After months of watching tape, evaluating testing numbers, making calls around the league and shuffling my board, I'm finally locking in my 2023 NFL draft rankings. This class has a little bit of everything. We have multiple quarterbacks with first-round grades, a handful of dynamic offensive playmakers and some really elite defenders at the top of the deck.

Even though only 259 names will be called over the course of the draft, I ended up ranking 350 prospects. And the list is topped with two 96 grades. For context, I didn't have any players with a grade that high last year, and the last two players to earn marks at least that high were Trevor Lawrence (97 in 2021) and Saquon Barkley (97 in 2018).

I included mini scouting reports for players with an 80-plus grade this year, and I broke out full positional rankings -- which actually include 561 total players and as many as 76 per position. Let's get into it. Here's how my final board stacks up for 2023.

Overall rankings by grade:
90-96 | 80-89 | 70-79 | 60-69
50-59 | 40-49 | 30-39

1. Bryce Young, QB, Alabama

HT: 5-foot-10 | WT: 204 pounds
Grade: 96 | Position rank: No. 1

Young is a fast processor with rare poise. The game slows down for him, and he never seems to panic, no matter the moment. He is sudden and tough in the pocket, with quick feet and a swift release, and he showcases excellent touch to all three levels of the field. And while Young is a pocket passer first, he has the mobility to frequently extend plays and generate production with his feet. Over the past two seasons, Young threw 79 touchdown passes to just 12 interceptions.


2. Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas

HT: 5-foot-11 | WT: 215
Grade: 96 | Position rank: No. 1

Robinson is a patient and instinctive runner who makes the most of his blocking and has a good feel for cutback lanes. He has the burst to turn the corner on perimeter runs, and he gets good push when he doesn't get a seam. Robinson has outstanding contact balance, and it almost always takes more than one defender to get him on the ground when he gets into space. He makes defenders miss without losing much momentum, as evidenced by his FBS-leading 91 forced missed tackles last season. Robinson ran for 1,580 yards and 18 touchdowns last season, both top-six numbers in the nation. He also can help out in the pass game, catching 60 balls over three seasons at Texas.


3. Will Anderson Jr., OLB, Alabama

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 253
Grade: 95 | Position rank: No. 1

Anderson's combination of an explosive first step and quick, powerful hands is outstanding. He has fantastic redirect quickness and closing burst to capitalize on his great recognition skills. Anderson frequently wins as a pass-rusher by overpowering blockers with his lower-body strength and powerful punch, and he excels in stacking, locating, disengaging and pursuing against the run. He posted 34.5 sacks, 184 pressures and 66 tackles for loss over his three-year career.


4. Tyree Wilson, DE, Texas Tech

HT: 6-foot-6 | WT: 271
Grade: 94 | Position rank: No. 1

Wilson is difficult to keep off the quarterback when he shoots his hands inside and extends his long arms, overwhelming offensive tackles with speed-to-power. He sometimes gets pushed past the quarterback, but he can still dip, bend and use his arm length to make a play. And while he is at his best hunting the quarterback, Wilson can spot drop into coverage and has the size and strength to set the edge against the run. Wilson posted 14 sacks and 30.5 tackles for loss over the past two seasons, and his 43 pressures in 2022 tied for 10th in the country.


5. C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 214
Grade: 94 | Position rank: No. 2

Stroud shows excellent football instincts and decision-making, seeing the entire field at an NFL level. Simply put, he is the best pure pocket passer in the 2023 class; his touch and timing are outstanding, and he shows a unique feel for trajectory. Stroud has a smooth delivery with good arm strength, and there isn't a throw he needs to make that he can't deliver with authority. We saw an ability to extend plays in the College Football Playoff with his feet, and that will be key to his success at the next level. Stroud was second in the nation last season in QBR (88.9) and touchdown throws (41).


6. Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 314
Grade: 93 | Position rank: No. 1

Carter fires off the ball with an explosive first step, has long arms and shows very good torso flexibility. He has every tool in the box necessary to emerge as a top-tier interior pass-rusher early in his career. Against the run, he rarely gets stalemated in one-on-ones, and he's strong/flexible enough to hold up against some double-teams. NFL teams have obviously been spending considerable time examining Carter's off-field situation, though. He pleaded no contest in March to misdemeanor charges of reckless driving and racing in connection with a fatal January crash.


7. Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois

HT: 6 feet | WT: 181
Grade: 93 | Position rank: No. 1

Witherspoon has the instincts, balance and burst to smother short-to-intermediate routes. He flashes great timing when breaking up passes, and he is fluid and fast enough to turn and run with most receivers in press coverage. Witherspoon does get overly physical at times, but his 14 pass breakups tied for 11th in the FBS last season, and he limited receivers to 3.3 yards per pass attempt when he was in coverage (second best).


8. Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon

HT: 6-foot-1 | WT: 197
Grade: 92 | Position rank: No. 2

Gonzalez is a talented press corner with the length to get his hands on receivers, the footspeed to mirror a receiver's release, the fluidity to flip his hips and the speed to run with receivers. He can recover quickly when he gets caught out of phase, and he is smooth changing directions matching up underneath. Gonzalez also closes well breaking on passes thrown in front of him, helping him to four interceptions last season. He is versatile enough to match up over the slot or on the outside too.


9. Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 313
Grade: 92 | Position rank: No. 1

Skoronski shows mirror-slide quickness in pass pro and is almost always on balance. He demonstrates great patience and has a lot of snap in his punch, generating leverage with his hand placement. Skoronski displays excellent awareness working against stunts and twists too. As a run-blocker, he takes excellent angles, has great range and is fundamentally sound. Skoronski lacks ideal length (32¼ inches), and he might end up at guard at the next level, but he is reliable in both the pass and run games. He allowed one sack last season on 860 offensive snaps.


10. Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 244
Grade: 91 | Position rank: No. 3

Richardson's arm strength is elite, as he can flick his wrist and drive the ball with ease. And he has elite speed to make defenses pay when they don't maintain gap control. Richardson ran a 4.43-second 40-yard dash and showcased his explosion in other drills at the combine. However, Richardson has some work to do on his mechanics, and his game tape is extremely erratic. His poor footwork leads to far too many off-target throws, and a lack of touch results in missed short layup throws. Given his limited experience, he is still understandably figuring things out in terms of reading coverages and overall decision-making. He completed just 53.8% of his throws last season -- but his 6.4 yards per rush topped all FBS quarterbacks.

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See why Anthony Richardson has become a top draft prospect

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11. Will Levis, QB, Kentucky

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 229
Grade: 91 | Position rank: No. 4

Levis has a huge arm and can drive the ball vertically, showing good trajectory on deep passes. He also is a mobile quarterback with plus vision, power and speed. Levis has played in two different pro-style systems and consistently shows the ability to go through progressions too. But when pressured and contained in the pocket, his eyes tend to drop at times, and he fails to see late-opening receivers when the pocket is collapsing. He has the physical traits to develop into a top-tier NFL starting quarterback, but he needs to improve his full-field reads and touch on underneath throws. Levis threw 19 touchdown throws and 10 interceptions last season.


12. Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State

HT: 6-foot-6 | WT: 313
Grade: 91 | Position rank: No. 2

Johnson has excellent size and arm length, and he can play multiple positions along the offensive line. He sets quickly and with balance, and when he lands his punch, it jars defensive linemen. He also is an easy mover when mirroring and sliding, though he isn't a natural knee bender and lets his pads rise too high at times. As a run-blocker, he fires out of his stance quickly and shows good mobility.


13. Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 311
Grade: 91 | Position rank: No. 3

Jones' combination of size, length and speed makes him a highly intriguing prospect who grades out as a plug-and-play starter. He mirrors and slides with ease and has no trouble with pure speed off the edge. As a run-blocker, he has a lot of snap in his initial contact, frequently knocking defensive linemen back with his upper-body power. He also has very good range as a second-level blocker. Jones didn't allow a sack across 15 starts last season.


14. Dalton Kincaid, TE, Utah

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 246
Grade: 91 | Position rank: No. 1

Kincaid accelerates quickly, flashes the ability to make the first defender miss and picks up yards after the catch. He has the speed to threaten vertically and the frame to win 50-50 balls downfield. Kincaid is also a zone buster who settles into pockets and presents the quarterback with a big target. He is an efficient route runner who is quick and smooth transitioning out of breaks, and his ability to move around the formation makes him a matchup problem. He posted 890 receiving yards and eight TD catches in 2022.


15. Lukas Van Ness, DE, Iowa

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 272
Grade: 91 | Position rank: No. 2

As a pass-rusher, Van Ness has a special combination of size, length, strength and speed. The biggest thing that stands out on tape is his power, as he is able to use his long arms to get into offensive linemen's pads and drive them back to the quarterback with relative ease. He has good swipe and chop moves but will need to continue to improve his array of pass-rush moves at the next level.


16. Nolan Smith, OLB, Georgia

HT: 6-foot-2 | WT: 238
Grade: 90 | Position rank: No. 2

Smith's take-off speed and change-of-direction skills really jump off the tape. He is able to occasionally get offensive tackles off-balance with effective stop-start moves, and he has excellent closing burst to the quarterback. But Smith frequently lacks a plan -- and simply tries to win with speed -- and does a poor job of countering once reached. Smith is a menacing run defender who explodes off the snap and creates a lot of havoc with how quickly he penetrates the backfield. He was limited to eight games last season with a right pectoral injury.


17. Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State

HT: 6-foot-1 | WT: 196
Grade: 90 | Position rank: No. 1

Smith-Njigba is a quarterback's best friend because of his unique instincts. He is extremely agile with precise route-running skills; he tempos his route stems like a pro and is very quick getting in and out of cuts. He shows soft hands and the ability to transition upfield in a flash, with the body control to contort his body and snatch balls thrown outside of his frame. JSN does a good job tracking the deep ball and has the lateral agility to make multiple defenders miss in space. He only played in three games last season while dealing with a hamstring injury, but he totaled 1,606 receiving yards in 2021.


18. Darnell Wright, OT, Tennessee

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 333
Grade: 90 | Position rank: No. 4

Wright shows exceptional lower-body explosion, but he has smaller-than-average arm length. In pass pro, he shows the ability to mirror and slide and keep pass-rushers in front of him when he is playing with urgency. He also rarely gives ground to power rushers. As a run-blocker, Wright is stellar, though he is better as a gap blocker than a zone blocker. He uses his massive frame and excellent overall strength well in the run game. Wright projects best as a right tackle but also would have no trouble kicking inside to guard.


19. Michael Mayer, TE, Notre Dame

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 249
Grade: 90 | Position rank: No. 2

Mayer's best traits are his toughness and strength after the catch. He is a bulldozer with the ball in his hands, generating yards by breaking tackles and carrying defenders. Mayer doesn't threaten with great speed down the seam, but he is an excellent route runner. And his ability to win on contested catches is second to none in this year's class. Mayer also has an edge as a blocker, and his technique really improved during his three seasons at Notre Dame. His tenacity, range and initial striking power at the point of attack are very positive traits. He went over 800 receiving yards in each of his past two seasons.


20. Calijah Kancey, DT, Pittsburgh

HT: 6-foot-1 | WT: 281
Grade: 90 | Position rank: No. 2

Kancey is a disruptive run defender and explosive pass-rusher, even though he is light for his position and his arms are much shorter than average. His low center of gravity and ability to shoot his hands help negate any disadvantages in length or size. He locates the ball, gets off blocks and tackles well. Kancey can give ground initially but rarely stays blocked, and he flashes the ability to split double-teams. He has strong hands, explosive power and footspeed to get to the quarterback, as displayed by 14.5 sacks over the past two seasons.


21. Emmanuel Forbes, CB, Mississippi State

HT: 6-foot-1 | WT: 166
Grade: 90 | Position rank: No. 3

Forbes is a tall but thin cornerback with long arms. He has excellent speed and is at his best in off-coverage, where he uses his fast eyes and great understanding of route concepts to get early jumps on the ball. And he has excellent ball skills, tallying 14 interceptions over his college career, including six pick-sixes. Forbes is instinctive, has length to contest passes and shows the ability to pluck the ball outside his frame with ease. But his lack of bulk and strength shows up in run support, and he is an unreliable tackler in space.


22. Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College

HT: 5-foot-9 | WT: 182
Grade: 89 | Position rank: No. 2

Flowers is undersized with a slim frame and short arms, but he does a great job of releasing off the line and generating separation with his initial burst and speed. (He ran a 4.42 40-yard dash.0 He is a highly instinctive route runner who tracks the deep ball well and has a second gear to get behind the coverage. Defenses also have to respect the threat of a jet sweep when he motions into the backfield. He traps a lot of passes and drops a few too many easy catches. Flowers caught 78 passes for 1,077 yards and 12 TDs last season.

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Zay Flowers' NFL draft profile

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23. Joey Porter Jr., CB, Penn State

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 193
Grade: 89 | Position rank: No. 4

Porter is a physical press corner with very good straight-line speed for his size. He is instinctive and uses excellent technique to reroute receivers off the line of scrimmage but has some tightness and tends to get handsy. He shows good playmaking instincts -- breaking up 11 passes last season -- but he only has one interception in his career. Porter is also aggressive and physical in run support but inconsistent in outside contain and tackling technique.


24. Myles Murphy, DE, Clemson

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 268
Grade: 89 | Position rank: No. 3

Murphy shows very good takeoff quickness and does a good job using his long arms to neutralize offensive linemen. Where he needs to improve is exploiting linemen when he has them off-balance; he doesn't show enough lateral agility or bend to work through engagement. But he has very good closing burst to the quarterback, and he gets a lot of production based on his motor. Murphy shows the strength and length to stack and shed offensive tackles defending the run. Murphy's tape is a little inconsistent, but he has an impressive toolbox. Over the past two seasons, he had 14 sacks and 23 tackles for loss.


25. Will McDonald IV, OLB, Iowa State

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 239
Grade: 89 | Position rank: No. 3

McDonald is a long and explosive edge rusher with good bend and closing burst. He has the footspeed to win with weave and inside moves, and he flashes an effective spin move to the inside. He doesn't gear down when he gets doubled, and he gets his hands up in passing windows. McDonald needs to get stronger to unlock his full potential as a pass-rusher, though. Over the past four years, he totaled 33 sacks and 115 pressures.


26. Jordan Addison, WR, USC

HT: 5-foot-11 | WT: 173
Grade: 89 | Position rank: No. 3

Addison is a savvy and elusive route runner who separates from man and finds pockets in zone looks. He catches passes in stride, hits his top speed quickly and is instinctive after the catch. Addison also tracks the deep ball well and catches over-the-shoulder passes. He will be a dangerous slot receiver and return man with the ability to make an immediate impact in the NFL. He posted eight TD catches last season.


27. Deonte Banks, CB, Maryland

HT: 6 feet | WT: 197
Grade: 88 | Position rank: No. 5

Banks is a physical corner who is at his best in press-zone coverage. He has the length and strength to reroute receivers off the line, though his technique will need to improve. He does get into trouble when his back is to the ball and he tries to turn and locate. Banks is the most reliable tackler at cornerback on tape this year, and he plays with an aggressive mindset and an excellent motor.


28. Jahmyr Gibbs, RB, Alabama

HT: 5-foot-9 | WT: 199
Grade: 88 | Position rank: No. 2

Gibbs does a good job of sticking his foot in the ground and accelerating upfield without losing much in transition. He isn't overpowering, but he shows good balance to absorb contact and advance the carry. Gibbs displays good vision when stringing together multiple cuts through the line of scrimmage, though he gets impatient at times and bounces too many carries to the outside. He is a reliable pass-catcher (44 receptions in 2022) too.


29. Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 208
Grade: 88 | Position rank: No. 4

Johnston is a deep threat with the buildup speed to stretch the field. He also is a big target with the body control and catching radius to win 50-50 balls downfield. Johnston can contort his body to make acrobatic catches that many receivers his size would struggle to make, and he does a very good job of tracking the deep ball over his shoulder. He ran a limited route tree at TCU, but he shows some savvy locating soft spots in zone and has the frame to shield defenders to gain late separation. And he shows the strength and contact balance to break tackles after the catch (24 forced missed tackles last year).


30. Brian Branch, S, Alabama

HT: 6 feet | WT: 190
Grade: 88 | Position rank: No. 1

Branch played the "star" position in Alabama's defense, and he is capable of playing nickel or free safety in the NFL. In coverage, he shows smooth movement skills and is capable of matching up one-on-one with many receivers. Against the run, he lacks ideal size, but he plays with gap control and does a very good job of using his quick feet and hands to keep off blocks.


31. Luke Musgrave, TE, Oregon State

HT: 6-foot-6 | WT: 253
Grade: 87 | Position rank: No. 3

Musgrave has the frame to make contested catches, transitions upfield smoothly and shows a good burst after the catch. He isn't a polished route runner on tape, but he flashed at the Senior Bowl and has the talent to continue to improve in that area. Musgrave shows the ability to get good initial pop as a blocker but needs to get stronger and improve his hand placement. He only played in three games last season while dealing with injuries.


32. Felix Anudike-Uzomah, DE, Kansas State

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 255
Grade: 87 | Position rank: No. 4

Anudike-Uzomah swipes blockers' hands down, clears his hips and closes well as a speed rusher. He can redirect inside when he sees the quarterback step up in the pocket and can beat double-teams. Anudike-Uzomah gets stuck when blockers are able to lock on, and his speed-to-power stalls out at times. He flashes the ability to stack and shed blocks, but he is on the lighter side and gives up ground. He posted 19.5 sacks over the past two seasons, but they came in bunches.


33. Hendon Hooker, QB, Tennessee

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 217
Grade: 86 | Position rank: No. 5

Hooker has a smooth and compact delivery and shows the ability to change arm angles when necessary. Hooker's accuracy on all three levels is good, but he really excels throwing the ball vertically. The biggest knock is that he is inconsistent with his timing and ball placement on anticipatory throws. Hooker is a legitimate running threat with high-level agility, above-average speed and the strength to break tackles. An area of his game that needs to improve is his willingness to move off his initial drop spot and extend the play with his eyes downfield, rather than immediately becoming a running back. He is coming off a torn ACL, but he led the nation in QBR last season (89.5).


34. Steve Avila, G, TCU

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 332
Grade: 86 | Position rank: No. 1

Avila is a guard/center prospect with outstanding size and good length. He has solid coordination and technique, especially with his hand placement and resetting at the point of attack. He has the flexibility to absorb contact and maintain a strong anchor, but his footwork and angles still need to become more consistent. He fits best in a power-heavy scheme and has the potential to develop into a dominant run-blocker.


35. Keeanu Benton, DT, Wisconsin

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 309
Grade: 86 | Position rank: No. 3

Benton has solid initial quickness and does a good job swiping and swimming. He improved as a finisher, but he is still more disruptive than productive. As a run defender, Benton has an excellent combination of length, power and leverage, and he stacks and sheds with ease. He consistently gets a surge and disrupts plays in the backfield.


36. Bryan Bresee, DT, Clemson

HT: 6-foot-6 | WT: 298
Grade: 85 | Position rank: No. 4

Bresee has shorter than ideal arms, but he has excellent speed for the position. He is a dominant run defender with the upper-body strength to stack and shed. He locates the ball quickly and is an effective tackler. Bresee tracks the quarterback and gets his hands up in passing lanes. If he gets a beat on the QB, he has outstanding closing burst. The biggest thing for Bresee is he needs to improve his ability to string multiple moves together as a pass-rusher and learn to counter once blockers get into his body.

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Bryan Bresee's NFL draft profile

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37. Jonathan Mingo, WR, Ole Miss

HT: 6-foot-2 | WT: 220
Grade: 85 | Position rank: No. 5

Mingo lines up wide, in the slot, at H-back and in the backfield. He has huge hands and is strong plucking the ball on contested throws. But he also is an effective vertical route runner who tracks the deep ball well. Mingo has the frame to box out defenders underneath and locates soft spots in zone looks. One of his best assets is his strength with the ball in his hands. He is built like a big back, and he is tough to bring down in the open field. Mingo caught 51 passes for 861 yards and five TDs in 2022.


38. Mazi Smith, DT, Michigan

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 323
Grade: 85 | Position rank: No. 5

Smith is one of the strongest prospects in this draft class. He won't offer much production as a pass-rusher, but his ability to clog the middle against the run and make plays within the tackle box is outstanding. What separates him from most other nose tackle prospects is his exceptional power. He doesn't have great range, but he has strong hands to disengage and has impressive short-area quickness for his size. Smith still needs to learn to tie his hands and feet together as a pass-rusher, and he lets his pads rise too often when attempting to penetrate.


39. Darnell Washington, TE, Georgia

HT: 6-foot-7 | WT: 264
Grade: 85 | Position rank: No. 4

Washington does a good job of fighting through press coverage and can locate soft spots in zone. He flashes the ability to make special catches in traffic and has huge hands to rip the ball away from defenders. Washington also has above-average speed for his size and the length to win down the seams on 50-50 balls. He also will generate yards after the catch with his ability to break tackles and drag defenders for extra yards. As a blocker, he has a massive frame, long arms and huge hands to latch onto defenders and steer them.


40. Joe Tippmann, C, Wisconsin

HT: 6-foot-6 | WT: 313
Grade: 85 | Position rank: No. 1

Tippmann has great mobility and initial burst as a move-blocker. In pass protection, he shows great awareness to identify twists, stunts and blitzes. Despite his tall frame, he has a flexible lower body and is a natural knee bender. He does a good job of dropping anchor and preventing rushers from pushing him back. Tippmann's range as a run-blocker is the first thing that jumps off the tape; he is surprisingly smooth for his frame and is efficient as a zone run-blocker.


41. Tyrique Stevenson, CB, Miami-FL

HT: 6 feet | WT: 198
Grade: 84 | Position rank: No. 6

Stevenson is a tall and lean press corner with the length to get his hands on receivers and the speed to run with them. He plays through the receiver's hands and recovers well when he gets caught out of phase. He masks his tightness with balance and burst, as well. Stevenson has the strength and catching radius to hold his own in jump ball situations and hold up on an island in the red zone. He is an aggressive run defender who needs to be more consistent wrapping up but flashes the ability to blow up plays in the backfield.


42. O'Cyrus Torrence, G, Florida

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 330
Grade: 84 | Position rank: No. 2

Torrence was a dominant player at Louisiana for three seasons before transferring to Florida. As a run-blocker, he does a great job of latching on and controlling defensive linemen while moving laterally. The only time he gets in trouble is when he is working on the second level and attempting to hit moving targets. In pass protection, Torrence rarely gives ground against bull rushes. He lacks ideal mirror-and-slide agility, however, and can get in trouble against talented 3-technique tackles. He will immediately upgrade a team's interior pass protection and will excel in a power-based run game.


43. Sam LaPorta, TE, Iowa

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 245
Grade: 84 | Position rank: No. 5

LaPorta shows crispness in his routes and acceleration out of breaks. He has very good ball skills, shows excellent focus in traffic and excels at reeling in contested catches. He isn't an overpowering blocker, but he is very diligent with his assignments. LaPorta fires out with good leverage and is scrappy, but he lacks the size and core strength to get movement, and he frequently struggles to sustain.


44. Julius Brents, CB, Kansas State

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 198
Grade: 84 | Position rank: No. 7

Brents has excellent length and the balance to smother receivers underneath. He is a long strider with a lot of speed, though he takes some time to recover when he gets caught out of position. And while he isn't a ball hawk, he flashes the ability to pluck the ball out of the air, as he picked off four passes last season.


45. Keion White, DE, Georgia Tech

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 285
Grade: 84 | Position rank: No. 5

White has the power to stack offensive tackles and overwhelm tight ends. He locates the ball, gets off blocks in time to make plays and is an effective tackler. He is still scratching the surface in terms of his ability to get to the quarterback. White relies on power too much, but he has a high ceiling. He also is a matchup problem when he kicks inside to rush the passer.


46. BJ Ojulari, OLB, LSU

HT: 6-foot-2 | WT: 248
Grade: 83 | Position rank: No. 4

Ojulari has great takeoff burst, explosive speed and very good bend to run a tight loop at the top of his rush. He is a highly technical pass-rusher with dip-and-rip, swipe and hesitation moves, and he uses great hand placement and understands how to tempo his rush. The biggest knock in this area is that his speed-to-power moves frequently stall, and he needs to improve his lower-body strength to drive opponents back into the pocket. Ojulari has experience dropping in coverage and great range against the run.


47. Jayden Reed, WR, Michigan State

HT: 5-foot-11 | WT: 187
Grade: 83 | Position rank: No. 6

Reed's versatility on offense and in the return game will add value to his draft stock. His ability to accelerate off the line, beat press coverage and generate separation with savviness and quickness is what jumps out on tape. He has above-average ball skills and is very dangerous after the catch.


48. John Michael Schmitz, C, Minnesota

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 301
Grade: 83 | Position rank: No. 2

Schmitz has short-area suddenness and a lot of power at the point of attack. He also is an effective zone blocker who understands angles and drives though the play-side shoulder. Once he latches on, his overwhelming strength allows him to finish at an exceptionally high rate. Schmitz gets set quickly, but his mirror-and-slide quickness and fluidity are average, at best.


49. Jalin Hyatt, WR, Tennessee

HT: 6 feet | WT: 176
Grade: 83 | Position rank: No. 7

Hyatt is an explosive playmaker with the burst to quickly eat up cushions and the second gear to get behind the coverage. He is a hands catcher who shows the ability to pluck the ball out of the air, but he isn't a polished route runner at this point. And he needs to get stronger to take the next step. Hyatt was fifth in the nation in receiving yards (1,267) and tied for second in TD catches (15) last season.


50. Kelee Ringo, CB, Georgia

HT: 6-foot-2 | WT: 207
Grade: 82 | Position rank: No. 8

Ringo's combination of length and top-end speed are excellent. He also does a great job of contesting jump balls, and he is capable of matching size with big wide receivers and even some tight ends. However, he is long-legged with tight hips, which leads to redirection slowness. His eye discipline was exploited at times in 2022, as he surrendered some big plays. In run support, Ringo is physical and has ideal size and length to keep blockers off his frame and to lasso ball carriers in space.

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Kelee Ringo's NFL draft profile

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51. Adetomiwa Adebawore, DE, Northwestern

HT: 6-foot-2 | WT: 282
Grade: 82 | Position rank: No. 6

As a pass-rusher, Adebawore is a power-based player who does a great job of getting underneath the pads of offensive linemen and driving them back into the quarterback. However, he doesn't threaten much with suddenness on outside-in moves. Adebawore is highly disruptive against the run, setting a hard edge and using his powerful upper body to quickly disengage. He has excellent speed in pursuit and will make a lot of plays from the backside.


52. Matthew Bergeron, OT, Syracuse

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 318
Grade: 82 | Position rank: No. 5

Bergeron is quick off the ball and flashes the ability to root defenders out of gaps in the run game. He is also smooth getting set, has the footspeed to mirror when he anticipates inside moves and flashes a strong punch in pass pro. But he struggles when defenders get into his frame, and his footwork is inconsistent.


53. Cody Mauch, OT, North Dakota State

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 302
Grade: 81 | Position rank: No. 6

Mauch has short arms, which means he might be a better fit at guard in the NFL. He explodes off the ball and has the ability to bury defenders, but he can stall out when the defender is able to absorb his initial momentum. He is tough to beat once he locks on and sinks his hips in pass protection, but Mauch's inconsistent hand placement is a concern in both the run game and against pass-rushers.


54. Trenton Simpson, ILB, Clemson

HT: 6-foot-2 | WT: 235
Grade: 81 | Position rank: No. 1

Simpson is versatile in the passing game, and one of his best strengths is his man-to-man matchup skills against running backs and tight ends. His instincts in zone are lacking, but he has the speed and length to recover. As a pass-rusher, Simpson has a good feel for hitting the right gap, and he explodes to the quarterback. Against the run, he has excellent range but takes too many false steps and too many poor angles.


55. Anton Harrison, OT, Oklahoma

HT: 6-foot-4 | WT: 315
Grade: 81 | Position rank: No. 7

Harrison stalls out at times, but he has the strength to move defenders when his technique is sound, and he flashes a finisher's mentality. He is an effective combo and second-level blocker with the range to lock up defenders in space. He is smooth getting set, flashes a powerful punch and is tough to shake once he is locked on in pass protection. Harrison also has good body control and changes directions well enough to take away inside moves.


56. DJ Turner, CB, Michigan

HT: 5-foot-11 | WT: 178
Grade: 81 | Position rank: No. 9

Turner ran the fastest 40-yard dash (4.26 seconds) of any player at the combine. He has an outstanding combination of quickness, fluidity and closing burst when the ball is in the air. The biggest knock on Turner is he lacks ideal size, length and strength, which leads to him getting pushed around at times by bigger receivers. In run support, he is willing and scrappy, but he gets stuck on blocks too long at times.


57. Dawand Jones, OT, Ohio State

HT: 6-foot-8 | WT: 374
Grade: 81 | Position rank: No. 8

Jones doesn't give up much ground against rushers when he is balanced, and he has impressive short-area quickness for his massive frame. However, Jones is not a natural knee bender and plays too high at times. He gets in most trouble when he has to slide while reacting to inside counter moves. As a run-blocker, he has a massive frame and does a good job of driving his legs on contact.


58. Jack Campbell, ILB, Iowa

HT: 6-foot-5 | WT: 249
Grade: 80 | Position rank: No. 2

Campbell is a strong wrap-up tackler, but his pursuit angles are inconsistent. He shows good awareness, and his size is an asset in underneath zone coverage. Campbell has some tightness and lacks recovery speed, and he matches up better with tight ends than running backs.


59. Cedric Tillman, WR, Tennessee

HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 213
Grade: 80 | Position rank: No. 8

Tillman has leaping ability, lower-body explosion, impressive route-running savvy, a big catch radius and strong hands. He does an excellent job tracking the deep ball and using his length to win on 50-50 opportunities. Tillman has a natural feel for contorting his body, timing his jumps and shielding defenders, but he lacks ideal elusiveness and initial acceleration.


60. Marvin Mims, WR, Oklahoma

HT: 5-foot-11 | WT: 183
Grade: 80 | Position rank: No. 9

Mims is an undersized receiver who runs well, sells double moves and tracks the deep ball well. He has the burst to produce after the catch and flashes as a punt returner. Mims lacks polish as an intermediate route runner, but he has the potential to make strides in that area and is a tough matchup working out of the slot thanks to his quickness and footspeed.


Grades of 70-79

61. Tucker Kraft, TE, South Dakota State (79)
62. Riley Moss, CB, Iowa (79)
63. Josh Downs, WR, North Carolina (79)
64. Zach Charbonnet, RB, UCLA (79)
65. Zacch Pickens, DT, South Carolina (79)
66. Derick Hall, DE, Auburn (79)
67. Ji'Ayir Brown, S, Penn State (78)
68. Brenton Strange, TE, Penn State (78)
69. Sydney Brown, S, Illinois (78)
70. Drew Sanders, ILB, Arkansas (78)
71. Luke Schoonmaker, TE, Michigan (78)
72. Jartavius Martin, S, Illinois (77)
73. Kendre Miller, RB, TCU (77)
74. Gervon Dexter, DT, Florida (76)
75. Daiyan Henley, ILB, Washington State (76)
76. Byron Young, DE, Tennessee (76)
77. Isaiah Foskey, DE, Notre Dame (75)
78. Devon Achane, RB, Texas A&M (75)
79. Tyler Steen, OT, Alabama (75)
80. Cam Smith, CB, South Carolina (74)
81. Tuli Tuipulotu, DE, USC (74)
82. Henry To'oTo'o, ILB, Alabama (74)
83. Clark Phillips III, CB, Utah (73)
84. Roschon Johnson, RB, Texas (73)
85. Darius Rush, CB, South Carolina (72)
86. Chandler Zavala, G, NC State (72)
87. Jordan Battle, S, Alabama (72)
88. Nathaniel Dell, WR, Houston (72)
89. DeMarvion Overshown, ILB, Texas (71)
90. Juice Scruggs, C, Penn State (71)
91. Tank Bigsby, RB, Auburn (71)
92. Jake Haener, QB, Fresno State (71)
93. Blake Freeland, OT, BYU (71)
94. Wanya Morris, OT, Oklahoma (71)
95. Tyler Scott, WR, Cincinnati (70)
96. Terell Smith, CB, Minnesota (70)
97. Nick Herbig, OLB, Wisconsin (70)
98. Marte Mapu, ILB, Cal-Sacramento (70)
99. Zach Harrison, DE, Ohio State (70)
100. Antonio Johnson, S, Texas A&M (70)


Grades of 60-69

101. Charlie Jones, WR, Iowa (69)
102. YaYa Diaby, DE, Louisville (69)
103. Braeden Daniels, G, Utah (69)
104. Tyjae Spears, RB, Tulane (69)
105. Siaki Ika, DT, Baylor (69)
106. Cory Trice, CB, Purdue (68)
107. A.T. Perry, WR, Wake Forest (68)
108. Israel Abanikanda, RB, Pittsburgh (68)
109. Carter Warren, OT, Pittsburgh (68)
110. Daniel Scott, S, California (67)
111. Will Mallory, TE, Miami-FL (67)
112. Luke Wypler, C, Ohio State (67)
113. Jakorian Bennett, CB, Maryland (67)
114. Byron Young, DT, Alabama (66)
115. Jaelyn Duncan, OT, Maryland (66)
116. Nick Saldiveri, OT, Old Dominion (66)
117. Josh Whyle, TE, Cincinnati (65)
118. Antoine Green, WR, North Carolina (65)
119. Moro Ojomo, DE, Texas (65)
120. Tre'Vius Hodges-Tomlinson, CB, TCU (65)
121. Scott Matlock, DT, Boise State (64)
122. Sidy Sow, G, Eastern Michigan (64)
123. Jaren Hall, QB, BYU (64)
124. Rashee Rice, WR, SMU (64)
125. Ricky Stromberg, C, Arkansas (63)
126. Michael Wilson, WR, Stanford (63)
127. Xavier Hutchinson, WR, Iowa State (63)
128. JL Skinner, S, Boise State (63)
129. Parker Washington, WR, Penn State (62)
130. Tavius Robinson, OLB, Ole Miss (62)
131. Jaquelin Roy, DT, LSU (62)
132. Eric Gray, RB, Oklahoma (62)
133. DJ Johnson, OLB, Oregon (61)
134. Jose Ramirez, OLB, Eastern Michigan (61)
135. Jalen Redmond, DT, Oklahoma (61)
136. Cameron Young, DT, Mississippi State (61)
137. K.J. Henry, DE, Clemson (61)
138. Zack Kuntz, TE, Old Dominion (61)
139. Dorian Williams, ILB, Tulane (61)
140. Yasir Abdullah, OLB, Louisville (61)
141. DeWayne McBride, RB, AL-Birmingham (60)
142. Ivan Pace Jr., ILB, Cincinnati (60)
143. Dorian Thompson-Robinson, QB, UCLA (60)
144. Elijah Higgins, WR, Stanford (60)

play
0:42
Israel Abanikanda's NFL draft profile

Check out the best highlights that contributed to a stellar college career for Pittsburgh's Israel Abanikanda.


Grades of 50-59

145. Garrett Williams, CB, Syracuse (59)
146. Christopher Smith, S, Georgia (59)
147. Lonnie Phelps, OLB, Kansas (59)
148. Nick Hampton, OLB, Appalachian State (59)
149. Colby Wooden, DT, Auburn (58)
150. Asim Richards, G, North Carolina (58)
151. Jay Ward, S, LSU (58)
152. Trey Palmer, WR, Nebraska (58)
153. Darrell Luter Jr., CB, South Alabama (57)
154. Owen Pappoe, ILB, Auburn (57)
155. Davis Allen, TE, Clemson (57)
156. Chase Brown, RB, Illinois (57)
157. Noah Sewell, ILB, Oregon (56)
158. Jammie Robinson, S, Florida State (56)
159. Carrington Valentine, CB, Kentucky (56)
160. Zach Evans, RB, Ole Miss (56)
161. Warren McClendon, OT, Georgia (56)
162. Chamarri Conner, S, Virginia Tech (55)
163. Cameron Mitchell, CB, Northwestern (55)
164. Brodric Martin, DT, Western Kentucky (54)
165. SirVocea Dennis, ILB, Pittsburgh (54)
166. Payne Durham, TE, Purdue (54)
167. Dontayvion Wicks, WR, Virginia (54)
168. Kobie Turner, DT, Wake Forest (53)
169. Rejzohn Wright, CB, Oregon State (53)
170. Kei'Trel Clark, CB, Louisville (53)
171. Anthony Johnson Jr., S, Iowa State (53)
172. Anthony Bradford, G, LSU (52)
173. Olusegun Oluwatimi, C, Michigan (52)
174. Isaiah McGuire, DE, Missouri (52)
175. Dylan Horton, DE, TCU (52)
176. Jordan Howden, S, Minnesota (52)
177. Kyu Blu Kelly, CB, Stanford (52)
178. Emil Ekiyor Jr., G, Alabama (52)
179. Brandon Hill, S, Pittsburgh (52)
180. Dee Winters, ILB, TCU (51)
181. Cameron Latu, TE, Alabama (51)
182. Alex Forsyth, C, Oregon (51)
183. Kayshon Boutte, WR, LSU (51)
184. Thomas Incoom, OLB, Central Michigan (51)
185. Nick Broeker, G, Ole Miss (51)
186. Karl Brooks, DE, Bowling Green (50)
187. Ronnie Bell, WR, Michigan (50)
188. Clayton Tune, QB, Houston (50)
189. Jason Taylor II, S, Oklahoma State (50)
190. Mike Morris, DE, Michigan (50)
191. Deuce Vaughn, RB, Kansas State (50)


Grades of 40-49

192. Aidan O'Connell, QB, Purdue (49)
193. Eli Ricks, CB, Alabama (49)
194. DeMarcco Hellams, S, Alabama (49)
195. Joel Wilson, TE, Central Michigan (49)
196. Tyler Lacy, DE, Oklahoma State (49)
197. Demario Douglas, WR, Liberty (49)
198. Jake Moody, K, Michigan (48)
199. Ronnie Hickman, S, Ohio State (48)
200. Ventrell Miller, ILB, Florida (48)
201. Ryan Hayes, OT, Michigan (48)
202. Chris Rodriguez Jr., RB, Kentucky (48)
203. Ali Gaye, DE, LSU (48)
204. Bryce Ford-Wheaton, WR, West Virginia (47)
205. Cameron Brown, CB, Ohio State (47)
206. Andre Carter II, OLB, Army (47)
207. Viliami Fehoko, DE, San Jose State (47)
208. Jerrod Clark, DT, Coastal Carolina (47)
209. Kenny McIntosh, RB, Georgia (47)
210. Jason Brownlee, WR, Southern Miss (47)
211. Jaylon Jones, CB, Texas A&M (46)
212. Lance Boykin, CB, Coastal Carolina (46)
213. Atonio Mafi, G, UCLA (46)
214. Robert Beal Jr., DE, Georgia (46)
215. Isaiah Land, OLB, Florida A&M (46)
216. Andrei Iosivas, WR, Princeton (46)
217. Keaton Mitchell, RB, East Carolina (45)
218. Anthony Johnson, CB, Virginia (45)
219. Tanner McKee, QB, Stanford (45)
220. Richard Gouraige, G, Florida (45)
221. T.J. Bass, OT, Oregon (45)
222. Tre Tucker, WR, Cincinnati (45)
223. Mekhi Blackmon, CB, USC (44)
224. Brandon Joseph, S, Notre Dame (44)
225. Jaxson Kirkland, OT, Washington (44)
226. Malik Knowles, WR, Kansas State (44)
227. Jeremy Banks, ILB, Tennessee (44)
228. Blake Whiteheart, TE, Wake Forest (44)
229. Andrew Vorhees, G, USC (43)
230. Earl Bostick Jr., OT, Kansas (43)
231. Sean Tucker, RB, Syracuse (43)
232. Tyrus Wheat, OLB, Mississippi State (43)
233. Hunter Luepke, FB, North Dakota State (43)
234. Aubrey Miller Jr., ILB, Jackson State (43)
235. Jarrett Patterson, C, Notre Dame (43)
236. Mohamoud Diabate, OLB, Utah (43)
237. Stetson Bennett, QB, Georgia (43)
238. Habakkuk Baldonado, DE, Pittsburgh (42)
239. Jordan McFadden, G, Clemson (42)
240. Jake Witt, OT, Northern Michigan (42)
241. Deneric Prince, RB, Tulsa (42)
242. Jake Andrews, C, Troy (42)
243. Amari Burney, OLB, Florida (42)
244. Keondre Coburn, DT, Texas (42)
245. Noah Gindorff, TE, North Dakota State (41)
246. John Ojukwu, OT, Boise State (41)
247. McClendon Curtis, G, Chattanooga (41)
248. Mohamed Ibrahim, RB, Minnesota (41)
249. MJ Anderson, DE, Iowa State (41)
250. Jacob Copeland, WR, Maryland (41)
251. Arquon Bush, CB, Cincinnati (41)
252. Shaka Heyward, OLB, Duke (41)
253. Malaesala Aumavae-Laulu, OT, Oregon (40)
254. Jon Gaines II, G, UCLA (40)
255. Eku Leota, DE, Auburn (40)
256. Dontay Demus Jr., WR, Maryland (40)
257. Ekow Boye-Doe, CB, Kansas State (40)
258. Gervarrius Owens, S, Houston (40)

play
0:34
Ryan Hayes' NFL draft profile

Check out the best highlights that contributed to a stellar college career for Michigan's Ryan Hayes.


Grades of 30-39

259. Anfernee Orji, ILB, Vanderbilt (39)
260. Travis Vokolek, TE, Nebraska (39)
261. Henry Bainivalu, G, Washington (39)
262. Ochaun Mathis, DE, Nebraska (39)
263. Justin Shorter, WR, Florida (39)
264. Alex Austin, CB, Oregon State (39)
265. Rashad Torrence II, S, Florida (39)
266. Andre Jones, OLB, Louisiana-Lafayette (39)
267. Caleb Murphy, DE, Ferris State (38)
268. Derius Davis, WR, TCU (38)
269. Keidron Smith, CB, Kentucky (38)
270. Quindell Johnson, S, Memphis (38)
271. DeAndre Square, ILB, Kentucky (38)
272. Alan Ali, C, TCU (38)
273. Jalen Graham, OLB, Purdue (38)
274. Mark Evans II, G, Arkansas-Pinebluff (38)
275. Connor Galvin, OT, Baylor (38)
276. Grant DuBose, WR, Charlotte (38)
277. Brayden Willis, TE, Oklahoma (38)
278. PJ Mustipher, DT, Penn State (38)
279. Evan Hull, RB, Northwestern (38)
280. Puka Nacua, WR, BYU (38)
281. Kaevon Merriweather, S, Iowa (38)
282. DJ Dale, DT, Alabama (38)
283. SaRodorick Thompson, RB, Texas Tech (37)
284. Mekhi Garner, CB, LSU (37)
285. Bryce Baringer, P, Michigan State (37)
286. Max Duggan, QB, TCU (37)
287. Lew Nichols III, RB, Central Michigan (37)
288. C.J. Johnson, WR, East Carolina (37)
289. Nesta Jade Silvera, DT, Arizona State (37)
290. Cam Jones, ILB, Indiana (37)
291. Brenton Cox Jr., OLB, Florida (37)
292. Adam Korsak, P, Rutgers (37)
293. Luke Haggard, OT, Indiana (36)
294. David Durden, WR, West Florida (36)
295. Leonard Taylor, TE, Cincinnati (36)
296. Emari Demercado, RB, TCU (36)
297. Xavier Gipson, WR, Stephen F. Austin (36)
298. Trey Dean III, S, Florida (36)
299. Isaiah Moore, ILB, NC State (36)
300. Charlie Thomas, OLB, Georgia Tech (35)
301. Chad Ryland, K, Maryland (35)
302. Joey Fisher, OT, Shepherd (35)
303. D'Shawn Jamison, CB, Texas (35)
304. Tyreque Jones, S, Boise State (35)
305. Jack Colletto, FB, Oregon State (35)
306. Micah Baskerville, ILB, LSU (34)
307. Dante Stills, DT, West Virginia (34)
308. Travis Dye, RB, USC (34)
309. Joseph Ngata, WR, Clemson (34)
310. Kyle Soelle, ILB, Arizona State (34)
311. Corey Luciano, C, Washington (34)
312. Jacob Slade, DT, Michigan State (34)
313. Tiyon Evans, RB, Louisville (33)
314. Malik Heath, WR, Ole Miss (33)
315. Myles Brooks, CB, Louisiana Tech (33)
316. Bumper Pool, ILB, Arkansas (33)
317. Jacob Gall, C, Baylor (33)
318. Michael Turk, P, Oklahoma (33)
319. Ben Sims, TE, Baylor (33)
320. Spencer Anderson, G, Maryland (33)
321. Jalen Cropper, WR, Fresno State (33)
322. Nic Jones, CB, Ball State (32)
323. Ikenna Enechukwu, DE, Rice (32)
324. Jalen Wayne, WR, South Alabama (32)
325. Jarrick Bernard-Converse, CB, LSU (32)
326. Kivon Bennett, OLB, Arkansas State (32)
327. T.J. Luther, WR, Gardner-Webb (32)
328. Antonio Moultrie, DE, Miami-FL (32)
329. Noah Taylor, OLB, North Carolina (32)
330. Kyle Patterson, TE, Air Force (31)
331. Tashawn Manning, G, Kentucky (31)
332. Michael Jefferson, WR, Louisiana-Lafayette (31)
333. Camerun Peoples, RB, Appalachian State (31)
334. Tyson Bagent, QB, Shepherd (31)
335. O'Rien Vance, ILB, Iowa State (31)
336. Grant Gibson, C, NC State (31)
337. Durrell Johnson, OLB, Liberty (31)
338. Tanner Morgan, QB, Minnesota (30)
339. Brent Laing, G, Minnesota-Duluth (30)
340. Kearis Jackson, WR, Georgia (30)
341. Tavion Thomas, RB, Utah (30)
342. Alex Ward, LS, UCF (30)
343. Brett Neilon, C, USC (30)
344. Jordan Lewis, OLB, Southern A&M (30)
345. Brad Robbins, P, Michigan (30)
346. Noah Daniels, CB, TCU (30)
347. Dalton Wagner, OT, Arkansas (30)
348. Jovaughn Gwyn, G, South Carolina (30)
349. Jake Bobo, WR, UCLA (30)
350. Jaray Jenkins, WR, LSU (30)

play
0:41
Nesta Jade Silvera's NFL draft profile

Check out the best highlights that contributed to a stellar college career for Arizona State's Nesta Jade Silvera.

POSITION RANKINGS

Quarterbacks

1. Bryce Young, Alabama
2. C.J. Stroud, Ohio State
3. Anthony Richardson, Florida
4. Will Levis, Kentucky
5. Hendon Hooker, Tennessee
6. Jake Haener, Fresno State
7. Jaren Hall, BYU
8. Dorian Thompson-Robinson, UCLA
9. Clayton Tune, Houston
10. Aidan O'Connell, Purdue
11. Tanner McKee, Stanford
12. Stetson Bennett, Georgia
13. Max Duggan, TCU
14. Tyson Bagent, Shepherd
15. Tanner Morgan, Minnesota
16. Tommy DeVito, Illinois
17. Tim DeMorat, Fordham
18. Malik Cunningham, Louisville
19. Sean Clifford, Penn State
20. Chase Brice, Appalachian State
21. Reece Udinski, Richmond
22. Adrian Martinez, Kansas State
23. Jarret Doege, Western Kentucky
24. Lindsey Scott Jr., Incarnate Word
25. Todd Centeio, James Madison
26. Holton Ahlers, East Carolina
27. Jack Abraham, Missouri
28. Braxton Burmeister, San Diego State
29. Logan Bonner, Utah State


Running backs

1. Bijan Robinson, Texas
2. Jahmyr Gibbs, Alabama
3. Zach Charbonnet, UCLA
4. Kendre Miller, TCU
5. Devon Achane, Texas A&M
6. Roschon Johnson, Texas
7. Tank Bigsby, Auburn
8. Tyjae Spears, Tulane
9. Israel Abanikanda, Pittsburgh
10. Eric Gray, Oklahoma
11. DeWayne McBride, AL-Birmingham
12. Chase Brown, Illinois
13. Zach Evans, Ole Miss
14. Deuce Vaughn, Kansas State
15. Chris Rodriguez Jr., Kentucky
16. Kenny McIntosh, Georgia
17. Keaton Mitchell, East Carolina
18. Sean Tucker, Syracuse
19. Deneric Prince, Tulsa
20. Mohamed Ibrahim, Minnesota
21. Evan Hull, Northwestern
22. SaRodorick Thompson, Texas Tech
23. Lew Nichols III, Central Michigan
24. Emari Demercado, TCU
25. Travis Dye, USC
26. Tiyon Evans, Louisville
27. Camerun Peoples, Appalachian State
28. Tavion Thomas, Utah
29. Xazavian Valladay, Arizona State
30. Jordan Mims, Fresno State
31. Kazmeir Allen, UCLA
32. Ulonzo Gilliam Jr., Cal-Davis
33. Jaleel McLaughlin, Youngstown
34. Josh Davis, Weber State
35. Narii Gaither, Gardner-Webb
36. Shaun Shivers, Indiana
37. Jarek Broussard, Michigan State
38. Percy Agyei-Obese, James Madison
39. Chris Smith, Louisiana-Lafayette
40. Christopher Brooks, BYU
41. Elijah Dotson, Northern Colorado
42. Wayne Taulapapa, Washington
43. Ronnie Brown, Shepherd
44. Owen Wright, Monmouth
45. TJ Cole, Ouachita Baptist
46. Hassan Hall, Georgia Tech


Fullbacks/H-backs

1. Hunter Luepke, North Dakota State
2. Jack Colletto, Oregon State
3. Masen Wake, BYU
4. Dominic Roberto, Furman
5. Derek Parish, Houston
6. Daniel Parker, Oklahoma
7. Zach Ojile, Minnesota-Duluth
8. Houston Heimuli, BYU


Wide receivers

1. Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Ohio State
2. Zay Flowers, Boston College
3. Jordan Addison, USC
4. Quentin Johnston, TCU
5. Jonathan Mingo, Ole Miss
6. Jayden Reed, Michigan State
7. Jalin Hyatt, Tennessee
8. Cedric Tillman, Tennessee
9. Marvin Mims, Oklahoma
10. Josh Downs, North Carolina
11. Nathaniel Dell, Houston
12. Tyler Scott, Cincinnati
13. Charlie Jones, Iowa
14. A.T. Perry, Wake Forest
15. Antoine Green, North Carolina
16. Rashee Rice, SMU
17. Michael Wilson, Stanford
18. Xavier Hutchinson, Iowa State
19. Parker Washington, Penn State
20. Elijah Higgins, Stanford
21. Trey Palmer, Nebraska
22. Dontayvion Wicks, Virginia
23. Kayshon Boutte, LSU
24. Ronnie Bell, Michigan
25. Demario Douglas, Liberty
26. Bryce Ford-Wheaton, West Virginia
27. Jason Brownlee, Southern Miss
28. Andrei Iosivas, Princeton
29. Tre Tucker, Cincinnati
30. Malik Knowles, Kansas State
31. Jacob Copeland, Maryland
32. Dontay Demus Jr., Maryland
33. Justin Shorter, Florida
34. Derius Davis, TCU
35. Grant DuBose, Charlotte
36. Puka Nacua, BYU
37. C.J. Johnson, East Carolina
38. David Durden, West Florida
39. Xavier Gipson, Stephen F. Austin
40. Joseph Ngata, Clemson
41. Malik Heath, Ole Miss
42. Jalen Moreno-Cropper, Fresno State
43. Jalen Wayne, South Alabama
44. T.J. Luther, Gardner-Webb
45. Michael Jefferson, Louisiana-Lafayette
46. Kearis Jackson, Georgia
47. Jake Bobo, UCLA
48. Jaray Jenkins, LSU
49. Matt Landers, Arkansas
50. Jadon Haselwood, Arkansas
51. Josh Vann, South Carolina
52. Rakim Jarrett, Maryland
53. Mitchell Tinsley, Penn State
54. Jalen Brooks, South Carolina
55. Keylon Stokes, Tulsa
56. Fotis Kokosioulis, Fordham
57. Jadakis Bonds, Hampton
58. Nikko Remigio, Fresno State
59. Dallas Daniels, Jackson State
60. Shaquan Davis, South Carolina State
61. Jakob Herres, Richmond
62. Braydon Johnson, Oklahoma State
63. Thayer Thomas, NC State
64. Tyler Hudson, Louisville
65. Hunter Kaufman, West Texas A&M
66. Tyrone Scott, Missouri State
67. Ontaria Wilson, Florida State
68. Malachi Carter, Georgia Tech
69. Bryan Thompson, Arizona State
70. Elijah Cooks, San Jose State
71. Ryan Miller, Furman
72. Tyler Adams, Butler
73. Cole Tucker, Northern Illinois
74. Cephus Johnson III, SE Louisiana
75. Justin Marshall, Buffalo
76. Shemar Thornton, Northern Illinois


Tight ends

1. Dalton Kincaid, Utah
2. Michael Mayer, Notre Dame
3. Luke Musgrave, Oregon State
4. Darnell Washington, Georgia
5. Sam LaPorta, Iowa
6. Tucker Kraft, South Dakota State
7. Brenton Strange, Penn State
8. Luke Schoonmaker, Michigan
9. Will Mallory, Miami-FL
10. Josh Whyle, Cincinnati
11. Zack Kuntz, Old Dominion
12. Davis Allen, Clemson
13. Payne Durham, Purdue
14. Cameron Latu, Alabama
15. Joel Wilson, Central Michigan
16. Blake Whiteheart, Wake Forest
17. Noah Gindorff, North Dakota State
18. Travis Vokolek, Nebraska
19. Brayden Willis, Oklahoma
20. Leonard Taylor, Cincinnati
21. Ben Sims, Baylor
22. Kyle Patterson, Air Force
23. Princeton Fant, Tennessee
24. Daniel Barker, Michigan State
25. Thomas Greaney, Albany
26. Griffin Hebert, Louisiana Tech
27. Ryan Jones, East Carolina
28. Tyrick James, Tulane
29. E.J. Jenkins, Georgia Tech
30. Marshon Ford, Louisville
31. Jahleel Billingsley, Texas
32. Dakota Allen, Eastern Kentucky
33. Keaton Upshaw, Kentucky
34. Luke Ford, Illinois
35. Johnny Lumpkin, Louisiana-Lafayette
36. Joel Honigford, Michigan

play
0:30
Tucker Kraft's NFL draft profile

Check out the highlights from South Dakota State's tight end Tucker Kraft.


Offensive tackles

1. Peter Skoronski, Northwestern
2. Paris Johnson Jr., Ohio State
3. Broderick Jones, Georgia
4. Darnell Wright, Tennessee
5. Matthew Bergeron, Syracuse
6. Cody Mauch, North Dakota State
7. Anton Harrison, Oklahoma
8. Dawand Jones, Ohio State
9. Tyler Steen, Alabama
10. Blake Freeland, BYU
11. Wanya Morris, Oklahoma
12. Carter Warren, Pittsburgh
13. Jaelyn Duncan, Maryland
14. Nick Saldiveri, Old Dominion
15. Warren McClendon, Georgia
16. Ryan Hayes, Michigan
17. T.J. Bass, Oregon
18. Jaxson Kirkland, Washington
19. Earl Bostick Jr., Kansas
20. Jake Witt, Northern Michigan
21. John Ojukwu, Boise State
22. Malaesala Aumavae-Laulu, Oregon
23. Connor Galvin, Baylor
24. Luke Haggard, Indiana
25. Joey Fisher, Shepherd
26. Dalton Wagner, Arkansas
27. Mason Brooks, Ole Miss
28. Demontrey Jacobs, South Florida
29. Quinton Barrow, Grand Valley State
30. Alex Palczewski, Illinois
31. Kilian Zierer, Auburn
32. Trevor Reid, Louisville
33. Colby Sorsdal, William & Mary
34. Kadeem Telfort, AL-Birmingham
35. Jacky Chen, Pace
36. BJ Wilson, Quincy
37. Theo Benedet, British Columbia
38. Jarrett Horst, Michigan State
39. Ryan Swoboda, UCF
40. Cooper Hodges, Appalachian State
41. Henry Byrd, Princeton


Guards

1. Steve Avila, TCU
2. O'Cyrus Torrence, Florida
3. Chandler Zavala, NC State
4. Braeden Daniels, Utah
5. Sidy Sow, Eastern Michigan
6. Asim Richards, North Carolina
7. Anthony Bradford, LSU
8. Emil Ekiyor Jr., Alabama
9. Nick Broeker, Ole Miss
10. Atonio Mafi, UCLA
11. Richard Gouraige, Florida
12. Andrew Vorhees, USC
13. Jordan McFadden, Clemson
14. McClendon Curtis, Chattanooga
15. Jon Gaines II, UCLA
16. Henry Bainivalu, Washington
17. Mark Evans II, Arkansas-Pinebluff
18. Spencer Anderson, Maryland
19. Tashawn Manning, Kentucky
20. Brent Laing, Minnesota-Duluth
21. Jovaughn Gwyn, South Carolina
22. Jerome Carvin, Tennessee
23. Justice Oluwaseun, Miami-FL
24. DJ Scaife Jr., Miami-FL
25. Jordan Rhodes, Ole Miss
26. Raiqwon O'Neal, UCLA
27. Chuck Filiaga, Minnesota
28. Marcus Minor, Pittsburgh
29. Josh Lugg, Notre Dame
30. LaQuinston Sharp, Mississippi State
31. Will Putnam, Clemson
32. Ilm Manning, Hawaii
33. Jeremy Cooper, Cincinnati
34. Nash Jensen, North Dakota State
35. Tyler Beach, Wisconsin


Centers

1. Joe Tippmann, Wisconsin
2. John Michael Schmitz, Minnesota
3. Juice Scruggs, Penn State
4. Luke Wypler, Ohio State
5. Ricky Stromberg, Arkansas
6. Olusegun Oluwatimi, Michigan
7. Alex Forsyth, Oregon
8. Jarrett Patterson, Notre Dame
9. Jake Andrews, Troy
10. Alan Ali, TCU
11. Corey Luciano, Washington
12. Jacob Gall, Baylor
13. Grant Gibson, NC State
14. Brett Neilon, USC
15. Matt Weimann, St. Thomas
16. Trevor Downing, Iowa State
17. James Jackson, South Alabama
18. Johari Branch, Maryland
19. Chris Murray, Oklahoma

play
0:35
Joe Tippmann's NFL draft profile

Check out highlights from Wisconsin's center Joe Tippmann.


Defensive ends

1. Tyree Wilson, Texas Tech
2. Lukas Van Ness, Iowa
3. Myles Murphy, Clemson
4. Felix Anudike-Uzomah, Kansas State
5. Keion White, Georgia Tech
6. Adetomiwa Adebawore, Northwestern
7. Derick Hall, Auburn
8. Byron Young, Tennessee
9. Isaiah Foskey, Notre Dame
10. Tuli Tuipulotu, USC
11. Zach Harrison, Ohio State
12. YaYa Diaby, Louisville
13. Moro Ojomo, Texas
14. K.J. Henry, Clemson
15. Isaiah McGuire, Missouri
16. Dylan Horton, TCU
17. Karl Brooks, Bowling Green
18. Mike Morris, Michigan
19. Tyler Lacy, Oklahoma State
20. Ali Gaye, LSU
21. Viliami Fehoko, San Jose State
22. Robert Beal Jr., Georgia
23. Habakkuk Baldonado, Pittsburgh
24. MJ Anderson, Iowa State
25. Eku Leota, Auburn
26. Ochaun Mathis, Nebraska
27. Caleb Murphy, Ferris State
28. Ikenna Enechukwu, Rice
29. Antonio Moultrie, Miami-FL
30. Desjuan Johnson, Toledo
31. DJ Coleman, Missouri
32. Spencer Waege, North Dakota State
33. Junior Aho, SMU
34. Deslin Alexandre, Pittsburgh


Outside linebackers

1. Will Anderson Jr., Alabama
2. Nolan Smith, Georgia
3. Will McDonald IV, Iowa State
4. BJ Ojulari, LSU
5. Nick Herbig, Wisconsin
6. Tavius Robinson, Ole Miss
7. DJ Johnson, Oregon
8. Jose Ramirez, Eastern Michigan
9. Yasir Abdullah, Louisville
10. Lonnie Phelps, Kansas
11. Nick Hampton, Appalachian State
12. Thomas Incoom, Central Michigan
13. Andre Carter II, Army
14. Isaiah Land, Florida A&M
15. Tyrus Wheat, Mississippi State
16. Mohamoud Diabate, Utah
17. Amari Burney, Florida
18. Shaka Heyward, Duke
19. Andre Jones, Louisiana-Lafayette
20. Jalen Graham, Purdue
21. Brenton Cox Jr., Florida
22. Charlie Thomas, Georgia Tech
23. Kivon Bennett, Arkansas State
24. Noah Taylor, North Carolina
25. Durrell Johnson, Liberty
26. Jordan Lewis, Southern A&M
27. Jeremiah Martin, Washington
28. Jacoby Windmon, Michigan State
29. Merlin Robertson, Arizona State
30. BJ Thompson, Stephen F. Austin
31. Truman Jones, Harvard
32. Thomas Rush, Minnesota
33. Titus Leo, Wagner
34. Liam Anderson, Holy Cross
35. Jordan Cole, Southeast Missouri State
36. Jalen Harris, Arizona
37. Durell Nchami, Maryland
38. Zaire Barnes, Western Michigan
39. Garrett Nelson, Nebraska
40. Nick Anderson, Tulane
41. TK McLendon Jr., Eastern Kentucky
42. Michael Ayers, Ashland
43. Jayson Ademilola, Notre Dame


Defensive tackles

1. Jalen Carter, Georgia
2. Calijah Kancey, Pittsburgh
3. Keeanu Benton, Wisconsin
4. Bryan Bresee, Clemson
5. Mazi Smith, Michigan
6. Zacch Pickens, South Carolina
7. Gervon Dexter, Florida
8. Siaki Ika, Baylor
9. Byron Young, Alabama
10. Scott Matlock, Boise State
11. Jaquelin Roy, LSU
12. Jalen Redmond, Oklahoma
13. Cameron Young, Mississippi State
14. Colby Wooden, Auburn
15. Brodric Martin, Western Kentucky
16. Kobie Turner, Wake Forest
17. Jerrod Clark, Coastal Carolina
18. Keondre Coburn, Texas
19. PJ Mustipher, Penn State
20. DJ Dale, Alabama
21. Nesta Jade Silvera, Arizona State
22. Dante Stills, West Virginia
23. Jacob Slade, Michigan State
24. Taron Vincent, Ohio State
25. Devonnsha Maxwell, Chattanooga
26. Shakel Brown, Troy
27. Jerron Cage, Ohio State
28. Robert Cooper, Florida State
29. J-Min Pelley, Calgary
30. Caleb Sampson, Kansas
31. Darel Middleton, Bethel College
32. Calvin Avery, Illinois
33. Jordon Riley, Oregon


Inside linebackers

1. Trenton Simpson, Clemson
2. Jack Campbell, Iowa
3. Drew Sanders, Arkansas
4. Daiyan Henley, Washington State
5. Henry To'oTo'o, Alabama
6. DeMarvion Overshown, Texas
7. Marte Mapu, Cal-Sacramento
8. Dorian Williams, Tulane
9. Ivan Pace Jr., Cincinnati
10. Owen Pappoe, Auburn
11. Noah Sewell, Oregon
12. SirVocea Dennis, Pittsburgh
13. Dee Winters, TCU
14. Ventrell Miller, Florida
15. Jeremy Banks, Tennessee
16. Aubrey Miller Jr., Jackson State
17. Anfernee Orji, Vanderbilt
18. DeAndre Square, Kentucky
19. Cam Jones, Indiana
20. Isaiah Moore, NC State
21. Micah Baskerville, LSU
22. Kyle Soelle, Arizona State
23. Bumper Pool, Arkansas
24. O'Rien Vance, Iowa State
25. Ben VanSumeren, Michigan State
26. Drake Thomas, NC State
27. Carlton Martial, Troy
28. Jacquez Jones, Kentucky
29. Patrick O'Connell, Montana
30. Ryan Greenhagen, Fordham
31. Jaylen Moody, Alabama
32. Dequan Jackson, Colorado State
33. Momo Sanogo, Louisville

play
0:45
Jack Campbell's NFL draft profile

Check out the best highlights that contributed to a stellar college career for Iowa's Jack Campbell.


Cornerbacks

1. Devon Witherspoon, Illinois
2. Christian Gonzalez, Oregon
3. Emmanuel Forbes, Mississippi State
4. Joey Porter Jr., Penn State
5. Deonte Banks, Maryland
6. Tyrique Stevenson, Miami-FL
7. Julius Brents, Kansas State
8. Kelee Ringo, Georgia
9. DJ Turner, Michigan
10. Riley Moss, Iowa
11. Cam Smith, South Carolina
12. Clark Phillips III, Utah
13. Darius Rush, South Carolina
14. Terell Smith, Minnesota
15. Cory Trice, Purdue
16. Jakorian Bennett, Maryland
17. Tre'Vius Hodges-Tomlinson, TCU
18. Garrett Williams, Syracuse
19. Darrell Luter Jr., South Alabama
20. Carrington Valentine, Kentucky
21. Cameron Mitchell, Northwestern
22. Rejzohn Wright, Oregon State
23. Kei'Trel Clark, Louisville
24. Kyu Blu Kelly, Stanford
25. Eli Ricks, Alabama
26. Cameron Brown, Ohio State
27. Jaylon Jones, Texas A&M
28. Lance Boykin, Coastal Carolina
29. Anthony Johnson, Virginia
30. Mekhi Blackmon, USC
31. Arquon Bush, Cincinnati
32. Ekow Boye-Doe, Kansas State
33. Alex Austin, Oregon State
34. Keidron Smith, Kentucky
35. Mekhi Garner, LSU
36. D'Shawn Jamison, Texas
37. Myles Brooks, Louisiana Tech
38. Nic Jones, Ball State
39. Jarrick Bernard-Converse, LSU
40. Noah Daniels, TCU
41. Kaleb Hayes, BYU
42. Sevyn Banks, LSU
43. Art Green, Houston
44. Isaiah Bolden, Jackson State
45. Ameer Speed, Michigan State
46. Tre Hawkins III, Old Dominion
47. Starling Thomas V, AL-Birmingham
48. Mark Milton, Baylor
49. Steven Jones Jr., Appalachian State
50. Nehemiah Shelton, San Jose State
51. Jaylin Williams, Indiana
52. Eric Scott Jr., Southern Miss
53. Tiawan Mullen, Indiana
54. Corey Mayfield Jr., UTSA
55. Gemon Green, Michigan
56. Justin Ford, Montana
57. Ty Okada, Montana State
58. Erick Hallett II, Pittsburgh
59. Jai Nunn-Liddell, Kentucky State
60. Jeremy Lucien, Vanderbilt
61. Tyler Richardson, Tiffin
62. DJ Ivey, Miami-FL
63. Tanner McCalister, Ohio State


Safeties

1. Brian Branch, Alabama
2. Ji'Ayir Brown, Penn State
3. Sydney Brown, Illinois
4. Jartavius Martin, Illinois
5. Jordan Battle, Alabama
6. Antonio Johnson, Texas A&M
7. Daniel Scott, California
8. JL Skinner, Boise State
9. Christopher Smith, Georgia
10. Jay Ward, LSU
11. Jammie Robinson, Florida State
12. Chamarri Conner, Virginia Tech
13. Anthony Johnson Jr., Iowa State
14. Jordan Howden, Minnesota
15. Brandon Hill, Pittsburgh
16. Jason Taylor II, Oklahoma State
17. DeMarcco Hellams, Alabama
18. Ronnie Hickman, Ohio State
19. Brandon Joseph, Notre Dame
20. Gervarrius Owens, Houston
21. Rashad Torrence II, Florida
22. Quindell Johnson, Memphis
23. Kaevon Merriweather, Iowa
24. Trey Dean III, Florida
25. Tyreque Jones, Boise State
26. Christian Young, Arizona
27. Jaiden Woodbey, Boston College
28. Anthony Cook, Texas
29. AJ Finley, Ole Miss
30. Kenderick Duncan, Louisville
31. Bennett Williams, Oregon
32. Kendall Williamson, Stanford
33. Kahlef Hailassie, Western Kentucky
34. Christian Izien, Rutgers
35. Macon Clark, Tulane
36. Latavious Brini, Arkansas
37. Lawrence Johnson, Southeast Missouri State
38. Isaiah Stalbird, South Dakota State
39. Kendell Brooks, Michigan State
40. Austin Ajiake, UNLV
41. Nico Bolden, Kent State
42. Tanner Ingle, NC State
43. Jerrick Reed II, New Mexico
44. Stephan Blaylock, UCLA


Kickers

1. Jake Moody, Michigan
2. Chad Ryland, Maryland
3. Anders Carlson, Auburn
4. Jack Podlesny, Georgia
5. B.T. Potter, Clemson
6. Christopher Dunn, NC State
7. Andre Szmyt, Syracuse
8. Will Reichard, Alabama
9. Harrison Mevis, Missouri
10. Jake Oldroyd, BYU


Punters

1. Bryce Baringer, Michigan State
2. Adam Korsak, Rutgers
3. Michael Turk, Oklahoma
4. Brad Robbins, Michigan
5. Paxton Brooks, Tennessee
6. Ethan Evans, Wingate


Long-snappers

1. Alex Ward, UCF
2. Karsten Battles, Oregon
3. Matt Hembrough, Oklahoma State
4. Chris Stoll, Penn State