Almost halfway into the 2024 college football season, what does the 2025 NFL Draft Big Board look like? The latest 2025 NFL Mock Draft from Pro Football Network approaches that question head-on — with quarterbacks like Jalen Milroe and Shedeur Sanders rising.
2025 NFL Mock Draft | Round 1
The order of this 2025 NFL Mock Draft was extrapolated from the latest Super Bowl odds for the 2024 NFL season, with some liberties taken for the final order. Projected compensatory selections for the 2025 NFL Draft are included in this mock draft. You can also find the same in the Pro Football Network Mock Draft Simulator.
1) Carolina Panthers: Jalen Milroe, QB, Alabama
Milroe has always been a top-flight physical talent, but he exploded into the QB1 conversation with his showing against Georgia. Just as impressive as his elite athleticism and his rocket arm was his decisive nature, quick processing, and clean mechanics.
In the modern NFL, unicorn QB prospects can help teams get ahead. The Panthers saw the inverse of this effect with Bryce Young. Milroe presents a massive upgrade in raw talent, with the dual-sided ability to elevate the offense in all phases.
In this scenario, Young would inevitably be traded. In this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, the Miami Dolphins make the move to secure Young — a solid scheme fit who provides insurance for Tua Tagovailoa.
Projected Trade: Dolphins receive QB Bryce Young, No. 140 pick; Panthers receive No. 98 pick
2) New York Giants: Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado
With Daniel Jones — even at his best moments — the New York Giants had a quarterback who was a tick slow as a processor, good at best with his arm talent, and inconsistent with his accuracy. With Sanders, the Giants can remedy all three of those issues.
Sanders’ pocket instincts have been shaky at times in his career, but he’s been playing career-best football as of late. Sanders has the pre-snap vision and rhythm to be a quality distributor, and in recent weeks, he’s flashed additional creative upside, too.
3) Tennessee Titans: Travis Hunter, WR/CB, Colorado
The Titans didn’t have a chance to pick one of the two top quarterbacks in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, but they still came away with a blue-chip talent in Travis Hunter. And with Hunter, they can toy with the idea of adding an evolutionary playmaker at WR or CB.
My stance is that Hunter is simply too dangerous as an offensive weapon to not play at WR — but opposite L’Jarius Sneed, he’d be a certified boundary bandit in the secondary, with generational turnover-generating skills. Wherever he plays, he’ll make an instant impact.
4) New England Patriots: Emery Jones Jr., OT, LSU
The Patriots say they’re holding Drake Maye out until he’s ready to start, but perhaps they’re also trying to protect him from hazardous offensive line play.
Emery Jones Jr. represents a needed investment in the OL, and he’s a quality pickup with his clean pass sets, explosive athleticism, stifling anchor strength, and finishing physicality.
5) Las Vegas Raiders: Drew Allar, QB, Penn State
It’s hard to get a read on whether or not the Raiders are stagnating with Antonio Pierce. At the same time, however, we know the franchise won’t be able to make it to the promised land with Gardner Minshew II at the helm. Drew Allar brings a needed upgrade in talent.
Allar hasn’t been quite as consistent as the top two QBs on the board, but he’s still shown visible growth from his 2023 campaign. Allar has perhaps the best arm in the class, and in 2024, he’s displayed improved touch, accuracy, and layering control with that arm.
6) Denver Broncos: Luther Burden III, WR, Missouri
Defenses are clearly ambivalent about Bo Nix’s ability to pass downfield. The Broncos need to put more stress on secondaries, and Luther Burden III‘s combined RAC and vertical ability can help with that. He’s an electric player with the ball in his hands.
7) Jacksonville Jaguars: Will Johnson, CB, Michigan
Tyson Campbell’s availability remains a concern, and the Jaguars don’t have many long-term assets at cornerback outside of him.
Will Johnson gives the Jaguars a ready-made man and zone CB on Day 1, with a particular affinity for clicking, closing, and catching passes intended for WRs.
8) Miami Dolphins: Tetairoa McMillan, WR, Arizona
Let’s try something different, Miami. Because what you’ve been doing clearly isn’t working. Let’s give defenses something else to worry about alongside Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle.
With his frame and hand strength, Tetairoa McMillan can be the contested convertor and chain-mover the others can’t, and he’s a vertical and RAC weapon in his own right.
9) Los Angeles Rams: Shavon Revel Jr., CB, East Carolina
The Rams gambled on late-career Tre’Davious White, and it didn’t pay off. Now they need to re-invest at the CB spot. Shavon Revel Jr.‘s recovery from a torn ACL will be the focus in the offseason, but he’s an elite physical talent with a nose for the football — and for screens.
10) Arizona Cardinals: Malaki Starks, S, Georgia
The Cardinals are a tricky team to get a read on. They’re not bad, but there’s a sense most of the roster is not immune from upgrades. At safety, Budda Baker has remained a stalwart, but Jalen Thompson’s regression opens the door for a player like Malaki Starks.
Starks is the top overall prospect on PFN’s 2025 NFL Draft Big Board, and he’d be a perfect fit alongside Baker. While Baker menaces short and intermediate zones, Starks can be the dynamic center-fielder overtop, bringing elite playmaking range and instincts to the fold.
11) Cleveland Browns: Carson Beck, QB, Georgia
The Browns still can’t get rid of Deshaun Watson without eating crippling amounts of dead cap, but Watson’s departure is trending toward being a necessity. Off-field concerns notwithstanding, he’s truly been one of the league’s worst QBs since coming to Cleveland.
In a system like Kevin Stefanski’s, a powerfully-armed pocket passer like Carson Beck could thrive. Beck’s strengths are his processing ability, anticipation, poise, and accuracy, and he has the arm talent to layer tight-window throws and generate chunk gains.
12) Los Angeles Chargers: Mason Graham, DT, Michigan
It wouldn’t be a 2025 NFL Mock Draft without Jim Harbaugh targeting one of his former Michigan players. In this case, however, he’s undeniably justified in his infatuation. Mason Graham is a top-five overall player with his disruptive imprint at 6’3″, 318 pounds.
13) Washington Commanders (via CHI): Mykel Williams, EDGE, Georgia
Projected Trade: Commanders receive No. 13 pick, 2026 fifth-round pick; Bears receive No. 15 pick, 2026 second-round pick
In this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, the Commanders engineer a slight trade-up, to make sure they get the best EDGE prospect in the class, and the best fit for Dan Quinn’s defense in Georgia’s Mykel Williams.
At around 6’5″ and 265 pounds, Williams is the exact kind of power profile Quinn prefers. And with that profile and his elite athleticism and hip fluidity, Williams can rush from all kinds of angles, across stunt paths as a looper. And the scary part is, he’s still trending up.
14) Indianapolis Colts: Tyleik Williams, DT, Ohio State
The Colts’ run defense, even with Grover Stewart, has been highly susceptible without DeForest Buckner. Tyleik Williams turns the front into a venerable unit across the board. He’s a slab against the run and an energized power implement against the pass.
15) Chicago Bears (via WAS): Tyler Booker, G, Alabama
Projected Trade: Commanders receive No. 13 pick, 2026 fifth-round pick; Bears receive No. 15 pick, 2026 second-round pick
Trading down in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, the Bears are still able to add the best guard in the class. That’s a definite win for Ryan Poles and Matt Eberflus, as they look to protect Caleb Williams.
At 6’5″, 352 pounds, Tyler Booker is a size anomaly, who moves unnaturally well on both the lateral and vertical planes for that size. He’s a road grader in the run game and a security blanket in pass protection with strong hands, feet, and vision on stunts.
16) Atlanta Falcons: Nic Scourton, EDGE, Texas A&M
The Falcons’ overtime win in Week 5 was magical, but the lack of pass rush on Baker Mayfield was glaring. Nic Scourton‘s addition is aimed at fixing that. Scourton has the blend of power and finesse at 6’4″, 280 pounds to strengthen Atlanta’s attack presence.
17) New Orleans Saints: Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan
If the Saints stay competitive this year, Dennis Allen and Derek Carr might buy themselves more time. In that scenario, “Best Player Available” is the way to go in the 2025 NFL Draft. And in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, Colston Loveland presents a unique opportunity there.
The Saints have a budding weapons core with Rashid Shaheed and Chris Olave, but Juwan Johnson’s impending free agency leaves a void.
18) Pittsburgh Steelers: Isaiah Bond, WR, Texas
Justin Fields has played well enough to warrant a long-term investment in Pittsburgh, but the WR room could benefit from expansion. Isaiah Bond fits the Steelers’ quick separator mold, but he plays with a size-defying toughness that helps him at the catch.
19) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise State
If the Buccaneers had a running back like Ashton Jeanty, they’d be able to run out the clock on every team they face. In just four games this year, Jeanty has 845 yards and 13 touchdowns — at over 10 yards per carry.
It’s not hyperbole to say Jeanty is the modern-age Barry Sanders. He’s as difficult to tackle as a running back can get. At 5’8″, 217 pounds, he’s dense and well-leveraged, and he maximizes that profile with elite elusiveness, burst, vision, contact balance, and tenacity.
Ashton Jeanty is putting up video game numbers, and the @BroncoSportsFB deserves to be in early Heisman conversations. 📈 pic.twitter.com/3hcKF0MPds
— College Football Network (@CFN365) September 18, 2024
20) Cincinnati Bengals: Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan
Part of the problem has been availability for the Bengals’ defensive tackle room, but the prevailing truth stands: Both interior pass-rush and run defense remain issues in 2024, and the Bengals need to stay proactive when it comes to solving those issues. Enter Kenneth Grant.
21) Seattle Seahawks: Jonah Savaiinaea, OL, Arizona
Jonah Savaiinaea is one of my favorite 2025 NFL Mock Draft picks for the Seahawks. He has experience at guard and right tackle — both potential areas of need in 2025. And at 6’5″, 330 pounds, he has the brisk mobility and driving power to be an impact player.
22) New York Jets: Abdul Carter, EDGE, Penn State
The Haason Reddick saga has been a headache for New York, but they can put it behind them by adding Abdul Carter to take his role. Carter is a former off-ball linebacker with the speed and bend to be a devastating finesse rusher from outside alignments.
23) Philadelphia Eagles: Princely Umanmielen, EDGE, Ole Miss
With expiring contracts and inconsistent on-field play marring the Eagles’ EDGE situation, another re-investment appears likely in 2025. Princely Umanmielen, at 6’5″, 255 pounds, has the instant first-step explosion, length, and run defense IQ to provide a facelift.
24) Green Bay Packers: Benjamin Morrison, CB, Notre Dame
Benjamin Morrison hasn’t been quite as “lights out” in 2024 as he has been in past years, but for Green Bay and Jeff Hafley, he’d be an exceptional fit with his stifling man coverage ability. He’s a gnat at the line, with elite corrective twitch and closing explosiveness.
25) Minnesota Vikings: Jordan Hancock, DB, Ohio State
If Byron Murphy Jr. walks, Jordan Hancock can be a quality replacement at the nickel spot. Hancock has a level of fluidity and springy athleticism that defies his frame. He’s instinctive in coverage and unhinged in support, and he’d be valued highly by Brian Flores.
26) Dallas Cowboys: Quinshon Judkins, RB, Ohio State
If anything, the 2024 season has proved that running back does, in fact, matter to a degree. And the Cowboys neglected that fact. They can remedy this by adding Quinshon Judkins — an almost 220-pound carving knife with sharp eyes and blistering speed.
27) San Francisco 49ers: LT Overton, DL, Alabama
At 6’5″, 283 pounds, LT Overton is the wild card of the 2025 NFL Draft defensive line class. He can take reps as far outside as 7-tech, and he has a tantalizing blend of first-step explosiveness, ankle flexion, and hand power. In San Francisco, he could be unlocked.
28) Houston Texans: Will Campbell, OL, LSU
In Houston, Will Campbell would likely move inside and man one of the offensive guard spots. He has a high floor with his functional athleticism, footwork, and sense of timing, and his compact power element would also flourish from interior alignments.
29) Detroit Lions: Dani Dennis-Sutton, EDGE, Penn State
Dani Dennis-Sutton still has room to keep refining his pass-rush arsenal, but he’s flashed growth in 2024, and he has the burst and bend capacity at 6’5″, 266 pounds to stress the pocket opposite Defensive Player of the Year candidate Aidan Hutchinson.
30) Buffalo Bills: Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State
Some suspicions were confirmed by Keon Coleman’s slow start in Buffalo. Coleman is talented, but the Bills need a utility WR to take pressure off of their youth. Emeka Egbuka fits that profile to a tee with his age-defying nuance, awareness, and three-level ability.
31) Baltimore Ravens: Kelvin Banks Jr., OL, Texas
Like Campbell, Kelvin Banks Jr. would likely move inside for the Ravens. He could play tackle if Ronnie Stanley Jr. leaves, but Stanley has been having one of his best seasons.
Alongside Stanley at left guard, blocking for Derrick Henry, Banks would be a game-wrecker with his burst off the snap, heavy hands, torque capacity, and mauler mentality.
32) Kansas City Chiefs: Bradyn Swinson, EDGE, LSU
The Chiefs are one of the most well-equipped teams to weather regression when regression occurs. But on both sides of the ball, there have been concerns in 2024. On defense, the pass-rush unit has not been consistent, even with investments like Felix Anudike-Uzomah.
If the Chiefs decide to re-invest in 2025, LSU’s Bradyn Swinson is a breakout player to keep an eye on. After jumping from Oregon to LSU, Swinson has emerged with five sacks and six tackles for loss in the first five games.
At 6’4″, 250 pounds, Swinson has the size and length to compel teams. And with that combination, he’s displayed impressive explosiveness, arc-running speed, bend, and power generation ability over the past few weeks. He’s quietly a complete player.
Round 2
33) Chicago Bears: James Pearce Jr., EDGE, Tennessee
If the Bears let Darrell Taylor go, they’ll still need a pass-rush catalyst opposite Montez Sweat. James Pearce Jr. has the elite tools to eventually fulfill that role.
34) New York Giants: Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina
Quietly, Omarion Hampton has been exceptional in 2024. He fits the volume back mold for the Giants, with the explosiveness, vision, and physicality to take the lion’s share of carries.
35) Tennessee Titans: Quinn Ewers, QB, Texas
In this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, the Titans manage to add Will Levis’ potential replacement in Quinn Ewers — ironically at the top of Round 2, the same place Levis was taken.
Ewers doesn’t quite have Levis’ arm strength, but he’s a much more natural off-platform passer, with superior accuracy and control in high-pressure situations.
36) New England Patriots: Tai Felton, WR, Maryland
At 6’2″, 188 pounds, Tai Felton has the speed to spread the field for Ja’Lynn Polk and others, but he also has the RAC fluidity to generate big gains on short completions.
37) Las Vegas Raiders: Nicholas Singleton, RB, Penn State
This 2025 NFL Mock Draft sees Allar stay with his Nittany Lions RB Nicholas Singleton. Singleton’s sheer athleticism is jaw-dropping, but he’s also a pass-catching threat.
38) Denver Broncos: Josh Conerly Jr., OT, Oregon
Josh Conerly Jr. has a level of natural leverage and easy-flowing athleticism that few tackles can match, and his proportional length allows him to stay stable on his axis.
39) Jacksonville Jaguars: Aireontae Ersery, OT, Minnesota
At 6’6″, 330 pounds, Aireontae Ersery has elite closing explosiveness when attacking blocks, and he’s flashed improvement with his leverage maintenance in 2024.
40) Miami Dolphins: Jalon Walker, EDGE, Georgia
At this point, Jaelan Phillips and Bradley Chubb are tough to count on with injuries. Jalon Walker provides depth and security but also has immediate two-phase utility off the edge.
41) Carolina Panthers: Nick Emmanwori, S, South Carolina
A certifiably elite athlete in Carolina’s locality, Nick Emmanwori has the versatility to play two-high or enforce in the box, and he’s a playmaking threat with his vast range.
42) New York Jets: Cam Ward, QB, Miami (FL)
Projected Trade: Jets receive No. 42 pick; Cardinals receive No. 54 pick, No. 93 pick
Cam Ward could crack the first round. Even if he doesn’t, he’ll be coveted on Day 2. Here, he becomes the understudy and eventual successor to fellow creator Aaron Rodgers.
Ward is an elite playmaker under center, who thrives when tasked with extending plays and layering into tight windows. And this year, he’s improved his discipline in the pocket.
Cam Ward kept it alive and made a play 🤯pic.twitter.com/60VxrOG61w
— College Football Network (@CFN365) September 28, 2024
43) Cleveland Browns: Tre Harris, WR, Ole Miss
Tre Harris has averaged over 150 yards per game in 2024. At around 6’2″, 208 pounds, he’s one of the class’ best pure catchers, and he also has good nuance and RAC.
44) Los Angeles Chargers: Oronde Gadsden II, WR/TE, Syracuse
Whether he plays at wide receiver or tight end, Oronde Gadsden II gives Justin Herbert a reliable size-adjusted separator with clutch ball-tracking ability and hand-eye coordination.
45) Chicago Bears: Parker Brailsford, C, Alabama
At 6’2″, 275 pounds, Parker Brailsford is undersized, but that undersized frame grants him stellar natural leverage, and he’s an explosive, rangy blocker with great synergy.
46) Indianapolis Colts: Tacario Davis, CB, Arizona
At 6’4″, 195 pounds, Tacario Davis is a picture-perfect fit for Gus Bradley’s Cover 3 heavy scheme. He can swarm zones, and he can play surprisingly well in man with his length.
47) Washington Commanders: Denzel Burke, CB, Ohio State
While the Commanders have improved, CB remains a need. Denzel Burke is one of the most nuanced CBs in the class, and he has great burst, ball skills, and support chops.
48) Atlanta Falcons: Tez Johnson, WR, Oregon
In this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, Kirk Cousins gets his “Tank Dell” to go beside Drake London and 2024 breakout WR Darnell Mooney. And the Falcons complete their weapons core with Tez Johnson.
49) New Orleans Saints: Tyler Baron, EDGE, Miami (FL)
Tyler Baron fits Dennis Allen’s favored mold of EDGE at 6’5″, 260 pounds, and his power is legitimate. But he’s also flashed bend and finesse elements in a strong 2024 campaign.
50) Pittsburgh Steelers: Deontae Lawson, LB, Alabama
If Patrick Queen continues to struggle, Deontae Lawson could assist with his short-area twitch, quick trigger, and physicality at 6’2″, 235 pounds.
51) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Harold Perkins Jr., OLB, LSU
Harold Perkins Jr. tore his ACL, but if he declares, he’s still a potential top-50 talent. He’s best as a pass-rush demon and designed attacking LB. Alongside Lavonte David, he’d eat.
52) Cincinnati Bengals: JT Tuimoloau, EDGE, Ohio State
A power rusher who’s finally learning how to fully channel that power, JT Tuimoloau strengthens Cincinnati’s rotation and gives Lou Anarumo a verified pocket cruncher.
53) Seattle Seahawks: Tyler Warren, TE, Penn State
Ryan Grubb’s offense is the perfect place for a multifaceted TE like Tyler Warren to shine. His versatility allows him to fulfill any and all roles the Seahawks need.
54) Arizona Cardinals: Deone Walker, DT, Kentucky
Projected Trade: Jets receive No. 42 pick; Cardinals receive No. 54 pick, No. 93 pick
Deone Walker‘s pad level is still a major issue, but there’s no denying his upside as a disruptive 3-tech, 4i, and 5-tech with his size, power, and electrified athleticism.
55) Philadelphia Eagles: Keon Sabb, S, Alabama
The C.J. Gardner-Johnson acquisition hasn’t panned out well for Philadelphia. Keon Sabb provides the same physicality and eye for the ball and inspires with his instincts.
56) Green Bay Packers: Jared Wilson, C, Georgia
Josh Myers has been decent for the Packers this year, but Jared Wilson could be an upgrade eventually. Wilson has a strong anchor and even stronger athleticism at 6’3″, 310 pounds.
57) Buffalo Bills: Barrett Carter, LB, Clemson
If Matt Milano’s injuries catch up to him, Barrett Carter could be a potential replacement as an elite-equipped coverage linebacker with all-encompassing usage versatility.
58) Dallas Cowboys: Dontay Corleone, DT, Cincinnati
Nose tackle has been a massive concern for Dallas. Dontay Corleone — The Godfather — corrects that. At 6’1″, 320 pounds, he’s a block of rock with an explosive power element.
59) San Francisco 49ers: Domani Jackson, CB, Alabama
Domani Jackson has been difficult to test in coverage this season. At 6’1″, 201 pounds, he’s a size-speed phenom worth molding at the professional level.
60) Houston Texans: Andrew Mukuba, S, Texas
Andrew Mukuba has experienced a resurgence at Texas this year. He stays in-state in this 2025 NFL Mock Draft, gifting his talents as a single-high, two-high, and nickel DB.
61) Detroit Lions: Tate Ratledge, OL, Georgia
Kevin Zeitler has been stellar for Detroit, but he’s on a one-year deal. Tate Ratledge has the leverage acquisition skills, strength, and experience to be a seamless successor.
62) Buffalo Bills: Ollie Gordon II, RB, Oklahoma State
Behind the Bills’ offensive line, and with Allen at his size, Ollie Gordon II would no doubt feast with his cutting flexibility, long-strider burst, and tenacious, grating edge.
63) Baltimore Ravens: Terrance Ferguson, TE, Oregon
The Mark Andrews era might be over in Baltimore. Terrance Ferguson gives the Ravens a well-rounded three-down TE with a functional route tree and red-zone utility early on.
64) Kansas City Chiefs: Kaleb Johnson, RB, Iowa
In four games, Kaleb Johnson has 82 carries for 685 yards and nine TDs. He’s an instinctive, smooth, and fluid long-striding runner at 6’0″, 225 pounds.
Round 3
65) Carolina Panthers: Elic Ayomanor, WR, Stanford
Elic Ayomanor is the exact kind of clutch WR who can capitalize on Milroe’s fearless late-down throws, and he still has RAC potential to unearth.
66) New York Giants: Jalen Royals, WR, Utah State
While Malik Nabers torments defenses on one side, Jalen Royals can feast on 1-on-1s on the other with his quickness and body control.
67) Kansas City Chiefs: Jayden Higgins, WR, Iowa State
Jayden Higgins fits the Chiefs’ profile as a nuanced, fleet-footed separator at 6’4″, 215 pounds, with a ready-made route tree and soft hands.
68) New England Patriots: TreVeyon Henderson, RB, Ohio State
If Rhamondre Stevenson doesn’t rebound, TreVeyon Henderson can be New England’s next dynamic three-down presence in the backfield.
69) Las Vegas Raiders: Jihaad Campbell, LB, Alabama
Though he still needs more experience and refinement, Jihaad Campbell has the size and athleticism to be a difference-maker at the second level.
70) Denver Broncos: Kyle Monangai, RB, Rutgers
Kyle Monangai is a reliable processor and a ruthless competitor who also has the needed high-end pass-blocking chops to protect Nix in the pocket.
Kyle Monangai with an ANGRY run 💪pic.twitter.com/e43Vum7jYH
— College Football Network (@CFN365) September 28, 2024
71) Jacksonville Jaguars: Rod Moore, S, Michigan
A spring injury prevented Rod Moore from playing in 2024, but he’s an explosive, instinctive, and versatile safety who can also man the nickel spot.
72) Washington Commanders: Jaylin Noel, WR, Iowa State
Jayden Daniels has been immaculate to start his career. Jaylin Noel gives him another RAC threat in the flats and on drag routes, who can also go vertical.
73) Los Angeles Rams: Jaxson Dart, QB, Ole Miss
Jaxson Dart can develop his processing and pocket instincts behind Matthew Stafford, as he builds around his high-end mobility and arm elasticity.
74) Arizona Cardinals: Jaishawn Barham, LB, Michigan
Jaishawn Barham‘s coverage instincts are subpar, but he has the athleticism to invest in, and he’s a rock-solid SAM backer and early-down presence.
75) Cleveland Browns: Josh Simmons, OT, Ohio State
Josh Simmons will need to keep upping his play strength, but he’s a tremendous athlete with rare quickness, flexibility, and recovery at 6’5″, 310 pounds.
76) Los Angeles Chargers: Jabbar Muhammad, CB, Oregon
In Jabbar Muhammad, the Chargers get an active support presence, a feisty man coverage CB, and a certified playmaker at the catch point.
77) Chicago Bears: Pat Bryant, WR, Illinois
Pat Bryant fits well with DJ Moore and Rome Odunze, filling in as the team’s streamlined size-speed threat, vertical X-factor, and red-zone asset.
78) Indianapolis Colts: Cameron Williams, OT, Texas
A mountainous player at 6’5″, 335 pounds, Cameron Williams can be Braden Smith’s replacement with his athleticism and vice-grip hands.
79) Washington Commanders: Jeremiah Cooper, S, Iowa State
In Jeremiah Cooper, the Commanders get a coverage-diverse safety who uses his WR background to read routes and track the ball with ease.
80) New England Patriots: Donovan Ezeiruaku, EDGE, Boston College
Donovan Ezeiruaku has eight sacks and 9.5 TFLs in just five games. He’s a picture-perfect stand-up rusher with speed, bend, and elite proportional length.
81) New Orleans Saints: Donovan Jackson, G, Ohio State
At 6’4″, 320 pounds, Donovan Jackson gives the Saints an explosive, well-leveraged player alongside Taliese Fuaga on the left side.
82) Pittsburgh Steelers: Cobee Bryant, CB, Kansas
Though he’s lighter at 6’0″, 175 pounds, Cobee Bryant is a ball-hawk with next-level playmaking skills and long speed on the attack.
83) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Walter Nolen, DT, Ole Miss
Logan Hall is starting to break out, but an interior rotation can never be too deep. Walter Nolen gives Todd Bowles an alignment-versatile battering ram.
84) Cincinnati Bengals: Chris Brazzell II, WR, Tennessee
Chris Brazzell II has been slow to produce in 2024, but he has rare size-adjusted fluidity at 6’5″, and his catching instincts would fit well with Joe Burrow.
85) Seattle Seahawks: Mansoor Delane, CB, Virginia Tech
Mansoor Delane has the quickness and foot speed to play man coverage, but his closing burst and tracking skills also play well in zone.
86) New York Jets: Ricky White, WR, UNLV
Alongside Garrett Wilson, Ricky White would be dangerous with his vertical speed, slashing RAC ability, and high-level catching instincts.
87) Philadelphia Eagles: Evan Stewart, WR, Oregon
Evan Stewart might be the WR3 Jahan Dotson couldn’t be for Philadelphia. Stewart is an energized separator with a competitive chip.
88) Green Bay Packers: Marcus Mbow, OL, Purdue
Marcus Mbow is one of the most explosive, free-flowing athletes in the 2025 class, and he has the T/G versatility the Packers crave.
89) Jacksonville Jaguars: Jaeden Roberts, G, Alabama
If the Jaguars let go of Brandon Scherff, Jaeden Roberts can fill the void with his power, heavy punch, and physicality at 6’5″, 316 pounds.
90) Dallas Cowboys: Tory Horton, WR, Colorado State
Tory Horton is the exact kind of WR the Cowboys need alongside CeeDee Lamb: A nuanced, physical separator with reliable hands and some RAC ability.
91) San Francisco 49ers: Fernando Carmona Jr., OL, Arkansas
Fernando Carmona Jr. still needs to iron out his game, but he has the explosiveness, energy, and zeal worth molding at tackle or guard.
92) Houston Texans: Dylan Sampson, RB, Tennessee
A lateral slasher in contrast to Jaylen Wright’s vertical slashing ability, Dylan Sampson is a quality change-of-pace back with a well-rounded skill set.
93) Arizona Cardinals: Landon Jackson, EDGE, Arkansas
Landon Jackson still has to improve his play strength and pad level, but he’s unnaturally fluid for his size, and flashes promise with his hands.
94) Buffalo Bills: Kaimon Rucker, EDGE, North Carolina
Kaimon Rucker hedges for the eventual departure of Von Miller with his speed and bend, but he also brings violent hands.
95) Baltimore Ravens: Dane Key, WR, Kentucky
Dane Key gives the Ravens a go-to weapon in the clutch with his hands of steel, and he’s also a quality run blocker.
96) Kansas City Chiefs: Aeneas Peebles, DT, Virginia Tech
Aeneas Peebles is a unique sawed-off interior defender who can hold the point and disrupt through individual gaps.
97) Minnesota Vikings: Devin Neal, RB, Kansas
Devin Neal has the vision, running leverage, and energized athleticism to be the Vikings’ top stable back after Aaron Jones departs.
98) Carolina Panthers (via MIA): Mike Green, EDGE, Marshall
At around 6’4″, 245 pounds, Mike Green is a pass-rush specialist with blistering speed, agility, and nuanced spatial IQ.
99) Miami Dolphins: Earnest Greene III, OL, Georgia
Earnest Greene III fits the Dolphins’ mold at guard with his massive frame and heavy hands, but he’s also a stalwart tackle.
100) Los Angeles Rams: Lander Barton, LB, Utah
Lander Barton gives the Rams an explosive, hard-charging linebacker in the box and a tone-setter in run defense.
101) San Francisco 49ers: Harold Fannin Jr., TE, Bowling Green
Harold Fannin Jr. is a clinic route runner at 6’4″, 235 pounds, with the receiving upside and blocking ability to be the 49ers’ TE2.
Round 4
102) Carolina Panthers
Bryce Foster, C, Kansas
103) New York Giants
Luke Lachey, TE, Iowa
104) Tennessee Titans
Gunnar Helm, TE, Texas
105) New England Patriots
Alfred Collins, DT, Texas
106) Las Vegas Raiders
Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State
107) Denver Broncos
Bryce Anderson, S, Texas A&M
108) Jacksonville Jaguars
Yahya Black, DT, Iowa
109) Miami Dolphins
Jonas Sanker, S, Virginia
110) Los Angeles Rams
DeMonte Capehart, DT, Clemson
111) Arizona Cardinals
Xavier Restrepo, WR, Miami (FL)
112) Cleveland Browns
Maxwell Hairston, CB, Kentucky
113) Los Angeles Chargers
Germie Bernard, WR, Alabama
114) Buffalo Bills
Jermari Harris, CB, Iowa
115) Indianapolis Colts
Ashton Gillotte, EDGE, Louisville
116) Washington Commanders
Kain Medrano, LB, UCLA
117) Atlanta Falcons
Blake Miller, OT, Clemson
118) New Orleans Saints
Will Sheppard, WR, Colorado
119) Pittsburgh Steelers
Xavier Scott, DB, Illinois
120) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Luke Kandra, G, Cincinnati
121) Cincinnati Bengals
Sebastian Castro, DB, Iowa
122) Seattle Seahawks
Malik Verdon, S, Iowa State
123) New York Jets
Bryson Nesbit, TE, North Carolina
124) Detroit Lions
Jordan Burch, DL, Oregon
125) Green Bay Packers
Danny Stutsman, LB, Oklahoma
126) Jacksonville Jaguars
Kyle Kennard, EDGE, South Carolina
127) Dallas Cowboys
Fadil Diggs, EDGE, Syracuse
128) San Francisco 49ers
Joshua Farmer, DT, Florida State
129) Houston Texans
Ricardo Hallman, CB, Wisconsin
130) Detroit Lions
Daniel Jackson, WR, Minnesota
131) Buffalo Bills
Xavier Watts, S, Notre Dame
132) Baltimore Ravens
Sai’vion Jones, DT, LSU
133) Kansas City Chiefs
Ephesians Prysock, CB, Washington
134) New York Giants
Armand Membou, OL, Missouri
135) Baltimore Ravens
Xavier Nwankpa, S, Iowa
136) Buffalo Bills
Fa’alili Fa’amoe, OT, Washington State
137) San Francisco 49ers
Antario Brown, RB, Northern Illinois
138) Seattle Seahawks
Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois
Round 5
139) Carolina Panthers
Anthony Belton, OT, NC State
140) Miami Dolphins
Sheldon Newton, DT, Boise State
141) Tennessee Titans
Patrick Payton, EDGE, Florida State
142) New England Patriots
Jack Nelson, OT, Wisconsin
143) Las Vegas Raiders
Ja’Corey Brooks, WR, Louisville
144) Miami Dolphins
Tyler Onyedim, DL, Iowa State
145) Jacksonville Jaguars
Barion Brown, WR, Kentucky
146) Miami Dolphins
Trevor Etienne, RB, Georgia
147) Pittsburgh Steelers
Damien Martinez, RB, Miami (FL)
148) Arizona Cardinals
Terrance Brooks, CB, Texas
149) Minnesota Vikings
Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State
150) Los Angeles Chargers
David Bailey, EDGE, Stanford
151) Chicago Bears
Woody Marks, RB, USC
152) Indianapolis Colts
Zakee Wheatley, S, Penn State
153) Philadelphia Eagles
Jalon Daniels, QB, Kansas
154) New Orleans Saints
Kalel Mullings, RB, Michigan
155) Pittsburgh Steelers
Elijah Roberts, DT, SMU
156) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Will Howard, QB, Ohio State
157) Cincinnati Bengals
Roman Hemby, RB, Maryland
158) New York Giants
Zy Alexander, CB, LSU
159) New York Jets
Deion Burks, WR, Oklahoma
160) Philadelphia Eagles
Davin Vann, DL, NC State
161) Green Bay Packers
Xzavier Henderson, WR, Cincinnati
162) Minnesota Vikings
Jalen Catalon, S, UNLV
163) Dallas Cowboys
Treydan Stukes, CB, Arizona
164) Houston Texans
Anto Saka, EDGE, Northwestern
165) Detroit Lions
Gus Hartwig, C, Purdue
166) Philadelphia Eagles
Thaddeus Dixon, CB, Washington
167) Baltimore Ravens
Francisco Mauigoa, LB, Miami (FL)
168) Kansas City Chiefs
Kevin Winston Jr., S, Penn State
169) Dallas Cowboys
Ty Hamilton, DT, Ohio State
170) Dallas Cowboys
Shemar Turner, DL, Texas A&M
171) Dallas Cowboys
Giovanni El-Hadi, G, Michigan
172) Baltimore Ravens
Aamir Hall, CB, Michigan
173) Seattle Seahawks
David Walker, EDGE, Central Arkansas
174) Buffalo Bills
Jonah Monheim, C, USC
175) Los Angeles Chargers
Nofoafia Tulafono, C, Wyoming
176) Baltimore Ravens
Nate Matlack, EDGE, Pittsburgh
Round 6
177) Carolina Panthers
Jay Higgins, LB, Iowa
178) Buffalo Bills
Thor Griffith, DT, Louisville
179) Tennessee Titans
Derrick Harmon, DT, Oregon
180) Los Angeles Chargers
Jaydn Ott, RB, California
181) Las Vegas Raiders
Brian Stevens, C, Virginia
182) Denver Broncos
Jack Velling, TE, Michigan State
183) Jacksonville Jaguars
Garrett Nussmeier, QB, LSU
184) Cleveland Browns
Raheim Sanders, RB, South Carolina
185) Los Angeles Rams
Antwane Wells Jr., WR, Ole Miss
186) Arizona Cardinals
Kaden Prather, WR, Maryland
187) Cleveland Browns
Jamaree Caldwell, DT, Oregon
188) Los Angeles Chargers
Jamon Dumas-Johnson, LB, Kentucky
189) Seattle Seahawks
Marcus Wehr, OL, Montana State
190) Indianapolis Colts
Jack Bech, WR, TCU
191) Washington Commanders
Tyreem Powell, OLB, Rutgers
192) Los Angeles Rams
Phil Mafah, RB, Clemson
193) Washington Commanders
Joshua Gray, OL, Oregon State
194) Chicago Bears
Quincy Riley, CB, Louisville
195) Detroit Lions
Jahdae Barron, S, Texas
196) Cincinnati Bengals
Jason Marshall Jr., CB, Florida
197) Jacksonville Jaguars
Mason Taylor, TE, LSU
198) New York Jets
Caleb Etienne, OT, BYU
199) Denver Broncos
Tim Keenan III, DT, Alabama
200) Green Bay Packers
Joe Evans, DT, UTSA
201) Cleveland Browns
Caullin Lacy, WR, Louisville
202) Dallas Cowboys
Kyle McCord, QB, Syracuse
203) San Francisco 49ers
Daylen Everette, CB, Georgia
204) Los Angeles Rams
DeVonta Smith, DB, Alabama
205) Cleveland Browns
Deshawn Pace, LB, UCF
206) Buffalo Bills
Kyren Lacy, WR, LSU
207) Baltimore Ravens
Oscar Delp, TE, Georgia
208) New York Jets
Jacob Parrish, CB, Kansas State
209) Dallas Cowboys
Montorie Foster Jr., WR, Michigan State
210) Baltimore Ravens
Logan Brown, OT, Kansas
211) Seattle Seahawks
Josh Kelly, WR, Texas Tech
212) Las Vegas Raiders
Dorian Singer, WR, Utah
213) Los Angeles Chargers
Makari Paige, S, Michigan
214) Cleveland Browns
Yam Banks, S, Ole Miss
215) Las Vegas Raiders
Chase Lundt, OT, UConn
Round 7
216) Carolina Panthers
Dorian Strong, CB, Virginia Tech
217) New York Giants
Omarr Norman-Lott, DT, Tennessee
218) New England Patriots
Jacob Gideon, C, Western Michigan
219) New England Patriots
John Michael Gyllenborg, TE, Wyoming
220) Las Vegas Raiders
Seth Coleman, EDGE, Illinois
221) Pittsburgh Steelers
Ashton Grable, OL, Florida A&M
222) Jacksonville Jaguars
T.J. Sanders, DT, South Carolina
223) Miami Dolphins
Mitchell Evans, TE, Notre Dame
224) Atlanta Falcons
Duce Chestnut, CB, Syracuse
225) San Francisco 49ers
Roc Taylor, WR, Memphis
226) Los Angeles Chargers
Nick Nash, WR, San José State
227) New England Patriots
Al’zillion Hamilton, CB, Fresno State
228) Miami Dolphins
Robert Longerbeam, CB, Rutgers
229) Indianapolis Colts
RJ Maryland, TE, SMU
230) Pittsburgh Steelers
Kamren Fabiculanan, S, Washington
231) Washington Commanders
Andrew Armstrong, WR, Arkansas
232) Pittsburgh Steelers
Kaidon Salter, QB, Liberty
233) Minnesota Vikings
Cyrus Allen, WR, Texas A&M
234) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Jake Briningstool, TE, Clemson
235) Cincinnati Bengals
Patrick Jenkins, DT, Tulane
236) Seattle Seahawks
Clay Webb, OL, Jacksonville State
237) New York Jets
Billy Bowman Jr., S, Oklahoma
238) Washington Commanders
K.J. Wallace, DB, UCLA
239) Tennessee Titans
Nate Carter, RB, Michigan State
240) Chicago Bears
Matthew Bedford, OL, Oregon
241) Detroit Lions
Graham Mertz, QB, Florida
242) Carolina Panthers
Sean Martin, DT, West Virginia
243) Houston Texans
De’Zhaun Stribling, WR, Oklahoma State
244) Detroit Lions
K.C. Ossai, LB, Louisiana
245) New York Giants
Luke Newman, G, Michigan State
246) Baltimore Ravens
Tahj Brooks, RB, Texas Tech
247) San Francisco 49ers
Jake Slaughter, C, Florida
248) San Francisco 49ers
Miles Capers, EDGE, Vanderbilt
249) Green Bay Packers
Antwaun Powell-Ryland, EDGE, Virginia Tech
250) Miami Dolphins
Jestin Jacobs, LB, Oregon
251) Los Angeles Chargers
Dylan Barnett, G, Iowa State
252) New Orleans Saints
Jelani Stafford, DT, UConn
253) Cleveland Browns
Aaron Lewis, EDGE, Rutgers
254) San Francisco 49ers
Flip Dixon, S, Rutgers
255) Kansas City Chiefs
Jimmy Horn Jr., WR, Colorado
256) Jacksonville Jaguars
Nick Martin, LB, Oklahoma State