WATCH: 2026 NFL Draft Day 3 Livestream With Reaction, Grades, Analysis, More From PFSN’s Football Debate Club

PFSN's "Football Debate Club" crew is livestreaming Day 3 of the 2026 NFL Draft today at noon ET, reacting to every pick, trade, and surprise.

The 2026 NFL Draft is almost in the books! After two days full of surprises, reaches, and trades, there are just four rounds remaining (plus the frenzy that is UDFA free agency).

PFSN has been reacting to every moment with the “Football Debate Club” crew of Jacob Infante, Ian Cummings, and Cam Mellor livestreaming our 2026 NFL Draft Show.

Infante, Cummings, and Mellor will be live again today at noon ET to grade every pick and debate all things NFL Draft (while mixing in some crazy surprises). You can watch the livestream here:


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Who Are the Best Available Players After Day 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft?

Just like last year, a projected first-round talent shockingly slid into Day 3, and there are a number of other surprising players still available entering Round 4 of the 2026 NFL Draft.

Here are the best available prospects heading into today, per PFSN’s NFL Draft HQ.

Jerod McCoy, CB, Tennessee | No. 14 on PFSN Big Board

Jermod McCoy was a frontrunner to challenge for the CB1 mantle in the 2026 NFL Draft, but he missed the entire 2025 season amidst his recovery from a torn ACL. At 5’11”, 193 pounds, McCoy doesn’t quite have the desired size profile. But at his size, McCoy has solid proportional length, to go along with elite explosiveness, long-strider acceleration on the attack, and hyper-elite hip fluidity, deceleration, and malleability on transitions.

He’s an instant closer off his plant-and-drive, and a fleet-footed and fluid short-area mover with easy-matching athleticism. In press, he can stay square and dictate releases with physicality, and he’s a smooth mover in zone with tremendous throttle control, vision, and reactive coil over top route breaks. All this, and McCoy’s playmaking might be his most exciting trait; he snagged four INTs in 2024.

Unfortunately, doctors believe McCoy needs an additional that’s surgery unrelated to his ACL in order to address a bone plug. This could cause him to miss the entire 2026 season and risk shortening his career, which is the cause of his draft freefall.

Keionte Scott, CB, Miami | No. 48 on PFSN Big Board

PFSN analyst Jacob Infante named Keionte Scott his favorite remaining prospect entering Day 3 “I think you’re looking at a guy who just plays like a bat out of hell. I’m genuinely surprised coming out of Round 3 that he’s still available. I mean, he’s an older prospect. Maybe that plays a role in it. Hell of a player. But I just, I don’t see what the holdup is with Scott and why nobody’s taking him here in the first 100 picks.

“I mean, you’re looking at a guy, two interceptions for Miami this past year, both of them got returned for touchdowns, 13 tackles for a loss, and 5 sacks as a defensive back. Ran a 4.33, 40-yard dash. You turn on the tape, just a relentless motor. He’s someone you see that closing speed come to fruition, the incredible downhill physicality, the ability to lower the shoulder and just pop guys as a tackler.

“I mean, his form can improve a little bit, but I like the instincts. I like the ball skills he showcases, and he has the athleticism and the creativity after he intercepts the ball to be able to make big plays, hence the 2 interceptions for touchdowns that he had in 2025, leading the FBS in that regard. I think he’s someone who, whether you have him as a safety, whether you have them as a nickel corner, is someone who plays in the box a lot as well. In the NFL, I see a future starter.

“When you have a future starter with that versatility, with that athleticism, I’m genuinely surprised he’s still available going in Round 4. So maybe there’s something that these NFL teams know that we don’t; obviously, they have access to information that we on the outside don’t necessarily always have. But to me, at least, going off the tape and the production, and the testing numbers, Scott being available this late is baffling.”

Keith Abney II, CB, Arizona State | No. 49 on PFSN Big Board

Keith Abney II was one of the stars of Arizona State’s CFB Playoff run in 2024, amassing 52 tackles, three INTs, and nine PBUs in a breakout campaign. As a junior, he compounded that momentum, registering two INTs, 12 pass breakups, and an elite PFSN CB Impact score of 92.9. At around 5’11”,190 pounds, Abney is close to average size, but his most pivotal physical quality is his energized motion and foot speed, combined with his wicked play pace and mental urgency.

He doesn’t quite have elite burst or long speed, but he’s more than explosive enough, and he’s extremely fluid decelerating and redirecting overtop routes, with a sharp competitive focus and quick processing capacity that enables him to play passes with precision. Abney can work in press-man with his hyper-disciplined mirror-motor, as well as pedal, plant, and drive with efficiency in off-man and zone, and he’s unusually consistent as a tackler for his size.

Abney’s max outcome could be similar to Jaylon Johnson — a non-elite athlete and at times overlooked prospect, who went on to be a stellar pro with his quicks, fluidity, and competitive consistency.

Joshua Josephs, EDGE, Tennessee | No. 56 on PFSN Big Board

Joshua Josephs is one of the more polarizing EDGE prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft. At around 6’3″, 234 pounds, Josephs is underweight, and he’ll need to add more mass at the next level. Nevertheless, he’s able to contend in run defense and stack blocks with his over-34″ arms, and he also has a great feel for acquiring leverage and loading his base.

Josephs’ high floor in run defense defies expectation, and his pass-rushing framework is theoretically sound. Josephs is explosive, agile, and fluid at his size, with a clear understanding of upper-lower synergy, timing, and precision working the arc. He keeps tackles on their toes with his unique blend of athleticism and length, and he’s a threat to generate momentum-changing plays on money downs.

That said, his pass-rush production didn’t match up with his tools in college. His PFSN EDGE Impact score in 2025 was a middling 77.7, and per TruMedia, he achieved a true dropback pressure rate of just 7.5%. Josephs doesn’t channel power consistently with his upper-tier explosiveness and length, and his suspect raw strength makes him susceptible to snatches and forceful strikes against larger opponents.

With his run defense profile, raw tools, and natural leveraging, he projects as a quality rotational presence with serviceable starting appeal in odd-front schemes, but he needs to improve his power element before he can reach his ceiling as a quality two-phase starter.

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