The Jacksonville Jaguars went through an overhaul after the 2024 season. New head coach Liam Coen and GM James Gladstone have a chance to add an impact player with the fifth pick.
PFSN’s Ian Cummings’ latest seven-round mock draft has the Jaguars getting Trevor Lawrence help up front, then grabbing multiple offensive weapons in the middle rounds.

5) Armand Membou, OL, Missouri
Cummings wrote, “It feels as though there are three distinct avenues for the Jacksonville Jaguars to follow in Round 1: Mason Graham, Ashton Jeanty, or an offensive lineman. If Membou — my fourth overall player — is still here, the prospect of building an elite offensive line may win out.”
Campbell may be slightly more refined at this point, but with his mix of natural leverage, mass, length, athleticism, and tenacity, Membou erases opponents in ways even Campbell can’t. He can excel at guard right away, and shift to tackle down the road if necessary.
36) Tyleik Williams, DT, Ohio State
Cummings said, “The Jaguars passed on DT in Round 1, and they still came away with a first-round talent in Tyleik Williams, an alignment-versatile hybrid nose tackle in the mold of Alim McNeill.”
Williams projects as a high-upside run defender who still has some room to develop as a pass rusher. His raw physical tools give him a certain amount of upside that will have NFL decision-makers excited, and the fact that he can play in multiple defensive alignments is appealing.
61) Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State
Projected Trade: Jaguars receive 61st pick; Commanders receive 70th pick, 107th pick, JAX 2026 4th
This is an aggressive trade for Jacksonville,” Cummings wrote, “but it’s for a top-32 prospect on my board in Azareye’h Thomas: A press-man savant with suffocating length, quick feet, and soft skills.”
Thomas has clear starting ability outside at corner with his overall movement ability and length. There are holes in his game as his technique and instincts still need to be developed, and his lack of footspeed and ball skills give me doubts about his ceiling. With that said, long corners who can play physically are what’s needed in the NFL.
88) Tory Horton, WR, Colorado State
Horton is a nuanced, experienced receiver who is composed as a catcher. He also has good spatial awareness, a solid release package, and quality zone IQ when bending through coverage looks. He’s a good-not-great size-speed athlete with lively lateral twitch and proportional length.
His high-hipped frame will impact his sharpness and multi-layered route transitions, but he makes up for it with his other strong points. Horton can be a quality WR3 in an NFL offense, with alignment versatility, chain-mover and RAC value, run-blocking utility, and an underrated dynamic and punt-return element.
126) Devin Neal, RB, Kansas
Neal is an electric runner. He’s explosive in the open field and shifty when evading defenders, making him a difficult player to catch up to and wrap up properly. A lack of significant play strength will limit Neal, and inconsistent hands will hurt his three-down value. However, he projects as a good change-of-pace back with athleticism and creativity.
142) Mitchell Evans, TE, Notre Dame
At 6’5″, 260 pounds, Evans has size, play strength, and power as a run blocker. The biggest question he’ll face is if he’s rebounded from a torn ACL and MCL in 2023. He’s not a dynamic athlete, which will cap his ceiling, but he’s fluid enough to separate. Evans is a sound blocker with elite hands and nuanced separating skills as a receiver. This would be a quality addition in the middle rounds.
182) Fadil Diggs, EDGE, Syracuse
Diggs played four years at Texas A&M before transferring to Syracuse in 2024. He totaled 45 tackles, 14 for loss, and 7.5 sacks for the Orange, and has NFL-caliber size and length. He’ll need to play with better aggression and finish to crack an NFL rotation, but his measurables are worth a late-round swing.
194) Sean Martin, DL, West Virginia
A five-year player at West Virginia, Martin is another defensive line prospect with size and length to excite NFL front offices. His stats dipped in 2024, totaling 23 tackles, six for loss, and 3.5 sacks, and he’ll need to be more impactful to get on the field.
221) Monaray Baldwin, WR, Baylor
Baldwin projects as a backend receiver but has explosive speed to develop. However, his size (5’9″, 172) will likely cap his ceiling as a gadget receiver who can contribute in the return game. Baldwin will struggle against press coverage, but this is another toolsy prospect who the Jaguars will hope they can develop.