2024 Official Super Duper Mock Draft Thread - Opinions On Mocks | Pundit Mocks

Collapse
X
Collapse
First Prev Next Last
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • powderblueboy
    Registered Charger Fan
    • Jul 2017
    • 9207
    • Send PM

    Originally posted by Boltnut View Post

    Skillset is fine... watch the TCU tape. Moore's usage of him last year was questionable.
    This is no longer college.
    He was going up against guys who are currently out of football.

    He's unproven at best in the NFL ... at worst, he has demonstrated traits that you find in backups, not starters.

    One point Popper made was that all the experienced NFL corners seemed to know the route he was going to run.
    He's raw, and at least needs some time to figure things out: which means you do not trust in him carrying much of a load this year.

    The better question would be, which one of those players would you expect to get a larger contract, if suddenly exposed as free agents?

    Comment

    • Chargers8491
      Registered Charger Fan
      • Apr 2022
      • 1233
      • Send PM

      Originally posted by dmac_bolt View Post

      You could be right.

      Diss got a FOUR year deal? No shit? I didn’t realize that, whoa. How much is guaranteed, the first month?
      Diss was brough in because he owns the C gap and they wanted to keep him around. Hurst in the right situation is a real good pass catching TE. I feel he was signed to fill a hole if they can't draft one which leads me to believe that they will be drafting one. The question is it in the early rounds or late.
      1- #11 Bowers TE 7a- #225 Boyd DT
      2a- #35 Cooper LB 7b- #253 Vidal RB
      2b- #37 Jenkins DT
      3a- #66 Puni OT
      3b- #69 Sainristill CB
      4a- #105 Rice WR
      4b- #110 Lloyd RB
      5- #140 Green CB
      6- #181 Nourzad C/OG

      Comment

      • Chargers8491
        Registered Charger Fan
        • Apr 2022
        • 1233
        • Send PM

        Originally posted by Boltjolt View Post
        Id guess Poona they see at NT. Whether or not he will start, idk but he has played a lot of games at NT in Seattle. Other than that, don't know their plan or who else they see there.
        Poona was pretty good in Seattle. He played in 63 of 66 games while there. He was used as an interior pass rush guy and he is a pretty good run stuffer. I think he fits pretty good in Minter's defense.
        1- #11 Bowers TE 7a- #225 Boyd DT
        2a- #35 Cooper LB 7b- #253 Vidal RB
        2b- #37 Jenkins DT
        3a- #66 Puni OT
        3b- #69 Sainristill CB
        4a- #105 Rice WR
        4b- #110 Lloyd RB
        5- #140 Green CB
        6- #181 Nourzad C/OG

        Comment

        • Topcat
          AKA "Pollcat"
          • Jan 2019
          • 18176
          • Send PM

          Originally posted by dmac_bolt View Post

          You could be right.

          Diss got a FOUR year deal? No shit? I didn’t realize that, whoa. How much is guaranteed, the first month?
          Actually, Diss got a 3-year deal with an out after 2:

          image.png

          Comment

          • Boltjolt
            Dont let the PBs fool ya
            • Jun 2013
            • 26924
            • Henderson, NV
            • Send PM

            The Athletic wriet Dane Brugler just put out his 7 round mock.

            Brugler i think is ok, but much to disagre with in this mock. Has us trading with AZ after they trade with Minne. We get 11 and 35. I do not think Hortiz will settle for 11 and 35 when AZ gets 11, 23 and a 2025 3rd. I think we will ask for 11 & 27 and MAYBE their 4th. Certainly if we get 11 and 35 we will ask for their 104 pick.I dont think we will settle for them to just tale MHJ.

            I also dont think we willl draft 3 OL, or 4 Michigan guys.


            Anyways, here it is.

            At the bottom of the article, I included the team-by-team hauls for a cleaner look at what each class looks like in this mock draft.

            (Note: An asterisk indicates a trade for the purposes of this mock.)
            go-deeper
            GO DEEPER

            NFL Draft 2024 ‘The Beast’ Guide: Dane Brugler’s scouting reports and player rankings

            1. Chicago Bears (from CAR): Caleb Williams, QB, USC


            Nothing is official until commissioner Roger Goodell steps to the podium in Detroit and announces the selection, but Williams will be a Bear in a little more than a week.

            2. Washington Commanders: Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU


            The draft winds will continue to swirl in unpredictable directions up until draft night. Right now, though, the buzz is pointing towards Daniels being the pick at No. 2. Truth is, new Washington general manager Adam Peters and head coach Dan Quinn aren’t tipping their hands, so everyone is still guessing at this point.

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


            Listening to trade offers is the responsible move for de facto general manager Eliot Wolf. But it is tough to imagine the Patriots passing on a quarterback here, especially if Maye makes it to No. 3. Owner Robert Kraft is not interested in another offensive season like last year in New England.

            4. Minnesota Vikings (from ARI)*: J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan


            (Projected trade: Vikings trade picks Nos. 11 and 23 and a 2025 third-round pick to the Cardinals for No. 4.)

            It is no secret that the Vikings are quarterback shopping in the NFL Draft, but how high can they trade up to secure their guy? In this scenario, Minnesota jumps to No. 4 for McCarthy, which would mark the first time in NFL Draft history we see quarterbacks drafted 1-2-3-4 overall.

            5. Arizona Cardinals (from LAC)*: Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State


            (Projected trade: Cardinals trade picks Nos. 11 and 35 to the Chargers for No. 5.)

            Just like last year, Cardinals general manager Monti Ossenfort works the phones to trade out of the top five … but then jumps right back up to grab an Ohio State stud. In 2023, it was Paris Johnson Jr.; this year it’s Harrison. The smooth maneuvering costs Arizona the No. 35 pick here, but it adds No. 23 and a 2025 third-rounder for essentially moving back one spot.

            ADVERTISEMENT

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


            I think the Giants will examine their trade-up options for a quarterback, but in this scenario, they stay put and add the true premier weapon they have been missing. Nabers would have been my No. 1 overall prospect in each of the last two draft classes.

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


            For the sake of being different, I could throw another name in here — but why go away from what makes sense? Alt fills a clear hole and (along with 2023 first-round left guard Peter Skoronski) would give the Titans one of the more promising left sides of an offensive line in the league.

            8. Atlanta Falcons: Dallas Turner, Edge, Alabama


            There is a good chance we see something this year that has happened just once (2021) in the Super Bowl era: no defensive players selected in the first seven picks of the draft. If that comes to fruition, the Falcons will have their choice of the top defensive player on their board at No. 8 — and I don’t think many people will be surprised if that is Turner.

            9. Chicago Bears: Rome Odunze, WR, Washington


            With only four draft picks this year, general manager Ryan Poles will be enticed by trade-back opportunities here to recoup draft capital. But when the Bears are feeling left out in the second round, they can throw on Odunze highlights and feel just fine about this decision. Adding Keenan Allen was a no-brainer, but he might only be a one-year rental.

            10. New York Jets: Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia


            If you focus only on the “TE” positional designation here, you might not love this pick. But if you pay attention to the dynamic impact Bowers can bring to an offense, this isn’t a hard sell. The Napa, Calif., native is as much a tight end as he is a slot receiver who can also block inline or line up outside. The Jets are in a win-now mindset, and Bowers makes the offense better from day one.
            go-deeper
            GO DEEPER

            NFL teams know the best way to draft, so why aren't they doing it?

            11. Los Angeles Chargers (from MIN)*: JC Latham, G/T, Alabama


            Trading back for an offensive lineman would be an unsurprising move for the Chargers. The bigger mystery might be which offensive lineman they prefer. Oregon State’s Taliese Fuaga is a devastating run blocker and Washington’s Troy Fautanu has legitimate position versatility, but I’ll go with Latham, who is arguably the strongest player in the draft and was recruited out of high school not too long ago by Jim Harbaugh.

            ADVERTISEMENT

            12. Denver Broncos: Taliese Fuaga, G/T, Oregon State


            With Garett Bolles entering the final year of his deal, the Broncos have done plenty of homework on the tackles in this draft class. Fuaga can compete for a spot at guard as a rookie while being the long-term plan at tackle.

            13. Las Vegas Raiders: Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama


            The Raiders will certainly consider several offensive and defensive linemen at this spot. With two worthy cornerback prospects on the board, though, both Arnold and Quinyon Mitchell will be part of the conversation. I wouldn’t be surprised to see either corner here, but Arnold has the dog mentality that speaks directly to Antonio Pierce.

            14. New Orleans Saints: Olu Fashanu, OT, Penn State


            Considering the Saints’ depth chart and the players expected to be drafted in this range, offensive tackle makes too much sense. And Fashanu might be the best-case scenario for New Orleans.

            15. Indianapolis Colts: Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo


            It wouldn’t be surprising to see the Colts go with a dynamic pass catcher at 15, especially if Bowers is still available. But Mitchell is an ideal fit, too, considering his tape, on-ball production and traits.

            16. Seattle Seahawks: Troy Fautanu, G/T, Washington


            The safe bet might be a trade down by the Seahawks, but it would be tough to move away from Fautanu if he falls here. Though the Huskies’ left tackle can stay on the outside if needed, his skill set could be maximized inside and would give the Seahawks appealing versatility across the offensive line.

            17. Buffalo Bills (from JAX)*: Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSU


            (Projected trade: Bills trade picks Nos. 28, 133, 144 and a 2025 second-rounder to the Jaguars for No. 17.)

            The Bills need their draft picks to remodel the roster with young, low-priced depth, but general manager Brandon Beane is an aggressive drafter and has never shied away from moving up in the first round to get his guy. Thomas is an outstanding size/speed athlete with better route-running skill than given he’s credit for, and he’d give Josh Allen a new WR1 on offense.

            18. Cincinnati Bengals: Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas


            With his explosive twitch and natural leverage, Murphy moves differently than any other defensive tackle in this draft class. He is equally disruptive versus the run and when rushing the passer — something the Bengals are looking to add to the roster.

            ADVERTISEMENT

            19. Los Angeles Rams: Jared Verse, Edge, Florida State


            Since Sean McVay became head coach, the Rams have picked in the top 60 six times — all six have been offensive players. But it feels like that will change this year with the Rams back in the first round and needing so many upgrades on defense, including at edge rusher. Verse brings all-day power and disruption with a motor that doesn’t quit.

            20. Pittsburgh Steelers: Graham Barton, C, Duke


            The Steelers have multiple needs on the offensive line, and Barton offers the five-position versatility that would allow Pittsburgh to get its best five on the field. In the long term, he’ll lock down the center position for the Steelers’ offense.
            go-deeper
            GO DEEPER

            NFL folks might be sleeping on these draft prospects, our CFB experts say

            21. Miami Dolphins: Laiatu Latu, Edge, UCLA


            The Dolphins weren’t scared off by Jaelan Phillips’ injury past, and I don’t think they will shy away from Latu’s either. With Bradley Chubb and Phillips working their way back from injury, Latu and his savvy pass-rush skills can contribute immediately in Miami.

            22. Philadelphia Eagles: Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia


            This would be an ideal landing spot for the inexperienced Mims. After making just eight starts at Georgia, he can earn his graduate degree from “Stoutland University” (under the watchful eye of Eagles O-line coach Jeff Stoutland) before taking over for Lane Johnson as the right tackle of the future. The Athens-to-Philadelphia pipeline remains fruitful.

            23. Arizona Cardinals (from MIN)*: Cooper DeJean, CB, Iowa


            Head coach Jonathan Gannon will be targeting savvy, high-character players in the draft. DeJean — and his versatility in the secondary — fits the bill.

            24. Dallas Cowboys: Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma


            Ideally, the Cowboys would love to keep Tyler Smith at left guard, but it might depend on how this draft plays out. In this scenario, they add the raw but toolsy tackle, who they hope will be the next Tyron Smith.

            25. Green Bay Packers: Jackson Powers-Johnson, G/C, Oregon


            There are several ways the Packers can attack the offensive line in the draft. One of those is to select Powers-Johnson, who can provide an upgrade at center and allow Green Bay to keep Zach Tom at tackle while moving Josh Myers to guard.

            ADVERTISEMENT

            26. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson


            The Buccaneers have more questions than established answers on their cornerback depth chart, especially after the Carlton Davis trade. Although his marginal play strength is a red flag, Wiggins is a high-level athlete with cover awareness that will appeal to coach Todd Bowles.

            27. Arizona Cardinals (from HOU): Chop Robinson, Edge, Penn State


            With Harrison, DeJean and Robinson, this is an All-Big Ten first round for Arizona. Robinson doesn’t have the body of work (15 tackles, four sacks over 10 games in 2023) that teams ideally target this early, but his first-step explosion is different than any other pass rusher in this class.

            28. Jacksonville Jaguars (from BUF)*: Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, Alabama


            In this scenario, the Jaguars are able to move down in the first round and still address the cornerback position with a strong option. McKinstry might not have elite speed, but he’s confident, controlled and smart, which will get him on the field as a rookie.

            29. Las Vegas Raiders (from DET)*: Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington


            (Projected trade: Raiders trade picks Nos. 44 and 77 to the Lions for No. 29.)

            According to The Athletic’s Vic Tafur, “the whispers are getting louder” that the Raiders might draft Penix at No. 13. But this scenario feels like the better option, even if it means parting with a pair of Day 2 draft picks. A polarizing player among NFL front offices, Penix is an aggressive downfield passer with the mental toughness that will certainly stand out for Pierce and his staff.

            30. Baltimore Ravens: Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona


            Considered a tackle by some teams and a guard by others, Morgan would provide immediate depth at both spots for the Ravens. He is well schooled as both a run blocker and pass protector and has the athletic balance to match up well against NFL defensive linemen.

            31. San Francisco 49ers: Jer’Zhan Newton, DT, Illinois


            Regardless of their perceived top needs, the 49ers are always looking for upgrades on the defensive line. Newton doesn’t have ideal size for what San Francisco wants (similar to how he fits in most schemes), but his disruptive nature and relentless play personality are qualities that help him overcome average measurements.

            32. Kansas City Chiefs: Adonai Mitchell, WR, Texas


            This is a fun pairing of player and team. Mitchell is a loose, limber pass catcher and has the ingredients to be the top weapon for an NFL offense.
            Round 2
            33 Panthers Ladd McConkey WR Georgia
            34 Patriots Kingsley Suamataia OT BYU
            35 Chargers (from ARI)* Kris Jenkins DT Michigan
            36 Commanders Patrick Paul OT Houston
            37 Chargers Keon Coleman WR Florida State
            38 Titans Marshawn Kneeland Edge Western Michigan
            39 Panthers (from NYG) T.J. Tampa CB Iowa State
            40 Commanders (from CHI) Ennis Rakestraw Jr. CB Missouri
            41 Packers (from NYJ) Darius Robinson DL Missouri
            42 Texans (from MIN) Mike Sainristil CB Michigan
            43 Falcons Mike Hall Jr. DT Ohio State
            44 Lions (from LV)* Zach Frazier G/C West Virginia
            45 Saints (from DEN) Xavier Worthy WR Texas
            46 Colts Ricky Pearsall WR Florida
            47 Giants (from SEA) Jaden Hicks S Washington State
            48 Jaguars Troy Franklin WR Oregon
            49 Bengals Cooper Beebe G Kansas State
            50 Eagles (from NO) Junior Colson LB Michigan
            51 Steelers Roman Wilson WR Michigan
            52 Rams Bo Nix QB Oregon
            53 Eagles Javon Bullard S Georgia
            54 Browns Maason Smith DT LSU
            55 Dolphins Ja'Tavion Sanders TE Texas
            56 Cowboys Payton Wilson LB NC State
            57 Buccaneeers Christian Haynes G UConn
            58 Packers Edgerrin Cooper LB Texas A&M
            59 Texans Ruke Orhorhoro DT Clemson
            60 Bills Cole Bishop S Utah
            61 Lions Braden Fiske DT Florida State
            62 Ravens Xavier Legette WR South Carolina
            63 49ers Andru Phillips CB Kentucky
            64 Chiefs Max Melton CB Rutgers
            Thoughts on a few Round 2 selections: 33. Carolina Panthers: Ladd McConkey, WR, Georgia


            For Bryce Young to take that next step in his development, the Panthers need to add more offensive weapons — particularly receivers who can separate. McConkey might be small, but his ability to create space in his routes would make him Young’s new best friend. 35. Los Angeles Chargers: Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan


            It will feel like an upset if the Chargers don’t draft either Jenkins, Junior Colson or Mike Sainristil — all Michigan products — early in Round 2. I could make an argument why any of the three would make sense, and it will be interesting to see which former Wolverine Jim Harbaugh and defensive coordinator Jesse Minter prefer.

            ADVERTISEMENT

            46. Indianapolis Colts: Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida


            There is a good chance the Colts get a pass catcher in Round 1. If they don’t (like in this scenario), reuniting Pearsall with Anthony Richardson in the second round makes a lot of sense. Pearsall can line up across the formation in Shane Steichen’s scheme. 54. Cleveland Browns: Maason Smith, DT, LSU


            Teams want 6-foot-5 and 300-plus pounds in the trenches. Those D-line types are in short supply in this draft class, which will help push Smith up the board. With his age and talent, the LSU product makes sense for Cleveland, as it looks to add depth on the defensive line. 63. San Francisco 49ers: Andru Phillips, CB, Kentucky


            Phillips is one of my favorite Day 2 prospects in this draft class — and the 49ers also are fond of the speedy nickel. Phillips’ lack of high-end ball production isn’t ideal, but he competes, stays in phase and has the makeup that will endear him to NFL coaching.
            Round 3
            65 Panthers Jonathon Brooks RB Texas
            66 Cardinals Brandon Dorlus DL Oregon
            67 Commanders Adisa Isaac Edge Penn State
            68 Patriots Malachi Corley WR W. Kentucky
            69 Chargers Blake Corum RB Michigan
            70 Giants Trey Benson RB Florida State
            71 Cardinals (from TEN) Dominick Puni OT/G Kansas
            72 Jets Tyler Nubin S Minnesota
            73 Lions (from MIN) Ja'Lynn Polk WR Washington
            74 Falcons Kamari Lassiter CB Georgia
            75 Bears Chris Braswell Edge Alabama
            76 Broncos Spencer Rattler QB South Carolina
            77 Lions (from LV)* Caelen Carson CB Wake Forest
            78 Commanders (from SEA) Roger Rosengarten OT Washington
            79 Falcons (from JAX) Devontez Walker WR North Carolina
            80 Bengals Theo Johnson TE Penn State
            81 Seahawks (from NO) Jonah Elliss Edge Utah
            82 Colts Dadrion Taylor-Demerson S Texas Tech
            83 Rams Jermaine Burton WR Alabama
            84 Steelers Blake Fisher OT Notre Dame
            85 Browns Kiran Amegadjie OT Yale
            86 Texans (from PHI) Kamren Kinchens S Miami
            87 Cowboys Jaylen Wright RB Tennessee
            88 Packers Calen Bullock S USC
            89 Buccaneers Austin Booker Edge Kansas
            90 Cardinals (from HOU) MarShawn Lloyd RB USC
            91 Packers (from BUF) Caeden Wallace OT Penn State
            92 Buccaneers (from DET) Trevin Wallace LB Kentucky
            93 Ravens Malik Mustapha S Wake Forest
            94 49ers Jared Wiley TE TCU
            95 Chiefs Christian Mahogany G Boston College
            96 Jaguars Mekhi Wingo DT LSU
            97 Bengals D.J. James CB Auburn
            98 Steelers (from PHI) Bralen Trice Edge Washington
            99 Rams Kris Abrams-Draine CB Missouri
            100 Commanders (from SF) Brenden Rice WR USC
            Thoughts on a few Round 3 selections: 70. New York Giants: Trey Benson, RB, Florida State


            The Giants have a handful of names on their running back depth chart, but no difference-makers. Benson isn’t the most instinctive ball carrier, but his contact balance and big-play potential would be a great fit in Brian Daboll’s offense. 75. Chicago Bears: Chris Braswell, Edge, Alabama


            The Bears’ lack of picks in this draft puts a little more pressure on Poles to get this one right. But Braswell — and his explosive flashes — feels like an ideal scenario at No. 75 for Chicago, which is still looking to add firepower at edge rusher. 97. Cincinnati Bengals: D.J. James, CB, Auburn


            If this pick happens, the Bengals would have a secondary that includes D.J. James, DJ Turner and D.J. Ivey. James is a quick-reaction athlete who can be the nickel corner of the future with Mike Hilton in the final year of his contract.

            ADVERTISEMENT

            100. Washington Commanders: Brenden Rice, WR, USC


            Looking at the Commanders’ receiver depth chart, there is plenty of speed but not much size. Rice is 6-2 1/2 and 208 with the body and play strength to be a physical presence on the outside. And his Hall of Fame bloodlines don’t hurt.
            Round 4
            101 Panthers Ben Sinnott TE Kansas State
            102 Seahawks (from WAS) Cedric Gray LB North Carolina
            103 Patriots Jalyx Hunt Edge Hou. Christian
            104 Cardinals Sedrick Van Pran-Granger C Georgia
            105 Chargers Nehemiah Pritchett CB Auburn
            106 Titans Cam Hart CB Notre Dame
            107 Giants Michael Pratt QB Tulane
            108 Vikings DeWayne Carter DT Duke
            109 Falcons Delmar Glaze OT/G Maryland
            110 Chargers (from CHI) Hunter Nourzad C Penn State
            111 Jets Malik Washington WR Virginia
            112 Raiders Braelon Allen RB Wisconsin
            113 Ravens (from DEN) Khyree Jackson CB Oregon
            114 Jaguars Isaiah Adams G Illinois
            115 Bengals T'Vondre Sweat DT Texas
            116 Jaguars (from NO) Gabriel Murphy Edge UCLA
            117 Colts Tanor Bortolini G/C Wisconsin
            118 Seahawks Dominique Hampton S Washington
            119 Steelers Jarvis Brownlee Jr. CB Louisville
            120 Eagles (from LAR) Jalen McMillan WR Washington
            121 Broncos (from MIA) Cade Stover TE Ohio State
            122 Bears (from PHI) Javon Foster, OT Missouri
            123 Texans (from CLE) Brandon Coleman OT/G TCU
            124 49ers Christian Jones OT Texas
            125 Buccaneers Audric Estime RB Notre Dame
            126 Packers Ray Davis RB Kentucky
            127 Texans Will Shipley RB Clemson
            128 Bills Javon Baker WR UCF
            129 Vikings (from DET) Mason McCormick G So. Dak. State
            130 Ravens Mohamed Kamara Edge Colorado State
            131 Chiefs Bucky Irving RB Oregon
            132 49ers Zak Zinter G Michigan
            133 Jaguars (from BUF)* Jaylin Simpson S Auburn
            134 Jets (from BAL) Gabe Hall DL Baylor
            135 49ers Luke McCaffery WR Rice
            Thoughts on a few Round 4 picks: 104. Arizona Cardinals: Sedrick Van Pran-Granger, C, Georgia


            Like I mentioned earlier in this mock draft, character (football and personal) will be a critical factor in whom the Cardinals draft, and Van Pran-Granger is one of the best leaders this class has to offer. He can compete with Hjalte Froholdt for starting center reps in Year 1. 115. Cincinnati Bengals: T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas


            Reuniting Murphy and Sweat on the same defensive line in the NFL? I’m here for it. With some of the off-field and conditioning questions surrounding Sweat, I don’t think he will be drafted on the first two days — but he becomes an interesting Day 3 wild card. Though there is obvious risk with this player, the fourth round might be a spot where the Bengals feel comfortable with him, especially given their need at nose tackle.
            go-deeper
            GO DEEPER

            Former Texas star DT Sweat charged with DWI 125. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Audric Estime, RB, Notre Dame


            The Buccaneers are excited for Rachaad White this upcoming season, but it wouldn’t be a surprise if they draft another running back to help carry the load. And Estime has the bruising run style that complements White well. 130. Baltimore Ravens: Mohamed Kamara, Edge, Colorado State


            The Ravens have high hopes for previous early-round picks Odafe Oweh and David Ojabo, but they will likely draft more pass-rush help at some point in the first four rounds. Although undersized, Kamara is relentless and has disruptive potential as a subpackage rusher. 135. San Francisco 49ers: Luke McCaffrey, WR, Rice


            The McCaffrey brothers playing together in San Francisco would be a great story, obviously. But Luke is a promising pass catcher with the toughness and ball skills that will stand out for Kyle Shanahan’s offense.
            Round 5
            136 Broncos (from CAR) Decamerion Richardson CB Miss. State
            137 Patriots Sataoa Laumea G Utah
            138 Cardinals Tommy Eichenberg LB Ohio State
            139 Commanders Tip Reiman TE Illinois
            140 Chargers Jeremiah Trotter Jr. LB Clemson
            141 Panthers (from NYG) Cedric Johnson Edge Ole Miss
            142 Panthers (from TEN) Beau Brade S Maryland
            143 Falcons Tykee Smith S Georgia
            144 Jaguars (from BUF)* Renardo Green CB Florida State
            145 Broncos (from NYJ) Johnny Wilson WR Florida State
            146 Titans (from MIN) Jacob Cowing WR Arizona
            147 Broncos Fabien Lovett Sr. DT Florida State
            148 Raiders Jamari Thrash WR Louisville
            149 Bengals Anthony Gould WR Oregon State
            150 Saints Tory Taylor P Iowa
            151 Colts Tyrone Tracy Jr. RB Purdue
            152 Commanders (from SEA) Edefuan Ulofoshio LB Washington
            153 Jaguars Isaac Guerendo RB Louisville
            154 Rams Leonard Taylor III DT Miami
            155 Rams (from PIT) Cody Schrader RB Missouri
            156 Browns (from PHI) Tahj Washington WR USC
            157 Vikings (from CLE) Qwan'tez Stiggers CB CFL
            158 Dolphins Khristian Boyd DT Northern Iowa
            159 Chiefs (from DAL) Brennan Jackson Edge Washington St.
            160 Bills (from GB) Beaux Limmer G/C Arkansas
            161 Eagles (from TB) Xavier Thomas Edge Clemson
            162 Cardinals (from HOU) Myles Harden CB South Dakota
            163 Bills Nelson Ceaser III Edge Houston
            164 Lions Braiden McGregor Edge Michigan
            165 Ravens Matt Goncalves G Pitt
            166 Giants (from SF) Josh Newton CB TCU
            167 Vikings (from KC) Eric Watts Edge UConn
            168 Saints Dylan Laube RB New Hampshire
            169 Packers Elijah Jones CB Boston College
            170 Saints Marcus Harris DT Auburn
            171 Eagles M.J. Devonshire CB Pitt
            172 Eagles Gottlieb Ayedze G Maryland
            173 Chiefs Jordan Jefferson DT LSU
            174 Cowboys Matt Lee, C Miami
            175 Saints Javon Solomon Edge Troy
            176 49ers Jordan Magee LB Temple
            Thoughts on a few Round 5 picks: 136. Denver Broncos (from CAR): Decamerion Richardson, CB, Mississippi State


            A lot of teams are doing extra homework on Richardson, who has a unique blend of size (6-2 with 32 3/8-inch arms) and speed (4.34-second 40-yard dash). He graded really well as a run defender, but his inability to find the football in coverage was a red flag on his tape.

            ADVERTISEMENT

            157. Minnesota Vikings (from CLE): Qwan’tez Stiggers, CB, CFL


            The first non-combine prospect drafted here is Stiggers, a CFL product who has had a Hollywood-worthy journey to this point. But he is more than a feel-good story — Stiggers has the talent to work his way up an NFL depth chart.
            go-deeper
            GO DEEPER

            From unknown to underdog: Qwan'tez Stiggers' storybook rise as an NFL Draft prospect 168. New Orleans Saints: Dylan Laube, RB, New Hampshire


            The Saints love running backs who add value as pass catchers, and that is the bread and butter for Laube. He could moonlight as a slot receiver, if needed. 174. Dallas Cowboys: Matt Lee, C, Miami


            If the Cowboys had to play a game tomorrow, the coaches would be comfortable starting Brock Hoffman at center. But they will address the position at some point in the draft. With his anchor and quickness, Lee is terrific value in the late fifth.
            Round 6
            177 Vikings (from CAR) Ainias Smith WR Texas A&M
            178 Steelers (from ARI) Kitan Oladapo S Oregon State
            179 Seahawks (from WAS) Keith Randolph Jr. DT Illinois
            180 Patriots Jaden Crumedy DT Miss. State
            181 Chargers Trevor Keegan G Michigan
            182 Titans Jaheim Bell TE Florida State
            183 Giants Justin Eboigbe DL Alabama
            184 Dolphins (from CHI) Kingsley Eguakun C Florida
            185 Jets Devin Leary QB Kentucky
            186 Cardinals (from MIN) Jha'Quan Jackson WR Tulane
            187 Falcons Rasheen Ali RB Marshall
            188 Texans (from LV) Jaylen Harrell Edge Michigan
            189 Texans (from DEN) Nathaniel Watson LB Miss. State
            190 Saints Jarrian Jones CB Florida State
            191 Colts Myles Cole DL Texas Tech
            192 Seahawks Jordan Travis QB Florida State
            193 Patriots (from JAX) Bub Means WR Pitt
            194 Bengals Erick All TE Iowa
            195 Steelers McKinnley Jackson DT Texas A&M
            196 Rams Tanner McLachlan TE Arizona
            197 Falcons (from CLE) Joe Milton III QB Tennessee
            198 Dolphins Chigozie Anusiem CB Colorado State
            199 Saints (from PHI) Josh Proctor S Ohio State
            200 Bills (from DAL) Tyler Davis DT Clemson
            201 Lions (from TB) Will Reichard K Alabama
            202 Packers Ty'Ron Hopper LB Missouri
            203 Broncos (from HOU) Jacob Monk C Duke
            204 Bills Ethan Driskell OT Marshall
            205 Lions Sione Vaki S Utah
            206 Browns (from BAL) JD Bertrand LB Notre Dame
            207 Broncos (from SF) Curtis Jacobs LB Penn State
            208 Raiders (from KC) Walter Rouse OT Stanford
            209 Rams Kalen King CB Penn State
            210 Eagles Ryan Flournoy WR SE Missouri St.
            211 49ers Blake Watson RB Memphis
            212 Jaguars Travis Glover OT Georgia State
            213 Rams Evan Williams S Oregon
            214 Bengals Giovanni Manu OT British Columbia
            215 49ers Khalid Duke Edge Kansas State
            216 Cowboys Xavier Weaver WR Colorado
            217 Rams Nathan Thomas OT Louisiana
            218 Ravens (from NYJ) Marist Liufau LB Notre Dame
            219 Packers Ryan Watts CB/S Texas
            220 Buccaneers Cornelius Johnson WR Michigan
            Thoughts on a few Round 6 picks: 187. Atlanta Falcons: Rasheen Ali, RB, Marshall


            The Falcons have a terrific one-two backfield combination in Bijan Robinson and Tyler Allgeier. But Ali would be an outstanding addition because of his big-play potential when given space to operate. 193. New England Patriots (from JAX): Bub Means, WR, Pitt


            It wouldn’t be surprising to see the Patriots draft multiple receivers, and Means is an impressive size/speed athlete with a ball-winning attitude. One of the reasons Means transferred to Pitt was his familiarity with former wide receivers coach Tiquan Underwood, who was recently hired by the Patriots. It’d be a fun story if they were reunited. 205. Detroit Lions: Sione Vaki, S, Utah


            If there is a player in this draft who has bitten a knee cap, Vaki is that guy, so there is no mystery why the Lions have shown considerable interest in the versatile safety (and running back) from Utah. 214. Cincinnati Bengals: Giovanni Manu, OT, British Columbia (Can.)


            At 6-7, 352 with 5.06 speed, Manu is a mammoth player with freaky ability and a basketball background. He is a project and will require development time, but he will be drafted by a team that doesn’t want to worry about bidding for him in free agency.
            Round 7
            221 Chiefs (from CAR) Garret Greenfield OT So. Dak. State
            222 Commanders Daijahn Anthony S Ole Miss
            223 Raiders (from NE) Layden Robinson G Texas A&M
            224 Bengals (from ARI) Sam Hartman QB Wake Forest
            225 Chargers Dwight McGlothern CB Arkansas
            226 Cardinals (from NYG) Frank Crum OT Wyoming
            227 Browns (from TEN) Isaiah Davis RB So. Dak. State
            228 Ravens (from NYJ) Tarheeb Still CB Maryland
            229 Raiders (from MIN) Evan Anderson DT FAU
            230 Vikings (from ATL) Tyrice Knight LB UTEP
            231 Patriots (from CHI) Mark Perry S TCU
            232 Vikings (from DEN) Dylan McMahon C NC State
            233 Cowboys (from LV) Chau Smith-Wade CB Washington St.
            234 Colts Tylan Grable OT UCF
            235 Seahawks AJ Barner TE Michigan
            236 Jaguars Cameron Little K Arkansas
            237 Bengals Ryan Rehkow P BYU
            238 Texans (from NO) Bayron Matos G Dom. Republic
            239 Saints (from LAR) KT Leveston G Kansas State
            240 Panthers (from PIT) Josiah Ezirim OT East. Kentucky
            241 Dolphins Isaiah Williams WR Illinois
            242 Titans (from PHI) LaDarius Henderson G Michigan
            243 Browns Javion Cohen G Miami
            244 Cowboys Javontae Jean-Baptiste Edge Notre Dame
            245 Packers Tulu Griffin WR Miss. State
            246 Buccaneers Trey Taylor S Air Force
            247 Texans Willie Drew CB Virginia State
            248 Bills Kimani Vidal RB Troy
            249 Lions Johnny Dixon CB Penn State
            250 Ravens Logan Lee DL Iowa
            251 49ers Kamal Hadden CB Tennessee
            252 Titans (from KC) Darius Muasau LB UCLA
            253 Chargers Michael Barrett Jr. LB Michigan
            254 Rams Jaylan Ford LB Texas
            255 Packers Nick Gargiulo OT/C South Carolina
            256 Jets C.J. Hanson G/C Holy Cross
            257 Jets Dillon Johnson RB Washington
            Thoughts on a few Round 7 picks: 229. Las Vegas Raiders (from MIN): Evan Anderson, DT, FAU


            This is not a strong year for nose tackles, which could help a player like Anderson hear his name called on draft weekend. He has the skill set and play personality to muddy gaps as a rotational nose for the Raiders. 231. New England Patriots (from CHI): Mark Perry, S, TCU


            Another non-combine invite, Perry is an outstanding size/speed athlete (6-0 and 213 pounds with 4.40 speed). It won’t be a surprise if Wolf takes a chance on his explosive athleticism later in the draft.

            ADVERTISEMENT

            234. Indianapolis Colts: Tylan Grable, OT, UCF


            General manager Chris Ballard and the Colts value raw athleticism at offensive tackle and Grable, with his 4.95 40 and 36.5-inch vertical at 6-6, 306, certainly fits. The former tight end has yet to play his best football. 248. Buffalo Bills: Kimani Vidal, RB, Troy


            It would be a surprise if the Bills don’t address running back in some way on draft weekend — probably before this pick. But Vidal is excellent value this late in the draft and could be a capable backup behind James Cook.
            Team-by-team results


            (Notes: Teams are listed in alphabetical order; players are designated by round selected and overall pick) Arizona Cardinals


            1 (5). Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State
            1 (23). Cooper DeJean, CB, Iowa
            1 (27). Chop Robinson, Edge, Penn State
            3 (66). Brandon Dorlus, DL, Oregon
            3 (71). Dominick Puni, OT/G, Kansas
            3 (90). MarShawn Lloyd, RB, USC
            4 (104). Sedrick Van Pran-Granger, C, Georgia
            5 (138). Tommy Eichenberg, LB, Ohio State
            5 (162). Myles Harden, CB, South Dakota
            6 (186). Jha’Quan Jackson, WR, Tulane
            7 (226). Frank Crum, OT, Wyoming Atlanta Falcons


            1 (8): Dallas Turner, Edge, Alabama
            2 (43): Mike Hall Jr., DT, Ohio State
            3 (74): Kamari Lassiter, CB, Georgia
            3 (79). Devontez Walker, WR, North Carolina
            4 (109). Delmar Glaze, OT/G, Maryland
            5 (143). Tykee Smith, S, Georgia
            6 (187). Rasheen Ali, RB, Marshall
            6 (197). Joe Milton III, QB, Tennessee Baltimore Ravens


            1 (30). Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona
            2 (62). Xavier Legette, WR, South Carolina
            3 (93). Malik Mustapha, S, Wake Forest
            4 (113). Khyree Jackson, CB, Oregon
            4 (130). Mo Kamara, Edge, Colorado State
            5 (165). Matt Goncalves, OG, Pittsburgh
            6 (218). Marist Liufau, LB, Notre Dame
            7 (228). Tarheeb Still, CB, Maryland
            7 (250). Logan Lee, DL, Iowa Buffalo Bills


            1 (17). Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSU
            2 (60). Cole Bishop, S, Utah
            4 (128). Javon Baker, WR, UCF
            5 (160). Beaux Limmer, G/C, Arkansas
            5 (163). Nelson Ceaser III, Edge, Houston
            6 (200). Tyler Davis, DT, Clemson
            6 (204). Ethan Driskell, OT, Marshall
            7 (248). Kimani Vidal, RB, Troy

            ADVERTISEMENT

            Carolina Panthers


            2 (33). Ladd McConkey, WR, Georgia
            2 (39). T.J. Tampa, CB, Iowa State
            3 (65). Jonathon Brooks, RB, Texas
            4 (101). Ben Sinnott, TE, Kansas State
            5 (141). Cedric Johnson, Edge, Ole Miss
            5 (142). Beau Brade, S, Maryland
            7 (240). Josiah Ezirim, OT, Eastern Kentucky Chicago Bears


            1 (1). Caleb Williams, QB, USC
            1 (9). Rome Odunze, WR, Washington
            3 (75). Chris Braswell, Edge, Alabama
            4 (122). Javon Foster, OT, Missouri Cincinnati Bengals


            1 (18). Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas
            2 (49). Cooper Beebe, G, Kansas State
            3 (80). Theo Johnson, TE, Penn State
            3 (97). D.J. James, CB, Auburn
            4 (115). T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas
            5 (149). Anthony Gould, WR, Oregon State
            6 (194). Erick All, TE, Iowa
            6 (214). Giovanni Manu, OT, British Columbia (Can.)
            7 (224). Sam Hartman, QB, Wake Forest
            7 (237). Ryan Rehkow, P, BYU Cleveland Browns


            2 (54). Maason Smith, DT, LSU
            3 (85). Kiran Amegadjie, OT, Yale
            5 (156). Tahj Washington, WR, USC
            6 (206). JD Bertrand, LB, Notre Dame
            7 (227). Isaiah Davis, RB, South Dakota State
            7 (243). Javion Cohen, G, Miami Dallas Cowboys


            1 (24). Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma
            2 (56). Payton Wilson, LB, NC State
            3 (87). Jaylen Wright, RB, Tennessee
            5 (174). Matt Lee, C, Miami
            6 (216). Xavier Weaver, WR, Colorado
            7 (233). Chau Smith-Wade, CB, Washington State
            7 (244). Javontae Jean-Baptiste, Edge, Notre Dame Denver Broncos


            1 (12). Taliese Fuaga, OT/G, Oregon State
            3 (76). Spencer Rattler, QB, South Carolina
            4 (121). Cade Stover, TE, Ohio State
            5 (136). Decamerion Richardson, CB, Mississippi State
            5 (145). Johnny Wilson, WR, Florida State
            5 (147). Fabien Lovett Sr., DT, Florida State
            6 (203). Jacob Monk, C, Duke
            6 (207). Curtis Jacobs, LB, Penn State Detroit Lions


            2 (44). Zach Frazier, G/C, West Virginia
            2 (61). Braden Fiske, DT, Florida State
            3 (73). Ja’Lynn Polk, WR, Washington
            3 (77). Caelen Carson, CB, Wake Forest
            5 (164). Braiden McGregor, Edge, Michigan
            6 (201). Will Reichard, K, Alabama
            6 (205). Sione Vaki, S, Utah
            7 (249). Johnny Dixon, CB, Penn State Green Bay Packers


            1 (25). Jackson Powers-Johnson, OG/C, Oregon
            2 (41). Darius Robinson, DL, Missouri
            2 (58). Edgerrin Cooper, LB, Texas A&M
            3 (88). Calen Bullock, S, USC
            3 (91). Caedan Wallace, OT, Penn State
            4 (126). Ray Davis, RB, Kentucky
            5 (169). Elijah Jones, CB, Boston College
            6 (202). Ty’Ron Hopper, LB, Missouri
            6 (219). Ryan Watts, CB/S, Texas
            7 (245). Tulu Griffin, WR, Mississippi State
            7 (255). Nick Gargiulo, OT/C, South Carolina Houston Texans


            2 (42). Mike Sainristil, CB, Michigan
            2 (59). Ruke Orhorhoro, DT, Clemson
            3 (86). Kamren Kinchens, S, Miami
            4 (123). Brandon Coleman, OT/G, TCU
            4 (127). Will Shipley, RB, Clemson
            6 (188). Jaylen Harrell, Edge, Michigan
            6 (189). Nathaniel Watson, LB, Mississippi State
            7 (238). Bayron Matos, G, Dominican Republic
            7 (247). Willie Drew, CB, Virginia State Indianapolis Colts


            1 (15). Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo
            2 (46). Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida
            3 (82). Dadrion Taylor-Demerson, S, Texas Tech
            4 (117). Tanor Bortolini, OG/C, Wisconsin
            5 (151). Tyrone Tracy Jr., RB, Purdue
            6 (191). Myles Cole, DL, Texas Tech
            7 (234). Tylan Grable, OT, UCF Jacksonville Jaguars


            1 (28). Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, Alabama
            2 (48). Troy Franklin, WR, Oregon
            3 (96). Mekhi Wingo, DT, LSU
            4 (114). Isaiah Adams, G, Illinois
            4 (116). Gabriel Murphy, Edge, UCLA
            4 (133). Jaylin Simpson, S, Auburn
            5 (144). Renardo Green, CB, Florida State
            5 (153). Isaac Guerendo, RB, Louisville
            6 (212). Travis Glover, OT, Georgia State
            7 (236). Cameron Little, K, Arkansas Kansas City Chiefs


            1 (32). Adonai Mitchell, WR, Texas
            2 (64). Max Melton, CB, Rutgers
            3 (95). Christian Mahogany, G, Boston College
            4 (131). Bucky Irving, RB, Oregon
            5 (159). Brennan Jackson, Edge, Washington State
            5 (173). Jordan Jefferson, DT, LSU
            7 (221). Garret Greenfield, OT, South Dakota State Las Vegas Raiders


            1 (13). Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama
            1 (29). Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington
            4 (112). Braelon Allen, RB, Wisconsin
            5 (148). Jamari Thrash, WR, Louisville
            6 (208). Walter Rouse, OT, Stanford
            7 (223). Layden Robinson, G, Texas A&M
            7 (229). Evan Anderson, DT, FAU Los Angeles Chargers


            1 (11). JC Latham, OT/G, Alabama
            2 (35). Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan
            2 (37). Keon Coleman, WR, Florida State
            3 (69). Blake Corum, RB, Michigan
            4 (105). Nehemiah Pritchett, CB, Auburn
            4 (110). Hunter Nourzad, C, Penn State
            5 (140). Jeremiah Trotter Jr., LB, Clemson
            6 (181). Trevor Keegan, G, Michigan
            7 (225). Dwight McGlothern, CB, Arkansas
            7 (253). Michael Barrett Jr., LB, Michigan

            ADVERTISEMENT

            Los Angeles Rams


            1 (19). Jared Verse, Edge, Florida State
            2 (52). Bo Nix, QB, Oregon
            3 (83). Jermaine Burton, WR, Alabama
            3 (99). Kris Abrams-Draine, CB, Missouri
            5 (154). Leonard Taylor III, DT, Miami
            5 (155). Cody Schrader, RB, Missouri
            6 (196). Tanner McLachlan, TE, Arizona
            6 (209). Kalen King, CB, Penn State
            6 (213). Evan Williams, S, Oregon
            6 (217). Nathan Thomas, OT, Louisiana
            7 (254). Jaylan Ford, LB, Texas Miami Dolphins


            1 (21). Laiatu Latu, Edge, UCLA
            2 (55). Ja’Tavion Sanders, TE, Texas
            5 (158). Khristian Boyd, DT, Northern Iowa
            6 (184). Kingsley Eguakun, OC, Florida
            6 (198). Chigozie Anusiem, CB, Colorado State
            7 (241). Isaiah Williams, WR, Illinois Minnesota Vikings


            1 (4). J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan
            4 (108). DeWayne Carter, DT, Duke
            4 (129). Mason McCormick, G, South Dakota State
            5 (157). Qwan’tez Stiggers, CB, CFL
            5 (167). Eric Watts, Edge, UConn
            6 (177). Ainias Smith, WR, Texas A&M
            7 (230). Tyrice Knight, LB, UTEP
            7 (232). Dylan McMahon, C, NC State New England Patriots


            1 (3). Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina
            2 (34). Kingsley Suamataia, OT, BYU
            3 (68). Malachi Corley, WR, Western Kentucky
            4 (103). Jalyx Hunt, Edge, Houston Christian
            5 (137). Sataoa Laumea, GG, Utah
            6 (180). Jaden Crumedy, DT, Mississippi State
            6 (193). Bub Means, WR, Pittsburgh
            7 (231). Mark Perry, S, TCU New Orleans Saints


            1 (14). Olu Fashanu, OT, Washington
            2 (45). Xavier Worthy, WR, Texas
            5 (150). Tory Taylor, P, Iowa
            5 (168). Dylan Laube, RB, New Hampshire
            5 (170). Marcus Harris, DT, Auburn
            5 (175). Javon Solomon, Edge, Troy
            6 (190). Jarrian Jones, CB, Florida State
            6 (199). Josh Proctor, S, Ohio State
            7 (239). KT Leveston, G, Kansas State New York Giants


            1 (6). Malik Nabers, WR, LSU
            2 (47). Jaden Hicks, S, Washington State
            3 (70). Trey Benson, RB, Florida State
            4 (107). Michael Pratt, QB, Tulane
            5 (166). Josh Newton, CB, TCU
            6 (183). Justin Eboigbe, DL, Alabama New York Jets


            1 (10). Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia
            3 (72). Tyler Nubin, S, Minnesota
            4 (111). Malik Washington, WR, Virginia
            4 (134). Gabe Hall, DL, Baylor
            6 (185). Devin Leary, QB, Kentucky
            7 (256). C.J. Hanson, G/C, Holy Cross
            7 (257). Dillon Johnson, RB, Washington Philadelphia Eagles


            1 (22). Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia
            2 (50). Junior Colson, LB, Michigan
            2 (53). Javon Bullard, S, Georgia
            4 (120). Jalen McMillan, WR, Washington
            5 (161). Xavier Thomas, Edge, Clemson
            5 (171). M.J. Devonshire, CB, Pittsburgh
            5 (172). Gottlieb Ayedze, G, Maryland
            6 (210). Ryan Flournoy, WR, SE Missouri State Pittsburgh Steelers


            1 (20). Graham Barton, C, Duke
            2 (51). Roman Wilson, WR, Michigan
            3 (84). Blake Fisher, OT, Notre Dame
            3 (98). Bralen Trice, Edge, Washington
            4 (119). Jarvis Brownlee Jr., CB, Louisville
            6 (178). Kitan Oladapo, S, Oregon State
            6 (195). McKinnley Jackson, DT, Texas A&M San Francisco 49ers


            1 (31). Jer’Zhan Newton, DT, Illinois
            2 (63). Andru Phillips, CB, Kentucky
            3 (94). Jared Wiley, TE, TCU
            4 (124). Christian Jones, OT, Texas
            4 (132). Zak Zinter, G, Michigan
            4 (135). Luke McCaffery, WR, Rice
            5 (176). Jordan Magee, LB, Temple
            6 (211). Blake Watson, RB, Memphis
            6 (215). Khalid Duke, Edge, Kansas State
            7 (251). Kamal Hadden, CB, Tennessee Seattle Seahawks


            1 (16). Troy Fautanu, OT/G, Washington
            3 (81). Jonah Elliss, Edge, Utah
            4 (102). Cedric Gray, LB, North Carolina
            4 (118). Dominique Hampton, S, Washington
            6 (179). Keith Randolph Jr., DT, Illinois
            6 (192). Jordan Travis, QB, Florida State
            7 (235). AJ Barner, TE, Michigan Tampa Bay Buccaneers


            1 (26). Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson
            2 (57). Christian Haynes, G, UConn
            3 (89). Austin Booker, Edge, Kansas
            3 (92). Trevin Wallace, LB, Kentucky
            4 (125). Audric Estime, RB, Notre Dame
            6 (220). Cornelius Johnson, WR, Michigan
            7 (246). Trey Taylor, S, Air Force Tennessee Titans


            1 (7). Joe Alt, OT, Notre Dame
            2 (38). Marshawn Kneeland, Edge, Western Michigan
            4 (106). Cam Hart, CB, Notre Dame
            5 (146). Jacob Cowing, WR, Arizona
            6 (182). Jaheim Bell, TE, Florida State
            7 (242). LaDarius Henderson, G, Michigan
            7 (252). Darius Muasau, LB, UCLA Washington Commanders


            1 (2). Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU
            2 (36). Patrick Paul, OT, Houston
            2 (40). Ennis Rakestraw Jr., CB, Missouri
            3 (67). Adisa Isaac, Edge, Penn State
            3 (78). Roger Rosengarten, OT, Washington
            3 (100). Brenden Rice, WR, USC
            5 (139). Tip Reiman, TE, Illinois
            5 (152). Edefuan Ulofoshio, LB, Washington
            7 (222). Daijahn Anthony, S, Ole Miss

            Comment

            • Chargers8491
              Registered Charger Fan
              • Apr 2022
              • 1233
              • Send PM

              Originally posted by Critty View Post
              Who is your #1 prospect at each spot?

              OT
              OG
              OC
              TE
              WR
              SlotWR
              RB
              Hback
              Edge
              DT
              NT
              OLB
              ILB
              CB
              NB
              FS
              SS
              KR/PR
              OT- LT- ALT/RT- Fuaga
              OG- Beebe
              OC- Frazier
              TE- Bowers
              WR- Odunze
              Slot WR- Nabers
              RB- Brooks
              Hback-
              DE- Latu (medical)/Verse
              DT- Murphy II/Newton (very close)
              OLB- Turner (can OLB or Edge)
              ILB- Wilson (injury history) Cooper/Colson (very close)
              CB- Arnold
              NB- Sainristil
              FS- Nubin
              1- #11 Bowers TE 7a- #225 Boyd DT
              2a- #35 Cooper LB 7b- #253 Vidal RB
              2b- #37 Jenkins DT
              3a- #66 Puni OT
              3b- #69 Sainristill CB
              4a- #105 Rice WR
              4b- #110 Lloyd RB
              5- #140 Green CB
              6- #181 Nourzad C/OG

              Comment

              • dmac_bolt
                Day Tripper
                • May 2019
                • 10738
                • North of the Lagoon
                • Send PM

                Originally posted by richpjr View Post

                They signed him because he is one of the blocking TE in football, not for his pass catching. Here is what our TE coach says about him:
                thx, I understood why they signed him, just didn't realize a top blocking TE cost that much.
                “Less is more? NO NO NO - MORE is MORE!”

                Comment

                • Critty
                  Dominate the Day.
                  • Mar 2019
                  • 5578
                  • Send PM

                  Originally posted by Boltnut View Post

                  Skillset is fine... watch the TCU tape. Moore's usage of him last year was questionable.
                  QJ is a guy you want to get the football in hands and let him run. So yes there were a number of ways Moore could have designed plays to get him the rock so he can YAC. At the same time the blocking up front in run and pass game killed some very good play calls where by design there was an advantage. But then someone like Pipkins failed on his block and the whole play failed. I don't know if I want to trade down and miss out on Joe Alt. I was watching some mock drafts where they talked about players and showed highlights and again I notice Alt looking so under control on his block. And then some others who looking a bit over aggressive and lose connection on the block. It stood out to me. And so I put Alt in class all by himself as worth top 5 pick.
                  And the other top OTs in the range of 11-37.
                  ​​​​​
                  Who has it better than us?

                  Comment

                  • dmac_bolt
                    Day Tripper
                    • May 2019
                    • 10738
                    • North of the Lagoon
                    • Send PM

                    Originally posted by Boltjolt View Post
                    The Athletic wriet Dane Brugler just put out his 7 round mock.

                    Brugler i think is ok, but much to disagre with in this mock. Has us trading with AZ after they trade with Minne. We get 11 and 35. I do not think Hortiz will settle for 11 and 35 when AZ gets 11, 23 and a 2025 3rd. I think we will ask for 11 & 27 and MAYBE their 4th. Certainly if we get 11 and 35 we will ask for their 104 pick.I dont think we will settle for them to just tale MHJ.

                    I also dont think we willl draft 3 OL, or 4 Michigan guys.


                    Anyways, here it is.

                    At the bottom of the article, I included the team-by-team hauls for a cleaner look at what each class looks like in this mock draft.

                    (Note: An asterisk indicates a trade for the purposes of this mock.)
                    go-deeper
                    GO DEEPER

                    NFL Draft 2024 ‘The Beast’ Guide: Dane Brugler’s scouting reports and player rankings

                    1. Chicago Bears (from CAR): Caleb Williams, QB, USC


                    Nothing is official until commissioner Roger Goodell steps to the podium in Detroit and announces the selection, but Williams will be a Bear in a little more than a week.

                    2. Washington Commanders: Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU


                    The draft winds will continue to swirl in unpredictable directions up until draft night. Right now, though, the buzz is pointing towards Daniels being the pick at No. 2. Truth is, new Washington general manager Adam Peters and head coach Dan Quinn aren’t tipping their hands, so everyone is still guessing at this point.

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


                    Listening to trade offers is the responsible move for de facto general manager Eliot Wolf. But it is tough to imagine the Patriots passing on a quarterback here, especially if Maye makes it to No. 3. Owner Robert Kraft is not interested in another offensive season like last year in New England.

                    4. Minnesota Vikings (from ARI)*: J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan


                    (Projected trade: Vikings trade picks Nos. 11 and 23 and a 2025 third-round pick to the Cardinals for No. 4.)

                    It is no secret that the Vikings are quarterback shopping in the NFL Draft, but how high can they trade up to secure their guy? In this scenario, Minnesota jumps to No. 4 for McCarthy, which would mark the first time in NFL Draft history we see quarterbacks drafted 1-2-3-4 overall.

                    5. Arizona Cardinals (from LAC)*: Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State


                    (Projected trade: Cardinals trade picks Nos. 11 and 35 to the Chargers for No. 5.)

                    Just like last year, Cardinals general manager Monti Ossenfort works the phones to trade out of the top five … but then jumps right back up to grab an Ohio State stud. In 2023, it was Paris Johnson Jr.; this year it’s Harrison. The smooth maneuvering costs Arizona the No. 35 pick here, but it adds No. 23 and a 2025 third-rounder for essentially moving back one spot.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

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


                    I think the Giants will examine their trade-up options for a quarterback, but in this scenario, they stay put and add the true premier weapon they have been missing. Nabers would have been my No. 1 overall prospect in each of the last two draft classes.

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


                    For the sake of being different, I could throw another name in here — but why go away from what makes sense? Alt fills a clear hole and (along with 2023 first-round left guard Peter Skoronski) would give the Titans one of the more promising left sides of an offensive line in the league.

                    8. Atlanta Falcons: Dallas Turner, Edge, Alabama


                    There is a good chance we see something this year that has happened just once (2021) in the Super Bowl era: no defensive players selected in the first seven picks of the draft. If that comes to fruition, the Falcons will have their choice of the top defensive player on their board at No. 8 — and I don’t think many people will be surprised if that is Turner.

                    9. Chicago Bears: Rome Odunze, WR, Washington


                    With only four draft picks this year, general manager Ryan Poles will be enticed by trade-back opportunities here to recoup draft capital. But when the Bears are feeling left out in the second round, they can throw on Odunze highlights and feel just fine about this decision. Adding Keenan Allen was a no-brainer, but he might only be a one-year rental.

                    10. New York Jets: Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia


                    If you focus only on the “TE” positional designation here, you might not love this pick. But if you pay attention to the dynamic impact Bowers can bring to an offense, this isn’t a hard sell. The Napa, Calif., native is as much a tight end as he is a slot receiver who can also block inline or line up outside. The Jets are in a win-now mindset, and Bowers makes the offense better from day one.
                    go-deeper
                    GO DEEPER

                    NFL teams know the best way to draft, so why aren't they doing it?

                    11. Los Angeles Chargers (from MIN)*: JC Latham, G/T, Alabama


                    Trading back for an offensive lineman would be an unsurprising move for the Chargers. The bigger mystery might be which offensive lineman they prefer. Oregon State’s Taliese Fuaga is a devastating run blocker and Washington’s Troy Fautanu has legitimate position versatility, but I’ll go with Latham, who is arguably the strongest player in the draft and was recruited out of high school not too long ago by Jim Harbaugh.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    12. Denver Broncos: Taliese Fuaga, G/T, Oregon State


                    With Garett Bolles entering the final year of his deal, the Broncos have done plenty of homework on the tackles in this draft class. Fuaga can compete for a spot at guard as a rookie while being the long-term plan at tackle.

                    13. Las Vegas Raiders: Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama


                    The Raiders will certainly consider several offensive and defensive linemen at this spot. With two worthy cornerback prospects on the board, though, both Arnold and Quinyon Mitchell will be part of the conversation. I wouldn’t be surprised to see either corner here, but Arnold has the dog mentality that speaks directly to Antonio Pierce.

                    14. New Orleans Saints: Olu Fashanu, OT, Penn State


                    Considering the Saints’ depth chart and the players expected to be drafted in this range, offensive tackle makes too much sense. And Fashanu might be the best-case scenario for New Orleans.

                    15. Indianapolis Colts: Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo


                    It wouldn’t be surprising to see the Colts go with a dynamic pass catcher at 15, especially if Bowers is still available. But Mitchell is an ideal fit, too, considering his tape, on-ball production and traits.

                    16. Seattle Seahawks: Troy Fautanu, G/T, Washington


                    The safe bet might be a trade down by the Seahawks, but it would be tough to move away from Fautanu if he falls here. Though the Huskies’ left tackle can stay on the outside if needed, his skill set could be maximized inside and would give the Seahawks appealing versatility across the offensive line.

                    17. Buffalo Bills (from JAX)*: Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSU


                    (Projected trade: Bills trade picks Nos. 28, 133, 144 and a 2025 second-rounder to the Jaguars for No. 17.)

                    The Bills need their draft picks to remodel the roster with young, low-priced depth, but general manager Brandon Beane is an aggressive drafter and has never shied away from moving up in the first round to get his guy. Thomas is an outstanding size/speed athlete with better route-running skill than given he’s credit for, and he’d give Josh Allen a new WR1 on offense.

                    18. Cincinnati Bengals: Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas


                    With his explosive twitch and natural leverage, Murphy moves differently than any other defensive tackle in this draft class. He is equally disruptive versus the run and when rushing the passer — something the Bengals are looking to add to the roster.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    19. Los Angeles Rams: Jared Verse, Edge, Florida State


                    Since Sean McVay became head coach, the Rams have picked in the top 60 six times — all six have been offensive players. But it feels like that will change this year with the Rams back in the first round and needing so many upgrades on defense, including at edge rusher. Verse brings all-day power and disruption with a motor that doesn’t quit.

                    20. Pittsburgh Steelers: Graham Barton, C, Duke


                    The Steelers have multiple needs on the offensive line, and Barton offers the five-position versatility that would allow Pittsburgh to get its best five on the field. In the long term, he’ll lock down the center position for the Steelers’ offense.
                    go-deeper
                    GO DEEPER

                    NFL folks might be sleeping on these draft prospects, our CFB experts say

                    21. Miami Dolphins: Laiatu Latu, Edge, UCLA


                    The Dolphins weren’t scared off by Jaelan Phillips’ injury past, and I don’t think they will shy away from Latu’s either. With Bradley Chubb and Phillips working their way back from injury, Latu and his savvy pass-rush skills can contribute immediately in Miami.

                    22. Philadelphia Eagles: Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia


                    This would be an ideal landing spot for the inexperienced Mims. After making just eight starts at Georgia, he can earn his graduate degree from “Stoutland University” (under the watchful eye of Eagles O-line coach Jeff Stoutland) before taking over for Lane Johnson as the right tackle of the future. The Athens-to-Philadelphia pipeline remains fruitful.

                    23. Arizona Cardinals (from MIN)*: Cooper DeJean, CB, Iowa


                    Head coach Jonathan Gannon will be targeting savvy, high-character players in the draft. DeJean — and his versatility in the secondary — fits the bill.

                    24. Dallas Cowboys: Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma


                    Ideally, the Cowboys would love to keep Tyler Smith at left guard, but it might depend on how this draft plays out. In this scenario, they add the raw but toolsy tackle, who they hope will be the next Tyron Smith.

                    25. Green Bay Packers: Jackson Powers-Johnson, G/C, Oregon


                    There are several ways the Packers can attack the offensive line in the draft. One of those is to select Powers-Johnson, who can provide an upgrade at center and allow Green Bay to keep Zach Tom at tackle while moving Josh Myers to guard.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    26. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson


                    The Buccaneers have more questions than established answers on their cornerback depth chart, especially after the Carlton Davis trade. Although his marginal play strength is a red flag, Wiggins is a high-level athlete with cover awareness that will appeal to coach Todd Bowles.

                    27. Arizona Cardinals (from HOU): Chop Robinson, Edge, Penn State


                    With Harrison, DeJean and Robinson, this is an All-Big Ten first round for Arizona. Robinson doesn’t have the body of work (15 tackles, four sacks over 10 games in 2023) that teams ideally target this early, but his first-step explosion is different than any other pass rusher in this class.

                    28. Jacksonville Jaguars (from BUF)*: Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, Alabama


                    In this scenario, the Jaguars are able to move down in the first round and still address the cornerback position with a strong option. McKinstry might not have elite speed, but he’s confident, controlled and smart, which will get him on the field as a rookie.

                    29. Las Vegas Raiders (from DET)*: Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington


                    (Projected trade: Raiders trade picks Nos. 44 and 77 to the Lions for No. 29.)

                    According to The Athletic’s Vic Tafur, “the whispers are getting louder” that the Raiders might draft Penix at No. 13. But this scenario feels like the better option, even if it means parting with a pair of Day 2 draft picks. A polarizing player among NFL front offices, Penix is an aggressive downfield passer with the mental toughness that will certainly stand out for Pierce and his staff.

                    30. Baltimore Ravens: Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona


                    Considered a tackle by some teams and a guard by others, Morgan would provide immediate depth at both spots for the Ravens. He is well schooled as both a run blocker and pass protector and has the athletic balance to match up well against NFL defensive linemen.

                    31. San Francisco 49ers: Jer’Zhan Newton, DT, Illinois


                    Regardless of their perceived top needs, the 49ers are always looking for upgrades on the defensive line. Newton doesn’t have ideal size for what San Francisco wants (similar to how he fits in most schemes), but his disruptive nature and relentless play personality are qualities that help him overcome average measurements.

                    32. Kansas City Chiefs: Adonai Mitchell, WR, Texas


                    This is a fun pairing of player and team. Mitchell is a loose, limber pass catcher and has the ingredients to be the top weapon for an NFL offense.
                    Round 2
                    33 Panthers Ladd McConkey WR Georgia
                    34 Patriots Kingsley Suamataia OT BYU
                    35 Chargers (from ARI)* Kris Jenkins DT Michigan
                    36 Commanders Patrick Paul OT Houston
                    37 Chargers Keon Coleman WR Florida State
                    38 Titans Marshawn Kneeland Edge Western Michigan
                    39 Panthers (from NYG) T.J. Tampa CB Iowa State
                    40 Commanders (from CHI) Ennis Rakestraw Jr. CB Missouri
                    41 Packers (from NYJ) Darius Robinson DL Missouri
                    42 Texans (from MIN) Mike Sainristil CB Michigan
                    43 Falcons Mike Hall Jr. DT Ohio State
                    44 Lions (from LV)* Zach Frazier G/C West Virginia
                    45 Saints (from DEN) Xavier Worthy WR Texas
                    46 Colts Ricky Pearsall WR Florida
                    47 Giants (from SEA) Jaden Hicks S Washington State
                    48 Jaguars Troy Franklin WR Oregon
                    49 Bengals Cooper Beebe G Kansas State
                    50 Eagles (from NO) Junior Colson LB Michigan
                    51 Steelers Roman Wilson WR Michigan
                    52 Rams Bo Nix QB Oregon
                    53 Eagles Javon Bullard S Georgia
                    54 Browns Maason Smith DT LSU
                    55 Dolphins Ja'Tavion Sanders TE Texas
                    56 Cowboys Payton Wilson LB NC State
                    57 Buccaneeers Christian Haynes G UConn
                    58 Packers Edgerrin Cooper LB Texas A&M
                    59 Texans Ruke Orhorhoro DT Clemson
                    60 Bills Cole Bishop S Utah
                    61 Lions Braden Fiske DT Florida State
                    62 Ravens Xavier Legette WR South Carolina
                    63 49ers Andru Phillips CB Kentucky
                    64 Chiefs Max Melton CB Rutgers
                    Thoughts on a few Round 2 selections: 33. Carolina Panthers: Ladd McConkey, WR, Georgia


                    For Bryce Young to take that next step in his development, the Panthers need to add more offensive weapons — particularly receivers who can separate. McConkey might be small, but his ability to create space in his routes would make him Young’s new best friend. 35. Los Angeles Chargers: Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan


                    It will feel like an upset if the Chargers don’t draft either Jenkins, Junior Colson or Mike Sainristil — all Michigan products — early in Round 2. I could make an argument why any of the three would make sense, and it will be interesting to see which former Wolverine Jim Harbaugh and defensive coordinator Jesse Minter prefer.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    46. Indianapolis Colts: Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida


                    There is a good chance the Colts get a pass catcher in Round 1. If they don’t (like in this scenario), reuniting Pearsall with Anthony Richardson in the second round makes a lot of sense. Pearsall can line up across the formation in Shane Steichen’s scheme. 54. Cleveland Browns: Maason Smith, DT, LSU


                    Teams want 6-foot-5 and 300-plus pounds in the trenches. Those D-line types are in short supply in this draft class, which will help push Smith up the board. With his age and talent, the LSU product makes sense for Cleveland, as it looks to add depth on the defensive line. 63. San Francisco 49ers: Andru Phillips, CB, Kentucky


                    Phillips is one of my favorite Day 2 prospects in this draft class — and the 49ers also are fond of the speedy nickel. Phillips’ lack of high-end ball production isn’t ideal, but he competes, stays in phase and has the makeup that will endear him to NFL coaching.
                    Round 3
                    65 Panthers Jonathon Brooks RB Texas
                    66 Cardinals Brandon Dorlus DL Oregon
                    67 Commanders Adisa Isaac Edge Penn State
                    68 Patriots Malachi Corley WR W. Kentucky
                    69 Chargers Blake Corum RB Michigan
                    70 Giants Trey Benson RB Florida State
                    71 Cardinals (from TEN) Dominick Puni OT/G Kansas
                    72 Jets Tyler Nubin S Minnesota
                    73 Lions (from MIN) Ja'Lynn Polk WR Washington
                    74 Falcons Kamari Lassiter CB Georgia
                    75 Bears Chris Braswell Edge Alabama
                    76 Broncos Spencer Rattler QB South Carolina
                    77 Lions (from LV)* Caelen Carson CB Wake Forest
                    78 Commanders (from SEA) Roger Rosengarten OT Washington
                    79 Falcons (from JAX) Devontez Walker WR North Carolina
                    80 Bengals Theo Johnson TE Penn State
                    81 Seahawks (from NO) Jonah Elliss Edge Utah
                    82 Colts Dadrion Taylor-Demerson S Texas Tech
                    83 Rams Jermaine Burton WR Alabama
                    84 Steelers Blake Fisher OT Notre Dame
                    85 Browns Kiran Amegadjie OT Yale
                    86 Texans (from PHI) Kamren Kinchens S Miami
                    87 Cowboys Jaylen Wright RB Tennessee
                    88 Packers Calen Bullock S USC
                    89 Buccaneers Austin Booker Edge Kansas
                    90 Cardinals (from HOU) MarShawn Lloyd RB USC
                    91 Packers (from BUF) Caeden Wallace OT Penn State
                    92 Buccaneers (from DET) Trevin Wallace LB Kentucky
                    93 Ravens Malik Mustapha S Wake Forest
                    94 49ers Jared Wiley TE TCU
                    95 Chiefs Christian Mahogany G Boston College
                    96 Jaguars Mekhi Wingo DT LSU
                    97 Bengals D.J. James CB Auburn
                    98 Steelers (from PHI) Bralen Trice Edge Washington
                    99 Rams Kris Abrams-Draine CB Missouri
                    100 Commanders (from SF) Brenden Rice WR USC
                    Thoughts on a few Round 3 selections: 70. New York Giants: Trey Benson, RB, Florida State


                    The Giants have a handful of names on their running back depth chart, but no difference-makers. Benson isn’t the most instinctive ball carrier, but his contact balance and big-play potential would be a great fit in Brian Daboll’s offense. 75. Chicago Bears: Chris Braswell, Edge, Alabama


                    The Bears’ lack of picks in this draft puts a little more pressure on Poles to get this one right. But Braswell — and his explosive flashes — feels like an ideal scenario at No. 75 for Chicago, which is still looking to add firepower at edge rusher. 97. Cincinnati Bengals: D.J. James, CB, Auburn


                    If this pick happens, the Bengals would have a secondary that includes D.J. James, DJ Turner and D.J. Ivey. James is a quick-reaction athlete who can be the nickel corner of the future with Mike Hilton in the final year of his contract.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    100. Washington Commanders: Brenden Rice, WR, USC


                    Looking at the Commanders’ receiver depth chart, there is plenty of speed but not much size. Rice is 6-2 1/2 and 208 with the body and play strength to be a physical presence on the outside. And his Hall of Fame bloodlines don’t hurt.
                    Round 4
                    101 Panthers Ben Sinnott TE Kansas State
                    102 Seahawks (from WAS) Cedric Gray LB North Carolina
                    103 Patriots Jalyx Hunt Edge Hou. Christian
                    104 Cardinals Sedrick Van Pran-Granger C Georgia
                    105 Chargers Nehemiah Pritchett CB Auburn
                    106 Titans Cam Hart CB Notre Dame
                    107 Giants Michael Pratt QB Tulane
                    108 Vikings DeWayne Carter DT Duke
                    109 Falcons Delmar Glaze OT/G Maryland
                    110 Chargers (from CHI) Hunter Nourzad C Penn State
                    111 Jets Malik Washington WR Virginia
                    112 Raiders Braelon Allen RB Wisconsin
                    113 Ravens (from DEN) Khyree Jackson CB Oregon
                    114 Jaguars Isaiah Adams G Illinois
                    115 Bengals T'Vondre Sweat DT Texas
                    116 Jaguars (from NO) Gabriel Murphy Edge UCLA
                    117 Colts Tanor Bortolini G/C Wisconsin
                    118 Seahawks Dominique Hampton S Washington
                    119 Steelers Jarvis Brownlee Jr. CB Louisville
                    120 Eagles (from LAR) Jalen McMillan WR Washington
                    121 Broncos (from MIA) Cade Stover TE Ohio State
                    122 Bears (from PHI) Javon Foster, OT Missouri
                    123 Texans (from CLE) Brandon Coleman OT/G TCU
                    124 49ers Christian Jones OT Texas
                    125 Buccaneers Audric Estime RB Notre Dame
                    126 Packers Ray Davis RB Kentucky
                    127 Texans Will Shipley RB Clemson
                    128 Bills Javon Baker WR UCF
                    129 Vikings (from DET) Mason McCormick G So. Dak. State
                    130 Ravens Mohamed Kamara Edge Colorado State
                    131 Chiefs Bucky Irving RB Oregon
                    132 49ers Zak Zinter G Michigan
                    133 Jaguars (from BUF)* Jaylin Simpson S Auburn
                    134 Jets (from BAL) Gabe Hall DL Baylor
                    135 49ers Luke McCaffery WR Rice
                    Thoughts on a few Round 4 picks: 104. Arizona Cardinals: Sedrick Van Pran-Granger, C, Georgia


                    Like I mentioned earlier in this mock draft, character (football and personal) will be a critical factor in whom the Cardinals draft, and Van Pran-Granger is one of the best leaders this class has to offer. He can compete with Hjalte Froholdt for starting center reps in Year 1. 115. Cincinnati Bengals: T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas


                    Reuniting Murphy and Sweat on the same defensive line in the NFL? I’m here for it. With some of the off-field and conditioning questions surrounding Sweat, I don’t think he will be drafted on the first two days — but he becomes an interesting Day 3 wild card. Though there is obvious risk with this player, the fourth round might be a spot where the Bengals feel comfortable with him, especially given their need at nose tackle.
                    go-deeper
                    GO DEEPER

                    Former Texas star DT Sweat charged with DWI 125. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Audric Estime, RB, Notre Dame


                    The Buccaneers are excited for Rachaad White this upcoming season, but it wouldn’t be a surprise if they draft another running back to help carry the load. And Estime has the bruising run style that complements White well. 130. Baltimore Ravens: Mohamed Kamara, Edge, Colorado State


                    The Ravens have high hopes for previous early-round picks Odafe Oweh and David Ojabo, but they will likely draft more pass-rush help at some point in the first four rounds. Although undersized, Kamara is relentless and has disruptive potential as a subpackage rusher. 135. San Francisco 49ers: Luke McCaffrey, WR, Rice


                    The McCaffrey brothers playing together in San Francisco would be a great story, obviously. But Luke is a promising pass catcher with the toughness and ball skills that will stand out for Kyle Shanahan’s offense.
                    Round 5
                    136 Broncos (from CAR) Decamerion Richardson CB Miss. State
                    137 Patriots Sataoa Laumea G Utah
                    138 Cardinals Tommy Eichenberg LB Ohio State
                    139 Commanders Tip Reiman TE Illinois
                    140 Chargers Jeremiah Trotter Jr. LB Clemson
                    141 Panthers (from NYG) Cedric Johnson Edge Ole Miss
                    142 Panthers (from TEN) Beau Brade S Maryland
                    143 Falcons Tykee Smith S Georgia
                    144 Jaguars (from BUF)* Renardo Green CB Florida State
                    145 Broncos (from NYJ) Johnny Wilson WR Florida State
                    146 Titans (from MIN) Jacob Cowing WR Arizona
                    147 Broncos Fabien Lovett Sr. DT Florida State
                    148 Raiders Jamari Thrash WR Louisville
                    149 Bengals Anthony Gould WR Oregon State
                    150 Saints Tory Taylor P Iowa
                    151 Colts Tyrone Tracy Jr. RB Purdue
                    152 Commanders (from SEA) Edefuan Ulofoshio LB Washington
                    153 Jaguars Isaac Guerendo RB Louisville
                    154 Rams Leonard Taylor III DT Miami
                    155 Rams (from PIT) Cody Schrader RB Missouri
                    156 Browns (from PHI) Tahj Washington WR USC
                    157 Vikings (from CLE) Qwan'tez Stiggers CB CFL
                    158 Dolphins Khristian Boyd DT Northern Iowa
                    159 Chiefs (from DAL) Brennan Jackson Edge Washington St.
                    160 Bills (from GB) Beaux Limmer G/C Arkansas
                    161 Eagles (from TB) Xavier Thomas Edge Clemson
                    162 Cardinals (from HOU) Myles Harden CB South Dakota
                    163 Bills Nelson Ceaser III Edge Houston
                    164 Lions Braiden McGregor Edge Michigan
                    165 Ravens Matt Goncalves G Pitt
                    166 Giants (from SF) Josh Newton CB TCU
                    167 Vikings (from KC) Eric Watts Edge UConn
                    168 Saints Dylan Laube RB New Hampshire
                    169 Packers Elijah Jones CB Boston College
                    170 Saints Marcus Harris DT Auburn
                    171 Eagles M.J. Devonshire CB Pitt
                    172 Eagles Gottlieb Ayedze G Maryland
                    173 Chiefs Jordan Jefferson DT LSU
                    174 Cowboys Matt Lee, C Miami
                    175 Saints Javon Solomon Edge Troy
                    176 49ers Jordan Magee LB Temple
                    Thoughts on a few Round 5 picks: 136. Denver Broncos (from CAR): Decamerion Richardson, CB, Mississippi State


                    A lot of teams are doing extra homework on Richardson, who has a unique blend of size (6-2 with 32 3/8-inch arms) and speed (4.34-second 40-yard dash). He graded really well as a run defender, but his inability to find the football in coverage was a red flag on his tape.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    157. Minnesota Vikings (from CLE): Qwan’tez Stiggers, CB, CFL


                    The first non-combine prospect drafted here is Stiggers, a CFL product who has had a Hollywood-worthy journey to this point. But he is more than a feel-good story — Stiggers has the talent to work his way up an NFL depth chart.
                    go-deeper
                    GO DEEPER

                    From unknown to underdog: Qwan'tez Stiggers' storybook rise as an NFL Draft prospect 168. New Orleans Saints: Dylan Laube, RB, New Hampshire


                    The Saints love running backs who add value as pass catchers, and that is the bread and butter for Laube. He could moonlight as a slot receiver, if needed. 174. Dallas Cowboys: Matt Lee, C, Miami


                    If the Cowboys had to play a game tomorrow, the coaches would be comfortable starting Brock Hoffman at center. But they will address the position at some point in the draft. With his anchor and quickness, Lee is terrific value in the late fifth.
                    Round 6
                    177 Vikings (from CAR) Ainias Smith WR Texas A&M
                    178 Steelers (from ARI) Kitan Oladapo S Oregon State
                    179 Seahawks (from WAS) Keith Randolph Jr. DT Illinois
                    180 Patriots Jaden Crumedy DT Miss. State
                    181 Chargers Trevor Keegan G Michigan
                    182 Titans Jaheim Bell TE Florida State
                    183 Giants Justin Eboigbe DL Alabama
                    184 Dolphins (from CHI) Kingsley Eguakun C Florida
                    185 Jets Devin Leary QB Kentucky
                    186 Cardinals (from MIN) Jha'Quan Jackson WR Tulane
                    187 Falcons Rasheen Ali RB Marshall
                    188 Texans (from LV) Jaylen Harrell Edge Michigan
                    189 Texans (from DEN) Nathaniel Watson LB Miss. State
                    190 Saints Jarrian Jones CB Florida State
                    191 Colts Myles Cole DL Texas Tech
                    192 Seahawks Jordan Travis QB Florida State
                    193 Patriots (from JAX) Bub Means WR Pitt
                    194 Bengals Erick All TE Iowa
                    195 Steelers McKinnley Jackson DT Texas A&M
                    196 Rams Tanner McLachlan TE Arizona
                    197 Falcons (from CLE) Joe Milton III QB Tennessee
                    198 Dolphins Chigozie Anusiem CB Colorado State
                    199 Saints (from PHI) Josh Proctor S Ohio State
                    200 Bills (from DAL) Tyler Davis DT Clemson
                    201 Lions (from TB) Will Reichard K Alabama
                    202 Packers Ty'Ron Hopper LB Missouri
                    203 Broncos (from HOU) Jacob Monk C Duke
                    204 Bills Ethan Driskell OT Marshall
                    205 Lions Sione Vaki S Utah
                    206 Browns (from BAL) JD Bertrand LB Notre Dame
                    207 Broncos (from SF) Curtis Jacobs LB Penn State
                    208 Raiders (from KC) Walter Rouse OT Stanford
                    209 Rams Kalen King CB Penn State
                    210 Eagles Ryan Flournoy WR SE Missouri St.
                    211 49ers Blake Watson RB Memphis
                    212 Jaguars Travis Glover OT Georgia State
                    213 Rams Evan Williams S Oregon
                    214 Bengals Giovanni Manu OT British Columbia
                    215 49ers Khalid Duke Edge Kansas State
                    216 Cowboys Xavier Weaver WR Colorado
                    217 Rams Nathan Thomas OT Louisiana
                    218 Ravens (from NYJ) Marist Liufau LB Notre Dame
                    219 Packers Ryan Watts CB/S Texas
                    220 Buccaneers Cornelius Johnson WR Michigan
                    Thoughts on a few Round 6 picks: 187. Atlanta Falcons: Rasheen Ali, RB, Marshall


                    The Falcons have a terrific one-two backfield combination in Bijan Robinson and Tyler Allgeier. But Ali would be an outstanding addition because of his big-play potential when given space to operate. 193. New England Patriots (from JAX): Bub Means, WR, Pitt


                    It wouldn’t be surprising to see the Patriots draft multiple receivers, and Means is an impressive size/speed athlete with a ball-winning attitude. One of the reasons Means transferred to Pitt was his familiarity with former wide receivers coach Tiquan Underwood, who was recently hired by the Patriots. It’d be a fun story if they were reunited. 205. Detroit Lions: Sione Vaki, S, Utah


                    If there is a player in this draft who has bitten a knee cap, Vaki is that guy, so there is no mystery why the Lions have shown considerable interest in the versatile safety (and running back) from Utah. 214. Cincinnati Bengals: Giovanni Manu, OT, British Columbia (Can.)


                    At 6-7, 352 with 5.06 speed, Manu is a mammoth player with freaky ability and a basketball background. He is a project and will require development time, but he will be drafted by a team that doesn’t want to worry about bidding for him in free agency.
                    Round 7
                    221 Chiefs (from CAR) Garret Greenfield OT So. Dak. State
                    222 Commanders Daijahn Anthony S Ole Miss
                    223 Raiders (from NE) Layden Robinson G Texas A&M
                    224 Bengals (from ARI) Sam Hartman QB Wake Forest
                    225 Chargers Dwight McGlothern CB Arkansas
                    226 Cardinals (from NYG) Frank Crum OT Wyoming
                    227 Browns (from TEN) Isaiah Davis RB So. Dak. State
                    228 Ravens (from NYJ) Tarheeb Still CB Maryland
                    229 Raiders (from MIN) Evan Anderson DT FAU
                    230 Vikings (from ATL) Tyrice Knight LB UTEP
                    231 Patriots (from CHI) Mark Perry S TCU
                    232 Vikings (from DEN) Dylan McMahon C NC State
                    233 Cowboys (from LV) Chau Smith-Wade CB Washington St.
                    234 Colts Tylan Grable OT UCF
                    235 Seahawks AJ Barner TE Michigan
                    236 Jaguars Cameron Little K Arkansas
                    237 Bengals Ryan Rehkow P BYU
                    238 Texans (from NO) Bayron Matos G Dom. Republic
                    239 Saints (from LAR) KT Leveston G Kansas State
                    240 Panthers (from PIT) Josiah Ezirim OT East. Kentucky
                    241 Dolphins Isaiah Williams WR Illinois
                    242 Titans (from PHI) LaDarius Henderson G Michigan
                    243 Browns Javion Cohen G Miami
                    244 Cowboys Javontae Jean-Baptiste Edge Notre Dame
                    245 Packers Tulu Griffin WR Miss. State
                    246 Buccaneers Trey Taylor S Air Force
                    247 Texans Willie Drew CB Virginia State
                    248 Bills Kimani Vidal RB Troy
                    249 Lions Johnny Dixon CB Penn State
                    250 Ravens Logan Lee DL Iowa
                    251 49ers Kamal Hadden CB Tennessee
                    252 Titans (from KC) Darius Muasau LB UCLA
                    253 Chargers Michael Barrett Jr. LB Michigan
                    254 Rams Jaylan Ford LB Texas
                    255 Packers Nick Gargiulo OT/C South Carolina
                    256 Jets C.J. Hanson G/C Holy Cross
                    257 Jets Dillon Johnson RB Washington
                    Thoughts on a few Round 7 picks: 229. Las Vegas Raiders (from MIN): Evan Anderson, DT, FAU


                    This is not a strong year for nose tackles, which could help a player like Anderson hear his name called on draft weekend. He has the skill set and play personality to muddy gaps as a rotational nose for the Raiders. 231. New England Patriots (from CHI): Mark Perry, S, TCU


                    Another non-combine invite, Perry is an outstanding size/speed athlete (6-0 and 213 pounds with 4.40 speed). It won’t be a surprise if Wolf takes a chance on his explosive athleticism later in the draft.

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    234. Indianapolis Colts: Tylan Grable, OT, UCF


                    General manager Chris Ballard and the Colts value raw athleticism at offensive tackle and Grable, with his 4.95 40 and 36.5-inch vertical at 6-6, 306, certainly fits. The former tight end has yet to play his best football. 248. Buffalo Bills: Kimani Vidal, RB, Troy


                    It would be a surprise if the Bills don’t address running back in some way on draft weekend — probably before this pick. But Vidal is excellent value this late in the draft and could be a capable backup behind James Cook.
                    Team-by-team results


                    (Notes: Teams are listed in alphabetical order; players are designated by round selected and overall pick) Arizona Cardinals


                    1 (5). Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State
                    1 (23). Cooper DeJean, CB, Iowa
                    1 (27). Chop Robinson, Edge, Penn State
                    3 (66). Brandon Dorlus, DL, Oregon
                    3 (71). Dominick Puni, OT/G, Kansas
                    3 (90). MarShawn Lloyd, RB, USC
                    4 (104). Sedrick Van Pran-Granger, C, Georgia
                    5 (138). Tommy Eichenberg, LB, Ohio State
                    5 (162). Myles Harden, CB, South Dakota
                    6 (186). Jha’Quan Jackson, WR, Tulane
                    7 (226). Frank Crum, OT, Wyoming Atlanta Falcons


                    1 (8): Dallas Turner, Edge, Alabama
                    2 (43): Mike Hall Jr., DT, Ohio State
                    3 (74): Kamari Lassiter, CB, Georgia
                    3 (79). Devontez Walker, WR, North Carolina
                    4 (109). Delmar Glaze, OT/G, Maryland
                    5 (143). Tykee Smith, S, Georgia
                    6 (187). Rasheen Ali, RB, Marshall
                    6 (197). Joe Milton III, QB, Tennessee Baltimore Ravens


                    1 (30). Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona
                    2 (62). Xavier Legette, WR, South Carolina
                    3 (93). Malik Mustapha, S, Wake Forest
                    4 (113). Khyree Jackson, CB, Oregon
                    4 (130). Mo Kamara, Edge, Colorado State
                    5 (165). Matt Goncalves, OG, Pittsburgh
                    6 (218). Marist Liufau, LB, Notre Dame
                    7 (228). Tarheeb Still, CB, Maryland
                    7 (250). Logan Lee, DL, Iowa Buffalo Bills


                    1 (17). Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSU
                    2 (60). Cole Bishop, S, Utah
                    4 (128). Javon Baker, WR, UCF
                    5 (160). Beaux Limmer, G/C, Arkansas
                    5 (163). Nelson Ceaser III, Edge, Houston
                    6 (200). Tyler Davis, DT, Clemson
                    6 (204). Ethan Driskell, OT, Marshall
                    7 (248). Kimani Vidal, RB, Troy

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    Carolina Panthers


                    2 (33). Ladd McConkey, WR, Georgia
                    2 (39). T.J. Tampa, CB, Iowa State
                    3 (65). Jonathon Brooks, RB, Texas
                    4 (101). Ben Sinnott, TE, Kansas State
                    5 (141). Cedric Johnson, Edge, Ole Miss
                    5 (142). Beau Brade, S, Maryland
                    7 (240). Josiah Ezirim, OT, Eastern Kentucky Chicago Bears


                    1 (1). Caleb Williams, QB, USC
                    1 (9). Rome Odunze, WR, Washington
                    3 (75). Chris Braswell, Edge, Alabama
                    4 (122). Javon Foster, OT, Missouri Cincinnati Bengals


                    1 (18). Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas
                    2 (49). Cooper Beebe, G, Kansas State
                    3 (80). Theo Johnson, TE, Penn State
                    3 (97). D.J. James, CB, Auburn
                    4 (115). T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas
                    5 (149). Anthony Gould, WR, Oregon State
                    6 (194). Erick All, TE, Iowa
                    6 (214). Giovanni Manu, OT, British Columbia (Can.)
                    7 (224). Sam Hartman, QB, Wake Forest
                    7 (237). Ryan Rehkow, P, BYU Cleveland Browns


                    2 (54). Maason Smith, DT, LSU
                    3 (85). Kiran Amegadjie, OT, Yale
                    5 (156). Tahj Washington, WR, USC
                    6 (206). JD Bertrand, LB, Notre Dame
                    7 (227). Isaiah Davis, RB, South Dakota State
                    7 (243). Javion Cohen, G, Miami Dallas Cowboys


                    1 (24). Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma
                    2 (56). Payton Wilson, LB, NC State
                    3 (87). Jaylen Wright, RB, Tennessee
                    5 (174). Matt Lee, C, Miami
                    6 (216). Xavier Weaver, WR, Colorado
                    7 (233). Chau Smith-Wade, CB, Washington State
                    7 (244). Javontae Jean-Baptiste, Edge, Notre Dame Denver Broncos


                    1 (12). Taliese Fuaga, OT/G, Oregon State
                    3 (76). Spencer Rattler, QB, South Carolina
                    4 (121). Cade Stover, TE, Ohio State
                    5 (136). Decamerion Richardson, CB, Mississippi State
                    5 (145). Johnny Wilson, WR, Florida State
                    5 (147). Fabien Lovett Sr., DT, Florida State
                    6 (203). Jacob Monk, C, Duke
                    6 (207). Curtis Jacobs, LB, Penn State Detroit Lions


                    2 (44). Zach Frazier, G/C, West Virginia
                    2 (61). Braden Fiske, DT, Florida State
                    3 (73). Ja’Lynn Polk, WR, Washington
                    3 (77). Caelen Carson, CB, Wake Forest
                    5 (164). Braiden McGregor, Edge, Michigan
                    6 (201). Will Reichard, K, Alabama
                    6 (205). Sione Vaki, S, Utah
                    7 (249). Johnny Dixon, CB, Penn State Green Bay Packers


                    1 (25). Jackson Powers-Johnson, OG/C, Oregon
                    2 (41). Darius Robinson, DL, Missouri
                    2 (58). Edgerrin Cooper, LB, Texas A&M
                    3 (88). Calen Bullock, S, USC
                    3 (91). Caedan Wallace, OT, Penn State
                    4 (126). Ray Davis, RB, Kentucky
                    5 (169). Elijah Jones, CB, Boston College
                    6 (202). Ty’Ron Hopper, LB, Missouri
                    6 (219). Ryan Watts, CB/S, Texas
                    7 (245). Tulu Griffin, WR, Mississippi State
                    7 (255). Nick Gargiulo, OT/C, South Carolina Houston Texans


                    2 (42). Mike Sainristil, CB, Michigan
                    2 (59). Ruke Orhorhoro, DT, Clemson
                    3 (86). Kamren Kinchens, S, Miami
                    4 (123). Brandon Coleman, OT/G, TCU
                    4 (127). Will Shipley, RB, Clemson
                    6 (188). Jaylen Harrell, Edge, Michigan
                    6 (189). Nathaniel Watson, LB, Mississippi State
                    7 (238). Bayron Matos, G, Dominican Republic
                    7 (247). Willie Drew, CB, Virginia State Indianapolis Colts


                    1 (15). Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo
                    2 (46). Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida
                    3 (82). Dadrion Taylor-Demerson, S, Texas Tech
                    4 (117). Tanor Bortolini, OG/C, Wisconsin
                    5 (151). Tyrone Tracy Jr., RB, Purdue
                    6 (191). Myles Cole, DL, Texas Tech
                    7 (234). Tylan Grable, OT, UCF Jacksonville Jaguars


                    1 (28). Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, Alabama
                    2 (48). Troy Franklin, WR, Oregon
                    3 (96). Mekhi Wingo, DT, LSU
                    4 (114). Isaiah Adams, G, Illinois
                    4 (116). Gabriel Murphy, Edge, UCLA
                    4 (133). Jaylin Simpson, S, Auburn
                    5 (144). Renardo Green, CB, Florida State
                    5 (153). Isaac Guerendo, RB, Louisville
                    6 (212). Travis Glover, OT, Georgia State
                    7 (236). Cameron Little, K, Arkansas Kansas City Chiefs


                    1 (32). Adonai Mitchell, WR, Texas
                    2 (64). Max Melton, CB, Rutgers
                    3 (95). Christian Mahogany, G, Boston College
                    4 (131). Bucky Irving, RB, Oregon
                    5 (159). Brennan Jackson, Edge, Washington State
                    5 (173). Jordan Jefferson, DT, LSU
                    7 (221). Garret Greenfield, OT, South Dakota State Las Vegas Raiders


                    1 (13). Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama
                    1 (29). Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington
                    4 (112). Braelon Allen, RB, Wisconsin
                    5 (148). Jamari Thrash, WR, Louisville
                    6 (208). Walter Rouse, OT, Stanford
                    7 (223). Layden Robinson, G, Texas A&M
                    7 (229). Evan Anderson, DT, FAU Los Angeles Chargers


                    1 (11). JC Latham, OT/G, Alabama
                    2 (35). Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan
                    2 (37). Keon Coleman, WR, Florida State
                    3 (69). Blake Corum, RB, Michigan
                    4 (105). Nehemiah Pritchett, CB, Auburn
                    4 (110). Hunter Nourzad, C, Penn State
                    5 (140). Jeremiah Trotter Jr., LB, Clemson
                    6 (181). Trevor Keegan, G, Michigan
                    7 (225). Dwight McGlothern, CB, Arkansas
                    7 (253). Michael Barrett Jr., LB, Michigan

                    ADVERTISEMENT

                    Los Angeles Rams


                    1 (19). Jared Verse, Edge, Florida State
                    2 (52). Bo Nix, QB, Oregon
                    3 (83). Jermaine Burton, WR, Alabama
                    3 (99). Kris Abrams-Draine, CB, Missouri
                    5 (154). Leonard Taylor III, DT, Miami
                    5 (155). Cody Schrader, RB, Missouri
                    6 (196). Tanner McLachlan, TE, Arizona
                    6 (209). Kalen King, CB, Penn State
                    6 (213). Evan Williams, S, Oregon
                    6 (217). Nathan Thomas, OT, Louisiana
                    7 (254). Jaylan Ford, LB, Texas Miami Dolphins


                    1 (21). Laiatu Latu, Edge, UCLA
                    2 (55). Ja’Tavion Sanders, TE, Texas
                    5 (158). Khristian Boyd, DT, Northern Iowa
                    6 (184). Kingsley Eguakun, OC, Florida
                    6 (198). Chigozie Anusiem, CB, Colorado State
                    7 (241). Isaiah Williams, WR, Illinois Minnesota Vikings


                    1 (4). J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan
                    4 (108). DeWayne Carter, DT, Duke
                    4 (129). Mason McCormick, G, South Dakota State
                    5 (157). Qwan’tez Stiggers, CB, CFL
                    5 (167). Eric Watts, Edge, UConn
                    6 (177). Ainias Smith, WR, Texas A&M
                    7 (230). Tyrice Knight, LB, UTEP
                    7 (232). Dylan McMahon, C, NC State New England Patriots


                    1 (3). Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina
                    2 (34). Kingsley Suamataia, OT, BYU
                    3 (68). Malachi Corley, WR, Western Kentucky
                    4 (103). Jalyx Hunt, Edge, Houston Christian
                    5 (137). Sataoa Laumea, GG, Utah
                    6 (180). Jaden Crumedy, DT, Mississippi State
                    6 (193). Bub Means, WR, Pittsburgh
                    7 (231). Mark Perry, S, TCU New Orleans Saints


                    1 (14). Olu Fashanu, OT, Washington
                    2 (45). Xavier Worthy, WR, Texas
                    5 (150). Tory Taylor, P, Iowa
                    5 (168). Dylan Laube, RB, New Hampshire
                    5 (170). Marcus Harris, DT, Auburn
                    5 (175). Javon Solomon, Edge, Troy
                    6 (190). Jarrian Jones, CB, Florida State
                    6 (199). Josh Proctor, S, Ohio State
                    7 (239). KT Leveston, G, Kansas State New York Giants


                    1 (6). Malik Nabers, WR, LSU
                    2 (47). Jaden Hicks, S, Washington State
                    3 (70). Trey Benson, RB, Florida State
                    4 (107). Michael Pratt, QB, Tulane
                    5 (166). Josh Newton, CB, TCU
                    6 (183). Justin Eboigbe, DL, Alabama New York Jets


                    1 (10). Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia
                    3 (72). Tyler Nubin, S, Minnesota
                    4 (111). Malik Washington, WR, Virginia
                    4 (134). Gabe Hall, DL, Baylor
                    6 (185). Devin Leary, QB, Kentucky
                    7 (256). C.J. Hanson, G/C, Holy Cross
                    7 (257). Dillon Johnson, RB, Washington Philadelphia Eagles


                    1 (22). Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia
                    2 (50). Junior Colson, LB, Michigan
                    2 (53). Javon Bullard, S, Georgia
                    4 (120). Jalen McMillan, WR, Washington
                    5 (161). Xavier Thomas, Edge, Clemson
                    5 (171). M.J. Devonshire, CB, Pittsburgh
                    5 (172). Gottlieb Ayedze, G, Maryland
                    6 (210). Ryan Flournoy, WR, SE Missouri State Pittsburgh Steelers


                    1 (20). Graham Barton, C, Duke
                    2 (51). Roman Wilson, WR, Michigan
                    3 (84). Blake Fisher, OT, Notre Dame
                    3 (98). Bralen Trice, Edge, Washington
                    4 (119). Jarvis Brownlee Jr., CB, Louisville
                    6 (178). Kitan Oladapo, S, Oregon State
                    6 (195). McKinnley Jackson, DT, Texas A&M San Francisco 49ers


                    1 (31). Jer’Zhan Newton, DT, Illinois
                    2 (63). Andru Phillips, CB, Kentucky
                    3 (94). Jared Wiley, TE, TCU
                    4 (124). Christian Jones, OT, Texas
                    4 (132). Zak Zinter, G, Michigan
                    4 (135). Luke McCaffery, WR, Rice
                    5 (176). Jordan Magee, LB, Temple
                    6 (211). Blake Watson, RB, Memphis
                    6 (215). Khalid Duke, Edge, Kansas State
                    7 (251). Kamal Hadden, CB, Tennessee Seattle Seahawks


                    1 (16). Troy Fautanu, OT/G, Washington
                    3 (81). Jonah Elliss, Edge, Utah
                    4 (102). Cedric Gray, LB, North Carolina
                    4 (118). Dominique Hampton, S, Washington
                    6 (179). Keith Randolph Jr., DT, Illinois
                    6 (192). Jordan Travis, QB, Florida State
                    7 (235). AJ Barner, TE, Michigan Tampa Bay Buccaneers


                    1 (26). Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson
                    2 (57). Christian Haynes, G, UConn
                    3 (89). Austin Booker, Edge, Kansas
                    3 (92). Trevin Wallace, LB, Kentucky
                    4 (125). Audric Estime, RB, Notre Dame
                    6 (220). Cornelius Johnson, WR, Michigan
                    7 (246). Trey Taylor, S, Air Force Tennessee Titans


                    1 (7). Joe Alt, OT, Notre Dame
                    2 (38). Marshawn Kneeland, Edge, Western Michigan
                    4 (106). Cam Hart, CB, Notre Dame
                    5 (146). Jacob Cowing, WR, Arizona
                    6 (182). Jaheim Bell, TE, Florida State
                    7 (242). LaDarius Henderson, G, Michigan
                    7 (252). Darius Muasau, LB, UCLA Washington Commanders


                    1 (2). Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU
                    2 (36). Patrick Paul, OT, Houston
                    2 (40). Ennis Rakestraw Jr., CB, Missouri
                    3 (67). Adisa Isaac, Edge, Penn State
                    3 (78). Roger Rosengarten, OT, Washington
                    3 (100). Brenden Rice, WR, USC
                    5 (139). Tip Reiman, TE, Illinois
                    5 (152). Edefuan Ulofoshio, LB, Washington
                    7 (222). Daijahn Anthony, S, Ole Miss
                    I actually like some of his picks for us. I'm completely freaked out now that Latham = Fluker after reading TPB for the last month, I have no idea what to believe and have no choice but to just take someone else! Fuaga was on the board for us there.

                    1 (11). JC Latham, OT/G, Alabama
                    2 (35). Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan
                    2 (37).
                    Keon Coleman, WR, Florida State
                    3 (69). Blake Corum, RB, Michigan
                    4 (105). Nehemiah Pritchett, CB, Auburn
                    4 (110).
                    Hunter Nourzad, C, Penn State
                    5 (140).
                    Jeremiah Trotter Jr., LB, Clemson
                    6 (181). Trevor Keegan, G, Michigan
                    7 (225).
                    Dwight McGlothern, CB, Arkansas
                    7 (253). Michael Barrett Jr., LB, Michigan


                    I don't dislike Corum, but think he was taken too soon and other better RBs were on the board when he assigned him to LAC.
                    Yellow - I just don't know them enough ...
                    “Less is more? NO NO NO - MORE is MORE!”

                    Comment


                    • Bolt-O
                      Bolt-O commented
                      Editing a comment
                      You don't have to quote to reply to a post... especially if it is overly long.
                  • beachcomber
                    & ramblin' man
                    • Jan 2019
                    • 5081
                    • Send PM

                    Originally posted by Boltjolt View Post

                    Lol,. As funny as that is, I do also like Sinnott, just not at 37. Hec we could get a real good CB, DT or OG there who can start over a development TE.

                    I also do like all those others late, except maybe All. Some also like Reiman. He is meh, for me.
                    the way you talk about Sinnott reminds me a bit of how you used to always give me grief for always mentioning George Pickens.... you weren't so impressed by my allegiance to him round 2, but after he got drafted there and produced, then you claimed that you had always liked him, but not in the second, and rather in the third....

                    and gotta admit, was caught by surprise when LaPorta outproduced Kincaid, altho it was clear early on that Allen was favoring his vet receivers in favor of Kincaid, often throwing to them in coverage, and while Kincaid was in the clear, and so.... not gonna be wholly surprised if Sinnott outproduces BB.... the same guy you claim is a day three developmental prospect, and hey.... I'm right w/you.... would love to get him day three, it's just as I've said.... have seen him one too many times slotted round two, and in the late thirties @that, and yes again.... and a little like HH, think that might be a bit of an overdraft, and then again, @least by my take, he is clearly the second best TE in the group, and the only one who can compare to Brock as a blocker, and can still catch the ball as well.

                    and will say again, that am not so convinced that Bowers is gonna take the League any more by storm than Kincaid, as not so sure he's gonna make hay against the likes of Derwin and others of his ilk ??

                    and agree again we could get a good CB (Lassiter), DT (Jenkins) or OG (Beebe) there @37, and then again.... not so sure I wouldn't take my chances w/Sinnott there, considering what we would have to choose from after he's off the board ??

                    and I know it's the same argument for drafting Bowers early, and.... lotsa choices.... GMing ain't easy.
                    5/11 Fuaga, 37 Kamari Lassiter, 40 Sinnott, 67 Bralen Trice, 69 Cedric Gray, 105 Jaylen Wright, 110 Braelon Allen, 140 Joe Milton, 181 Khristian Boyd, Tylan Grable, 225 Daijun Edwards, 253 Miyan Williams

                    Comment

                    • Boltjolt
                      Dont let the PBs fool ya
                      • Jun 2013
                      • 26924
                      • Henderson, NV
                      • Send PM

                      May not be my final but it wont change much. Going to stick with my guy though he may not be our pick. But at 11 he has a better chance.

                      Think some guys will slide and think Gray could go sooner, Nourzad may go sooner, Johnson may go sooner..not sure about Procter. Ive mocked him before and prefer Bullard but cant fit him with what i like better. I did have Wright and Rice switched but think Rice has a better chance to fall than him.

                      Ill assume we trade with AZ for 11 and 27,.....or 35 and 66...fuck them they arent getting off easy. Id ask for 27 before 35 but ill assume we get 35 and 66.
                      I like Wright, think Benson is gone but think Harbaugh may like Corum so making two options.

                      Bolt O...i their a way to make it so we can have more than 10 lines in our sig? This mock in the Sig says it wont fit in there for that reason...and cant have more than 1000 charactors.



                      11 Brock Bowers TE/ Georgia
                      35 Kris Jenkins/ DT Michigan
                      37 Cooper Beebe OG/ Kansas st
                      66 Mike Sainristil CB/ Michigan
                      69 Jaylen Wright RB/ Tenn or Blake Corum / Michigan
                      105 Brenden Rice WR/ USC
                      110 Cedric Gray LB/ N. Carolina
                      140 Hunter Nourzad OC/ Penn st
                      181 Cedrick Johnson Edge/ Mississippi
                      225 Josh Procter S/ Ohio st
                      253 Dwight McGlothern CB/ Arkansas
                      Last edited by Boltjolt; 04-17-2024, 01:45 PM.

                      Comment

                      • Boltjolt
                        Dont let the PBs fool ya
                        • Jun 2013
                        • 26924
                        • Henderson, NV
                        • Send PM

                        Originally posted by beachcomber View Post

                        the way you talk about Sinnott reminds me a bit of how you used to always give me grief for always mentioning George Pickens.... you weren't so impressed by my allegiance to him round 2, but after he got drafted there and produced, then you claimed that you had always liked him, but not in the second, and rather in the third....

                        and gotta admit, was caught by surprise when LaPorta outproduced Kincaid, altho it was clear early on that Allen was favoring his vet receivers in favor of Kincaid, often throwing to them in coverage, and while Kincaid was in the clear, and so.... not gonna be wholly surprised if Sinnott outproduces BB.... the same guy you claim is a day three developmental prospect, and hey.... I'm right w/you.... would love to get him day three, it's just as I've said.... have seen him one too many times slotted round two, and in the late thirties @that, and yes again.... and a little like HH, think that might be a bit of an overdraft, and then again, @least by my take, he is clearly the second best TE in the group, and the only one who can compare to Brock as a blocker, and can still catch the ball as well.

                        and will say again, that am not so convinced that Bowers is gonna take the League any more by storm than Kincaid, as not so sure he's gonna make hay against the likes of Derwin and others of his ilk ??

                        and agree again we could get a good CB (Lassiter), DT (Jenkins) or OG (Beebe) there @37, and then again.... not so sure I wouldn't take my chances w/Sinnott there, considering what we would have to choose from after he's off the board ??

                        and I know it's the same argument for drafting Bowers early, and.... lotsa choices.... GMing ain't easy.
                        I gave you grief about Pickens? I liked Pickens but if you had him first round i might of. Otherwise i did like him. He was injured nearly all his last year and i thought third round for him coming off that. I dont recall but i know i liked him. Didnt know he had an attitude either lol.

                        And what am i saying bad about Sinnott?
                        He isnt worth a second? IMO he isnt a good value there is all with what will be on the board and there will be some good ones. Still havent seen anyone mock him there and Bruglers latest i posted has him first pick of round 4. Not that he is the all mighty one.

                        I also said he could go late 3rd but we don't pick there and would have to trade up....or he may fall top 4 and good value. Just saying.

                        As for Kincaid, he didnt start right away. He came on about week 6. I got nothing negative about Kincaid. Love the kid , but i just had Bowers above him. How can that be a knock? Everybody has Bowers ranked high and says the same things i have been saying. Guys i never heard of so it not me copying what they are saying. I been saying this since h as a freshman.

                        But f we dont draft him, ill be cool with it and my nextt TE targets would be Sinnott and Wiley round 4.

                        Also agree, LaPorta had a great year, wasnt expecting that. And ill point out he is the same size as Bowers.

                        Bowers will depend on where he goes. If we draft him, he will be a great weapon but i do not expect him to have 80-90 reeptions. Not in this offense. He would be a piece to move around but we will run and limit Herbs pass attempt compared to last season. If Bowers as a rookie gives us 60 to 65 receptions, some TDs and YAC, moves chains with our WRs all healthy i think thats productive for this offense. Then he can be more moving forward.
                        Last edited by Boltjolt; 04-17-2024, 01:49 PM.

                        Comment

                        Working...
                        X