2021 NFL Mock Draft: Seven Rounds

The 2021 NFL Draft is less than a week away and while there are going to be a ton of moving pieces beforehand, teams have established their draft boards and likely have a list of targets they expect to be around when they pick. In this format of mock draft, we look at the full draft and break down each potential draft class for all 32 teams in a no-trade environment. A complete round by round list can be found at the end of the team breakdowns.

Arizona Cardinals

16) Alijah Vera-Tucker, OT/OG – USC

49) Ronnie Perkins, Edge – Oklahoma

160) Elijah Mitchell, RB – Louisiana

223) Matt Bushman, TE – BYU

243) Avery Williams, DB – Boise State

247) Zech McPhearson, CB – Texas Tech

Summary: Going into Year 3 of Kyler Murray, it is imperative the Cardinals hit on this draft and maximize Murray on his rookie contract. With only six picks and two in the top 150, it is likely they trade back at some point. However, with the no-trades model, the Cardinals still come away with a good haul. Alijah Vera-Tucker, Ronnie Perkins and Elijah Mitchell are all capable of starting Day 1 and help solidify positions of need. Vera-Tucker specifically would be a home run pick for the offense having already played in a similar scheme in college. Late Day 3 pickups include Matt Bushman and Zech McPhearson as sleepers who could make a run for playing time early and Avery Williams, a dynamic special teams player that head coach Kliff Kingsbury could get creative with on offense every now and again as well.

Atlanta Falcons

4) Trey Lance, QB – NDSU

35) Najee Harris, RB – Alabama

68) Joe Tryon, Edge – Washington

108) Brevin Jordan, TE – Miami

148) Rodarius Williams, CB - Oklahoma State

182) Marquez Stevenson, WR – Houston

183) KJ Britt, ILB – Auburn

187) Darrick Forrest, S – Cincinnati

219) Trey Hill, IOL – Georgia

Summary: The Falcons’ roster is much better than the fourth overall pick. They likely will not be drafting here again anytime soon, which means taking a great prospect like Trey Lance to groom behind Matt Ryan is the optimal move. After the Lance pick, Najee Harris and Brevin Jordan are both guys who can come in and make an instant impact in Arthur Smith’s new offense. On the defense, Rodarius Williams, KJ Britt and Darrick Forrest are all guys who will need some time to develop but provide depth and high floors as prospects. Joe Tryon in the early third round is likely the biggest question mark as a guy with tremendous athletic ability who did not play last year. He fills a need but likely will join the aforementioned players as a guy who will need some development to hit his ceiling. Overall, Atlanta would have a nice mix of impact players and developmental upside with this selection of picks.

Baltimore Ravens

27) Kwity Paye, Edge – Michigan

58) Landon Dickerson, IOL – Alabama

104) Hamilcar Rashed, OLB – Oregon State

131) Tariq Thompson, S – San Diego State

171) Cornell Powell, WR – Clemson

184) Bobby Brown, IDL – Texas A&M

210) Cole Van Lanen, OT/OG – Wisconsin

Summary: The Ravens are in a Super Bowl window but just cannot seem to put it all together around Lamar Jackson recently. This class will likely be crucial to extending that window with several need-based picks early on. Kwity Paye and Hamilcar Rashed would help breathe life into an edge-defender room that just lost Matt Judon and has several underperforming players currently in it. Landon Dickerson would slide right in as the starting center if his health allowed, and even sixth round pick Cole Van Lanen could potentially push for playing time down the road. Cornell Powell is the sleeper of this group, adding size and physicality to a receiver room that desperately needs someone with that skill set. This draft class would give the Ravens a group of guys who likely can all contribute early on and continue keeping Baltimore competitive down the road.

Buffalo Bills

30) Eric Stokes, CB – Georgia

61) Gregory Rousseau, Edge – Miami

93) Hamsah Nasirildeen, S – Florida State

161) Seth Williams, WR – Auburn

174) Thomas Graham, CB – Oregon

213) Chris Evans, RB – Michigan

236) Zach Davidson, TE/P – Central Missouri

Summary: The Bills are in win-now mode with Josh Allen hitting his stride and nearing the end of his rookie contract. With nearly the entire offense back from last year, the Bills likely will go defense heavy to fill in some gaps both now and upcoming. Eric Stokes would be a Day 1 starter on the outside opposite Tre’Davious White filling the largest hole on the Bills roster. In addition, Rousseau, Nasirildeen and Graham would all likely see rotational snaps in 2021, setting them up to be future starters at their positions down the road. On the offensive side of the ball, Seth Williams would bring a big physical target to the receiver’s room, and Chris Evans adds depth and competition to the running back group. Zach Davidson likely would make this roster as well at tight end and maybe even punter! With this draft, the Bills fill their No. 1 need, but also have the luxury of taking some risk on higher ceiling players thanks to an already strong roster.

Carolina Panthers

8) Penei Sewell, OT – Oregon

39) Richie Grant, S – UCF

73) Amari Rogers, WR – Clemson

113) Tay Gowan, CB – UCF

151) Darius Stills, IDL – West Virginia

193) DJ Daniel, CB/S – Georgia

222) Quintin Morris, TE – Bowling Green

Summary: The Panthers are all in with Sam Darnold as their quarterback and now must do what they can to maximize his value. Penei Sewell is a great start as the franchise left tackle, likely kicking Greg Little inside and solidifying the offensive line. Amari Rogers would be the perfect replacement for Curtis Samuel as an underneath weapon, and Quintin Morris is a nice late round tight end prospect with wide receiver skills. On the defense, Richie Grant not only fills a hole at safety but also was one of Matt Rhule’s favorite players down at the Senior Bowl. His former teammate Tay Gowan would team with DJ Daniel to create competition in the corner room and Darius Stills would do the same for the defensive line unit. The Panthers are a better roster than most realize and with the return of Christian McCaffrey could be a sleeper team in the NFC South next season.

Chicago Bears

20) Chicago Bears: Caleb Farley, CB – Virginia Tech

52) Chicago Bears: Jalen Mayfield, OT – Michigan

83) Chicago Bears: Amon-Ra St. Brown, WR – USC

164) Chicago Bears: Richard LeCounte, S – Georgia

204) Chicago Bears: Tommy Kraemer, IOL – Notre Dame

208) Chicago Bears (from Seahawks via Dolphins): Wyatt Hubert, Edge – Kansas State

221) Chicago Bears: Gerrid Doaks, RB – Cincinnati

228) Chicago Bears: Kyle Trask, QB – Florida

Summary: Bears fans might be asking where the quarterback is, but at this point the front office and coaching staff are fighting for their jobs and need to fill holes on the roster. Additionally, if Andy Dalton plays well, he likely will get an extension at the end of the year so no need to draft a QB early (you still get Trask). This class is all about big swings with the first two picks. Caleb Farley and Jalen Mayfield both have extremely high ceilings, but also low floors. However, if one or both hit, the Bears could have high quality starting players at premium positions down the road. St. Brown is pro ready and likely would push Anthony Miller down the depth chart while being an insurance piece if Allen Robinson holds out while on the franchise tag. The Day 3 picks are purely depth plays with high floors who can contribute if called upon in a back up role. Wyatt Hubert was extremely productive at Kansas State and could get some run if Robert Quinn continues to play poorly. This draft is about winning now for the Bears and to do that they have to take swings on high upside talent.

Cincinnati Bengals

5) Ja’Marr Chase, WR – LSU

38) Quinn Meinerz, IOL – UW Whitewater

69) Tommy Togiai, IDL – Ohio State

111) Patrick Jones, Edge – Pitt

149) Kylin Hill, RB – Mississippi State

190) Sadarius Hutcherson, IOL – South Carolina

202) Damar Hamlin, S – Pitt

235) Evan McPherson, K – Florida

Summary: This draft has to be all about helping Joe Burrow and that is what the Bengals do with their first two picks here. Ja’Marr Chase and Burrow clearly have a special connection, and adding Quinn Meinerz in the second round helps solidify the offensive line. Those first two picks alone would help elevate the Bengals offense immediately. Tommy Togiai and Patrick Jones both add depth and likely have future starter potential on a defensive line that lost a few guys in free agency. Kylin Hill provides a nice backup option at running back while Hutcherson and Hamlin both add depth pieces to their respective units. With Randy Bullock gone, the Bengals need fresh blood at kicker, Evan McPherson was one of the best kickers in college football and a seventh round pick to solidify that spot is a great use of that pick. With this haul, the Bengals get five instant contributors and two immediate starters to help them be competitive in 2021.

Cleveland Browns

26) Rashod Bateman, WR – Minnesota

59) Tyson Campbell, CB – Georgia

89) Brady Christensen, OT/OG – BYU

91) Quincy Roche, Edge – Miami

110) Milton Williams, IDL – Louisiana Tech

132) Rhamondre Stevenson, RB – Oklahoma

169) Garret Wallow, ILB – TCU

211) Tony Poljan, TE – Virginia

257) Ta’Quon Graham, IDL – Texas

Summary: The Browns have built a strong competitive team for the 2021 season, and this draft is as much about maintaining that competitive roster as it is getting immediate impact. Rashod Bateman is adding to a strength and allows the Browns flexibility in the future with two large contracts of Jarvis Landry and Odell Beckham Jr. on the books. The defense gets a host of depth players including Campbell, Roche, Williams, Wallow and Graham who all could get mixed into their various position groups rotation and learn from the veterans. Brady Christensen and Rhamondre Stevenson both are guys who likely will not start Year 1 but could take meaningful snaps down the road with starters on expiring contracts. With this class, the Browns continue to build a strong roster that can sustain their recent success.

Dallas Cowboys

10) Jaycee Horn, CB – South Carolina

44) Jayson Oweh, Edge – Penn State

75) Marvin Wilson, IDL – Florida State

99) Dan Moore Jr. OT – Texas A&M

115) Trill Williams, CB/S – Syracuse

138) Briley Moore, TE – Kansas State

179) Chauncey Golston, Edge – Iowa

192) Kenny Yeboah, TE – Ole Miss

227) Jamar Johnson, S – Indiana

238) Tamorrion Terry, WR – FSU

Summary: The Cowboys offense was explosive in the first few games before the Dak Prescott injury and they likely will be explosive again in 2021. The defense, however, was not particularly good and needs some major retooling. Jaycee Horn, Jayson Oweh and Mavin Wilson are all instant starters who would be important pieces to getting the Cowboys back into the playoffs. Dan Moore and Trill Williams likely will not be starters Year 1 but have the upside to take over as starters at their positions down the road. Everyone else including Moore, Golston, Yeboah and Johnson are players that will provide depth at positions the Cowboys lack depth due to players leaving in free agency and sustaining injuries in 2020. With the new defensive additions in the early round, the goal would be to immediately get the Cowboys back on track and building depth on the defensive line and in the secondary.

Denver Broncos

9) Rashawn Slater, OT/OG – Northwestern

40) Jamin Davis, ILB – Kentucky

71) Michael Carter, RB – North Carolina

114) Israel Mukuamu, CB/S – South Carolina

152) Jaylen Twyman, IDL – Pitt

191) Shaka Toney, Edge – Penn State

237) Chris Rumph, Edge – Duke

239) Naquan Jones, IDL – Michigan State

253) Shawn Davis, S – Florida

Summary: The Broncos are looking up at the Chiefs in the AFC West and need to add a few pieces to be more competitive. Rashawn Slater would solidify the offensive line for Drew Lock and really leave the young quarterback no excuses with his all the weapons and support on the team. Jamin Davis brings athleticism to the linebacker position Denver simply does not have yet. The addition of Michael Carter gives Melvin Gordon a legitimate backup and change of pace. Day 3 is all about adding depth to the defense especially with a defensive minded head coach. Mukuamu is probably best as a safety but could hang at corner if needed. Twyman, Toney, Rumph and Jones allow Denver to have a versatile defensive front and provide depth behind its high-priced starting defensive line. A draft haul like this should have Denver fans excited for the competitiveness of the team both immediately and in the future.

Detroit Lions

7) Jaylen Waddle, WR – Alabama

41) Dillon Radunz, OT – NDSU

72) Kelvin Joseph, CB – Kentucky

101) Tylan Wallace, WR – Oklahoma State

112) Tyree Gillespie, S – Missouri

153) Khyiris Tonga, IDL – BYU

Summary: With only six picks and a rebuild ahead of them, the Lions likely are a trade back candidate in multiple rounds. However, if they do stay put bolstering their wide receiver room should be priority No. 1. They do just that with the selections of Jaylen Waddle and Tylan Wallace, who both could start in their rookie seasons with the dearth of talent the Lions currently have in the receiver room. Dillon Radunz is another guy who could get early playing time at right tackle or guard and Kelvin Joseph as well at outside corner where depth is lacking. Tyree Gillespie and Khyiris Tonga are two other guys who can give the Lions immediate snaps and quality depth for their rebuild. Coach Dan Campbell is not going to roll over just because his team is rebuilding. Guys with intangibles of being scrappy, resilient, hard workers will likely find a role playing for Campbell in 2021.

Green Bay Packers

29) Asante Samuel Jr. CB – Florida State

62) Walker Little, OT – Stanford

92) Daviyon Nixon, IDL – Iowa

135) Monty Rice, ILB – Georgia

142) Josh Myers, IOL – Ohio State

173) Mustafa Johnson, IDL – Colorado

178) Brady Breeze, S – Oregon

214) CJ Marable, RB – Coastal Carolina

220) Dax Milne, WR – BYU

256) Shemar Jean-Charles, CB – Appalachian State

Summary: The Packers must capitalize on this class to not only set themselves up for the future, but also get immediate impact to make another run at the Super Bowl with Aaron Rodgers. Asante Samuel Jr. and Walker Little are a good start as first and second round picks who likely would see immediate playing time and be big contributors down the road. The additions of Daviyon Nixon and Mustafa Johnson give the Packers more athleticism along their defensive front to shoot gaps and make plays. Monty Rice and Brady Breeze are instinctual players who could see time in sub-packages, and along with Shemar Jean-Charles improve the special teams units for the Packers immediately. Dax Milne and CJ Marable are pure depth adds on the offense, although Marable could crack into the lineup as a return man and fly sweep decoy used similarly to how the Packers used Tyler Ervin last season. With this class, Green Bay would have a nice mix of developmental pieces and instant impact to keep them as the front runners in the NFC playoff picture.

Houston Texans

67) Tommy Tremble, TE – Notre Dame

109) Keith Taylor, CB – Washington

147) Austin Watkins, WR – UAB

158) David Moore, IOL – Grambling

195) Tre Norwood, CB – Oklahoma

203) Tedarrell Slaton, IDL – Florida

212) Adetokunbo Ogundeji, Edge – Notre Dame

233) Jaret Patterson, RB – Buffalo

Summary: The Texans are in a tough spot with the unknown around their quarterback spot and a roster depleted of talent. Even without a first or second round pick, this group would give them instant contributors on offense with Tommy Tremble and Austin Watkins. David Moore could push for the starting center spot, and Jaret Patterson would act as a nice rotational running back. On the defense, Keith Taylor and Tre Norwood would not only add depth to a cornerback room that needs it. Taylor specifically could potentially push for a starting job as a rookie. Tedarrell Slaton is a mountain of a man, and Adetokunbo Ogundeji is an intriguing athlete with a ton of length that could be a nice development piece along the defensive line. The Texans really need guys who can simply come in and raise the competition level with this draft and getting guys like Tremble and Taylor would help.

Indianapolis Colts

21) Samuel Cosmi, OT – Texas

54) Rondale Moore, WR – Purdue

127) Joshuah Bledsoe, S – Missouri

165) Robert Rochell, CB – Central Arkansas

206) Ernest Jones, ILB – South Carolina

248) Jonathan Marshall, IDL – Arkansas

Summary: The Colts have been one of the best drafting teams in recent years and need to hit on this draft with several needs in house. Sam Cosmi is an athletic tackle prospect who has the experience outside to start immediately. Rondale Moore is a bit redundant, but with TY Hilton on a one-year deal and Parris Campbell consistently injured, Moore gives the Colts another weapon in the receiver room. Josh Bledsoe and Robert Rochell are a pair of secondary players with high upside who can play special teams and potentially develop into starters down the road. Ernest Jones could slide into the mike linebacker role on base downs as a thumper in the middle, and Jonathan Marshall provides some depth along the defensive line. The Colts scouting department is one of the best in the league, and it would not be a surprise to see a haul like this.

Jacksonville Jaguars

1) Trevor Lawrence, QB – Clemson

25) Trevon Moehrig, S – TCU

33) Travis Etienne, RB – Clemson

45) Elijah Moore, WR – Ole Miss

65) Wyatt Davis, IOL – Ohio State

106) Shaun Wade, CB/S – Ohio State

130) Dayo Odeyingbo, Edge – Vanderbilt

145) Robert Jones, OT/IOL – MTSU

170) Noah Gray, TE – Duke

249) Tuf Borland, ILB – Ohio State

Summary: The Jaguars have more talent on their roster than most realize, and adding Trevor Lawrence will help maximize that talent. Travis Etienne and Elijah Moore add explosiveness and speed to the offense and give Lawrence more weapons to be successful right away. Trevon Moehrig in the first round is an instant starter in the secondary for a thin safety unit currently on the roster. Wyatt Davis at 65 is a potential starter and likely could take over for Andrew Norwell, who is on an expiring contract. Shaun Wade might be too rich for some at pick 106, but he still has athletic upside and could potentially be a better pro with a move to safety. Dayo Odeyingbo is potentially the steal of the draft and with the extra picks Jacksonville has, it can afford to take a guy like him who might not play immediately. With a draft like this, Jacksonville could be competitive immediately in the AFC South.

Kansas City Chiefs

31) Spencer Brown, OT – Northern Iowa

63) Joseph Ossai, Edge – Texas

94) Nico Collins, WR – Michigan

136) Robert Hainsey, IOL – Notre Dame

144) Rachad Wildgoose, CB – Wisconsin

175) Jake Funk, RB – Maryland

181) Adrian Ealy, OT – Oklahoma

207) Grant Stuard, ILB – Houston

Summary: The Chiefs were on the cusp of repeating as Super Bowl champs, but their lack of depth caught up with them. With this draft, they add three new members to the offensive line including Spencer Brown, who can step in at right tackle and Robert Hainsey who likely can handle center or a guard position as well. Joseph Ossai in the second round is an explosive edge rusher to develop across from Frank Clark. Nico Collins in the third round adds height and physicality to the receiver room and replaces the recently departed Sammy Watkins. Rachad Wildgoose and Jake Funk are both unheralded prospects who could push for snaps early in their careers and are excellent value picks. Finally, the selection of Grant Stuard gives Kansas City an energizer bunny who will likely be a special teams ace. With the Chiefs being in a Super Bowl window, they can afford to take swings on guys with larger developmental upside and lower floors knowing if they hit on one or two, that could be enough to push them back over the top as world champions once more.

Las Vegas Raiders

17) Teven Jenkins, OT – Oklahoma State

48) Alim McNeil, IDL – NC State

79) Jabril Cox, ILB – LSU

80) Andre Cisco, S – Syracuse

121) Dez Fitzpatrick, WR – Louisville

162) Patrick Johnson, Edge – Tulane

167) Deonte Brown, IOL – Alabama

200) Victor Dimukeje, Edge – Duke

Summary: With the Raiders cuts and trades this offseason, they need some new players along both of their lines. Teven Jenkins and maybe even Deonte Brown are both guys who can start on the offensive line in Year 1 with their play strength and physical demeanor. Alim McNeil, Jabril Cox and Andre Cisco are all guys who will likely grow into more and more snaps throughout their rookie seasons and help solidify each level of the Raiders defense. Cisco is likely the biggest risk of the group, but his playmaking ability and upside are worth the risk. Adding Patrick Johnson and Victor Dimukeje brings some quickness and speed to an edge room that currently is built more around power. Finally, Jon Gruden must get at least one new weapon for Derek Carr and Dez Fitzpatrick could be a nice fit as a possession receiver. This draft would be a home run for the Raiders filling both need and giving them developmental pieces with high upside.

Los Angeles Chargers

13) Christian Darrisaw, OT – Virginia Tech

47) Ifeatu Melifonwu, CB – Syracuse

77) Osa Odighizuwa, IDL – UCLA

97) Talanoa Hufanga, ILB/S – USC

118) Kendrick Green, IOL – Illinois

159) Cade Johnson, WR – South Dakota State

185) Nick Eubanks, TE – Michigan

198) Deommodore Lenoir, CB – Oregon

241) Jose Borregales, K – Miami

Summary: The Chargers top priority should be adding protection for Justin Herbert and they do that by getting him a starting left tackle and guard with Christian Darrisaw in the first round and Kendrick Green in the fourth round. They also need to address their defense at all three levels. Adding Ifeatu Melifonwu and Deommodore Lenoir at corner would not just be great for an all-name team, but get the Chargers two guys who can play on the outside. Moving to the front seven, Odighizuwa and Hufanga add additional athleticism and are a better fit for what new head coach Brandon Staley likely is looking for on defense. Swinging back to the offense, Cade Johnson and Nick Eubanks are solid depth options who round out the pass catching depth. With their final pick, Jose Borregales gives the Chargers a kicker on an affordable contract who has shown the ability to consistently hit the clutch kick throughout his college career. Overall, if the Chargers can help protect Justin Herbert and add to their defense, they could be a competitive team in the AFC West.

Los Angeles Rams

57) Los Angeles Rams: Nick Bolton, ILB – Missouri

88) Los Angeles Rams: Aaron Robinson, CB – UCF

103) Los Angeles Rams: Ar’Darius Washington, S – TCU

141) Los Angeles Rams: Ben Cleveland, IOL – Georgia

209) Los Angeles Rams: Ben Mason, FB – Michigan

252) Los Angeles Rams: Tyler Vaughns, WR – USC

Summary: The Rams have not valued the draft quite as much as other teams in recent years but still have made the most of their limited picks. This haul would give them players who can make immediate impact on the defense with Nick Bolton, Aaron Robinson and Ar’Darius Washington. All three have high floors as players and fit nicely into the Rams defense that places added value on aggressive and physical play. While the defense certainly must be the priority, the offense also gets some quality pieces late including Ben Cleveland and Ben Mason both oh whom would be assets in the run game and have the ability and work ethic to start immediately. Tyler Vaughns in the seventh round is a local kid out of USC who can provide depth in the receiver room. The Rams are looking to maximize Matthew Stafford, and they have the offensive pieces to do so. However, a draft like this helps them replenish the defensive side of the ball that saw some key players leave in free agency.

Miami Dolphins

6) Kyle Pitts, TE – Florida

18) DeVonta Smith, WR – Alabama

36) Zaven Collins, LB – Tulsa

50) Javonte Williams, RB – North Carolina

81) Payton Turner, Edge – Houston

156) Kary Vincent Jr. CB – LSU

231) Isaiahh Loudermilk, IDL – Wisconsin

258) Frank Darby, WR – Arizona State

Summary: The Dolphins were a surprise team in 2020 and now are looking to remain competitive in a changing AFC landscape. Adding both Kyle Pitts and DeVonta Smith in the first round would be an absolute coup for the Dolphins and instantly solidify the receiving options around Tua. Throw in the selection of Javonte Williams in the second round and the Dolphins offense could soon be one of the more exciting and efficient units in the league. On defense, they add to their front seven with the selections of Zaven Collins and Payton Turner, whom both bring athletic upside and high motors coach Brian Flores loves in his players. Kary Vincent and Isaiah Loudermilk are depth pieces with high floors who also would likely see some playing time early on. The final pick of Frank Darby is a nice depth piece to a revitalize receiver room in this scenario. The Dolphins must hit on this draft if they hope to take their recent success to the next level and make the playoffs. Getting a generational talent like Pitts as well as some instant impact guys on both offense and defense would be a great way to do just that.

Minnesota Vikings

14) Jaelan Phillips, Edge – Miami

78) Jackson Carman, OT/OG – Clemson

90) Caden Sterns, S – Texas

119) Shi Smith, WR – South Carolina

125) Royce Newman, IOL – Ole Miss

134) Tre’ McKitty, TE – Georgia

143) Divine Deablo, S – Virginia Tech

157) Josh Palmer, WR – Tennessee

168) Charles Snowden, OLB – Virginia

199) Alaric Jackson, OT – Iowa

Summary: The Vikings have a solid roster they have primarily built through the draft. They have taken some big swings on players recently and could again with Jaelan Phillips, who profiles as a great power player at defensive end. Sticking on defense, adding two safeties like Sterns and Deablo to a room that lost Anthony Harris provides youth and depth to learn from Harrison Smith. Charles Snowden is Anthony Barr light and provides a developmental piece for Minnesota with Barr on the last year of his contract. On offense, the Vikings struck gold last season with Justin Jefferson but still need to add to their receiver room, which they do here with Shi Smith and Josh Palmer. The offensive line also gets some pieces in Jackson Carman, Royce Newman and Alaric Jackson, who all could push for starting time on what is arguably the weakest positional group for the team. Finally, Tre’ McKitty steps in for the departed Kyle Rudolph and replenishes the depth at tight end. With a draft like this, the Vikings could once again become a threat to displace the Packers in the NFC North.

New England Patriots

15) Mac Jones, QB – Alabama

46) Levi Onwuzurike, DT – Washington

96) Benjamin St. Juste, CB – Minnesota

120) Jonathan Adams, WR – Arkansas State

122) Chazz Surratt, ILB – North Carolina

139) Josh Ball, OT – Marshall

177) Jonathon Cooper, Edge – Ohio State

188) Jermar Jefferson, RB – Oregon State

197) Christian Uphoff, S – Illinois State

242) Paddy Fisher, ILB – Northwestern

Summary: The Patriots added a ton of pieces is free agency, but that should not stop them in the draft. Even though they are clearly in win now mode, the quarterback position is still a long-term question mark, and adding Mac Jones solves that problem. Levi Onwuzurike is an instant contributor along the defensive line with his versatility. Benjamin St. Juste and Chazz Surratt are guys who could also push for playing time early on. Jonathan Adams, Josh Ball and Jermar Jefferson are all depth players who can step into starting roles if called upon. Jonathon Cooper, Christian Uphoff and Paddy Fisher are all purely depth pieces that Bill Belichick likely will have some use for and all could play special teams to start. Altogether the Patriots recent moves have created a log jam at most positions on the roster. A trade up scenario is likely and with Cam Newton on another short-term deal, drafting a quarterback seems inevitable.

New Orleans Saints

28) Christian Barmore, IDL – Alabama

60) Dyami Brown, WR – North Carolina

98) Baron Browning, ILB – Ohio State

105) Olaijah Griffen, CB – USC

133) Trey Sermon, RB – Ohio State

218) Tarron Jackson, Edge – Costal Carolina

229) Justin Hilliard, ILB – Ohio State

255) Tommy Doyle, OT – Miami (OH)

Summary: The Saints are still in a world of hurt with their cap situation and to avoid that problem down the road, they need to have a great draft. Christian Barmore in the first round is steal and upgrades the interior pass rush. Dyami Brown is a clone of Emmanuel Sanders and gives the Saints a vertical option across from Michael Thomas. Barron Browning is an athletic linebacker who replaces Alex Anzalone, and Olaijah Griffen is an underrated man cover corner who fits the Saints cover-two scheme and likely can take some snaps Day 1. Day 3 picks Trey Sermon and Tarron Jackson likely could push for some snaps early into their careers. Additionally, they both provide depth at positions with aging contributors. Justin Hilliard and Tommy Doyle are nice depth pieces to add in the back of the draft. A group like this gives the Saints some immediate starters at various positions and the ability to continue to shed veteran contracts for cap relief purposes.

New York Giants

11) Micah Parsons, ILB – Penn State

42) Carlos Basham, Edge – Wake Forest

76) Trey Smith, IOL – Tennessee

116) Tyler Shelvin, IDL – LSU

196) Chuba Hubbard, RB – Oklahoma State

201) Simi Fehoko, WR – Stanford

Summary: The Giants may trade back, but with all the quarterbacks likely going ahead of them at pick 11, there is a fairly good chance a blue-chip prospect gets pushed down to them. That is the case here with the addition of Micah Parsons as a do-it-all linebacker with elite athleticism at the position. Carlos Basham in the second round and Tyler Shelvin in the fourth round are both big and physical players who can start immediately on the defensive line or play in a rotation. Trey Smith is a big and powerful guard prospect who really would solidify the offensive line around Daniel Jones and open running lanes for a healthy Saquon Barkley. Speaking of Saquon, a backup like Chuba Hubbard could not hurt, and a big physical receiver who does not mind blocking like Simi Fehoko would also help the Giants franchise rusher get back on track. A lot of mocks think adding a weapon for Daniel Jones could be in play, but the Giants won their Super Bowls with great defensive fronts, and a draft like this could be the final piece to another stretch of fantastic defensive play in New York.

New York Jets

2) Zach Wilson, QB – BYU

23) Greg Newsome II, CB – Northwestern

34) Liam Eichenberg, OT – Notre Dame

66) Elerson Smith, Edge – Northern Iowa

86) Hunter Long, TE Boston College

107) Kenneth Gainwell, RB – Memphis

146) Dylan Moses, ILB – Alabama

154) Josh Imatorbhebhe, WR – Illinois

186) Shakur Brown, CB/S – Michigan State

226) Drake Jackson, IOL – Kentucky

Summary: The Jets are still in rebuilding mode, and adding Zach Wilson to go along with new offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur could be a great way to kickstart the offense. Liam Eichenberg at right tackle would be the Jets version of Mike McGlinchey. Add in Hunter Long and Kenneth Gainwell, and the offense could surprise some people in 2021. On the defensive side of the ball, Greg Newsome would be a starting corner immediately and Elerson Smith would be a great strong-side defensive end in the new 4-3 scheme Robert Salah will be running. On Day 3, the additions of Josh Imatorbhebhe, Dylan Moses, Shakur Brown and Drake Jackson are high upside picks that need some developing, but all could be future starters down the road at their various positions. Adding a draft class like this would set up the Jets to turn around their recent misfortune and compete once again.

Philadelphia Eagles

12) Patrick Surtain II, CB – Alabama

37) Terrace Marshall, WR – LSU

70) Pete Werner, ILB – Ohio State

84) Jay Tufele, IDL – USC

123) Khalil Herbert, RB – Virginia Tech

150) Tutu Atwell, WR – Louisville

189) Sage Surratt, WR – Wake Forest:

224) Malcolm Koonce, Edge – Buffalo

225) Sam Ehlinger, QB – Texas

234) John Bates, TE – Boise State

240) Jimmy Morrissey, IOL – Pitt

Summary: With 11 picks on board, the Eagles are potentially a trade up candidate, but with their cap situation, they could look to keep all eleven picks and reset their roster. Adding Patrick Surtain at corner and Terrace Marshall at wide receiver gives the Eagles two players who could be immediate starters at positions of need. Pete Werner and Jay Tufele in the third round add much-needed athleticism and youth to the front seven of the defense. The selections of Herbert at running back, Atwell as a speed/slot weapon and Sage Surratt as a physical receiving option helps round out the depth at the skill positions. Koonce, Bates and Morrissey are all developmental options on Day 3 who could eventually become starters with aging and expensive veterans at each of their respective positions. Sam Ehlinger might seem like an odd pick, but he plays a lot like Jalen Hurts and would provide a solid option as a backup for the new Eagles quarterback. Ultimately, Philadelphia has a strong core of players, but adding some fresh faces could be key to competing for a Super Bowl once again.

Pittsburgh Steelers

24) Azeez Ojulari, Edge – Georgia

55) Creed Humphrey, IOL – Oklahoma

87) Kellen Mond, QB – Texas A&M

128) Ambry Thomas, CB – Michigan

140) Jaylon Moore, OT – Western Michigan

216) Derrick Barnes, ILB – Purdue

245) Stone Forsythe, OT – Florida

254) Larry Roundtree III, RB – Missouri

Summary: The Steelers have signaled they are still going for it with Big Ben back under center, and their 2021 draft class is likely to reflect that. They can add immediate starters with Azeez Ojulari and Creed Humphrey in the first and second round. Ojulari has a high ceiling and would have the added benefit of playing across from TJ Watt, and Humphrey is a pro ready replacement for Maurkice Pouncey. In the third round, they draft a developmental quarterback in Kellen Mond who can learn for a year behind Roethlisberger and allow the Steelers to move on from Mason Rudolph. On Day 3, the selections of Ambry Thomas Thomas, Derrick Barnes and Larry Roundtree are all guys who can add developmental depth the position groups that lack it. Jaylon Moore and Stone Forsythe do that but also give the option as Day 3 potential starters along the offensive line. This class is going to be all about the first couple picks for the Steelers, who need to get instant production if they hope to contend for a Super Bowl.

San Francisco 49ers

3) Justin Fields, QB – Ohio State

43) Paulson Adebo, CB – Stanford

102) James Hudson, OT/OG – Cincinnati

117) Ihmir Smith-Marsette, WR – Iowa

155) Jordan Smith, Edge – UAB

172) Tony Fields, ILB – West Virginia

180) Camryn Bynum, CB – Cal

194) Javian Hawkins, RB – Louisville

230) Tre Brown, CB – Oklahoma

Summary: The 49ers trade up made it easy to assess that they were drafting a quarterback, the questions is which one? There is smoke around Mac Jones and Trey Lance, but at the end of the day Justin Fields has the highest development upside and could be the pick on draft night. Adding athletic players like James Hudson, Ihmir Smith-Marsette and Javian Hawkins give the 49ers offense some explosiveness and guys who can likely contribute at some level on Day 1. Paulson Adebo might be a bit of a reach at 43rd overall, but GM John Lynch loves his Stanford guys, and Adebo is also a scheme fit. Adding Jordan Smith, Toney Fields, Cam Bynum and Tre Brown also gives the 49ers depth and developmental talent on their defense. The quarterback decision is a big one, but with Kyle Shanahan firmly entrenched and a great running game, taking a swing on a player like Justin Fields seems like it could be worth the risk. However, without getting that pick right the rest of this draft will really be overlooked regardless of their performance.

Seattle Seahawks

56) D’Wayne Eskridge, WR – Western Michigan

129) Rashad Weaver, Edge – Pitt

250) Nahshon Wright, CB – Oregon State

Summary: With only three picks in this year’s draft, Seattle is the most obvious trade down candidate in this year’s draft. However, in a no trade scenario, the Seahawks can still address a few needs with the picks they do have. At 56th overall, D’Wayne Eskridge brings route running and speed to the offense and creates more matchup problems for defenses in three receiver sets with Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf. Rashad Weaver gives Seattle a traditional edge rusher who likely can take snaps in a rotation starting on Day 1. Even though it is late, the pick of Nahshon Wright out of Oregon State is the quintessential Seattle pick with his length and aggressiveness as an outside corner. There is a 1% chance the Seahawks stay in their current draft slots, but if they do a draft class like this could still provide them value.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

32) Kadarius Toney, WR – Florida

64) Jevon Holland, S – Oregon

95) Aaron Banks, IOL – Notre Dame

137) Cameron Sample, Edge – Tulane

176) Demetric Felton, RB/WR – UCLA

217) JaCoby Stevens, S – LSU

251) Forrest Merrill, IDL – Arkansas State

259) Damonte Coxie, WR – Memphis

Summary: Tampa Bay is in win now mode so drafting players who can make an instant impact is top priority. Kadarius Toney gives Tom Brady a beast in the slot, and the Bucs a dangerous return weapon on special teams. Jevon Holland at safety also has starting ability as a hybrid slot/star defender in sub-packages. Aaron Banks, Cameron Sample, JaCoby Stevens and Forrest Merrill are all draft picks who can play if called upon, but primarily provide developmental depth on a roster stocked with veteran talent. The sleepers in this draft class are Demetric Felton and Damonte Coxie. Felton would provide an immediate upgrade as a weapon catching the ball out of the backfield and Coxie once healthy could potentially take over for Chris Godwin or Mike Evans down the line. Like this group, look for Tampa Bay to take players who can help them win now in the early rounds and developmental depth pieces later in the draft.

Tennessee Titans

22) Alex Leatherwood, OT – Alabama

53) Pat Freiermuth, TE – Penn State

85) James Wiggins, S – Cincinnati

100) Anthony Schwartz, WR – Auburn

126) Daelin Hayes, Edge – Notre Dame

166) Marlon Tuipulotu, IDL – USC

205) Darren Hall, CB – San Diego State

215) Trevon Grimes, WR – Florida

232) Tristan Hoge, IOL – BYU

Summary: Tennessee suffered a ton of attrition due to the cuts it made, and several top players left in free agency. Alex Leatherwood at 22nd overall might be a reach, but he is a scheme fit for the Titans and likely can start immediately at right tackle. Pat Freiemuth and Anthony Schwartz help fill the rolls of the recently departed Jonnu Smith and Corey Davis on the offense. Late round picks Trevon Grimes and Tristan Hoge are high-floor depth players who could be surprise starters down the line. Defensively, James Wiggins brings physicality to the secondary likely starting from Day 1. Meanwhile, Daelin Hayes, Marlon Tuipulotu and Darren Hall are all guys who need some development, but likely would see the field in rotation during their rookie seasons. Tennessee made a big splash with Bud Dupree in free agency, but it still has several areas that lack depth and talent on their roster. This draft haul would address this issue and give the Titans a few starters on Day 1.

Washington Football Team

19) Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, LB/S – Notre Dame

51) Davis Mills, QB – Stanford

74) Elijah Molden, CB – Washington

82) D’Ante Smith, OT – ECU

124) Cameron McGrone, ILB – Michigan

163) Miller Forristall, TE – Alabama

244) Dazz Newsome, WR – North Carolina

246) Janarius Robinson, Edge – Florida State

Summary: Washington has one of the best defensive fronts in the NFL right now, and it needs to build out the back seven of the defense. Adding Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah and Cameron McGrone would give them youth and athleticism at the linebacker position. Coupled with Elijah Molden, the three would really solidify the defense both now and over the next few years with core players like Chase Young, Montez Sweat, Landon Collins and William Jackson all on long term deals. On offense, Davis Mills at quarterback gives them a young signal caller to develop behind Ryan Fitzpatrick. D’Ante Smith will need some developing but could be a steal at the left tackle position if he hits his ceiling. Miller Forristall and Dazz Newsome are depth pieces with high floors who likely can step into contributor roles immediately. Washington is a competitive franchise once again primarily thanks to a recent string of successful drafts. A class like this would likely build upon that foundation and help make them a competitive team for the next several seasons.

Full Mock Draft Round By Round

Round 1

1) Jacksonville Jaguars: Trevor Lawrence, QB – Clemson
2) New York Jets: Zach Wilson, QB – BYU
3) San Francisco 49ers: Justin Fields, QB – Ohio State
4) Atlanta Falcons: Trey Lance, QB – NDSU
5) Cincinnati Bengals: Ja’Marr Chase, WR – LSU
6) Miami Dolphins: Kyle Pitts, TE – Florida
7) Detroit Lions: Jaylen Waddle, WR – Alabama
8) Carolina Panthers:
Penei Sewell, OT – Oregon
9) Denver Broncos: Rashawn Slater, OT/OG – Northwestern
10) Dallas Cowboys: Jaycee Horn, CB – South Carolina
11) New York Giants: Micah Parsons, ILB – Penn State
12) Philadelphia Eagles: Patrick Surtain II, CB – Alabama
13) Los Angeles Chargers: Christian Darrisaw, OT – Virginia Tech
14) Minnesota Vikings: Jaelan Phillips, Edge – Miami
15) New England Patriots: Mac Jones, QB – Alabama
16) Arizona Cardinals: Alijah Vera-Tucker, OT/OG – USC
17) Las Vegas Raiders: Teven Jenkins, OT – Oklahoma State
18) Miami Dolphins: DeVonta Smith, WR – Alabama
19) Washington Football Team: Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, LB/S – Notre Dame
20) Chicago Bears: Caleb Farley, CB – Virginia Tech
21) Indianapolis Colts
: Samuel Cosmi, OT – Texas
22) Tennessee Titans: Alex Leatherwood, OT – Alabama
23) New York Jets (from Seahawks): Greg Newsome II, CB – Northwestern
24) Pittsburgh Steelers: Azeez Ojulari, Edge – Georgia
25) Jacksonville Jaguars (from Rams): Trevon Moehrig, S – TCU
26) Cleveland Browns: Rashod Bateman, WR – Minnesota
27) Baltimore Ravens: Kwity Paye, Edge – Michigan
28) New Orleans Saints: Christian Barmore, IDL – Alabama
29) Green Bay Packers: Asante Samuel Jr. CB – Florida State
30) Buffalo Bills: Eric Stokes, CB – Georgia
31) Kansas City Chiefs: Spencer Brown, OT – Northern Iowa
32) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Kadarius Toney, WR – Florida

Round 2

33) Jacksonville Jaguars: Travis Etienne, RB – Clemson
34) New York Jets: Liam Eichenberg, OT – Notre Dame
35) Atlanta Falcons: Najee Harris, RB – Alabama
36) Miami Dolphins (from Texans): Zaven Collins, LB – Tulsa
37) Philadelphia Eagles: Terrace Marshall, WR – LSU
38) Cincinnati Bengals: Quinn Meinerz, IOL – UW Whitewater
39) Carolina Panthers: Richie Grant, S – UCF

40) Denver Broncos: Jamin Davis, ILB – Kentucky
41) Detroit Lions: Dillon Radunz, OT – NDSU
42) New York Giants: Carlos Basham, Edge – Wake Forest
43) San Francisco 49ers: Paulson Adebo, CB – Stanford
44) Dallas Cowboys: Jayson Oweh, Edge – Penn State
45) Jacksonville Jaguars (from Vikings): Elijah Moore, WR – Ole Miss
46) New England Patriots: Levi Onwuzurike, DT – Washington
47) Los Angeles Chargers: Ifeatu Melifonwu, CB – Syracuse
48) Las Vegas Raiders: Alim McNeil, IDL – NC State
49) Arizona Cardinals: Ronnie Perkins, Edge – Oklahoma
50) Miami Dolphins: Javonte Williams, RB – North Carolina

51) Washington Football Team: Davis Mills, QB – Stanford
52) Chicago Bears: Jalen Mayfield, OT – Michigan
53) Tennessee Titans: Pat Freiermuth, TE – Penn State
54) Indianapolis Colts: Rondale Moore, WR – Purdue
55) Pittsburgh Steelers: Creed Humphrey, IOL – Oklahoma
56) Seattle Seahawks: D’Wayne Eskridge, WR – Western Michigan
57) Los Angeles Rams: Nick Bolton, ILB – Missouri
58) Baltimore Ravens: Landon Dickerson, IOL – Alabama
59) Cleveland Browns: Tyson Campbell, CB – Georgia
60) New Orleans Saints: Dyami Brown, WR – North Carolina
61) Buffalo Bills: Gregory Rousseau, Edge – Miami
62) Green Bay Packers: Walker Little, OT – Stanford
63) Kansas City Chiefs: Joseph Ossai, Edge – Texas
64) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Jevon Holland, S – Oregon

Round 3

65) Jacksonville Jaguars: Wyatt Davis, IOL – Ohio State
66) New York Jets: Elerson Smith, Edge – Northern Iowa
67) Houston Texans: Tommy Tremble, TE – Notre Dame
68) Atlanta Falcons: Joe Tryon, Edge – Washington
69) Cincinnati Bengals: Tommy Togiai, IDL – Ohio State

70) Philadelphia Eagles: Pete Werner, ILB – Ohio State
71) Denver Broncos: Michael Carter, RB – North Carolina
72) Detroit Lions: Kelvin Joseph, CB – Kentucky
73) Carolina Panthers: Amari Rogers, WR – Clemson
74) Washington Football Team (from 49ers): Elijah Molden, CB – Washington
75) Dallas Cowboys: Marvin Wilson, IDL – Florida State
76) New York Giants: Trey Smith, IOL – Tennessee

77) Los Angeles Chargers: Osa Odighizuwa, IDL – UCLA
78) Minnesota Vikings: Jackson Carman, OT/OG – Clemson
79) Las Vegas Raiders (from Cardinals): Jabril Cox, ILB – LSU
80) Las Vegas Raiders: Andre Cisco, S – Syracuse
81) Miami Dolphins: Payton Turner, Edge – Houston
82) Washington Football Team: D’Ante Smith, OT – ECU
83) Chicago Bears: Amon-Ra St. Brown, WR – USC
84) Philadelphia Eagles (from Colts): Jay Tufele, IDL – USC
85) Tennessee Titans: James Wiggins, S – Cincinnati
86) New York Jets (from Seahawks): Hunter Long, TE Boston College
87) Pittsburgh Steelers: Kellen Mond, QB – Texas A&M
88) Los Angeles Rams: Aaron Robinson, CB – UCF
89) Cleveland Browns: Brady Christensen, OT/OG – BYU
90) Minnesota Vikings (from Ravens): Caden Sterns, S – Texas
91) Cleveland Browns (from Saints): Quincy Roche, Edge – Miami
92) Green Bay Packers: Daviyon Nixon, IDL – Iowa
93) Buffalo Bills: Hamsah Nasirildeen, S – Florida State
94) Kansas City Chiefs: Nico Collins, WR – Michigan
95) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Aaron Banks, IOL – Notre Dame
96) New England Patriots: Benjamin St. Juste, CB – Minnesota
97) Los Angeles Chargers: Talanoa Hufanga, ILB/S – USC
98) New Orleans Saints: Baron Browning, ILB – Ohio State
99) Dallas Cowboys: Dan Moore Jr. OT – Texas A&M
100) Tennessee Titans: Anthony Schwartz, WR – Auburn
101) Detroit Lions: Tylan Wallace, WR – Oklahoma State
102) San Francisco 49ers: James Hudson, OT/OG – Cincinnati
103) Los Angeles Rams: Ar’Darius Washington, S – TCU
104) Baltimore Ravens: Hamilcar Rashed, OLB – Oregon State
105) New Orleans Saints: Olaijah Griffen, CB – USC

Round 4

106) Jacksonville Jaguars: Shaun Wade, CB/S – Ohio State
107) New York Jets: Kenneth Gainwell, RB – Memphis
108) Atlanta Falcons: Brevin Jordan, TE – Miami
109) Houston Texans: Keith Taylor, CB – Washington
110) Cleveland Browns (from Eagles): Milton Williams, IDL – Louisiana Tech
111) Cincinnati Bengals: Patrick Jones, Edge – Pitt
112) Detroit Lions: Tyree Gillespie, S – Missouri
113) Carolina Panthers: Tay Gowan, CB – UCF
114) Denver Broncos: Israel Mukuamu, CB/S – South Carolina
115) Dallas Cowboys: Trill Williams, CB/S – Syracuse
116) New York Giants: Tyler Shelvin, IDL – LSU
117) San Francisco 49ers: Ihmir Smith-Marsette, WR – Iowa
118) Los Angeles Chargers: Kendrick Green, IOL – Illinois
119) Minnesota Vikings: Shi Smith, WR – South Carolina

120) New England Patriots: Jonathan Adams, WR – Arkansas State
121) Las Vegas Raiders: Dez Fitzpatrick, WR – Louisville
122) New England Patriots (from Cardinals Via Texans): Chazz Surratt, ILB – North Carolina
123) Philadelphia Eagles (from Dolphins): Khalil Herbert, RB – Virginia Tech
124) Washington Football Team: Cameron McGrone, ILB – Michigan
125) Minnesota Vikings (from Bears): Royce Newman, IOL – Ole Miss
126) Tennessee Titans: Daelin Hayes, Edge – Notre Dame
127) Indianapolis Colts: Joshuah Bledsoe, S – Missouri
128) Pittsburgh Steelers: Ambry Thomas, CB – Michigan
129) Seattle Seahawks: Rashad Weaver, Edge – Pitt
130) Jacksonville Jaguars (from Rams): Dayo Odeyingbo, Edge – Vanderbilt
131) Baltimore Ravens: Tariq Thompson, S – San Diego State
132) Cleveland Browns: Rhamondre Stevenson, RB – Oklahoma
133) New Orleans Saints: Trey Sermon, RB – Ohio State
134) Minnesota Vikings (from Bills): Tre McKitty, TE – Georgia
135) Green Bay Packers: Monty Rice, ILB – Georgia
136) Kansas City Chiefs: Robert Hainsey, IOL – Notre Dame
137) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Cameron Sample, Edge – Tulane
138) Dallas Cowboys: Briley Moore, TE – Kansas State
139) New England Patriots: Josh Ball, OT – Marshall
140) Pittsburgh Steelers: Jaylon Moore, OT – Western Michigan
141) Los Angeles Rams: Ben Cleveland, IOL – Georgia
142) Green Bay Packers: Josh Myers, IOL – Ohio State
143) Minnesota Vikings:
Divine Deablo, S – Virginia Tech
144) Kansas City Chiefs: Rachad Wildgoose, CB – Wisconsin

Round 5

145) Jacksonville Jaguars: Robert Jones, OT/IOL – MTSU
146) New York Jets: Dylan Moses, ILB – Alabama
147) Houston Texans: Austin Watkins, WR – UAB
148) Atlanta Falcons: Rodarius Williams, CB - Oklahoma State
149) Cincinnati Bengals: Kylin Hill, RB – Mississippi State
150) Philadelphia Eagles: Tutu Atwell, WR – Louisville
151) Carolina Panthers: Darius Stills, IDL – West Virginia
152) Denver Broncos: Jaylen Twyman, IDL – Pitt
153) Detroit Lions: Khyiris Tonga, IDL – BYU
154) New York Jets (from Giants): Josh Imatorbhebhe, WR – Illinois
155) San Francisco 49ers: Jordan Smith, Edge – UAB
156) Miami Dolphins (from Cowboys via Eagles): Kary Vincent Jr. CB – LSU
157) Minnesota Vikings: Josh Palmer, WR – Tennessee
158) Houston Texans (from Patriots): David Moore, IOL – Grambling
159) Los Angeles Chargers: Cade Johnson, WR – South Dakota State
160) Arizona Cardinals: Elijah Mitchell, RB – Louisiana
161) Buffalo Bills (from Raiders): Seth Williams, WR – Auburn
162) Las Vegas Raiders (from Dolphins): Patrick Johnson, Edge – Tulane
163) Washington Football Team: Miller Forristall, TE – Alabama
164) Chicago Bears: Richard LeCounte, S – Georgia
165) Indianapolis Colts: Robert Rochell, CB – Central Arkansas
166) Tennessee Titans: Marlon Tuipulotu, IDL – USC
167) Las Vegas Raiders (from Seahawks): Deonte Brown, IOL – Alabama
168) Minnesota Vikings (from Steelers via Ravens): Charles Snowden, OLB – Virginia
169) Cleveland Browns (from Rams): Garret Wallow, ILB – TCU
170) Jacksonville Jaguars (from Browns): Noah Gray, TE – Duke
171) Baltimore Ravens: Cornell Powell, WR – Clemson
172) San Francisco 49ers (from Saints): Tony Fields, ILB – West Virginia
173) Green Bay Packers: Mustafa Johnson, IDL – Colorado
174) Buffalo Bills: Thomas Graham, CB – Oregon
175) Kansas City Chiefs: Jake Funk, RB – Maryland
176) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Demetric Felton, RB/WR – UCLA
177) New England Patriots: Jonathon Cooper, Edge – Ohio State
178) Green Bay Packers: Brady Breeze, S – Oregon
179) Dallas Cowboys: Chauncey Golston, Edge – Iowa
180) San Francisco 49ers: Camryn Bynum, CB – Cal
181) Kansas City Chiefs: Adrian Ealy, OT – Oklahoma
182) Atlanta Falcons: Marquez Stevenson, WR – Houston
183) Atlanta Falcons: KJ Britt, ILB – Auburn
184) Baltimore Ravens: Bobby Brown, IDL – Texas A&M

Round 6

185) Los Angeles Chargers (from Jaguars via Titans): Nick Eubanks, TE – Michigan
186) New York Jets: Shakur Brown, CB/S – Michigan State
187) Atlanta Falcons: Darrick Forrest, S – Cincinnati
188) New England Patriots (from Texans): Jermar Jefferson, RB – Oregon State
189) Philadelphia Eagles: Sage Surratt, WR – Wake Forest
190) Cincinnati Bengals: Sadarius Hutcherson, IOL – South Carolina
191) Denver Broncos: Shaka Toney, Edge – Penn State
192) Dallas Cowboys (from Lions): Kenny Yeboah, TE Ole Miss
193) Carolina Panthers: DJ Daniel, CB/S – Georgia
194) San Francisco 49ers: Javian Hawkins, RB – Louisville
195) Houston Texans (from Cowboys via Patriots): Tre Norwood, CB – Oklahoma
196) New York Giants: Chuba Hubbard, RB – Oklahoma State
197) New England Patriots: Christian Uphoff, S – Illinois State
198) Los Angeles Chargers: Deommodore Lenoir, CB – Oregon
199) Minnesota Vikings: Alaric Jackson, OT – Iowa
200) Las Vegas Raiders:
Victor Dimukeje, Edge – Duke
201) New York Giants (from Cardinals): Simi Fehoko, WR – Stanford
202) Cincinnati Bengals (from Dolphins via Texans): Damar Hamlin, S – Pitt
203) Houston Texans (from WFT via Raiders via Dolphins): Tedarrell Slaton, IDL – Florida
204) Chicago Bears: Tommy Kraemer, IOL – Notre Dame
205) Tennessee Titans: Darren Hall, CB – San Diego State
206) Indianapolis Colts: Ernest Jones, ILB – South Carolina
207) Kansas City Chiefs (from Steelers via Miami Dolphins): Grant Stuard, ILB – Houston
208) Chicago Bears (from Seahawks via Dolphins): Wyatt Hubert, Edge – Kansas State
209) Los Angeles Rams: Ben Mason, FB – Michigan
210) Baltimore Ravens: Cole Van Lanen, OT/OG – Wisconsin
211) Cleveland Browns: Tony Poljan, TE – Virginia
212) Houston Texans (from Saints): Adetokunbo Ogundeji, Edge – Notre Dame
213) Buffalo Bills: Chris Evans, RB – Michigan
214) Green Bay Packers: CJ Marable, RB – Coastal Carolina
215) Tennessee Titans (from Chiefs): Trevon Grimes, WR – Florida
216) Pittsburgh Steelers (from Buccaneers): Derrick Barnes, ILB – Purdue
217) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: JaCoby Stevens, S – LSU
218) New Orleans Saints: Tarron Jackson, Edge – Costal Carolina
219) Atlanta Falcons: Trey Hill, IOL – Georgia
220) Green Bay Packers: Dax Milne, WR – BYU
221) Chicago Bears: Gerrid Doaks, RB – Cincinnati
222) Carolina Panthers: Quintin Morris, TE – Bowling Green
223) Arizona Cardinals (from Vikings): Matt Bushman, TE – BYU
224) Philadelphia Eagles: Malcolm Koonce, Edge – Buffalo
225) Philadelphia Eagles: Sam Ehlinger, QB – Texas
226) New York Jets (from Panthers): Drake Jackson, IOL – Kentucky
227) Dallas Cowboys: Jamar Johnson, S – Indiana
228) Chicago Bears: Kyle Trask, QB – Florida

Round 7

229) New Orleans Saints (from Jaguars): Justin Hilliard, ILB – Ohio State
230) San Francisco 49ers (from Jets): Tre Brown, CB – Oklahoma
231) Miami Dolphins (from Texans): Isaiahh Loudermilk, IDL – Wisconsin
232) Tennessee Titans (from Falcons via Dolphins): Tristan Hoge, IOL – BYU
233) Houston Texans (from Bengals): Jaret Patterson, RB – Buffalo
234) Philadelphia Eagles: John Bates, TE – Boise State
235) Cincinnati Bengals (from Lions via Seahawks): Evan McPherson, K – Florida
236) Buffalo Bills (from Panthers):
Zach Davidson, TE/P – Central Missouri
237) Denver Broncos: Chris Rumph, Edge – Duke
238) Dallas Cowboys: Tamorrion Terry, WR – FSU
239) Denver Broncos (from Giants): Naquan Jones, IDL – Michigan State
240) Philadelphia Eagles (from 49ers): Jimmy Morrissey, IOL – Pitt
241) Los Angeles Chargers: Jose Borregales, K – Miami
242) New England Patriots: Paddy Fisher, ILB – Northwestern
243) Arizona Cardinals: Avery Williams, DB – Boise State
244) Washington Football Team (from Raiders): Dazz Newsome, WR – North Carolina
245) Pittsburgh Steelers (from Dolphins): Stone Forsythe, OT – Florida
246) Washington Football Team: Janarius Robinson, Edge – Florida State
247) Arizona Cardinals (from Bears via Raiders): Zech McPhearson, CB – Texas Tech
248) Indianapolis Colts: Jonathan Marshall, IDL – Arkansas
249) Jacksonville Jaguars (from Titans): Tuf Borland, ILB – Ohio State
250) Seattle Seahawks: Nahshon Wright, CB – Oregon State
251) Tampa Bay Buccaneers (from Steelers): Forrest Merrill, IDL – Arkansas State
252) Los Angeles Rams: Tyler Vaughns, WR – USC
253) Denver Broncos (from Browns): Shawn Davis, S – Florida
254) Pittsburgh Steelers (from Ravens): Larry Roundtree III, RB – Missouri
255) New Orleans Saints: Tommy Doyle, OT – Miami (OH)
256) Green Bay Packers: Shemar Jean-Charles, CB – Appalachian State
257) Cleveland Browns (from Bills): Ta’Quon Grahamm, IDL – Texas
258) Miami Dolphins (from Chiefs): Frank Darby, WR – Arizona State
259) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Damonte Coxie, WR – Memphis