 spot alongside Chris Olave with his size, vertical speed, catch radius, and multi-level separation.

74) Kansas City Chiefs

Keionte Scott, Miami (FL) | DB

Keionte Scott will be an older rookie, but for a Chiefs squad clinging to a feeble contention window, he can insert right away as a dynamic, physical, and fast-flowing nickel DB.

75) Miami Dolphins

Caleb Tiernan, Northwestern | OL

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

76) Pittsburgh Steelers

Germie Bernard, Alabama | WR

Alongside DK Metcalf and Michael Pittman Jr., Germie Bernard can function as the perfect WR3: A short-and-intermediate target funnel with strong hands, RAC, and blocking value.

77) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Kaleb Proctor, SE Louisiana | DT

At 6-foot-2, 291 pounds, with 33-inch arms, Kaleb Proctor has an excellent leverage-length combination, to pair with hyper-elite explosive athleticism and pass-rush upside.

78) Indianapolis Colts

Dani Dennis-Sutton, Penn State | EDGE

Dani Dennis-Sutton is somewhat stiff, but at 6-foot-6 and almost 260 pounds, he’s an elite linear athlete, a competent run defender, and an absolute motor monster on the rush.

79) Atlanta Falcons

Zachariah Branch, Georgia | WR

Zachariah Branch fielded an ungodly amount of targets behind the line of scrimmage, but he quietly has the separation upside and catch-point composure to complete his WR profile.

80) Baltimore Ravens

Max Klare, Ohio State | TE

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

81) Jacksonville Jaguars

Kaleb Elarms-Orr, TCU | LB

At 6-foot-2, 237 pounds, with 4.47 speed, Kaleb Elarms-Orr can start the process of filling the void left by Devin Lloyd with his range, downhill physicality, and blitzing utility.

82) Minnesota Vikings

Darrell Jackson Jr., Florida State | DT

Brian Flores’ scheme functions best with an immovable force in the middle, and Darrell Jackson fits that description perfectly with his giant frame and violent contact disposition.

83) Carolina Panthers

Matt Gulbin, Michigan State | C

Matt Gulbin is an underrated center prospect whose strong anchor, leverage game, and technical prowess would be right at home on Carolina’s physically imposing line.

84) Green Bay Packers

Drew Shelton, Penn State | OL

Drew Shelton can still improve his functional play strength, but the 6-foot-5, 313-pound blocker has the athleticism, nuance, and position flexibility the Packers have been known to value.

85) Pittsburgh Steelers

Tacario Davis, Washington | CB

Tacario Davis is among the Steelers’ Top 30 visits ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft, and at 6-foot-4, with 33-inch arms and 4.4 speed, he fits Pittsburgh’s desired boundary profile to a tee.

86) Los Angeles Chargers

Genesis Smith, Arizona | S

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

87) Miami Dolphins

Dametrious Crownover, Texas A&M | OT

Hedging for uncertainty with Austin Jackson, the Dolphins add Dametrious Crownover: A hulking 6-foot-7, 320-pound blocker who mirrors Patrick Paul’s domineering visage.

88) Jacksonville Jaguars

R Mason Thomas, Oklahoma | EDGE

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

89) Chicago Bears

Derrick Moore, Michigan | EDGE

Derrick Moore needs to further refine his rush pallet, but the 6-foot-4, 255-pound edge defender has the elite explosiveness and power element that Dennis Allen craves.

90) Miami Dolphins

Davison Igbinosun, Ohio State | CB

While Delane can man the slot and the boundary, Davison Igbinosun has the tools to eventually lock down one side with his length, explosion, recalibration quickness, and zeal.

91) Buffalo Bills

Ja’Kobi Lane, USC | WR

Ja’Kobi Lane completes the Bills’ WR room with his gazelle-invoking mobility, smooth stem IQ, explosive intermediate athleticism, and sprawling catch radius in 50-50 situations.

92) Dallas Cowboys

Will Lee III, Texas A&M | CB

At 6-foot-1 1/2, 189 pounds, with near-33-inch arms and high-level explosiveness, Will Lee III gives Dallas a scheme-versatile CB with playmaking chops and a chippy competitive edge.

93) Los Angeles Rams

Febechi Nwaiwu, Oklahoma | OL

With looming contract uncertainty at both guard and center, the Rams invest in Febechi Nwaiwu: A lineman who can play both spots reliably with a stout anchor and violent hands.

94) Miami Dolphins

Eli Stowers, Vanderbilt | TE

Eli Stowers will always be somewhat limited in the blocking phase, but the 6-foot-4, 239-pound TE has the rare speed and dynamism to be a true pass-game catalyst at the position.

95) New England Patriots

Bryce Lance, North Dakota State | WR

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

96) Seattle Seahawks

Julian Neal, Arkansas | CB

At 6-foot-2, 203 pounds, with near-33-inch arms and 4.5 speed, Julian Neal gives Seattle another long, agile, and support-savvy CB to throw in a deep defensive back rotation.

97) Minnesota Vikings

Jonah Coleman, Washington | RB

The Vikings will host Jonah Coleman on a Top 30 visit, signaling interest in a 5-foot-8, 220-pound volume back with excellent vision, adaptive quickness, bend, and physicality.

98) Philadelphia Eagles

Kendrick Law, Kentucky | WR

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

99) Pittsburgh Steelers

Jalon Kilgore, South Carolina | DB

At 6-foot-1, 210 pounds, with 4.4 speed and 33-inch arms, Jalon Kilgore has tantalizing tools and the versatility to man up big-slot weapons in nickel or manage space at safety.

100) Jacksonville Jaguars

Seth McGowan, Kentucky | RB

A Senior Bowl standout, Seth McGowan has the size, burst, short-area quickness, spatial sense, and physicality to be a regular in the Jaguars’ rotation right away.

Round 4

101) Tennessee Titans

Kage Casey, Boise State | OG

102) Las Vegas Raiders

Landon Robinson, Navy | DT

103) New York Jets

Brian Parker II, Duke | OL

104) Arizona Cardinals

Jalen Farmer, Kentucky | OG

105) New York Giants

Bud Clark, TCU | S

106) Houston Texans

Dallen Bentley, Utah | TE

107) Cleveland Browns

Garrett Nussmeier, LSU | QB

108) Denver Broncos

Eli Raridon, Notre Dame | TE

109) Kansas City Chiefs

Ephesians Prysock, Washington | CB

110) Cincinnati Bengals

Nick Barrett, South Carolina | DT

111) Denver Broncos

Aiden Fisher, Indiana | LB

112) Dallas Cowboys

Jaishawn Barham, Michigan | EDGE

113) Indianapolis Colts

Michael Taaffe, Texas | S

114) Philadelphia Eagles

Justin Joly, NC State | TE

115) Baltimore Ravens

Keagen Trost, Missouri | OL

116) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Charles Demmings, Stephen F. Austin | CB

117) Las Vegas Raiders

Jude Bowry, Boston College | OT

118) Detroit Lions

Zane Durant, Penn State | DT

119) Carolina Panthers

Domonique Orange, Iowa State | DT

120) Green Bay Packers

Malik Benson, Oregon | WR

121) Pittsburgh Steelers

Cole Payton, North Dakota State | QB

122) Atlanta Falcons

Logan Jones, Iowa | C

123) Los Angeles Chargers

Hezekiah Masses, San Diego State | CB

124) Jacksonville Jaguars

Brenen Thompson, Mississippi State | WR

125) New England Patriots

Carver Willis, Washington | OL

126) Buffalo Bills

Keyron Crawford, Auburn | EDGE

127) San Francisco 49ers

Beau Stephens, Iowa | OG

128) Detroit Lions

Malik Muhammad, Texas | CB

129) Chicago Bears

Zakee Wheatley, Penn State | S

130) Miami Dolphins

Louis Moore, Indiana | S

131) New England Patriots

Travis Burke, Memphis | OT

132) New Orleans Saints

Fa’alili Fa’amoe, Wake Forest | OL

133) San Francisco 49ers

Kyle Louis, Pittsburgh | LB

134) Las Vegas Raiders

Isaiah World, Oregon | OL

135) Pittsburgh Steelers

Austin Barber, Florida | OT

136) New Orleans Saints

Deontae Lawson, Alabama | LB

137) Philadelphia Eagles

Tristan Leigh, Clemson | OL

138) San Francisco 49ers

Romello Height, Texas Tech | EDGE

139) San Francisco 49ers

Nate Boerkircher, Texas A&M | DT

140) New York Jets

Chris McClellan, Missouri | DT

Round 5

141) Houston Texans

Keyshaun Elliott, Arizona State | LB

142) Tennessee Titans

Elijah Sarratt, Indiana | WR

143) Arizona Cardinals

Deion Burks, Oklahoma | WR

144) Tennessee Titans

Deven Eastern, Minnesota | DT

145) New York Giants

Devin Moore, Florida | CB

146) Cleveland Browns

Markel Bell, Miami (FL) | OT

147) Washington Commanders

VJ Payne, Kansas State | S

148) Kansas City Chiefs

Kevin Coleman Jr., Missouri | WR

149) Cleveland Browns

Jeremiah Wright, Auburn | OG

150) New Orleans Saints

Michael Trigg, Baylor | TE

151) Miami Dolphins

Taurean York, Texas A&M | LB

152) Dallas Cowboys

Kaelon Black, Indiana | RB

153) Philadelphia Eagles

Daylen Everette, Georgia | CB

154) Baltimore Ravens

Andre Fuller, Toledo | CB

155) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

De’Zhaun Stribling, Ole Miss | WR

156) Indianapolis Colts

Malachi Fields, Notre Dame | WR

157) Detroit Lions

Joe Royer, Cincinnati | TE

158) Carolina Panthers

Cyrus Allen, Cincinnati | WR

159) Carolina Panthers

Dae’Quan Wright, Ole Miss | TE

160) Green Bay Packers

Kaytron Allen, Penn State | RB

161) Pittsburgh Steelers

Marlin Klein, Michigan | TE

162) Baltimore Ravens

Harold Perkins Jr., LSU | LB

163) Minnesota Vikings

Jake Slaughter, Florida | C

164) Jacksonville Jaguars

Diego Pounds, Ole Miss | OT

165) Buffalo Bills

Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest | RB

166) Jacksonville Jaguars

Tyler Onyedim, Texas A&M | DT

167) Houston Texans

Anthony Lucas, USC | EDGE

168) Buffalo Bills

JC Davis, Illinois | OL

169) Kansas City Chiefs

Jaeden Roberts, Alabama | OG

170) Denver Broncos

Jadon Canady, Oregon | DB

171) New England Patriots

Jack Endries, Texas | TE

172) New Orleans Saints

Devan Boykin, Indiana | DB

173) Baltimore Ravens

Roman Hemby, Indiana | RB

174) Baltimore Ravens

George Gumbs Jr., Florida | EDGE

175) Las Vegas Raiders

Jalen Huskey, Maryland | S

176) Kansas City Chiefs

Aamil Wagner, Notre Dame | OT

177) Dallas Cowboys

Chandler Rivers, Duke | CB

178) Philadelphia Eagles

LT Overton, Alabama | DL

179) New York Jets

Devon Marshall, NC State | CB

180) Dallas Cowboys

Lewis Bond, Boston College | WR

181) Detroit Lions

Eli Heidenreich, Navy | WR/RB

Round 6

182) Buffalo Bills

Wydett Williams Jr., Ole Miss | S

183) Arizona Cardinals

Jack Strand, MSU Moorhead | QB

184) Tennessee Titans

Thaddeus Dixon, North Carolina | CB

185) Las Vegas Raiders

Jayden Loving, Wake Forest | DT

186) New York Giants

Jakobe Thomas, Miami (FL) | S

187) Washington Commanders

Al’zillion Hamilton, Fresno State | CB

188) Seattle Seahawks

Nadame Tucker, Western Michigan | EDGE

189) Cincinnati Bengals

Kendal Daniels, Oklahoma | LB

190) New Orleans Saints

Nicholas Singleton, Penn State | RB

191) New England Patriots

Billy Schrauth, Notre Dame | OG

192) New York Giants

Alex Wollschlaeger, Kentucky | OT

193) New York Giants

Trey Zuhn III, Texas A&M | OL

194) Tennessee Titans

Jack Kelly, BYU | LB

195) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Mason Reiger, Wisconsin | EDGE

196) Minnesota Vikings

Vinny Anthony II, Wisconsin | WR

197) Philadelphia Eagles

James Brockermeyer, Miami (FL) | C

198) New England Patriots

Chip Trayanum, Toledo | RB

199) Cincinnati Bengals

Sam Roush, Stanford | TE

200) Carolina Panthers

Bryce Boettcher, Oregon | LB

201) Green Bay Packers

Rayshaun Benny, Michigan | DT

202) New England Patriots

Tim Keenan III, Alabama | DT

203) Jacksonville Jaguars

Will Kacmarek, Ohio State | TE

204) Los Angeles Chargers

Justin Jefferson, Alabama | LB

205) Detroit Lions

Taylen Green, Arkansas | QB

206) Cleveland Browns

DeShon Singleton, Nebraska | S

207) Los Angeles Rams

Drew Allar, Penn State | QB

208) Las Vegas Raiders

Noah Whittington, Oregon | RB

209) Washington Commanders

Caden Barnett, Wyoming | OG

210) Kansas City Chiefs

Jaydn Ott, Oklahoma | RB

211) Baltimore Ravens

Cade Klubnik, Clemson | QB

212) New England Patriots

Joe Fagnano, UConn | QB

213) Detroit Lions

Skyler Thomas, Oregon State | S

214) Indianapolis Colts

Cam Miller, Rutgers | DB

215) Atlanta Falcons

Albert Regis, Texas A&M | DT

216) Pittsburgh Steelers

Dontay Corleone, Cincinnati | DT

Round 7

217) Arizona Cardinals

DeMonte Capehart, Clemson | DT

218) Dallas Cowboys

Rene Konga, Louisville | DT

219) Las Vegas Raiders

Riley Nowakowski, Indiana | TE

220) Buffalo Bills

Lander Barton, Utah | LB

221) Cincinnati Bengals

Carson Beck, Miami (FL) | QB

222) Detroit Lions

Eric Rivers, Georgia Tech | WR

223) Washington Commanders

Jaden Dugger, Louisiana | LB

224) Pittsburgh Steelers

Max Llewellyn, Iowa | EDGE

225) Tennessee Titans

Nolan Rucci, Penn State | OT

226) Cincinnati Bengals

Kapena Gushiken, Ole Miss | DB

227) Miami Dolphins

Jordan Hudson, SMU | WR

228) New York Jets

Josh Cameron, Baylor | WR

229) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Tanner Koziol, Houston | TE

230) Pittsburgh Steelers

James Thompson Jr., Illinois | DT

231) Atlanta Falcons

Gavin Ortega, Weber State | OT

232) Los Angeles Rams

Owen Heinecke, Oklahoma | LB

233) Jacksonville Jaguars

Luke Altmyer, Illinois | QB

234) Minnesota Vikings

Brent Austin, California | CB

235) Minnesota Vikings

DJ Rogers, TCU | TE

236) Green Bay Packers

Max Tomczak, Youngstown State | WR

237) Pittsburgh Steelers

Aaron Anderson, LSU | WR

238) Miami Dolphins

Skyler Gill-Howard, Texas Tech | DT

239) Chicago Bears

Logan Taylor, Boston College | OG

240) Jacksonville Jaguars

Delby Lemieux, Dartmouth | OL

241) Chicago Bears

Caleb Douglas, Texas Tech | WR

242) New York Jets

Dalton Johnson, Arizona | S

243) Houston Texans

Robert Henry Jr., UTSA | RB

244) Minnesota Vikings

Anez Cooper, Miami (FL) | OG

245) Jacksonville Jaguars

Collin Wright, Stanford | RB

246) Denver Broncos

Rahsul Faison, South Carolina | RB

247) New England Patriots

Bryce Phillips, San Diego State | CB

248) Cleveland Browns

Khordae Sydnor, Purdue | EDGE

249) Indianapolis Colts

Jackson Kuwatch, Miami (OH) | LB

250) Baltimore Ravens

Aaron Hall, Duke | DT

251) Los Angeles Rams

Davon Booth, Mississippi State | RB

252) Los Angeles Rams

TJ Hall, Iowa | CB

253) Baltimore Ravens

Ryan Schernecke, Kutztown | OT

254) Indianapolis Colts

Sawyer Robertson, Baylor | QB

255) Green Bay Packers

Josh Cuevas, Alabama | TE

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256) Denver Broncos

Fernando Carmona Jr., Arkansas | OL

257) Denver Broncos

Tyren Montgomery, John Carroll | WR

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