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    Ian Cummings’ 7-Round 2024 NFL Mock Draft: Vikings Trade Up for J.J. McCarthy, Dallas Turner Lands With NFC Contender

    J.J. McCarthy to the Vikings? Spencer Rattler breaching the top 50? This 2024 NFL Mock Draft breaks down the possibilities with QBs rising.

    In this 7-Round 2024 NFL Mock Draft, a team trades into the top five for J.J. McCarthy, while countless wide receivers go within the top 100 picks. Who does your favorite team come away with, and which 2024 NFL Draft prospects provide the best value on the board?

    2024 NFL Mock Draft | Round 1

    1) Chicago Bears: Caleb Williams, QB, USC

    If the Bears decide to make a change at QB, there’s no disputing Caleb Williams‘ merit as a worthy successor. Williams resets Chicago’s clock while also providing an elevating force.

    At 6’1″, 215 pounds, Williams makes some of the most exhilarating plays look almost second nature. He’s a hyper-elite creator with deadly potential in the modern NFL.

    2) Washington Commanders: Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU

    It’s a tight race between Jayden Daniels and Drake Maye for this pick. Maye is higher on my board, but Daniels could be the superior fit for Kliff Kingsbury’s vertical spread attack.

    Daniels has familiarity with spread looks from his time at LSU and is a deep ball merchant with rare timing and accuracy. His turbocharged athleticism is just the cherry on top.

    3) New England Patriots: Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina

    Maye falls to No. 3 in this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, but he’s my personal QB1 in the 2024 class. And of the top three QBs, he might be the best fit for Alex Van Pelt’s scheme.

    Maye has the rocket arm and anticipatory tendencies to take advantage of Van Pelt’s bunch concepts over the middle and up the seam, and he’s quietly also a creative presence.

    4) Arizona Cardinals: Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State

    With the way QBs are valued, the Cardinals could entertain trade-down options here. But it’s hard to pass up a quantifiably generational WR prospect in Marvin Harrison Jr.

    Harrison has all of the hallmark qualities of an elite caliber X-receiver at 6’4″, 205 pounds, but he has the speed and route running flexibility of a WR half a foot shorter.

    5) Minnesota Vikings (From LAC): J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan

    Trade: Vikings receive No. 5 pick, Chargers receive No. 11 pick, No. 42 pick, 2025 second-round pick

    J.J. McCarthy is a polarizing 2024 NFL Draft prospect. But there’s a QB scarcity issue. And when a team can add a young, talented passer like McCarthy, it’s difficult to pass up.

    MORE: Free NFL Mock Draft Simulator With Trades

    In this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, Kevin O’Connell and Kwesi Odofo-Mensah are aggressive in trading up for their next franchise QB, getting McCarthy in on the ground floor at just 21.

    There will be questions about McCarthy’s developmental arc, but he’s assuredly a high-end physical talent who flashes great poise, efficiency, and autonomy in and out of structure.

    6) New York Giants: Malik Nabers, WR, LSU

    The New York Giants need a central force for their offense at wide receiver. And more than that, they need a three-phase weapon they can rely on. Malik Nabers fits the bill.

    At 6’0″, 200 pounds, Nabers has nitrous in his soles and anger in his soul. He pummels DBs with physicality but also has the speed, twitch, and body control to win with finesse.

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

    Almost every 2024 NFL Mock Draft to this point has seen the Tennessee Titans pick an offensive tackle in Round 1. Joe Alt is my OT1, so he’s the pick at this juncture.

    At 6’8″, 315 pounds, Alt has dominating reach, rivaled only by his hyper-elite athleticism, flexibility, and recovery freedom. He can keep Will Levis clean for a decade on end.

    8) Atlanta Falcons: Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia

    In this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, the Falcons trade for Bears QB Justin Fields. Then, they waste no time giving him another elite playmaker alongside Bijan Robinson and Drake London.

    Brock Bowers‘ positional designation should really say “weapon” — because that’s what he is. He wouldn’t be redundant next to Kyle Pitts because he can do so many different things.

    For Atlanta, Bowers would function best as a big-slot hybrid with in-line, motion, and seam capabilities — a role in which he’d be able to terrorize defenses with his three-level ability.

    9) Chicago Bears: Rome Odunze, WR, Washington

    With Williams in tow, it’s now time for the Chicago Bears to give him the weaponry he needs to reach his ceiling in the Windy City. At ninth overall, Rome Odunze tops the list.

    Odunze perfectly complements D.J. Moore with his size, smooth athleticism, separation ability, and veteran-caliber catching instincts, and he can be a threat at all levels.

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

    The injury to Aaron Rodgers in 2023 was beyond the Jets’ control, but the Jets can simultaneously decrease injury risk and help the offense function by upgrading at OT.

    At No. 10 overall, Olu Fashanu is an excellent value. He’s one of the most naturally synergetic pass blockers to hit the circuit in recent years, with the talent to match.

    11) Los Angeles Chargers (From MIN): Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama

    In this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, the Chargers trade out of the top 10, add two second-round picks, and still net the top CB prospect in the class. That’s a home run for Joe Hortiz.

    Terrion Arnold perfectly encapsulates the tenacious energy Jesse Minter wants in his cornerbacks, and he doubles as a suffocating cover man with his speed, fluidity, and reach.

    12) Denver Broncos: Bo Nix, QB, Oregon

    More than anything, Bo Nix proved at Oregon that a coach can build a successful offense around him. But how far can Nix take the offense beyond its constraints? That looms large.

    Nevertheless, in Sean Payton’s offense, Nix would thrive. He’s an accurate distributor and energized creator with effortless arm elasticity, pre-snap intelligence, and MOF anticipation.

    13) Las Vegas Raiders: Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma

    With five quarterbacks off the board already, the Raiders stand pat and take one of the top natural right tackles available in Tyler Guyton — shoring up their offensive line.

    Guyton is a rare physical specimen at 6’7″, 328 pounds, with over 34″ arms, and his elite flexibility and leverage acquisition skills in pass protection should insulate his growth.

    14) New Orleans Saints: Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon State

    Taliese Fuaga is a 6’6″, 330-pound matter anomaly. A lineman as big as he is shouldn’t be as explosive in space, and Fuaga compounds that physical ability with ruthless execution.

    The Saints have an obvious need at left tackle, but there are also long-term health questions surrounding Ryan Ramczyk. Fuaga has the ability to fill either spot with ease.

    15) Indianapolis Colts: Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo

    Slowly, we’re seeing the layers peel back on Quinyon Mitchell‘s actual draft stock. He’s viewed as a top-20 prospect after the Senior Bowl. The Combine will lift him even more.

    An absolute ball-hawk with 4.3 recovery speed and instant click-and-close ability, Mitchell fits perfectly in Gus Bradley’s Cover 3 scheme, but he can also man up WRs when needed.

    16) Seattle Seahawks: Jackson Powers-Johnson, OC, Oregon

    There’s little doubt now that Jackson Powers-Johnson will be the first interior offensive line off the board in the 2024 NFL Draft. And he could go as early as No. 16 to the Seahawks.

    The 6’3″, 330-pound Powers-Johnson immediately fills a void in Seattle’s offense and has the athletic traits, physicality, and age-defying veteran savvy to be an instant stud.

    17) Pittsburgh Steelers (From JAX): JC Latham, OT, Alabama

    Trade: Steelers receive No. 17 pick, 2025 sixth-round pick, Jaguars receive No. 20 pick, No. 84 pick, 2025 fourth-round pick

    In the 2023 NFL Draft, the Steelers traded up from No. 17 to No. 14 to take Broderick Jones. In this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, they trade up to No. 17 for Alabama’s JC Latham, sniping him ahead of Cincinnati.

    Latham is a near blue-chip prospect on my board, whose acquisition is a two-fold victory for Pittsburgh. He’s a menacing blocker who also allows Jones to move to the left side.

    18) Cincinnati Bengals: Jer’Zhan Newton, DT, Illinois

    There are still a couple of functional right tackle options on the board for Cincinnati, but there aren’t many options whose value matches up to that of Illinois’ Jer’Zhan Newton.

    The Bengals have sorely missed having a disruptive presence on the interior D-line since Geno Atkins’ retirement. Newton changes that with his burst and hyper-elite flexibility.

    19) Los Angeles Rams: Laiatu Latu, EDGE, UCLA

    Every single EDGE prospect is still on the board for the Los Angeles Rams. But when you think about what the Rams need — Day 1 pass-rushing utility — Laiatu Latu is the best fit.

    At 6’5″, 265 pounds, Latu has unnatural size-adjusted flexibility and bend capacity, which he uses to finish reps after demolishing opposing extensions with wicked hand usage.

    20) Jacksonville Jaguars (From PIT): Adonai Mitchell, WR, Texas

    Adonai Mitchell is a worthy Round 1 candidate in any situation, but trading back and acquiring more capital makes this move that much sweeter for the Jacksonville Jaguars.

    MORE: Top WRs in the 2024 NFL Draft

    Mitchell has the size, hands, and conversion ability the Jaguars need at 6’4″, 195 pounds, but he’s also one of the best route runners in the class with his nuance and flexibility.

    21) Detroit Lions (From MIA): Dallas Turner, EDGE, Alabama

    Trade: Lions receive No. 21 pick, Dolphins receive No. 29 pick, No. 73 pick, 2025 third-round pick

    Under Brad Holmes and Dan Campbell, the Lions have proven that they’re willing to trade up for high-upside players who can make a transformative impact on the roster.

    That’s what the Lions do in this 2024 NFL Mock Draft, taking advantage of a golden opportunity to trade up for Dallas Turner: The completing piece opposite Aidan Hutchinson.

    Turner has the bristling speed, explosiveness, and bend to terrorize tackles and send them lurching in recovery, but he’s also an alignment-versatile, high-motor power generator.

    22) Philadelphia Eagles: Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, Alabama

    The rise of cornerback prospects like Mitchell and Wiggins through the offseason has had a counteractive effect on Kool-Aid McKinstry‘s stock, but McKinstry is still a Round 1 player.

    McKinstry might not be quite as fast or dynamic as the above names, but he’s an extremely savvy and fluid cover man and support player with stellar targeted physicality.

    23) Houston Texans: Cooper DeJean, DB, Iowa

    The Texans have a long-term need at CB opposite Derek Stingley, and there’s also a question mark at safety if Jimmie Ward leaves. Cooper DeJean can attack both spots.

    DeJean has the smooth athleticism, route recognition ability, and attack voracity to either be Stingley’s off-man complement on the opposite boundary or rotate with Jalen Pitre on the back end.

    24) Dallas Cowboys: Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia

    If Amarius Mims is still available when the Cowboys pick at No. 24, there aren’t many other picks to make. With Tyron Smith likely to leave this offseason, reinvesting at tackle is key.

    Mims is often viewed as a long-term investment with his youth, athleticism, and power at 6’7″, 330 pounds, but he’s already far along with his patience, leverage play, and vision.

    25) Miami Dolphins (From GB): Graham Barton, OL, Duke

    Trade: Dolphins receive No. 25 pick, Packers receive No. 29 pick, No. 156 pick, 2025 fourth-round pick, DET 2025 third-round pick

    The Dolphins originally traded back with the Lions to No. 29 overall, but now, they make a move back up the board to acquire a top interior offensive lineman ahead of Tampa Bay.

    With holes at both guard and center, the Dolphins can add Graham Barton as a five-position versatile blocker whose zone-blocking ability and tenacity would translate well.

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

    Chop Robinson is one of the more unique evaluations in the 2024 NFL Draft EDGE class. He lacks elite size and production, but his cumulative disruptive impact is hard to match.

    Robinson is a maniacal pressure generator with the twitch and power to blast open holes in the blocking front. Here, he’s matched with a similarly maniacal mind in Todd Bowles.

    27) Arizona Cardinals: Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas

    Cornerback is an option here for the Arizona Cardinals, but Byron Murphy II is my highest-graded prospect remaining at a position of need for Arizona, and many CBs are available.

    At 6’1″, 308 pounds, Murphy can have a symbiotic effect on Arizona’s rush-coverage equation with his ability to obliterate 1-on-1 blocks and prevent QBs from stepping up.

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

    Josh Allen is capable of putting an offense on his back, but the Bills need to be proactive in giving him weapons, especially given the fact that Stefon Diggs faded late in 2023.

    At 6’4″, 205 pounds, with elite explosiveness, speed, and lateral fluidity, Brian Thomas Jr. fits the WR1 physical profile, and he has the ball tracking and body control to convert.

    29) Green Bay Packers (from MIA via DET): Tyler Nubin, S, Minnesota

    DeJean was the top target for Green Bay at No. 25, but since he was off the board, the Packers traded back and added the arguable top safety in the NFL Draft at No. 29.

    MORE: 2024 NFL Draft Big Board

    Even without high-end long speed, Tyler Nubin serves as a perfect fit for Jeff Hafley’s scheme with his coverage versatility, instincts, competitiveness, and playmaking ability.

    30) Baltimore Ravens: Jared Verse, EDGE, Florida State

    With multiple free agents at EDGE and a major scheme transition on the way, the Ravens may need a scheme-transcendent infusion in the 2024 NFL Draft. Jared Verse qualifies.

    Verse’s high-level run defense ability ensures he won’t be a liability on any down, and he has the burst, violent energy, power, and twitch to rush from 2-point or 4-point stances.

    31) San Francisco 49ers: Adisa Isaac, EDGE, Penn State

    He’s not always viewed in this light, but on my board, Adisa Isaac is a worthy Round 1 contender at EDGE. And for the 49ers, he’d be a stellar scheme fit and pursuit presence.

    At 6’4″, 250 pounds, with 34″ arms, Isaac has a perfect blend of burst, agility, length, and hand power, and he’s flashed the ability to stack counters off initial power exertions.

    32) Kansas City Chiefs: Keon Coleman, WR, Florida State

    Yes, the Chiefs Chief’d again. The Chiefs, under Andy Reid and Brett Veach, have made playing the NFL Draft board an art form. Here, they get a top-25 talent in Keon Coleman.

    There’s some development to undergo for Coleman as a route runner, but in Reid’s scheme, which masterfully schemes weapons opportunities, Coleman has the traits to take advantage while also serving as a clutch presence at the X spot.

    Round 2

    33) Carolina Panthers: Darius Robinson, EDGE, Missouri

    It’s hard to pass on WR, but Darius Robinson can be a game-changing presence in Ejiro Evero’s scheme with his inside-outside versatility and destructive capabilities.

    34) New England Patriots: Kingsley Suamataia, OT, BYU

    With potential holes at both left and right tackle, Kingsley Suamataia brings value with his versatility, but also has the explosiveness, power, and bend to support a massive ceiling.

    35) Arizona Cardinals: Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson

    This is a best-case scenario for Arizona, getting a CB they could’ve considered at No. 27 overall eight picks later. Nate Wiggins has the speed and instincts to be a star.

    36) Washington Commanders: Troy Fautanu, OL, Washington

    Whether the Commanders decide to play him at tackle or guard, they can feel confident knowing they have a physical, athletic, synergetic, and powerful presence in Troy Fautanu.

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

    With a Corey Linsley retirement likely, Zach Frazier can help Los Angeles keep things rolling with his high-floor profile, functional athleticism and flexibility, and physical edge.

    38) Tennessee Titans: Kamari Lassiter, CB, Georgia

    With a looming need at CB, Dennard Wilson adds Kamari Lassiter, a prospect who fits his vision with his speed, playmaking ability, and authoritative physicality in run support.

    39) New York Giants: Ennis Rakestraw Jr., CB, Missouri

    Shane Bowen clearly had an affinity for feisty, fleet-footed man coverage CBs in his time at Tennessee. Ennis Rakestraw Jr. fits that mold perfectly opposite of Deonte Banks.

    40) Washington Commanders: Xavier Worthy, WR, Texas

    Xavier Worthy’s speed is superlative in the 2024 NFL Draft. He’ll not only gain chemistry with Daniels and feed into his big-play propensity but also have a gravitational effect on other WRs with his sharp route running.

    41) Green Bay Packers: Max Melton, CB, Rutgers

    After taking Nubin in Round 1, the Packers add Max Melton in Round 2. Melton has the speed and length to play the boundary, but he also has slot versatility and support value.

    42) Los Angeles Chargers: Ja’Lynn Polk, WR, Washington

    My WR6, Ja’Lynn Polk is the quintessential movement-Z receiver, whose all-encompassing alignment versatility and infallible hand strength are reminiscent of Rams’ star Puka Nacua.

    43) Atlanta Falcons: Ladd McConkey, WR, Georgia

    After adding Bowers as an all-encompassing weapon, the Falcons stay in Georgia with Ladd McConkey, adding the speedy separator as a versatile movement-Z alongside London.

    44) Las Vegas Raiders: Spencer Rattler, QB, South Carolina

    Spencer Rattler is highly regarded as a developmental starter with his elite arm talent and elasticity, and his Senior Bowl showing may have sold him to evaluators as a leader and field general.

    45) New Orleans Saints: Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington

    Injuries could push Michael Penix Jr. down the board, but if he’s still here for the Saints, he has the starting upside, processing ability, and competitive toughness to bank on.

    46) Indianapolis Colts: Roman Wilson, WR, Michigan

    Roman Wilson is a good bet to be a top-50 pick once he runs the 40. He’s a perfect fit for Shane Steichen and Anthony Richardson with his speed, bend, catching ability, and presence as a blocker.

    47) New York Giants: Roger Rosengarten, OT, Washington

    Roger Rosengarten will need to up his play strength at the NFL level, but he’s a natural right tackle with great technique, recovery capacity, and uncommon athleticism in space.

    48) Jacksonville Jaguars: T.J. Tampa, CB, Iowa State

    At 6’2″, 200 pounds, T.J. Tampa has the foot speed, fluidity, and smothering length to be a true CB1 in Ryan Nielsen’s man-heavy scheme, and he’s a former WR with plus ball skills.

    49) Cincinnati Bengals: Patrick Paul, OT, Houston

    Patrick Paul still has work to refine his technique, but he profiles well as a future right tackle with his grip strength and dominating wingspan at 6’7″, 333 pounds.

    50) San Francisco 49ers (From PHI): Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona

    Trade: 49ers receive No. 50 pick, Eagles receive No. 63 pick, No. 124 pick, 2025 third-round pick

    There’s a drop-off in the offensive line class in the mid-Day 2 range. The 49ers get ahead of the curve in this 2024 NFL Mock Draft by trading up for Jordan Morgan.

    MORE: Top OTs in the 2024 NFL Draft

    Morgan may project inside at the next level with his non-elite arm length. But regardless, he’s a high-energy athlete with the size and power to thrive in the 49ers’ scheme.

    51) Pittsburgh Steelers: Christian Haynes, OL, UConn

    In this 2024 NFL Mock Draft scenario, the Steelers would experiment with Christian Haynes at center. He’ll need to improve his snaps, but he’s a tone-setter with dominating explosiveness, power, and strength.

    52) Los Angeles Rams: Caelen Carson, CB, Wake Forest

    Caelen Carson is quietly one of the best man coverage CBs in the 2024 NFL Draft with his foot speed, corrective twitch, and physicality, and he can play the ball through the catch.

    53) Philadelphia Eagles: Kamren Kinchens, S, Miami (FL)

    Kamren Kinchens has almost unheard-of dynamism and range at 5’11”, 206 pounds. He’s a verified playmaker, a solid support defender, and an exciting long-term investment.

    54) Cleveland Browns: Ruke Orhorhoro, DT, Clemson

    At the 54th pick, Ruke Orhorhoro gives Cleveland one of the better floor-ceiling balances available. He’s a stellar run defender with explosive, alignment-versatile pass-rush upside.

    55) Miami Dolphins: Beau Brade, S, Maryland

    At 6’2″, 209 pounds, Beau Brade is a stellar strong safety complement to Jevon Holland, with impressive coverage versatility and presence as an enforcer in the box.

    56) Dallas Cowboys: Edgerrin Cooper, LB, Texas A&M

    Edgerrin Cooper immediately upgrades the Cowboys’ LB room with his ability to attack downhill, engage and offset blocks, and finish plays with his range and length in pursuit.

    57) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Dominick Puni, OL, Kansas

    Moving Dominick Puni to center will take some experimentation, but Puni is a plus athlete with great power, football IQ, and leverage awareness, and he snapped well in Mobile.

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

    Finally, the first running back is off the board. At around 6’1″, 220 pounds, Trey Benson is an explosive, relentless volume back with crisp cutting ability and receiving utility.

    59) Houston Texans: Malachi Corley, WR, Western Kentucky

    A dream fit for Bobby Slowik’s Shanahan-derived scheme, Malachi Corley can maintain his RAC divinity status as a slot WR3 and motion man beneath Nico Collins and Tank Dell.

    60) Buffalo Bills: Austin Booker, EDGE, Kansas

    Austin Booker gives the Bills a little bit of everything, which is what they need at EDGE. He has power and active hands with his 34″ arms, but he’s also exceedingly fast and flexible.

    61) Washington Commanders (From DET): Bralen Trice, EDGE, Washington

    Trade: Commanders receive No. 61 pick, Lions receive No. 67 pick, No. 137 pick, 2025 fourth-round pick

    MORE: Top EDGEs in the 2024 NFL Draft

    Needing an EDGE presence, Dan Quinn and Co. make a slight trade up for Bralen Trice — a powerful rusher with some of the most consistent production over the past two years.

    62) Baltimore Ravens: Troy Franklin, WR, Oregon

    Troy Franklin may need to acclimate to NFL physicality, but he has the athletic profile of a prime Robbie Anderson and can be utilized in various ways in Todd Monken’s scheme.

    63) Philadelphia Eagles (From SF): Kiran Amegadjie, OL, Yale

    Jeff Stoutland could turn Kiran Amegadjie into a Pro Bowl-caliber guard. Amegadjie has the explosiveness, power, wrenching strength, and domineering physicality to overwhelm defenders.

    64) Kansas City Chiefs: T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas

    We got a first-hand look at how valuable a nose tackle can be with Mike Pennel’s Super Bowl showing. With T’Vondre Sweat, the Chiefs lock down that spot for at least four years.

    Round 3

    65) Carolina Panthers: Xavier Legette, WR, South Carolina

    The flashes of route nuance and separation ability are there for Xavier Legette at 6’1″, 225 pounds, and his speed and density make him a venerable RAC threat in space.

    66) Arizona Cardinals: Chris Braswell, EDGE, Alabama

    EDGE isn’t Arizona’s top need, but the Cardinals could use a player like Chris Braswell in their rotation — a dynamic speed-to-power entity with workmanlike hands and a great motor.

    67) Detroit Lions (From WAS): D.J. James, CB, Auburn

    Though D.J. James is a bit lighter at around 170 pounds, he’s a fast, twitched-up, physical, technically sound CB with great ball skills and support urgency.

    68) New England Patriots: Devontez Walker, WR, North Carolina

    Devontez Walker needs to clean up his hand technique and refine his route running, but he has pre-existing chemistry with Maye and is a weapon on the vertical plane.

    69) Los Angeles Chargers: McKinnley Jackson, DT, Texas A&M

    Jim Harbaugh and Minter will need to re-tool the interior defensive line. McKinnley Jackson, with his burst, energy, and torque at 320 pounds, should help as a versatile 1-tech.

    70) New York Giants: Brandon Dorlus, EDGE, Oregon

    In Bowen’s new scheme, Brandon Dorlus brings a unique stand-up capable presence at 6’3″, 272 pounds, with the menacing power profile to cave in tackles opposite Kayvon Thibodeaux.

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

    A Day 1 starter at guard, Cooper Beebe has some Kevin Zeitler to his game. He’s not an elite athlete, but he’s an elite competitor with high football IQ.

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

    With virtually no help alongside Garrett Wilson at WR, Jalen McMillan gives the Jets a sharp and nuanced separator with the speed to exploit seams and stress defenses vertically.

    73) Miami Dolphins: Marshawn Kneeland, EDGE, Western Michigan

    Jaelan Phillips and Bradley Chubb incite fear on paper, but health has been an issue. Marshawn Kneeland immediately strengthens Miami’s rotation but also has upside with his power and motor.

    74) Chicago Bears (From ATL): Sedrick Van Pran, OC, Georgia

    Trade: Bears receive No. 74 pick, 2025 third-round pick, Falcons receive Justin Fields

    MORE: Top iOL in the 2024 NFL Draft

    In the Justin Fields trade, the Bears netted the 74th overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, which they use here on a potential starting center in Sedrick Van Pran.

    75) Chicago Bears: Leonard Taylor III, DT, Miami (FL)

    Even after adding Gervon Dexter and Zacch Pickens in 2023, Leonard Taylor III’s explosive upside at 3-tech is too much for the Bears to pass up here.

    76) Seattle Seahawks: Trevin Wallace, LB, Kentucky

    It’s fun to think about Trevin Wallace‘s upside in Mike Macdonald’s scheme. Wallace has arguably the highest ceiling of all 2024 NFL Draft LBs and is an RB eraser in coverage.

    77) Las Vegas Raiders: Michael Hall Jr., DT, Ohio State

    Michael Hall Jr. will function best when paired with a nose tackle, but at 6’2″, 280 pounds, his searing burst, lateral athleticism, and energy can leave linemen grasping for air.

    78) Seattle Seahawks: Ja’Tavion Sanders, TE, Texas

    In Ryan Grubb’s offense, Ja’Tavion Sanders’ versatility as a seam and RAC threat could be extremely valuable. He’s the explosive after-contact presence Seattle still needs.

    79) Jacksonville Jaguars: Christian Mahogany, OL, Boston College

    At 6’2 1/2″ and 318 pounds, Christian Mahogany is a hyper-dense mauler who also has the natural leverage, strength, and square mechanics to translate well at center if needed.

    80) Cincinnati Bengals: Mike Sainristil, CB, Michigan

    Assuming Mike Hilton leaves in 2025, Mike Sainristil can be a seamless replacement in the slot with his coverage variability, terse physicality in support, and WR-esque ball skills.

    81) Denver Broncos: Kalen King, CB, Penn State

    Kalen King‘s non-elite size-adjusted athleticism has worked against him this offseason, but he’s still a quality and high-IQ boundary CB with flexibility across different coverage looks.

    82) Indianapolis Colts: Javon Bullard, DB, Georgia

    Javon Bullard has nickel capabilities for down the road, but in the immediate timeline, he’s a versatile strong safety with throttle freedom, keen vision, and a chippy mentality.

    83) Los Angeles Rams: Payton Wilson, LB, NC State

    Payton Wilson is a big gamble on the medical side. But on tape, there’s no questioning his elite range, keen instincts, projected versatility, and ability to always be around the ball.

    84) Jacksonville Jaguars: Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan

    Kris Jenkins brings some comfort with his outstanding run defense at 6’3″, 310 pounds. And at that size, he has twitch and torquing freedom to supplement growth as a rusher.

    85) Cleveland Browns: Malik Washington, WR, Virginia

    Malik Washington is a top-75 prospect on my board and one of the most reliable WRs in this class — whose explosiveness serves as an accelerant for his separation and RAC.

    86) Houston Texans: Javon Baker, WR, UCF

    This may seem redundant with Corley, but Corley is an alignment-versatile weapon who’ll be schemed touches. Javon Baker is a reliable catcher, separator, and blocker at WR3/4.

    87) Dallas Cowboys: Jonathon Brooks, RB, Texas

    Though his torn ACL could muddle his 2024 NFL Draft stock, Jonathon Brooks has the easy acceleration, slashing verticality, and instinctive angle awareness to be 2024’s best RB.

    88) Green Bay Packers: Delmar Glaze, OT, Maryland

    Delmar Glaze needs to improve at channeling his traits as a run blocker, but he’s a good investment for Green Bay with his size, length, lateral mobility, and natural leverage.

    89) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Bucky Irving, RB, Oregon

    As a weapon who can work through tight creases with his energetic short-area agility and prying balance or infuse explosives in the passing game, Bucky Irving presents exciting value.

    90) Arizona Cardinals: Blake Fisher, OT, Notre Dame

    An explosive mauler who improved his knee bend and hand precision in 2023, Blake Fisher could allow Paris Johnson Jr. to move back to left tackle if D.J. Humphries is eventually cut.

    91) Green Bay Packers: Cedric Gray, LB, North Carolina

    At 6’2″, 232 pounds, with 32 1/2″ arms, Cedric Gray has the profile to explode downhill and splice through gaps, as well as drift back in coverage, manage zones, and disrupt passes.

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

    Braden Fiske is as close to a Dan Campbell “Kneecap-Biter” as you’ll get in this class, and he also brings the burst, compact strength, and violent hands to make an impression next to Alim McNeill.

    93) Baltimore Ravens: Jeremiah Trotter Jr., LB, Clemson

    In the Ravens’ scheme, where he’s freed up to explode downhill and attack as a blitzer, Jeremiah Trotter Jr would flourish while also providing early-down value.

    94) San Francisco 49ers: Calen Bullock, S, USC

    Faulty safety play in the deep third was an issue at times in the Super Bowl. Calen Bullock can remedy that with his vast range, ball-tracking ability, and playmaking proficiency.

    95) Kansas City Chiefs: Junior Colson, LB, Michigan

    A freakish size-adjusted athlete with surprising coverage chops and attack upside, Junior Colson could pay back massive dividends in Steve Spagnuolo’s scheme.

    96) Jacksonville Jaguars: Brandon Coleman, OG, TCU

    Assuming the Jaguars test Mahogany’s ability at center, Brandon Coleman can be a stalwart guard with his active hands, lateral mobility, and long, well-leveraged frame.

    97) Philadelphia Eagles: Jaylan Ford, LB, Texas

    Jaylan Ford‘s upside is a bit limited by his lack of sideline-to-sideline range, but he’s an intelligent zone coverage defender with great size, take-on ability, and closing burst.

    98) San Francisco 49ers: Jermaine Burton, WR, Alabama

    Jermaine Burton’s most marketable surface-level trait is his searing speed, but he’s also a smooth and nuanced separator and a willing blocker outside the hashes.

    99) Buffalo Bills: Khristian Boyd, DT, Northern Iowa

    If DaQuan Jones walks, Khristian Boyd is worth the investment as a replacement. He’s a bountiful block absorber at 6’2″, 320 pounds, who also has the torque to win 1-on-1.

    100) Washington Commanders: James Williams, S/LB, Miami (FL)

    James Williams could be a superb chess piece in Dan Quinn’s scheme, with the ability to man up TEs and serve as a sledgehammer in the box with his size and explosiveness.

    Round 4

    101) Carolina Panthers
    Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida

    102) Washington Commanders
    Tyrice Knight, LB, UTEP

    103) New England Patriots
    Ben Sinnott, TE, Kansas State

    104) Arizona Cardinals
    Will Shipley, RB, Clemson

    105) Los Angeles Chargers
    Blake Corum, RB, Michigan

    106) Tennessee Titans
    Javon Foster, OT, Missouri

    107) New York Giants
    Justin Eboigbe, DT, Alabama

    108) Minnesota Vikings
    Nelson Ceaser, EDGE, Houston

    109) Atlanta Falcons
    Kris Abrams-Draine, CB, Missouri

    110) Chicago Bears
    Jaden Hicks, S, Washington State

    111) New York Jets
    Cade Stover, TE, Ohio State

    112) Las Vegas Raiders
    Jaylin Simpson, CB, Auburn

    113) New York Jets
    Cole Bishop, S, Utah

    114) Atlanta Falcons
    Javon Solomon, EDGE, Troy

    115) Cincinnati Bengals
    Jared Wiley, TE, TCU

    116) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Mekhi Wingo, DT, LSU

    117) Indianapolis Colts
    Theo Johnson, TE, Penn State

    118) Seattle Seahawks
    Keith Randolph Jr., DT, Illinois

    119) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Khyree Jackson, CB, Oregon

    120) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Malik Mustapha, S, Wake Forest

    121) Denver Broncos
    Jonah Elliss, EDGE, Utah

    122) Chicago Bears
    Jamari Thrash, WR, Louisville

    123) Houston Texans
    Gabe Hall, DT, Baylor

    124) Philadelphia Eagles
    Luke McCaffrey, WR, Rice

    125) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Renardo Green, CB, Florida State

    126) Green Bay Packers
    Cedric Johnson, EDGE, Ole Miss

    127) Houston Texans
    Qwan’tez Stiggers, CB, Toronto (CFL)

    128) Buffalo Bills
    Josh Newton, CB, TCU

    129) Minnesota Vikings
    Jha’Quan Jackson, WR, Tulane

    130) Baltimore Ravens
    MarShawn Lloyd, RB, USC

    131) San Francisco 49ers
    Tanor Bortolini, OL, Wisconsin

    132) Kansas City Chiefs
    Matt Goncalves, OT, Pittsburgh

    133) Baltimore Ravens
    Zak Zinter, OG, Michigan

    Round 5

    134) Cleveland Browns
    Michael Pratt, QB, Tulane

    135) New England Patriots
    Audric Estimé, RB, Notre Dame

    136) Arizona Cardinals
    Evan Anderson, DT, Florida Atlantic

    137) Detroit Lions
    Mason McCormick, OL, South Dakota State

    138) Los Angeles Chargers
    Jaheim Bell, TE, Florida State

    139) New York Giants
    Braelon Allen, RB, Wisconsin

    140) Carolina Panthers
    Sataoa Laumea, OL, Utah

    141) Atlanta Falcons
    Jordan Jefferson, DT, LSU

    142) Chicago Bears
    Jaylen Harrell, EDGE, Michigan

    143) Denver Broncos
    Brenden Rice, WR, USC

    144) Tennessee Titans
    Tyler Davis, DT, Clemson

    145) Denver Broncos
    DeWayne Carter, DT, Duke

    146) Las Vegas Raiders
    Jaylen Wright, RB, Tennessee

    147) Cincinnati Bengals
    Jordan Whittington, WR, Texas

    148) New Orleans Saints
    Johnny Wilson, TE, Florida State

    149) Indianapolis Colts
    Dylan Laube, RB, New Hampshire

    150) Seattle Seahawks
    LaDarius Henderson, OG, Michigan

    151) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Sundiata Anderson, EDGE, Grambling State

    152) Los Angeles Rams
    Kitan Oladapo, S, Oregon State

    153) Los Angeles Rams
    Travis Glover, OT, Georgia State

    154) Cleveland Browns
    Emani Bailey, RB, TCU

    155) Minnesota Vikings
    Isaiah Davis, RB, South Dakota State

    156) Green Bay Packers
    Evan Williams, DB, Oregon

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

    158) Buffalo Bills
    Dadrion Taylor-Demerson, S, Texas Tech

    159) Philadelphia Eagles
    Thomas Harper, DB, Notre Dame

    160) Arizona Cardinals
    Jordan Travis, QB, Florida State

    161) Buffalo Bills
    Maason Smith, DT, LSU

    162) Detroit Lions
    Cornelius Johnson, WR, Michigan

    163) Baltimore Ravens
    Jowon Briggs, DT, Cincinnati

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

    165) Carolina Panthers
    Dallin Holker, TE, Colorado State

    166) New Orleans Saints
    Anthony Goodlow, DL, Oklahoma State

    167) Green Bay Packers
    Charles Turner, OC, LSU

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

    169) Philadelphia Eagles
    Mohamed Kamara, EDGE, Colorado State

    170) Philadelphia Eagles
    Tanner McLachlan, TE, Arizona

    171) Kansas City Chiefs
    Jacob Cowing, WR, Arizona

    172) Dallas Cowboys
    Elijah Jones, CB, Boston College

    173) New Orleans Saints
    Isaiah Adams, OL, Illinois

    174) Cincinnati Bengals
    Ty’Ron Hopper, LB, Missouri

    175) San Francisco 49ers
    Johnny Dixon, CB, Penn State

    176) Los Angeles Rams
    Kingsley Eguakun, OC, Florida

    177) Philadelphia Eagles
    Ray Davis, RB, Kentucky

    Round 6

    178) Minnesota Vikings
    Aaron Casey, LB, Indiana

    179) Carolina Panthers
    Daequan Hardy, CB, Penn State

    180) Washington Commanders
    Javion Cohen, OG, Miami (FL)

    181) New England Patriots
    Willie Drew, CB, Virginia State

    182) Los Angeles Chargers
    Anim Dankwah, OT, Howard

    183) Tennessee Titans
    Jalen Coker, WR, Holy Cross

    184) New York Giants
    KT Leveston, OL, Kansas State

    185) Miami Dolphins
    Chau Smith-Wade, CB, Washington State

    186) New York Jets
    Carter Bradley, QB, South Alabama

    187) Arizona Cardinals
    Beaux Limmer, OL, Arkansas

    188) Philadelphia Eagles
    Christian Jones, OT, Texas

    189) New England Patriots
    Jaylon Carlies, S, Missouri

    190) Los Angeles Rams
    Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint, WR, Georgia

    191) New Orleans Saints
    Caedan Wallace, OT, Penn State

    192) Indianapolis Colts
    Jacob Monk, OL, Duke

    193) Seattle Seahawks
    Jarius Monroe, CB, Tulane

    194) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Tahj Washington, WR, USC

    195) Cincinnati Bengals
    Justin Rogers, DT, Auburn

    196) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Jarrian Jones, CB, Florida State

    197) Buffalo Bills
    Kimani Vidal, RB, Troy

    198) Atlanta Falcons
    Daijun Edwards, RB, Georgia

    199) Miami Dolphins
    Anthony Gould, WR, Oregon State

    200) New Orleans Saints
    DeCamerion Richardson, CB, Mississippi State

    201) Buffalo Bills
    Austin Reed, QB, Western Kentucky

    202) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Xavier Weaver, WR, Colorado

    203) Green Bay Packers
    Donovan Jennings, OL, South Florida

    204) Cleveland Browns
    Eric Watts, EDGE, UConn

    205) Buffalo Bills
    Myles Cole, EDGE, Texas Tech

    206) Detroit Lions
    Andrew Raym, OC, Oklahoma

    207) Cleveland Browns
    Marist Liufau, LB, Notre Dame

    208) Las Vegas Raiders
    Marcus Harris, DL, Auburn

    209) Denver Broncos
    Julian Pearl, OT, Illinois

    210) Jacksonville Jaguars
    M.J. Devonshire, CB, Pittsburgh

    211) Los Angeles Rams
    Sione Vaki, RB/S, Utah

    212) Dallas Cowboys
    Fabien Lovett, DT, Florida State

    213) San Francisco 49ers
    Isaac Guerendo, RB, Louisville

    214) San Francisco 49ers
    Jack Westover, TE, Washington

    215) Green Bay Packers
    Ainias Smith, WR, Texas A&M

    216) Los Angeles Rams
    Brevyn Spann-Ford, TE, Minnesota

    217) Los Angeles Rams
    Xavier Thomas, EDGE, Clemson

    Round 7

    218) Tennessee Titans
    Jalyx Hunt, EDGE, Houston Christian

    219) Washington Commanders
    Tarheeb Still, CB, Maryland

    220) Las Vegas Raiders
    Dylan McMahon, OL, NC State

    221) Houston Texans
    Brennan Jackson, EDGE, Washington State

    222) Los Angeles Chargers
    Josh Proctor, S, Ohio State

    223) Arizona Cardinals
    Kamal Hadden, CB, Tennessee

    224) Tennessee Titans
    Jarvis Brownlee, CB, Louisville

    225) Baltimore Ravens
    Ryan Cooper Jr., DB, Oregon State

    226) Las Vegas Raiders
    Myles Murphy, DT, North Carolina

    227) Minnesota Vikings
    Logan Lee, DT, Iowa

    228) New England Patriots
    Gabriel Murphy, EDGE, UCLA

    229) New Orleans Saints
    Jaxon Janke, WR, South Dakota State

    230) Dallas Cowboys
    Drake Nugent, OC, Michigan

    231) Indianapolis Colts
    Jaden Crumedy, DT, Mississippi State

    232) Seattle Seahawks
    Joshua Cephus, WR, UTSA

    233) Jacksonville Jaguars
    Blake Watson, RB, Memphis

    234) Cincinnati Bengals
    Dillon Johnson, RB, Washington

    235) Houston Texans
    Josiah Ezirim, OL, Eastern Kentucky

    236) San Francisco 49ers
    Maema Njongmeta, LB, Wisconsin

    237) Pittsburgh Steelers
    Devaughn Vele, WR, Utah

    238) Miami Dolphins
    Darius Muasau, LB, UCLA

    239) Tennessee Titans
    Carson Steele, RB, UCLA

    240) Cleveland Browns
    Garret Greenfield, OT, South Dakota State

    241) Dallas Cowboys
    Tommy Eichenberg, LB, Ohio State

    242) Green Bay Packers
    Jordan Miller, DT, SMU

    243) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Dominique Hampton, S, Washington

    244) Houston Texans
    Nathaniel Watson, LB, Mississippi State

    245) Buffalo Bills
    Jontrey Hunter, LB, Georgia State

    246) Detroit Lions
    Tykee Smith, DB, Georgia

    247) Baltimore Ravens
    Mike Edwards, OT, Campbell

    248) Kansas City Chiefs
    Jaden Shirden, RB, Monmouth

    249) San Francisco 49ers
    Jamree Kromah, DT, James Madison

    250) Green Bay Packers
    Mark Perry, S, TCU

    251) Cincinnati Bengals
    Nick Samac, OC, Michigan State

    252) New York Jets
    Curtis Jacobs, LB, Penn State

    253) New York Jets
    Solomon Byrd, EDGE, USC

    254) Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Kyle Hergel, OL, Boston College

    255) Los Angeles Chargers
    Eyabi Okie-Anoma, EDGE, Charlotte

    256) New York Jets
    James Ester, DT, Northern Illinois

    All the 2024 NFL Draft resources you need — the draft order, the top QBs, the Top 100 prospects, and the full 2024 Big Board — right at your fingertips at Pro Football Network!

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