Miami (FL)
• Sr
• 6’2″
/ 219 lbs
Projected Team
N.Y. Giants
|
PROSPECT RNK
8th
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
PAYDS
4313
|
RUYDS
204
|
INTS
7
|
TDS
43
|
A win-win for both sides. The Giants FINALLY get a quarterback, and the Titans add extra picks at the beginning of their rebuild, but don’t move down too far, out of the elite prospect range in this class.
|
Colorado
• Jr
• 6’0″
/ 188 lbs
Projected Team
Cleveland
|
PROSPECT RNK
1st
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
The Browns simply take who they believe is the best prospect in this class. And many agree with them.
|
Michigan
• Jr
• 6’3″
/ 296 lbs
Projected Team
Tennessee
|
PROSPECT RNK
2nd
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
The Titans get this pick along with the Giants’ second-round selection (No. 34), a fourth-round pick (No. 104) and a 2026 second-round pick, and they select the prospect who many would consider the cleanest defensive front seven player in the class (without any injury concerns).
|
Penn State
• Jr
• 6’3″
/ 250 lbs
Projected Team
Chicago
|
PROSPECT RNK
2nd
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
The moment the Graham pick was announced for the Titans, the Bears called the Patriots and sent an offer New England couldn’t refuse — the first of Chicago’s two second-round picks (No. 39) this year and a second-round pick in 2026. The Bears get a premier edge rusher to pair with Montez Sweat in Carter.
|
Missouri
• Jr
• 6’4″
/ 332 lbs
Projected Team
Jacksonville
|
PROSPECT RNK
14th
|
POSITION RNK
3rd
|
After a ridiculous combine, Membou is the first offensive tackle off the board. Jaguars new head coach Liam Coen felt the impact of Tristan Wirfs in Tampa Bay. Membou isn’t quite that caliber of a prospect but the upside is there.
|
Colorado
• Sr
• 6’2″
/ 212 lbs
Projected Team
Las Vegas
|
PROSPECT RNK
24th
|
POSITION RNK
2nd
|
PAYDS
4134
|
RUYDS
-50
|
INTS
10
|
TDS
41
|
This is where Sanders wants to go. I truly believe that. And it’s in the Raiders’ best interest to pick a quarterback for this new Tom Brady-led era.
|
Georgia
• Jr
• 6’1″
/ 197 lbs
Projected Team
N.Y. Jets
|
PROSPECT RNK
12th
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
Aaron Glenn’s background as a defensive back helps with this selection, as Starks is one of the cleanest prospects in the draft.
|
South Carolina
• Jr
• 6’3″
/ 220 lbs
Projected Team
Carolina
|
PROSPECT RNK
26th
|
POSITION RNK
2nd
|
The Panthers go back-to-back first-round picks from South Carolina with the ultra-explosive Emmanwori, who’ll be the center of the defensive rebuild in Carolina.
|
Arizona
• Jr
• 6’4″
/ 219 lbs
Projected Team
New Orleans
|
PROSPECT RNK
7th
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
REC
84
|
REYDS
1319
|
YDS/REC
15.7
|
TDS
8
|
The Saints have to replenish the receiver group, and there’s plenty of Drake London to McMillan’s game.
|
LSU
• Jr
• 6’6″
/ 319 lbs
Projected Team
New England
|
PROSPECT RNK
6th
|
POSITION RNK
2nd
|
Draft magic for the Patriots, who sink back, obtain future draft capital, and still land the blocker who many believe is the best offensive lineman in the class. The length concerns are legitimate, but the Patriots are in search of quality blockers regardless of their position.
|
Tennessee
• Jr
• 6’5″
/ 245 lbs
Pearce has plenty of Leonard Floyd to him, and enters the league with more upside because of the power he packs when flying around the corner. Ideal pick to be the bookend to Nick Bosa.
|
Boise State
• Jr
• 5’9″
/ 211 lbs
Projected Team
Dallas
|
PROSPECT RNK
10th
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
RUYDS
2601
|
YDS/ATT
7
|
REYDS
138
|
TDS
30
|
I maintain that if Jeanty is available when Jerry Jones goes on the clock, the Boise State back will be the pick.
|
Texas
• Jr
• 6’5″
/ 315 lbs
Projected Team
Miami
|
PROSPECT RNK
8th
|
POSITION RNK
2nd
|
The Dolphins pick Banks to play left tackle under the impression Terron Armstead is going to call it quits.
|
Iowa State
• Sr
• 6’3″
/ 195 lbs
Projected Team
Indianapolis
|
PROSPECT RNK
75th
|
POSITION RNK
9th
|
There’s not much Colts GM Chris Ballard likes more than long, uber-athletic cornerbacks, and Porter had the finest all-around workout of the cornerback class at the combine.
|
Marshall
• Soph
• 6’3″
/ 251 lbs
Projected Team
Atlanta
|
PROSPECT RNK
18th
|
POSITION RNK
5th
|
Would you look at that — a defensive first-round pick from Falcons GM Terry Fontenot. Green may take time to acclimate to the NFL from Marshall, yet his traits are through the roof.
|
Texas A&M
• Jr
• 6’5″
/ 267 lbs
Projected Team
Arizona
|
PROSPECT RNK
23rd
|
POSITION RNK
3rd
|
Stewart is simply too big, too athletic, and too long for the defensive-line needy Cardinals to pass on him here.
|
Ole Miss
• Jr
• 6’4″
/ 296 lbs
Projected Team
Cincinnati
|
PROSPECT RNK
20th
|
POSITION RNK
2nd
|
Nolen is a freaky mover with long arms and supreme power at the point of attack. He’s precisely what the Bengals need on their defensive interior.
|
Georgia
• Jr
• 6’5″
/ 260 lbs
Projected Team
Seattle
|
PROSPECT RNK
16th
|
POSITION RNK
4th
|
The Seahawks get another raw-ish specimen to control blockers, play stout run defense, and in time, get after the quarterback.
|
Alabama
• Jr
• 6’3″
/ 235 lbs
Projected Team
Tampa Bay
|
PROSPECT RNK
21st
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
Campbell is the ideal physical freak at linebacker to be the heir apparent to Buccaneers legend Lavonte David.
|
Penn State
• Sr
• 6’6″
/ 256 lbs
Projected Team
Denver
|
PROSPECT RNK
19th
|
POSITION RNK
2nd
|
REC
104
|
REYDS
1233
|
YDS/REC
11.9
|
TDS
12
|
There are Jimmy Graham characteristics to Warren’s game, which of course leads to Sean Payton gravitating toward him.
|
Texas
• Jr
• 5’11”
/ 191 lbs
Projected Team
Pittsburgh
|
PROSPECT RNK
34th
|
POSITION RNK
4th
|
REC
58
|
REYDS
987
|
YDS/REC
17
|
TDS
9
|
While the Steelers have historically waited until Round 2 to pick a receiver, Golden is the exact type of speedster with polished route running skill they need.
|
Michigan
• Jr
• 6’6″
/ 248 lbs
REC
56
|
REYDS
582
|
YDS/REC
10.4
|
TDS
5
|
How about this? Loveland reunites with Jim Harbaugh in Los Angeles to become the preferred seam-stretching target for Justin Herbert.
|
Missouri
• Jr
• 6’0″
/ 205 lbs
Projected Team
Green Bay
|
PROSPECT RNK
13th
|
POSITION RNK
2nd
|
REC
61
|
REYDS
676
|
YDS/REC
11.1
|
TDS
8
|
The production wasn’t there in 2024 for Burden, but he’s a Randall Cobb-like YAC specialist with some downfield juice.
|
Oregon
• Jr
• 6’5″
/ 310 lbs
Projected Team
Minnesota
|
PROSPECT RNK
29th
|
POSITION RNK
4th
|
Harmon is a tall game-wrecker who can play up and down the line of scrimmage and routinely push the pocket. He has deceptive pass-rushing skills at his size.
|
Ohio State
• Sr
• 6’4″
/ 315 lbs
Projected Team
Houston
|
PROSPECT RNK
38th
|
POSITION RNK
3rd
|
Jackson is a ready-to-go guard, which is precisely what the Texans need entering Year 3 of the C.J. Stroud era.
|
Ohio State
• Sr
• 6’5″
/ 317 lbs
Projected Team
L.A. Rams
|
PROSPECT RNK
20th
|
POSITION RNK
4th
|
The Rams are ecstatic to land a left tackle with Day 1 starter traits in Simmons.
|
Minnesota
• Sr
• 6’6″
/ 330 lbs
Projected Team
Baltimore
|
PROSPECT RNK
41st
|
POSITION RNK
6th
|
The tackle-guard flexibility will draw the Ravens toward Ersery, and he had clean quality film at tackle over the past few seasons at Minnesota. Now we know he’s a supremely gifted athlete.
|
Michigan
• Jr
• 6’4″
/ 331 lbs
Projected Team
Detroit
|
PROSPECT RNK
30th
|
POSITION RNK
5th
|
The Lions get a serious nose tackle prospect with plus run-stuffing skills and a glimmer of pass-rush ability for the middle of their defense.
|
Michigan
• Jr
• 6’2″
/ 194 lbs
Projected Team
Washington
|
PROSPECT RNK
5th
|
POSITION RNK
1st
|
The Commanders stop Johnson’s precipitous fall and gladly pair him with Marshon Lattimore on the outside. Good drafting here.
|
Texas A&M
• Jr
• 6’3″
/ 257 lbs
Projected Team
Buffalo
|
PROSPECT RNK
22nd
|
POSITION RNK
6th
|
Scourton’s a stocky yet nimble defensive end with consecutive highly productive seasons on his resume.
|
Iowa State
• Sr
• 5’10”
/ 194 lbs
Projected Team
Kansas City
|
PROSPECT RNK
166th
|
POSITION RNK
18th
|
REC
81
|
REYDS
1194
|
YDS/REC
14.7
|
TDS
8
|
The Chiefs get a super-explosive speedster with quicks to win downfield and underneath.
|
Toledo
• Sr
• 6’4″
/ 310 lbs
Projected Team
Philadelphia
|
PROSPECT RNK
45th
|
POSITION RNK
8th
|
Howie Roseman stays true to form and picks a trench player in the first round. Another Toledo Rocket. Alexander can be a valuable chess piece in Vic Fangio’s scheme right away.
|