Post’s expert big board of top talent…
An inside linebacker may very well be a top-five draft choose for the first time since 2019 (Devin White).
A operating back may very well be a top-five draft choose for the first time since 2018 (Saquon Barkley).
A security may very well be a top-five draft choose for the first time since 2010 (Eric Berry).
Yes, the top of the 2026 NFL Draft may look very different than standard because of the dearth of top quarterbacks after Fernando Mendoza and the willingness of some common managers to break away from positional-value groupthink.
Here is The Post’s annual Big Board rating the Top 75 prospects, based on evaluations and conversations with sources around the league:
1. RB Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame, 6-0, 212 lbs.
Do-it-all three-down back who may very well be the draft’s best participant. Explodes through the outlet or shortly will get to the sting. More than a checkdown receiver as seen in wheel routes. Eight 20-plus-yard positive factors last season. Sticks his nostril in a blitzer’s chest.
2. S Caleb Downs, Ohio State, 6-0, 206 lbs.
Chess piece who can shut-down cowl from the slot, patrol middle discipline, decrease the increase and blitz. Extension of the defensive coordinator in phrases of communication. Had uncommon true-freshman 100-tackle season at Alabama. Human missile battling “How high is too high for a safety?” notion.
Caleb Downs (2) was a multi-faceted weapon on protection for both Alabama and Ohio State. ISI Photos via Getty Images
3. QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana, 6-5, 236 lbs.
Should full the trifecta: Heisman Trophy, national champion, No. 1 choose. Takes a licking and retains on ticking (particularly pre-transfer at California). Accurate thrower and fast decision-maker. King of the back-shoulder fade. Raises his sport in clutch moments. Self-described “nerd.”
4. EDGE Arvell Reese, Ohio State, 6-4, 241 lbs.
Expected to make a Micah Parsons-like soar after largely spying quarterbacks as an off-ball linebacker. Elite closing burst and twitch, but will he flip instruments into sacks? Can he bend the sting? Mirrors in coverage. Only one 12 months of manufacturing (14 profession begins) but sponges teaching.
5. EDGE David Bailey, Texas Tech, 6-4, 251 lbs.
Half of his 29 profession sacks got here last season — his third straight with a strain charge better than 20 %. Fires off the ball and can bend the sting or get the inside monitor. Run protection improved in 2025, particularly in the backfield.
6. LB Sonny Styles, Ohio State, 6-5, 244 lbs.
Record-setting show at NFL mix elevated him into top-five-pick vary. Shoots gaps and closes on ball with 4.46-second velocity. Hits like a brick wall. Instinctual blitzer. Fluid change of direction to cut off angles. Covers like an ex-safety. Aggressiveness backfires on RPOs.
Sonny Styles’ eye-opening mix exercises have catapulted the Ohio State linebacker into a potential top-five choose. Getty Images
7. WR Carnell Tate, Ohio State, 6-2, 192 lbs.
Latest standout from Wide Receiver U. averaged 17.2 yards per catch last season. Mostly single coated. One drop on 67 targets, creating separation with clean route operating and long strides. Willing blocker. Speed reveals up in pads, not 40-yard sprint (4.51-seconds).
8. OL Francis Mauigoa, Miami, 6-5 ½, 329 lbs.
Mauler in the run sport and stout in move safety. Mirrors velocity rushers. More than 2,700 profession snaps at proper deal with and only three sacks allowed since 2024. Some groups see him as a Pro Bowl-caliber guard. Younger brother of Jets linebacker.
9. CB Mansoor Delane, LSU, 6-0, 187 lbs.
Set up Delane Island in press coverage. Drives on beneath and in-breaking throws. Physical tackler in the run sport. Allowed zero touchdowns and dedicated zero penalties last season, though his handsy fashion may be called otherwise in NFL. Loose hips to change instructions
10. WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State, 6-2, 203 lbs.
Open even when he’s “covered” because of his share on 50/50 balls. Body contortionist who makes the highlight-reel catch. Yards-after-the-catch menace with breakaway velocity. Durability issues (knee, hamstring and collarbone accidents) restricted him to 33 video games in 4 years and an particular person Pro Day on April 17.
Jordyn Tyson scored 18 touchdowns in 21 video games over his last two seasons at Arizona State. Getty Images
11. OG Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State, 6-4, 320 lbs.
A cut above the remaining in underwhelming class of inside linemen. Broad chest is like a STOP signal for energy pass-rushers. Clears out operating lanes. Nasty temperament. Better mover after dropping weight in 2025 offseason. Slow to react to sudden change.
12. EDGE Rueben Bain Jr., Miami, 6-2, 263 lbs.
Biography title must be: “Strong hands, small arms.” Sets the sting by forklifting blockers with the previous, historic outlier because of the latter. No edge with sub-31-inch arms has been a first-round choose since 2003. Tallied 20.5 profession sacks (33.5 tackles for loss). Always hustling.
13. OL Spencer Fano, Utah, 6-5 ½, 311 lbs.
Experienced starter at left deal with (11 video games) and proper deal with (24) with potential five-position flexibility. Natural knee-bender with unfastened hips and clean footwork. Absorbs a bull rush. Downhill run-blocker who can pull and climb to the second degree. Lacks superb size.
14. WR Makai Lemon, USC, 5-11, 192 lbs.
Often in contrast to Lions receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown because he performs greater than his measurement and runs through solo tackles until the gang arrives. Inside/exterior versatility and soul-piercing depth. Not a true vertical menace but understands route-running nuances.
15. TE Kenyon Sadiq, Oregon, 6-3, 241 lbs.
Athletic freak who isn’t just a miscast receiver. Fastest 40-yard sprint (4.39) at his place in 20 years, plus 26 reps on bench press. Strength manifests as ending blocker. Perfect match in “move” tight end position. Just 892 profession receiving yards.
Tight end Kenyon Sadiq (18) was as helpful a blocker for Oregon as he was as a receiver. Getty Images
16. CB Jermod McCoy, Tennessee, 6-1, 188 lbs.
Might have been No. 1 if he performed last season because his 2024 tape (4 interceptions) is The Real McCoy. Quick reads and spatial awareness in zone. “No limits” after torn ACL in January 2025. Penalty-prone downfield. Plays the high strain, man-to-man “cat coverage” — and he’s that “cat.”
17. OT Monroe Freeling, Georgia, 6-7, 315 lbs.
Prototypical left deal with who generates motion in the run sport and is alert to stunts in the move sport. Only 18 profession begins. Upside will increase as he provides strength. Pass safety progressed by the sport. Will battle upright stance and overextension.
18. S Dillon Thieneman, Oregon, 6-0, 201 lbs.
Add up top-five security marks in 40-yard sprint and vertical soar with a 78 ⅛-inch wingspan and unfastened hips and you’ve gotten a fast-rising first-rounder. Sideline-to-sideline vary. Tackling machine. Sees issues before they occur. Six interceptions at Purdue in 2023.
19. WR Denzel Boston, Washington, 6-4, 212 lbs.
Is he fast enough to separate at next degree? Needs to play to his strengths: Using big physique to box out defensive backs and suction something in his catch radius with strong oven mitts. Finds the first-down marker.
Denzel Boston (12) had more than 60 catches for 800-plus yards in each of his last two season with the Huskies. Getty Images
20. EDGE Keldric Faulk, Auburn, 6-6, 276 lbs.
Disappointing two-sack season included a lot of shoulda-beens. Best suited as 4-3 defensive end but can slide inside on passing downs and create knockback. More of a pupil of the artwork than toolsy athlete. Chases the ball. Helped pay walk-on teammate’s tuition.
21. OT Kadyn Proctor, Alabama, 6-7, 352 lbs.
Boom-or-best factor. Concerned about weight management? Love his athleticism at that measurement? Powerful enough to knock over defenders by respiratory. Struggles to get well against velocity. Needs to commit to approach. Durable, near-penalty-free and 5 profession carries for 16 yards speeding.
22. EDGE Akheem Mesidor, Miami, 6-3, 259 lbs.
Needed six seasons to put it all together but finally did (12.5 sacks, 4 compelled fumbles). Was he just a grown man (shall be 25-year-old rookie) beating up boys? Invents new pass-rush strikes. Doesn’t take performs off against the run. Only is aware of full velocity.
23. S Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Toledo, 6-3 ½, 201 lbs.
Rangy, punishing tackler who would’ve been a common on ESPN’s outdated “Jacked Up” section. Physicality interprets to contagious power. Imagine if he bulks up. Nose for the ball — 9 compelled fumbles and circus interceptions. Better off masking tight ends than fast slot receivers.
Safety Emmanuel McNeil-Warren commonly created turnovers in 4 years with Toledo. Getty Images
24. WR Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana, 6-0, 199 lbs.
Leaping, toe-tapping game-winning landing against Penn State was factor of magnificence. No concern working the center of the sector. Combines strength and acceleration. Should be a better run-blocker given his physicality. Caught 20 touchdowns in last 29 video games.
25. CB Colton Hood, Tennessee, 6-0, 193 lbs.
Three-school, three-year journey ended filling McCoy’s sneakers and making 4.5 tackles for loss. Safety-like run-defense mentality, but shifty receivers may give him points. Runs stride-for-stride in man-to-man coverage on vertical routes. Only 13 profession begins. Jams receivers off the ball.
26. QB Ty Simpson, Alabama, 6-1, 211 lbs.
Five-star recruit made all 15 profession begins in 2025, after three seasons on the bench. Set Alabama report for lowest interception proportion (5 on 523 passes). Throws with anticipation. Operated largely from shotgun. Extends performs to his detriment. Play tailed off late in season.
27. OT Blake Miller, Clemson, 6-7, 317 lbs.
Career 54-game starter whose expertise reveals up in his savvy. Length will be a weapon if he doesn’t lunge. Quick off the snap and into his move set. Footwork leaves him off-balance at occasions. Team-first angle displayed by taking part in in Pinstripe Bowl.
Blake Miller (78) strikes to make a block against LSU on Aug. 30, 2025. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
28. OT Caleb Lomu, Utah, 6-6, 313 lbs.
Allowed two sacks whole over two seasons as a starter. Profiles as a energy run. Quickly finds and redirects the blitzer. Finishes blocks to the grime. Bad behavior of pad degree getting too high. Can add core strength. Nimble ft.
29. DT Peter Woods, Clemson, 6-2 ½, 298 lbs.
Regressed in 2025 but his 2024 tape reveals flashes of dominance. Was he out of place? Motor runs sizzling enough to imagine he’ll grow to be more constant. Twitchy, with first-step explosiveness. Needs more numerous rush plan after go-to transfer. Frequently double-teamed.
30. OT Max Iheanachor, Arizona State, 6-6, 321 lbs.
Nigeria native who didn’t play soccer until junior school. Raw athleticism and skill to keep sq. created buzz at Senior Bowl. Credit soccer background for footwork. Repeat offender of holding penalties. Ideally sits as a rookie. Eager to be taught approach.
31. WR KC Concepcion, Texas A&M, 6-0, 196 lbs.
Easy start-stop velocity burst to create separation and gain yards after the catch on quick-hitters and selection routes. Too many focus drops (10.3 % of catchable passes). Showed spectacular maturity as advocacy for speech impediments. Return specialist.
KC Concepcion demonstrated the sort of velocity at Texas A&M that shouold help him create separation from defensive backs in the NFL. Getty Images
32. EDGE T.J. Parker, Clemson, 6-4, 263 lbs.
Preseason Top-10 projected choose didn’t match 11-sack manufacturing from 2024. Goes for the strip when making the hit. Speed-to-power rushes are the identify of his sport. What’s his Plan B transfer? Versatility to slide inside. Gets off run blocks.
33. LB Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech, 6-1, 231 lbs.
Thirteen profession compelled fumbles (seven last season) jumps off the web page. Former quarterback/operating back/receiver/tight end at Virginia. Filled his trophy case. Quarterback of the protection communicator with contagious hustle. Could wrestle in man coverage. Only satisfactory measurement. Waiting for ball-carriers in gap.
34. CB Chris Johnson, San Diego State, 6-0, 193 lbs.
Expert in studying quarterbacks’ eyes. Proof: Two long pick-sixes among his 4 interceptions — all out of zone coverage. Inside/exterior versatility. Tenacious tackler. One of true athletic freaks of NFL mix. Out-maneuvered on soar balls.
35. OG Chase Bisontis, Texas A&M, 6-5, 315 lbs.
Blue-collar New Jersey native. Will bury a defender to the ground and loom. Strong arms a plus, lack of size a minus. Burly run-blocker who climbs to second-level blocks. Susceptible to lunging. Penalty inclined. Rare prospect who competed in every NFL mix drill.
Chase Bisontis (71) performed in 36 video games for Texas A&M, where he excelled at run blocking. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
36. DT Kayden McDonald, Ohio State, 6-2, 326 lbs.
Knock-back energy in his arms allowed him to live behind the road of scrimmage (9 tackles for loss) last season. Immovable object for opposing facilities. Big numbers versus elite competitors. Limited pass-rush skill, particularly against shifting pockets. One-year starter.
37. EDGE Cashius Howell, Texas A&M, 6-2 ½, 253 lbs.
Projected rotational pass-rusher with go-to spin transfer as a rookie. Of 27 profession sacks, three on three straight performs vs. Utah State was most spectacular. Will disguise a drop in coverage (14 move breakups). Improvements as a run-defender needed to play three downs.
38. LB Anthony Hill Jr., Texas, 6-2, 238 lbs.
Relentless ball-pursuer who tallied 31.5 profession tackles for loss. Dynamic blitzer with 17 sacks and eight compelled fumbles. Evades blocks with quickness. See-ball, get-ball anticipation. Shedding blocks is a work in progress. Suffocates screens thrown in entrance of him and covers tight ends.
39. CB Avieon Terrell, Clemson, 5-11, 186 lbs.
Good genes: Brother A.J. (2020 first-round choose) is a six-year starter. Undersized but feisty. Well-suited in the slot, where his footwork is fluid, his head is on a swivel and he can blitz. Eight compelled fumbles and 21 passes defended since 2024.
40. DT Christen Miller, Georgia, 6-4, 321 lbs.
Played 43 video games in SEC but his path-clearing run-defense influence is more in teammates’ box scores. Example of low pad degree, heavy arms and spectacular vary. Could play nostril deal with or three approach. Plays with fire and breathes it, too. Jolly giant.
Christen Miller (52) pursues Marshall operating back Antwan Roberts (44) on Aug. 30, 2025. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
41. CB Brandon Cisse, South Carolina, 6-0, 189 lbs.
Mostly performed man-to-man coverage with no help on the perimeter (permitting just 13 completions in 2025) Could be an influence blitzer. Sure-tackler who fires downhill with elite twitch. Ball-tracking lapses and top-end velocity issues. Averaged just 41 defensive snaps per sport.
42. RB Jadarian Price Notre Dame, 5-11, 203 lbs.
Only 295 touches in three seasons behind Love, so lots of tread left on the tires. Sets up blocks with endurance — or an excessive amount of dancing? Displayed contact steadiness to drive missed tackles. Three kickoff return touchdowns. Not a receiving option.
43. OG Keylan Rutledge, Georgia Tech, 6-3 ⅝, 316 lbs.
Combines approach, burly physique and nasty temperament. Epitome of “toughness” after overcoming severe accidents suffered in a December 2023 car crash. Allowed two sacks in 43 profession begins. Shows no mercy to defenders on ground.
44. WR Zachariah Branch, Georgia, 5-9, 177 lbs.
NFL mix standout based on 4.35-second 40-yard sprint, 38-inch vertical and clean gauntlet drill. Nearly 80 % of receiving yards last season after the catch. Limited downfield route tree. Short arms let ball get into his chest. Electric returner.
Georgia’s Zachariah Branch compiled the overwhelming majority of his receiving yards after the catch. Getty Images
45. LB CJ Allen, Georgia, 6-1, 230 lbs.
Sideline-to-sideline vary but at his best flying downhill to meet ball-carriers in the box. Always appears to be like under control no matter what disguises offenses throw. Stiffness in coverage is a concern but mandatory velocity is there. Not a lot of a blitzer. High-floor prospect.
46. DT Lee Hunter, Texas Tech, 6-3 ½, 318 lbs.
“A-gap” space-eater who absorbs double-teams and stuffs the run. Durable Day 1-ready high-floor prospect because of size-strength-length mixture, with pass-rush upside. Bull-rush energy on show at Senior Bowl. Conditioning wants work. Won’t match every protection. Lacks explosion.
47. S Treydan Stukes, Arizona, 6-1, 190 lbs.
Former walk-on with 4.33-second velocity (overcoming 2024 torn ACL) that reveals up as he jumps throwing lanes (seven profession interceptions) and blows up screens. Allowed zero touchdowns in 2025. Susceptible to double strikes and cutback runs. Core special-teamer.
48. WR Chris Brazzell II, Tennessee, 6-4, 198 lbs.
One-trick pony who goes deep (16.4 yards per catch and 9 touchdowns last season) and controls his physique along sidelines. A 4.37-second 40-yard sprint is flying at his measurement. Needs to offer more in first two ranges of passing assault.
49. EDGE Zion Young, Missouri, 6-6, 262 lbs.
Stout, rangy, assignment-sound edge-setter. Won’t win with his first step but will stroll most single-blockers backwards (53 pressures in 2025). Used to double groups. Capped strong Senior Bowl week by successful Player of the Game. Contagious power. Two arrests (DWI, assault).
Zion Young (9) confirmed the strength to shed blockers to the tune of 53 QB pressures in 2025. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
50. OL Caleb Tiernan, Northwestern, 6-8, 323 lbs.
High-floor prospect with 43 straight begins on both ends of the road. Advanced hand usage — hanging to gain leverage and hardly ever out of place. Stays sq. but bull-rushers will check his anchor. Short arms (32 ¼-inches) may immediate transfer to guard.
51. WR Antonio Williams, Clemson, 5-11 ½, 187 lbs.
Slippery slot receiver who may very well be a high-volume, intermediate-range goal. Consistent manufacturing across 4 seasons, highlighted by 11 touchdowns in 2024. Sharp cuts as a ball-carrier but tackled too simply. Not always on same web page as quarterback.
52. CB D’Angelo Ponds, Indiana, 5-9, 182 lbs.
Too small? Not when you add in a 43.5-inch vertical that tied for best of any prospect at 2025 NFL Combine. Competitive streak of an underdog. Sticky man-to-man coverage. Opponents will run at him in slot. Acceleration reveals up on particular groups. Four profession touchdowns.
53. EDGE R Mason Thomas, Oklahoma, 6-2, 241 lbs.
Remained twitchy as he added strength — still lacking some size. Aggressive fashion leads to splash performs but also can work against him with over-pursuit and offsides penalties. Missed video games due to injury in three of 4 seasons. Scoop-and-score mindset.
R Mason Thomas’ (10) aggressiveness lends itself to making splash performs but also to overpursuing opponents. Getty Images
54. CB Keionte Scott, Miami, 5-11, 193 lbs.
Plug-and-play 25-year-old rookie who may very well be transformed from nickel to security. Chess piece in sub packages. Won’t discover many defensive backs with 13 tackles for loss last season. When not blitzing, wraps up receivers and limits yards after catch. Contagious power.
55. EDGE Malachi Lawrence, Central Florida, 6-4, 253 lbs.
Only Reese and Bailey ran the 40-yard sprint quicker (4.52). Ranked No. 2 among edges in vertical and broad jumps. Diverse bag of methods. Not examined by many top deal with prospects. Can he add mass without sacrificing explosion? Why so few tackles?
56. DT Caleb Banks, Florida, 6-6, 327 lbs.
Underwent surgical procedure after breaking foot at NFL mix and is sidelined until at least June. Unrelated to damaged foot that restricted him to three video games last season. Bread-and-butter pass-rush transfer. Relies on athleticism and energy over approach. Alignment versatility.
Caleb Banks (88) was restricted to three video games last season after registering 4.5 sacks in 2024. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
57. WR Malachi Fields, Notre Dame, 6-4 ½, 218 lbs.
Senior Bowl standout whose stock dipped at NFL mix with a couple drops and a 4.61-second 40-yard sprint. Prototypical “X” receiver and red-zone fade menace. Out-physicals defensive backs to high-point 50/50 balls. Jammed by press coverage.
58. TE Eli Stowers, Vanderbilt, 6-4, 239 lbs.
Converted quarterback’s 45.5-inch vertical was third highest at any place since 1999. Scratching the floor at tight end/H-back. Beats coverage down the seam and retains operating. Reliable arms when requested to transfer the chains.
59. EDGE Derrick Moore, Michigan, 6-4, 255 lbs.
Contributor to 2023 national champions who was voted 2025 Team MVP after 10.5-sack breakout. Bull-rushes like a boulder rolling downhill. Some stiffness bending the sting. Steamrolled a blocker at Senior Bowl. Needs same dedication to playmaking — not just edge-setting — against the run.
60. DT Domonique Orange, Iowa State, 6-2, 322 lbs.
Prototypical, block-devouring 3-4 nostril deal with with tree trunks (650-pound squatter) planted in ground. Drop in manufacturing last season as missed-tackle charge jumped. Non-factor pass-rusher with restricted lateral motion. Nicknamed “Big Citrus.” Does he love soccer? Sheds contact with hand-to-hand fight.
Domonique “Big Citrus” Orange (95) wraps up TCU’s Jordyn Bailey on Nov. 8, 2025. Getty Images
61. WR Germie Bernard, Alabama, 6-1, 206 lbs.
Versatile receiver who is comfy over the center and operating a full route tree. Forced 17 missed tackles. Attacks the soccer with his arms. Lacks top velocity so wants crisp routes to create separation. Added 101 speeding yard last season.
62. TE Max Klare, Ohio State, 6-4, 246 lbs.
Crisp route runner with a high ceiling as a move catcher. At his best break up out in the slot to use a numerous route tree and be a chess piece. Understanding of timing and creating leverage. Ascending run blocker. Should bulk up.
63. LB Josiah Trotter, Missouri, 6-2, 237 lbs.
Father (Jeremiah) and brother (Jeremiah Jr.) offer NFL DNA. Big-hitting discipline common who is a step forward in the run sport. Strong enough to knock blockers off steadiness. Might be a two-down participant with coverage legal responsibility. Missed 2023 season due to leg injury.
64. WR Chris Bell, Louisville, 6-2, 222 lbs.
Not to be confused with UConn WR Skyler Bell. Coming off season-ending torn ACL in December. Was already a query of whether or not he’s too stiff to beat press coverage. Possession receiver who is more harmful in movement.
65. QB Garrett Nussmeier, LSU, 6-2, 203 lbs.
Sounded alarms when a fifth-year senior is benched in his last sport. More of a daredevil mentality than anticipated from a coach’s son (father is Saints offensive coordinator). Cut down on interception charge in 2025. Invents new arm angles. Senior Bowl MVP.
Garrett Nussmeier’s daredevil tendencies have raised questions about his NFL potential. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
66. OT/OG Gennings Dunker, Iowa, 6-5, 319 lbs.
Don’t be distracted by the mullet. What he lacks in lateral quickness is made up for in brute drive. Old-school mentality to plant defenders on their back. Crafted to play in a run and play-action-based offense. Will be a locker-room favourite.
67. LB Jake Golday, Cincinnati, 6-4 ½, 239 lbs.
Traits and upside. Fits on the weakside where he can roam freely, shed blocks and chase the ball. Former defensive end not as bodily as physique measurement suggests. Quarterback-spy velocity. Special-teams contributor. Plays a clean sport. Can be out of place in coverage.
68. CB Davison Igbinosun, Ohio State, 6-2, 189 lbs.
Lanky four-year starter across Big Ten and SEC. Built to play press coverage. Sticks his long arms into catch level when a step behind. Susceptible to play-action fakes. Magnet for penalties (16 since 2024) and NFL is more ticky-tack.
69. S Jalon Kilgore, South Carolina, 6-1, 210 lbs.
Enforcer who stops energy backs in their tracks and matches the physicality of tight ends with a jam in the move sport from the slot. Should be paired with a rangy free security. Can clean up missed tackles. Eight profession interceptions.
Jalon Kilgore (24) intercepts a move in the end zone against Clemson on Nov. 29, 2025. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
70. EDGE Gabe Jacas, Illinois, 6-3, 260 lbs.
Four-year starter with ascending sack totals (27 profession). Powers his means to quarterbacks by churning his legs and hand-fighting like a former wrestler. Inside pass-rush versatility. Never provides up on a run. Lacks superb twitch and first-step quickness.
71. WR Elijah Sarratt, Indiana, 6-3, 210 lbs.
No-star recruit who adopted coach Curt Cignetti from James Madison. Nicknamed “Waffle House” because he’s always open. Physical former basketball star assaults 50/50 balls like offensive rebounds. At his best on third down. Not a big yards-after-catch menace.
72. OG Emmanuel Pregnon, Oregon, 6-4, 314 lbs.
Drives linemen off the ball in the run sport with the outcomes from weight room. Not fooled by blitzes and stunts. Finishes his blocks to the ground. Will be high-floor 25-year-old rookie. Locked in at left guard. Not suited for pulling.
73. CB Chandler Rivers, Duke, 5-9 ½, 185 lbs.
High soccer IQ — sometimes operating the route for the receiver. Drives on beneath throws from zone coverage. Special groups worth as a gunner. Will he be out-muscled by greater receivers and swallowed up in run sport? More than 3,500 profession snaps.
Chandler Rivers (0) suited up in 52 video games over 4 seasons with Duke. Getty Images
74. S A.J. Haulcy, LSU, 6-0, 215 lbs.
Urgent three-school ballhawk nicknamed “Mr. Give Me That” because he generates takeaways (10 profession interceptions, 4 compelled fumbles). Reads the quarterback’s eyes and understands zone spacing. Will run through receivers. Lacks make-up velocity and control when honing in on a deal with.
75. RB Mike Washington Jr., Arkansas, 6-1, 223 lbs.
Ran a 4.33-second 40-yard sprint that is tied for quickest over the past 20 NFL combines for gamers weighing at least 220 kilos, per ESPN. Averaged 6.4 yards per carry last season. Physical runner who contributes to the passing sport.
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