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    7-Round 2025 NFL Mock Draft: Shedeur Sanders and Cam Ward Highlight a QB Wasteland Among a Strong Defensive Class at the Top

    All 256 picks are in, and the running back resurgence this season extends itself into the 2025 NFL Draft.

    The 2025 NFL Draft remains months away, but we are so close to knowing every player in the potential class after the declaration deadline has come and gone with only two teams exempt.

    A lot will change before April. Teams will fill needs in free agency and picks will be swapped for veteran players on expiring contracts. In short, things will look very different in April. But that doesn’t stop us from an early simulation!

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    1) Tennessee Titans

    Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado

    The Titans are in an interesting spot. Brian Callahan clearly needs a new name under center for his offense. His relationship with Will Levis is tumultuous at best, and he should have more than enough security to have Sanders develop for a year or two.

    Sanders isn’t a finished product. He’s the most accurate quarterback in the class by a significant margin, and he’s able to work within an NFL timeline, considering he’s survived poor protection in college throughout his career. His physical ceiling is lower than Cam Ward’s, but the same clear frustrations Callahan has with Levis will be present with Ward, who is, by any definition, an old-school gunslinger.

    2) Cleveland Browns

    Abdul Carter, EDGE, Penn State

    The Cleveland Browns have a lot of talented and expensive players on the roster. They’re good enough to compete for a Wild Card spot in the AFC with said talent, but they need a steady hand under center. Fans will undoubtedly want Ward here, but he won’t be ready for at least a full season.

    Imagine a defense with that talented secondary and two aliens on the edge pressuring the passer with outrageous consistency. Carter is practically a spitting image of Micah Parsons but with longer arms and a more well-rounded repertoire leaving the college ranks. His ascension throughout 2024 weekly was astronomical. He got better every week until it was crystal clear he was the most devastating defensive player in college football.

    3) New York Giants

    Travis Hunter, ATH, Colorado

    Hunter likely wants to play on both sides of the ball at the NFL level. His wallet would certainly want him to play a significant amount of snaps on the offensive side of the ball. However, teams likely won’t give that much thought considering how difficult it is to find an island defensively.

    MORE: NFL World Holds Its Breath Due to Viral Travis Hunter Video 

    Hunter is that island.

    He’s the most intelligent cornerback since Patrick Surtain, and he just so happens to have the best ball skills in the class as a wide receiver, let alone for cornerbacks.

    4) New England Patriots

    Mason Graham, DT, Michigan

    Interior pressure is devastating for opposing quarterbacks. Graham is a 320-pound defensive tackle with more ankle flexibility than 90% of 270-pound defensive ends. He can legitimately threaten the corner and run under a table, which makes him all the more dangerous from multiple alignments.

    The Michigan defensive tackle also has the most violent hands from an interior defender since Jeffery Simmons, and he brings those in a frame carrying close to 15 pounds more than the Titans elite interior defender. Graham should immediately be a menace against the run and pass for New England.

    5) Jacksonville Jaguars

    Will Johnson, CB, Michigan

    If it weren’t for Hunter’s mind-bending ball skills, we’d be discussing Will Johnson’s nutty ball-hawking abilities. Johnson lies incredibly well to quarterbacks when he gets the opportunity to sink into Cover 2, and his length, fluidity, and explosiveness allow him to easily carry receivers downfield.

    Those lying eyes also help locate the ball in the air from his man-coverage carry, and he has made some head-tilting aerial plays on the ball during his time at Michigan.

    6) Las Vegas Raiders

    Cameron Ward, QB, Miami (FL)

    With entirely new leadership in place in Las Vegas, the front office should have enough of a runway to bring along Ward at a reasonable pace. Under no circumstance should Ward play in 2025. In fact, he should probably be the team’s emergency quarterback unless injuries take over for the Raiders.

    Ward’s closest comparison is Zach Wilson. His bad habits will only be magnified in live action against NFL defenses. However, if the organization places training wheels on him, he has the athletic potential to compete in a division with Justin Herbert and Patrick Mahomes.

    7) New York Jets

    Malaki Starks, S, Georgia

    Most of the Jets secondary are unrestricted free agents and a new regime enters the fray in New York. With the top two cornerbacks off the board, we turn our attention to an elite safety prospect.

    Starks is a safety by trade but possesses a skill set that could see him survive as a boundary cornerback, which at his size makes him a ringer for Jalen Ramsey. Ramsey’s intelligence in coverage made him a potential safety candidate coming from college, and positionless defenses make a talent like Starks incredibly valuable because he can be anything from your center fielder to your slot cornerback to a box safety.

    8) Carolina Panthers

    Luther Burden III, WR, Missouri

    There are legitimate concerns with Burden’s draft profile. His production at Missouri was underwhelming, and his route tree was practically drawn up by a 9-year-old just learning the game. But Burden’s smooth and explosive athleticism, paired with his dense frame, is reminiscent of Ja’Marr Chase.

    His post-catch ability isn’t too dissimilar, either. Chase is more explosive in a straight line and through bends, but Burden is more sudden and possesses more physicality as a runner. Tetairoa McMillan is a better prospect than Xavier Legette and Jalen Coker were, but Burden is as well and his skill set complements them better.

    9) New Orleans Saints

    Tetairoa McMillan, WR, Arizona

    It’s impossible to know right now what Chris Olave’s career trajectory looks like. What we do know is that no matter what happens, having a big, consistent target like McMillan makes a quarterback’s job easier, and his skill set is a perfect complement to the outrageous speed Olave and Rashid Shaheed offer.

    10) Chicago Bears

    Josh Simmons, OT, Ohio State

    Simmons was the best offensive tackle in the class this year on tape. His athletic profile is ideal for a blindside blocker, a feat few can claim in the 2025 NFL Draft class. Unfortunately, Ohio State lost him early against Oregon in their first matchup. That means he played… nobody.

    His last bout against true NFL talent was in 2023, and that tape is far less enticing. The question becomes whether he’s improved as much as he showed, or if his improvements are only marginal and he only looked elite because he didn’t face any legitimate NFL talent.

    In the end, his technical improvements seem very real and his athleticism makes him worthy of being the first tackle drafted in this class.

    11) San Francisco 49ers

    Will Campbell, OT/OG, LSU

    Campbell might have a fate similar to Tyler Smith’s in Dallas. Campbell played left tackle in college, but his lack of length and trouble protecting the arc against explosive, technical speed and bend could make him a guard candidate at the next level.

    However, he could begin his career at left guard for the 49ers before sliding outside when Trent Williams (eventually) retires. In a league severely lacking talent at offensive tackle, it is foolish to disregard a blocker without giving them the chance to fail inside.

    12) Dallas Cowboys

    Tyler Warren, TE, Penn State

    The advanced metrics for Jake Ferguson in 2024 weren’t kind. The Dallas Cowboys desperately need offensive weapons surrounding CeeDee Lamb, and Dak Prescott loves operating over the middle of the field and targeting tight ends. Warren’s presence as a traditional in-line tight end could be an even more significant complement to Lamb, who operates a majority of his snaps from the slot.

    But Warren is far from your average in-line tight end, and it would be foolish to eliminate that versatility from his game at the NFL level. Maybe the Cowboys don’t use him as a Wildcat QB as often as Penn State, but Warren’s skill set is reminiscent of Taysom Hill, except Warren has been injected with Steve Roger’s Super Soldier Serum.

    A good offensive mind should have no trouble pushing Warren toward Brock Bowers’s rookie TE receiving yards record.

    13) Miami Dolphins

    Kelvin Banks Jr., OT/OG, Texas

    This selection was a battle. Banks is certainly highly regarded by many a draftnik, but this analyst isn’t as impressed. However, unless the Dolphins do indeed trade Tyreek Hill this offseason, there’s no real need to add an Emeka Egbuka here. Ashton Jeanty is the best player left on the board and Miami could use a RB that can actually remain on the field healthy while using De’Von Achane more as an offensive weapon, but that seems a bit of a luxury.

    What sells Banks here is the similarity between Miami’s passing attack and the one he comes from at Texas. Tua Tagovailoa does not want to hang onto the ball for long, which mitigates the need for Banks to set vertically too often. The other saving grace here is that Banks should begin his career, and potentially remain, at left guard for Miami considering Terron Armstead and Patrick Paul should lock down the bookend.

    14) Indianapolis Colts

    Jihaad Campbell, LB, Alabama

    It’s surprising to see some questions floating around whether Campbell is an off-ball linebacker or an edge rusher. His build could suggest playing off the edge, but he plays a more finesse style when playing as the end man on the line of scrimmage compared to how he plays at the second level.

    But it’s his growth in coverage that is so enticing as a true linebacker. His fluidity, explosiveness, and trigger in coverage is incredibly impressive. College linebackers (Jalon Walker is a great example) aren’t often asked to turn and burn or pedal much to gain depth, but Campbell does so with ease. There’s even a beautiful rep of him mirroring Kyren Lacy on the goal line to take away a touchdown.

    Add in his length and athleticism and you have a multiple player who is a linebacker, but could also be used sparingly as a rusher.

    15) Atlanta Falcons

    James Pearce Jr., EDGE, Tennessee

    Pearce’s usage at Tennessee was frustrating at times, but the flashes of brilliance are why he was many people’s EDGE1 coming into the season. His style is closer to a Brian Burns, which means he may never be a consistently dominant run defender, but he has the explosive closing speed and quick hands to be a disruptor in that arena.

    However, it’s that outrageous first-step explosiveness and sheer flexibility that makes him a unique threat off the edge. If Pearce times the snap correctly, there is almost nothing an offensive tackle can do athletically to beat him to the set point up the arc.

    16) Arizona Cardinals

    Nic Scourton, EDGE, Texas A&M

    Scourton is one of the youngest players in the 2025 NFL Draft class, but don’t let that fool you into thinking he’s raw. The young pass rusher put on some unnecessary weight at Texas A&M (Mike Elko seems to like them thick) and in turn was less explosive, and dominant, in 2024.

    However, the young rusher has an arsenal of pass-rush moves that could make many NFL veterans blush, and losing 10-15 pounds to play around 265 should unleash a truly devastating exterior rusher who also just so happens to be a consistent run defender to boot.

    17) Cincinnati Bengals

    Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State

    The Egbuka selection here comes with the caveat that Tee Higgins will not be around next season.

    Egbuka brings a necessary element that should help unlock another level for an already unbelievable Joe Burrow. He doesn’t have the catch radius or above-the-rim game of Higgins, but he does something potentially even more valuable in the Bengals offense. He wins IMMEDIATELY and consistently as a route runner.

    Don’t let that fool you into thinking he’s some third-down chain mover. Egbuka isn’t a speed demon, but he’s quick and sturdy enough to be a true three-level threat at the next level because he is already a professional route runner. In fact, he’s been a professional route runner for the better part of three seasons.

    18) Seattle Seahawks

    Nick Emmanwori, S, South Carolina

    There is no way that Mike Macdonald turns on the South Carolina tape and doesn’t see the number “14” when he squints really hard watching Emmanwori. The Madden create-a-player safety is built more like a modern WILL linebacker while possessing the fluidity of a true center fielder.

    The Gamecocks safety played mostly on the back end as a split-field safety to the boundary. His size, athleticism, and tackling ability are all impressive. However, what separates him is what made Kyle Hamilton so special. Emmanwori is incredibly quick-witted. That’s a necessary trait for NFL success at safety, and he’s automatic seeing the picture in front of him.

    19) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    Shemar Stewart, EDGE, Texas A&M

    Although there’s a better-than-not chance that Stewart hears his name called before his teammate, the fit in Tampa Bay is too good not to fantasize about. Although fans are surely clamoring for a linebacker, adding a 290-pound outside linebacker chisled from stone and shot out of a cannon to this defensive line makes the Monstars feel real alongside Vita Vea, Yaya Diabi, and Calijah Kancey.

    But because he’s so athletic, implementing him in place of Anthony Nelson opposite of Yaya or with his hand in the dirt as more of a 5-technique to spell Logal Hall. And even at slasher defensive tackle weight Stewart is no stranger to pedaling into coverage, either.

    20) Denver Broncos

    Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan

    Marques Colston Loveland. Make the tee shirt.

    Loveland is a tight end in designation alone. You don’t want him putting his hand in the dirt trying to block Chris Jones or Maxx Crosby on the edge in the run game. But the long, smooth Loveland is an outstanding weapon from the slot and even split out wide. He’s not nearly as explosive as Kyle Pitts, but they should be used similarly at the NFL level (except with more volume.)

    Trust that Sean Payton can carve out a role for the big-bodied offensive weapon because he’s good enough as an H-back type to move around the formation and block across the formation on split zone or in space.

    21) Pittsburgh Steelers

    Jalon Walker, LB, Georgia

    Walker is a hybrid player that will take some development in pass coverage at the NFL level. However, his devastating closing speed and versatility as a blitzer, spy, and edge rusher make him a dangerous weapon in a Steelers’ defense that ranked inside of the top 1/3 in blitz rate.

    Walker doesn’t quite possess the build many covet in a full-time edge, but the 240-pounder linebacker is a sawed-off, heat-seeking missile.

    22) Los Angeles Chargers

    Mykel Williams, EDGE, Georgia

    Williams is an even greater unknown on the edge than his college teammate. However, you can’t teach 36-inch arms and the natural ability to anchor from a defensive tackle alignment against double teams at (only) 265 pounds.

    Williams’ lack of flexibility may hamper his ceiling as a pass rusher because he’ll never consistently win on the outside track, but winning through blockers can be even more devastating when one possesses his lateral quickness.

    23) Green Bay Packers

    Shavon Revel Jr., CB, East Carolina

    Revel could be the steal of the class. Like Quinyon Mitchell a season ago, Revel was poised to go through the college all-star circuit and display his skills against the best of the best. A good showing in Mobile or Frisco could have cemented top-10 pick status for the 6-foot-2 cornerback, but a season-ending injury killed those dreams.

    Still, nobody in the class can effortlessly hinge and carry vertically the way Revel can, and the playmaking cornerback has a Trevon Diggs-like knack for playing out of phase to bait quarterbacks into silly mistakes.

    24) Minnesota Vikings

    Marcus Mbow, OC, Purdue

    Garrett Bradbury is an unrestricted free agent heading into the offseason and Minnesota will likely hand the reins over to J.J. McCarthy at quarterback next season, so continuity isn’t there between a center-quarterback duo anyways.

    Mbow has been projected to guard by many, but his best bet for NFL stardom is at the pivot. Coincidentally, his hip fluidity and ability to pivot is what makes him such an outstanding candidate to anchor down the middle of an offensive line. Add in some violent hands, conspicuous explosiveness, and a keen eye for defensive line games and Minnesota might have a gem.

    25) Houston Texans

    Tyler Booker, OG, Alabama

    Booker transformed his body heading into 2024 and his game took the necessary steps along with it. He’s always played with the requisite violence and natural anchoring ability of a high-end guard, but his body composition aided his athleticism. He’s become a legitimately dominant left guard.

    And if anybody watched the Texans… (ever???) they’d see that left guard for the Houston Texans might be the most obvious team need in the league.

    26) Los Angeles Rams

    Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise State

    Whatever deal Les Snead made, he fleeced the Devil worse than Johnny did. Jeanty isn’t quite the same caliber of athletic phenom that Saquon Barkley or Bijan Robinson were. However, his game is likely the most complete coming from the college ranks that we’

    He’s no slouch athletically, either. Nobody creates more explosive runs than Jeanty in college football. He clearly has a high gear despite being packaged in a 5-foot-8 frame. But many might not know that he also led all RBs in receiving yards in 2023, a trait the Broncos hid from the world in the 2024 version of their offense. Also, Jeanty is a fantastic pass protector both physically and technically, making him as well-rounded as they come.

    But he’s still a running back and the 2025 class is loaded, which could, theoretically, push him down the board a bit.

    27) Washington Commanders

    Jahdae Barron, S, Texas

    Anybody who followed Dan Quinn during his run as Dallas Cowboys’ DC knows he is a bit obsessed with the safety position. No team in the NFL fielded more three-safety looks than Dallas did during his tenure. But Quinn also values versatility, which is a specialty of Barron, who wore many Stetsons while playing in Austin.

    Although Barron is a fine Cover 3 cornerback he’s best playing with his eyes to the QB. His best role is likely as a slot defender, which pairs well alongside Quan Martin and Jeremy Chinn. Barron’s versatility allows Quinn more freedom to disguise coverages by rotating those safeties high and low instead of traveling across the formation in man coverage.

    28) Baltimore Ravens

    Jonah Savaiinaea, OT/OG, Arizona

    Everybody on the broadcast can be as obsessed with the 380-pound Daniel Faalele all they want. The Ravens could use an upgrade at right guard, and it wouldn’t hurt to have someone with swing tackle flexibility.

    Savaiinaea has played both tackle positions and right guard for the Wildcats over the past three seasons in Arizona. He also happens to be a 335-pound explosive phenom who can move people with ease.

    29) Buffalo Bills

    Derrick Harmon, DT, Oregon

    Derrick Harmon is a curious prospect. His pass-rushing production is outrageous, but so much of it was produced by being a free runner on defensive line games. It’s a bit fake. However, I was far more impressed with the 320-pounders devastating slashing nature as a run defender.

    Harmon isn’t a consistent processor, but if given a simple one-gap task, his first-step explosiveness, length, and hand-fighting technique is difficult to nail down for offensive linemen. Harmon played the 3-technique role alongside Jamaree Caldwell at Oregon, but he has the ability to slide inside as a penetrating nose tackle at the NFL level.

    30) Philadelphia Eagles

    Walter Nolen, DT, Ole Miss

    Nolen is a 3-0 home run swing. The pitcher could throw a curveball and you could look foolish, or he could try to send a fastball over the heart of the plate that travels 450 feet.

    Nolen goes from looking like an unstoppable force one game to complete anonymity in another. His inconsistencies are endlessly frustrating, but the Eagles have such an insulated roster that they can afford to slowly develop the Ole Miss Rebel at his own pace.

    31) Kansas City Chiefs

    Josh Conerly Jr., OT, Oregon

    The Chiefs need to do right by Kingsley Suamataia and move him back over to the right side where he was natural. They need to develop him so they can eventually replace their high-priced, penalty-happy right tackle.

    Conerly has the type of outrageous athleticism necessary for a Chiefs offensive tackle attempting to protect a serial pocket floater. Although Conerly must continue to develop his frame and up his core strength, he showed improvements there in 2024 while being a consistently dominant run blocker on wide zone looks to his left side.

    32) Detroit Lions

    Landon Jackson, EDGE, Arkansas

    Dan Campbell is practically the NFL’s resident professional wrestler and Jackson is one of WWE’s NIL athletes. It’s a meathead match made in heaven.

    But Jackson’s 270-pound frame is also not dissimilar to Aidan Hutchinson. While he isn’t the same caliber of prospect, Jackson possesses an uncanny ability to win on the outside track with accurate pass-rush hands and outrageous flexibility for his size.

    Round 2 | 33) Cleveland Browns

    Matthew Golden, WR, Texas

    No player in college football has helped themselves more in the back half of the season than Texas WR Matthew Golden. Since taking over as the team’s wide receiver on the right side of the formation after Isaiah Bond’s ankle injury, Golden took off in production.

    While some of that is because the Texas passing attack is entirely right-hand heavy, more of it has to do with his skill set. Golden is a quarterback’s best friend. Jerry Jeudy is an explosive weapon but can be frustratingly inconsistent at times. Golden is a sure-handed weapon who can go win a football in the air while also possessing some manipulative route-running prowess.

    He’s a great second option for a team with a dominant slot receiver like Cleveland.

    34) New York Giants

    Donovan Jackson, OG, Ohio State

    After flashing surprisingly productive tape at offensive tackle in the back half of the season the 34th pick might be 15 picks too low for Jackson. He might end up going before the young man he replaced at left tackle for the Buckeyes. He might even play tackle in the NFL, considering he has the athleticism for it and boasts 35-inch arms!

    But in this simulation, he’s inserting as the Giants left guard.

    35) Tennessee Titans

    Elic Ayomanor, WR, Stanford

    Although general managers have come and gone in Nashville, the Titans seem to have a type at wide receiver. Ayomanor is a big-bodied “X” receiver, but unlike other Tennessee receivers at that size, Ayomanor plays with a grace and explosiveness that should be coveted at the position.

    His production is concerning but content is important. That context being his quarterback couldn’t get him the ball in 2024 and he was often aligned practically on the sideline, making his life more difficult without grass to operate with.

    36) Jacksonville Jaguars

    Xavier Watts, S, Notre Dame

    Every team that needs a safety and passes on Watts because he isn’t an underwear warrior who will test off the turf in Indianapolis is doing a disservice to their defense. Luck has a bit to do with interceptions, but consistently being in the right place at the right time at the safety position doesn’t happen by accident.

    Add in the fact that Watts is a consistent tackler with more than enough fluidity to survive in the slot and you have a multi-faceted back-end ball hawk.

    37) New England Patriots

    Tre Harris, WR, Ole Miss

    Harris played in a Mickey Mouse Ole Miss offense that didn’t ask him to run a full route tree. However, in situations like that (and situations like, say, playing quarterback at Tennessee) it’s less about what you were asked to do and how you performed what you were asked to do.

    Harris has Daniel Riccardo circa 2017 brakes on him, which allows him to consistently create separation on stopping routes. He also has the physicality and manipulative skills to win quickly in a phone booth, which will make him a devastating weapon around the goal line, not unlike Davante Adams.

    38) New York Jets

    Armand Membou, OT, Missouri

    Membou shouldn’t have to wait this long to hear his name called, but his loss is New York’s gain. They need a right tackle and Membou is a Feldman Freak for a reason.

    He also boasts the best resume of any blocker in the country. He went through an absolute gauntlet of outrageous NFL-caliber pass rushers in 2024 playing at Missouri, and he passed every unique test with flying colors.

    He faced and won against many of the names who’ve already heard their names called in this simulation.

    39) Las Vegas Raiders

    Princely Umanmielen, EDGE, Ole Miss

    Princely Umanmielen is a 50 Cent and Eminem collaboration. We’ve been patiently waiting for him to explode for the better part of three years, and he finally flipped the switch late in his collegiate career.

    Umanmielen always had the bend and explosiveness to be a problem, but his pass rush plan always lacked. However, the well-proportioned pass rusher seemed to finally get into a groove late in college, and pairing him with Crosby could lead to beautiful results in Las Vegas if he develops further.

    40) New Orleans Saints

    Benjamin Morrison, CB, Notre Dame

    Paulson Adebo played well for New Orleans but will be a free agent after suffering a season-ending injury in 2024. It makes sense for a team deep in the red on their ledger to let him walk.

    Morrison suffered his own season-ending injury in 2024, but the Notre Dame defender is one of the most well-coached cornerbacks in the class. His leggy frame allows him to maintain vertical carries and his advanced eyes allow him to smoothly mirror route runners despite not possessing elite fluidity.

    So… he’s relatively similar to Adebo.

    41) Chicago Bears

    Wyatt Milum, OG, West Virginia

    Milum is one of the few players in college football this season to actually get the better of Abdul Carter.

    The West Virginia tackle will be a guard at the next level, but his consistency in pass protection will be a beautiful sight for a team with a quarterback lacking an internal clock. However, Milum also possesses a mean streak that devastates second-level defenders in the run game, and his intelligence puts him in the right spots without possessing elite-level natural burst.

    42) Chicago Bears

    Tai Felton, WR, Maryland

    Unlike Milum, Felton has an elite-level burst. The leggy Terrapin receiver is one of the quietest killers in the draft. Despite his burner traits, only San Diego State WR Nick Nash commanded more targets in 2024.

    Felton was a true three-level threat for Maryland who was manufactured touches while also flashing high-level fluidity as a route runner. In fact, Felton is very much what draftniks thought Troy Franklin was coming out of Oregon a season ago.

    43) San Francisco 49ers

    Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State

    Playing cornerback well is as much about being a schematic fit as it is being an outrageous talent. Only the elite are completely safe from looking like a fish out of water in diverse defensive structures.

    Thomas best fits a role that lets him be an athlete. Luckily, Kyle Shanahan’s (yes, his defense) should allow Thomas to do just that by working in a lot of Cover 1 and Cover 3 while avoiding too much confusing processing.

    44) Dallas Cowboys

    Jack Sawyer, EDGE, Ohio State

    He’s not T.J. Watt or anything close, but they do share a commonality. Both guys seem to outperform their given athletic skill set by possessing the “better to be lucky than good” trait.

    In other words, they somehow concoct their own luck. Both players simply have a knack for getting their hands on the football. Sawyer is a short-armed rusher who wins primarily through the chest, but he somehow finds a way to consistently get the better of his opponent, even if it looks uglier than his contemporaries.

    With Micah Parsons on the other side, he just needs to be Robin.

    45) Indianapolis Colts

    Harold Fannin Jr., TE, Bowling Green

    Fannin isn’t a bad consolation prize for missing out on the Tyler Warren sweepstakes. The Deebo Samuel of tight ends might be “undersized” at 230 pounds, but nobody told him that. Fannin made Oregon and Penn State defenders look like MAC defenders for eight quarters.

    He’s not incredibly fluid as a route runner but he is sudden, explosive, and utterly powerful in a rocked-up frame. He’s also manipulative with the ball in his hands while possessing the kind of contact balance you’d expect from a supercharged bowling ball.

    46) Atlanta Falcons

    Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan

    Grant is a bit enigmatic. He’s large and explosive but also somehow a bit underwhelming on tape relative to his perceived draft stock. He was less productive as a pass rusher this season despite playing alongside an alien and two other NFL pass rushers, and he was a flashier run defender more than he was consistent.

    47) Arizona Cardinals

    Tyleik Williams, DT, Ohio State

    There were none and have been no such inconsistencies with Williams over the past two seasons. Although Williams hasn’t developed into a true three-down threat, he is one of the most consistent run defenders we’ve seen over the past few cycles. He’s quick-witted, powerful, and energetic against the run while providing a bit as a pass rusher when he really pins his ears back.

    48) Miami Dolphins

    Gunnar Helm, TE, Texas

    Helm doesn’t have the same explosive potential as Mike McDaniel’s former tight end in San Francisco. However, Helm possesses the ability to be a quarterback’s best friend on third down while providing a positive impact as both a pass protector and a run blocker.

    It’s no secret that Miami wants to run the football. Helm’s addition aids that tremendously. It also allows Miami to run more 12 personnel groupings which could force more speed off the field defensively, leaving more operating space for Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle.

    49) Cincinnati Bengals

    Mason Taylor, TE, LSU

    Taylor was an underutilized part of the LSU passing attack. He’s a smooth operator with an outstanding understanding of space along the sideline, and his hands are very consistent. He’s well-proportioned and although he must still improve as a run blocker and pass protector, arguably no tight end in the class battles in the trenches the way Taylor did for the Tigers.

    50) Seattle Seahawks

    Cameron Williams, OT, Texas

    Williams probably needed to go back to school and see more snaps. What early on looked like a “stonks” trajectory turned into a crypto crash late in the season. Williams lost form late, culminating in a difficult performance against Ohio State in the playoffs.

    However, the 330-pound right tackle has all the potential in the world, although there’s a chance that potential could be better suited for an interior starting or swing tackle role with Seattle immediately.

    51) Denver Broncos

    Kaleb Johnson, RB, Iowa

    Sean Payton wasn’t shy about wanting some more production from his running backs in 2025, and what better way to ensure that than taking the smoothest zone runner we’ve seen over the past few draft cycles.

    Despite not possessing the same explosive potential of his contemporaries in the class, Johnson produced more 15-plus-yard runs than anyone in college football not named Jeanty or Central Florida’s RJ Harvey. His vision is outrageous and his feet are like electric torque vectors with a mind of their own that consistently point him in the perfect direction to maximize his return.

    52) Pittsburgh Steelers

    Isaiah Bond, WR, Texas

    This selection feels inevitable.

    No team in the NFL gravitates toward outcast wide receivers the way Mike Tomlin and the Steelers do. From Antonio Brown to JuJu Smith-Schuster to James Washington to Diontae Johnson to Chase Claypool to George Pickens, it’s almost a guarantee the Steelers draft a talented but somehow troubled pass catcher inside the top 100.

    Bond is the most natural separator in the class. He possesses unbelievable quickness, fluidity, and explosiveness. At times at Alabama and early with Texas it looked like he could be a top pick. He ran detailed routes that snapped off some of the best cornerbacks in the country.

    But things fell apart at Texas in more ways than one and he fell into obscurity within that offense. Can the Steelers extract his talent while minimizing the distractions?

    53) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    Grey Zabel, OG North Dakota State

    Maryland does crabcakes and football. Talented FCS and Division II blockers get drafted by the Buccaneers and become consistent starters. That’s just what Jason Licht does.

    Zabel has a big opportunity in Mobile to showcase his skill against the best players in the country. His tape was somewhat underwhelming in the eyes of this analyst personally, but a strong week at the Senior Bowl could quell some of the dominance concerns that lacked on tape for a small-school prospect.

    54) Green Bay Packers

    Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina

    The Packers added Josh Jacobs to the roster for some physical injection. Quadzilla is an unrestricted free agent, and Hampton is the 2025 NFL Draft class’s resident bowling ball running back.

    You absolutely do not want to be the first guy to contact Hampton when he accelerates through a hole. His North-South burst is eye-popping, which is exactly what happens to linebackers when they meet him in the hole. Add in a bit of wiggle, some hilariously physical pass pro reps, and some impressive receiving ability out of the backfield and Hampton could become the dominant back in Green Bay sooner rather than later.

    55) Los Angeles Chargers

    TreVeyon Henderson, RB, Ohio State

    Jim Harbaugh saw how special Henderson was playing on the opposite sideline from him at Michigan early in Henderson’s college career. That outrageous explosiveness returned in 2024. He also might be the best pass protector in the past half-decade to come from the collegiate ranks for the position, and the Texas game proved he’s devastating with the ball in his hands as a pass catcher.

    56) Buffalo Bills

    Andrew Mukuba, S, Texas

    Mukuba helped his stock by transferring to Texas and playing more of a back-end safety role for the longhorns. The lean safety plays like Dax Hill did at Michigan. He’s a heat-seeking undersized missile. Mukuba can also mirror and match from the slot while possessing the quick trigger of a center fielder and the route recognition to bait quarterbacks as a buzz defender.

    57) Carolina Panthers

    Trey Amos, CB, Ole Miss

    Amos is a talented-but-inconsistent cornerback who could end up hearing his name called on Day 1. Getting him late in the second round would be a nice snag for the Panthers, who desperately need some help on the outside. His frame and athleticism suggest he could be a longtime starter, but he must iron out his eye discipline first.

    58) Houston Texans

    Xavier Restrepo, WR, Miami (FL)

    Injuries piled onto the Texans’ WR corps in 2024, and although Tank Dell is an undersized player, he played most of his snaps on the outside for Houston. Restrepo is also “undersized,” but at 190 pounds and with the heart of a lion, the Hurricanes’ WR thrives on physicality as a blocker and pass catcher.

    His shifty and manipulative route running will make him a dangerous third-down weapon, but he was also a downfield playmaker for Miami. His ability to freestyle when Ward was running around in the backfield makes him a quarterback’s best friend when the pocket collapses, and he adds value as a blocker in the run game.

    59) Baltimore Ravens

    Maxwell Hairston, CB, Kentucky

    Hairston might have the most impressive mirroring skills in the class. However, not unlike Amos or Thomas, Hairston is best served in a defensive scheme that allows him to be a reactionary athlete, which could make his learning curve in the Baltimore defense somewhat steep.

    If he develops mentally he could be one of the stickiest cover corners in the game.

    60) Washington Commanders

    Dorian Strong, CB, Virginia Tech

    Strong is a perfect Quinn cornerback. He’s comfortable in off man and is a wonderful Cover 3 boundary cornerback. He has a knack for sliding around pass-catchers on in-breaking routes to break up passes and he consistently maintains over-the-top leverage, making him a safe player on the boundary.

    61) Buffalo Bills

    Tory Horton, WR, Colorado State

    Horton was a target magnet at Colorado State for years. He’s long-legged with impressive brakes and a penchant for separating at the intermediate levels of the field. Although there appears to be a stable of weapons serviceable enough in Buffalo, their roster is well-rounded enough to take a bit of a luxury here late in Round 2.

    62) Philadelphia Eagles

    Emery Jones, OT, LSU

    The Eagles always value trench play and are never afraid of drafting a year ahead in the trenches. Jones needs a year to develop whether it be as a right tackle or as a guard, and the Eagles iron-clad roster allows for that freedom.

    63) Kansas City Chiefs

    Deone Walker, DT, Kentucky

    Walker is enigmatic. The 340-pound nose tackle plays more like a 290-pound gap shooter than a gap plugger. He has an arsenal of pass-rush moves and is hard to move, but he would rather use his energy as a pass rusher than as a run defender. If he can work on his conditioning he could be a devastating complement to Chris Jones on the Kansas City interior.

    64) Detroit Lions

    Denzel Burke, CB, Ohio State

    Aside from a nightmare-inducing first matchup against the Oregon Ducks, Burke has played well over the past two seasons for the Buckeyes. He’s fluid and intelligent but must hone in on the consistency of his ability to process the picture in front of him and not get his hands caught in the cookie jar.

    Round 3 | 65) New York Giants

    Jalen Milroe, QB, Alabama

    After looking like a potential QB1 midway through the CFB season Milroe’s confidence, accuracy, and overall play drove off a cliff in the second half. However, few players in college football were more dangerous with the ball in their hands, and Milroe should at least see the field in set offensive packages in 2025 as he develops as a quarterback while fixing some mechanical tightness in his throwing motion.

    If it doesn’t work out, he has the frame density, explosiveness, and vision to potentially be one of the most dangerous running backs in the league. But this is a talent that needs to fail into that role.

    66) Kansas City Chiefs

    JT Tuimoloau, EDGE, Ohio State

    Tuimoloau is a jack-of-all player with an impressive frame and explosiveness while underwhelming as a pass rusher. He should be a steady hand on the outside as an edge setter and his explosiveness and length occasionally allows him to win through the chest.

    67) Cleveland Browns

    Aireontae Ersery, OT, Minnesota

    Ersery flashed starter-level traits at left tackle in 2024, but mentally and technically must show drastic improvements before protecting the blind side as an NFL starter.

    68) New England Patriots

    Shemar Turner, DT, Texas A&M

    Turner possesses alignment versatility. He played on the edge at Texas A&M in 2023 before sliding inside this season, and his best role might be as a base 5-technique.

    69) Jacksonville Jaguars

    Tate Ratledge, OG, Georgia

    Although Ratledge would slide to the right side from the left in the Jacksonville offense, the Georgia guard is the only true interior option available. Although the Georgia tackles were a consistent problem for the Bulldogs offense in 2024, Ratledge maintained a high level of play on the interior.

    70) Las Vegas Raiders

    Jayden Higgins, WR, Iowa State

    Look at the Raiders depth chart.

    71) Las Vegas Raiders

    Tez Johnson, WR, Oregon

    Higgins brings the thunder and Johnson brings the flash to what should (eventually) be a high-flying passing attack with Ward under center in the future. Higgins is big but fluid, and Johnson is as quick as anybody in the draft class, although his frame makes his jump to the league a bit difficult, considering we haven’t seen too many receivers with his frame find consistent success in recent times.

    72) Chicago Bears

    Mike Green, EDGE, Marshall

    There is a very good chance that Green is about 30-40 picks too low in this January mock draft. The Marshall edge might be the third-most naturally gifted pass rusher in the class. However, he also lacks the frame density and raw power of a three-down player at this point, which leads one to believe he’ll have a rotational role early on.

    73) Carolina Panthers

    Donovan Ezeiruaku, EDGE, Boston College

    No player in the class has more weapons in their pass-rush arsenal. Ezeiruaku could stand to sell a few of those weapons and become a master of a just a few of them. The sawed-off rusher’s go-to move is an arm over, which is interesting considering his lack of height. However, he also splashes in the run game with consistency.

    74) New Orleans Saints

    Kevin Winston Jr., S, Penn State

    Winston has a ton of potential. He’s endlessly long for a defensive back and he might be the most consistent tackler in the class. The rub is that playing safety is more about what’s going on above the shoulders than below, and Winston’s lack of time on task leaves a lot to be desired from a processing perspective.

    75) San Francisco 49ers

    Alfred Collins, DT, Texas

    Collins is the best run defender in the class, and it’s not particularly close. Collins also brings absolutely nothing as a pass rusher, and with his arm length, violence, and athleticism, that makes him the most confusing player in the class.

    76) Dallas Cowboys

    Cam Skattebo, RB, Arizona State

    All 32 NFL franchises should want Skattebo on their roster after the Texas game. He almost single-handedly won Arizona State that football game while struggling to remain upright. Skattebo lacks the high-end burst of a consistent big-play creator, but he’s got smooth hands and is incredibly difficult to wrangle on first attempt.

    77) New England Patriots

    Savion Williams, WR, TCU

    See: Pick 70

    Williams didn’t get to really show everything he could do as a receiver for TCU in 2024 because that offense was a mess, but at 6-foot-5 and 225 pounds he is one of the most unique athletes in the class.

    78) Arizona Cardinals

    Jalen Royals, WR, Utah State

    Watching the Utah State offense in 2024 will make the most sane individual put their head through drywall. Royals was subjected to five-yard routes and manufactured screens almost exclusively this season, but he showed enough in 2023 to command Day 2 attention as a three-level threat.

    79) Washington Commanders

    Jaylen Reed, S, Penn State

    Quinn’s obsession with safeties knows no bounds. Jeremy Chinn is a free agent and Reed’s usage at Penn State suggests he could be used similarly in Washington as a player with the athleticism to live on the back end but with the frame and physicality to survive in the box.

    80) Indianapolis Colts

    Ajani Cornelius, OT, Oregon

    Cornerlius is a good player hampered by average overall athletic traits. While lacking athleticism is rarely on the Colts draft bingo card, Cornelius is technical enough to slide inside to right guard for the Colts as a rookie.

    81) Cincinnati Bengals

    Kyle Kennard, EDGE, South Carolina

    Cincinnati has to give a bit contractually. Maybe the Keep Sam Hubbard if they let Higgins walk, but Kennard offers them a skill set that they don’t posses currently behind Trey Hendrickson. He should immediately be a weapon on obvious passing downs for whoever is calling the Bengals defense in 2025.

    82) Seattle Seahawks

    Chase Lundt, OT, UConn

    Abraham Lucas is entering the final year of his rookie deal and has struggled to stay on the field during his time in Seattle.

    83) Pittsburgh Steelers

    Quinshon Judkins, RB, Ohio State

    Judkins plays a similar game to Hampton but in a smaller package with less natural contact balance and worse ankle flexibility. Many believed he could be one of the best backs in the class, but in truth he’s always been outclassed by Henderson on his own team.

    Still, his battering-ram style fits the culture in Pittsburgh, and if you need four yards, he can get you four yards!

    84) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    T.J. Sanders, DT, South Carolina

    Although Stewart can play the Logal Hall role if needed, Sanders could be the true Hall replacement in the long term. Sanders needs further development to become a consistent three-down player, but he flashes some impressive hands and explosiveness as a pass rusher.

    85) Denver Broncos

    Jared Ivey, EDGE, Ole Miss

    Ivey is big and stiff on the outside but he’s got bricks for hands and an arsenal of rushing moves to win tightly off the shoulder of offensive tackles. He will also be an impressive run defender at the NFL level.

    86) Los Angeles Chargers

    Ty Hamilton, DT, Ohio State

    Hamilton lives in the shadow of three other highly-touted Buckeyes defenders, but all the buzz surrounding that defense suggests he should be a top-100 pick in April.

    87) Green Bay Packers

    Zy Alexander, CB, LSU

    Sometimes there is a perfect player-team fit in the mid rounds that you can’t take your eyes off of, and Alexander to the Packers to create and Alexander-squared cornerback duo feels perfect even without the name symmetry.

    88) Jacksonville Jaguars

    Jordan Phillips, DT Maryland

    It was a shock to see Phillips declare as a redshirt sophomore considering he had been anonymous before that point. However, this young man is a built-in-a-lab athlete as a nose tackle that’s simply waiting to be molded into an absolute menace to opposing interior blockers.

    89) Houston Texans

    Devin Neal, RB, Kansas

    Neal’s game would suggest he’s a 190-pound scatback. No, he’s a 215-pound wide zone savant. The only thing keeping him from a higher selection is the Jayhwak’s wide-open offense that often allowed Neal not to have to think too hard about his landmarks.

    90) Los Angeles Rams

    Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama

    Lawson entered the year neck-and-neck with Campbell after summer scouting. However, inconsistent finishing and an overall lack of physical development kept him later in the Day 2 range while his running mate goes in Round 1. However, Lawson is a heady coverage defender and an impressive interior blitzer.

    91) New Orleans Saints

    Barrett Carter, LB, Clemson

    Carter is a really good linebacker stuck in a 5-foot-11 frame that’s simply unable to consistently process information in front of him because he literally can’t always see what’s happening in the backfield. He’s explosive and has impressive length and presence on the edge, so an early SAM role could be in the cards.

    92) Baltimore Ravens

    Ashton Gillotte, EDGE, Louisville

    Landon Jackson but significantly less explosive. Gillotte impresses with bend and hand fighting, but his lack of athleticism cuts his ceiling like a low-rider.

    93) Cleveland Browns

    Raheim Sanders, RB, South Carolina

    Sanders is another back in a class filled with three-down players. He’s lost some juice since his “Rocket” days at Arkansas, but he’s a legitimate route-running threat on the outside with soft hands. Sanders also has impressive vision and contact balance.

    94) Philadelphia Eagles

    Danny Stutsman, LB, Oklahoma

    Stutsman is an old-school, downhill glass eater. Some linebackers have a knack for finding a crease to exploit and make plays behind the line of scrimmage, and Stutsman is that guy. He’s also an intelligent, but physically underwhelming coverage defender.

    95) Kansas City Chiefs

    Elijah Arroyo, TE, Miami (FL)

    Arroyo didn’t produce much volume in the Miami offense but he consistently produced plays downfield in the passing game for the Hurricanes. He’s a good athlete with decent size who could develop into a starter when Travis Kelce hangs up the cleats.

    96) New York Jets

    Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State

    Just have Sauce Gardner show Igbinosun how to grab a hold of some jersey without getting penalized and the Jets secondary will be cooking with a blow torch.

    97) Minnesota Vikings

    DJ Giddens, RB, Kansas State

    Giddens doesn’t produce the same three-down versatility of his contemporaries in the class, but he might be one of the most gifted natural runners among them. Johnson, Neal, and Giddens all specialize in maximizing outside zone. Although KOC mixes up his run game, Giddens zone running is a more nuanced endeavor.

    98) Miami Dolphins

    Smael Mondon Jr., LB, Georgia

    Mondon could be what David Long was in Tennessee. Long was a downhill gap plugger who consistently made plays at the line of scrimmage, and Mondon has the same physicality, explosiveness, and ability to disrupt.

    Learning to cover or be more of a read-and-react player could be a tougher task for the staff.

    99) San Francisco 49ers

    Blake Miller, OT, Clemson

    Miller is as technically sound and springy as any of the pass protectors in the class. The 49ers have needed an upgrade at right tackle for a long time, and if Miller can come along a bit physically while becoming more of a presence in the run game he could eventually be that guy in San Francisco.

    100) Los Angeles Rams

    Charles Grant, OT, William & Mary

    Physical development will also be the name of the gam for Grant, who needs time, nutrition, and an NFL weight room to get the meat on him to survive the taxing nature of playing tackle in the NFL.

    Round 4

    101) Tennessee Titans
    Antwane Wells Jr., WR, Ole Miss

    102) Cleveland Browns
    Corey Kiner, RB, Cincinnati

    103) New York Giants
    Kalel Mullings, RB, Michigan

    104) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Jah Joyner, EDGE, Minnesota

    105) New England Patriots
    Josaiah Stewart, EDGE, Michigan

    106) New York Jets
    Quinn Ewers, QB, Texas

    107) Las Vegas Raiders
    Ollie Gordon II, RB, Oklahoma State

    108) Carolina Panthers
    Jordan Hancock, CB, Ohio State

    109) New Orleans Saints
    Jaxson Dart, QB, Ole Miss

    110) Buffalo Bills
    Kaden Prather, WR, Maryland

    111) San Francisco 49ers
    Terrance Ferguson, TE, Oregon

    112) Carolina Panthers
    Jake Briningstool, TE, Clemson

    113) Arizona Cardinals
    Ricky White, WR, UNLV

    114) Miami Dolphins
    Rod Moore, S, Michigan

    115) Indianapolis Colts
    Jake Majors, OC, Texas

    116) Atlanta Falcons
    Jabbar Muhammad, CB, Oregon

    117) Cincinnati Bengals
    Cobee Bryant, CB, Kansas

    118) Tennessee Titans
    Davin Vann, DT, NC State

    119) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Ja’Corey Brooks, WR, Louisville

    120) Denver Broncos
    Jaydon Blue, RB, Texas

    121) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Quincy Riley, CB, Louisville

    122) Green Bay Packers
    Pat Bryant, WR, Illinois

    123) Los Angeles Chargers
    Sebastian Castro, S, Iowa

    124) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Anthony Belton, OT, NC State

    125) Los Angeles Rams
    Oronde Gadsden II, WR, Syracuse

    126) Houston Texans
    Jack Bech, WR, TCU

    127) Baltimore Ravens
    Jacob Parrish, CB, Kansas State

    128) New Orleans Saints
    Tyler Baron, EDGE, Miami (FL)

    129) Buffalo Bills
    Chris Paul Jr., LB, Ole Miss

    130) Detroit Lions
    Lander Barton, LB, Utah

    131) Tennessee Titans
    Luke Lachey, TE, Iowa

    132) Philadelphia Eagles
    Kyren Lacy, WR, LSU

    133) New York Giants
    Malachi Moore, S, Alabama

    134) Miami Dolphins
    Dillon Gabriel, QB, Oregon

    135) Baltimore Ravens
    Will Howard, QB, Ohio State

    136) Seattle Seahawks
    Jamon Dumas-Johnson, LB, Kentucky

    137) San Francisco 49ers
    Samuel Brown, WR, Miami (FL)

    138) San Francisco 49ers
    Omarr Norman-Lott, DT, Tennessee

    Round 5

    139) Minnesota Vikings
    J.J. Pegues, DT, Ole Miss

    140) Carolina Panthers
    Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois

    141) Tennessee Titans
    Lathan Ransom, S, Ohio State

    142) New England Patriots
    Reuben Fatheree II, OT, Texas A&M

    143) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Dylan Sampson, RB, Tennessee

    144) Las Vegas Raiders
    Phil Mafah, RB, Clemson

    145) New York Jets
    Jaylin Noel, WR, Iowa State

    146) Washington Commanders
    Mitchell Evans, TE, Notre Dame

    147) Chicago Bears
    Damien Martinez, RB, Miami (FL)

    148) Carolina Panthers
    Joshua Farmer, DT, Florida State

    149) Dallas Cowboys
    Bhayshul Tuten, RB, Virginia Tech

    150) Miami Dolphins
    Jonas Sanker, S, Virginia

    151) Indianapolis Colts
    RJ Oben, EDGE, Notre Dame

    152) Arizona Cardinals
    Jason Marshall Jr., CB, Florida

    153) Cincinnati Bengals
    Howard Cross, DT, Notre Dame

    154) New York Giants
    Nickolas Martin, LB, Oklahoma State

    155) Miami Dolphins
    Tonka Hemingway, DT, South Carolina

    156) New York Jets
    Jo’Quavious Marks, RB, USC

    157) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Carson Schwesinger, LB, UCLA

    158) Los Angeles Chargers
    Xavier Truss, OG, Georgia

    159) Green Bay Packers
    Jay Higgins, LB, Iowa

    160) Minnesota Vikings
    Kurtis Rourke, QB, Indiana

    161) Philadelphia Eagles
    Donovan Edwards, RB, Michigan

    162) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Riley Leonard, QB, Notre Dame

    163) Philadelphia Eagles
    Seth McLaughlin, OC, Ohio State

    164) Carolina Panthers
    Jermari Harris, CB, Iowa

    165) Houston Texans
    Jaylon Smith, CB, USC

    166) Arizona Cardinals
    Fadil Diggs, EDGE, Syracuse

    167) Kansas City Chiefs
    Elijhah Badger, WR, Florida

    168) Cleveland Browns
    Jeffrey Bassa, LB, Oregon

    169) Dallas Cowboys
    Thaddeus Dixon, CB, Washington

    170) Buffalo Bills
    Luke Kandra, OG, Cincinnati

    171) Dallas Cowboys
    Rhylie Mills, DT, Notre Dame

    172) Seattle Seahawks
    Bradyn Swinson, EDGE, LSU

    173) Buffalo Bills
    Johnny Walker, EDGE, Missouri

    174) Dallas Cowboys
    Theo Wease Jr., WR, Missouri

    175) Baltimore Ravens
    Antwuan Powell-Ryland, EDGE, Virginia Tech

    176) Buffalo Bills
    Tahveon Nicholson, CB, Louisville

    Round 6

    177) Tennessee Titans
    Jordan Burch, EDGE, Oregon

    178) Buffalo Bills
    Joshua Gray, OG, Oregon State

    179) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Kyle McCord, QB, Syracuse

    180) Los Angeles Chargers
    Thor Griffith, DT, Louisville

    181) New York Jets
    Jestin Jacobs, LB, Oregon

    182) Las Vegas Raiders
    Billy Bowman, S, Oklahoma

    183) Seattle Seahawks
    Yahya Black, DT, Iowa

    184) Baltimore Ravens
    Kain Medrano, LB, UCLA

    185) New Orleans Saints
    Tahj Brooks, RB, Texas Tech

    186) San Francisco 49ers
    Max Brosmer, QB, Minnesota

    187) Dallas Cowboys
    Hudson Clark, S, Arkansas

    188) Indianapolis Colts
    Kyle Monangai, RB, Rutgers

    189) Los Angeles Rams
    Darien Porter, CB, Iowa State

    190) Denver Broncos
    Jordan Oladokun, CB, Bowling Green

    191) Cleveland Browns
    Justin Walley, CB, Minnesota

    192) Cincinnati Bengals
    Nathan Carter, RB, Michigan State

    193) Seattle Seahawks
    Gavin Bartholomew, TE, Pittsburgh

    194) Washington Commanders
    Jack Nelson, OT, Wisconsin

    195) Detroit Lions
    Campbell Barrington, OT, Baylor

    196) Denver Broncos
    Josh Priebe, OG, Michigan

    197) Green Bay Packers
    Marcus Wehr, OG, Montana State

    198) Atlanta Falcons
    Nick Nash, WR, San Jose State

    199) Cleveland Browns
    Elijah Robert, DT, SMU

    200) Los Angeles Rams
    Arian Smith, WR, Georgia

    201) Chicago Bears
    Jamoi Mayes, WR, Cincinnati

    202) Baltimore Ravens
    Will Sheppard, WR, Colorado

    203) Washington Commanders
    Jimmy Horn Jr., WR, Colorado

    204) Buffalo Bills
    Spencer Brown, OT, Oklahoma

    205) Denver Broncos
    Izavion Miller, OT, Auburn

    206) New York Jets
    Jacob Gideon, OC, Western Michigan

    207) Cleveland Browns
    Malik Verdon, S, Iowa State

    208) Baltimore Ravens
    Kamren Fabiculanan, S, Washington

    209) Los Angeles Chargers
    Fentrell Cypress III, CB, Florida State

    210) Dallas Cowboys
    Jordan Clark, CB, Notre Dame

    211) Seattle Seahawks
    Woodi Washington, CB, Oklahoma

    212) Baltimore Ravens
    Jarquez Hunter, RB, Auburn

    213) Las Vegas Raiders
    Kameryn Alexander, CB, Oregon

    214) Los Angeles Chargers
    Andrew Armstrong, WR, Arkansas

    215) Cleveland Browns
    Joey Slackman, DT, Florida

    Round 7

    216) Cleveland Browns
    Kobe King, LB, Penn State

    217) Las Vegas Raiders
    Power Echols, LB, North Carolina

    218) New England Patriots
    Shemar James, LB, Florida

    219) Los Angeles Chargers
    Cody Lindenberg, LB, Minnesota

    220) New York Giants
    Upton Stout, CB, Western Kentucky

    221) New England Patriots
    Tommi Hill, TE, Nebraska

    222) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Corey Thornton, CB, Louisville

    223) Las Vegas Raiders
    Patrick Jenkins, DT, Tulane

    224) Arizona Cardinals
    LeQuint Allen, RB, Syracuse

    225) San Francisco 49ers
    Dante Trader Jr., S, Maryland

    226) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Hunter Wohler, S, Wisconsin

    227) Miami Dolphins
    Barryn Sorrell, EDGE, Texas

    228) Carolina Panthers
    Gus Hartwig, OC, Purdue

    229) Detroit Lions
    DJ Wingfield, OG, Purdue

    230) Washington Commanders
    Jahvaree Ritzie, DT, North Carolina

    231) Kansas City Chiefs
    Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, DT, Georgia

    232) Miami Dolphins
    Kaimon Rucker, EDGE, North Carolina

    233) Indianapolis Colts
    Tim Smith, DT, Alabama

    234) Chicago Bears
    Jamaree Caldwell, DT, Oregon

    235) Seattle Seahawks
    Montorie Foster, WR, Michigan State

    236) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Vernon Broughton, DT, Texas

    237) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Cam Jackson, DT, Florida

    238) Green Bay Packers
    CJ West, DT, Indiana

    239) New England Patriots
    Seth Coleman, EDGE, Illinois

    240) Tennessee Titans
    Maurice Westmoreland, EDGE, UTEP

    241) Chicago Bears
    Kendall Bohler, CB, Florida A&M

    242) Houston Texans
    Nazir Stackhouse, DT, Georgia

    243) Atlanta Falcons
    Brandon Adams, CB, UCF

    244) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Travis Martin, S, Langston

    245) Baltimore Ravens
    Jalen Rivers, OT, Miami

    246) New York Giants
    Holden Willis, TE, Middle Tennessee

    247) New Orleans Saints
    Joey Corcoran, WR, New Hampshire

    248) Dallas Cowboys
    Steven McBride, WR, Hawaii

    249) Detroit Lions
    Ja’Quinden Jackson, RB, Arkansas

    250) Green Bay Packers
    Akili Arnold, S, USC

    251) New Orleans Saints
    Kobe Savage, S, Oregon

    252) Miami Dolphins
    Jhari Patterson, WR, East Carolina

    253) Los Angeles Chargers
    J.J. Weaver, EDGE, Kentucky

    254) New Orleans Saints
    Marcus Yarns, RB, Delaware

    255) San Francisco 49ers
    Josh Kelly, WR, Texas Tech

    256) Cleveland Browns
    C.J. Dippre, TE, Alabama

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