Cummings’ 7-Round 2026 NFL Mock Draft: Jets Make Massive Trade for Fernando Mendoza, Cardinals Move On From Kyler Murray

Here's our latest 7-Round 2026 NFL Mock Draft from PFSN Analyst Ian Cummings, including bold trades, QB surprises, and every pick for every team.

Draft season is inching closer and closer, which means it’s time for yet another 7-Round 2026 NFL Mock Draft. With each passing week, we get more clarity on the draft order, as well as the upcoming crop of NFL Draft prospects.

Editor’s Note: The draft order is based on the current NFL standings as of Week 12 and does not include changes resulting from Week 13’s games, including those from Thanksgiving, Black Friday, and the Sunday Slate.


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1) Cleveland Browns (via TEN)

Dante Moore, QB, Oregon

Projected Trade: Browns receive No. 1 pick; Titans receive No. 6 pick, No. 22 pick, No. 72 pick, 2027 first-round pick

The first pick of the 2026 NFL Draft is in. The Cleveland Browns have made a trade to leap to the top of the board, and with this selection, they take Oregon quarterback Dante Moore.

The QB1 debate has truly been a week-to-week conversation in the 2026 NFL Draft cycle, but at this moment, Moore holds my QB1 spot by a slim margin over Fernando Mendoza and Ty Simpson. If he declares, he should be firmly in the No. 1 overall pick mix.

The resemblance between Moore and C.J. Stroud has been uncanny from near the start, but Moore has delivered some of his best play late in the season. The Browns can’t afford to go another offseason without a true franchise QB candidate. Moore ends the complacency.

Moore is a smooth, effortless distributor with easy velocity and platform diversity, and he has the anticipatory capacity and clutch gene to be a difference-maker under center even in high-pressure moments.

2) New York Jets (via NYG)

Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana

Projected Trade: Jets receive No. 2 pick; Giants receive No. 4 pick, No. 35 pick, 2027 second-round pick

Seeing the Browns’ aggression in moving up for a QB, the Jets follow suit and make a move to secure their next franchise quarterback — making a local deal with the Giants to acquire Fernando Mendoza.

Mendoza falls just below Moore on my current QB board, but both are QB1 candidates in the 2026 NFL Draft. While Moore is the smooth and talented distributor, Mendoza is the strong-armed, prototypical gunslinger who can build leads and dig his team out of deficits.

At 6’5″, 225 pounds, Mendoza is powerfully built, with solid functional pocket mobility and a rifle arm, but what sets him apart is his pocket depth discipline, timely operation, leverage IQ against zone, and his fearlessness to give his pass-catchers quality chances.

3) New Orleans Saints

Arvell Reese, LB/EDGE, Ohio State

The Saints are in an interesting position. Tyler Shough showed promise in his first start, then cooled off — but there’s reason to believe he could earn another year of evaluation from a Saints team that won’t be competitive until 2027 at the earliest.

Playing the long game, the Saints could extend their evaluation period of Shough and infuse the roster with blue-chip talent in the 2026 NFL Draft. That path would enable them to add Arvell Reese: Ohio State’s resident rarity and the latest NFL Draft phenomenon.

At around 6’4″, 245 pounds, Reese plays a hybrid off-ball and EDGE role, and projects well as a potential full-time EDGE with his inhuman stacking strength, power profile, and hyper-elite explosiveness, twitch, and arc-running speed.

4) Arizona Cardinals (from NYG via NYJ)

Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama

Projected Trade: Cardinals receive No. 4 pick, 2027 fourth-round pick; Giants receive No. 9 pick, No. 40 pick, 2027 second-round pick, 2027 third-round pick

There was a brief stretch when Ty Simpson was my QB1, but he’s since cooled off a bit after back-to-back-to-back rocky performances. He’s still firmly a top-three QB and an early first-round pick, but it’s looking more and more like he’d be the third QB off the board.

Still, for a Cardinals team desperately seeking competence under center in what appears to be the twilight of Kyler Murray’s frenetic tenure, Simpson is a clear operational upgrade. That’s why Arizona makes the move up to fourth overall to bring in the Alabama QB.

My working comparison for Simpson is Marc Bulger — though Simpson may have slightly superior physical tools. Like Bulger, Simpson will need adequate support, but he’s a high-level processor and a mechanical savant with Pro Bowl upside at his peak.

5) Las Vegas Raiders

Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State

The Raiders have a laundry list of needs, and QB is in the discussion here — but if all three QBs are gone by this point, Las Vegas should just take the best player available at a position of need. In this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, that’s my WR1: Carnell Tate.

A common comp for Tate has been George Pickens. My personal comp is the “Pickens Blend” — George Pickens and Carl Pickens (not related), who combined for 199 catches, 2,414 yards, and 29 touchdowns across the 1995 and 1996 seasons.

Tate, to be sure, has the newer Pickens’ size, most of his vertical athleticism, and his jaw-dropping catch-point authority and body control, but he also has the older Pickens’ savvy, operational consistency, and potential as a true high-volume target funnel at WR1.

6) Tennessee Titans (via CLE)

Rueben Bain Jr., EDGE, Miami (FL)

After trading down with the Browns and acquiring capital, the Titans get the player who’s arguably the best fit for them in the 2026 NFL Draft: Miami’s Rueben Bain Jr.

Bain’s production has fallen off since his hot early-season start, and fair questions have arisen about his maximum potential with non-elite bend and hip flexibility at the arc. Nevertheless, Bain still grades extremely high on my board and is a blue-chip talent.

At around 6’3″, 275 pounds, Bain’s combination of initial explosion, long-track acceleration, compact power, torso malleability, and strength can be overwhelming on the rush, and he’s an incredibly strong run defender with edge-setting and double-team splicing utility.

7) Washington Commanders

Keldric Faulk, EDGE, Auburn

One could easily go WR here for the Commanders, or even snag Caleb Downs. Still, Washington’s EDGE situation has deteriorated to a level where it would almost be malpractice to pass on Keldric Faulk in a relatively thin, unproven EDGE class.

To be clear, Faulk himself is somewhat unproven as a pass-rusher, but at 6’6″, 285 pounds, he fits Dan Quinn’s desired mold to a tee.

Faulk is an elite run defender with awe-inspiring point-of-attack power, and he has the burst, size-defying bend, and hand force to lend massive pass-rush upside.

8) Cincinnati Bengals

Caleb Downs, DB, Ohio State

Oh, to be a Bengals fan. Joe Burrow’s Super Bowl appearance teased the Cincinnati faithful with hope. Since then, it’s been all downhill. There are long-term questions for the Bengals, but the best we can do right now is rebuild the defense — namely, the secondary.

In the 2026 NFL Draft, Caleb Downs is the best pick Cincinnati could make, in my opinion. He’s the consummate “glue guy” at safety — with elite coverage athleticism, processing speed, route intelligence, role versatility, and run support value.

9) New York Giants (via ARI)

Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU

There’s plenty wrong with the Giants’ defense, but most of it can be boiled down to the second and third levels. Deonte Banks didn’t pan out at cornerback, and Cor’Dale Flott is an impending free agent. New York needs to reinvest there and reinvest early.

In the 2026 NFL Draft, there’s no better pick for the Giants than Mansoor Delane. In PFSN’s CFB CB Impact database, Delane has the highest grade: An ungodly score of 99.3. For context, the next-highest CB is almost five points lower.

Delane is a mirror-motor machine in man coverage, a master space manager and processor in off-man and zone. He generates incompletions at a high clip, and he can fend off crack-and-replace blocks in support. Rarely has a CB ever been such a sure thing as this.

10) Miami Dolphins

David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech

Anthony Weaver deserves credit for turning around the Dolphins’ defense after a disastrous start and several player losses. Still, Miami will enter the 2026 offseason with a pressing need for improved personnel. David Bailey helps with that in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft.

At 6’3″, 247 pounds, Bailey appears a bit undersized off of the raw measurements — but his over 34″ arms give him a unique speed-to-power profile, and athletically, he’s the most dynamic edge rusher in the class with his instant burst, agility, and arc-running speed.

Bailey holds PFSN’s top CFB EDGE Impact grade with an elite score of 92.9, and per PFF, he’s generated pressure on an insane 24.1% of his rush reps, with an over 17% sack conversion rate. No one gets after the QB better, and there are flashes in run defense.

11) Los Angeles Rams

Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee

Jermod McCoy hasn’t played a down yet in 2025 as he recovers from a torn ACL (he has returned to practice), but there’s a chance he could pull a Ja’Marr Chase of sorts and declare anyway. Off his 2024 tape alone, he’s an arguable top-ten talent.

Medicals will be big for McCoy, but at his best, he bears resemblance to Darius Slay on film: An ultra-fluid and explosive closer with shadow-like matching skills in man coverage and instant responsiveness in off-man and zone. He’d be a vital playmaker for the Rams.

12) Pittsburgh Steelers (via MIN)

Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State

Projected Trade: Steelers receive No. 12 pick, 2027 sixth-round pick; Vikings receive No. 16 pick, No. 78 pick, 2027 third-round pick

There’s a chance Jordyn Tyson could fall a bit in the 2026 NFL Draft due to his streaky medical history — but in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, the Steelers take advantage, trading with the Vikings to give DK Metcalf a quality complementary target.

At 6’2″, 200 pounds, Tyson is a fluid and explosive three-level threat with energized twitch as a separator, smooth body control at the catch, and dynamic RAC ability. As a diverse movement-Z with universal usage versatility, he can help Pittsburgh’s offense level up.

13) Carolina Panthers

Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon

I’ve made this pick before for the Panthers, and I can understand Panthers fans being skeptical.

Tight ends aren’t traditionally valued this high, and Carolina has needs elsewhere. But the value isn’t great at EDGE or CB, and Kenyon Sadiq can make a big impact on offense for Bryce Young.

At 6’3″, 255 pounds, Sadiq is an explosive and compact two-phase weapon who can splice through zones, stem up slot DBs, make high-difficulty catches, and accrue RAC as a pass-catcher, while driving EDGEs off the ball in the run game.

14) Dallas Cowboys

Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah

Cowboys fans may crash out after seeing me spend their first Round 1 pick on yet another offensive lineman, but hear me out: The value at defensive positions of need isn’t great here, and Terence Steele is set to potentially be a cap casualty.

With how important Dak Prescott and the offense have been this year, there’s nothing to lose investing up front, and Caleb Lomu has the athleticism, leverage acquisition, flexibility, and power in the run game to be an impact starter.

Lomu could shift to right tackle or insert at left tackle, and allow Tyler Guyton to move back to his most natural position.

15) Kansas City Chiefs

Peter Woods, DL, Clemson

This is a tremendous value acquisition, but an unorthodox pick for the Chiefs in the 2026 NFL Draft cycle thus far. Allow me to explain: Peter Woods is still a top-15 talent. But his best role might better fit what the Chiefs need.

Woods reportedly beefed up to around 310 pounds ahead of the 2025 season. And in 2025, he appeared visibly stiffer and less fluid in transitions than he did in 2024. My subjective opinion is that the added weight may bear some blame for this.

In Kansas City, Woods could trim back down to around 295 pounds and terrorize as a role-diverse pressure generator between 3-tech and 7-tech alongside Chris Jones. In that role, he has the explosiveness, power, torque, and motor to thrive.

16) Minnesota Vikings (via PIT)

Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson

After trading down with the Steelers in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, the Vikings address their trepidatious CB situation by taking Avieon Terrell. Terrell is the perfect utility CB for Brian Flores’ defense, and he comes at an important time where Minnesota needs stability.

At 5’11”, 180 pounds, Terrell is a bit undersized, but he can play press-man, off-man, or zone — in the slot, or on the boundary — and he has a knack for impacting the football, with three INTs, 25 PBUs, and seven forced fumbles across his career.

17) Houston Texans

Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame

The Texans have three picks within the 38-66 window in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, so I’m going to take the best player available here and address the offensive line on Day 2. There’s no dispute on who the BPA is here: It’s Notre Dame’s Jeremiyah Love.

Giving off shades of Ahman Green at 6’0″, 214 pounds, Love has an incredibly rare type of dynamic vertical athleticism, where he can toggle and throttle behind the line to pin defenders into vats, then explode into space and punish pursuers 1-on-1. He’s special.

18) Detroit Lions

Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State

Hear me out, Lions fans. I didn’t love the value at other positions of need here, and Alex Anzalone is set to become a free agent soon. The Lions are close to a best-player-available situation, and the best player available is indeed Ohio State’s Sonny Styles.

Styles is 6’4″, 243 pounds, and had six sacks as a blitzer in 2024, so don’t get caught thinking he can’t provide something as a pass-rush catalyst. But his prime function is as an elite WILL linebacker, with sideline range, take-on physicality, and high-end coverage value.

19) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Quincy Rhodes Jr., EDGE, Arkansas

Styles going one pick before the Buccaneers is a devastating blow, but Tampa Bay recovers in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft by taking promising edge rusher Quincy Rhodes Jr. The Buccaneers still need long-term EDGE help, and Rhodes has massive upside in that lens.

At 6’6″, 275 pounds, Rhodes has unnatural quickness, burst, and bend capacity for his size. He can win with quick swims and spins, but also has the power profile to cave in blocks and reduce pocket space when his hips are properly aligned.

20) Tennessee Titans (via BAL)

Makai Lemon, WR, USC

Projected Trade: Titans receive No. 20 pick; Ravens receive No. 22 pick, No. 65 pick

After watching Makai Lemon fall too far in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, the Titans make a move up the board to acquire him as a top-flight weapon for Cam Ward. Wide receiver is still a massive area of need for Ward and the Titans. Lemon changes that on Day 1.

At around 5’11”, 195 pounds, without much press exposure, Lemon fits better as a versatile movement-Z than a true X-receiver. Still, his energized short-area athleticism, leverage IQ, and icy contested-catch consistency will help him make an immediate impact.

21) Buffalo Bills

KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M

Bills fans might be salty about missing out on Lemon, but I actually think KC Concepcion is a slightly better fit for what the Bills right now. What the Bills need most is independent separation from press coverage, as well as vertical speed. Concepcion clears Lemon in those areas.

Lemon is considerably more consistent at the catch point. Still, Concepcion is the unique undersized WR who can win against physicality at the line with hyperactive quickness and targeted physicality, and he’s a stellar separator and an explosive vertical-RAC presence.

22) Baltimore Ravens (via TEN)

Spencer Fano, OL, Utah

After trading back with the Titans, the Ravens address a position group they should have paid more care and attention to in the 2025 NFL Draft: The interior offensive line. Baltimore drastically needs a talent upgrade at guard, and Spencer Fano suffices.

Fano has played exclusively at tackle for the Utes, but he projects well to the interior with his blistering short-area athleticism, jarring point-of-attack power, and relish for physical finishes. He can get a bit stronger, but the upside in Baltimore is through the roof.

23) San Francisco 49ers

Chris Bell, WR, Louisville

Between Brandon Aiyuk’s impending split from the 49ers, Ricky Pearsall’s struggles to catch on, and Jauan Jennings’ trepidatious contract outlook, San Francisco could be nearing a complete restart at the WR spot. Chris Bell can help catalyze that kind of rebuild.

At 6’2″, 225 pounds, with over 32″ arms, Bell has the size, contact authority, and uber-explosive RAC profile that Kyle Shanahan craves. But his keen zone intelligence and domineering catch-point skills have helped him field comparisons to A.J. Brown.

24) Dallas Cowboys

Colton Hood, CB, Tennessee

The Cowboys’ defense has found new life late in the 2025 season, but there’s still lots of work to be done in the 2026 offseason. Trevon Diggs’ long-term outlook is uncertain, and one could argue that DaRon Bland is the only stable asset at the cornerback spot.

At 6’0″, 195 pounds, Colton Hood has been one of the breakout stars of the 2025 season, carrying a near-elite 88.5 PFSN CFB CB Impact grade. He’s a high-caliber athlete, with quick processing and reaction, technical variability, and catch-point proactivity.

25) Los Angeles Chargers

Francis Mauigoa, OL, Miami (FL)

Much of the Chargers’ offensive line woes weren’t their fault in 2025; losing Rashawn Slater and Joe Alt within three months would crater almost any blocking front. That said, the interior still needs significant help. That’s where Francis Mauigoa comes in.

To be clear, Mauigoa is a natural right tackle. He could feasibly stay there for the Chargers if Slater’s recovery proves ill-fated — but Mauigoa translates even better inside at guard with his explosive athleticism, compact and sawed-off power element, and finishing zeal.

26) Chicago Bears

Kayden McDonald, DT, Ohio State

If the Bears can get continued good play out of 2025 rookie Ozzy Trapilo, it’ll make their first-round conversation very simple in the 2026 NFL Draft. The defensive line bears the most priority next April, and Kayden McDonald could be a target on the interior.

With Andrew Billings set to be a free agent, McDonald makes sense for Chicago as an upgrade. At 6’3″, 326 pounds, McDonald is stout, strong, and uber-explosive in linear modes, with the power to reset the line, take on double teams, and feed stack-and-sheds.

27) Seattle Seahawks

Olaivavega Ioane, OG, Penn State

The Seahawks made a big dent in their iOL issues by selecting Grey Zabel in the 2025 NFL Draft, but there’s still work to be done. Jalen Sundell and Anthony Bradford are replacement-level starters, and there will be an upgrade opportunity in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Olaivavega Ioane is an incredibly imposing player at 6’4″, 330 pounds, who combines stifling hand power and anchor strength with bounding athleticism and reliable leverage acquisition. With Ioane, Zabel could stick at guard or be experimented with at center.

28) New York Jets

Denzel Boston, WR, Washington

The wide receiver position — aside from Garrett Wilson — has been a massive problem for the Jets for multiple years on end now. It’s time for New York to aggressively address the issue. Denzel Boston is one such first-round target who can help them accomplish that.

At 6’4″, 209 pounds, Boston is a plus-size threat on the boundary, who can reliably win 50-50 balls with his steely focus, vice-grip hand strength, and savvy control of catch-point positioning — but he’s also a fairly smooth separator and RAC threat in space.

29) Philadelphia Eagles

Keith Abney II, CB, Arizona State

Keith Abney II carried a fringe first-round grade on my board entering the 2026 NFL Draft cycle, and he’s only validated that placement in 2025. He has an elite 91.2 PFSN CFB CB Impact score this year, with two interceptions and 11 pass breakups through November.

At 6’0″, 190 pounds, Abney is an incredibly sound cover man who thrives working in off-man and zone. He has the fleet-footed athleticism to manage hip leverage and depth at will, and he boasts lightning-quick response to stimulus, breaking over the top routes.

30) Denver Broncos

CJ Allen, LB, Georgia

The time has come for the Broncos to stop neglecting inside linebacker. Denver traditionally doesn’t take LBs high in the draft, but in a 2026 NFL Draft class that’s thin on blue-chip talent, there’s a perfect opportunity to just take the good football player.

READ MORE: CJ Allen NFL Draft Profile: Week 13 Scouting Report for the Georgia Linebacker

At 6’1″, 230 pounds, Allen is around average size, and can be controlled at the point by climbing linemen at times — but that’s one of the only knocks on his profile. He’s rangy, instinctive, physical, relentless in pursuit, and he has excellent coverage feel as well.

31) Los Angeles Rams

Blake Miller, OT, Clemson

The Rams are firing on all cylinders this season, and they uncharacteristically have two first-round picks in the 2026 NFL Draft. With their second first-round selection in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft, they snag Rob Havenstein’s prospective replacement: Blake Miller.

At 6’6″, 315 pounds, Miller isn’t quite as big or as sturdy at contact as Havenstein — but he’s pound-for-pound the best athlete in the 2026 OT class, with second-level range that’s nearly impossible to replicate, and he’s nimble, balanced, and proactive in pass protection.

32) New England Patriots

Genesis Smith, SAF, Arizona

The Patriots have gotten by with their current safety duo, but one thing New England desperately needs is a long-term impact talent on the back end. Few 2026 NFL Draft safeties project better than Genesis Smith — if he declares.

At 6’2″, 200 pounds, Smith’s superpower is his coverage. He has elite range and coverage malleability, to go along with quick processing speed and route ID skills — and he’s also improved his angle discipline and run support technique as the season has gone on.

Round 2 | 33) Tennessee Titans

Kadyn Proctor, OL, Alabama

Kadyn Proctor isn’t JC Latham insurance in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft. Instead, he’s a replacement for veteran Kevin Zeitler at the right guard spot. Proctor projects better inside, and his power element as a driver and help blocker would be beneficial for Latham.

34) New York Giants

Chase Bisontis, OG, Texas A&M

The Giants’ offensive line has performed better than expected in 2025, but New York still needs a long-term solution at guard. At 6’5″, 315 pounds, with a stable center of gravity, active hands, power in the run game, and high-end athleticism, Chase Bisontis qualifies.

35) New York Giants

Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, SAF, Toledo

Tyler Nubin has not inspired confidence in his two-year stretch as a Giants starter. At 6’3″, 209 pounds, with energized athleticism, veteran route vision, and voracious support ability, Emmanuel McNeil-Warren can serve as an upgrade alongside Jevon Holland.

36) Las Vegas Raiders

Iapani Laloulu, OL, Oregon

Iapani Laloulu isn’t an elite athlete, but for a Raiders line that needs role awareness, angle IQ, and displacing power, he couldn’t be a much better fit. He projects best at center, where he has the most experience, but Las Vegas could try him at guard, too.

37) New Orleans Saints

Kamari Ramsey, DB, USC

Kamari Ramsey’s impact can get lost in the raw stats at times. Still, he’s an excellent nickel prospect at 6’0″, 205 pounds, with elite coverage mobility and swivel in zone, high-level route vision, and willing physicality in support.

38) Houston Texans

A’Mauri Washington, DT, Oregon

A’Mauri Washington is still raw with his pass-rush execution, but with Folorunso Fatukasi’s contract expiring, the Texans can upgrade at nose tackle with Washington’s elite explosive element at 6’3″, 339 pounds, while also adding an alignment-versatile power generator.

39) Cincinnati Bengals

Julian Neal, CB, Arkansas

Julian Neal doesn’t quite have DJ Turner II’s vertical speed on the boundary, but across from Turner, Neal can be a quality CB2 with size at 6’2″, 200 pounds, matching agility and fluidity, playmaking chops, and perhaps the best run support ability in the class.

40) New York Giants

Anthony Hill Jr., LB, Texas

Anthony Hill Jr. will function better as a run-and-chase WILL linebacker than a green dot. Still, in that attacking role, he has incredible upside with his range and agility at 6’3″, 238 pounds, ability to slither through gaps, blitzing acumen, and promising coverage feel.

41) Cleveland Browns

Isaiah World, OT, Oregon

Isaiah World remains relatively raw with his leveraging and hands, but he’s the kind of domineering physical specimen the Browns like to invest in at tackle, with his massive 6’6″, 320-pound frame, overwhelming length, elite explosiveness, and mauler mentality.

42) Atlanta Falcons

Skyler Bell, WR, UConn

Skyler Bell will be a 24-year-old rookie, but the 6’0″, 185-pound pass-catcher is exactly what the Falcons need as a WR2 alongside Drake London. Bell can separate at multiple levels, he’s a twitched-up RAC threat, and he can make high-difficulty catches.

43) Minnesota Vikings

AJ Haulcy, SAF, LSU

At 6’0″, 215 pounds, AJ Haulcy has the size and willingness to enforce in support, and in coverage, he’s an instinctive robber with exceptional route vision, reaction speed, and haste breaking back toward the ball.

44) Miami Dolphins

Chris Johnson, CB, San Diego State

In Anthony Weaver’s zone-heavy scheme, Chris Johnson can be a high-caliber starter fairly early in his NFL career. While Johnson is a bit smaller at 6’0″, 185 pounds, he’s fleet-footed, quick to react, sharp in 2-on-1 situations, and can enforce at the catch and in support.

45) New York Jets

Christen Miller, DT, Georgia

Quinnen Williams was a major loss for the Jets, and New York won’t be able to make it up with a lone second-round pick — but Christen Miller can be an impactful presence with his hand power and strength, and he has the quickness to unearth additional potential.

46) Carolina Panthers

Cashius Howell, EDGE, Texas A&M

Cashius Howell grades as a mid-to-late Day 2 prospect for me, on account of his almost entirely absent power profile — but for the Panthers and Ejiro Evero specifically, he’s a perfect fit with his affinity for terrorizing and securing sacks as a speed and finesse rusher.

47) Pittsburgh Steelers

Will Lee III, CB, Texas A&M

At 6’1″ and over 190 pounds, Will Lee III has the size, length, and chippy physicality the Steelers like on the boundary, and he has the technical variation to smother WRs in press-man, or manage depth and stems in off-man and zone.

48) Houston Texans

Oscar Delp, TE, Georgia

Dalton Schultz has regressed in 2025 and has a potential out in his contract next offseason, so the situation could be primed for Houston to find a successor. Oscar Delp has Day 1 functionality as a blocker and untapped receiving upside due to his athleticism.

49) Kansas City Chiefs

Emmett Johnson, RB, Nebraska

Emmett Johnson is exactly what the Chiefs need at running back. At 5’11”, 200 pounds, one could argue he’s the best creator in the 2026 NFL Draft RB class. He combines unnatural spatial intelligence and contact sense with wicked agility and burst.

50) Detroit Lions

Anthony Lucas, EDGE, USC

The Lions need a long-term complement to Aidan Hutchinson. While Anthony Lucas still needs greater consistency, his power profile is eye-catching at 6’5″, 272 pounds, and on his best reps, he flashes an impressive blend of quickness, hand force, and finishing strength.

51) Baltimore Ravens

Kenyatta Jackson Jr., EDGE, Ohio State

Kenyatta Jackson Jr. was a projection heading into the year, but that’s slowly changing. 3.5 of his 4.5 sacks have come over the past six games. At 6’6″, 265 pounds, he has an elite explosiveness-power combo, with the leverage acquisition to win at the point routinely.

52) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Eli Raridon, TE, Notre Dame

With Cade Otton entering free agency, the Buccaneers may need to look at TE in the 2026 NFL Draft. Eli Raridon is 6’7″, 250 pounds, with very good functional athleticism, zone IQ, and hands as a receiver, and near-elite lower-body load and power drive as a blocker.

53) Jacksonville Jaguars

Germie Bernard, WR, Alabama

Jakobi Meyers is a free agent in 2026, Brian Thomas Jr. is in limbo, and the Jaguars have little else in the way of quality starting talent. Germie Bernard could be a target for Liam Coen, who likes WRs with play strength, reliable separation ability, and RAC potential.

54) Buffalo Bills

Dillon Thieneman, SAF, Oregon

Dillon Thieneman has played more as a rover and box safety for Oregon. Still, he can also rotate back into single-high, manage space, and flip his hips to respond to routes and undercut throws. He would thrive alongside the rejuvenated Cole Bishop.

55) San Francisco 49ers

Caleb Banks, DT, Florida

If Caleb Banks declares for the 2026 NFL Draft, his outlook is uncertain. But there’s no denying the raw potential he has as an elite athlete with a massive 6’6″, 330-pound frame. Getting Banks with Kris Kocurek would ensure he gets the developmental touch he needs.

56) Green Bay Packers

Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State

Davison Igbinosun hasn’t been tested much in 2025, but he’s flashed improvement with his targeted physicality. And in Jeff Hafley’s man-heavy scheme, Igbinosun has the length, vertical speed, size-adjusted fluidity, and playmaking ability to deliver starter-impact upside.

57) Los Angeles Chargers

Parker Brailsford, OC, Alabama

It’s been painful to watch the Chargers’ center play at times in 2025. Parker Brailsford may be undersized, but he has the athleticism and quickness off the ball, compact power element, sturdy core, and finishing physicality to change LA’s outlook at the fulcrum.

58) Seattle Seahawks

Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina

Brandon Cisse is still young and needs more work in press, but in Mike Macdonald’s zone-heavy scheme, the 6’0″, 195-pound Cisse would be right at home with his elite explosiveness and twitch, fluid sink, brisk reaction speed, and willingness in support.

59) Indianapolis Colts

Anthony Smith, EDGE, Minnesota

The Colts lean more into raw power on the edge with this 2026 NFL Mock Draft selection. Anthony Smith is 6’6″, 285 pounds, with excellent lean mass and lower-body action. He’s more fluid and flexible than dynamic, but he has the tools to make a consistent impact.

60) Chicago Bears

Matayo Uiagalelei, EDGE, Oregon

Matayo Uiagalelei is a polarizing prospect — he’s long and explosive, but stiff and uncoordinated at times — but there’s no denying he has the linear athleticism, length, and power profile to earn the allure of Dennis Allen. In time, he has stellar two-phase upside.

61) Philadelphia Eagles

Dametrious Crownover, OT, Texas A&M

Dametrious Crownover is 6’7″, 330 pounds, with over 35″ arms, and has exceptional athleticism and range off the line as a climber and backside sealer. Get him in a room with Jeff Stoutland and let him grow behind Lane Johnson.

62) Denver Broncos

Bear Alexander, DT, Oregon

Few DTs in this 2026 NFL Mock Draft can match Bear Alexander’s explosive power element at the point. Across from Zach Allen, he’d form an incredibly imposing tandem with three-down appeal.

63) Los Angeles Rams

Brendan Sorsby, QB, Cincinnati

Brendan Sorsby is firmly in the mix for the QB4 spot in the 2026 NFL Draft, but he presently grades as a fringe Day 2-Day 3 passer on my board. He hasn’t yet earned Round 1 capital, but he could thrive entering the right situation within the Top 75 picks.

In Los Angeles, the 6’3″, 235-pound Sorsby — a quality athlete with a strong arm and all-encompassing angle and platform freedom — would get to learn from Matthew Stafford: One of the greatest window manipulators this generation has seen.

64) New England Patriots

R Mason Thomas, EDGE, Oklahoma

The Patriots have gotten the most out of their personnel, but they could still use a more consistent pass-rush presence. R Mason Thomas suffices with his elite explosiveness, agility, and bend, as well as his formidable speed-to-power.

Round 3 | 65) Baltimore Ravens

Mateen Ibirogba, DT, Wake Forest

Mateen Ibirogba is relatively raw, but he has a certifiably insane first-step at 6’3″, 292 pounds, flashes overwhelming power as a pass-rusher, and can reset the line in run defense.

66) Houston Texans

Emmanuel Pregnon, OG, Oregon

Emmanuel Pregnon is a bit stiff in the hips, but he’s an extremely long and heavy-handed guard who can overwhelm in a phone booth or drive defenders off the line and work upfield on runs.

67) Las Vegas Raiders:

Jayden Maiava, QB, USC

The 2025 season has been as ugly as you could imagine for the Raiders, and it’s easier to list which positions haven’t been issues. QB, unfortunately, has not been one of them, as Geno Smith has starkly regressed.

Smith’s age and poor performance have Raiders fans already looking to the future. At first glance, the 2026 QB class is relatively sparse past the top three, but there are wild cards in the fold.

At 6’4″, 230 pounds, Jayden Maiava is a prototypical gunslinger with a double-edged fearlessness to his game, but also definite potential with his leverage IQ and easy velocity. He has plenty of reason to return to school, but he’d field Day 2 interest as a prospect.

68) New Orleans Saints

Eric Singleton Jr., WR, Auburn

Eric Singleton Jr. has been hampered by poor QB play, but he’s an energized separator, RAC threat, and explosive vertical athlete who flashes high-level body control and focus.

69) Philadelphia Eagles

Keylan Rutledge, OG, Georgia Tech

The Eagles have seen a regression in terms of power and displacement from their interior line. Keylan Rutledge can change that in very short order.

70) Cincinnati Bengals

Brian Parker II, OL, Duke

Brian Parker II isn’t as athletic as his predecessor, Graham Barton. However, he’s still a tackle with a promising projection at guard or center, thanks to his flexibility, rotational torque, strong center of gravity, and technical savvy.

71) Arizona Cardinals

Max Iheanachor, OT, Arizona State

Arizona snags a promising local talent in Max Iheanachor: A 6’5″, 320-pound JUCO product with over 34″ arms, explosiveness and power, and promising synergy as a pass protector.

72) Tennessee Titans

Devon Marshall, CB, NC State

Devon Marshall is coming off one of the most dominant performances of any 2026 NFL Draft CB against Florida State. At 5’11”, 200 pounds, he has ideal vertical speed, technical versatility, and strength as a disruptor.

73) Washington Commanders

Ja’Kobi Lane, WR, USC

A 6’4″, 200-pound WR with big slot and boundary versatility, smooth stemming ability, fluid RAC, and impossible catch-point prowess, Ja’Kobi Lane can be a weapon for Jayden Daniels.

74) Minnesota Vikings

Darian Mensah, QB, Duke

Let’s be real, Vikings fans. Quarterback might be your most pressing need. But the real question is: When can you realistically address it?

The 2026 NFL Draft might not provide the chance, but it’s still worth exploring potential early declarations. Darian Mensah is one such wild card who could change the equation.

RELATED: Darian Mensah NFL Draft Profile: Week 13 Scouting Report for the Duke Quarterback

At 6’3″, 215 pounds, Mensah is a prototypical passer and a good functional athlete who has bright flashes of anticipation, multi-read processing, and layering on tape. He needs to improve his pocket-depth discipline, but Kevin O’Connell could play with him.

75) Miami Dolphins

Zachariah Branch, WR, Georgia

At 5’10”, 180 pounds, Zachariah Branch has hyper-elite explosiveness and energized athleticism as a RAC threat, but he’s also quietly a quality separator and catch-point operator at his size.

76) Atlanta Falcons

D’Angelo Ponds, CB, Indiana

D’Angelo Ponds won’t tip the scales at 5’9″, 170 pounds, but Jeff Ulbrich has given smaller CBs chances before, and Ponds is a truly exceptional prospect outside of his outlier size — with speed, fluidity, and playmaking chops.

77) Carolina Panthers

Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama

A four-year starter, Deontae Lawson has an impressive blend of short-area energy, explosive athleticism, and two-phase instincts. He can add a bit more weight and power, but he’s a starter in waiting.

78) Minnesota Vikings

Joshua Josephs, EDGE, Tennessee

The Vikings could use developmental talent at EDGE. At 6’3″, 235 pounds, with over-34″ arms, Joshua Josephs has the burst, bend, and length to mold, and he’s already a quality run defender.

79) Miami Dolphins

LT Overton, DL, Alabama

At around 6’2 1/2″, 274 pounds, with over 33″ arms, LT Overton could be a candidate to pack on 10 pounds and function as a versatile 3-tech opposite Zach Sieler in the Dolphins’ scheme.

80) Kansas City Chiefs

Antonio Williams, WR, Clemson

The Chiefs need real separators at the WR position; there’s no skirting around it anymore. Antonio Williams is that kind of route-runner and physicality merchant, despite being undersized.

81) Pittsburgh Steelers

Fa’alili Fa’amoe, OL, Wake Forest

The Steelers need a long-term answer at guard. Fa’alili Fa’amoe could be that player with his searing attack explosiveness, driving power off the line, and active hands in pass protection.

82) Jacksonville Jaguars

Hezekiah Masses, CB, California

In Anthony Campanile’s man-heavy scheme, Hezekiah Masses would be right at home with his matching athleticism, length, fluidity, sticky stem work, and ball skills at 6’1″, 185 pounds.

83) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Taurean York, LB, Texas A&M

For my money, Taurean York is one of the most underrated players in the 2026 class. He’s small, but he’s a “green dot” LB with elite processing, full-field range, and excellent coverage feel.

84) Baltimore Ravens

Jaeden Roberts, OG, Alabama

Jaeden Roberts is more proficient as a linear attacker than a lateral matcher, but he’s heavy-handed and physical in a phone booth, with impressive driving power in the run game.

85) Buffalo Bills

Domonique Orange, DT, Iowa State

At 6’2″, 328 pounds, with near-34″ arms, Domonique Orange has the perfect mix of natural leverage, mass, and proportional length for the Bills at nose tackle next to Deone Walker.

86) Jacksonville Jaguars

Darrell Jackson Jr., DT, Florida State

At 6’5″, 340 pounds, with 35″ arms, Darrell Jackson Jr. is a real-life tree stump at the fulcrum, who also has the hand violence and relentless motor to disrupt 1-on-1 in spurts.

87) San Francisco 49ers

Kade Pieper, OG, Iowa

There isn’t a better fit at guard for the 49ers than Kade Pieper: A 6’4″, 290-pound super-athlete who thrives pulling, climbing, and swarming second-level defenders with his range.

88) Green Bay Packers

Drew Shelton, OL, Penn State

The Packers crave positional flexibility, and Drew Shelton has shown versatility across multiple spots with his athleticism, compact size, and high floor in both phases.

89) Los Angeles Chargers

Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati

Junior Colson is still a complete unknown, and Denzel Perryman is aging. Jake Golday gives the Chargers a sturdy, reliable, and rangy second-level presence at 6’4″, 240 pounds.

90) Indianapolis Colts

Chris Brazzell II, WR, Tennessee

At 6’5″, 200 pounds, Chris Brazzell II could be a quality Alec Pierce successor with his vertical athleticism, smooth stem flexibility, and IQ, and logic-defying catch-point skills.

91) Chicago Bears

Demond Claiborne, RB, Wake Forest

Demond Claiborne is small, compact, and explosive, with exceptional short-area twitch, size-adjusted contact balance, toughness, and natural receiving instincts.

92) Seattle Seahawks

T.J. Parker, EDGE, Clemson

It hasn’t been the year that was envisioned for T.J. Parker, but on Day 2, he presents intrigue with his upside as a precision power rusher and his sturdy run defense profile.

93) Miami Dolphins

Gennings Dunker, OL, Iowa

A right tackle at Iowa, Gennings Dunker would assuredly shift to guard for Miami — a spot he projects better at with his power, strength in a phone booth, and true mauler mentality.

94) Denver Broncos

Michael Trigg, TE, Baylor

Michael Trigg is a projection as a blocker, but he compensates by being a high-level receiving threat out of the gate with spry athleticism, elite reach, and abnormal catch-point instincts.

95) Los Angeles Rams

Bray Hubbard, SAF, Alabama

Bray Hubbard is a well-sized, instinctive, and physical safety with two-high and box capabilities, who’d fit well alongside Kamren Kinchens in Chris Shula’s defense.

96) New England Patriots

Lance Heard, OT, Tennessee

Lance Heard needs to improve his footwork and leverage, but at 6’6″, 330 pounds, with rare athleticism and power, he’s the perfect prototype to let grow behind Morgan Moses.

97) Minnesota Vikings

Raleek Brown, RB, Arizona State

A WR-turned-RB, Raleek Brown has exploded for over 1,000 yards in 2025. At 5’9″, 195 pounds, he has the burst, quickness, spatial IQ, and prying contact balance to succeed Aaron Jones.

98) Philadelphia Eagles

Max Klare, TE, Ohio State

Max Klare is still coming into his own, but he’s one of the more well-rounded TE prospects in 2026, with a functional route tree, usage versatility, RAC value, and blocking utility.

99) Pittsburgh Steelers

Xavier Scott, DB, Illinois

A true senior, Xavier Scott could take a medical redshirt and return to school. But if he declares, he’s still a quality nickel prospect with route intelligence and willing physicality.

100) Jacksonville Jaguars

LJ Martin, RB, BYU

Jacksonville could use long-term reliability at RB. LJ Martin provides that with his vision, spatial IQ, smooth agility, and forward-churning contact balance at 6’2″, 220 pounds.

2026 NFL Mock Draft | Round 4

101) Tennessee Titans
Justice Haynes, RB, Michigan

102) New York Giants
Elijah Sarratt, WR, Indiana

103) Denver Broncos
Jonah Coleman, RB, Washington

104) New York Jets
Clev Lubin, EDGE, Louisville

105) Las Vegas Raiders
Caleb Tiernan, OT, Northwestern

106) Arizona Cardinals
Amare Ferrell, SAF, Indiana

107) Cleveland Browns
Omar Cooper Jr., WR, Indiana

108) Houston Texans
Lander Barton, LB, Utah

109) Cincinnati Bengals
Malachi Lawrence, EDGE, UCF

110) Miami Dolphins
Jalon Kilgore, SAF, South Carolina

111) Atlanta Falcons
PJ Williams, OT, SMU

112) Jacksonville Jaguars
Harold Perkins Jr., LB, LSU

113) Dallas Cowboys
Jadarian Price, RB, Notre Dame

114) Carolina Panthers
Tao Johnson, S, Utah

115) Kansas City Chiefs
Kelley Jones, CB, Mississippi State

116) Pittsburgh Steelers
Tristan Leigh, OT, Clemson

117) Houston Texans
Bryce Foster, OC, Kansas

118) Detroit Lions
Justin Joly, TE, NC State

119) Baltimore Ravens
Dae’Quan Wright, TE, Ole Miss

120) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Carter Smith, OL, Indiana

121) Las Vegas Raiders
Jermaine Mathews Jr., CB, Ohio State

122) Buffalo Bills
Tyreak Sapp, EDGE, Florida

123) San Francisco 49ers
Zion Young, EDGE, Missouri

124) Green Bay Packers
Tim Keenan III, DT, Alabama

125) Los Angeles Chargers
Jaishawn Barham, EDGE, Michigan

126) New England Patriots
Chandler Rivers, CB, Duke

127) New Orleans Saints
Tacario Davis, CB, Washington

128) Indianapolis Colts
Preston Hodge, CB, Colorado

129) Philadelphia Eagles
Damon Wilson II, EDGE, Missouri

130) Denver Broncos
Cooper Barkate, WR, Duke

131) Chicago Bears
Domani Jackson, CB, Alabama

132) New England Patriots
Ian Strong, WR, Rutgers

133) Pittsburgh Steelers
Jalen Huskey, SAF, Maryland

134) Detroit Lions
Austin Barber, OT, Florida

135) Las Vegas Raiders
Greg Johnson, OL, Minnesota

136) Philadelphia Eagles
Eric Rivers, WR, Georgia Tech

137) New Orleans Saints
Jack Kelly, LB, BYU

138) San Francisco 49ers
Jude Bowry, OT, Boston College

139) San Francisco 49ers
Zakee Wheatley, SAF, Penn State

140) San Francisco 49ers
Deion Burks, WR, Oklahoma

Round 5

141) Tennessee Titans
Max Llewellyn, EDGE, Iowa

142) New York Giants
Aiden Fisher, LB, Indiana

143) Tennessee Titans
Matt Gulbin, OC, Michigan State

144) Cleveland Browns
Febechi Nwaiwu, OG, Oklahoma

145) New Orleans Saints
Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt

146) Cleveland Browns
Trey Zuhn III, OL, Texas A&M

147) Washington Commanders
Kaytron Allen, RB, Penn State

148) Cleveland Browns
Keionte Scott, DB, Miami (FL)

149) Arizona Cardinals
Kevin Coleman Jr., WR, Missouri

150) Philadelphia Eagles
Nicholas Singleton, RB, Penn State

151) Minnesota Vikings
Jacob Rodriguez, LB, Texas Tech

152) Miami Dolphins
Marlin Klein, TE, Michigan

153) Carolina Panthers
Treydan Stukes, CB, Arizona

154) Dallas Cowboys
Bud Clark, SAF, TCU

155) Pittsburgh Steelers
Romello Height, EDGE, Texas Tech

156) Houston Texans
Alex Harkey, OT, Oregon

157) Kansas City Chiefs
Vincent Anthony Jr., EDGE, Duke

158) Detroit Lions
Kayin Lee, CB, Auburn

159) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Roman Hemby, RB, Indiana

160) Baltimore Ravens
Dani Dennis-Sutton, EDGE, Penn State

161) Buffalo Bills
Antonio Watts, LB, Louisville

162) Jacksonville Jaguars
Wesley Williams, EDGE, Duke

163) Jacksonville Jaguars
Rod Moore, SAF, Michigan

164) Green Bay Packers
De’Zhaun Stribling, WR, Ole Miss

165) Baltimore Ravens
CJ Daniels, WR, Miami (FL)

166) New Orleans Saints
Garrett Nussmeier, QB, LSU

167) Indianapolis Colts
Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech

168) Chicago Bears
Keagen Trost, OL, Missouri

169) Carolina Panthers
Josh Cameron, WR, Baylor

170) Denver Broncos
Carson Beck, QB, Miami (FL)

171) Los Angeles Rams
Earl Little Jr., DB, Florida State

172) New England Patriots
Akheem Mesidor, EDGE, Miami (FL)

173) Las Vegas Raiders
Lewis Bond, WR, Boston College

174) Baltimore Ravens
Hollywood Smothers, RB, NC State

175) Baltimore Ravens
TJ Dottery, LB, Ole Miss

176) Kansas City Chiefs
Dontay Corleone, DT, Cincinnati

177) Dallas Cowboys
Arion Carter, LB, Tennessee

178) New York Jets
Wydett Williams Jr., SAF, Ole Miss

179) Tennessee Titans
Jimmy Rolder, LB, Michigan

Round 6

180) New York Giants
Adam Randall, RB, Clemson

181) Las Vegas Raiders
Ikenna Ezeogu, DT, Iowa State

182) New Orleans Saints
Bryce Lance, WR, North Dakota State

183) Las Vegas Raiders
DeShon Singleton, SAF, Nebraska

184) Washington Commanders
Kendal Daniels, LB, Oklahoma

185) Cincinnati Bengals
Zane Durant, DT, Penn State

186) Arizona Cardinals
Austin Romaine, LB, Kansas State

187) Seattle Seahawks
J’Mari Taylor, RB, Virginia

188) New England Patriots
Sam Roush, TE, Stanford

189) New York Giants
Lake McRee, TE, USC

190) Atlanta Falcons
David Blay, DT, Miami (FL)

191) New York Giants
Derrick Moore, EDGE, Michigan

192) Carolina Panthers
Chris McClellan, DT, Missouri

193) Los Angeles Rams
Joe Royer, TE, Cincinnati

194) New England Patriots
Devin Moore, CB, Florida

195) New England Patriots
Chip Trayanum, RB, Toledo

196) Cincinnati Bengals
Kage Casey, OT, Boise State

197) Tennessee Titans
Chase Roberts, WR, BYU

198) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Marcus Allen, CB, North Carolina

199) Detroit Lions
Barion Brown, WR, LSU

200) Cleveland Browns
Cole Wisniewski, SAF, Texas Tech

201) Washington Commanders
Jalen Catalon, SAF, Missouri

202) Green Bay Packers
Daniel Wingate, LB, Maryland

203) Los Angeles Rams
Cayden Green, OL, Missouri

204) Jacksonville Jaguars
Jaden Craig, QB, Harvard

205) Cleveland Browns
Tanner Koziol, TE, Houston

206) Detroit Lions
Tomas Rimac, OL, Virginia Tech

207) Houston Texans
Taylen Green, QB, Arkansas

208) Baltimore Ravens
Dane Key, WR, Nebraska

209) Los Angeles Rams
Xavier Chaplin, OT, Auburn

210) New England Patriots
Lyndon Cooper, OL, Pittsburgh

211) Philadelphia Eagles
Trinidad Chambliss, QB, Ole Miss

212) Pittsburgh Steelers
Robert Henry Jr., RB, UTSA

213) Pittsburgh Steelers
Bryce Boettcher, LB, Oregon

214) Indianapolis Colts
Sawyer Robertson, QB, Baylor

Round 7

215) Tennessee Titans
Isaiah Nwokobia, SAF, SMU

216) Cincinnati Bengals
Malachi Fields, WR, Notre Dame

217) Pittsburgh Steelers
DeMonte Capehart, DT, Clemson

218) Buffalo Bills
Dillon Wade, OL, Auburn

219) Las Vegas Raiders
Albert Regis, DT, Texas A&M

220) Cincinnati Bengals
Josh Cuevas, TE, Alabama

221) Arizona Cardinals
Zxavian Harris, DT, Ole Miss

222) Detroit Lions
Cole Payton, QB, North Dakota State

223) Washington Commanders
Terrance Carter Jr., TE, Texas Tech

224) Miami Dolphins
Eric McAlister, WR, TCU

225) Atlanta Falcons
John Michael Gyllenborg, TE, Wyoming

226) Minnesota Vikings
Brent Austin, CB, California

227) Minnesota Vikings
Kaleb Proctor, DT, SE Louisiana

228) Buffalo Bills
Alex Honig, TE, UConn

229) Kansas City Chiefs
Jack Velling, TE, Michigan State

230) Pittsburgh Steelers
Jaren Kanak, TE, Oklahoma

231) Minnesota Vikings
Eni Falayi, TE, Wake Forest

232) Jacksonville Jaguars
Isaiah Sategna III, WR, Oklahoma

233) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Reggie Virgil, WR, Texas Tech

234) Los Angeles Rams
Squirrel White, WR, Florida State

235) New York Jets
Cameron Robertson, EDGE, SMU

236) Minnesota Vikings
Javin Whatley, WR, Arizona

237) Houston Texans
Marvin Jones Jr., EDGE, Oklahoma

238) Green Bay Packers
Noah Whittington, RB, Oregon

239) New York Jets
Logan Jones, OC, Iowa

240) Chicago Bears
Xavier Nwankpa, SAF, Iowa

241) Cleveland Browns
Jamal Haynes, RB, Georgia Tech

242) Indianapolis Colts
Ben Murawski, OT, UConn

243) Chicago Bears
Desmeal Leigh, OT, Youngstown State

244) Denver Broncos
Howard Sampson, OT, Texas Tech

245) Jacksonville Jaguars
Cam Miller, DB, Rutgers

246) San Francisco 49ers
Behren Morton, QB, Texas Tech

247) Jacksonville Jaguars
Kemari Copeland, DT, Virginia Tech

248) Los Angeles Rams
Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois

249) Indianapolis Colts
Mike Washington Jr., RB, Arkansas

250) Los Angeles Rams
Terion Stewart, RB, Virginia Tech

251) Baltimore Ravens
Cade Klubnik, QB, Clemson

252) Indianapolis Colts
Isaiah Glasker, LB, BYU

253) Denver Broncos
Caden Curry, EDGE, Ohio State

254) Denver Broncos
Damonic Williams, DT, Oklahoma

255) Baltimore Ravens
Markel Bell, OT, Miami (FL)

256) New York Jets
Collin Wright, CB, Stanford

257) New York Jets
Jeff Caldwell, WR, Cincinnati

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2 COMMENTS

    0
    Anonymous 5 months ago

    u pick well for frisco,thanx,all others dont know this team,u do,thanx again.

    0
    Anonymous 5 months ago

    Great mockdraft, but some of the picks for make no sense. Who would they take a edge round one when they have one of the worst secondaries plus tight end rooms itl?

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