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    Ian Cummings’ 7-Round 2024 NFL Mock Draft: Drake Maye Succeeds Sam Howell, Caleb Williams Goes Coast-to-Coast

    In this 7-round 2024 NFL mock draft, Drake Maye succeeds Sam Howell in the nation's capital while Caleb Williams heads east to reignite a dynasty.

    With the NFL season nearing its conclusion, the 2024 NFL Draft is starting to come into focus. At this point, what does the draft board look like, and how much talent is available? That’s what this 7-round 2024 NFL mock draft explores.

    Round 1

    1) Chicago Bears: Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State

    If the Bears decide to stick with Justin Fields, they have a golden opportunity to give him one of the best WR duos in the NFL. Marvin Harrison Jr. would perfectly complement DJ Moore as an elite X-receiver with rare composite three-level ability.

    2) Arizona Cardinals: Malik Nabers, WR, LSU

    Harrison may be WR1, but Malik Nabers would be WR1 in any other class, and he’s a blue-chip prospect on my board. Nabers’ breathtaking explosiveness, RAC ability, and physicality make him a certified weapon, but his upside as an independent separator is immense, too.

    3) Washington Commanders: Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina

    The most popular comparison for Drake Maye this cycle has been Justin Herbert, and there’s merit to it. Like Herbert, Maye is a rocket-armed super-athlete who can use anticipation, pocket feel, and arm elasticity to maximize his tools within the system.

    4) New England Patriots: Caleb Williams, QB, USC

    Caleb Williams is a bit polarizing as a prospect, but there’s no denying the magic in his game. He’s a hyper-elite creator whose instincts, arm velocity, and off-script freedom make him an unpredictable force of reckoning for defenses.

    5) New York Giants: Rome Odunze, WR, Washington

    This one is simple. The Giants need a WR1, and Rome Odunze is built to be that guy. Odunze has the size-adjusted flexibility and route-running ability of a young Keenan Allen at 6’3″, 215 pounds, but he’s visibly faster and more explosive on the vertical plane.

    6) Los Angeles Chargers: Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia

    There’s a stigma around picking tight ends this early, but Brock Bowers isn’t just a tight end. He’s a weapon. Bowers’ all-encompassing usage profile is a product of his elite speed and explosiveness, contact balance, physicality, zone IQ, vise-grip hands, and play strength.

    7) Tennessee Titans: Joe Alt, OT, Notre Dame

    For Will Levis, getting a franchise left tackle is paramount. At 6’8″, 315 pounds, Joe Alt has the necessary size and athleticism, but he doubles down with rare size-adjusted flexibility and recovery capacity, and he improved his hand usage and play strength in 2023.

    8) Chicago Bears: Laiatu Latu, EDGE, UCLA

    The Bears appear to have found one high-level pass-rushing force in Montez Sweat. Now, across from Sweat’s power, they can add Laiatu Latu — a finesse-oriented rusher at 6’5″, 260 pounds with truly awe-inspiring hand usage, precision, and counter quickness.

    9) New York Jets: Olumuyiwa Fashanu, OT, Penn State

    2024 will be a do-over for the Jets, and they can start on the right foot by upgrading their tackle room. At around 6’6″, 320 pounds, Olu Fashanu brings exceptional functional athleticism and suffocating anchor strength, and he’s patient and disciplined with his sets.

    10) Atlanta Falcons: Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU

    It’s long past time for the Falcons to take the quarterback position seriously. By adding Jayden Daniels in this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, they get a true weapon on the ground, who compounds his hyper-elite athleticism with pinpoint deep passing ability.

    11) New Orleans Saints: Keon Coleman, WR, Florida State

    With Michael Thomas’ lacking availability and expiring contract in 2025, the Saints might need a new WR1 to help right the ship with Derek Carr. Keon Coleman is an absolute alpha at 6’4″, 215 pounds who can threaten vertically in 1-on-1s or grate out RAC yards.

    12) Green Bay Packers: Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia

    The Packers will have movement on the offensive line in 2024 and need to plan for life past David Bakhtiari. Amarius Mims — a young, ascending OT with left-right versatility and elite size and athleticism at 6’7″, 330 pounds — helps them prepare for everything.

    13) Las Vegas Raiders: JC Latham, OT, Alabama

    Assuming Antonio Pierce remains the Raiders’ head coach, the next two steps are simple: Improve the trenches and find a quarterback. JC Latham, a blue-chip right tackle prospect with searing explosiveness and physicality at 6’6″, 360 pounds, checks off the first box.

    14) Denver Broncos: Jer’Zhan Newton, DT, Illinois

    Despite being just 6’1″, 295 pounds, Jer’Zhan Newton is arguably a top-10 prospect in the 2024 NFL Draft. His instant first-step burst, active hands, and flexibility make him a pass-rushing menace, but he’s also a strong, instinctive, and tenacious run defender.

    15) Minnesota Vikings: Dallas Turner, EDGE, Alabama

    Dallas Turner is still polishing his game, but for a defensive coordinator in Brian Flores, who loves to terrorize QBs with simulated pressures and deceptive alignments, Turner can be a true X-factor with his unique attack explosiveness, agility, bend, length, and power.

    16) Arizona Cardinals: Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama

    With their second first-round pick at No. 16 overall, the Cardinals luck into the class’ potential CB1 in this 2024 NFL Mock Draft. Terrion Arnold has sticky coverage ability with his foot speed and fluidity, but he’s also the best, most imposing support CB this cycle.

    17) Pittsburgh Steelers: Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon State

    Taliese Fuaga is a mountainous tackle at 6’6″, 335 pounds, who combines elite space athleticism and hand power with impressive leverage acquisition, recovery capacity, and combative hand usage. He’ll also allow Broderick Jones to move back to left tackle.

    18) Cincinnati Bengals: Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma

    This would be a bit rich for Tyler Guyton on my board, but that doesn’t mean I’d pan the pick. At 6’7″, 326 pounds, Guyton has one of the highest ceilings in this tackle class with his athleticism, balance, and flexibility, and he’s trending up as an impact right tackle.

    19) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Chop Robinson, EDGE, Penn State

    Production and size will be arguments to make against Chop Robinson, but the tape paints a more optimistic picture of his projection. His first step is one of the best in the class, and his unhinged energy and tenacity allow him to generate pressure from all alignments.

    20) Indianapolis Colts: Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson

    The Colts have two young CBs in JuJu Brents and Jaylon Jones, but they could be another high-end investment on the boundary. Nate Wiggins has lockdown upside with his length, speed, and processing skills, and he’d allow Jones to succeed Kenny Moore in the slot.

    21) Seattle Seahawks: Graham Barton, OG, Duke

    With impending free agents at guard and center, the Seahawks can’t go wrong with Graham Barton. Barton — PFN’s top interior-line prospect — has pre-existing experience at center and projects well at guard with his athleticism, strength, and grating physicality.

    22) Jacksonville Jaguars: Xavier Worthy, WR, Texas

    Xavier Worthy is an outlier at 6’1″, 172 pounds, but watching the tape, his gravitational effect on both man and zone coverage is clear. He’s an undeniably electric speed threat who knows how to weaponize his speed as a route-running slasher and blend up DBs.

    23) Los Angeles Rams: Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, Alabama

    Kool-Aid McKinstry was the preliminary CB1 across the consensus in the 2024 NFL Draft, and he still has merit as a first-round prospect. At 6’1″, 195 pounds, with fast feet, disciplined technique, length and physicality, and ball skills, he can be an impact starter.

    24) Buffalo Bills: Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSU

    Amassing 60 catches for 1,079 yards and 15 TDs in 2023, Brian Thomas Jr. proved himself as a venerable vertical threat, both on the boundary and out of the slot. At 6’4″, 205 pounds, with his speed, burst, and steely catching instincts, he’d fill Gabe Davis’ role well.

    25) Kansas City Chiefs: Xavier Legette, WR, South Carolina

    The fifth-year breakout may scare some evaluators away, but almost everything about Xavier Legette‘s game translates. He’s a size-speed freak and a potential RAC menace at 6’1″, 225 pounds, but he’s also an impressive stem operator, with mitts for hands at the catch point.

    26) Dallas Cowboys: Cooper DeJean, CB, Iowa

    For a Cowboys team that may need help at both cornerback and safety in the 2024 offseason, it’s hard to think of a better fit than Cooper DeJean — a prospect who can play both spots at a high level with his strong frame, gliding athleticism, vision, and proactivity.

    27) Houston Texans: Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas

    In this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, the Big 12 Defensive Lineman of the Year stays in-state. At 6’1″, 308, with his hyperactive twitch and energy, torquing freedom, natural leverage, play strength, and unyielding motor, Byron Murphy II brings shades of Grady Jarrett.

    28) Detroit Lions: Jared Verse, EDGE, Florida State

    I made this same pick for the Lions in my previous 2024 NFL Mock Draft. It’s pretty simple. If Jared Verse drops this far, he’s hard to pass up. He provides a raw, explosive power element that the Lions need more of, and he’s also a stellar run defender.

    29) Miami Dolphins: Troy Fautanu, OG, Washington

    Troy Fautanu could feasibly give the Dolphins long-term insurance at tackle, but the 6’4″, 317-pound lineman translates just as well on the interior, where he can move defenders off their spot with impressive core strength and power while also locking his gaps in pass pro.

    30) Philadelphia Eagles: Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo

    Young, playmaking talent at CB. That’s what the Eagles need. Quinyon Mitchell has a rumored 4.3 recovery speed at 6’0″, 200 pounds, and he racked up six interceptions and 37 pass breakups across 2022 and 2023. That’s playmaking ability at the highest level.

    31) San Francisco 49ers: Malachi Corley, WR, Western Kentucky

    This pick was made purely for mischievous reasons. Malachi Corley is the RAC god of the 2024 NFL Draft at 5’11”, 210 pounds with his speed and relentless forward-pressing physicality. Alongside Deebo Samuel and Brandon Aiyuk, he’d give defenses too much to contend with.

    32) Baltimore Ravens: Ladd McConkey, WR, Georgia

    This prospect-team fit makes sense, as Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken led Ladd McConkey to his best season in 2022. But with his speed, throttle control, nuance, and hands, McConkey has merit in Round 1, and he’d be a perfect fit alongside Zay Flowers.

    Round 2

    33) Carolina Panthers: Troy Franklin, WR, Oregon

    At 6’3″ and 187 pounds, Troy Franklin has the athletic and separation profile of prime Robbie Chosen, and he can be a versatile weapon at the NFL level.

    34) Arizona Cardinals: Kingsley Suamataia, OT, BYU

    Superlative explosiveness, size, and power grant Kingsley Suamataia a dominant potential ceiling if he can continue to improve his balance and hand usage.

    35) New England Patriots: Adonai Mitchell, WR, Texas

    More than anything, the Patriots need an X-receiver who can separate independently and win at the catch point. Adonai Mitchell checks both of those boxes effusively.

    36) Washington Commanders: Jeremiah Trotter Jr., LB, Clemson

    Jeremiah Trotter Jr. is exactly the kind of rock-solid three-down presence the Commanders need at LB alongside Jamin Davis, and he brings playmaking value as well.

    37) Los Angeles Chargers: Kamari Lassiter, CB, Georgia

    Kamari Lassiter has some of the highest scheme-diverse potential with his energetic motion and long-strider speed, and he’s a menace coming downhill in support.

    38) Tennessee Titans: Devontez Walker, WR, North Carolina

    Devontez Walker is still developing as a route runner, but in Tennessee, he can be a high-level deep threat and RAC asset while learning from one of the best in DeAndre Hopkins.

    39) New York Giants: Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona

    Further investment in the line is a must for the Giants. Jordan Morgan projects well at tackle and guard, and he could feasibly move to the right side with his mobility and balance.

    40) Green Bay Packers: Trey Benson, RB, Florida State

    Trey Benson played well enough in 2023 to be the first RB off the board in the 2024 NFL Draft. He’s a volume back with vertical speed, elite contact balance, and receiving chops.

    41) Washington Commanders: Kamren Kinchens, S, Miami (FL)

    Occasional lapses in coverage can be an issue for Kamren Kinchens, but his ceiling as a centerfielder is tantalizing with his range, route recognition, and playmaking ability.

    42) Philadelphia Eagles: Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State

    If he declares, Emeka Egbuka would be a picture-perfect WR3 alongside A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith — a route-running savant and solo-tackle shredder with long-strider speed.

    43) Green Bay Packers: Tyler Nubin, S, Minnesota

    For a team that needs security at safety, there’s no better pick than Tyler Nubin in Round 2 — an instinctive, physical, high-IQ three-down player with ball skills as a bonus.

    44) Las Vegas Raiders: Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington

    If he can stay healthy, Michael Penix Jr. has the field vision, elite driving velocity, arm elasticity, and competitive toughness to be a long-term starter for the Raiders.

    45) New Orleans Saints: Patrick Paul, OT, Houston

    Patrick Paul has the length and power to be a dominating force at tackle with more development, and he’d allow Trevor Penning to potentially move to guard.

    46) Minnesota Vikings: Braelon Allen, RB, Wisconsin

    Braelon Allen will be just a 20-year-old rookie, albeit with formidable speed and physicality at 6’2″, 245 pounds. For the Vikings, he’d be a great long-term investment as a volume back.

    47) Atlanta Falcons: Ja’Lynn Polk, WR, Washington

    Opposite Drake London, Ja’Lynn Polk could be a phenomenal movement Z receiver for the Falcons with his explosiveness, body control, and RAC ability at 6’2″, 203 pounds.

    48) Pittsburgh Steelers: Bo Nix, QB, Oregon

    Complacency kills at quarterback. If the Steelers can get a reliable distributor with high-end talent like Bo Nix in Round 2, they should take that chance.

    49) Cincinnati Bengals: T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas

    If the Bengals move on from D.J. Reader, T’Vondre Sweat can take the nose tackle role in stride with his strength, power, and high-octane motor.

    50) Houston Texans: Darius Robinson, EDGE, Missouri

    At 6’5″, 290 pounds, with 35″ arms, Darius Robinson is built to pinch the pocket with his elite power element. Across from Will Anderson Jr., he’d be a force.

    51) Indianapolis Colts: Leonard Taylor III, DT, Miami (FL)

    On day one, Leonard Taylor III can provide quality depth on the interior for the Colts, and his elite first-step explosiveness buoys an incredibly high ceiling.

    52) New York Giants: T.J. Tampa, CB, Iowa State

    Across from Deonte Banks, T.J. Tampa brings similarly enthralling explosiveness and physicality at 6’2″ and can erase separation with his long-strider speed.

    53) Jacksonville Jaguars: Tyleik Williams, DT, Ohio State

    If he declares, Tyleik Williams‘ unique ability to disrupt 1-on-1 and bend around blocks at 6’3″, 320 pounds will be highly coveted, and he also holds strong in run defense.

    54) Los Angeles Rams: Beau Brade, S, Maryland

    Beau Brade has the athleticism, all-around versatility, and tone-setting tenacity to be an asset for the Rams’ safety room at 6’1″, 210 pounds.

    55) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Jackson Powers-Johnson, OC, Oregon

    Jackson Powers-Johnson, the 2023 Rimington Award winner, fits Tampa Bay’s line culture perfectly with his physicality, and he expands beyond that with his athleticism and torque.

    56) Buffalo Bills: Chris Braswell, EDGE, Alabama

    At 6’3″, 255 pounds, Chris Braswell‘s combination of speed and length can amount to devastating power from outside alignments, as well as provide a foundation for the future.

    57) Kansas City Chiefs: McKinnley Jackson, DT, Texas A&M

    At 6’2″, 325 pounds, McKinnley Jackson has the size and strength to encumber blocks and double-teams alongside Chris Jones, but he can also disrupt with his burst and twitch.

    58) Cleveland Browns: Ruke Orhorhoro, DT, Clemson

    Ruke Orhorhoro is still fairly early in his football career, but his searing explosiveness at 6’4″, 303 pounds grants him high disruptive potential and alignment versatility.

    59) Dallas Cowboys: Brandon Dorlus, EDGE, Oregon

    With Dorance Armstrong potentially moving on, the Cowboys can add a new alignment-versatile power EDGE and pressure generator in Brandon Dorlus.

    60) Detroit Lions: Kalen King, CB, Penn State

    Non-elite traits may cause Kalen King to fall, but he’s still a quick, instinctive, and contentious cover man who’d be right at home in Detroit’s defense.

    61) Philadelphia Eagles: Cedric Gray, LB, North Carolina

    Cedric Gray‘s ability to find depth and play in coverage will resonate with the Eagles, but he’s just as proficient at flowing downhill and invading gaps.

    62) Miami Dolphins: Johnny Wilson, WR, Florida State

    Johnny Wilson‘s usage will require some creativity, but Mike McDaniel would know how to weaponize Wilson’s long-strider speed and physicality in the RAC phase.

    63) San Francisco 49ers: Edgerrin Cooper, LB, Texas A&M

    Edgerrin Cooper is built to be a downhill attacker at 6’3″, 230 pounds with searing burst and angle IQ — but he also has coverage upside to unlock.

    64) Baltimore Ravens: Kiran Amegadjie, OT, Yale

    With potential needs at tackle and guard, the Ravens add an elite size-explosiveness specimen with experience at both spots in Kiran Amegadjie, and he also boasts a mauler mentality that rounds out his game.

    Round 3

    65) Carolina Panthers: Bralen Trice, EDGE, Washington

    Bralen Trice isn’t the most flexible rusher, but he can rework the Panthers’ EDGE room with his burst, power, and heavy hands.

    66) Arizona Cardinals: Cooper Beebe, OG, Kansas State

    With his strength, football IQ, and glass-eating disposition, Cooper Beebe has the feel of a decade-long starter at guard.

    67) Washington Commanders: Delmar Glaze, OT, Maryland

    A local prospect for Washington, Delmar Glaze quietly has a starting upside at 6’5″, 328 pounds with his lateral mobility and balance.

    68) New England Patriots: Caelen Carson, CB, Wake Forest

    In man alignments, Caelen Carson brings tantalizing upside with his corrective athleticism, exhaustive use of space, reaction speed, and chippy mentality.

    69) Arizona Cardinals: Michael Hall Jr., DT, Ohio State

    Michael Hall Jr. is one of the class’s more natural block destructors with his burst, torque, natural leverage, and urgency.

    70) New York Giants: Audric Estimé, RB, Notre Dame

    Between the tackles, Audric Estimé has a true volume-back upside with his vision, efficient footwork, size, density, and speed.

    71) Los Angeles Chargers: Zach Frazier, OC, West Virginia

    With Corey Linsley’s future uncertain, the Chargers reinvest at center with Zach Frazier — a well-leveraged and high-IQ blocker in both phases.

    72) Chicago Bears: Sedrick Van Pran, OC, Georgia

    Sedrick Van Pran can anchor the Bears’ run game with his explosiveness and zeal, and he’s actively growing as a pass protector.

    73) New York Jets: Jalen McMillan, WR, Washington

    With his speed, flexibility, and sharp route-running ability, Jalen McMillan could be an excellent complementary threat alongside Garrett Wilson.

    74) Green Bay Packers: Donovan Jackson, OG, Ohio State

    Donovan Jackson is still refining his game, but his athleticism, natural leverage, and elite proportional length present massive developmental potential.

    75) Las Vegas Raiders: Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan

    Kris Jenkins is the perfect DT for a team like Las Vegas to invest in: A high-level run defender with the twitch and torque to grow as a pass rusher.

    76) Seattle Seahawks: Jaylan Ford, LB, Texas

    At 6’3″, 245 pounds, Jaylan Ford has the size and explosiveness to disrupt downhill, but he’s also an instinctive playmaker and space manager in coverage.

    77) Detroit Lions: Braden Fiske, DT, Florida State

    There might not be a more “Lions” prospect in this class than Braden Fiske. Fiske’s motor is unhinged, and he’s a sound three-down defender in spite of his size.

    78) Atlanta Falcons: Adisa Isaac, EDGE, Penn State

    Adisa Isaac has the explosiveness, length, hand power, and urgency in pursuit to be an asset in Atlanta’s scheme, and his peak hand usage flashes are exciting.

    79) Denver Broncos: Michael Pratt, QB, Tulane

    Michael Pratt could fill the Day 2 void in the 2024 NFL Draft QB class. His anticipation and accuracy would be right at home in Sean Payton’s offense.

    80) Cincinnati Bengals: Ben Sinnott, TE, Kansas State

    Ben Sinnott can be an essential utility piece for the Bengals while doubling as a nuanced separator with strong hands and RAC appeal.

    81) Arizona Cardinals: Bucky Irving, RB, Oregon

    With James Conner nearing free agency, Bucky Irving provides depth, but he also has the electric two-phase ability to be a valuable playmaker long-term.

    82) Pittsburgh Steelers: Max Melton, CB, Rutgers

    Opposite Joey Porter Jr., Max Melton gives the Steelers another man-oriented CB with excellent speed, proportional length, and ball skills.

    83) Seattle Seahawks: Roman Wilson, WR, Michigan

    The Seahawks could still use a deeper weapons core, and Roman Wilson — with his carving speed — can be a chain-mover and red-zone threat.

    84) Jacksonville Jaguars: Christian Haynes, OG, UConn

    Christian Haynes is a bona fide refrigerator on the interior, whose physicality and power drive can help clear open lanes and nullify rushers.

    85) Los Angeles Rams: J.T. Tuimoloau, EDGE, Ohio State

    Bend limitations are a concern for J.T. Tuimoloau, but his speed-to-power at 6’4″, 277 pounds can be overwhelming from outside alignments.

    86) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Ja’Tavion Sanders, TE, Texas

    At 6’4″, 249 pounds, Ja’Tavion Sanders can be a dangerous seam and red-zone threat, but he also has the athleticism and contact balance to work as a big-slot weapon.

    87) Indianapolis Colts: James Williams, S/LB, Miami (FL)

    For a team that needs speed and physicality at the second level and safety depth, James Williams can be a very fruitful hybrid investment with his support upside.

    88) Green Bay Packers: Jamari Thrash, WR, Louisville

    The Packers’ WR room is growing, but it could use a quality three-level glue piece like Jamari Thrash — a WR who can separate and accrue RAC.

    89) Kansas City Chiefs: Blake Fisher, OT, Notre Dame

    A natural right tackle, Blake Fisher would provide the Chiefs depth and upside at the OT spot, as well as crunching point-of-contact power.

    90) Dallas Cowboys: LaDarius Henderson, OT, Michigan

    LaDarius Henderson turned in a first-team All-Big Ten season at tackle in 2023 and has immense upside with his length, explosiveness, and physicality.

    91) Cleveland Browns: Matt Goncalves, OT, Pittsburgh

    An injury took Matt Goncalves off the field early, but he has starting upside with his athleticism, knee bend, hand power, and tenacity.

    92) Detroit Lions: Ennis Rakestraw Jr., CB, Missouri

    Ennis Rakestraw Jr. is one of the best man coverage cornerbacks in the 2024 NFL Draft with his foot speed, fluidity, and physicality.

    93) Houston Texans: Jonathon Brooks, RB, Texas

    If Jonathon Brooks declares, his quickness, vision, grating contact balance, and receiving utility should earn him Day 2 interest.

    94) San Francisco 49ers: Rod Moore, S, Michigan

    Rod Moore has the versatility to play the slot once Isaiah Oliver moves on, and can cover ground in coverage or play in support.

    95) Baltimore Ravens: Jaylen Wright, RB, Tennessee

    Alongside Lamar Jackson, Jaylen Wright could be a game-breaking presence with his instant vertical trigger and home-run speed in space.

    96) Washington Commanders: D.J. James, CB, Auburn

    At 6’0″, 185 pounds, D.J. James is a free-flowing short-area mover with excellent foot freedom and throttle control who’d function well in man and off-man.

    Round 4


    97) Carolina Panthers
    Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida

    98) Arizona Cardinals
    Payton Wilson, LB, NC State

    99) New England Patriots
    Jonah Elliss, EDGE, Utah

    100) Washington Commanders
    Malik Washington, WR, Virginia

    101) New York Giants
    Nelson Ceaser, EDGE, Houston

    102) Los Angeles Chargers
    Roger Rosengarten, OT, Washington

    103) Tennessee Titans
    Kris Abrams-Draine, CB, Missouri

    104) New York Jets
    Spencer Rattler, QB, South Carolina

    105) Chicago Bears
    Calen Bullock, S, USC

    106) Las Vegas Raiders
    Christian Mahogany, OG, Boston College

    107) New York Jets
    Jordan Burch, EDGE, Oregon

    108) Minnesota Vikings
    Cole Bishop, S, Utah

    109) Atlanta Falcons
    Kendall Bohler, CB, Florida A&M

    110) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Sundiata Anderson, EDGE, Grambling State

    111) Green Bay Packers
    Johnny Dixon, CB, Penn State

    112) Houston Texans
    Josiah Ezirim, OT, Eastern Kentucky

    113) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Tanor Bortolini, OC, Wisconsin

    114) Cincinnati Bengals
    Brenden Rice, WR, USC

    115) Atlanta Falcons
    DeWayne Carter, DT, Duke

    116) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Ty’Ron Hopper, LB, Missouri

    117) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Hudson Clark, S, Arkansas

    118) Indianapolis Colts
    Will Shipley, RB, Clemson

    119) Seattle Seahawks
    Jared Wiley, TE, TCU

    120) Buffalo Bills
    Josh Newton, CB, TCU

    121) Kansas City Chiefs
    Jacob Cowing, WR, Arizona

    122) Houston Texans
    Mike Sainristil, CB, Michigan

    123) San Francisco 49ers
    Sataoa Laumea, OT, Utah

    124) Minnesota Vikings
    Jamree Kromah, DL, James Madison

    125) Chicago Bears
    Justin Eboigbe, DT, Alabama

    126) Denver Broncos
    Javon Solomon, EDGE, Troy

    127) San Francisco 49ers
    Cade Stover, TE, Ohio State

    128) Baltimore Ravens
    Javon Bullard, DB, Georgia

    Round 5


    129) Cleveland Browns
    Jermaine Burton, WR, Alabama

    130) Arizona Cardinals
    Jay Stanley, S, Southern Miss

    131) Washington Commanders
    Jasheen Davis, EDGE, Wake Forest

    132) New England Patriots
    Dominick Puni, OL, Kansas

    133) Los Angeles Chargers
    Sione Vaki, RB/S, Utah

    134) Carolina Panthers
    Terrance Ferguson, TE, Oregon

    135) New York Giants
    Thomas Harper, S, Notre Dame

    136) Chicago Bears
    Jaylin Simpson, DB, Auburn

    137) Denver Broncos
    Chau Smith-Wade, CB, Washington State

    138) Denver Broncos
    Curtis Jacobs, LB, Penn State

    139) Tennessee Titans
    Jordan Jefferson, DT, LSU

    140) Atlanta Falcons
    Ainias Smith, WR, Texas A&M

    141) New Orleans Saints
    Sebastian Castro, DB, Iowa

    142) Buffalo Bills
    Jaden Hicks, S, Washington State

    143) Las Vegas Raiders
    Dylan Laube, RB, New Hampshire

    144) Los Angeles Rams
    Tyrice Knight, LB, UTEP

    145) Cincinnati Bengals
    Keith Randolph Jr., DT, Illinois

    146) Arizona Cardinals
    Jaheim Bell, TE, Florida State

    147) Los Angeles Rams
    Javon Foster, OT, Missouri

    148) Philadelphia Eagles
    Emani Bailey, RB, TCU

    149) Indianapolis Colts
    Theo Johnson, TE, Penn State

    150) Seattle Seahawks
    Khyree Jackson, CB, Oregon

    151) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Davin Vann, DL, NC State

    152) Buffalo Bills
    Tyler Davis, DT, Clemson

    153) Minnesota Vikings
    Tahj Washington, WR, USC

    154) Kansas City Chiefs
    Cam Hart, CB, Notre Dame

    155) Minnesota Vikings
    Tommy Eichenberg, LB, Ohio State

    156) Detroit Lions
    Brandon Coleman, OL, TCU

    157) Miami Dolphins
    Brevyn Spann-Ford, TE, Minnesota

    158) Cleveland Browns
    Patrick McMorris, S, California

    159) Carolina Panthers
    MarShawn Lloyd, RB, USC

    160) Baltimore Ravens
    Aaron Casey, LB, Indiana

    Round 6


    161) Minnesota Vikings
    Willie Drew, CB, Virginia State

    162) Carolina Panthers
    Quincy Riley, CB, Louisville

    163) New England Patriots
    Mason Fairchild, TE, Kansas

    164) Washington Commanders
    Bryson Nesbit, TE, North Carolina

    165) Tennessee Titans
    Isaac Guerendo, RB, Louisville

    166) New York Giants
    Jordan Travis, QB, Florida State

    167) Los Angeles Chargers
    Jowon Briggs, DT, Cincinnati

    168) New York Jets
    Xavier Watts, S, Notre Dame

    169) Miami Dolphins
    Josh Proctor, S, Ohio State

    170) Arizona Cardinals
    Collin Oliver, OLB, Oklahoma State

    171) Philadelphia Eagles
    Travis Glover, OT, Georgia State

    172) New Orleans Saints
    Eyabi Okie-Anoma, EDGE, Charlotte

    173) Green Bay Packers
    Taylor Upshaw, EDGE, Arizona

    174) New England Patriots
    Jha’Quan Jackson, WR, Tulane

    175) Los Angeles Rams
    Joshua Karty, K, Stanford

    176) Cincinnati Bengals
    Jarius Monroe, CB, Tulane

    177) Cleveland Browns
    Jontrey Hunter, LB, Georgia State

    178) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Malik Mustapha, S, Wake Forest

    179) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Blake Corum, RB, Michigan

    180) Indianapolis Colts
    KT Leveston, OL, Kansas State

    181) Seattle Seahawks
    Caedan Wallace, OT, Penn State

    182) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Charles Turner, OC, LSU

    183) Buffalo Bills
    Ray Davis, RB, Kentucky

    184) Buffalo Bills
    Robert Scott Jr., OT, Florida State

    185) Las Vegas Raiders
    Bub Means, WR, Pittsburgh

    186) Atlanta Falcons
    Joshua Gray, OL, Oregon State

    187) Buffalo Bills
    Elijah Jones, CB, Boston College

    188) Detroit Lions
    Luke McCaffrey, WR, Rice

    189) New Orleans Saints
    Nathan Thomas, OL, Louisiana

    190) Miami Dolphins
    Xavier Thomas, EDGE, Clemson

    191) Denver Broncos
    Isaiah Williams, WR, Illinois

    192) Cleveland Browns
    Jawhar Jordan, RB, Louisville

    Round 7


    193) Tennessee Titans
    Javion Cohen, OL, Miami (FL)

    194) Houston Texans
    Isaiah Adams, OL, Illinois

    195) Washington Commanders
    Zak Zinter, OG, Michigan

    196) Las Vegas Raiders
    Beaux Limmer, OL, Arkansas

    197) Arizona Cardinals
    Evan Anderson, DT, Florida Atlantic

    198) Los Angeles Chargers
    Jelani Baker, WR, Limestone

    199) Tennessee Titans
    Mohamed Kamara, EDGE, Colorado State

    200) New England Patriots
    Anim Dankwah, OT, Howard

    201) Baltimore Ravens
    Jaylen Harrell, EDGE, Michigan

    202) Minnesota Vikings
    Layden Robinson, OG, Texas A&M

    203) Houston Texans
    Joshua Cephus, WR, UTSA

    204) Green Bay Packers
    PJ Jules, S, Southern Illinois

    205) Dallas Cowboys
    Kimani Vidal, RB, Troy

    206) New Orleans Saints
    Trey Taylor, S, Air Force

    207) Las Vegas Raiders
    Daequan Hardy, CB, Penn State

    208) Houston Texans
    A.J. Barner, TE, Michigan

    209) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Sam Pinckney, WR, Coastal Carolina

    210) Cincinnati Bengals 
    Blake Watson, RB, Memphis

    211) Indianapolis Colts
    Anthony Gould, WR, Oregon State

    212) Seattle Seahawks
    Gabe Hall, DT, Baylor

    213) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Tejhaun Palmer, WR, UAB

    214) San Francisco 49ers
    Anthony Goodlow, DL, Oklahoma State

    215) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Devaughn Vele, WR, Utah

    216) Buffalo Bills
    Devin Leary, QB, Kentucky

    217) Kansas City Chiefs
    Jalen White, RB, Georgia Southern

    218) Dallas Cowboys
    Marist Liufau, LB, Notre Dame

    219) Cleveland Browns
    Zion Tupuola-Fetui, EDGE, Washington

    220) Detroit Lions
    Jason Bean, QB, Kansas

    221) Miami Dolphins
    Nazir Stackhouse, DT, Georgia

    222) Tennessee Titans
    Dadrian Taylor-Demerson, DB, Texas Tech

    223) San Francisco 49ers
    Ja’quan Sheppard, CB, Maryland

    224) Baltimore Ravens
    Marcus Harris, DL, Auburn

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