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Self-Scouting: Building a Winning Mock Draft

A week ago, the 2020 NFL Draft was held over the course of three days to rousing success. To the league’s credit, they successfully pulled off the first virtual draft event that took us everywhere from Roger Goodell’s basement man cave to Jerry Jones’ $250M mega yacht; from Kliff Kingsbury’s palatial bachelor pad to Mike Vrabel’s menagerie for his parade of human oddities; and even direct to the dining room table domain of Bill Belichick’s dog, Nike.

Indeed, it was a unique peek behind the curtain separating the fan and the NFL’s elite. It was also an intimate look at what will soon be considered the humble beginnings of the league’s next generation of superstars.

But, far from the limelight of the ESPN and NFL Network simulcast, it was also a crowning moment for yours truly, as my 2020 NFL Mock Draft: Final Edition emerged victorious in both The Huddle Report Mock Draft Scoring competition and The Mock Draft Database HERC Score competition.

Among an increasingly competitive community of established and self-proclaimed experts, I certainly did not expect to earn the mantle of mock draft champion.

Yet, here I am.

And as much of a curiosity it is every year as to how the most renowned names in the business can miss the mark by a considerable margin, I venture there are people who wonder how a veritable unknown like me came away with the most accurate mock draft of the season according to both The Huddle Report and The Mock Draft Database.

So, as part of my self-scouting efforts in closing the book on the 2020 NFL Draft, I thought I would provide my own peek behind the curtain, examining how my aim to compete, to increase the exposure for my brand, and to present a good accounting of myself and my work actually became an exercise in building a winning mock draft.

The Approach

“But, ultimately, there are still the same, two distinct paths to complete this final exercise as there are every year for a one-man war room like me—playing for field position with the consensus until contacts and clout inevitably win out, or launching a 50/50 ball on 4th down on the off chance that chaos becomes chalk.”

This is quoted directly from the introduction to my final mock draft. And I think it’s entirely appropriate considering the outcome.

Once final mock drafts start flying in the days before the NFL Draft, it’s generally easy to find the trends and see where insider information from anonymous or protected sources is coming into play. We saw that this year with a number of high-profile analysts making late switches on early picks, such as DT Derrick Brown becoming the favorite over CB Jeff Okudah to go to the Lions at #3 and OT Tristan Wirfs becoming the popular choice to go to the Giants at #4. However, the most egregious example occurred with the Dolphins at #5, as there was a tangible swing to QB Justin Herbert over QB Tua Tagovailoa, and not only Herbert being locked in as the pick, but perhaps being the target of a trade up.

When these eleventh-hour tips start factoring into mock drafts and you have yet to complete your own, you have a choice—proceed to follow the crowd or pass in favor of forming your own opinions.

I personally don’t see anything wrong with taking the word of an analyst you trust. If you are someone like me with no contacts in the league and no connections with the NFL Draft media who do have them, that data could make the difference between the right pick or the wrong pick for a selection that has you on the fence. However, in doing so, you are also basing your work on third-party information that you cannot confirm is true and sources that you personally have no way of knowing are credible.

It’s up to you to decide whether to believe the hype and risk being duped by a smokescreen—or carve your own path and be willing to crash and burn on your own merits. That being said, it doesn’t have to be one or the other. You can even weigh the option pick for pick. But, ultimately, the choices you make will affect the success of your mock draft.

In the end, going with the flow is just fine if your goal is a respectable score. Just like when drafting players, there’s no shame in going the route of the high floor. But, understand, that at some point, the more established and well-connected experts will probably come out ahead. You also have to consider that the more your mock draft resembles theirs, then the less authentic your effort appears in comparison.

That’s why I would say I am firmly on the side of forming your own opinions about who you expect to go where. If anything, use the general consensus as a form of confirmation bias. If you believe in a projected pick and it lines up with the field, you have validation. If it’s contrarian, be it as a calculated gamble of going against the grain or a personal conviction in your own process, and you’re correct?

Well, there’s the secret to creating separation or making up ground in mock draft competition.

Now, taking the road less traveled does not come without risk. But, as you may have discerned, my personal approach to building my final mock draft is generally to go boom-or-bust. Not only is it more fun to write, I feel it’s more enjoyable to read. But, even more importantly, I feel like the high-risk/high-reward nature provides the best opportunity to win.

Boom-or-Bust

There are two frameworks for constructing a final mock draft—with trades or without. I’m not necessarily an advocate for either, as they both have their benefits. It’s really just a matter of preference and how much thought you want to put into moving pieces up and down the board in terms of teams and players.

Per my previous point, I do think incorporating trades does make the exercise more fun, both as a writer and a reader. But, I also think there is a higher probability of missing on individual picks and making of a mockery of your mock draft as a whole when trades are involved.

But, as I said… boom-or-bust.

If your goal is to build a winning mock draft, I think you have to make an earnest run at predicting the unpredictable and not be afraid of having it all fall apart. You don’t have to go wild, but if you think a team will want to move up or down the board, or if you can only reconcile a particular player-team fit from a different draft position—then go for it. Incorporating trades is also a way to squeeze in a player who you think will go off the board in the first round, but who doesn’t have a natural home with the draft order as it stands.

Now, you could just as easily slot the player to the team that you expect to trade out, but in doing so, you’re also likely conceding points if you’re correct. So, if you are committed to making the pick, you might as well swap out the teams and shoot for the higher score, right?

Whether you choose to work in trades or go without, being a little bolder with your player selection is also advisable if you are aiming for peak accuracy with your mock draft. I wouldn’t expect anyone who has ever topped the annual leaderboard to have played it safe with every pick. You have to be willing to yield to BPA (Best Player Available) when applicable and step outside of the comfortable box of projecting players to teams solely on need and personal rankings. Because you have a league of 32 teams who are all competing with each other for talent and who all have different philosophies for team building, projecting picks is simply not matching your top player at a position on the board to the next team with that need. Their evaluations are different, their boards are different, and their draft tendencies are different. Fits are fine, but the nuance of value is what really determines the way the board falls in your mock draft.

Practical Application

Per The Huddle Report scoring system, a perfect score would be a 96. Per The Mock Draft Database scoring system, a perfect HERC score would 100.

While an admirable goal, a perfect mock draft is effectively a unicorn. With my mock draft, I tied for the highest mock draft score of the past 10 years per The Huddle Report with a 53 and I set the new HERC score record as calculated by The Mock Draft Database with a 58.13.

So, if you think that I think that I have the secret to building a perfect mock draft, I don’t. But, I think it would be interesting to look at the thought process I outlined above in execution and show you how effective it was in practical application by reviewing my winning mock draft.

Here’s the breakdown:

1. BENGALS — Joe Burrow, QB, LSU
2. REDSKINS — Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State
Hit & Hit. These were locks. Nothing to see here.

3. LIONS — Jeffrey Okudah, CB, Ohio State
Hit. As much as the Lions reportedly liked DT Derrick Brown, an elite CB like Okudah is by far more difficult to come by. And I did not see Detroit’s defensive line as being as deficient as their secondary. Apparently, neither did they—they didn’t draft at DT until Round 6.

4. GIANTS — Jedrick Wills Jr., OT, Alabama
Semi-Hit. The Giants selected OT Andrew Thomas. OT Tristan Wirfs was a popular pick in most final mock drafts, but I projected Wills, who actually went #10 to the Browns. Between Wills and Wirfs, I think most expected New York to draft a right tackle by trade. But, Thomas was also an All-American at right tackle his freshman season at Georgia. I personally did not take that into consideration, instead seeing Thomas as the safe, plug-and-play left tackle option who would probably go second, third, or fourth among the tier-one tackles.

5. DOLPHINS — Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama
6. CHARGERS — Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon
Hit & Hit. The Tank for Tua campaign came to fruition in a roundabout way despite late-breaking reports that the Dolphins were all in on drafting QB Justin Herbert, perhaps even exploring a trade up to #3. I’m not sure exactly where the information initially came from, but what proved to be a bit of a bait-and-switch did appear to throw off a lot of media mocks. For the record, I started out projecting the Dolphins trading up to #3, but it was going to be for Tua. When the Herbert reports broke, I thought about revising the stretch of picks between #3 and #6, because it seemed like there was high level of confidence that it was going to happen. But, in the end, I couldn’t bring myself to buy into it and just decided to stick with my original picks—only wiping out the projected trade. I did get it right, but I thought that if I was wrong, at least it wouldn’t throw off my mock as much if I just played the order straight. As for slotting Herbert to the Chargers, I came to the conclusion that the Chargers would try to inject some energy into their franchise by taking the QB that Miami didn’t, rather than attempt to build around journeyman veteran Tyrod Taylor.

7. PANTHERS — Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson
8. CARDINALS — Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn
Semi-Hit & Semi-Hit. I had these picks in reverse of how they went, as Brown ended up going to Carolina and Simmons to Arizona. Brown was certainly a consideration at #7 for me, but I thought Simmons might be a more natural fit and a better value as a Swiss Army knife defender. Now, even if I had slotted Brown to the Panthers, I never really considered Simmons as the pick for the Cardinals. I would have had them pick an OT there, probably Tristan Wirfs. To that end, I think this swap actually worked in my favor.

9. JAGUARS — C.J. Henderson, CB, Florida
Hit. Initially slotted in the Top-20 range, Henderson’s draft stock caught fire in the weeks leading up to the draft to the point where he was considered a lock Top-10 selection. I could have seen him being drafted as high as #7 to the Panthers. With Brown off the board in my mock draft, I thought this was an easy call because of Jacksonville’s situation at CB. Now, there was buzz that the Falcons would make a play to land Henderson, but I didn’t think it was plausible that 1) the Jaguars would pass on Henderson or 2) the Jaguars would trade away from Henderson, meaning Atlanta would likely have to pay a king’s ransom to jump up into the Top-8 to snag him. I didn’t think the Falcons would do that and they didn’t.

10. BROWNS — Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia
Semi-Hit. Thomas went #4 to the Giants, while Jedrick Wills Jr. went #10 to the Browns. Much like the decision at #4, where I had Wills as the plug-and-play right tackle for the Giants, I had Thomas as the plug-and-play left tackle for the Browns. But, while I did not score direct hits on these two picks, it still worked in my favor because, again, I simply had the players swapped between the same two teams. More importantly, I had the same 10 players go in the Top-10 of my mock draft that went in the Top-10 of the actual draft, which meant I still had the whole board in front of me. With that, I was not only going to be in the hunt for an accurate mock, but right on track to make a run if the picks between #10 and #20 fell in my favor.

11. JETS — Mekhi Becton, OT, Louisville
Hit. Despite having their pick of wide receivers here, I thought the depth at the position would have the Jets leaning tackle. And my feeling was that they would prefer Becton to Wirfs, which they did.

12. BUCCANEERS — Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa
Hit. Now here is where I introduced my first projected trade. I did not see any course of action for Tampa Bay other than taking a tackle. My assumption was that once the third went off the board, they would make a play for the fourth, whoever it may be, provided the jump was reasonable. In my mock draft, they traded with the Raiders to jump from #14 to #12 to take Wirfs. In the actual draft, they only needed to move up one spot to #13, trading instead with the 49ers. To be fair, I could have had the Buccaneers stand pat at #14 and still had the same outcome in my mock draft, but I was correct in them being compelled to trade up.

13. BRONCOS — Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama
Hit. Again, another projected trade here, with the Broncos swapping their #15 pick for the 49ers pick at #13. My logic was that the Broncos were going to be targeting a receiver and that they might have to jump the Raiders to ensure they could land the one they were after. In the actual draft, they didn’t have to move to get Jerry Jeudy, but like the Buccaneers and Wirfs, I still earned maximum points for the match.

14. RAIDERS — CeeDee Lamb, WR, Oklahoma
Semi-Hit. The other half of the projected trade with the Buccaneers, the Raiders ended up staying put at #12 and drafting WR Henry Ruggs III, while Lamb went #17 to the Cowboys. Which again, was another player swap that still worked in my favor while being a miss on the match.

15. 49ERS — Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina
Hit. The other half of the projected trade with the Broncos, the 49ers actually ended up trading one spot back from #13 with the Buccaneers and drafting Kinlaw at #14. While the 49ers were expected to strongly consider a receiver here, I thought they might seek to fill their DT need first to keep their strength strong and then pursue a receiver later, either with their pick at #31 or perhaps with a trade down scenario into the second or third round. Suffice to say, I chose wisely.

16. FALCONS — K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE, LSU
Semi-Hit. I thought Atlanta’s top three options were Henderson, Kinlaw, and Chaisson. By process of elimination, the pick here was Chaisson. The Falcons ended up drafting CB A.J. Terrell, who moved into the first-round conversation late and was expected to go in the Top-20 range. I simply didn’t think Atlanta would pass on Chaisson in favor of Terrell. I was wrong, but I had the general range right for Chaisson, who went at #20 to Jacksonville.

17. COWBOYS — Henry Ruggs III, WR, Alabama
Semi-Hit. If you read my mock draft write-up, then you know I fully expected to get this pick wrong for the Cowboys. I didn’t think they would take a receiver, but I couldn’t force myself out of them picking Ruggs. Had it been Lamb or Jeudy in my mock draft who was available, the third receiver still would have been the pick. Lo and behold, CeeDee Lamb was the last of the three on the board and the pick for Dallas at #17. And fortunately for me, it was another simple swap of the picks for the Cowboys and the Raiders that kept my mock in lockstep with the actual draft in terms of who was left on the board.

18. DOLPHINS — Josh Jones, OT, Houston
19. RAIDERS — A.J. Terrell, CB, Clemson
Miss & Semi-Hit. I had the positions right, but not the picks. The Dolphins went with OT Austin Jackson, who I had slotted to the Jaguars at #20, and the Raiders went with CB Damon Arnette, who I don’t think was in the first round of any mock draft, let alone the Top-20. As for my picks, the league was apparently much lower on Jones, who slipped to the third round, while Terrell went at #16 to Atlanta.

20. JAGUARS — Austin Jackson, OT, USC
Semi-Hit. Jackson went at #18 to the Dolphins, while the Jaguars landed Chaisson at #20. But, looking at the bigger picture, my mock draft was once again a closed loop here. I had no Top-20 picks who slipped later into the first round, nor any players selected between #21 and #32 who snuck in. Even the whiff on OT Josh Jones at #18 was offset by the surprise selection of CB Damon Arnette at #19.

21. EAGLES — Patrick Queen, LB, LSU
Semi-Hit. I think an overwhelming majority of mock drafts had slotted WR Justin Jefferson to the Eagles at some point, even right up the very end. I was contrarian, projecting Queen to Philadelphia despite strong evidence that they simply would not take a LB. They didn’t, instead they selected WR Jalen Reagor. Meanwhile, Queen went at #28 to the Ravens.

22. VIKINGS — Justin Jefferson, WR, LSU
Hit. While I didn’t follow the trend at any point of mocking Jefferson to the Eagles, I didn’t see him making it past the Vikings at #22. It was the right call.

23. PATRIOTS — Kenneth Murray, LB, Oklahoma
24. RAVENS — Cesar Ruiz, OL, Michigan
Semi-Hit & Semi-Hit. This was a fascinating coincidence as I had the correct players going at #23 and #24, but I missed on the teams. First, the Patriots traded out of their pick with the Chargers, who moved up to draft Murray. Then I projected a trade between the Saints and the Ravens that saw Baltimore move up to draft Ruiz, but instead the Saints stood in and made the same pick.

25. VIKINGS — Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU
Miss. This was the biggest disappointment for me personally of my mock draft. I had the Vikings drafting CB Jeff Gladney in both my Mock Draft 1.0 and my seven-round Super Mock because I loved the fit. Then I shied away from Gladney in the final mock because I bit on reports of the league being higher on Fulton than the media was and thought maybe Minnesota at #25 would be where that would materialize. The Vikings ultimately picked Gladney at #31 after trading back with the 49ers and I left points on the board with the big whiff. Here’s an example of needing to trust your process.

26. DOLPHINS — Xavier McKinney, S, Alabama
Miss. The Dolphins traded back to #30 with the Packers and selected CB Noah Igbinoghene, who I did not project in the first round. I don’t think anyone else did either, which meant nothing was gained or lost with their pick. McKinney ended up going in the early-second to the Giants at #36.

27. SEAHAWKS — Trevon Diggs, CB, Alabama
Miss. Shockingly, the Seahawks stood in and made a pick at #27 instead of trading out of the first round, selecting LB Jordyn Brooks. Diggs, meanwhile, went at #51 to the Cowboys. This ended up being another wash, as Brooks was a relatively uncommon name among final mock drafts.

28. SAINTS — Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State
Semi-Hit. Finding a place to slip Aiyuk into the first round paid off. I thought he might be a good fit with the Saints in this projected trade down with Baltimore, but he ended up going to the 49ers at #25 in their trade up with the Vikings. As for pick #28, this was where the Ravens drafted LB Patrick Queen, my pick at #21 to the Eagles.

29. TITANS — Isaiah Wilson, OT, Georgia
Hit. I called this pick a foregone conclusion in my write-up. It just made too much sense.

30. PACKERS — Jalen Reagor, WR, TCU
Semi-Hit. Reagor was another player who I wanted in the first round, but I didn’t see an obvious landing spot. I figured Green Bay would be as a good of a place as any since it seemed like they could use some juice at receiver. I was correct in projecting Reagor would come off the board early, only it was to the Eagles at #21. Meanwhile, the Packers traded up to #26 with the Dolphins to draft QB Jordan Love. I was contrarian in that I didn’t have Love in my mock draft, despite first-round buzz among the media throughout the draft process. I pegged him as more of an early-second round consideration. So, that ended up being a whiff on my part, but one I was content with because of my conviction in evaluating the player.

31. EAGLES — Denzel Mims, WR, Baylor
Miss. I don’t know that Mims not going in the first round was a surprise, but I think him lasting until late in the second round was wholly unexpected. I thought he might round out the run on receivers there at the end of the night, maybe in a trade up scenario like this one I projected with the Eagles and 49ers. But, unlike Aiyuk earlier, my attempt to work Mims into the first round did not pay off.

32. CHIEFS — Clyde Edwards-Helaire, RB, LSU
The Knockout Blow. Talk about boom-or-bust — initially just a fun fit to close out my final mock draft, this bold projection turned out to be the 50/50 ball that connected for the win. I don’t think I was the only person who had the Chiefs drafting a back at #32, but here was an example of not just slotting the consensus top player at the position to the team with a need. I thought another team could possibly draft RB D’Andre Swift in the #25-#32 range, which would conceivably put Clyde Edwards-Helaire in position for a first-round selection as RB2 off the board. But, I also thought because of his all-around skillset, that CEH might actually be the first RB taken. So, instead of including Swift in my final mock draft, I decided to hedge my bets on the receivers, effectively being content to miss should he go in the first round. Meanwhile, I did not move away from CEH from being the pick at #32. It was offbeat, out-of-the-box thinking based in nothing other than my own impressions of need, fit, and value, and while I could have just as easily missed, it just so happened that fortune favored the bold.

Conclusion

Despite the hot and holier-than-thou takes, there’s no shame in doing a mock draft just as there’s no real right or wrong way to build one—it just depends on what you want to accomplish with it. If you want to present a scenario, put your personal rankings into practice, present what you would do if you were each team, or put whatever kind of spin you want on it, those are all valid exercises.

But, with a final mock draft, I do think the goal should be to predict the players who you expect to be picked and the teams that you expect to pick them as accurately as possible, over all else.

To that point, if your intent is not just to build an accurate mock draft, but to build a winning mock draft, I think I’ve hazily outlined a viable approach. You’re welcome to use it to support your own efforts to compete and, dare I say, even challenge for the throne. But, don’t think that I’ve shared all of my secrets… after all, I have two mock draft championships to defend in 2021!


Jason Pruett
DRAFTPLEX

2020 NFL Mock Draft: Day 2 Edition

The first round of the 2020 NFL Draft is now officially closed — but we’re just getting started!

My final first-round mock draft scored the highest in The Huddle Report’s 2020 Mock Draft Scoring competition. And now, I am pleased to present my 2020 NFL Mock Draft: Day 2 Edition. These Round 2 and Round 3 projections are based on the draft order as it currently stands and my impression of remaining team needs, and do not reflect any potential trade scenarios.

Enjoy the draft!


ROUND 2

33. BENGALS — Josh Jones, OT, Houston
34. COLTS — Michael Pittman Jr., WR, USC
35. LIONS — D’Andre Swift, RB, Georgia
36. GIANTS — Xavier McKinney, S, Alabama
37. PATRIOTS — A.J. Epenesa, EDGE, Iowa
38. PANTHERS — Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU
39. DOLPHINS — Zack Baun, LB, Wisconsin
40. TEXANS — Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE, Penn State
41. BROWNS — Antoine Winfield Jr., S, Minnesota
42. JAGUARS — Ross Blacklock, DT, TCU
43. BEARS — Trevon Diggs, CB, Alabama
44. COLTS — Cole Kmet, TE, Notre Dame
45. BUCCANEERS — J.K. Dobbins, RB, Ohio State
46. BRONCOS — Ezra Cleveland, OT, Boise State
47. FALCONS — Josh Uche, EDGE, Michigan
48. JETS — Tee Higgins, WR, Clemson
49. STEELERS — Cam Akers, RB, Florida State
50. BEARS — Jeremy Chinn, S, Southern Illinois
51. COWBOYS — Jaylon Johnson, CB, Utah
52. RAMS — Denzel Mims, WR, Baylor
53. EAGLES — Logan Wilson, LB, Wyoming
54. BILLS — Jonathan Taylor, RB, Wisconsin
55. RAVENS — Robert Hunt, OL, Louisiana-Lafayette
56. DOLPHINS — Grant Delpit, S, LSU
57. RAMS — Akeem Davis-Gaither, LB, Appalachian State
58. VIKINGS — John Simpson, OG, Clemson
59. SEAHAWKS — Laviska Shenault Jr., WR, Colorado
60. RAVENS — Chase Claypool, WR, Notre Dame
61. TITANS — Bryce Hall, CB, Virginia
62. PACKERS — Malik Harrison, LB, Ohio State
63. CHIEFS — Marlon Davidson, DL, Auburn
64. SEAHAWKS — Jalen Hurts, QB, Alabama

ROUND 3

65. BENGALS — Willie Gay Jr., LB, Mississippi State
66. REDSKINS — Prince Tega Wanogho, OT, Auburn
67. LIONS — Bradlee Anae, EDGE, Utah
68. JETS — Cameron Dantzler, CB, Mississippi State
69. PANTHERS — Kyle Dugger, S, Lenoir-Rhyne
70. DOLPHINS — Lloyd Cushenberry III, OC, LSU
71. CHARGERS — Matt Peart, OT, Connecticut
72. CARDINALS — Lucas Niang, OT, TCU
73. JAGUARS — Saahdiq Charles, OT, LSU
74. BROWNS — Terrell Lewis, EDGE, Alabama
75. COLTS — Neville Gallimore, DT, Oklahoma
76. BUCCANEERS — K.J. Hamler, WR, Penn State
77. BRONCOS — Matt Hennessy, OC, Temple
78. FALCONS — Zack Moss, RB, Utah
79. JETS — Jonathan Greenard, EDGE, Florida
80. RAIDERS — Darrynton Evans, RB, Appalachian State
81. RAIDERS — Jacob Eason, QB, Washington
82. COWBOYS — Justin Madubuike, DT, Texas A&M
83. BRONCOS — Ashtyn Davis, S, California
84. RAMS — Julian Okwara, EDGE, Notre Dame
85. LIONS — Ben Bredeson, OG, Michigan
86.  BILLS — Terrell Burgess, DB, Utah
87. PATRIOTS — Adam Trautman, TE, Dayton
88. SAINTS — Antonio Gibson, RB/WR, Memphis
89. VIKINGS — Darrell Taylor, EDGE, Tennessee
90. TEXANS — Jordan Elliott, DL, Missouri
91. RAIDERS — Leki Fotu, DT, Utah
92. RAVENS — Curtis Weaver, EDGE, Boise State
93. TITANS — Davon Hamilton, DT, Ohio State
94. PACKERS — Raekwon Davis, DL, Alabama
95. BRONCOS — James Lynch, DL, Baylor
96. CHIEFS — Amik Robertson, CB, Louisiana Tech
97. BROWNS — Bryan Edwards, WR, South Carolina
98. PATRIOTS — Jake Fromm, QB, Georgia
99. GIANTS — Davion Taylor, LB, Colorado
100. PATRIOTS — Van Jefferson, WR, Florida
101. SEAHAWKS — Reggie Robinson II, CB, Tulsa
102. STEELERS — Jabari Zuniga, EDGE, Florida
103. EAGLES — Troy Pride Jr., CB, Notre Dame
104. RAMS — Darnay Holmes, DB, UCLA
105. VIKINGS — Donovan Peoples-Jones, WR, Michigan
106. RAVENS — Lynn Bowden Jr., WR, Kentucky


Jason Pruett
DRAFTPLEX

2020 NFL Mock Draft: Final Edition

In January, we received a glimpse of what would have been the most unique NFL Draft experience we had seen to this point as plans for the elaborate presentation to emanate from the Las Vegas Strip were revealed.

Three months later, Commissioner Roger Goodell is expected to announce selections from his basement while front office staffs operate from distributed war rooms and top picks celebrate from the comforts of home—all as part of a virtual draft event that’s equal parts ambitious and ridiculous, and comes laden with so many points of potential failure that it could have been a plot device for HBO’s now-defunct series Silicon Valley.

Suffice to say, starting Thursday night, we are indeed getting the NFL Draft like we’ve never seen it before. Just not like anyone could have possibly expected. And now, the emerging narrative surrounding the actual selection of players seems to be trending toward the unexpected as well.

But, ultimately, there are still the same, two distinct paths to complete this final exercise as there are every year for a one-man war room like me—playing for field position with the consensus until contacts and clout inevitably win out, or launching a 50/50 ball on 4th down on the off chance that chaos becomes chalk.

With that being said, my score may suffer, but in the immortal words of the legendary Roger Staubach: “Hail Mary.”

Thus, I present my final 2020 NFL Mock Draft. These first-round projections are based on the current draft order and my impression of team needs heading into the draft, with consideration given to potential trade scenarios.

Enjoy the draft!

FIRST ROUND


1 | Cincinnati Bengals — Joe Burrow, QB, LSU
This has been locked in since the season’s end. The official selection Thursday night is but a mere formality.

2 | Washington Redskins — Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State
I’m sure they’ve entertained the possibilities of not taking the best player in the draft, but let’s not overthink it.

3 | Detroit Lions — Jeffrey Okudah, CB, Ohio State
The Lions are ideally positioned to take the second defender off the board or do business with a team chasing a quarterback. In either case, CB1 should be the pick.

4 | New York Giants — Jedrick Wills Jr., OT, Alabama
They can consider a stud defender or explore a trade back, but the Giants can’t expect Daniel Jones and Saquon Barkley to be successful trotting out their offensive line in the shape it is now.

5 | Miami Dolphins — Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama
The Dolphins were rumored to have settled on drafting Justin Herbert to be their next quarterback—until they weren’t. So, let’s dismiss the draft week conjecture entirely and say they take Tua. They can still try tanking for Trevor Lawrence if it doesn’t work out.

6 | Los Angeles Chargers — Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon
The Chargers have a bridge quarterback on the books for one season, just invested heavily in their offensive line, and need a new face of the franchise. It’s rich for Herbert, in my opinion, but it makes sense by draft logic.

7 | Carolina Panthers — Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson
Cornerback and defensive tackle are both strong possibilities, but Simmons is a unique talent that the Panthers can (re)build around.

8 | Arizona Cardinals — Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn
Offensive tackle is on the table, but the Cardinals could also beef up their defensive front to compete in a division with two of the strongest rushing attacks in the game.

9 | Jacksonville Jaguars — C.J. Henderson, CB, Florida
The buzz around Henderson has been growing and the Jaguars have a clear need at cornerback. Whether he stays in-state or relocates, the Florida product now projects as a Top-10 selection.

10 | Cleveland Browns — Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia
Thomas has gained steam late in the process for being the plug-and-play left tackle option in this class. The Browns would love to see him still on the board here.

11 | New York Jets — Mekhi Becton, OT, Louisville
The Jets are certainly a contender to take the first receiver off the board, but they might not get another chance at one of the top offensive tackles.

12 | Tampa Bay Buccaneers — Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa
* PROJECTED TRADE WITH LAS VEGAS RAIDERS * If the run on offensive tackles starts and the Buccaneers are within reasonable striking distance, look for a trade up.

13 | Denver Broncos — Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama
* PROJECTED TRADE WITH SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS * The Broncos are reportedly targeting a wide receiver and willing to move up. Jumping ahead of their division rival to take their pick of the top pass catchers is an added bonus.

14 | Las Vegas Raiders — CeeDee Lamb, WR, Oklahoma
* PROJECTED TRADE WITH TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS * In my mind, I hear Mike Mayock gushing over Jerry Jeudy, but I now see CeeDee Lamb in the silver and black. The Broncos trading up makes the decision easy.

15 | San Francisco 49ers (via IND) — Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina
* PROJECTED TRADE WITH DENVER BRONCOS * The 49ers cut the heart out of their defensive line by shipping DeForest Buckner and his contract to the Colts. Kinlaw would fill the void.

16 | Atlanta Falcons — K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE, LSU
The Falcons have been linked to Henderson, Kinlaw, and Chaisson. If they don’t rise up in a trade, the high-upside pass rusher might be the only one of those names left on the board at #16 as he is here.

17 | Dallas Cowboys — Henry Ruggs III, WR, Alabama
This is where I came to the crossroads of my final mock draft. I fully expect the Cowboys to draft for an obvious need (CB or EDGE), a sneaky need (LB), or trade back. I don’t personally see the value here at cornerback or pass rusher. I couldn’t bring myself to mock them a linebacker. And I simply couldn’t find a logical trade partner. I don’t think Dallas would draft Ruggs because of the holes on defense—but they don’t have a third receiver, their offense has long lacked a legitimate deep threat, and they are about to pay the quarterback. I expect to be wrong here, but I couldn’t force my way out of making this pick.

18 | Miami Dolphins (via PIT) — Josh Jones, OT, Houston
Regardless of who they end up drafting at quarterback, he will need protection. Jones is generally considered the next-best edge blocker beyond the tier-one tackles.

19 | Las Vegas Raiders (via CHI) — A.J. Terrell, CB, Clemson
Terrell’s stock is apparently higher in league circles than it has been in the draft community. Among the rumored suitors are the Raiders, who could once again tap into the Clemson pipeline.

20 | Jacksonville Jaguars (via LAR) — Austin Jackson, OT, USC
The Jaguars are among the teams in the market for an offensive tackle. Jackson would be drafting the position with an eye toward the future as he’s not necessarily ready to go right now.

21 | Philadelphia Eagles — Patrick Queen, LB, LSU
Wide receiver is the sexy pick for Philadelphia at #21. Linebacker is the more glaring need and the pool isn’t nearly as deep. Queen it is.

22 | Minnesota Vikings (via BUF) — Justin Jefferson, WR, LSU
The Vikings have choice needs to address, but if they take a corner first, the window between #22 and #25 might be wide enough for another team to sneak in and steal Jefferson.

23 | New England Patriots — Kenneth Murray, LB, Oklahoma
The Patriots could be interested in drafting a new quarterback—it just happens to be the one on defense.

24 | Baltimore Ravens — Cesar Ruiz, OL, Michigan
* PROJECTED TRADE WITH NEW ORLEANS SAINTS * In it to win it and with extra picks to work with, the Ravens might consider moving up to secure the top interior offensive lineman in the draft.

25 | Minnesota Vikings — Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU
Despite receiver being the priority, cornerback is arguably the most urgent need for the Vikings. Fulton seems to be firmly in the first-round conversation despite draft circles cooling on him during the process.

26 | Miami Dolphins (via HOU) — Xavier McKinney, S, Alabama
The Dolphins were active in free agency and their defense is starting to look formidable on paper. McKinney would be another pillar.

27 | Seattle Seahawks — Trevon Diggs, CB, Alabama
Seattle always seems to be the wildcard late in the first round. Diggs feels like an uncharacteristically sensible pick and should compete for a starting role.

28 | New Orleans Saints — Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State
* PROJECTED TRADE WITH BALTIMORE RAVENS * The Saints have a loaded roster, but are light on picks. They could trade back to acquire an asset or two, and still be in range of an offensive weapon like Aiyuk or TCU’s Jalen Reagor.

29 | Tennessee Titans — Isaiah Wilson, OT, Georgia
At this point, the Titans taking Wilson to be their new right tackle is considered a foregone conclusion. We’ll see if it plays out that way.

30 | Green Bay Packers — Jalen Reagor, WR, TCU
The Packers have a number of tall trees populating their receiver depth chart. Reagor would bring a different dimension to their offense and return game.

31 | Philadelphia Eagles — Denzel Mims, WR, Baylor
* PROJECTED TRADE WITH SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS * Late in the first round expects to be a sweet spot for the second wave of receivers. If San Francisco shops their pick at #31, Mims could be in play for a team like the Eagles, who aren’t afraid to make a move up for a player they covet.

32 | Kansas City Chiefs — Clyde Edwards-Helaire, LSU
The Chiefs have done well to fill holes this offseason and could certainly entertain offers to move back. If they hold, Edwards-Helaire has an all-around skillset that would be fun in Andy Reid’s offense.


Jason Pruett
DRAFTPLEX

2020 NFL Draft Super Mock

Here it is. All 32 teams. All seven rounds. All 255 selections.

This is my 2020 NFL Draft Super Mock.

Projections are based on the official draft order and my impression of team needs heading into the draft, and do not reflect any potential trade scenarios.

The full mock draft from pick #1 to pick #255 is below, followed by per-team draft classes.


ROUND 1

1.  BENGALS — Joe Burrow, QB, LSU
2.  REDSKINS — Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State
3.  LIONS — Jeffrey Okudah, CB, Ohio State
4.  GIANTS — Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson
5.  DOLPHINS — Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama
6.  CHARGERS — Mekhi Becton, OT, Louisville
7.  PANTHERS — Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina
8.  CARDINALS — Jedrick Wills Jr., OT, Alabama
9.  JAGUARS — Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn
10. BROWNS — Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa
11. JETS — CeeDee Lamb, WR, Oklahoma
12. RAIDERS — Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama
13. 49ERS — Henry Ruggs III, WR, Alabama
14. BUCCANEERS — Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia
15. BRONCOS — Justin Jefferson, WR, LSU
16. FALCONS — C.J. Henderson, CB, Florida
17. COWBOYS — K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE, LSU
18. DOLPHINS — Josh Jones, OT, Houston
19. RAIDERS — Kenneth Murray, LB, Oklahoma
20. JAGUARS — Trevon Diggs, CB, Alabama
21. EAGLES — Patrick Queen, LB, LSU
22. VIKINGS — Jeff Gladney, CB, TCU
23. PATRIOTS — Jordan Love, QB, Utah State
24. SAINTS — Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State
25. VIKINGS — Austin Jackson, OT, USC
26. DOLPHINS — Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE, Penn State
27. SEAHAWKS — Denzel Mims, WR, Baylor
28. RAVENS — Josh Uche, EDGE, Michigan
29. TITANS — Isaiah Wilson, OT, Georgia
30. PACKERS — Jalen Reagor, WR, TCU
31. 49ERS — A.J. Terrell, CB, Clemson
32. CHIEFS — Cesar Ruiz, C, Michigan

ROUND 2

33. BENGALS — Zack Baun, LB, Wisconsin
34. COLTS — Tee Higgins, WR, Clemson
35. LIONS — D’Andre Swift, RB, Georgia
36. GIANTS — Xavier McKinney, S, Alabama
37. CHARGERS — Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon
38. PANTHERS — Jaylon Johnson, CB, Utah
39. DOLPHINS — Clyde Edwards-Helaire, RB, LSU
40. TEXANS — Terrell Lewis, EDGE, Alabama
41. BROWNS — Jeremy Chinn, S, Southern Illinois
42. JAGUARS — A.J. Epenesa, EDGE, Iowa
43. BEARS — Noah Igbinoghene, CB, Auburn
44. COLTS — Cole Kmet, TE, Notre Dame
45. BUCCANEERS — J.K. Dobbins, RB, Ohio State
46. BRONCOS — Ezra Cleveland, OT, Boise State
47. FALCONS — Willie Gay Jr., LB, Mississippi State
48. JETS — Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU
49. STEELERS — Jonathan Taylor, RB, Wisconsin
50. BEARS — John Simpson, G, Clemson
51. COWBOYS — Grant Delpit, S, LSU
52. RAMS — Laviska Shenault Jr., WR, Colorado
53. EAGLES — Cameron Dantzler, CB, Mississippi State
54. BILLS — Damon Arnette, CB, Ohio State
55. RAVENS — Robert Hunt, G, Louisiana-Lafayette
56. DOLPHINS — Antoine Winfield Jr., S, Minnesota
57. RAMS — Bradlee Anae, EDGE, Utah
58. VIKINGS — Ross Blacklock, DL, TCU
59. SEAHAWKS — Marlon Davidson, DL, Auburn
60. RAVENS — Malik Harrison, LB, Ohio State
61. TITANS — Jordan Elliott, DL, Missouri
62. PACKERS — Jordyn Brooks, LB, Texas Tech
63. CHIEFS — Cam Akers, RB, Florida State
64. SEAHAWKS — Prince Tega Wanogho, OT, Auburn

ROUND 3

65. BENGALS — Lucas Niang, OT, TCU
66. REDSKINS — Michael Pittman Jr., WR, USC
67. LIONS — Chase Claypool, WR, Notre Dame
68. JETS — Curtis Weaver, EDGE, Boise State
69. PANTHERS — Kyle Dugger, S, Lenoir-Rhyne
70. DOLPHINS — Van Jefferson, WR, Florida
71. CHARGERS — K.J. Hamler, WR, Penn State
72. CARDINALS — Bryce Hall, CB, Virginia
73. JAGUARS — Jacob Eason, QB, Washington
74. BROWNS — Jonah Jackson, G, Ohio State
75. COLTS — Justin Madubuike, DT, Texas A&M
76. BUCCANEERS — K.J. Hill, WR, Ohio State
77. BRONCOS — Matt Hennessy, C, Temple
78. FALCONS — Lynn Bowden Jr., WR, Kentucky
79. JETS — Saahdiq Charles, OT, LSU
80. RAIDERS — Darrynton Evans, RB, Appalachian State
81. RAIDERS — Amik Robertson, CB, Louisiana Tech
82. COWBOYS — Troy Pride Jr., CB, Notre Dame
83. BRONCOS — Ashtyn Davis, S, California
84. RAMS — Akeem Davis-Gaither, LB, Appalachian State
85. LIONS — Julian Okwara, EDGE, Notre Dame
86.  BILLS — Zack Moss, RB, Utah
87. PATRIOTS — Adam Trautman, TE, Dayton
88. SAINTS — Logan Wilson, LB, Wyoming
89. VIKINGS — Jonathan Greenard, EDGE, Florida
90. TEXANS — Neville Gallimore, DT, Oklahoma
91. RAIDERS — Terrell Burgess, DB, Utah
92. RAVENS — Lloyd Cushenberry III, C, LSU
93. TITANS — Jalen Hurts, QB, Oklahoma
94. PACKERS — Raekwon Davis, DL, Alabama
95. BRONCOS — James Lynch, DL, Baylor
96. CHIEFS — Darrell Taylor, EDGE, Tennessee
97. BROWNS — Donovan Peoples-Jones, WR, Michigan
98. PATRIOTS — Jason Strowbridge, DL, North Carolina
99. GIANTS — Matt Peart, OT, Connecticut
100. PATRIOTS — Anfernee Jennings, EDGE, Alabama
101. SEAHAWKS — Reggie Robinson II, CB, Tulsa
102. STEELERS — Jabari Zuniga, EDGE, Florida
103. EAGLES — K’Von Wallace, DB, Clemson
104. RAMS — Jake Fromm, QB, Georgia
105. VIKINGS — Bryan Edwards, WR, South Carolina
106. RAVENS — Antonio Gibson, RB, Memphis

ROUND 4

107. BENGALS — Antonio Gandy-Golden, WR, Liberty
108. REDSKINS — Michael Ojemudia, CB, Iowa
109. LIONS — Ben Bredeson, G, Michigan
110. GIANTS — Alton Robinson, EDGE, Syracuse
111. TEXANS — Joshua Kelley, RB, UCLA
112. CHARGERS — Eno Benjamin, RB, Arizona State
113. PANTHERS — Khalid Kareem, EDGE, Notre Dame
114. CARDINALS — Brandon Jones, S, Texas
115. BROWNS — Markus Bailey, LB, Purdue
116. JAGUARS — Darnay Holmes, DB, UCLA
117. BUCCANEERS — McTelvin Agim, DL, Arkansas
118. BRONCOS — John Hightower, WR, Boise State
119. FALCONS — Kenny Robinson Jr., S, West Virginia
120. JETS — Alohi Gilman, S, Notre Dame
121. RAIDERS — Ben Bartch, OL, St. John’s
122. COLTS — Jacob Phillips, LB, LSU
123. COWBOYS — Davon Hamilton, DT, Ohio State
124. STEELERS — Collin Johnson, WR, Texas
125. PATRIOTS — Troy Dye, LB, Oregon
126. RAMS — Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin
127. EAGLES — Jauan Jennings, WR, Tennessee
128. BILLS — Kenny Willekes, EDGE, Michigan State
129. RAVENS — Tyre Phillips, OL, Mississippi State
130. SAINTS — Anthony McFarland Jr., RB, Maryland
131. CARDINALS — Harrison Bryant, TE, Florida Atlantic
132. VIKINGS — Geno Stone, S, Iowa
133. SEAHAWKS — Kevin Dotson, G, Louisiana-Lafayette
134. RAVENS — Alex Highsmith, EDGE, Charlotte
135. STEELERS — Damien Lewis, G, LSU
136. PACKERS — Albert Okwuegbunam, TE, Missouri
137. BRONCOS — Davion Taylor, LB, Colorado
138. CHIEFS — Josiah Scott, CB, Michigan State
139. BUCCANEERS — Logan Stenberg, G, Kentucky
140. JAGUARS — Shane Lemieux, G, Oregon
141. DOLPHINS — Leki Fotu, DT, Utah
142. REDSKINS — Cameron Clark, OL, Charlotte
143. FALCONS — Lamical Perine, RB, Florida
144. SEAHAWKS — Justin Strnad, LB, Wake Forest
145. EAGLES — Nick Harris, C, Washington
146. EAGLES — Ke’Shawn Vaughn, RB, Vanderbilt

ROUND 5

147. BENGALS — Joe Bachie, LB, Michigan State
148. PANTHERS — Hakeem Adeniji, OL, Kansas
149. LIONS — Larrell Murchison, DL, North Carolina State
150. GIANTS — Keith Ismael, C, San Diego State
151. CHARGERS — D.J. Wonnum, EDGE, South Carolina
152. PANTHERS — A.J. Dillon, RB, Boston College
153. DOLPHINS — Netane Muti, G, Fresno State
154. DOLPHINS — Harrison Hand, CB, Temple
155. VIKINGS — John Reid, CB, Penn State
156. 49ERS — Jack Driscoll, OL, Auburn
157. JAGUARS — L’Jarius Sneed, DB, Louisiana Tech
158. JETS — James Morgan, QB, Florida International
159. RAIDERS — Isaiah Hodgins, WR, Oregon State
160. COLTS — Antoine Brooks Jr., S, Maryland
161. BUCCANEERS — Tyler Johnson, WR, Minnesota
162. SEAHAWKS — Jake Luton, QB, Oregon State
163. BEARS — Josh Metellus, S, Michigan
164. COWBOYS — Devin Duvernay, WR, Texas
165. JAGUARS — Francis Bernard, LB, Utah
166. LIONS — Charlie Heck, OT, North Carolina
167. BILLS — Quintez Cephus, WR, Nebraska
168. EAGLES — Stanford Samuels III, CB, Florida State
169. SAINTS — Javaris Davis, CB, Auburn
170. RAVENS — Hunter Bryant, TE, Washington
171. TEXANS — Shaquille Quarterman, LB, Miami
172. PATRIOTS — Evan Weaver, LB, California
173. DOLPHINS — Cohl Cabral, C, Arizona State
174. TITANS — Brycen Hopkins, TE, Purdue
175. PACKERS — Alex Taylor, OT, South Carolina State
176. 49ERS — Clay Johnston, LB, Baylor
177. CHIEFS — A.J. Green, CB, Oklahoma State
178. BRONCOS — Carter Coughlin, EDGE, Minnesota
179. COWBOYS — Dane Jackson, CB, Pittsburgh

ROUND 6

180. BENGALS — Khalil Davis, DT, Nebraska
181. BRONCOS — Lamar Jackson, CB, Nebraska
182. LIONS — Braden Mann, P, Texas A&M
183. GIANTS — Quartney Davis, WR, Texas A&M
184. PANTHERS — Devin Asiasi, TE, UCLA
185. DOLPHINS — Rashard Lawrence, DT, LSU
186. CHARGERS — Gabriel Davis, WR, UCF
187. BROWNS — Broderick Washington Jr., DT, Texas Tech
188. BILLS — Nate Stanley, QB, Iowa
189. JAGUARS — Colby Parkinson, TE, Stanford
190. EAGLES — Jon Runyan, OL, Michigan
191. JETS — Isaiah Coulter, WR, Rhode Island
192. PACKERS — Anthony Gordon, QB, Washington State
193. COLTS — Danny Pinter, OL, Ball State
194. BUCCANEERS — Chauncey Rivers, EDGE, Mississippi State
195. PATRIOTS — Darryl Williams, OL, Mississippi State
196. BEARS — Raequan Williams, DL, Michigan State
197. COLTS — James Proche, WR, SMU
198. STEELERS — DeMarkus Acy, CB, Missouri
199. RAMS — DeeJay Dallas, RB, Miami
200. BEARS — James Robinson, RB, Illinois State
201. VIKINGS — Treymayne Anchrum, OL, Clemson
202. CARDINALS — Josiah Coatney, DL, Ole Miss
203. SAINTS — Josiah Deguara, TE, Cincinnati
204. PATRIOTS — Thaddeus Moss, TE, LSU
205. VIKINGS — JaMycal Hasty, RB, Baylor
206. JAGUARS — Trey Adams, OT, Washington
207. BILLS — Jalen Elliott, S, Notre Dame
208. PACKERS — Julian Blackmon, S, Utah
209. PACKERS — Javon Leake, RB, Maryland
210. 49ERS — Dalton Keene, TE, Virginia Tech
211. JETS — Trevis Gipson, EDGE, Tulsa
212. PATRIOTS — Kalija Lipscomb, WR, Vanderbilt
213. PATRIOTS — Justin Herron, OL, Wake Forest
214. SEAHAWKS — Michael Warren II, RB, Cincinnati

ROUND 7

215. BENGALS — Stantley Thomas-Oliver III, CB, Florida International
216. REDSKINS — Jared Pinkney, TE, Vanderbilt
217. 49ERS — J.R. Reed, S, Georgia
218. GIANTS — Solomon Kindley, G, Georgia
219. VIKINGS — Cale Garrett, LB, Missouri
220. CHARGERS — Michael Onwenu, G, Michigan
221. PANTHERS — Bravvion Roy, DT, Baylor
222. CARDINALS — Xavier Jones, RB, SMU
223. JAGUARS — Lawrence Cager, WR, Georgia
224. TITANS — Kindle Vildor, CB, Georgia Southern
225. RAVENS — Grayland Arnold, DB, Baylor
226. BEARS — Branden Bowen, OT, Ohio State
227. DOLPHINS — Kendrick Rogers, WR, Texas A&M
228. FALCONS — Benito Jones, DT, Ole Miss
229. REDSKINS — Calvin Throckmorton, OL, Oregon
230. PATRIOTS — Nick Coe, DL, Auburn
231. COWBOYS — Tanner Muse, LB, Clemson
232. STEELERS — Casey Toohill, LB, Stanford
233. BEARS — Quez Watkins, WR, Southern Miss
234. RAMS — Madre Harper, CB, Southern Illinois
235. PATRIOTS — Malcolm Perry, WR, Navy
236. PACKERS — Joe Gaziano, DL, Northwestern
237. BRONCOS — Steven Montez, QB, Colorado
238. GIANTS — Jordan Fuller, S, Ohio State
239. BILLS — Terence Steele, OT, Texas Tech
240. TEXANS — Javelin Guidry, CB, Utah
241. PATRIOTS — Rodrigo Blankenship, K, Georgia
242. PACKERS — Levonta Taylor, DB, Florida State
243. TITANS — Benny LeMay, RB, Charlotte
244. BROWNS — Joe Reed, WR, Virginia
245. 49ERS — Jonathan Garvin, EDGE, Miami
246. DOLPHINS — Cameron Brown, LB, Penn State
247. GIANTS — Rico Dowdle, RB, South Carolina
248. TEXANS — Colton McKivitz, OL, West Virginia
249. VIKINGS — Cole McDonald, QB, Hawaii
250. TEXANS — Daniel Thomas, S, Auburn
251. DOLPHINS — Charlie Taumoepeau, TE, Portland State
252. BRONCOS — John Molchon, OL, Boise State
253. VIKINGS — Derrek Tuszka, EDGE, North Dakota State
254. BRONCOS — John Penisini, DT, Utah
255. GIANTS — Trevon Hill, EDGE, Miami


SELECTIONS BY TEAM

Arizona Cardinals
1.8 — Jedrick Wills Jr., OT, Alabama
3.72 — Bryce Hall, CB, Virginia
4.114 — Brandon Jones, S, Texas
4.131 — Harrison Bryant, TE, Florida Atlantic
6.202 — Josiah Coatney, DL, Ole Miss
7.222 — Xavier Jones, RB, SMU

Atlanta Falcons
1.16 — C.J. Henderson, CB, Florida
2.47 — Willie Gay Jr., LB, Mississippi State
3.78 — Lynn Bowden Jr., WR, Kentucky
4.119 — Kenny Robinson Jr., S, West Virginia
4.143 — Lamical Perine, RB, Florida
7.228 — Benito Jones, DT, Ole Miss

Baltimore Ravens
1.28 — Josh Uche, EDGE, Michigan
2.55 — Robert Hunt, G, Louisiana-Lafayette
2.60 — Malik Harrison, LB, Ohio State
3.92 — Lloyd Cushenberry III, C, LSU
3.106 — Antonio Gibson, RB, Memphis
4.129 — Tyre Phillips, OL, Mississippi State
4.134 — Alex Highsmith, EDGE, Charlotte
5.170 — Hunter Bryant, TE, Washington
7.225 — Grayland Arnold, DB, Baylor

Buffalo Bills
2.54 — Damon Arnette, CB, Ohio State
3.86 — Zack Moss, RB, Utah
4.128 — Kenny Willekes, EDGE, Michigan State
5.167 — Quintez Cephus, WR, Nebraska
6.188 — Nate Stanley, QB, Iowa
6.207 — Jalen Elliott, S, Notre Dame
7.239 — Terence Steele, OT, Texas Tech 

Carolina Panthers
1.7 — Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina
2.38 — Jaylon Johnson, CB, Utah
3.69 — Kyle Dugger, S, Lenoir-Rhyne
4.113 — Khalid Kareem, EDGE, Notre Dame
5.148 — Hakeem Adeniji, OL, Kansas
5.152 — A.J. Dillon, RB, Boston College
6.184 — Devin Asiasi, TE, UCLA
7.221 — Bravvion Roy, DT, Baylor

Cincinnati Bengals
1.1 — Joe Burrow, QB, LSU
2.33 — Zack Baun, LB, Wisconsin
3.65 — Lucas Niang, OT, TCU
4.107 — Antonio Gandy-Golden, WR, Liberty
5.147 — Joe Bachie, LB, Michigan State
6.180 — Khalil Davis, DT, Nebraska
7.215 — Stantley Thomas-Oliver III, CB, Florida International

Chicago Bears
2.43 — Noah Igbinoghene, CB, Auburn
2.50 — John Simpson, G, Clemson
5.163 — Josh Metellus, S, Michigan
6.196 — Raequan Williams, DL, Michigan State
6.200 — James Robinson, RB, Illinois State
7.226 — Branden Bowen, OT, Ohio State
7.233 — Quez Watkins, WR, Southern Miss

Cleveland Browns
1.10 — Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa
2.41 — Jeremy Chinn, S, Southern Illinois
3.74 — Jonah Jackson, G, Ohio State
3.97 — Donovan Peoples-Jones, WR, Michigan
4.115 — Markus Bailey, LB, Purdue
6.187 — Broderick Washington Jr., DT, Texas Tech
7.244 — Joe Reed, WR, Virginia

Dallas Cowboys
1.17 — K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE, LSU
2.51 — Grant Delpit, S, LSU
3.82 — Troy Pride Jr., CB, Notre Dame
4.123 — Davon Hamilton, DT, Ohio State
5.164 — Devin Duvernay, WR, Texas
5.179 — Dane Jackson, CB, Pittsburgh
7.231 — Tanner Muse, LB, Clemson

Denver Broncos
1.15 — Justin Jefferson, WR, LSU
2.46 — Ezra Cleveland, OT, Boise State
3.77 — Matt Hennessy, C, Temple
3.83 — Ashtyn Davis, S, California
3.95 — James Lynch, DL, Baylor
4.118 — John Hightower, WR, Boise State
4.137 — Davion Taylor, LB, Colorado
5.178 — Carter Coughlin, EDGE, Minnesota
6.181 — Lamar Jackson, CB, Nebraska
7.237 — Steven Montez, QB, Colorado
7.252 — John Molchon, OL, Boise State
7.254 — John Penisini, DT, Utah

Detroit Lions
1.3 — Jeffrey Okudah, CB, Ohio State
2.35 — D’Andre Swift, RB, Georgia
3.67 — Chase Claypool, WR, Notre Dame
3.85 — Julian Okwara, EDGE, Notre Dame
4.109 — Ben Bredeson, G, Michigan
5.149 — Larrell Murchison, DL, North Carolina State
5.166 — Charlie Heck, OT, North Carolina
6.182 — Braden Mann, P, Texas A&M

Green Bay Packers
1.30 — Jalen Reagor, WR, TCU
2.62 — Jordyn Brooks, LB, Texas Tech
3.94 — Raekwon Davis, DL, Alabama
4.136 — Albert Okwuegbunam, TE, Missouri
5.175 — Alex Taylor, OT, South Carolina State
6.192 — Anthony Gordon, QB, Washington State
6.208 — Julian Blackmon, S, Utah
6.209 — Javon Leake, RB, Maryland
7.236 — Joe Gaziano, DL, Northwestern
7.242 — Levonta Taylor, DB, Florida State

Houston Texans
2.40 — Terrell Lewis, EDGE, Alabama
3.90 — Neville Gallimore, DT, Oklahoma
4.111 — Joshua Kelley, RB, UCLA
5.171 — Shaquille Quarterman, LB, Miami
7.240 — Javelin Guidry, CB, Utah
7.248 — Colton McKivitz, OL, West Virginia
7.250 — Daniel Thomas, S, Auburn

Indianapolis Colts
2.34 — Tee Higgins, WR, Clemson
2.44 — Cole Kmet, TE, Notre Dame
3.75 — Justin Madubuike, DT, Texas A&M
4.122 — Jacob Phillips, LB, LSU
5.160 — Antoine Brooks Jr., S, Maryland
6.193 — Danny Pinter, OL, Ball State
6.197 — James Proche, WR, SMU

Kansas City Chiefs
1.32 — Cesar Ruiz, C, Michigan
2.63 — Cam Akers, RB, Florida State
3.96 — Darrell Taylor, EDGE, Tennessee
4.138 — Josiah Scott, CB, Michigan State
5.177 — A.J. Green, CB, Oklahoma State                                    

Las Vegas Raiders
1.12 — Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama
1.19 — Kenneth Murray, LB, Oklahoma
3.80 — Darrynton Evans, RB, Appalachian State
3.81 — Amik Robertson, CB, Louisiana Tech
3.91 — Terrell Burgess, DB, Utah
4.121 — Ben Bartch, OL, St. John’s
5.159 — Isaiah Hodgins, WR, Oregon State

Los Angeles Chargers
1.6 — Mekhi Becton, OT, Louisville
2.37 — Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon
3.71 — K.J. Hamler, WR, Penn State
4.112 — Eno Benjamin, RB, Arizona State
5.151 — D.J. Wonnum, EDGE, South Carolina
6.186 — Gabriel Davis, WR, UCF
7.220 — Michael Onwenu, G, Michigan

Los Angeles Rams
2.52 — Laviska Shenault Jr., WR, Colorado
2.57 — Bradlee Anae, EDGE, Utah
3.84 — Akeem Davis-Gaither, LB, Appalachian State
3.104 — Jake Fromm, QB, Georgia
4.126 — Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin
6.199 — DeeJay Dallas, RB, Miami
7.234 — Madre Harper, CB, Southern Illinois

Jacksonville Jaguars
1.9 — Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn
1.20 — Trevon Diggs, CB, Alabama
2.42 — A.J. Epenesa, EDGE, Iowa
3.73 — Jacob Eason, QB, Washington
4.116 — Darnay Holmes, DB, UCLA
4.140 — Shane Lemieux, G, Oregon
5.157 — L’Jarius Sneed, DB, Louisiana Tech
5.165 — Francis Bernard, LB, Utah
6.189 — Colby Parkinson, TE, Stanford
6.206 — Trey Adams, OT, Washington
7.223 — Lawrence Cager, WR, Georgia

Miami Dolphins
1.5 — Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama
1.17 — Josh Jones, OT, Houston
1.26 — Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE, Penn State
2.39 — Clyde Edwards-Helaire, RB, LSU
2.56 — Antoine Winfield Jr., S, Minnesota
3.70 — Van Jefferson, WR, Florida
4.141 — Leki Fotu, DT, Utah
5.153 — Netane Muti, G, Fresno State
5.154 — Harrison Hand, CB, Temple
5.173 — Cohl Cabral, C, Arizona State
6.185 — Rashard Lawrence, DT, LSU
7.227 — Kendrick Rogers, WR, Texas A&M
7.246 — Cameron Brown, LB, Penn State
7.251 — Charlie Taumoepeau, TE, Portland State

Minnesota Vikings
1.22 — Jeff Gladney, CB, TCU
1.25 — Austin Jackson, OT, USC
2.58 — Ross Blacklock, DL, TCU
3.89 — Jonathan Greenard, EDGE, Florida
3.105 — Bryan Edwards, WR, South Carolina
4.132 — Geno Stone, S, Iowa
5.155 — John Reid, CB, Penn State
6.201 — Treymayne Anchrum, OL, Clemson
6.205 — JaMycal Hasty, RB, Baylor
7.219 — Cale Garrett, LB, Missouri
7.249 — Cole McDonald, QB, Hawaii
7.253 — Derrek Tuszka, EDGE, North Dakota State

New England Patriots
1.23 — Jordan Love, QB, Utah State
3.87 — Adam Trautman, TE, Dayton
3.98 — Jason Strowbridge, DL, North Carolina
3.100 — Anfernee Jennings, EDGE, Alabama
4.125 — Troy Dye, LB, Oregon
5.172 — Evan Weaver, LB, California
6.195 — Darryl Williams, OL, Mississippi State
6.204 — Thaddeus Moss, TE, LSU
6.212 — Kalija Lipscomb, WR, Vanderbilt
6.213 — Justin Herron, OL, Wake Forest
7.230 — Nick Coe, DL, Auburn
7.235 — Malcolm Perry, WR, Navy
7.241 — Rodrigo Blankenship, K, Georgia

New Orleans Saints
1.24 — Brandon Aiyuk, WR, Arizona State
3.88 — Logan Wilson, LB, Wyoming
4.130 — Anthony McFarland Jr., RB, Maryland
5.169 — Javaris Davis, CB, Auburn
6.203 — Josiah Deguara, TE, Cincinnati

New York Giants
1.4 — Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson
2.36 — Xavier McKinney, S, Alabama
3.99 — Matt Peart, OT, Connecticut
4.110 — Alton Robinson, EDGE, Syracuse
5.150 — Keith Ismael, C, San Diego State
6.183 — Quartney Davis, WR, Texas A&M
7.218 — Solomon Kindley, G, Georgia
7.238 — Jordan Fuller, S, Ohio State
7.247 — Rico Dowdle, RB, South Carolina
7.255 — Trevon Hill, EDGE, Miami

New York Jets
1.11 — CeeDee Lamb, WR, Oklahoma
2.48 — Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU
3.68 — Curtis Weaver, EDGE, Boise State
3.79 — Saahdiq Charles, OT, LSU
4.120 — Alohi Gilman, S, Notre Dame
5.158 — James Morgan, QB, Florida International
6.191 — Isaiah Coulter, WR, Rhode Island
6.211 — Trevis Gipson, EDGE, Tulsa

Philadelphia Eagles
1.21 — Patrick Queen, LB, LSU
2.53 — Cameron Dantzler, CB, Mississippi State
3.103 — K’Von Wallace, DB, Clemson
4.127 — Jauan Jennings, WR, Tennessee
4.145 — Nick Harris, C, Washington
4.146 — Ke’Shawn Vaughn, RB, Vanderbilt
5.168 — Stanford Samuels III, CB, Florida State
6.190 — Jon Runyan, OL, Michigan

Pittsburgh Steelers
2.49 — Jonathan Taylor, RB, Wisconsin
3.102 — Jabari Zuniga, EDGE, Florida
4.124 — Collin Johnson, WR, Texas
4.135 — Damien Lewis, G, LSU
6.198 — DeMarkus Acy, CB, Missouri
7.232 — Casey Toohill, LB, Stanford

San Francisco 49ers
1.13 — Henry Ruggs III, WR, Alabama
1.31 — A.J. Terrell, CB, Clemson
5.156 — Jack Driscoll, OL, Auburn
5.176 — Clay Johnston, LB, Baylor
6.210 — Dalton Keene, TE, Virginia Tech
7.217 — J.R. Reed, S, Georgia
7.245 — Jonathan Garvin, EDGE, Miami

Seattle Seahawks
1.27 — Denzel Mims, WR, Baylor
2.59 — Marlon Davidson, DL, Auburn
2.64 — Prince Tega Wanogho, OT, Auburn
3.101 — Reggie Robinson II, CB, Tulsa
4.133 — Kevin Dotson, G, Louisiana-Lafayette
4.144 — Justin Strnad, LB, Wake Forest
5.162 — Jake Luton, QB, Oregon State
6.214 — Michael Warren II, RB, Cincinnati

Tampa Bay Buccaneers
1.14 — Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia
2.45 — J.K. Dobbins, RB, Ohio State
3.76 — K.J. Hill, WR, Ohio State
4.117 — McTelvin Agim, DL, Arkansas
4.139 — Logan Stenberg, G, Kentucky
5.161 — Tyler Johnson, WR, Minnesota
6.194 — Chauncey Rivers, EDGE, Mississippi State

Tennessee Titans
1.29 — Isaiah Wilson, OT, Georgia
2.61 — Jordan Elliott, DL, Missouri
3.93 — Jalen Hurts, QB, Oklahoma
5.174 — Brycen Hopkins, TE, Purdue
7.224 — Kindle Vildor, CB, Georgia Southern
7.243 — Benny LeMay, RB, Charlotte

Washington Redskins
1.2 — Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State
3.66 — Michael Pittman Jr., WR, USC
4.108 — Michael Ojemudia, CB, Iowa
4.142 — Cameron Clark, OL, Charlotte
7.216 — Jared Pinkney, TE, Vanderbilt
7.229 — Calvin Throckmorton, OL, Oregon


Jason Pruett
DRAFTPLEX

2020 NFL Mock Draft: 1.0 Edition

I took a different path to get this point than in previous years. You could say the same thing about the 2020 NFL Draft.

By now, I’m usually getting ready to drop my third mock draft of the season, but alas, this is only my first. I took the long, slow road to rolling out this year’s content, partly by circumstance, partly by choice. Meanwhile, the rapidly developing global healthcare crisis of COVID-19 has impacted our communities, our nations, and our ways of life dramatically. The draft process and indeed the NFL Draft itself is among the figurative collateral damage incurred in the wake of governmental and organizational efforts to mitigate the spread of the novel coronavirus.

It’s safe to say we’ve not seen a draft season like this before. We were fortunate to power through bowl season, the all-star game circuit, and the NFL Scouting Combine more or less like normal before the process came to a screeching halt prior to most college pro days. And to that end, you can best believe that the 32-team machine that is annually operating on all cylinders isn’t quite humming in the way we’re all used to come April—and we should expect the lingering effects of that anomaly to continue right on through the presentation of the selection meeting in three weeks’ time.

But, even with sea of change that’s currently washing over society, the mocks roll on in advance of draft day.

With that being said, I am pleased to present my 2020 NFL Mock Draft 1.0. These first-round projections are based on the current draft order and my impression of team needs as of April 3, and do not reflect any potential trade scenarios.


1 | Cincinnati Bengals — Joe Burrow, QB, LSU
After capping off perhaps the greatest single-season performance of any college quarterback ever by earning the Heisman Trophy and winning the College Football Playoff National Championship, the trendily anointed ‘Tiger King’ takes yet another top spot—the first overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft.

2 | Washington Redskins — Chase Young, EDGE, Ohio State
If not for the intersection of need and value between the Bengals and Burrow, Young would be the first player of any position drafted—easy. But, the board falls in the favor of the Redskins, who have the rare opportunity to draft a generational talent beyond the first pick.

3 | Detroit Lions — Jeffrey Okudah, CB, Ohio State
The Lions could be a candidate to bail if the right offer comes in from the field for the chance to draft Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. But, since I’m not mocking trades in this edition, they address their deficient secondary with the selection of Okudah.

4 | New York Giants — Isaiah Simmons, LB, Clemson
The prospect of choosing their pick of the top-tier offensive tackles has to be tempting for the Giants. But, the do-everything ability of Simmons would be hard to pass up for franchise that lacks an impact player on defense.

5 | Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama
The alleged “Tanking for Tua” plan didn’t work to perfection for either the Dolphins or the former Crimson Tide signal caller. But, his medicals have checked out and it looks like this seemingly destined match could end up just waiting until pick #5—unless Miami has intentions of moving up for their prospective prime target.

6 | Los Angeles Chargers — Mekhi Becton, OT, Louisville
A quarterback, either Oregon’s Justin Herbert or Utah State’s Jordan Love, is a strong possibility at #6, but I personally think that’s a little rich and maybe a little reckless for an offense that wouldn’t provide much help. Instead, they roll with Tyrod Taylor as a bridge for a year and start building a better foundation for the next QB with the mountainous Mekhi Becton.

7 | Carolina Panthers — C.J. Henderson, CB, Florida
With a new coach, a new quarterback, and a lot of familiar faces departing from their defense, the Panthers are currently about as close as you can get to a clean slate. In this scenario, they tap talented coverman C.J. Henderson as their new cornerstone outside to help combat a division chock full of top receivers.

8 | Arizona Cardinals — Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa
An improved Cardinals team with Kyler Murray behind center was expected to covet a receiver at #8 until they fleeced the Texans for DeAndre Hopkins. So, now they turn their attention to the offensive line, where adding the highly athletic Wirfs would be an immediate upgrade.

9 | Jacksonville Jaguars — Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn
The Jaguars as they stand hardly resemble the team that seemed to be on the verge of joining the AFC’s elite just two seasons ago. But, they might start earning a reputation as a good drafting team if their good fortune of getting a great player to fall right into their lap continues with Brown.

10 | Cleveland Browns — Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia
Stocks were booming for the Browns heading into the season, but they came back down to earth by the end of the campaign. It’s sort of a similar story for Thomas, a talented blocker who was highly thought of throughout the year, then slid down the board really through no fault of his own. He gets the nod over fellow SEC stud Jedrick Wills Jr. here for being a left tackle by trade.

11 | New York Jets — CeeDee Lamb, WR, Oklahoma
The Jets are lacking elite talent in multiple areas, but without a top-flight weapon opposing defenses have to account for in the passing game, they’ll continue to struggle scoring points. Lamb is instant offense for a team that desperately needs it.

12 | Las Vegas Raiders — Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama
The Antonio Brown experiment was a bust in Oakland, leaving the Raiders wanting for a WR1 in their final season by the Bay. Now residing in Sin City, the NFL’s resident bad boys hope to hit the jackpot with Alabama ace Jerry Jeudy.

13 | San Francisco 49ers (via IND) — Henry Ruggs III, WR, Alabama
The 49ers forged an incredible single-season turnaround thanks to a stifling defense, a hard-charging ground game, and a potent short passing attack. Adding the blazing-fast Ruggs to stretch the field could be the piece to put them over the top.

14 | Tampa Bay Buccaneers — Jedrick Wills Jr., OT, Alabama
With TB12 taking his talents to Tampa for what expects to be the twilight of his career, the first order of business for the Buccaneers should be fortifying the offensive line. Wills is an enforcer on the offensive edge.

15 | Denver Broncos — Josh Jones, OT, Houston
The Broncos appear to have the requisite pieces in place behind center and at the skill positions, but their offensive line still requires an overhaul. Jones is a riser in a deep tackle class and would take care of one urgent need up front.

16 | Atlanta Falcons — Javon Kinlaw, DT, South Carolina
I thought long and hard about the possibility of Atlanta drafting a successor to the aging Matt Ryan, and if they were picking deeper in the draft, I might have considered it. That said, while I don’t think they’re quite in the market for a quarterback yet, I do think they would welcome the opportunity to draft the dominating Kinlaw into their defensive front.

17 | Dallas Cowboys — K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE, LSU
With their solid, if unspectacular, offseason moves, Dallas is effectively in a position to draft the best player available at #17. With the top defensive tackles and cornerbacks off the board, the high-upside Chaisson expects to be in the mix to fill a crucial role where the Cowboys are currently heavy on hope and light on options.

18 | Miami Dolphins (via PIT) — Zack Baun, LB, Wisconsin
Back on the clock for the second time, the Dolphins add to their collection of former Badgers, bringing in versatile linebacker Zack Baun to be part playmaker, part pass rusher for a defense that could use both.

19 | Las Vegas Raiders (via CHI) — Kenneth Murray, LB, Oklahoma
With their second call into the commissioner, the Raiders will likely look at addressing their defense. After double-dipping last year with pass rushers and pass defenders, securing a second-level standout in Murray makes sense.

20 | Jacksonville Jaguars (via LAR) — Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon
Upstart sophomore Gardner Minshew is the projected starter, but you wonder if Jacksonville is actually sold on him as the quarterback of the future—or as just a serviceable option for right now. If this scenario were to play out and they were to select Herbert, the answer would be clear.

21 | Philadelphia Eagles — Patrick Queen, LB, LSU
Philadelphia is a popular landing spot for a receiver in most mocks I’ve seen, but they don’t always address first what the consensus declares the most obvious need. With that in mind, pencil in Patrick Queen at #21 as the Eagles start shoring up an alarmingly inadequate linebacker corps.

22 | Minnesota Vikings (via BUF) — Jeff Gladney, CB, TCU
With the mass exodus of cornerbacks from the Minnesota secondary this offseason—Xavier Rhodes, Trae Waynes, Mackensie Alexander—the Vikings need to backfill with a pro-ready presence on the boundary. Gladney is a fierce competitor and fearless in coverage.

23 | New England Patriots — A.J. Epenesa, EDGE, Iowa
With the door effectively closed on their two-decade dynasty with the departure of Tom Brady, the Patriots could begin anew with a young quarterback like Jordan Love. But, consider they ride with second-year signal caller Jarrett Stidham or opt for a late free-agent signing such as Cam Newton or Jameis Winston. Then a powerful pressure generator with position flex could be on the table for a defense short its two top sack leaders from last season.

24 | New Orleans Saints — Trevon Diggs, CB, Alabama
Where some teams force a to reach to fill a need with their top pick, the Saints have the luxury of rounding out a depth chart with theirs—they’re pretty well stocked across the board. Diggs is the choice here, because no team ever has enough quality corners.

25 | Minnesota Vikings — Justin Jefferson, WR, LSU
With their second selection in the first round, the Vikings should look fill the void created by trading receiver Stefon Diggs to the Bills. Justin Jefferson has been steadily climbing draft boards and would be a nice fit for SKOL Nation’s favorite sons.

26 | Miami Dolphins (via HOU) — Austin Jackson, OT, USC
After shipping former left tackle Laremy Tunsil to the Texans, the Dolphins might use the 2020 first-round pick acquired from Houston to draft a replacement. Austin Jackson trades SoCal for South Florida, making it six edge blockers off the board in this first-round scenario.

27 | Seattle Seahawks — Marlon Davidson, DL, Auburn
Offensive line seems like a pressing need for Seattle every year. But, looking at the names on their roster, I feel like they are going to try and patch the holes again using former starters turned spare parts. Alternatively, a disruptive inside-outside addition like Davidson could be in the cards to boost their defensive line rotation.

28 | Baltimore Ravens — Yetur Gross-Matos, EDGE, Penn State
The Ravens have expended a considerable cache of draft capital in recent years to find their next great edge rusher. But, their latest candidate, Matt Judon, is currently on the franchise tag and might only be around for one more season. Gross-Matos could be groomed as a replacement or make for a complementary bookend if Judon sticks around.

29 | Tennessee Titans — Ross Blacklock, DL, TCU
Career Titan Jurrell Casey was traded to Denver in March, leaving a large vacancy in their defensive front line and big veteran shoes to fill. Blacklock is worthy of first-round consideration and might be viewed as a suitable successor.

30 | Green Bay Packers — Jalen Reagor, WR, TCU
Baylor receiver Denzel Mims has been a popular pick for the Pack after making a huge splash at the Senior Bowl and the NFL Scouting Combine. But, the electric Reagor would provide a different kind of skillset for an offense that is already loaded with big, athletic receivers.

31 | San Francisco 49ers — Antoine Winfield Jr., S, Minnesota
With their designated first-round pick, a defensive tackle prospect to replace the traded DeForest Buckner might be the obvious direction. But, I’ll offer the left-field selection of stud safety Antoine Winfield Jr. to push veteran Jaquiski Tartt and role player Tarvarius Moore for starting snaps.

32 | Kansas City Chiefs — Kristian Fulton, CB, LSU
Closing out the first round, the Super Bowl Champions pluck an accomplished pass defender from the College Football Playoff National Champions. Fulton would expect to be a day-one starter at corner as the Chiefs set out to defend their crown.


Jason Pruett
DRAFTPLEX