This is the third edition of my top 300 big board for the 2022 NFL Draft. The HBCU Combine, All-Star Games, NFL Scouting Combine, and a few pro days are in our rear-view mirror. It's time to take another deep dive into the top prospects in the 2022 class. Grab a snack, kick back, and enjoy digging through my latest list of the top 300 players in the upcoming draft.
I’ve included each prospect’s rank at his position on the board in parentheses. I suggest referencing the positional rank if you don’t like a certain prospect’s overall position. The board features eleven tiers. The prospect’s rank at their position is more important than the tier they appear in, but I feel more confident about the spacing and order of the tiers than with my first top 300 board.
I intended to include player bios, strengths, weaknesses, stats, and measurables in this edition. However, other projects, work, and shoveling snow prevented me from adding that information ahead of my self-imposed Monday, March 14 deadline. I will update this board with that information in the coming weeks, so make sure to check back regularly.
Reach out to me on Twitter @Sam_Teets33 or in the comments section below this article with any reactions. I’ll take anything, positive or negative.
Tier 1: Blue Chip Prospects
1. Aidan Hutchinson, EDGE (1) Michigan
2. Kyle Hamilton, S (1) Notre Dame
3. Kayvon Thibodeaux, EDGE (2) Oregon
Tier 2: 1st Round Grades
4. Evan Neal, OT (1) Alabama
5. Ahmad Gardner, CB (1) Cincinnati
6. Ikem Ekwonu, OT (2) N.C. St.
7. Derek Stingley Jr., CB (2) LSU
Injury: Underwent surgery for a Lisfranc injury in early October
8. Tyler Linderbaum, IOL (1) Iowa
9. Charles Cross, OT (3) Mississippi St.
10. Drake London, WR (1) USC
Injury: Suffered a fractured ankle on 10/30
11. Trent McDuffie, CB (3) Washington
12. Jermaine Johnson II, EDGE (3) Florida St.
Jermaine Johnson II (6'5", 254 lbs., with 34" arms) was the most impressive performer at the Senior Bowl. The Georgia transfer looked unstoppable for most of the week. He won with power, putting Kentucky’s Darian Kinnard flat on his butt on the first day of practice. Johnson also showed excellent hand counters, making it hard for offensive linemen even to touch him.
Johnson showed more bend off the edge than I expected, and his ability to convert speed to power while flattening his rush was NFL-caliber. He’ll go in the first-round.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
13. George Karlaftis, EDGE (4) Purdue
14. Jameson Williams, WR (2) Alabama
Injury: Suffered a torn ACL on 1/10
15. Travon Walker, EDGE (5) Georgia
16. Andrew Booth Jr., CB (4) Clemson
Injury: Underwent surgery on core muscle in late March
17. Zion Johnson, IOL (2) Boston College
I wasn’t prepared to see Zion Johnson (6'3", 312 lbs. with 34" arms) taking snaps at center, but he spent plenty of time there during the practices. Johnson started 2021 and 2019 for Boston College at left guard. He played right tackle in 2020 but never logged a snap at center, according to Pro Football Focus. It was an adjustment for Johnson, who had a few high snaps on Day 3 and stayed late to work on his shotgun snaps on Day 2.
Overall, I thought the transition went well for Johnson. He showcased high-level versatility and picked up some wins against elite competition, like Travis Jones. Johnson has relentless hands that constantly latch and re-latch mid-rep to keep defenders trapped. He’s a borderline first-round pick.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
18. Devonte Wyatt, IDL (1) Georgia
Devonte Wyatt gains natural leverage with his frame (6'3", 304 lbs. with 32 5/8" arms), but his freakish agility and quickness in small spaces separate him from other Senior Bowl participants. Wyatt’s active hands and arms were always looking for ways to break past offensive linemen, and few tackles or guards were equipped to handle the Georgia product’s polished moves. Wyatt lost a few reps throughout the week, most notably against LSU’s Ed Ingram.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
19. Devin Lloyd, LB (1) Utah
20. Jordan Davis, IDL (2) Georgia
21. Nakobe Dean, LB (2) Georgia
Tier 3: Top 50 Prospects
22. Trevor Penning, OT (4) Northern Iowa
Trevor Penning (6'7", 325 lbs. with 34 1/4" arms) was the most physically imposing offensive lineman this week. He went into Thursday’s practice actively looking to start a fight, especially with Ohio State’s Tyreke Smith. Penning showed some vulnerabilities to speed rushers, but his length and size were enough to swallow pass rush plans. He occasionally lost reps because of poor leverage.
The UNI product had some of the best finishes among all blockers.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
23. Roger McCreary, CB (5) Auburn
24. Kaiir Elam, CB (6) Florida
25. David Ojabo, EDGE (6) Michigan
Injury: Suffered a torn Achilles on 3/18
26. Bernhard Raimann, OT (5) Central Michigan
27. Chris Olave, WR (3) Ohio St.
28. Boye Mafe, EDGE (7) Minnesota
29. Daxton Hill, S (2) Michigan
30. Garrett Wilson, WR (4) Ohio St.
31. Jalen Pitre, S (3) Baylor
I turned off the Senior Bowl practices feeling fairly disappointed that more defensive backs didn’t jump off the screen. Baylor’s Jalen Pitre (5'11", 198 lbs. with 30 5/8" arms) was one of the few that consistently made plays on the ball. I wish he were an inch or two taller, but he’s versatile enough to play safety or in the slot while occasionally taking reps as a true corner.
Pitre’s instincts are next level in this class. His Senior Bowl tape is nothing but pass breakup after pass breakup paired with terrific physicality.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
32. Leo Chenal, LB (3) Wisconsin
33. Treylon Burks, WR (5) Arkansas
34. Kenyon Green, IOL (3) Texas A&M
35. Lewis Cine, S (4) Georgia
36. Kenneth Walker III, RB (1) Michigan St.
37. Arnold Ebiketie, EDGE (8) Penn St.
38. Breece Hall, RB (2) Iowa St.
39. Travis Jones, IDL (3) UConn
Jones has the size (6'4", 325 lbs. with 34 1/4" arms) and physicality to play as a nose and destroy running games. I envision a path for Jones to play three downs instead of filling the traditional two-down nose tackle role.
Jones uses leverage well and has exceptional power in his lower body, which he displayed by running through offensive linemen like they were tackle sleds at practice. When slowed on his initial rush, Jones activated his hands, often flipping linemen around with ease. After his initial rush died, he frequently resorted to tossing centers (he has examples of this against Zion Johnson and Cole Strange). His hands have terrific pop and power.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
40. Christian Watson, WR (6) North Dakota St.
Christian Watson played at the FCS level, but he more than belonged with the elite competitors present at the Senior Bowl. Watson showed soft hands, high-pointing and plucking the ball out of the air away from his body. He struggled to create separation on some reps deep in the red zone, but the 6'4", 211 lb. receiver had some nice releases (6'4", 208 lbs. with 32 1/2" arms at the Combine). Watson has great flexibility for a player his size.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
41. Nik Bonitto, EDGE (9) Oklahoma
42. Tyler Smith, IOL (4) Tulsa
43. Jaquan Brisker, S (5) Penn St.
44. Drake Jackson, EDGE (10) USC
45. Kingsley Enagbare, EDGE (11) South Carolina
Kingsley Enagbare (6'3", 261 lbs.) had the longest arms (35") of any pure edge rusher measured at the Shrine Bowl or Senior Bowl. The only defenders with longer arms were Otito Ogbonnia, Eyioma Uwazurike, and Perrion Winfrey. Enagbare used his length as a weapon, one-arm bull rushing tackles and tight ends and driving them deep into the backfield.
Enagbare did a good job attacking offensive tackles’ hands, swatting their initial punches and getting into their pads. He doesn’t have elite bend or cornering ability, but he showed some signs of flattening his rush when advantages presented themselves. I was initially concerned Enagbare wouldn’t possess the power to compete with some players at the Senior Bowl. I was wrong.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
46. Malik Willis, QB (1) Liberty
47. Jahan Dotson, WR (7) Penn St.
48. Kenny Pickett, QB (2) Pittsburgh
49. Skyy Moore, WR (8) Western Michigan
50. Matt Corral, QB (3) Ole Miss
Tier 4: Late Second/Early Third
51. Sam Howell, QB (4) North Carolina
52. Kyler Gordon, CB (7) Washington
53. Myjai Sanders, EDGE (12) Cincinnati
54. George Pickens, WR (9) Georgia
55. Brian Asamoah, LB (4) Oklahoma
Brian Asamoah is an undersized linebacker (6'0", 226 lbs.) that measured in smaller than he did at Oklahoma. However, the National Team’s offensive line, tight end, and running back groups voted him the top linebacker from the practices. He won’t offer much as a pass rusher, but his stickiness in one-on-one coverage and mobility are reminiscent of Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah’s versatility.
Asamoah wasn’t overwhelmed in the running game either. He showed the ability to read running plays, shoot through gaps, and crash in from the backside for quick stops.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
56. Logan Hall, IDL (4) Houston
Logan Hall (6'6", 283 lbs. with 32 3/4" arms) combines the skill set of an edge rusher with the power of an interior defensive lineman. He used a spin move to beat Ja'Tyre Carter on Day 3 and had active hands that made it nearly impossible for blockers to pin him down. Hall also has a developed swim move, which let him almost walk into the backfield on reps against Marquis Hayes, Cole Strange, and Andrew Stueber. When his polished moves don’t work, Hall has the classic bull rush.
Hall has the power throughout his frame to anchor the defensive front in the running game. He’s not quite as powerful as Travis Jones or as bendy as Jermaine Johnson, but he brings great get-off and a total package capable of blowing up running plays and putting quarterbacks under duress.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
57. Trey McBride, TE (1) Colorado St.
Trey McBride cemented himself as the runaway candidate for TE1 in the 2022 NFL Draft. The Colorado State product has a squattier build (6'4", 246 lbs.) than other Senior Bowl tight ends, but he clicked with Kenny Pickett immediately. I didn’t see McBride drop a pass this week, even during Wednesday’s rainy day when the ball was slippery and quarterbacks struggled with accuracy. His build lends to creating positive leverage in pass protection, and he showed a firm anchor during blocking reps.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
58. Christian Harris, LB (5) Alabama
59. DeMarvin Leal, EDGE (13) Texas A&M
60. Desmond Ridder, QB (5) Cincinnati
61. Perrion Winfrey, IDL (5) Oklahoma
Perrion Winfrey (6'4", 290 lbs. with 35 1/4" arms) was up there for best performances in Mobile. He looked completely unblockable on Day 2 thanks to an explosive first step and hands that bounced linemen backward on first contact. He doesn’t have as much power in his lower half as Travis Jones, but Winfrey was able to drive linemen deep into the backfield several times.
Aside from simply working forward as a pass rusher, Winfrey won multiple reps against the run in team drills. He even managed to force a fumble by Rachaad White.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
62. Abraham Lucas, OT (6) Washington St.
63. Troy Andersen, LB (6) Montana St.
64. Cameron Thomas, EDGE (14) San Diego St.
65. Jamaree Salyer, IOL (5) Georgia
Jamaree Salyer (6'3", 321 lbs. with 33 5/8" arms) primarily played left tackle over the past two years, but he also took snaps at both guard spots. He played every spot but center during the Senior Bowl practices, and I believe he’s earned the right to try playing tackle in the NFL. Salyer showed patience throughout the week, absorbing and deadening pass rushers.
In pass pro, Salyer consistently kept his body square between the defender and quarterback. He didn’t allow for easy angles or hand counters. The Georgia product also packs a punch in the running game, easily able to create movement and dislodge defenders.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
66. Chad Muma, LB (7) Wyoming
67. Jalen Tolbert, WR (10) South Alabama
At 6'1", 195 lbs., Tolbert measured a little smaller than I expected, but he still performed well in contested catch situations (6'1", 194 lbs. with 32 1/4" arms at the Combine).
Tolbert naturally high points the football in contested situations and brings it in with long arms and soft hands. He maintains control through contact and rarely loses the ball once it hits his hands. Tolbert has enough speed to threaten defenses vertically. His release package, footwork, and route running were even better than I expected.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
68. John Metchie III, WR (11) Alabama
Injury: Suffered a torn ACL on 12/4
69. Quay Walker, LB (8) Georgia
70. Josh Paschal, EDGE (15) Kentucky
Tier 5: Locked in Third Rounders
71. Darian Kinnard, IOL (6) Kentucky
72. Kerby Joseph, S (6) Illinois
Kerby Joseph (6'1", 203 lbs. with 33" arms) was the other clear winner among defensive backs. Pro Football Focus arrived on Joseph’s bandwagon early, and it’s easy to see why. The Illinois product has great ball skills and was routinely a step ahead of quarterbacks throughout the week, even getting a few wins against Trey McBride in coverage. Joseph also flashed good instincts and anticipation.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
73. Dylan Parham, IOL (7) Memphis
Dylan Parham began his collegiate career at Memphis as a tight end. I didn’t take him too seriously as a top 100 selection coming into the draft process because Memphis listed the center at 285 lbs., which is too light to stick in the NFL. However, Parham weighed in at 6'2", 313 lbs. (he was 6'3", 311 lbs. with 33 1/8" arms at the Combine). That was an immediate win for Parham, who went on to establish himself as one of the best trench players in Mobile.
Adding weight hasn’t limited Parham’s superb mobility, which allowed him to open holes for running backs in the team drills. The center’s anchor was my biggest concern entering last week, but he showed more than enough strength to play the position in the NFL.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
74. Martin Emerson, CB (8) Mississippi St.
75. Brandon Smith, LB (9) Penn St.
76. Dameon Pierce, RB (3) Florida
Pierce (5'10", 218 lbs.) blew past linebackers in receiving drills with ease. He also stood out in pass protection, winning almost all of his one-on-one reps on Thursday. Pierce has fresh, powerful legs after not having over 110 attempts in any season during his collegiate career. He’s one of the most well-rounded backs coming out of Mobile.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
77. Mario Goodrich, CB (9) Clemson
78. JoJo Domann, LB (10) Nebraska
79. Kellen Diesch, OT (7) Arizona St.
80. Zach Tom, IOL (8) Wake Forest
81. Alontae Taylor, CB (10) Tennessee
82. Channing Tindall, LB (11) Georgia
83. Coby Bryant, CB (11) Cincinnati
84. Nicholas Petit-Frere, OT (8) Ohio St.
85. Sean Rhyan, IOL (9) UCLA
86. Tariq Woolen, CB (12) UTSA
87. Carson Strong, QB (6) Nevada
Injury: Suffered from osteochondritis dissecans in his knee
88. Daniel Faalele, OT (9) Minnesota
89. Luke Fortner, IOL (10) Kentucky
90. Justyn Ross, WR (12) Clemson
Injury: Underwent surgery for a stress fracture in his foot in the fall
91. Luke Goedeke, IOL (11) Central Michigan
92. Khalil Shakir, WR (13) Boise St.
Khalil Shakir showed out on Thursday. The slot receiver (6'0", 196 lbs. with 29" arms) is a smooth route runner that creates natural separation. He took some punishment over the middle, absorbing some of the larger shots dished out at the Senior Bowl practices. Shakir maintained his catches through contact, including a diving grab away from his body in the back of the end zone.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
93. Darrian Beavers, LB (12) Cincinnati
94. Jerome Ford, RB (4) Cincinnati
95. Cole Strange, IOL (12) Tennessee-Chattanooga
96. Isaiah Likely, TE (2) Coastal Carolina
Isaiah Likely came in with the size (6'4 1/2", 245 lbs. with 31 7/8" arms) to outrebound safeties and the speed to outrun linebackers. He had some false steps and wasted energy in his releases, but he mostly dominated in one-on-one reps. Likely doesn’t offer much value as an in-line tight end, but he fits the traditional “bigger receiver” build that many NFL teams embrace.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
Tier 6: Fringe Third Round Quality
97. Marcus Jones, CB (13) Houston
98. Damone Clark, LB (13) LSU
Injury: Underwent spinal fusion surgery on 3/24 for a herniated disk
99. Alec Pierce, WR (14) Cincinnati
100. Nick Cross, S (7) Maryland
101. Romeo Doubs, WR (15) Nevada
102. Ed Ingram, IOL (13) LSU
Ed Ingram (6'3", 307 lbs. with 33 5/8" arms) went through the gauntlet at the Senior Bowl, facing a host of powerhouse SEC defensive linemen. Ingram’s anchor was on full display against Phidarian Mathis and Devonte Wyatt. Aside from lower body strength, Ingram’s arms appear powerful enough to forklift linemen once he gains leverage. Ingram arguably had the best blocking rep of the week when he stonewalled Wyatt on Wednesday. He got nasty in the team drills, and I was very impressed with how he maintained leverage.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
103. Jeremy Ruckert, TE (3) Ohio St.
104. Isaiah Spiller, RB (5) Texas A&M
105. Cam Taylor-Britt, CB (14) Nebraska
106. Phidarian Mathis, IDL (6) Alabama
107. Dohnovan West, IOL (14) Arizona St.
108. Rasheed Walker, OT (10) Penn St.
109. James Cook, RB (6) Georgia
110. Derion Kendrick, CB (15) Georgia
111. Bryan Cook, S (8) Cincinnati
112. Tyler Allgeier, RB (7) BYU
113. Greg Dulcich, TE (4) UCLA
Tier 7: Top of Day 3
114. Rachaad White, RB (8) Arizona St.
115. Joshua Williams, CB (16) Fayetteville St.
116. Sam Williams, EDGE (16) Ole Miss
117. Brian Robinson Jr., RB (9) Alabama
118. DeAngelo Malone, EDGE (17) Western Kentucky
119. Zyon McCollum, CB (17) Sam Houston St.
120. Jalen Wydermyer, TE (5) Texas A&M
121. Max Mitchell, OT (11) Louisiana
122. David Bell, WR (16) Purdue
123. Terrel Bernard, LB (14) Baylor
124. Josh Jobe, CB (18) Alabama
125. Bailey Zappe, QB (7) Western Kentucky
126. Matthew Butler, IDL (7) Tennessee
127. Pierre Strong Jr., RB (10) South Dakota St.
128. Spencer Burford, OT (12) UTSA
129. Justin Shaffer, IOL (15) Georgia
130. Tyreke Smith, EDGE (18) Ohio St.
131. Kyren Williams, RB (11) Notre Dame
132. Calvin Austin III, WR (17) Memphis
Calvin Austin III is a smaller receiver (5'8", 170 lbs. with 30" arms), but he’s coming out of a school infamous for producing versatile weapons. Austin owned cornerbacks in Mobile, easily creating separation with his speed, twitch, and fluid route running. It’ll be interesting to see if those skills translate in real game situations when players are more physical, but Austin showed teams what he brings to the table.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
133. Marquis Hayes, IOL (16) Oklahoma
134. Cade Otton, TE (6) Washington
135. Micheal Clemons, EDGE (19) Texas A&M
136. Wan'Dale Robinson, WR (18) Kentucky
137. Lecitus Smith, IOL (17) Virginia Tech
138. Hassan Haskins, RB (12) Michigan
139. Cam Jurgens, IOL (18) Nebraska
140. Kyle Philips, WR (19) UCLA
141. Mykael Wright, CB (19) Oregon
142. Jelani Woods, TE (7) Virginia
143. Jesse Luketa, EDGE (20) Penn St.
144. Neil Farrell Jr., IDL (8) LSU
145. Chris Paul, IOL (19) Tulsa
146. Tycen Anderson, S (9) Toledo
147. Obinna Eze, OT (13) TCU
148. Zachary Carter, IDL (9) Florida
149. Akayleb Evans, CB (20) Missouri
150. Jack Sanborn, LB (15) Wisconsin
151. Sterling Weatherford, S (10) Miami (OH)
152. Charlie Kolar, TE (8) Iowa St.
Tier 8: Meat of Day 3
153. Dominique Robinson, EDGE (21) Miami (OH)
154. Tariq Castro-Fields, CB (21) Penn St.
155. John Ridgeway, IDL (10) Arkansas
John Ridgeway (6'5", 321 lbs. with 33 3/8" arms) tried employing a spin move several times during the week with little success. He often ended up doing half spins and getting caught midway through the move, but I like that he was working on something other than his polished and effective bull rush. Ridgeway’s power was near the top of the interior defensive line class in Mobile, perhaps only trailing UConn’s Travis Jones.
-Excerpt from “Biggest risers from 2022 Senior Bowl week”
156. Dare Rosenthal, OT (14) Kentucky
157. Derrick Deese, TE (9) San Jose St.
158. Amare Barno, EDGE (22) Virginia Tech
159. Zamir White, RB (13) Georgia
160. Thayer Munford, IOL (20) Ohio St.
161. Andrew Stueber, IOL (21) Michigan
162. Abram Smith, RB (14) Baylor
163. Jake Ferguson, TE (10) Wisconsin
164. D'Vonte Price, RB (15) Florida International
165. Haskell Garrett, IDL (11) Ohio St.
166. Isaiah Thomas, EDGE (23) Oklahoma
167. Nehemiah Pritchett, CB (22) Auburn
168. Ty Chandler, RB (16) North Carolina
169. Jaivon Heiligh, WR (20) Coastal Carolina
170. Cordale Flott, CB (23) LSU
171. Alex Wright, EDGE (24) UAB
172. Malcolm Rodriguez, LB (16) Oklahoma St.
173. Eyioma Uwazurike, IDL (12) Iowa St.
174. Samori Toure, WR (21) Nebraska
175. JT Woods, S (11) Baylor
176. Sincere McCormick, RB (17) UTSA
177. Chigoziem Okonkwo, TE (11) Maryland
178. Logan Bruss, IOL (22) Wisconsin
179. Velus Jones Jr., WR (22) Tennessee
180. Joshua Ezeudu, IOL (23) North Carolina
181. Ellis Brooks, LB (17) Penn St.
182. Leon O'Neal Jr., S (12) Texas A&M
183. Jack Jones, CB (24) Arizona St.
184. Jaquarii Roberson, WR (23) Wake Forest
Tier 9: Sixth Round Quality
185. Smoke Monday, S (13) Auburn
186. E.J. Perry, QB (8) Brown
187. Tyler Badie, RB (18) Missouri
188. Jalyn Armour-Davis, CB (25) Alabama
189. Cade Mays, IOL (24) Tennessee
190. Jeremiah Gemmel, LB (18) North Carolina
191. Shaun Jolly, CB (26) Appalachian St.
192. Bo Melton, WR (24) Rutgers
193. Montaric Brown, CB (27) Arkansas
194. D'Marco Jackson, LB (19) Appalachian St.
195. Reed Blankenship, S (14) Middle Tennessee
196. Jeffrey Gunter, EDGE (25) Coastal Carolina
197. Tyler Goodson, RB (19) Iowa
198. Thomas Booker, IDL (13) Stanford
199. Zakoby McClain, LB (20) Auburn
200. Kevin Harris, RB (20) South Carolina
201. Aqeel Glass, QB (9) Alabama A&M
202. Braxton Jones, OT (15) Southern Utah
203. ZaQuandre White, RB (21) South Carolina
204. Markquese Bell, S (15) Florida A&M
205. Micah McFadden, LB (21) Indiana
206. Grant Morgan, LB (22) Arkansas
207. CJ Verdell, RB (22) Oregon
208. Kalon Barnes, CB (28) Baylor
209. Forrest Rhyne, LB (23) Villanova
210. Otito Ogbonnia, IDL (14) UCLA
211. Christopher Allen, EDGE (26) Alabama
212. Jerrion Ealy, RB (23) Ole Miss
213. Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa, EDGE (27) Notre Dame
214. Noah Elliss, IDL (15) Idaho
215. Keir Thomas, EDGE (28) Florida St.
216. Esezi Otomewo, EDGE (29) Minnesota
Tier 10: Hoping to Get Drafted
217. James Empey, IOL (25) BYU
218. Tyree Johnson, EDGE (30) Texas A&M
219. Cole Turner, TE (12) Nevada
220. Cade Hall, EDGE (31) San Jose St.
221. Keaontay Ingram, RB (24) USC
222. David Anenih, EDGE (32) Houston
223. Daniel Bellinger, TE (13) San Diego St.
224. Cordell Volson, OT (16) North Dakota St.
225. Marquan McCall, IDL (16) Kentucky
226. Christopher Hinton, IDL (17) Michigan
227. Nephi Sewell, LB (24) Utah
228. Trestan Ebner, RB (25) Baylor
229. Chasen Hines, IOL (26) LSU
230. Verone McKinley III, S (16) Oregon
231. Matt Waletzko, OT (17) North Dakota
232. Jermaine Waller, CB (29) Virginia Tech
233. Nick Zakelj, OT (18) Fordham
234. Matt Hankins, CB (30) Iowa
235. Zonovan Knight, RB (26) N.C. St.
236. Jerreth Sterns, WR (25) Western Kentucky
237. Damarion Williams, CB (31) Houston
238. Decobie Durant, CB (32) South Carolina St.
239. Grant Calcaterra, TE (14) SMU
240. Jack Coan, QB (10) Notre Dame
241. Kennedy Brooks, RB (27) Oklahoma
242. Tre Williams, EDGE (33) Arkansas
243. Damarri Mathis, CB (33) Pittsburgh
244. Chase Lucas, CB (34) Arizona St.
245. Charleston Rambo, WR (26) Miami
246. Bubba Bolden, S (17) Miami
247. Sam Webb, CB (35) Missouri Western St.
248. Zachary Thomas, OT (19) San Diego St.
249. Kolby Harvell-Peel, S (18) Oklahoma St.
250. Tyrese Robinson, IOL (27) Oklahoma
251. Kevin Austin Jr., WR (27) Notre Dame
252. Jaylen Watson, CB (36) Washington St.
253. Tyler Vrabel, OT (20) Boston College
254. Nick Ford, IOL (28) Utah
255. Tayler Hawkins, CB (37) San Diego St.
256. Vederian Lowe, OT (21) Illinois
257. Danny Gray, WR (28) SMU
258. Tyrion Davis-Price, RB (28) LSU
259. Alec Lindstrom, IOL (29) Boston College
260. Austin Deculus, OT (22) LSU
261. Percy Butler, S (19) Louisiana
262. Dontario Drummond, WR (29) Ole Miss
263. Gerrit Prince, TE (15) UAB
264. Jake Hummel, LB (25) Iowa St.
265. Tyquan Thornton, WR (30) Baylor
266. De'Shaan Dixon, EDGE (34) Norfolk St.
267. Mike Rose, LB (26) Iowa St.
268. Jayden Peevy, IDL (18) Texas A&M
269. Ja'Quan McMillian, CB (38) East Carolina
270. James Mitchell, TE (16) Virginia Tech
271. Dallis Flowers, CB (39) Pitt St.
272. Vincent Gray, CB (40) Michigan
273. Reggie Roberson Jr., WR (31) SMU
274. Isaiah Pola-Mao, S (20) USC
275. Tre Turner, WR (32) Virginia Tech
276. Lucas Krull, TE (17) Pittsburgh
277. Dai’Jean Dixon, WR (33) Nicholls St.
Tier 11: Priority UDFAs
278. Mika Tafua, EDGE (35) Utah
279. Diego Fagot, LB (27) Navy
280. Max Borghi, RB (29) Washington St.
281. Eric Johnson, IDL (19) Missouri St.
282. Luke Tenuta, OT (23) Virginia Tech
283. Samuel Womack, CB (41) Toledo
284. Brad Hawkins, S (21) Michigan
285. Leddie Brown, RB (30) West Virginia
286. Michael Maietti, IOL (30) Missouri
287. Zach VanValkenburg, EDGE (36) Iowa
288. Yusuf Corker, S (22) Kentucky
289. Dawson Deaton, IOL (31) Texas Tech
290. Isaac Taylor-Stuart, CB (42) USC
291. Brayden Thomas, EDGE (37) North Dakota St.
292. Myron Cunningham, OT (24) Arkansas
293. Devon Williams, WR (34) Oregon
294. Coney Durr, CB (43) Minnesota
295. Jordan Tucker, OT (25) North Carolina
296. Bamidele Olaseni, OT (26) Utah
297. Jacub Panasiuk, EDGE (38) Michigan St.
298. Emeka Emezie, WR (35) N.C. St.
299. Ali Fayad, EDGE (39) Central Michigan
300. Julius “Junior” Faulk, CB (44) Delta St.
301. Jashaun Corbin, RB (31) Florida St.
302. Delarrin Turner-Yell, S (23) Oklahoma
303. Chris Steele, CB (45) USC
304. Tre Sterling, S (24) Oklahoma St.
305. Keyshawn James, EDGE (40) Fayetteville St.
306. DaMarcus Fields, CB (46) Texas Tech
307. Deionte Knight, EDGE (41) University of Western Ontario
308. Jeremiah Moon, EDGE (42) Florida
309. Nate Landman, LB (28) Colorado
310. Isaiah Land, EDGE (43) Florida A&M
311. Brock Purdy, QB (11) Iowa St.
312. Peyton Hendershot, TE (18) Indiana
313. Alec Anderson, OT (27) UCLA
314. Armani Rogers, TE (19) Ohio
315. Curtis Brooks, IDL (20) Cincinnati
316. Derek Kerstetter, IOL (32) Texas
317. Devin Taylor, CB (47) Bowling Green
318. Luke Wattenberg, IOL (33) Washington
319. Deven Thompkins, WR (36) Utah St.
320. Nick Grant, S (25) Virginia
Others Considered by Position
Players appear in alphabetical order by last name within their position groups.
*Candidate with great chance to move up
Quarterback
Kaleb Eleby, QB (N/A) Western Michigan
McKenzie Milton, QB (N/A) Florida St.
Skylar Thompson, QB (N/A) Kansas St.
Running Back
B.J. Baylor, RB (N/A) Oregon St.
Greg Bell, RB (N/A) San Diego St.*
Brittain Brown, RB (N/A) UCLA
Snoop Conner, RB (N/A) Ole Miss*
Mataeo Durant, RB (N/A) Duke
Cam'Ron Harris, RB (N/A) Miami*
Bryant Koback, RB (N/A) Toledo
Jah-Maine Martin, RB (N/A) North Carolina A&T
Isaih Pacheco, RB (N/A) Rutgers*
Ricky Person Jr., RB (N/A) N.C. St. *
Ronnie Rivers, RB (N/A) Fresno St.
Master Teague III, RB (N/A) Ohio St.
Jaylen Warren, RB (N/A) Oklahoma St.
Wide Receiver
Stanley Berryhill III, WR (N/A) Arizona
Slade Bolden, WR (N/A) Alabama
Tanner Conner, WR (N/A) Idaho St.
Erik Ezukanma, WR (N/A) Texas Tech*
Jequez Ezzard, WR (N/A) Sam Houston St.
Ty Fryfogle, WR (N/A) Indiana
Lio’Undre Gallimore, WR (N/A) Valdosta State
Josh Johnson, WR (N/A) Tulsa
Davontavean Martin, WR Oklahoma St.
Jalen Nailor, WR (N/A) Michigan St.
Makai Polk, WR (N/A) Mississippi St.
Braylon Sanders, WR (N/A) Ole Miss*
Dareke Young, WR (N/A) Lenoir-Rhyne*
Tight End
Chase Allen, TE (N/A) Iowa St.
Trae Barry, TE (N/A) Boston College
Connor Heyward, TE/FB (N/A) Michigan St.*
Daniel Imatorbhebhe, TE (N/A) Kansas St.
Nick Muse, TE (N/A) South Carolina
Teagan Quitoriano, TE (N/A) Oklahoma St.
Offensive Tackle
Ja'Tyre Carter, OT/OL (N/A) Southern*
Devin Cochran, OT (N/A) Georgia Tech
Jean Delance, OT (N/A) Florida
Jack Snyder, OT (N/A) San Jose St.*
Ryan Van Demark, OT (N/A) UConn
Interior Offensive Lineman
Blaise Andries, IOL (N/A) Minnesota
Brock Hoffman, IOL (N/A) Virginia Tech
Hayden Howerton, IOL (N/A) SMU
George Moore, IOL (N/A) Oregon
Xavier Newman-Johnson, IOL (N/A) Baylor
Josh Seltzner, IOL (N/A) Wisconsin
Interior Defensive Lineman
Kevin Atkins, IDL (N/A) Fresno St.*
Nolan Cockrill, IDL (N/A) Army
D.J. Davidson, IDL (N/A) Arizona St.
Matt Henningsen, IDL (N/A) Wisconsin
Ralph Holley, IDL (N/A) Western Michigan
Tayland Humphrey, IDL (N/A) Louisiana*
LaBryan Ray, IDL (N/A) Alabama*
Ben Stille, IDL (N/A) Nebraska
Derrick Tangelo, IDL (N/A) Penn St.
Savion Williams, IDL (N/A) Florida A&M*
EDGE Rusher
Ryder Anderson, EDGE (N/A) Indiana
Cameron Goode, EDGE (N/A) Cal
Kyron Johnson, EDGE (N/A) Kansas
Big Kat Bryant, EDGE (N/A) UCF
Zach McCloud, EDGE (N/A) Miami
Arron Mosby, EDGE (N/A) Fresno St.*
Taylor Riggins, EDGE (N/A) Buffalo
Carson Wells, EDGE (N/A) Colorado*
Linebacker
Darien Butler, LB (N/A) Arizona St.
Aaron Hansford, LB (N/A) Texas A&M
James Houston IV, LB (N/A) Jackson St.
Luke Masterson, LB (N/A) Wake Forest
Josh Ross, LB (N/A) Michigan
Baylon Spector, LB (N/A) Clemson*
DQ Thomas, LB (N/A) Middle Tennessee
Tre Walker, LB (N/A) Idaho
Cornerback
Darrell Baker, CB (N/A) Georgia Southern
Joshua Flowers, CB (N/A) Winston-Salem St.
Zyon Gilbert, CB (N/A) FAU
Steven Gilmore, CB (N/A) Marshall
Leonard Johnson, CB (N/A) Duke
Kyler McMichael, CB (N/A) North Carolina
Dishon McNary, CB (N/A) Central Michigan*
Brendan Radley-Hiles, CB (N/A) Washington
Brandon Sebastian, CB (N/A) Boston College
Tre Swilling, CB (N/A) Georgia Tech
Ja'Sir Taylor, CB (N/A) Wake Forest
Josh Thompson, CB (N/A) Texas*
Bryce Watts, CB (N/A) UMass
Safety
Qwynnterrio Cole, S (N/A) Louisville
Elijah Hicks, S (N/A) Cal
Gregory Junior, S (N/A) Ouachita Baptist*
Qwuantrezz Knight, S (N/A) UCLA
Quentin Lake, S (N/A) UCLA
Juanyeh Thomas, S (N/A) Georgia Tech
Nolan Turner, S (N/A) Clemson
Russ Yeast, S (N/A) Kansas St. *