The 2025 NFL Draft cycle is well underway, and it’s never been a better time for a 2025 NFL Mock Draft. With the Senior Bowl and the Shrine Bowl in the rearview mirror, the picture is becoming clearer and clearer.
Today, I dusted off the scouting jacket to compile a seven-round 2025 NFL Mock Draft for PFN, assessing the class as it stands today, with the NFL Combine coming into focus.
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1) Tennessee Titans
Cameron Ward, QB, Miami (FL)
The frontrunners for QB1 in the 2025 NFL Draft seem to be Miami’s Cameron Ward and Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders. Both have their question marks as prospects. If you’re going to separate one from the other, use creative ability as the deciding factor.
Ward still has room to cut down on the questionable “arm arrogance” throws at times, but he improved his discipline as a distributor in 2024. And when you factor in his creative instincts and arm elasticity, he’s one of the more exciting prospects in recent memory.
2) Cleveland Browns
Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado
If the Browns weren’t already aware, Myles Garrett’s trade request was the strongest indication they could get: Kevin Stefanski and Andrew Berry have to cut loose from the Deshaun Watson plan and re-invest at QB to start anew.
Shedeur Sanders is the next man up in the 2025 NFL Draft QB class, and he has some QB1 buzz. He’s not quite the playmaker that Ward is, but Sanders thrives pre-snap, he’s calm and collected in the pocket, his arm is strong, and his accuracy is top-shelf at its peak.
3) New York Giants
Mason Graham, DT, Michigan
Dexter Lawrence is as good as they come, but they can’t do it alone. With the top QBs off the board, the Giants add Mason Graham alongside Lawrence, instantly acquiring one of the scariest DT tandems in the league. Graham is an instant impact contributor.
4) New England Patriots
Travis Hunter, CB/WR, Colorado
The golden question is which position Travis Hunter will play in the NFL. He’s a near blue-chip prospect on my board at both wide receiver and cornerback. I think his uncommon three-level threat profile would do Drake Maye wonders at WR.
5) Jacksonville Jaguars
Will Campbell, OT, LSU
Will Campbell isn’t your typical top-ten pick at the tackle position. He doesn’t have great length but compensates with high-level athleticism, balance, patience, anchor strength, and finishing ability in both phases. He’s Trevor Lawrence’s new blindside bouncer.
6) Las Vegas Raiders
Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise State
That’s right. Running backs matter again. And a running back like Ashton Jeanty can be an offense’s most valuable player. Jeanty is a special RB talent, with a near-generational evasion fusion that combines elusiveness, contact balance, vision, and relentlessness.
7) New York Jets
Abdul Carter, EDGE, Penn State
Abdul Carter’s transition to EDGE brought out his pure talent, as the former five-star recruit racked up 12 sacks and 24 tackles for loss in 2024. It sounds cheap to say Micah Parsons is the ceiling, but Carter truly has the raw talent and the disposition to live up to that.
8) Carolina Panthers
Tetairoa McMillan, WR, Arizona
Bryce Young won back the Panthers’ affection late in the 2024 season. Now, in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, Dan Morgan and Dave Canales give Young his new WR1 in Tetairoa McMillan: A size-athleticism rarity with high-level box-out and tracking talents.
9) New Orleans Saints
Mykel Williams, EDGE, Georgia
The Saints need any kind of talent infusion on the edge, with Cameron Jordan entering the twilight of his career. At around 6’5″, 265 pounds, Mykel Williams has the elite mix of explosiveness, hip fluidity, power capacity, and urgency to deliver.
10) Chicago Bears
Kelvin Banks Jr., OT, Texas
With potential needs looming at left tackle and both guard spots, the Bears can hedge for movement by taking Kelvin Banks Jr. Banks could feasibly project inside with his frame and physicality. Still, in 2024, he improved his matching technique on an island.
11) San Francisco 49ers
Armand Membou, OT, Missouri
A dramatic riser of the 2024 college football campaign, Armand Membou has massive potential at both tackle and guard for the 49ers. He’s low to the ground, yet impossibly long. He’s an elite athlete. He’s unyielding with his physicality, and he’s only trending up.
12) Dallas Cowboys
Nic Scourton, EDGE, Texas A&M
The Dallas Cowboys feel like they’re in limbo as a franchise. But regardless of their standing, it’s never a bad idea to pick a potential blue-chip prospect at a high-value position. Nic Scourton provides that at EDGE with his size, power, and fluidity.
13) Miami Dolphins
Tyler Booker, OG, Alabama
The Dolphins neglected their interior offensive line in 2024, and it came back to haunt them. That happens no longer. In Tyler Booker, they get a 6’5″, 350-pound giant who inspires awe with his lateral matching, recovery ability, and piledriving power.
14) Indianapolis Colts
Malaki Starks, S, Georgia
Lou Anarumo brings a scheme that values high-quality safety talent to Indianapolis. Malaki Starks is a perfect fit because he can play single-high, two-high, or man the slot against larger targets. His amalgamation of tools gives him a blue-chip upside.
15) Atlanta Falcons
Will Johnson, CB, Michigan
In 2024, the Falcons’ defense was torn apart by poor scheming, pass-rush, and ephemeral pass coverage. Will Johnson at least solves one of those issues, situating himself as a scheme-versatile playmaker opposite A.J. Terrell.
16) Arizona Cardinals
James Pearce Jr., EDGE, Tennessee
The 2024 season wasn’t necessarily a step forward for James Pearce Jr., but his raw tools are still rare and exciting. His long-track explosiveness is some of the best in the class, and if he can keep building his frame, he can be an impact starter for Jonathan Gannon.
17) Cincinnati Bengals
Tyler Warren, TE, Penn State
Tyler Warren proved himself to be in a class of his own at the tight end position in 2024. His versatility and blocking utility alone will win over coaches, but he also has an incredible clutch gene that’ll make him an instant go-to target for Joe Burrow.
18) Seattle Seahawks
Cameron Williams, OT, Texas
The Seahawks might be unable to bank on Abraham Lucas’ availability long-term. If they seek a successor at right tackle, Cameron Williams is a worthwhile investment with his size-defying short-area athleticism and foot speed at 6’5″, 335 pounds.
19) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Jalon Walker, EDGE, Georgia
Jalon Walker has some off-ball experience, but he best projects as a wide-alignment pass rusher in the NFL, and Tampa Bay presents a perfect fit. With his natural leverage, length, and burst, Walker’s speed-to-power can be devastating for tackles.
20) Denver Broncos
Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan
Sean Payton has said the Broncos need a “joker” on offense. Few fit that image better than Colston Loveland: A 6’5″, 245-pound tight end with size-defying athleticism, flexibility, and separation upside. Bo Nix would flourish with Loveland as a target over the middle.
21) Pittsburgh Steelers
Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State
At times, the Steelers’ offense stagnated without sufficient ancillary threats to George Pickens in 2024. Emeka Egbuka is the perfect utility WR for Pittsburgh: A movement-Z prototype who can separate against man and zone, generate RAC, and make tough plays.
22) Los Angeles Chargers
Tyleik Williams, DT, Ohio State
The Chargers’ defense performed admirably in 2024, but there’s still room to upgrade the trenches. At 6’3″, 320 pounds, Tyleik Williams has the size and sturdiness to play 0-tech and 1-tech, as well as the explosiveness and agility to rush from wider alignments.
23) Green Bay Packers
Luther Burden III, WR, Missouri
Luther Burden III’s 2024 campaign wasn’t quite as productive as expected, but he still has WR1 tools, and Josh Jacobs believes Green Bay still needs a WR1. Burden’s RAC framework emulates Packers greats of old, but he has truly elite three-level upside.
24) Minnesota Vikings
Quinshon Judkins, RB, Ohio State
Whether the Vikings roll with J.J. McCarthy or Sam Darnold in 2025, they need a workhorse running back to carry the load long-term. Quinshon Judkins can be the explosive, uber-physical carving knife the Vikings need to control the game’s pace.
25) Houston Texans
Jonah Savaiinaea, OL, Arizona
Profiling well at both tackle and guard, Jonah Savaiinaea is a savvy choice for the Texans in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft. He still needs to become more consistent with his timing, but his unique high-energy athleticism — at his size — grants him tantalizing potential.
26) Los Angeles Rams
Shavon Revel, CB, East Carolina
Even if Shavon Revel only comes back at 95% from his torn ACL, he’s still a 99th-percentile athlete and a 99th-percentile competitor. His physics-defying mix of length, speed, and fluidity makes him a matchup nightmare for receivers on the boundary.
27) Baltimore Ravens
Aireontae Ersery, OT, Minnesota
The Ravens need a tackle with size, length, power, and open-field athleticism to replace Ronnie Stanley Jr. if the veteran leaves as expected. Aireontae Ersery has all of those difficult-to-teach qualities, and his flashes of technical prowess are inspiring.
28) Detroit Lions
J.T. Tuimoloau, EDGE, Ohio State
J.T. Tuimoloau finally realized his full potential with the Buckeyes in 2024. Now, in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, he joins Aidan Hutchinson in Detroit as the Lions’ 6’4″, 270-pound power rusher. Together, Tuimoloau and Hutchinson can pinch the pocket and terrorize QBs.
29) Washington Commanders
Matthew Golden, WR, Texas
Jayden Daniels and Terry McLaurin present a grave threat to the NFC East in the years to come. Add Matthew Golden to the equation, and it’s all over. Golden, at 6’0″, 195 pounds, gives the Commanders a smooth vertical separator whose tracking skills fit perfectly.
30) Buffalo Bills
Nick Emmanwori, S, South Carolina
A freakish athlete at 6’3″, 227 pounds, Nick Emmanwori, has some of the highest upside at safety we’ve seen in years. He can play single-high and two-high, read and react in space, explode downhill and enforce, and take strides as a playmaker.
31) Philadelphia Eagles
Jihaad Campbell, OLB, Alabama
Jihaad Campbell has incredible upside alongside Zack Baun as an off-ball linebacker. Still, as his five sacks and 12 TFLs evidence, Campbell also has sky-high potential as a situational pass rusher at 6’3″, 244 pounds. He’s a Wild Card who can complete Vic Fangio’s defense.
32) Kansas City Chiefs
Walter Nolen, DT, Ole Miss
Walter Nolen’s Round 1 upside was apparent in the preseason. Then he went and racked up 6.5 sacks and 14 TFLs. At around 6’4″, 295 pounds, he’s the perfect Steve Spagnuolo lineman with his elite explosiveness and power profile.
Round 2 | 33) Cleveland Browns
Marcus Mbow, OT, Purdue
With the writing on the wall for Jedrick Wills Jr., Marcus Mbow enters the scene as an uber-athletic blocker with easy leverage acquisition skills and hand pop.
34) New York Giants
Jayden Higgins, WR, Iowa State
At 6’4″, 215 pounds, Jayden Higgins is the streamlined, reliable WR2 the New York Giants to fully free up Malik Nabers in the passing game.
35) Tennessee Titans
Emery Jones Jr., OT, LSU
Emery Jones Jr. can be a plug-and-play blocker at right tackle opposite JC Latham with his smooth pass sets, suffocating anchor, and physicality in both phases.
36) Jacksonville Jaguars
Jalen Royals, WR, Utah State
The Jaguars shouldn’t let money stop them from re-investing at wide receiver. Jalen Royals gives Jacksonville a type of all-around utility Gabe Davis lacks.
37) Las Vegas Raiders
Isaiah Bond, WR, Texas
Isaiah Bond gives Las Vegas a combined vertical and separation threat alongside Jakobi Meyers, and he plays bigger than his size would imply.
38) New England Patriots
Mike Green, EDGE, Marshall
Mike Green produced even against titans like Ohio State with his explosiveness, bend, and peak pass-rush arsenal. He’d be a godsend for Mike Vrabel.
39) Chicago Bears
Shemar Stewart, DL, Texas A&M
A true chess piece on the defensive line, Shemar Stewart has “dancing bear” agility to go along with ruthlessly heavy hands and overwhelming power output.
40) New Orleans Saints
Tai Felton, WR, Maryland
With long-term instability looming at WR for the Saints, Tai Felton gives New Orleans a venerable speed threat with RAC versatility.
41) Chicago Bears
Jared Wilson, OC, Georgia
Jared Wilson isn’t a top-50 overall prospect, but he’s a young, up-and-coming center with athleticism, anchor, and a low center of gravity.
42) New York Jets
Derrick Harmon, DT, Oregon
At times, hip stiffness is an issue for Derrick Harmon, but his length and motor stand out in a role where he can rush vertically and attack one-on-one.
43) San Francisco 49ers
Trey Amos, CB, Ole Miss
A breakout star of the 2024 season, Trey Amos is phase-versatile, athletic, physical, and a tailor-made fit for a 49ers defense that rewards those qualities.
44) Dallas Cowboys
Tre Harris, WR, Ole Miss
The Cowboys need more supporting talent alongside CeeDee Lamb. Tre Harris is less dimensional, but his catch-point instincts are near the top of the class.
45) Indianapolis Colts
Benjamin Morrison, CB, Notre Dame
Though injuries and consistency were problems down the stretch for him, Benjamin Morrison is a gnat in man coverage with Round 1-worthy raw ability.
46) Atlanta Falcons
Princely Umanmielen, EDGE, Ole Miss
A double-digit sack-getter in 2024, Princely Umanmielen has an absolutely volcanic first step to go with NFL-ready size, length, and run defense utility.
47) Arizona Cardinals
Donovan Ezeiruaku, EDGE, Boston College
It’s long past time for the Cardinals to double-up on EDGE talent. Donovan Ezeiruaku has the leverage, proportional length, and pass-rush skill set to menace blockers.
48) Miami Dolphins
Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan
A steal at this point in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, Kenneth Grant gives the Dolphins a sturdy, high-upside nose tackle alongside Zach Sieler.
49) Cincinnati Bengals
Deone Walker, DT, Kentucky
Though he still needs to work on his pad level, Deone Walker’s potential as a defensive line joker — from nose tackle to 5 and 7-tech — is nearly unmatched.
50) Seattle Seahawks
Carson Schwesinger, LB, UCLA
A Swiss army knife with pass-rush, coverage, and gap-invading abilities, Carson Schwesinger would fit perfectly in Mike Macdonald’s defense.
51) Denver Broncos
Kaleb Johnson, RB, Iowa
Sean Payton loves to have an engine at running back, and Kaleb Johnson fits that profile with his efficient footwork, upfield burst, and resilience at 6’0″, 225 pounds.
52) Pittsburgh Steelers
Darien Porter, CB, Iowa State
With Joey Porter Jr. and Darien Porter — two 6’4″ cornerbacks — the Steelers will have one of the most imposing size-speed combos in the league.
53) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Barrett Carter, LB, Clemson
K.J. Britt was exposed all too often in coverage in 2024. Barrett Carter gives Tampa Bay a high-level cover man at the second level who can learn under Lavonte David.
54) Green Bay Packers
Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State
Unproductive only because no one threw his way, Azareye’h Thomas has the length, fluidity, and competitive mentality to be a mainstay for Green Bay.
55) Los Angeles Chargers
Gray Zabel, OL, North Dakota State
A standout of the All-Star game circuit, Gray Zabel projects well at center and brings a tone-setting physical
lity that would mesh well with Jim Harbaugh.
56) Buffalo Bills
Landon Jackson, EDGE, Arkansas
Landon Jackson has the size, length, and power potential that the Bills crave, but his hands are also uniquely flexible, bendy, and crafty.
57) Carolina Panthers
Jordan Hancock, DB, Ohio State
A supremely versatile defensive back with nickel, boundary, and field safety capabilities, Jordan Hancock can be a glue guy alongside Jaycee Horn in the secondary.
58) Houston Texans
TreVeyon Henderson, RB, Ohio State
The Texans might seek a pass-game complement to Joe Mixon with new schematic oversight. TreVeyon Henderson can be a catalyst in that role.
59) Baltimore Ravens
Denzel Burke, CB, Ohio State
Denzel Burke is underrated by my board. He’s a scheme-versatile playmaker with exceptional explosiveness, fluidity, and eager aggression.
60) Detroit Lions
Wyatt Milum, OL, West Virginia
A mauler with tackle experience who also projects well at guard, Wyatt Milum fits the Lions’ mode of operation on the front line.
61) Washington Commanders
Josh Simmons, OT, Ohio State
Spying a future need at right tackle, the Commanders take Josh Simmons: A supremely athletic and flexible blocker with massive upside once he gets fully healthy.
62) Buffalo Bills
Tommi Hill, CB, Nebraska
Tommi Hill is a uniquely built cornerback prospect with great frame density and proportional length. Particularly in Buffalo’s zone scheme, he’d be proficient.
63) Philadelphia Eagles
Xavier Restrepo, WR, Miami (FL)
Alongside A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith, Xavier Restrepo can be the perfect WR3 with his quickness, route-running nuance, and conversion ability.
64) Kansas City Chiefs
Anthony Belton, OL, NC State
Nicknamed “Escalade,” Anthony Belton is a two-ton block of rock who tore up the Senior Bowl, using his physical tools and violent hands to dominate rushers.
Round 3 | 65) New York Giants
Quinn Ewers, QB, Texas
Quinn Ewers has enough arm talent and creative capacity to be a future starter for the Giants if he can stay disciplined with his mechanics and rhythm.
66) Kansas City Chiefs
Elic Ayomanor, WR, Stanford
The Chiefs have an explosive RAC weapon in Rashee Rice and a vertical threat in Xavier Worthy. Elic Ayomanor can be the enforcer who takes advantage of those matchups.
67) Cleveland Browns
Jack Sawyer, EDGE, Ohio State
The Ohio State kid stays in-state in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft. With a Myles Garrett trade looming, Jack Sawyer gives back some of the strength and power Cleveland loses.
68) Las Vegas Raiders
Jaxson Dart, QB, Ole Miss
Pete Carroll will like Jaxson Dart’s toughness and gamer mentality, and on top of that, Dart has high-end physical tools to develop behind the scenes.
69) New England Patriots
Josh Conerly Jr., OT, Oregon
Though Josh Conerly Jr. is a bit undersized, his combination of natural leverage, proportional length, and athleticism serves him very well.
70) Jacksonville Jaguars
Jahdae Barron, DB, Texas
A former safety who transitioned to cornerback and thrived in 2024, Jahdae Barron brings a stellar mobility profile and even better physicality and intangibles.
71) New Orleans Saints
Donovan Jackson, OG, Ohio State
Donovan Jackson combines abundant experience and abundant physical talent as one of the top guard prospects in the 2025 NFL Draft.
72) Chicago Bears
Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina
Ben Johnson will want to form his own one-two punch at RB in Chicago. Omarion Hampton can be his next iteration of David Montgomery.
73) Las Vegas Raiders
Andrew Mukuba, S, Texas
Though he has nickel experience, Andrew Mukuba was at his best as a field safety in 2024, using his easy pedal, explosive burst, and tenacity to make an impact.
74) Carolina Panthers
Kyle Kennard, EDGE, South Carolina
Kyle Kennard once logged four sacks in a game at Georgia Tech, and he realized his full potential at South Carolina in 2024, using his length and motor to produce.
75) San Francisco 49ers
Bradyn Swinson, EDGE, LSU
If he can reach his ultimate ceiling, few edge rushers match Bradyn Swinson’s potential with his burst, bend, length, and frame density.
76) Dallas Cowboys
Dylan Sampson, RB, Tennessee
One of the most productive runners in 2024, and at the SEC level, Dylan Sampson gives Dallas an efficient slasher with a unique middle-field feel.
77) New England Patriots
Maxwell Hairston, CB, Kentucky
If the Patriots decide to use Hunter at WR, Maxwell Hairston ensures they don’t lose that playmaking edge on the defensive side.
78) Arizona Cardinals
Tez Johnson, WR, Oregon
Tez Johnson gives the Cardinals a Tank Dell-esque threat alongside Marvin Harrison Jr., which can expand the offense for Kyler Murray.
79) Washington Commanders
Rod Moore, DB, Michigan
Joining former teammate and DROY candidate Mike Sainristil in Washington, Rod Moore can play safety or man the slot with his twitch and quick processing.
80) Indianapolis Colts
Harold Fannin Jr., TE, Bowling Green
Harold Fannin Jr. took over with 117 catches, 1,555 yards, and 10 touchdowns in 2024. He’s an able seam and red zone threat with unique all-around utility.
81) Cincinnati Bengals
Zy Alexander, CB, LSU
Zy Alexander’s size-speed combination pops, and he also has the willing physicality that the Bengals sorely lack, opposite Cam Taylor-Britt.
82) Seattle Seahawks
Tate Ratledge, OG, Georgia
The Seahawks need to upgrade their interior line, and Tate Ratledge does it better than anyone at this point with his experience and mean streak.
83) Pittsburgh Steelers
Jalen Milroe, QB, Alabama
Jalen Milroe is a project, no doubt. But with a veteran to take the short-term pressure off, his athleticism and arm strength are worth investing in.
84) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Daylen Everette, CB, Georgia
Daylen Everette is a long, fluid, and well-put-together cornerback who showed growth as a playmaker at the catch point in 2024.
85) Denver Broncos
Jay Higgins, LB, Iowa
Old-school thumper linebackers are becoming in style again. It helps that Jay Higgins has legitimate short-area range and cover instincts along with his physicality.
86) Los Angeles Chargers
Cam Skattebo, RB, Arizona State
A star of Arizona State’s playoff season, Cam Skattebo is a workmanlike and phase-versatile playmaker at the next level.
87) Green Bay Packers
Tyler Baron, EDGE, Miami (FL)
The Packers’ high-upside gambles haven’t always panned out at EDGE, but Tyler Baron has the power, bend, and upward trajectory to bank on.
88) Jacksonville Jaguars
Alfred Collins, DL, Texas
Needing fresh talent on the front line, the Jaguars would benefit from adding Alfred Collins: An explosive, power-generating brawler with untapped potential.
89) Houston Texans
Ricky White III, WR, UNLV
With Stefon Diggs’ future uncertain, the Texans can add some of the same stop-and-start ability and vertical upside with Ricky White.
90) Los Angeles Rams
Oronde Gadsden II, WR/TE, Syracuse
Sean McVay could use phenom hybrid receiver Oronde Gadsden II in a role similar to Cooper Kupp’s if Kupp ultimately gets traded.
91) Baltimore Ravens
Chris Paul Jr., LB, Ole Miss
Chris Paul Jr. is the perfect rangy, hard-charging linebacker to pair alongside MIKE extraordinaire Roquan Smith.
92) New York Jets
Ozzy Trapilo, OT, Boston College
Ozzy Trapilo gives the Jets immediate depth and has a long-term starting upside alongside Olu Fashanu.
93) New Orleans Saints
Xavier Watts, S, Notre Dame
Xavier Watts is an eager and instinctive ballhawk with equally prominent downhill skills and brings new blood at safety.
94) Cleveland Browns
Phil Mafah, RB, Clemson
On the surface, Phil Mafah is an old-school bruiser, but he has the footwork, nuance, and vision to be a Nick Chubb successor.
95) Philadelphia Eagles
David Walker, EDGE, Central Arkansas
David Walker, an uber-productive small-school product, seamlessly fits an Eagles defense where he’ll rush from wide alignments.
96) Kansas City Chiefs
Jordan Burch, EDGE, Oregon
At 6’6″ and almost 300 pounds, Jordan Burch has the explosive, alignment-versatile power profile of a Steve Spagnuolo rusher.
97) Minnesota Vikings
Darius Alexander, DT, Toledo
Darius Alexander, an explosive Senior Bowl standout, has the leverage, proportional length, and attacking mentality to thrive.
98) Miami Dolphins
Kyle McCord, QB, Syracuse
Investing in a legitimate, high-quality backup is sensible, given Tua Tagovailoa’s injury issues. Kyle McCord fits the bill.
99) San Francisco 49ers
Terrance Ferguson, TE, Oregon
A well-rounded TE2 behind George Kittle, Terrance Ferguson gives the 49ers a capable receiver and blocker in the rotation.
100) Los Angeles Rams
Lander Barton, LB, Utah
Linebacker is an area of weakness for the Rams. Lander Barton presents an immediate upgrade in the box with his size, explosiveness, and gap instincts.
101) Detroit Lions
Savion Williams, WR, TCU
The Lions need a plus-sized receiver to complement Amon-Ra St. Brown and Jameson Williams. Savion Williams qualifies at 6’5″, and his twitch unearths greater upside.
Round 4
102) Tennessee Titans
T.J. Sanders, DT, South Carolina
103) Cleveland Browns
Kaden Prather, WR, Maryland
104) New York Giants
Hollin Pierce, OT, Rutgers
105) New England Patriots
Jack Bech, WR, TCU
106) Jacksonville Jaguars
Dylan Fairchild, OG, Georgia
107) Las Vegas Raiders
Jamaree Caldwell, DT, Oregon
108) Buffalo Bills
Jonah Monheim, OL, USC
109) New York Jets
Jaylin Noel, WR, Iowa State
110) Carolina Panthers
Kevin Winston Jr., S, Penn State
111) New Orleans Saints
Will Howard, QB, Ohio State
112) San Francisco 49ers
Demetrius Knight II, LB, South Carolina
113) Carolina Panthers
Jacob Gideon, OL, Western Michigan
114) Arizona Cardinals
Charles Grant, OL, William & Mary
115) Miami Dolphins
Jaylen Reed, S, Penn State
116) Indianapolis Colts
Ty Robinson, DT, Nebraska
117) Atlanta Falcons
Lathan Ransom, S, Ohio State
118) Cincinnati Bengals
Ashton Gillotte, EDGE, Louisville
119) Tennessee Titans
Jermari Harris, CB, Iowa
120) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Earnest Greene III, OL, Georgia
121) Denver Broncos
Tory Horton, WR, Colorado State
122) Pittsburgh Steelers
Rylie Mills, DT, Notre Dame
123) Green Bay Packers
Jake Majors, OC, Texas
124) Los Angeles Chargers
Dorian Strong, CB, Virginia Tech
125) Jacksonville Jaguars
Cody Simon, LB, Ohio State
126) Los Angeles Rams
Chase Lundt, OT, UConn
127) Houston Texans
Omarr Norman-Lott, DT, Tennessee
128) Baltimore Ravens
Luke Kandra, OG, Cincinnati
129) Philadelphia Eagles
Miles Frazier, OG, LSU
130) New Orleans Saints
Gunnar Helm, TE, Texas
131) Buffalo Bills
Kyle Monangai, RB, Rutgers
132) Detroit Lions
Elijah Roberts, DT, SMU
133) Tennessee Titans
Antwane Wells Jr., WR, Ole Miss
134) New York Giants
Quincy Riley, CB, Louisville
135) Miami Dolphins
Fadil Diggs, EDGE, Syracuse
136) Baltimore Ravens
Pat Bryant, WR, Illinois
137) Seattle Seahawks
Nick Nash, WR, San Jose State
138) San Francisco 49ers
Clay Webb, OL, Jacksonville State
139) San Francisco 49ers
Kobe Hudson, WR, UCF
Round 5
140) Minnesota Vikings
Ephesians Prysock, CB, Washington
141) Carolina Panthers
Austin Barber, OT, Florida
142) Tennessee Titans
Josaiah Stewart, EDGE, Michigan
143) Jacksonville Jaguars
Woody Marks, RB, USC
144) Las Vegas Raiders
Cobee Bryant, CB, Kansas
145) New England Patriots
Shemar Turner, EDGE, Texas A&M
146) New York Jets
Elijah Arroyo, TE, Miami (FL)
147) Carolina Panthers
Howard Cross III, DT, Notre Dame
148) Washington Commanders
Sai’vion Jones, DL, LSU
149) Chicago Bears
Bryce Anderson, S, Texas A&M
150) Dallas Cowboys
Ajani Cornelius, OL, Oregon
151) Miami Dolphins
Elijhah Badger, WR, Florida
152) Indianapolis Colts
Bhayshul Tuten, RB, Virginia Tech
153) Arizona Cardinals
Cody Lindenberg, LB, Minnesota
154) Cincinnati Bengals
Garrett Dellinger, OG, LSU
155) New York Giants
Mason Taylor, TE, LSU
156) Miami Dolphins
Isas Waxter, CB, Villanova
157) New York Jets
Jabbar Muhammad, CB, Oregon
158) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Andrew Armstrong, WR, Arkansas
159) Los Angeles Chargers
Theo Wease Jr., WR, Missouri
160) Green Bay Packers
Aeneas Peebles, DT, Virginia Tech
161) Minnesota Vikings
Joshua Gray, OG, Oregon State
162) Philadelphia Eagles
Trey Wedig, OT, Indiana
163) Pittsburgh Steelers
Malik Verdon, S, Iowa State
164) Carolina Panthers
Devin Neal, RB, Kansas
165) Cleveland Browns
Willie Lampkin, OL, North Carolina
166) Philadelphia Eagles
Patrick Jenkins, DT, Tulane
167) Houston Texans
Jeffrey Bassa, LB, Oregon
168) Arizona Cardinals
Jordan Phillips, DT, Maryland
169) Kansas City Chiefs
Ollie Gordon II, RB, Oklahoma State
170) Dallas Cowboys
Mello Dotson, CB, Kansas
171) Buffalo Bills
Will Sheppard, WR, Colorado
172) Dallas Cowboys
Danny Stutsman, LB, Oklahoma
173) Seattle Seahawks
Kamren Fabiculanan, S, Washington
174) Dallas Cowboys
Tonka Hemingway, DT, South Carolina
175) Buffalo Bills
Deion Burks, WR, Oklahoma
176) Baltimore Ravens
Jonas Sanker, S, Virginia
177) Los Angeles Chargers
Jake Briningstool, TE, Clemson
178) Baltimore Ravens
Antwaun Powell-Ryland Jr., EDGE, Virginia Tech
Round 6
179) Buffalo Bills
Dillon Gabriel, QB, Oregon
180) Tennessee Titans
Connor Colby, OG, Iowa
181) Buffalo Bills
Barryn Sorrell, EDGE, Texas
182) Las Vegas Raiders
Kaimon Rucker, EDGE, North Carolina
183) Los Angeles Chargers
Ty Hamilton, DT, Ohio State
184) Jacksonville Jaguars
Luke Lachey, TE, Iowa
185) Baltimore Ravens
Mitchell Evans, TE, Notre Dame
186) New Orleans Saints
DJ Giddens, RB, Kansas State
187) Seattle Seahawks
Jared Ivey, EDGE, Ole Miss
188) New York Jets
Hunter Wohler, S, Wisconsin
189) San Francisco 49ers
Jack Nelson, OT, Wisconsin
190) Dallas Cowboys
Yahya Black, DT, Iowa
191) Indianapolis Colts
Brian Stevens, OC, Virginia
192) Los Angeles Rams
DeMonte Capeheart, DT, Clemson
193) Denver Broncos
Justin Walley, CB, Minnesota
194) Cleveland Browns
J.J. Pegues, DT, Ole Miss
195) Cincinnati Bengals
Jack Kiser, LB, Notre Dame
196) Seattle Seahawks
David Bailey, EDGE, Stanford
197) Washington Commanders
Corey Thornton, CB, Louisville
198) Detroit Lions
Brandon Crenshaw-Dixon, OT, Florida
199) Denver Broncos
Nofoafia Tulafono, OC, Wyoming
200) Green Bay Packers
Da’Quan Felton, WR, Virginia Tech
201) Atlanta Falcons
Ja’Corey Brooks, WR, Louisville
202) Cleveland Browns
Kyren Lacy, WR, LSU
203) Los Angeles Rams
Konata Mumpfield, WR, Pittsburgh
204) Chicago Bears
Jah Joyner, EDGE, Minnesota
205) Baltimore Ravens
Kurtis Rourke, QB, Indiana
206) Cleveland Browns
Ethan Downs, EDGE, Oklahoma
207) Washington Commanders
Robert Longerbeam, CB, Rutgers
208) Buffalo Bills
Yam Banks, DB, Ole Miss
209) Denver Broncos
Trey Moore, EDGE, Texas
210) New York Jets
Riley Leonard, QB, Notre Dame
211) Dallas Cowboys
Billy Bowman Jr., S, Oklahoma
212) Seattle Seahawks
RJ Maryland, TE, SMU
213) Baltimore Ravens
Jordan James, RB, Oregon
214) Las Vegas Raiders
Anto Saka, EDGE, Northwestern
215) Los Angeles Chargers
Malik Dixon-Williams, S, UConn
216) Cleveland Browns
Nohl Williams, CB, California
217) Cleveland Browns
Jamon Dumas-Johnson, LB, Kentucky
218) Las Vegas Raiders
Antario Brown, RB, Northern Illinois
Round 7
219) New England Patriots
Kalel Mullings, RB, Michigan
220) Los Angeles Chargers
Danny Striggow, EDGE, Minnesota
221) New York Giants
Johnny Walker Jr., EDGE, Missouri
222) New England Patriots
Jalen Travis, OT, Iowa State
223) Jacksonville Jaguars
Tyler Shough, QB, Louisville
224) Las Vegas Raiders
Xzavier Henderson, WR, Cincinnati
225) Pittsburgh Steelers
LaJohntay Wester, WR, Colorado
226) Miami Dolphins
Carson Vinson, OT, Alabama A&M
227) Arizona Cardinals
Joshua Farmer, DT, Florida State
228) San Francisco 49ers
Thor Griffith, DT, Louisville
229) Carolina Panthers
CJ West, DT, Indiana
230) Detroit Lions
Jacob Parrish, CB, Kansas State
231) Washington Commanders
Sebastian Castro, DB, Iowa
232) Kansas City Chiefs
Jason Marshall Jr., CB, Florida
233) Miami Dolphins
Brashard Smith, RB, SMU
234) Indianapolis Colts
Daniel Jackson, WR, Minnesota
235) Chicago Bears
Kyle Williams, WR, Washington State
236) Seattle Seahawks
Dorian Singer, WR, Utah
237) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
RJ Harvey, RB, UCF
238) Pittsburgh Steelers
Damien Martinez, RB, Miami (FL)
239) Green Bay Packers
Jackson Woodard, LB, UNLV
240) New England Patriots
Montorie Foster Jr., WR, Michigan State
241) Tennessee Titans
Oluwafemi Oladejo, LB, UCLA
242) Chicago Bears
Jahvaree Ritzie, DT, North Carolina
243) Houston Texans
Xavier Truss, OL, Georgia
244) Atlanta Falcons
R Mason Thomas, EDGE, Oklahoma
245) Baltimore Ravens
Simeon Barrow Jr., DT, Miami (FL)
246) Detroit Lions
Smael Mondon Jr., LB, Georgia
247) Pittsburgh Steelers
Deshawn Pace, LB, UCF
248) New York Giants
Trevor Etienne, RB, Georgia
249) New Orleans Saints
Zah Frazier, CB, UTSA
250) Dallas Cowboys
Jalin Conyers, TE, Texas Tech
251) Green Bay Packers
Dalton Cooper, OT, Oklahoma State
252) Miami Dolphins
Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, DT, Georgia
253) Los Angeles Chargers
Quinn Carroll, OL, Minnesota
254) New Orleans Saints
Bru McCoy, WR, Tennessee
255) San Francisco 49ers
Graham Mertz, QB, Florida
256) Kansas City Chiefs
Joe Huber, OG, Wisconsin
257) Cleveland Browns
Raheim Sanders, RB, Arkansas