2026 NFL Draft Team Rankings: All 32 Teams Graded With Every Pick + WAA Breakdown
A full post-draft ranking of every NFL team’s 2026 draft class, including team grades, all drafted players, Wins Above Average value, roster fit, player projections and quick scouting-style breakdowns
This ranking evaluates all 32 NFL draft classes by overall team draft grade, using WAA as one supporting data point rather than the only ranking factor. WAA stands for Wins Above Average, an analytics-based projection that estimates how much above-average value a draft class is expected to add compared to a baseline NFL outcome. The higher the WAA, the more projected impact the class adds, but the final rankings also factor in player value, roster needs, positional importance, scheme fit and long-term upside. Giving us a value-based way to compare draft classes beyond just big names, team needs or fan reaction.
New York Giants: A+
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 0.999 (Rank 19/32)
Pick 5: LB Arvell Reese, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 10: T Francis Mauigoa, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 37: CB Colton Hood, Tennessee Volunteers
Pick 74: WR Malachi Fields, Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Pick 186: DI Bobby Jamison-Travis, Auburn Tigers
Pick 192: T J.C. Davis, Illinois Fighting Illini
Pick 193: LB Jack Kelly, BYU Cougars
Player Snapshot
Reese: Reese is the explosive defensive chess piece, a 20-year-old athlete who can threaten the quarterback even if he plays off-ball. New York gets front-seven versatility and a rare growth ceiling.
Mauigoa: Mauigoa is the power-and-flexibility pick, likely beginning inside while preserving tackle insurance. His run-blocking force and strong pass-protection efficiency give the Giants immediate offensive-line options.
Hood: Hood is a talented but inconsistent corner with starting tools. The one-year starter profile makes him risky early, but the upside is real if the technique settles.
Fields: Fields is a big-bodied receiver with blocking value and enough long speed. The catch-point urgency must improve for him to stick.
Jamison-Travis: Jamison-Travis is a stocky run defender with disruptive early-down traits. Limited rush value and age tighten the roster path.
Davis: Davis has tackle length and run-game impact. Recovery in pass protection decides whether he becomes more than depth.
Kelly: Kelly is a pressure-capable linebacker with downhill juice and blitz production. He profiles as a core-teams defender with sub-package value.
Cleveland Browns: A+
Picks: 10 | WAA added: 2.065 (Rank 4/32)
Pick 9: T Spencer Fano, Utah Utes
Pick 24: WR KC Concepcion, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 39: WR Denzel Boston, Washington Huskies
Pick 58: S Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Toledo Rockets
Pick 86: T Austin Barber, Florida Gators
Pick 146: C Parker Brailsford, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 149: LB Justin Jefferson, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 170: TE Joe Royer, Cincinnati Bearcats
Pick 182: QB Taylen Green, Arkansas Razorbacks
Pick 248: TE Carsen Ryan, BYU Cougars
Player Snapshot
Fano: Fano is the offensive-line stabilizer, a right tackle with enough flexibility to help Cleveland build its best five. His consistency and movement skills give the Browns a plug-in starter profile.
Concepcion: Concepcion is the space weapon Cleveland needed, a Z/slot receiver who wins after the catch. He is not a classic boundary X, but he adds juice to an offense short on easy-play creators.
Boston: Boston is a smooth outside receiver with size, hands and one-on-one value. The concern is zone efficiency, but his catch-point strength gives Cleveland a real developmental starter.
McNeil-Warren: McNeil-Warren is a big, explosive safety with turnover instincts. He projects as a box-impact starter who can change possessions.
Barber: Barber is a developmental tackle with prototype size and enough athletic ability. He gives Cleveland swing depth with future starter potential.
Brailsford: Brailsford wins with quickness and technique, but size and strength are real concerns. He fits best in an outside-zone system.
Jefferson: Jefferson is a coverage-capable linebacker with SEC snaps and no touchdowns allowed in 2025. His path is depth linebacker and special teams.
Royer: Royer is a receiving tight end with athleticism and hands. He must be protected as a blocker, but he can flex into passing-game packages.
Green: Green is an elite athlete with quarterback experience and position-change intrigue. The passing consistency may block a QB role, but the tools are roster-worthy.
Ryan: Ryan is a late tight end value with separation ability and useful run-blocking effort. His frame and contested-catch profile limit the ceiling.
Carolina Panthers: A+
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 1.036 (Rank 17/32)
Pick 19: T Monroe Freeling, Georgia Bulldogs
Pick 49: DI Lee Hunter, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 83: WR Chris Brazzell II, Tennessee Volunteers
Pick 129: CB Will Lee III, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 144: C Sam Hecht, Kansas State Wildcats
Pick 151: S Zakee Wheatley, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 227: LB Jackson Kuwatch, Miami (OH) RedHawks
Player Snapshot
Freeling: Freeling is the upside tackle play, young, long and improving fast in pass protection. Carolina gets another starting option at left tackle, which matters with Ikem Ekwonu coming off a major late-season injury.
Hunter: Hunter is the interior tone-setter, a run-game disruptor with steady year-over-year growth. His pass rush is more solid than explosive, but Carolina gets a dependable early-down defender with rotational upside.
Brazzell: Brazzell is the vertical swing, a boom-or-bust outside receiver who can stress coverage downfield. The route tree is limited, but his field-stretching profile gives Carolina real WR3 upside.
Lee: Lee is a developmental corner with size, length and ball production. The concern is tackling and penalty discipline, but his physical tools give him a late-round starter path.
Hecht: Hecht is a clean interior value with balance, leverage and pass-protection reliability. He profiles as a backup center with real push-for-a-role potential.
Wheatley: Wheatley is a long, rangy safety built for single-high work. His frame can get exposed in the box, but the coverage range gives him defensive value.
Kuwatch: Kuwatch is a depth linebacker swing with special teams value. He must prove coverage range, but the roster path is effort, tackling and core teams.
Miami Dolphins: B+
Picks: 12 | WAA added: 2.092 (Rank 3/32)
Pick 12: T Kadyn Proctor, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 27: CB Chris Johnson, San Diego State Aztecs
Pick 43: LB Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 75: WR Caleb Douglas, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 87: TE Will Kacmarek, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 94: WR Chris Bell, Louisville Cardinals
Pick 130: LB Trey Moore, Texas Longhorns
Pick 138: LB Kyle Louis, Pittsburgh Panthers
Pick 158: S Michael Taaffe, Texas Longhorns
Pick 177: WR Kevin Coleman Jr., Missouri Tigers
Pick 180: TE Seydou Traore, Mississippi State Bulldogs
Pick 200: G DJ Campbell, Texas Longhorns
Player Snapshot
Proctor: Proctor is the massive trench reset, a 6-foot-7, 350-plus-pound left tackle with three years of Alabama starting experience. Miami needed talent everywhere, and he immediately raises the offensive-line ceiling.
Johnson: Johnson is the secondary upgrade, a rising corner coming off elite coverage efficiency and shutdown production. Miami badly needed defensive back help, and his cover profile gives them a legitimate starter path.
Rodriguez: Rodriguez is the instincts linebacker, winning with processing and football IQ more than elite tools. His ceiling is capped physically, but the floor is high because he sees the game fast.
Douglas: Douglas is a long X-receiver projection with outside size. Speed and hands concerns make him a developmental target.
Kacmarek: Kacmarek is a big tight end with blocking value and enough athletic traits. Receiving production is limited, but the frame plays.
Bell: Bell is a vertical WR2 profile with size, weight and explosiveness. Tightness limits route nuance, but he can stretch coverages.
Moore: Moore is a tweener linebacker-edge with blitz juice. Coverage struggles and size questions make him a specialized pressure piece.
Louis: Louis is an undersized space linebacker with nickel value. His explosiveness and coverage ability give him sub-package upside.
Taaffe: Taaffe wins with anticipation and football intelligence. The athletic ceiling is limited, but he can stick through reliability.
Coleman: Coleman is a slot receiver with ball skills and yards-after-catch value. Size limits him, but the efficiency gives him a role.
Traore: Traore is a late tight end upside swing with separation traits. Football experience is still developing, but the athletic profile is intriguing.
Campbell: Campbell has length, get-off and pass-protection reliability. Technique refinement decides whether he becomes more than depth.
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New York Jets: A
Picks: 8 | WAA added: 2.239 (Rank 2/32)
Pick 2: ED David Bailey, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 16: TE Kenyon Sadiq, Oregon Ducks
Pick 30: WR Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana Hoosiers
Pick 50: CB D’Angelo Ponds, Indiana Hoosiers
Pick 103: DI Darrell Jackson Jr., Florida State Seminoles
Pick 110: QB Cade Klubnik, Clemson Tigers
Pick 188: G Anez Cooper, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 228: S VJ Payne, Kansas State Wildcats
Player Snapshot
Bailey: Bailey is the immediate edge-speed answer, a proven pressure producer with back-to-back elite efficiency seasons. His 79 pressures give Aaron Glenn a day-one disruptor instead of a projection-only athlete.
Sadiq: Sadiq is the mismatch weapon, a rare 240-pound athlete with 4.39 speed and explosive-play production. He gives Geno Smith a flexible tight end who can align everywhere and stress coverage.
Cooper: Cooper is a dense, well-rounded receiver with strong hands and WR2 projection. He gives the Jets a physical complement who can win through contact.
Ponds: Ponds is an urgent zone defender with instincts and football IQ. Size and strength cap the ceiling, but he has starter potential.
Jackson: Jackson is a massive defensive tackle with power and upside. Technique inconsistency keeps him developmental, but the traits are starter-caliber.
Klubnik: Klubnik is a polished touch passer with high football character. Arm talent may cap him, but he has long-term QB2 value.
Cooper: Cooper is a high-volume interior lineman with pass-protection value. The run game is uneven, but he gives the Jets backup guard depth.
Payne: Payne brings NFL size and speed with safety-corner flexibility. His path is special teams first, then sub-package defensive depth.
Indianapolis Colts: A
Picks: 9 | WAA added: 0.648 (Rank 28/32)
Pick 53: LB CJ Allen, Georgia Bulldogs
Pick 78: S A.J. Haulcy, LSU Tigers
Pick 113: G Jalen Farmer, Kentucky Wildcats
Pick 135: LB Bryce Boettcher, Oregon Ducks
Pick 156: ED George Gumbs Jr., Florida Gators
Pick 214: ED Caden Curry, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 237: HB Seth McGowan, Kentucky Wildcats
Pick 237: ED Max Llewellyn, Iowa Hawkeyes
Pick 254: WR Deion Burks, Oklahoma Sooners
Player Snapshot
Allen: Allen is the physical middle-linebacker answer, a sturdy run defender with enough coverage flashes to stay on the field. His length limits the ceiling, but the Colts get a reliable defensive communicator.
Haulcy: Haulcy is a true deep safety with range, ball skills and aggressive instincts. Indianapolis gets a back-end defender who fits best when allowed to patrol space.
Farmer: Farmer is a pass-protection-first guard with steady but unspectacular tape. The run game needs more force, but he gives Indianapolis a developmental interior option.
Boettcher: Boettcher is a high-energy linebacker with multi-sport toughness and downhill aggression. His size caps the ceiling, but he can fit an attacking role.
Gumbs: Gumbs is a long developmental edge with flashes against both phases. The production is still coming, but the body type gives him upside.
Curry: Curry is a productive edge with run-defense value and special teams polish. Size and length may limit the role, but he can stick.
McGowan: McGowan is a powerful, explosive back with between-the-tackles value. He fits best in downhill concepts where his burst can hit fast.
Llewellyn: Llewellyn wins with effort and pass-rush variety. Average athleticism and strength questions make him a rotational developmental edge.
Burks: Burks is an explosive slot projection with strength and athletic traits. The production profile is light, but the upside keeps him alive.
Las Vegas Raiders: A-
Picks: 10 | WAA added: 2.604 (Rank 1/32)
Pick 1: QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana Hoosiers
Pick 38: CB Treydan Stukes, Arizona Wildcats
Pick 67: ED Keyron Crawford, Auburn Tigers
Pick 91: T Trey Zuhn III, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 101: CB Jermod McCoy, Tennessee Volunteers
Pick 122: HB Mike Washington Jr., Arkansas Razorbacks
Pick 150: S Dalton Johnson, Arizona Wildcats
Pick 175: CB Hezekiah Masses, California Golden Bears
Pick 195: WR Malik Benson, Oregon Ducks
Pick 229: DI Brandon Cleveland, North Carolina State Wolfpack
Player Snapshot
Mendoza: Mendoza is the franchise reset, a high-level 2025 quarterback with production, poise and immediate offensive importance. Las Vegas gets a new foundation piece for Klint Kubiak after finishing near the bottom in offensive efficiency.
Stukes: Stukes is a walk-on-to-starter slot defender with instincts and playmaking urgency. Athletic limitations may cap the outside projection, but his nickel value is clean.
Crawford: Crawford is a pass-rush-driven edge with real pressure production and useful burst. The run defense is less consistent, but Las Vegas gets rotational disruption.
Zuhn: Zuhn is an elite pass-protection profile with tackle experience and guard projection. His run blocking lags, but the athletic testing and SEC experience give him starter upside inside.
McCoy: McCoy is a first-round talent if the medicals cooperate, with press-man size and shutdown traits. The risk is availability, not ceiling.
Washington: Washington is a size-speed power back with yards-after-contact value. He fits best as an early-down committee runner.
Johnson: Johnson is a versatile safety with coverage production and alignment flexibility. He gives Las Vegas a movable defensive back with ball skills.
Masses: Masses is a zone corner with ball production and anticipation. He must add physicality to become more than depth.
Benson: Benson is a quick slot projection with downfield receiving juice. His lighter frame limits the role, but he can create vertical stress.
Cleveland: Cleveland is a leverage-based nose tackle with dependable dirty-work value. He lacks explosion, but he can anchor depth.
Washington Commanders: A-
Picks: 6 | WAA added: 1.87 (Rank 5/32)
Pick 7: LB Sonny Styles, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 71: WR Antonio Williams, Clemson Tigers
Pick 147: ED Joshua Josephs, Tennessee Volunteers
Pick 187: HB Kaytron Allen, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 209: C Matt Gulbin, Michigan State Spartans
Pick 223: QB Athan Kaliakmanis, Rutgers Scarlet Knights
Player Snapshot
Styles: Styles is the immediate-impact defender, a big, explosive linebacker with coverage range and downhill force. The value debate is real, but Washington gets a three-down talent with the physical profile to fix run fits and matchup issues.
Williams: Williams is the separator, a quick slot receiver with route tempo, hands and underneath efficiency. His explosive ceiling is limited, but he gives Washington a chain-moving option with early special teams value.
Josephs: Josephs is a developmental edge with burst, length and rotational upside. The rush plan still needs work, but his athletic traits give Washington a moldable pressure piece.
Allen: Allen is a physical committee back with contact balance and pass-protection value. He lacks elite juice, but his downhill style gives Washington dependable depth.
Gulbin: Gulbin is a leverage-based center with enough strength and control to compete for interior depth. His path is backup guard-center versatility.
Kaliakmanis: Kaliakmanis is a late quarterback swing with size, toughness and starter experience. His consistency must improve, but he has practice-squad developmental value.
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Baltimore Ravens: B+
Picks: 11 | WAA added: 1.798 (Rank 6/32)
Pick 14: G Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 45: ED Zion Young, Missouri Tigers
Pick 80: WR Ja’Kobi Lane, USC Trojans
Pick 115: WR Elijah Sarratt, Indiana Hoosiers
Pick 133: TE Matthew Hibner, SMU Mustangs
Pick 162: CB Chandler Rivers, Duke Blue Devils
Pick 173: TE Josh Cuevas, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 174: HB Adam Randall, Clemson Tigers
Pick 211: P Ryan Eckley, Michigan State Spartans
Pick 250: DI Rayshaun Benny, Michigan Wolverines
Pick 253: G Evan Beerntsen, Northwestern Wildcats
Player Snapshot
Ioane: Ioane is the interior stabilizer Baltimore needed, especially after losing Tyler Linderbaum. Most of his work came at left guard, where his size, experience and steady efficiency should translate quickly.
Young: Young is a high-effort edge with strength, build and run-game dependability. The athletic ceiling may cap the pass rush, but Baltimore gets a rotational tone-setter.
Lane: Lane is the contested-catch X receiver with size and boundary toughness. Separation and yards-after-catch questions lower the ceiling, but the catch-point profile is clear.
Sarratt: Sarratt is a competitive outside receiver with strong hands and jump-ball toughness. Average athleticism limits him, but he can become a WR2 in the right offense.
Hibner: Hibner is a slot-heavy tight end with receiving production and size. Blocking consistency decides whether he becomes more than a package target.
Rivers: Rivers is an experienced outside corner with ball control and penalty discipline. The 2025 dip matters, but the long-term coverage profile is playable.
Cuevas: Cuevas is an undersized but smart tight end who competes as a blocker. He profiles as a TE2 and special teams piece.
Randall: Randall is a conversion back with size-speed traits. Vision and patience must improve for him to earn regular snaps.
Eckley: Eckley brings leg strength and inside-the-20 production. Return control is the concern after too many punts came back.
Benny: Benny is a run-defense interior with a clear phase split. He can anchor early downs, but the rush value is limited.
Beerntsen: Beerntsen is an older interior lineman with strong run-blocking impact and pass-protection stability. He gives Baltimore dependable depth.
Philadelphia Eagles: B+
Picks: 8 | WAA added: 1.537 (Rank 8/32)
Pick 20: WR Makai Lemon, USC Trojans
Pick 54: TE Eli Stowers, Vanderbilt Commodores
Pick 68: T Markel Bell, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 178: QB Cole Payton, North Dakota State Bison
Pick 207: G Micah Morris, Georgia Bulldogs
Pick 244: S Cole Wisniewski, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 251: DI Uar Bernard, IPP
Pick 252: ED Keyshawn James-Newby, New Mexico Lobos
Player Snapshot
Lemon: Lemon is the aggressive receiver value, a tough middle-of-field target who wins through contact. With receiver uncertainty in Philadelphia, his contested-catch ability gives the offense a usable day-one skill.
Stowers: Stowers is a versatile offensive weapon, best as a big slot or backfield piece rather than a true in-line tight end. Philadelphia gets formation flexibility and passing-game usage.
Bell: Bell is the rare-size tackle swing, a massive blocker with better movement than expected. Foot speed and flexibility may stop him from becoming a full-time starter.
Payton: Payton is a rare utility quarterback with athleticism, left-handed passing ability and gadget-package value. Pressure play against NFL talent remains the concern.
Morris: Morris is a pass-protection guard with size and anchor. His run impact is limited, but he gives Philadelphia interior depth.
Wisniewski: Wisniewski is a box safety with awareness and tight end matchup value. Range limits him, but the role is clear.
Bernard: Bernard is a defensive-line depth swing with rotational traits. He must prove his anchor and rush plan to stick.
James-Newby: James-Newby is an elite small-school pressure producer. The jump in competition is real, but the rush production demands a look.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers: B+
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 1.159 (Rank 15/32)
Pick 15: ED Rueben Bain Jr., Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 47: LB Jeremiah Trotter Jr., Clemson Tigers
Pick 84: WR Evan Hurst, Washington State Cougars
Pick 142: S Myles Scott, California Golden Bears
Pick 169: DI Demonte Capehart, Clemson Tigers
Pick 224: G Rocco Spindler, Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Pick 225: TE Jake Overman, Pittsburgh Panthers
Player Snapshot
Bain: Bain is the premium edge answer, a powerful, productive rusher who fits Tampa’s need for front-seven force. He gives the Buccaneers a day-one pressure piece with three-down potential.
Trotter: Trotter is a smart, instinctive linebacker with NFL bloodlines and coverage awareness. Size and take-on power are the concerns, but the processing gives him early defensive value.
Hurst: Hurst is a receiver swing with route ability and competitive hands. He must prove separation against NFL corners, but the skill set gives Tampa depth upside.
Scott: Scott is a safety with movement skills and sub-package value. Tackling consistency decides whether he becomes more than depth.
Capehart: Capehart is a big interior defender with early-down power. The pass rush is limited, but he can compete as a rotational run plugger.
Spindler: Spindler is an interior depth lineman with guard-center utility. He must clean up protection issues, but the toughness fits Tampa.
Overman: Overman is a depth tight end with special teams value. Blocking consistency will decide his roster path.
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Cincinnati Bengals: B+
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 0.57 (Rank 31/32)
Pick 41: ED Cashius Howell, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 72: CB Tacario Davis, Washington Huskies
Pick 128: C Connor Lew, Auburn Tigers
Pick 140: WR Colbie Young, Georgia Bulldogs
Pick 189: T Brian Parker II, Duke Blue Devils
Pick 221: TE Jack Endries, Texas Longhorns
Pick 226: DI Landon Robinson, Navy Midshipmen
Player Snapshot
Howell: Howell is the situational pass-rush bet, winning with burst, hands and a real rush arsenal. The measurables are not ideal, but Cincinnati gets a one-on-one disruptor.
Davis: Davis is the long press-corner projection, with rare height, arm length and speed. The production dipped after Arizona, but the developmental upside fits a secondary needing traits.
Lew: Lew is a technically clean center with leverage, balance and posture. Power is the concern, but his age and fundamentals give him starting upside.
Young: Young is a big outside receiver with steady development and strong target efficiency. He gives Cincinnati boundary depth.
Parker: Parker is a guard-tackle swing with run-game strength. He must keep pressures from becoming sacks, but the versatility is valuable.
Endries: Endries is a flexible tight end who can align as a slot or wing. He adds receiving and lead-blocking value.
Robinson: Robinson is a compact interior rusher with quickness and production. Size limits him, but the disruption gives him rotational value.
Buffalo Bills: B
Picks: 10 | WAA added: 1.324 (Rank 10/32)
Pick 35: ED T.J. Parker, Clemson Tigers
Pick 62: CB Davison Igbinosun, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 102: T Jude Bowry, Boston College Eagles
Pick 125: WR Skyler Bell, Connecticut Huskies
Pick 126: LB Kaleb Elarms-Orr, TCU Horned Frogs
Pick 167: CB Jalon Kilgore, South Carolina Gamecocks
Pick 181: DI Zane Durant, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 220: CB Toriano Pride Jr., Missouri Tigers
Pick 239: P Tommy Doman, Florida Gators
Pick 241: G Ar’maj Reed-Adams, Texas A&M Aggies
Player Snapshot
Parker: Parker is the steady edge, a well-rounded defender with no glaring hole but no dominant trait. Buffalo gets rotational value now with starter potential if the explosiveness or strength jumps.
Igbinosun: Igbinosun is the physical press-corner swing with size and attitude. The concern is panic at the catch point, where penalties can erase his traits.
Bowry: Bowry is a zone-scheme swing tackle with size and athletic ability. Power is the question, but he gives Buffalo flexible line depth.
Bell: Bell is a productive slot receiver who created like a top-100 player against his level. Size and athletic questions lower the ceiling.
Elarms-Orr: Elarms-Orr is an undersized but athletic linebacker with three-phase defensive improvement. He projects as a developmental depth piece with coverage value.
Kilgore: Kilgore has the length, strength and explosiveness to develop into a nickel defender. Buffalo gets upside in the secondary.
Durant: Durant is a strength-based interior defender still chasing consistent production. His role projection remains unclear, but the tools are real.
Pride: Pride is an undersized outside corner with ball production and strong passer-rating results. He profiles as zone depth.
Doman: Doman is a hang-time punter with return-control value. The leg gives Buffalo real specialist competition.
Reed-Adams: Reed-Adams has size and swing-line appeal, but protection and penalties must improve. He is a depth gamble.
Chicago Bears: B
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 0.675 (Rank 27/32)
Pick 25: S Dillon Thieneman, Oregon Ducks
Pick 57: C Logan Jones, Iowa Hawkeyes
Pick 69: TE Sam Roush, Stanford Cardinal
Pick 89: WR Zavion Thomas, LSU Tigers
Pick 124: CB Malik Muhammad, Texas Longhorns
Pick 166: LB Keyshaun Elliott, Arizona State Sun Devils
Pick 213: DI Jordan van den Berg, Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
Player Snapshot
Thieneman: Thieneman is the clean defensive fit, a safety with high-end athleticism, coverage value and run support. Chicago needed backend help, and he gives Dennis Allen a true three-phase defender.
Jones: Jones is a smart, feisty zone center with lateral quickness and strong hands. The arm length issue is real, but he gives Chicago a high-IQ interior anchor.
Roush: Roush is a true Y tight end with blocking value and heavy-personnel utility. The passing-game ceiling is limited, but the role fits.
Thomas: Thomas is an energy receiver with return value and roster toughness. Special teams may get him active before offense does.
Muhammad: Muhammad is a zone-oriented corner with pedigree and starting traits. The lighter frame and limited disruption keep the projection tempered.
Elliott: Elliott is a downhill linebacker with blitz and run-game flashes. Coverage issues may limit him to early downs and teams.
Berg: Van den Berg is an athletic interior defender with run-game value. Limited rush production makes him a rotation-only projection.
Dallas Cowboys: B
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 1.021 (Rank 18/32)
Pick 11: S Caleb Downs, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 23: ED Malachi Lawrence, UCF Knights
Pick 92: ED Jaishawn Barham, Michigan Wolverines
Pick 112: T Drew Shelton, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 114: CB Devin Moore, Florida Gators
Pick 137: ED LT Overton, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 218: WR Anthony Smith, East Carolina Pirates
Player Snapshot
Downs: Downs is the stabilizer Dallas badly needed, an elite college safety with three straight high-efficiency seasons. He immediately raises the floor of a secondary that struggled badly in coverage.
Lawrence: Lawrence is the edge-need selection, a rotational pass rusher with real 2025 rush efficiency. The pick may be rich on value, but Dallas needed pressure after major turnover outside.
Barham: Barham is the tweener upside defender, disruptive against the run with flashes as a rusher. His lighter frame clouds the role, but the athletic profile is dangerous.
Shelton: Shelton is a tackle-to-guard projection with improved pass protection. The run game must get stronger inside.
Moore: Moore is a press-man corner with length, speed and ball skills. Injury history is the swing factor.
Overton: Overton is a 3-4 end with inside-out versatility and power. Limited bend caps the edge-rush ceiling.
Smith: Smith is an efficient, big-framed receiver with quickness and yards-after-catch ability. Ball security and blocking must improve.
Kansas City Chiefs: B
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 1.288 (Rank 12/32)
Pick 6: CB Mansoor Delane, LSU Tigers
Pick 29: DI Peter Woods, Clemson Tigers
Pick 40: ED R Mason Thomas, Oklahoma Sooners
Pick 109: CB Jadon Canady, Oregon Ducks
Pick 161: HB Emmett Johnson, Nebraska Cornhuskers
Pick 176: WR Cyrus Allen, Cincinnati Bearcats
Pick 249: QB Garrett Nussmeier, LSU Tigers
Player Snapshot
Delane: Delane is the cornerback answer after Kansas City lost major secondary pieces. He brings top-of-class cover production and should fit Steve Spagnuolo’s development pipeline immediately.
Woods: Woods is the interior upside swing, an explosive 300-pounder who can become the disruptive complement to Chris Jones. The 2025 tape dipped, but the age and earlier production keep the ceiling high.
Thomas: Thomas is a track-explosive edge with pass-rush tools despite size limitations. He projects as a situational pressure piece.
Canady: Canady is a small, aggressive slot corner with ball skills. Tackling and run support cap the role.
Johnson: Johnson is a quick-footed back with receiving value and scheme flexibility. He has three-down committee potential.
Allen: Allen is a slot receiver with route ability, hands and big-play production. Frame and blocking concerns limit the ceiling.
Nussmeier: Nussmeier is a polished pocket passer with NFL bloodlines and vertical confidence. Average tools make him a developmental backup.
Los Angeles Chargers: B
Picks: 8 | WAA added: 1.313 (Rank 11/32)
Pick 22: ED Akheem Mesidor, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 63: C Jake Slaughter, Florida Gators
Pick 105: WR Brenen Thompson, Mississippi State Bulldogs
Pick 117: T Travis Burke, Memphis Tigers
Pick 131: S Genesis Smith, Arizona Wildcats
Pick 145: DI Nick Barrett, South Carolina Gamecocks
Pick 202: G Logan Taylor, Boston College Eagles
Pick 206: T Alex Harkey, Oregon Ducks
Player Snapshot
Mesidor: Mesidor is older, but the tape is dominant, with elite rush efficiency and strong run defense in 2025. The Chargers get an immediate edge replacement and top-three rotational piece.
Slaughter: Slaughter is a smart, finesse center built for zone concepts. He wins with quickness and space work, but NFL power will test him early.
Thompson: Thompson is the speed shot, a 4.26 burner with real vertical production. Size and contested-catch consistency limit the complete receiver projection.
Burke: Burke is a massive tackle with real late-career growth. His pass protection and size give him developmental starter appeal.
Smith: Smith is a single-high safety projection with size and athletic traits. Physicality and strength consistency remain concerns.
Barrett: Barrett is a rotational nose tackle with size, anchor and run-defense production. Rush impact is limited.
Taylor: Taylor is a huge interior swing with tackle experience and run-game value. He gives Los Angeles versatile depth.
Harkey: Harkey is a right tackle depth option with pass-blocking stability. The run-game transition to better competition needs work.
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New Orleans Saints: B
Picks: 8 | WAA added: 0.797 (Rank 23/32)
Pick 32: WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State Sun Devils
Pick 70: HB Darius Taylor, Minnesota Golden Gophers
Pick 107: TE Oscar Delp, Georgia Bulldogs
Pick 136: CB Kahlil Ali, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 160: WR Eliander Lance, North Dakota State Bison
Pick 172: S Lorenzo Styles Jr., Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 184: WR Gregory Brown III, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 194: CB Ryland Hall, Northwestern Wildcats
Player Snapshot
Tyson: Tyson is the receiver addition New Orleans needed, a productive target with enough size and playmaking to factor early. He gives the Saints a legitimate offensive building block.
Taylor: Taylor is a three-down back profile with receiving value and steady production. The ceiling depends on whether his power translates through NFL contact.
Delp: Delp is a tight end with SEC experience and developmental receiving upside. He must prove blocking consistency to earn a bigger role.
Ali: Ali is a developmental corner with size and movement traits. His technique must catch up, but the athletic profile is worth the swing.
Lance: Lance is a versatile FCS X receiver with contested-catch reliability. The competition jump is real, but he has early Day 3 upside.
Styles: Styles is a former receiver turned defensive back with run-support growth. Coverage consistency will decide his role.
Brown: Brown is a return-game path receiver with straight-line speed. Route nuance and hands must improve.
Hall: Hall is a competitive corner with strong 2025 coverage production. He wins with footwork and catch-point toughness.
Green Bay Packers: B
Picks: 6 | WAA added: 0.645 (Rank 29/32)
Pick 52: CB Brandon Cisse, South Carolina Gamecocks
Pick 77: DI Chris McClellan, Missouri Tigers
Pick 120: ED Dani Dennis-Sutton, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 153: C Jager Burton, Kentucky Wildcats
Pick 201: CB Domani Jackson, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 216: K Trey Smack, Florida Gators
Player Snapshot
Cisse: Cisse is the twitchy corner projection, explosive enough to develop into a starter. The concern is physicality, but the tools fit Green Bay’s long-term secondary plan.
McClellan: McClellan is the power-based interior defender with size, length and run-game anchor ability. He is not a pure athlete, but the strength translates to early-down value.
Dennis-Sutton: Dennis-Sutton is a long, powerful defensive lineman with 3-4 end traits and 4-3 flexibility. Agility limits the ceiling, but the developmental arrow points up.
Burton: Burton is an athletic center with quickness and strong pass protection. He fits gap schemes and gives Green Bay interior depth.
Jackson: Jackson is a zone corner with speed and eyes-forward coverage value. Man coverage issues limit the role.
Smack: Smack is a proven kicker with range and multi-year consistency. He gives Green Bay legitimate specialist competition.
Houston Texans: B-
Picks: 8 | WAA added: 0.901 (Rank 21/32)
Pick 26: G Keylan Rutledge, Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
Pick 36: DI Kayden McDonald, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 59: TE Marlin Klein, Michigan Wolverines
Pick 106: G Febechi Nwaiwu, Oklahoma Sooners
Pick 123: LB Wade Woodaz, Clemson Tigers
Pick 141: S Kamari Ramsey, USC Trojans
Pick 204: WR Lewis Bond, Boston College Eagles
Pick 243: LB Aiden Fisher, Indiana Hoosiers
Player Snapshot
Rutledge: Rutledge is the late-rising interior line bet, a powerful guard whose best 2025 work came in the run game. Houston moved up for need, but the value is a little aggressive.
McDonald: McDonald is the elite run defender, a block-control interior force with top-tier run-stop production. The pass rush is limited, but Houston gets an immediate early-down answer.
Klein: Klein is a young, developmental tight end with blocking mentality and growth upside. Added strength could make him a real TE2.
Nwaiwu: Nwaiwu is a pass-protection specialist with guard versatility. The run game needs major work, but the protection profile is excellent.
Woodaz: Woodaz is a long, fast linebacker with coverage production. He gives Houston developmental sub-package and special teams value.
Ramsey: Ramsey is a versatile safety-slot defender for two-high structures. A lighter build caps the ceiling.
Bond: Bond is a possession receiver with contested-catch skill and alignment flexibility. Speed and catch radius limit upside.
Fisher: Fisher is an experienced, high-effort linebacker. Size and athletic limitations make him a depth and teams projection.
Detroit Lions: B-
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 0.867 (Rank 22/32)
Pick 17: T Blake Miller, Clemson Tigers
Pick 44: ED Derrick Moore, Michigan Wolverines
Pick 118: LB Jimmy Rolder, Michigan Wolverines
Pick 157: CB Keith Abney II, Arizona State Sun Devils
Pick 168: WR Kendrick Law, Kentucky Wildcats
Pick 205: DI Skyler Gill-Howard, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 222: ED Tyre West, Tennessee Volunteers
Player Snapshot
Miller: Miller is the offensive-line succession pick, a four-year Clemson starter with nearly 4,000 snaps and steady year-to-year efficiency. Detroit can start him at right tackle and shift Penei Sewell left if needed.
Moore: Moore is the quick, smart edge with pass-rush feel and rotational value. Length may limit sack volume, but he fits Detroit’s pressure identity as a sub-package rusher.
Rolder: Rolder is a downhill linebacker with strong run-defense efficiency and low missed-tackle volume. Injuries and coverage catch rate are concerns, but the upside is real.
Abney: Abney is a competitive zone corner with run-support toughness. Length and elite athleticism are missing, but he fits Detroit’s culture.
Law: Law is an athletic utility receiver with special teams value. Receiving limitations lower the ceiling, but versatility gives him a roster path.
Gill-Howard: Gill-Howard is a quick 3-technique with interior pass-rush juice. Size and length make him scheme-specific, but the disruption is real.
West: West is a developmental edge/line swing with power traits. The role must be defined, but Detroit gets a late defensive front bet.
Tennessee Titans: B-
Picks: 8 | WAA added: 0.721 (Rank 26/32)
Pick 4: WR Carnell Tate, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 33: ED Keldric Faulk, Auburn Tigers
Pick 60: LB Anthony Hill Jr., Texas Longhorns
Pick 99: T Mason Murphy, USC Trojans
Pick 121: WR Zechariah Singleton, Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns
Pick 154: CB Jaden Robinson, Oregon State Beavers
Pick 185: C Pat Coogan, Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Pick 230: LB Jaren Kanak, Oklahoma Sooners
Player Snapshot
Tate: Tate is the WR1 swing, a polished Ohio State receiver with size, hands and perimeter reliability. Tennessee gets a clean target profile, though the explosive ceiling will be the debate.
Faulk: Faulk is the power edge with three-down traits and defensive-front value. If the rush plan sharpens, Tennessee gets a foundational defender opposite its young core.
Hill: Hill is a downhill linebacker with violence, range and blitz impact. Coverage consistency remains the separator between role player and true defensive centerpiece.
Murphy: Murphy is a developmental tackle with size and starting experience. Footwork and anchor will decide whether he becomes more than depth.
Singleton: Singleton is a speed receiver with big-play value. Route polish and play strength must improve.
Robinson: Robinson is a corner depth swing with coverage tools. He needs special teams value to stick early.
Coogan: Coogan is an interior depth piece with center flexibility. Strength and leverage will define his NFL role.
Kanak: Kanak is a traits linebacker with speed and special teams appeal. Processing consistency is the key developmental point.
More Info Here »»»»»» LINK
Arizona Cardinals: C+
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 1.202 (Rank 14/32)
Pick 3: HB Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Pick 34: G Chase Bisontis, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 65: QB Carson Beck, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 104: DI Kaleb Proctor, Southeastern Louisiana Lions
Pick 143: WR Reggie Virgil, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 183: LB Karson Sharar, Iowa Hawkeyes
Pick 217: T Jayden Williams, Mississippi Rebels
Player Snapshot
Love: Love is the home-run swing, a back who changes run-game math with explosive-play ability. Arizona already had volume backs, but Love adds juice the offense lacked. The question is whether the blocking structure creates enough runway.
Bisontis: Bisontis is a volume-experienced guard with uneven efficiency and clear scheme splits. The pass protection is usable, but the gap-run work needs a jump for him to become more than depth.
Beck: Beck is the experienced quarterback with clean mechanics and game-manager traits. The concern is arm talent after UCL surgery, which may limit his NFL ceiling.
Proctor: Proctor is a small-school interior disruptor with explosive rush ability and real 2025 production. He gives Arizona late value.
Virgil: Virgil is a high-floor Z receiver with alignment flexibility and strong hands. The ceiling is limited, but he can block and provide depth.
Sharar: Sharar is a special teams-ready linebacker with one-year defensive starting experience. Core teams are his first path.
Williams: Williams is a developmental tackle with size and swing-line value. He must prove protection consistency to earn a roster spot.
Atlanta Falcons: C+
Picks: 6 | WAA added: 0.774 (Rank 24/32)
Pick 48: CB Avieon Terrell, Clemson Tigers
Pick 79: WR Zachariah Branch, Georgia Bulldogs
Pick 134: S Kendal Daniels, Oklahoma Sooners
Pick 208: DI Anterio Thompson, Washington Huskies
Pick 215: LB Harold Perkins Jr., LSU Tigers
Pick 231: G Ethan Onianwa, Ohio State Buckeyes
Player Snapshot
Terrell: Terrell is the instinctive corner with elite football IQ and playmaking feel. Length may push him toward zone-heavy usage, but the starter traits are there.
Branch: Branch is the rare-athlete receiver, explosive enough to tilt coverage and special teams. The route craft must catch up, or he risks becoming a gadget-only weapon.
Daniels: Daniels is a massive safety-linebacker convert with range, size and multi-year defensive experience. He gives Atlanta matchup flexibility.
Thompson: Thompson is a strong, explosive interior defender with balanced run and rush production. His testing gives him late developmental upside.
Perkins: Perkins is a rare athlete without a clean position. Atlanta must package him as a rusher, space defender and teams piece.
Onianwa: Onianwa is a tackle-to-guard projection with Rice development and Ohio State depth experience. He profiles as interior competition.
New England Patriots: C+
Picks: 9 | WAA added: 0.604 (Rank 30/32)
Pick 28: T Caleb Lomu, Utah Utes
Pick 55: ED Gabe Jacas, Illinois Fighting Illini
Pick 95: TE Eli Raridon, Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Pick 171: CB Karon Prunty, Wake Forest Demon Deacons
Pick 196: T Dametrious Crownover, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 212: LB Namdi Obiazor, TCU Horned Frogs
Pick 234: QB Behren Morton, Texas Tech Red Raiders
Pick 245: HB Jam Miller, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 247: ED Quintayvious Hutchins, Boston College Eagles
Player Snapshot
Lomu: Lomu is the offensive-line bet, a tackle with starting traits and enough movement ability to upgrade New England’s front. The Patriots need his technique to mature quickly.
Jacas: Jacas is a physical edge with run-game toughness and pressure flashes. He may not be a pure bend rusher, but he fits a sturdy defensive front.
Raridon: Raridon is a big tight end with receiving upside and red-zone value. Blocking consistency decides whether he becomes a full-time contributor.
Prunty: Prunty is a corner depth piece with experience and ball skills. He must prove he can hold up physically.
Crownover: Crownover is a massive tackle with developmental upside. Foot speed and pass-protection consistency are the roster questions.
Obiazor: Obiazor is a linebacker depth swing with athletic traits. Coverage and tackling consistency will define the role.
Morton: Morton is a backup quarterback projection with Big 12 passing production. Decision-making consistency must improve.
Miller: Miller is a compact Alabama back with early-down toughness. He needs special teams value to stick.
Hutchins: Hutchins is a late edge flyer with rush tools. The path is special teams and sub-package development.
Pittsburgh Steelers: C+
Picks: 11 | WAA added: 0.875 (Rank 20/32)
Pick 21: T Michael Ihanacho, Oregon Ducks
Pick 46: WR Kevin Bernard, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 76: QB Drew Allar, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 90: CB Jahlil Florence, Oregon Ducks
Pick 116: G Gus Hartwig, Purdue Boilermakers
Pick 132: TE Luke Hasz, Ole Miss Rebels
Pick 155: HB Jaydn Ott, Oklahoma Sooners
Pick 190: CB Shamari Simmons, Arizona State Sun Devils
Pick 210: DI Gabriel Rubio, Notre Dame
Pick 236: S Malik Hartford, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 242: WR Isaac TeSlaa, Arkansas Razorbacks
Player Snapshot
Iheanachor: Iheanachor is the tackle swing, a powerful blocker with starter traits if the pass sets stabilize. Pittsburgh gets size and upside at a premium position.
Bernard: Bernard is the receiver answer, a polished route runner with strong hands and SEC toughness. He gives Pittsburgh immediate target competition and a defined passing-game role.
Allar: Allar is the size-arm quarterback bet, built like an NFL passer with big-play tools. Accuracy, timing and pocket urgency decide whether he becomes more than a backup.
Florence: Florence is a corner with athletic traits and press upside. Technique consistency will decide the ceiling.
Hartwig: Hartwig is an interior depth lineman with center-guard flexibility. Strength and anchor are the concerns.
Hasz: Hasz is a pass-catching tight end with seam value. Blocking must improve for a full role.
Ott: Ott is a back with burst and receiving ability. Durability and between-the-tackles power are the questions.
Simmons: Simmons is a secondary depth piece with special teams value. He must prove coverage consistency.
Rubio: Rubio is a big interior defender with early-down value. Pass-rush impact remains the concern.
Hartford: Hartford is a safety depth swing with range and teams ability. Tackling consistency decides his path.
TeSlaa: TeSlaa is a big receiver with contested-catch traits. Separation is the question.
Los Angeles Rams: C
Picks: 5 | WAA added: 1.383 (Rank 9/32)
Pick 13: QB Ty Simpson, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 61: TE Max Klare, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 93: T Keagen Trost, Missouri Tigers
Pick 197: WR CJ Daniels, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 232: DI Tim Keenan III, Alabama Crimson Tide
Player Snapshot
Simpson: Simpson is the post-Stafford swing, a first-round quarterback bet with one year of starting experience. Sean McVay can develop the timing and placement, but the pick delays short-term roster help.
Klare: Klare is a receiving tight end with savvy hands and starter upside in a pass-heavy role. Blocking inconsistency keeps him from being a complete Y.
Trost: Trost is a pass-protection standout with elite 2025 efficiency, but short arms create projection concerns. The Rams are betting the production beats the measurables.
Daniels: Daniels is an older traits receiver with contested-catch ability and toughness. Long speed and YAC limit the ceiling.
Keenan: Keenan is a power nose tackle built for run defense. He must develop more rush counters to expand the role.
Minnesota Vikings: C
Picks: 9 | WAA added: 0.493 (Rank 32/32)
Pick 18: DI Caleb Banks, Florida Gators
Pick 51: LB Jake Golday, Cincinnati Bearcats
Pick 82: DI Domonique Orange, Iowa State Cyclones
Pick 97: T Caleb Tiernan, Northwestern Wildcats
Pick 98: S Jakobe Thomas, Miami (FL) Hurricanes
Pick 159: TE Max Bredeson, Michigan Wolverines
Pick 163: CB Charles Demmings, Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks
Pick 198: HB Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest Demon Deacons
Pick 235: C Gavin Gerhardt, Cincinnati Bearcats
Player Snapshot
Banks: Banks is the Brian Flores fit, a long, strong defensive lineman who can move across fronts. The value is rich, but the alignment flexibility gives Minnesota a useful chess piece.
Golday: Golday is a long, athletic linebacker with starter traits if the instincts catch up. His floor is strong special teams and defensive depth.
Orange: Orange is a massive power lineman with speed-to-power potential. Hand speed and pass-rush finesse remain developmental concerns.
Tiernan: Tiernan is a smart, experienced tackle with technique and balance. High pads and shorter arms cap the ceiling.
Thomas: Thomas is a physical safety with size and enforcer traits. Inconsistency likely makes him rotational early.
Bredeson: Bredeson is a blocking tight end with strong run-game efficiency. Receiving value is limited, but the role is clear.
Demmings: Demmings is an explosive small-school corner with ball skills and testing numbers. Development will decide the payoff.
Claiborne: Claiborne is a speed back with zone-run value and receiving upside. He profiles as an RB3 and return option.
Gerhardt: Gerhardt is a developmental center with interior depth value. He must prove strength and protection consistency.
Denver Broncos: C-
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 1.145 (Rank 16/32)
Pick 66: DI Tyler Onyedim, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 108: HB Jonah Coleman, Washington Huskies
Pick 111: T Kage Casey, Boise State Broncos
Pick 152: TE Justin Joly, North Carolina State Wolfpack
Pick 246: S Miles Scott, Illinois Fighting Illini
Pick 256: TE Dallen Bentley, Utah Utes
Pick 257: LB Red Murdock, Buffalo Bulls
Player Snapshot
Onyedim: Onyedim is the rotational interior defender, built around run-game production, first-step quickness and active hands. The pass rush is secondary, but Denver gets early-down utility.
Coleman: Coleman is the efficient zone-run back with power, one-cut timing and third-down reliability. He is not flashy, but his game translates to structured rushing offenses.
Casey: Casey is a Boise State mauler with tackle experience and guard projection. Shorter arms and limited burst point him inside, where his strength can play.
Joly: Joly is a natural receiving tight end with hands, IQ and competitive toughness. He gives Denver offensive and teams value.
Scott: Scott is a depth safety with special teams value and matchup flexibility. He must prove range and tackling consistency.
Bentley: Bentley is a receiving tight end with athletic limitations. Route feel must carry him if he sticks.
Murdock: Murdock is a highly productive linebacker with run, coverage and tackling efficiency. He is a late steal if the testing translates.
Seattle Seahawks: C-
Picks: 7 | WAA added: 0.75 (Rank 25/32)
Pick 64: HB Nicholas Singleton, Penn State Nittany Lions
Pick 73: ED Patrick Payton, LSU Tigers
Pick 96: WR Jurrion Dickey, Oregon Ducks
Pick 139: T Trey Wedig, Indiana Hoosiers
Pick 199: WR Emmanuel Henderson Jr., Kansas Jayhawks
Pick 219: C Jake Majors, Texas Longhorns
Pick 255: DI Greg Gaines, Boise State Broncos
Player Snapshot
Singleton: Singleton is the explosive backfield shot, a home-run runner with size-speed traits. Seattle gets a big-play weapon, but vision and consistency determine the workload.
Payton: Payton is a long edge with pass-rush bend and developmental upside. He must add strength to become a complete defender.
Dickey: Dickey is a size-speed receiver with splash-play traits. The route running and availability questions keep the projection risky.
Wedig: Wedig is a developmental tackle with length and swing value. Pass-protection recovery will decide the role.
Henderson: Henderson is a receiver conversion with athletic upside. Special teams are the first path.
Majors: Majors is an experienced center with intelligence and toughness. Size and power cap the ceiling.
Gaines: Gaines is a late interior depth swing with run-game value. He must create enough disruption to stick.
More Info Here »»»»»» LINK
Jacksonville Jaguars: D+
Picks: 10 | WAA added: 1.548 (Rank 7/32)
Pick 56: TE Nate Boerkircher, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 81: DI Albert Regis, Texas A&M Aggies
Pick 88: G Emmanuel Pregnon, Oregon Ducks
Pick 100: S Jalen Huskey, Maryland Terrapins
Pick 119: ED Wesley Williams, Duke Blue Devils
Pick 164: TE Tanner Koziol, Houston Cougars
Pick 191: WR Josh Cameron, Baylor Bears
Pick 203: WR CJ Williams, Stanford Cardinal
Pick 233: ED Zach Durfee, Washington Huskies
Pick 240: LB Parker Hughes, Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders
Player Snapshot
Boerkircher: Boerkircher is an older tight end with blocking toughness and better athleticism than production suggests. He profiles as Day 3 depth with heavy-personnel value.
Regis: Regis is a steady nose tackle who wins with leverage, positioning and consistency. He lacks penetration, but the floor is useful.
Pregnon: Pregnon is the best value, a guard who made a major 2025 jump with high-end pass protection and zone-blocking impact. Jacksonville gets a legitimate interior starter candidate.
Huskey: Huskey is a productive, versatile safety with ball production and alignment flexibility. The coverage numbers support a movable defensive back role.
Williams: Williams is a run-defense edge with strong stop production. Limited pass rush and shorter arms cap the ceiling.
Koziol: Koziol is a big-slot tight end with catch-radius and red-zone value. He needs a creative offense.
Cameron: Cameron is a punt-return path receiver with explosiveness. Separation must improve for offensive snaps.
Williams: Williams is an outside receiver with contested-catch production. Route nuance and consistency are the questions.
Durfee: Durfee is a developmental edge with size and rotational traits. He needs rush-plan growth to stick.
Hughes: Hughes is a linebacker depth swing with special teams value. Coverage consistency will decide his path.
San Francisco 49ers: D
Picks: 8 | WAA added: 0.697 (Rank 27/32)
Pick 31: WR Denzel Stribling, Oklahoma State Cowboys
Pick 85: ED Elijah Roberts, SMU Mustangs
Pick 127: TE Kaden Helms, Oklahoma Sooners
Pick 148: DI Ty Hamilton, Ohio State Buckeyes
Pick 165: S Keon Sabb, Alabama Crimson Tide
Pick 179: T Enrique Cruz Jr., Kansas Jayhawks
Pick 223: CB Dorian Strong, Virginia Tech Hokies
Pick 238: HB Fluff Bothwell, South Alabama Jaguars
Player Snapshot
Stribling: Stribling is the receiver swing, a perimeter target with size and catch-point potential. San Francisco needs him to separate more consistently to justify the early investment.
Roberts: Roberts is an edge defender with rotational rush value and developmental tools. The ceiling depends on bend, counters and early-down toughness.
Helms: Helms is a tight end depth option with receiving flashes. Blocking consistency will define his roster path.
Hamilton: Hamilton is an interior defender with run-game strength. Pass-rush value is limited, but he can compete for rotation snaps.
Sabb: Sabb is a safety with size, range and starting flashes. Consistency and tackling will decide how quickly he plays.
Cruz: Cruz is a developmental tackle with swing-line potential. Technique and anchor must improve.
Strong: Strong is a corner depth piece with coverage experience. Special teams value is essential.
Bothwell: Bothwell is a late running back swing with burst and toughness. He needs teams value to stick.
Will Rock is an independent journalist covering the NFL for the Detroit Football Journal. Contact him at Mailbag@Rockedon.Com, join the chat or Follow him on X - don’t forget to catch the live Rise & Grind Morning Show Monday-Friday starting at 8am on Rocked On Detroit Lions Youtube channel.
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