NFL Draft News & Analysis

2024 NFL Draft Big Board: PFF's top 315 prospects

The 2024 NFL Draft presents an exciting quarterback class full of notable names. It is led by USC's Caleb Williams, the 2022 Heisman Trophy winner and dynamic dual-threat quarterback.

Williams is followed by Ohio State's Marvin Harrison Jr., who likely would have been the best pass catcher in the 2023 NFL Draft. Now as a draft-eligible junior, he's the crown jewel for any team in need of help at the position.

Here are PFF's top 315 draft prospects in the 2024 NFL Draft. For the full ranking of 300-plus players, along with their three-year player grades, position rankings and measurables, click here.

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1. QB Caleb Williams, USC

Williams is an incredibly talented player with natural gifts even other previous QB1s do not have. His issues are more from a lack of consistency than ability in any area. This is a quarterback with franchise-changing talent that is worthy of a No. 1 overall selection.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


2. WR Marvin Harrison Jr., Ohio State

Harrison comes from Hall of Fame bloodlines, and you can see that in his tape without even knowing his last name. He has a truly rare blend of size, speed, strength and football IQ for such a young player. He will be a WR1-caliber player the day he is drafted, and one in the mold of a Tier 1 NFL wideout.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

3. QB Drake Maye, North Carolina

Maye's arm talent alone puts him in the first-round and top-10 conversation. Though his ball placement and decision-making need improvement, he has all the talent tools you want to bet on as a franchise QB.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


4. WR Malik Nabers, LSU

Nabers' movement skills are rare, even for the NFL level. His ability to change direction yet continue to accelerate makes him an open-target specialist in the slot and on the outside. His athleticism demands opposing defenses to account for him at all times. He is a future WR1.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


5. T Joe Alt, Notre Dame

The NFL draft is all about finding players with size, speed and strength who have the IQ to use those traits. That's Joe Alt, and that should spell a top-10 selection as a future long-term tackle.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


6. WR Rome Odunze, Washington

In an offense filled with future NFL players at the skill positions, Odunze was the best of the bunch. If he weren't in a class with Marvin Harrison Jr. and Malik Nabers, we would be talking about him as an easy WR1 and a player worthy of a top-10 pick, although the latter is still true for 2024.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

7. TE Brock Bowers, Georgia

Outside of being on the smaller side, Bowers is a dream tight end prospect who can be an impact player in the slot, out wide and in-line. Add in his reliable blocking ability on the line and in space, and you have an ultimate chess piece offensive weapon with All-Pro potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


8. CB Cooper DeJean, Iowa

The talk of DeJean playing outside cornerback or safety or slot cornerback at the next level is not due to lack of a home position; it's because he could truly be an impact player anywhere. His footwork, ball skills and explosive athleticism make him an impactful outside cornerback — one with All-Pro potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


9. CB Quinyon Mitchell, Toledo

Mitchell put some of the best advanced coverage metrics PFF has ever recorded over a two-year sample size. He has all the ability in the world to be a CB1 at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


10. ED Laiatu Latu, UCLA

Though he's somewhat limited athletically, Latu just lives in the offensive backfield due to his hand usage and pass-rush moves. That will continue to win at the NFL level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


11. DI Jer'Zhan Newton, Illinois

Newton has some physical limitations due to his size and lack of natural flexibility, but his hand usage, pass-rush tools and block-shedding ability allow him to be very productive in any alignment from 3-tech to 5-tech.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

12. DI Byron Murphy II, Texas

Murphy is a gifted defensive lineman in terms of strength and speed. He is a versatile three-down player who brings plus abilities as a run defender and a pass-rusher, projecting as a first-round impact starter for any front.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


13. T Taliese Fuaga, Oregon State

Fuaga's tape is that of a starting NFL offensive lineman, whether at tackle or guard. He brings the powerful mentality needed to stand out in the trenches. He has the adequate length and foot speed, good offensive line IQ and elite strength to succeed at tackle and get a shot there as a first-round pick.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


14. CB Terrion Arnold, Alabama

Arnold isn't the most polished cornerback in this class, but his high-percentile athletic abilities give him as high a ceiling as any cornerback in man or zone systems.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


15. T Troy Fautanu, Washington

Fautanu is a true athlete of an offensive lineman, and he has starting-caliber traits for a center or guard. His movement skills would be a big plus in a zone-blocking scheme.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


16. ED Dallas Turner, Alabama

Although he can continue to improve as a run defender and a tackler, Turner is a first-round type of edge rusher. He has high-ceiling pass-rush traits and has the ability to contribute in Year 1 and beyond.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

Click here to view Dallas Turner's 2024 NFL Draft profile!

17. T Olumuyiwa Fashanu, Penn State

Fashanu is not only incredibly talented; he is also one of the youngest prospects in the 2024 class. He is the type of athlete teams draft in the first round, even if he needs to get stronger to live up to his very high potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


18. T JC Latham, Alabama

Latham is in the mold of an offensive lineman who does not come around often. He will be just 21 years old during his rookie season, yet he has two years of starting experience in the SEC.

Despite drawing 18 penalties over the past two years and having room to improve in some anticipation parts of the position, Latham is a first-round trench player due to his rare combination of size, speed and refinement.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


19. ED Jared Verse, Florida State

Verse doesn't have the longest arms, and that shows up in some pass-rush counters and in tackling, but he brings his hard hat and lunch pail to every snap. He wins with strength regularly and is built like a first-rounder.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


20. T Amarius Mims, Georgia

Mims is not a polished prospect — a level below former teammate and first-round pick Broderick Jones — but he brings sky-high potential. He'll take some developing, but trench players built like this don't make it out of the top 50.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

21. QB Jayden Daniels, LSU

Daniels' rushing ability and fundamentals give him a high floor as a player who can put a ton of stress on a defense. His arm talent is good enough to give him a decently high ceiling and makes him a worthy first-round pick.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


22. WR Adonai Mitchell, Texas

Mitchell's fluidity and size make him a tough matchup for anyone, especially in the red zone. The biggest area of concern is that I wish he attacked the ball more when it was in the air. If he improves in that category, he has fringe WR1/WR2 abilities.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


23. T Graham Barton, Duke

Barton is a tough lineman who moves well, and he has strong hands and a mean streak in the run game. His best position in the NFL is likely at center, as he brings starting-caliber traits there.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


24. CB Nate Wiggins, Clemson

Wiggins has the tools of a first-round, high-impact cornerback. His athleticism and competitiveness will never be in question, and those two characteristics should produce a long-term starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


25. WR Brian Thomas Jr., LSU

Thomas offers a good combination of size and speed to push the ball vertically down the sideline, demanding safeties stay rotated to his side. To truly unlock that kind of threat, he will need to show he can consistently beat press coverage. Offenses that like to push the ball will prioritize what he brings to the table in the top 50.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


26. CB Kool-Aid McKinstry, Alabama

McKinstry plays one of the most difficult positions in the game with so much poise and production. He might not be an elite athlete, but he is one of the smartest cornerback prospects you'll find. He can play in any defensive scheme and is the type of player you draft in the first round.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

Click here to see Kool-Aid McKinstry's 2024 NFL Draft profile!

27. C Jackson Powers-Johnson, Oregon

Powers-Johnson possesses starting-caliber power and finesse traits at center or guard for both zone or man/gap-blocking concepts. He is dominant enough at his position to be considered a top-20 talent.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


28. QB J.J. McCarthy, Michigan

McCarthy is not a finished product, but he is a growing quarterback with experience in a pro-style offense and good tools (physical and mental) to be a starting QB in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

29. WR Troy Franklin, Oregon

Franklin might get lost in the shuffle of a loaded wide receiver class, but he shouldn't. His smoothness comes from his athletic profile and his confidence in knowing how to win at the position. He needs to continue to get stronger, but he is a competitive player who can be a good WR2 for a vertical NFL offense.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


30. LB Payton Wilson, NC State

Wilson has the length, movement skills, IQ and tape of a first-round linebacker. His injury history and age are likely the only things keeping him from being drafted on Day 1. If healthy, he can be a starting inside linebacker in any defense.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


31. S Tyler Nubin, Minnesota

Nubin possesses the athleticism, football IQ and talent as a run-stopper to be a versatile and impactful safety in any scheme. He would likely make the most plays in a system that consistently uses two-deep coverages, allowing him to play free, robber and box safety roles.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


32. WR Ladd McConkey, Georgia

McConkey won't be an “X” jump-ball receiver, but it's still hard to imagine him failing in the NFL. His game is reminiscent of Eddie Royal's. He has devastating quickness and provides a spark in the return game. He is also a strong blocker for a player of his size.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


33. C Zach Frazier, West Virginia

Frazier's background and build give him a high floor as a scheme-versatile center who is worthy of an early Day 2 pick and a starting role.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

34. CB Mike Sainristil, Michigan

Every NFL team would love to have a player like Sainristil. He brings the skill set and mentality of a starting slot cornerback, with safety and special teams versatility to boot. He should be viewed as one of the top “football players” in this draft, regardless of position.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


35. QB Bo Nix, Oregon

Nix's experience is evident in his ability to make pre-snap reads, his performance under pressure and his ability to avoid negative plays. His footwork needs to be more disciplined, and he will take some time to read progressions better in the NFL. However, he is a QB with starting-caliber tools and added out-of-structure playmaking.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


36. QB Michael Penix Jr., Washington

Penix has NFL-level arm talent, two years of good health and top-tier production in a spread-out shotgun offense. To become a consistent starter and top-15 quarterback in the league, he will need to clean up his footwork, throw with more anticipation and touch (which will improve ball placement) and be more willing to attack the middle of the field.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


37. T Jordan Morgan, Arizona

Morgan needs to get stronger — whether he plays tackle or guard in the NFL — but he has desirable athletic traits with fast hands and feet that bolster his starting-caliber potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


38. ED Adisa Isaac, Penn State

If he can pack on some extra pounds for added strength and anchor ability while remaining adequately explosive, he has the handwork and pass-rush profile of an NFL starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


39. T Tyler Guyton, Oklahoma

Guyton is raw, but there aren't many offensive linemen who have a better athletic mold. He has starting-caliber NFL gifts but must eliminate negatives in both the run and pass games to succeed at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


40. ED Chop Robinson, Penn State

Regardless of his lack of polish, Robinson is a gifted player athletically — likely on a level that is top of the class. A lot of what leaves you wanting more from Robinson is coachable. If he can take his game to that next level, he can become a dominant edge defender.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

41. WR Keon Coleman, Florida State

Coleman is a top-tier receiver from an explosiveness standpoint. His burst, top speed and leaping ability are All-Pro caliber. However, the lack of agility in his game limits his route tree and ability to separate from defensive backs. Those who love those alpha-type receivers will be big fans, but his inability to consistently separate means he won't be for everyone.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


42. WR Roman Wilson, Michigan

If this were a different receiver class, Wilson would be much higher on these rankings. He not only brings NFL-level speed but also NFL-level determination at the catch point and as a blocker. His tape shows a player coaches would love to have.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

43. TE Ja'Tavion Sanders, Texas

Sanders is a Tier 1 athlete for the tight end position. He is still mastering the nuances of tight end play, and he needs more of a consistent mean streak as a blocker. But even with those concerns, what he brings to the table as a vertical threat is worth a top-50 pick.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

Click here to see Ja'Tavion Sanders' 2024 NFL Draft Profile!

44. DI Braden Fiske, Florida State

Fiske's measurements are not ideal, but he has an NFL-level football IQ and pass-rush quickness to be a potential impact player as a 4-3 defensive tackle.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


45. WR Ricky Pearsall, Florida

Pearsall won't intimidate defenders at the line of scrimmage, but he will once the ball is snapped. He is a ready-made slot receiver who can contribute early in his NFL career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


46. CB Ennis Rakestraw Jr., Missouri

Rakestraw possesses a high football IQ and does great work in off-coverage when he can anticipate with space. He is a quick and controlled cornerback who will provide reliability as a run defender. His traits are worthy of a top-50 draft pick, but his lack of production might mean that he falls out of that range.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


47. S Javon Bullard, Georgia

Bullard is a versatile secondary player with a fearless mentality. Though he isn't an elite athlete, his competitiveness, quickness and tackling ability project him to a starting role as a nickel defender.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


48. WR Ja'Lynn Polk, Washington

Polk is a limited route runner, but he is also one of the best “go up and get it” contested-catch receivers in this class (and that is really saying something). His knack for making big plays should always get him on an NFL roster in some capacity.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


49. HB Jonathon Brooks, Texas

Brooks is an ideal blend of size, speed, strength and agility. Though limited in snap totals, he has good vision in both gap and zone run schemes. If he can get back to form following his torn ACL, he has all the goods to be a starting running back in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

50. DI Kris Jenkins, Michigan

Jenkins is one of the strongest players in the entire draft class, but his arm-length limitations and lack of pass-rush profile will likely limit his draft stock to a mid-to-late Day 2 selection. However, his high floor gives him the potential to start in a 4-3 scheme.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


51. CB T.J. Tampa, Iowa State

Tampa's unique fluidity and size for a cornerback make him worthy of a top-75 pick. If he can clean up his footwork, he can be a starting outside cornerback with the potential to be an impact player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


52. HB Blake Corum, Michigan

Corum was not as efficient in the individual metrics of running back play after his meniscus tear, but the traits of an effective back were present in 2023, especially toward the end of the season. He lacks elite overall athleticism, but he is precise, sees the field well, has good contact balance, and brings good third-down abilities, which should yield a contributing role in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

53. WR Xavier Legette, South Carolina

Leggette does not have too much experience as the focal point of a passing attack, but 2023 showed he is capable of that. He is not as polished as a route runner/release artist as he needs to be to achieve his potential at the NFL level, but teams take a chance on players of his build.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


54. S Jaden Hicks, Washington State

Hicks is a well-built strong safety who can play at all three levels of the field. He is a tone-setting tackler with starting potential in two-safety systems, especially as a strong safety/robber over the middle.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


55. ED Jonah Elliss, Utah

Elliss will have to get stronger if he is to continue being the difference-maker he was in 2023. If he can add weight while remaining as quick and flexible, he can be an impactful pass-rusher.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


56. CB Kamari Lassiter, Georgia

Lassiter is a competitive, scheme-versatile cornerback who can succeed in both man and zone assignments. While he isn't the best athlete at the position, he makes up for it in many ways, including through instincts and anticipation. He projects as a priority Day 2 selection as a future CB2.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


57. T Kiran Amegadjie, Yale

It's tricky to project a player's transition from the FCS level, but Amegadjie is a starting-caliber lineman who has the tools and the tape to be a worthwhile investment in the top 50.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


58. ED Chris Braswell, Alabama

Even if he doesn't become a pass-rush technician, Braswell's power, speed and length give him the floor of a rotational pass-rusher and the ceiling of an impact starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


59. LB Edgerrin Cooper, Texas A&M

Cooper has the length and athleticism to be a starting-caliber linebacker in a downhill role. However, his lack of anticipation and instincts for deeper coverage work will likely keep him from being picked in the first round.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

60. G Christian Haynes, UConn

Haynes showed in his tape and at the Senior Bowl that he has starting-potential measurables and traits for an NFL guard. His best work comes on the move, which would bode well for a zone-blocking scheme and as a puller for man/gap schemes.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


61. ED Darius Robinson, Missouri

Robinson is a powerful defensive lineman who can line up anywhere from 0- to 7-technique. He won't win with speed as much at the next level, but he certainly can with power. His strength profile projects to a rotational role as a floor with starting potential if he can continue to hone in on his pass-rush plans.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


62. WR Malachi Corley, Western Kentucky

Corley is pretty raw in the nuances of playing receiver (release footwork, route tree and how to get off contact). Nonetheless, those are all things he can learn. If he does, he is a true weapon with the ball in his hands.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


63. ED Marshawn Kneeland, Western Michigan

Kneeland's competition wasn't the best, but he absolutely dominated it, especially in 2023. NFL teams will love his passion for physicality. He has the body, explosiveness and mentality of an NFL contributor.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


64. CB Andru Phillips, Kentucky

Phillips' physical profile makes him an interesting cornerback for a team that likes to play a lot of press coverage. He projects as a mid-round rotation player early in his career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


65. DI Brandon Dorlus, Oregon

Though a bit of a tweener, Dorlus has 3-4 and 4-3 versatility with a strong power profile to be a rotational player and potential spot starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


66. T Kingsley Suamataia, BYU

Suamataia is a dream Day 2 prospect for a team to draft and develop. I worry about him being baptized by fire if he is drafted in the first round and called upon to start right away.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


67. DI Ruke Orhorhoro, Clemson

Orhorhoro is a versatile defensive lineman who can be a high-floor player at defensive end or defensive tackle. However, he needs to develop technical pass-rush moves to be more than a rotational player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


68. HB Jaylen Wright, Tennessee

Wright is an NFL-caliber athlete. His youth is both a positive (lack of mileage) and a negative (lack of consistent RB vision), but he has succeeded in gap- and zone-blocking concepts. He also boasts top-tier pass-blocking ability, giving him three-down potential in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


69. WR Xavier Worthy, Texas

Worthy must be identified pre-snap in all situations due to how easily he can take a pass to the house if he is not accounted for. If he can get stronger and learn to be a better hand fighter, he can be an impact pass-catcher as a WR2/3.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

70. T Brandon Coleman, TCU

Coleman is the ideal developmental offensive line prospect. He has high-percentile athleticism and measurables, which give him the ceiling of an NFL starter if he can improve his fundamentals.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


71. LB Junior Colson, Michigan

Colson's background and journey to this point are inspiring. He has the size and football IQ to play in the NFL. He is a good but not great athlete, which will likely make him a Day 2 pick as a rotational 4-3 linebacker with starting potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


72. CB Max Melton, Rutgers

Melton is an intriguing cornerback prospect because the slot might be his best role in the NFL. He does bring a lot of experience on the outside, though. Melton projects as a priority Day 3 pick with inside-outside versatility.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

73. T Blake Fisher, Notre Dame

Fisher has the power to play at the NFL level but needs to get quicker to his landmarks. He also needs to be more patient and balanced in his strikes to avoid being susceptible to NFL-level speed rushers. At an ideal age, he has starter potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


74. WR Jermaine Burton, Alabama

Burton brings a fiery approach to the position. As long as his size doesn't cause him to be pushed around, he has elite quickness to win against press- and off-coverage as a flanker or slot.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


75. HB Trey Benson, Florida State

Benson brings NFL build and athleticism to the table in all categories of explosiveness, but he is too focused on his athletic abilities and needs more patience in order to maximize his athletic gifts and be more than a committee running back.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


76. WR Devontez Walker, North Carolina

Walker is not a polished product, but at 6-foot-2 and 200 pounds, he has the foot speed and vertical ability to put a lot of stress on defenses. His most pressing issue is his reliability as a pass-catcher. If he shores that up, he can become a good vertical threat.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


77. QB Spencer Rattler, South Carolina

Rattler has a mature game, with sound fundamentals and pocket presence, as well as good accuracy in and out of structure. His arm is adequate, but he needs to improve when it comes to seeing additional coverage defenders post-snap. He projects as a Day 2 quarterback with starting potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


78. WR Javon Baker, UCF

Baker can be a solid WR3 for a vertical offense that likes to attack down the sidelines. His long-speed limitations hurt his ability to separate, but he is a competitive contested-catch receiver.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


79. HB Bucky Irving, Oregon

Irving might not look like a running back teams will automatically covet on draft weekend, but his tape shows an incredibly efficient player in both the running game and passing game.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


80. WR Johnny Wilson, Florida State

It's hard to watch Wilson's tape and not be intrigued enough to take him at the back end of Day 2. He has some frustrating drops on tape, but there is so much more to like, including how well he moves for a player of his size.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


81. S Calen Bullock, USC

Bullock's lack of strength will limit how much an NFL team can trust him to play early in his career. But if he can get stronger, he possesses elite range as an impactful single-high safety for any defense, especially for Cover 3 and Cover 1 systems.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


82. HB Ray Davis, Kentucky

Davis might not have the build and long speed of a top-50 player, but his vision, feel for space/blocking and one-cut ability make him an efficient ball carrier with good hands in the passing game. This should make him a mid-round selection and potential starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


83. ED Xavier Thomas, Clemson

Thomas is a true low-floor, high-ceiling prospect. He is on the older side, but his natural athletic gifts are still worth taking a chance on, especially for teams in need of a 3/4 pass-rushing specialist.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


84. HB Marshawn Lloyd, USC

Lloyd is a starting-caliber athlete. If he can improve his vision to see space before it opens up, he can be an impact starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


85. WR Jalen McMillan, Washington

Washington continued to prioritize McMillan in its passing attack, even with players like Rome Odunze and Ja'Lynn Polk on the roster. His nuances give him a high floor as a WR2/3.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


86. ED Jalyx Hunt, Houston Christian

Hunt lacks nuance for the position (whether that is in natural leverage, stance or block shedding) but that can all be improved. He has explosiveness, length and power that you can't teach, so he is worth drafting in the middle rounds to develop as a 3-4 outside linebacker,

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


87. CB Khyree Jackson, Oregon

Jackson is an alluring prospect because his size and athletic combination don't come around often. However, he must anticipate routes better and try not to rely on his recovery speed as much. If he can do this, he can be a starting-caliber cornerback.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


88. ED Austin Booker, Kansas

Booker is an alluring prospect because of his pass-rushing style, but his lack of weight is a concern. To mitigate that at the NFL level, he must play with a better pad level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


89. CB Renardo Green, Florida State

Green is a calm and confident man-coverage cornerback with CB2 potential for a team that likes to play press coverage.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


90. WR Malik Washington, Virginia

Washington is a tough assignment in the slot due to how fast he accelerates and his ability to create separation with quick changes of direction. He is a slot-only type of receiver due to his lack of size and strength, but he is tough to cover.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

91. ED Javon Solomon, Troy

His length could prove to be a limiting factor for his potential in the NFL, but his athletic ability should yield a rotational pass-rush role at worst. He has the potential to eventually play an impact role as a top-100 pick.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


92. TE Erick All, Iowa

Although his game could use a bit more nastiness, this is a player with a versatile, contributing skill set who projects as a TE2 at the next level if he can stay healthy.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


93. G Cooper Beebe, Kansas State

Beebe's high football IQ should lead to a long NFL career. Unfortunately, his athletic shortcomings will likely limit that career to that of a backup swing lineman.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


94. S Dadrion Taylor-Demerson, Texas Tech

Taylor-Demerson sees the back end of coverage with excellent vision and anticipation. However, his overall play speed must improve if he is to make plays at the NFL level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


95. G Mason McCormick, South Dakota State

McCormick pairs a mauling mentality with explosive athleticism. His hips are a tad stiff, which limits his flexibility, but he has the potential to be a starter in a zone-blocking scheme.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


96. LB Jeremiah Trotter Jr., Clemson

Trotter is an incredibly smart linebacker who consistently puts himself in the right positions. However, his lack of length, size and explosiveness limit his NFL potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


97. QB Michael Pratt, Tulane

Pratt's clean fundamentals and impressive touch throws make him an intriguing quarterback, even though he has smaller measurables. His arm strength limits his ability to push the ball vertically, but he has a good enough feel for the game to garner a potential starter label.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


98. ED Bralen Trice, Washington

This is a powerful edge player who will never shy away from the contact trench play demands. You might have to align him a bit wider to unlock his disruption potential, but he is an NFL-caliber player and should be picked in the top 50.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


99. T Roger Rosengarten, Washington

Rosengarten is worth a Day 3 flier as a developmental, athletic offensive tackle. He lacks the power necessary to survive at the NFL level in his current state.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


100. C Sedrick Van Pran, Georgia

Despite some athletic limitations, Van Pran is a high-IQ center prospect whose acumen, experience and physical mentality warrant a shot at a starting role (center only) in a man/gap-heavy scheme.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


101. T Patrick Paul, Houston

Paul's size alone makes him worth betting on, and the improvement in his fundamentals from 2022 to 2023 was encouraging. He has the frame of a starting-caliber offensive tackle but does need to get quicker and more fundamentally sound — particularly with his hands and feet — to become a reliable long-term lineman.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


102. HB Tyrone Tracy, Purdue

Tracy is a natural playmaker with adequate athleticism (explosiveness and agility) for a zone-blocking scheme. He must continue to improve how he sees blocks/space if he is to be a consistent rotational player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


103. TE Cade Stover, Ohio State

Stover is a well-rounded, well-versed football player whose natural athletic ability and fundamentally sound approach to the position should make him a high-floor role player with TE1 potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


104. T Dominick Puni, Kansas

Puni improved significantly from 2022 to 2023. If he continues on his current trajectory, he has the power profile and size to earn a rotational role at guard.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


105. TE Ben Sinnott, Kansas State

Sinnott is a true jack-of-all-trades tight end who can line up in the backfield, on the line of scrimmage and at receiver. His game lacks a true trump card, but he's the type of versatile role player every NFL team wants in their tight end room.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


106. G Christian Mahogany, Boston College

Mahogany is a guard only and a powerful run-blocker with inconsistencies in the passing game. He projects into a rotational and potential starting role for a team that is heavier in the run game in mostly man/gap concepts.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


107. DI Michael Hall Jr., Ohio State

Hall's measurements make him a tough player to slot into a specific scheme, but due to how quickly he can win with finesse on the interior, his best spot in the league is likely as a DT/DE in a versatile 4-3 front. His pass-rush abilities give him the chance to be a productive pass-rush specialist.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


108. TE Jared Wiley, TCU

Wiley has an ideal size/athleticism combination to be a contributing TE2/3 at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


109. S Kamren Kinchens, Miami Fl

Kinchens is a solid all-around athlete with a good eye for where quarterbacks are going with the ball. He possesses great ball skills to come down with interceptions when he anticipates throws. A little lighter in size, he is projected as a potential starter at free safety.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


110. CB Caelen Carson, Wake Forest

Carson lacks the long speed/recovery speed to play island coverage. He can be a CB2/3 as an off-coverage defender in a zone-heavy scheme, bringing good downhill closing speed and reliable tackling.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

111. C Hunter Nourzad, Penn State

Nourzard presents a well-rounded skill set and high-floor fundamentals for almost any offense, though he must get stronger to really garner a full-time starting role in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


112. WR Jamari Thrash, Louisville

Thrash is a good all-around athlete who has a knack for setting defenders up to create subtle separation near the sideline.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


113. CB Jarrian Jones, Florida State

It took a while for Jones to find a home at slot cornerback, but since doing so, he has shown valuable skills that should translate to the NFL. His quickness, both physically and mentally, projects well to the slot as a rotational defensive back or nickel starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


114. HB Blake Watson, Memphis

Watson is an alluring athlete out of the backfield, both as a rusher and a receiver. He should earn the versatile “offensive weapon” label with the potential to be an NFL contributor.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


115. ED Brennan Jackson, Washington State

Jackson has the power profile and effort of an early rotational 4-3 defensive end with the potential to be a starter at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


116. HB Isaiah Davis, South Dakota State

Davis brings a finesse game in a power frame. If he can run with more violence from north to south, he can be a reliable option in a two-back offense.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


117. WR Jacob Cowing, Arizona

If creating a separation window for your quarterback is the name of the game, not many (if any) do it better than Cowing. His NFL role will be niche in the slot, but there is a world where he can be a very productive player, as he has been his entire college football career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


118. S Tykee Smith, Georgia

NFL teams that like to stack the box and be more aggressive on the line of scrimmage will be drawn to Smith's power when setting the edge in run defense. Ultimately, his lack of long speed could cause him issues in coverage.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


119. WR Ainias Smith, Texas A&M

Teams looking for an underneath slot receiver who wins with suddenness, savviness and blocking while contributing on special teams will have Smith's name on their list. That likely yields Day 2 value on draft weekend.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


120. T Matt Goncalves, Pittsburgh

Goncalves' 2023 season was cut short due to a season-ending torn ACL. He won't “wow” with athleticism or length, but he's a solid prospect who has the chance to be a starter at tackle or guard in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


121. HB Braelon Allen, Wisconsin

Allen is a super-sized running back prospect, and he will likely be a mid-round pick due to that and his age alone. However, his decision-making and feel for space leave much to be desired.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

122. DI T'Vondre Sweat, Texas

Sweat has the ideal size. At his best, he's an impact, versatile interior defensive player, but weight and conditioning will determine how often he can make an impact.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


123. HB Audric Estime, Notre Dame

Estime's power profile should yield some sort of committee work at the NFL level, as he is built for it. However, his lack of finesse and speed likely pigeonholes him as a short-yardage specialist.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


124. S Sione Vaki, Utah

If he is fully committed to playing running back in the NFL, he has the physical gifts, athletic ability and playmaker's vision to be a contributing player out of the backfield.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


125. WR Brenden Rice, USC

Rice‘s name will come with high expectations, but in terms of how he plays the position, his ability to win as a route runner is better than most of the receivers in this class. His high football intelligence should enable him to be a high-floor player in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


126. G Trevor Keegan, Michigan

Keegan is smart and experienced, and he brings coordination, balance and explosiveness as an ideal guard in a man/gap scheme. He lacks true power and body density, which complicates his projection, but he does have starting-caliber traits.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


127. LB Tommy Eichenberg, Ohio State

Eichenberg is a strong-side linebacker who can find work in an early-down role as a MIKE/SAM, specifically in a 4-3 defense. However, due to his lack of lateral mobility, you won't want him operating in coverage in late-down, sub-package situations.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


128. C Tanor Bortolini, Wisconsin

Bortolini brings an alluring combination of versatility, high football IQ and top-tier athleticism. He has starter qualities, but his lack of length could be a deal-breaker.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


129. WR Tahj Washington, USC

Washington‘s size will likely limit his playing time at the next level, but he could be an ideal WR4/5 as a nice depth piece and slot receiver on offense in addition to a return man/punt coverage gunner on special teams.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


130. CB Kris Abrams-Draine, Missouri

Abrams-Draine has a lower weight percentile and is still learning the nuances and anticipation required to play the position at a high level, but he is a fluid athlete with a knack for making plays on the ball. He projects as a CB3 with CB2 potential in a zone-based defense, and he brings special teams experience.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


131. DI Mekhi Wingo, LSU

Wingo's shorter arms and legs limit his efficacy and versatility. He will likely be limited between the 2i and 4i alignments in a 4-3 scheme. However, his quickness and consistent hand placement can lead to some success as a rotational pass-rusher in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


132. S Cole Bishop, Utah

Bishop has starting potential as a strong safety and slot defender, but he must work on his overaggressive tendencies and lack of patience in zone.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


133. LB Jordan Magee, Temple

Magee approaches the middle linebacker position like he is the quarterback of the defense (he played QB in high school). He is fast and tough, and he communicates well. However, he is on the smaller side in height, weight and length, which could limit full-time opportunities.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


134. CB Jarvis Brownlee, Louisville

Brownlee is a competitive player who will be coveted by teams that run press coverage, but his middling long speed is a concern when it comes to him defending vertical routes from NFL athletes.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


135. TE Theo Johnson, Penn State

Johnson brings alluring size to the position, as he plus length for blocking and pass-catching. He is a developmental tight end who runs good vertical routes and thrives when blocking, but he needs to be more consistent in both areas.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


136. DI DeWayne Carter, Duke

Carter isn't an elite physical presence, but he is a versatile, smart and consistent in both the run and pass games. He projects as a high-floor rotational player with starting potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


137. T Isaiah Adams, Illinois

Adams is still a developmental guard prospect. Moving to guard will mitigate some of his biggest issues, as he has the size and movement skills to be a potential starter in a zone-blocking scheme.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


138. LB Marist Liufau, Notre Dame

Liufau is a powerful downhill linebacker who attacks ball carriers and blockers with bad intentions. His instincts and feel for spot zone coverage still need work if he is to be relied upon consistently. He is projected as a contributing inside linebacker for either a 4-3 or 3-4 defense.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


139. ED Mohamed Kamara, Colorado State

Kamara's measurables limit his finesse pass-rush potential and ceiling. However, he can be a stout depth defensive lineman because he enjoys the physical aspect of the position.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

140. DI Maason Smith, LSU

Smith is a physically gifted prospect, but he will need to develop. He has to speed up his play—both in recognition and movements—to be more than a rotational player with plus size.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


141. DI Leonard Taylor III, Miami Fl

When Taylor is on, he possesses the power and explosive athletic ability to be an impact player. We don't see that enough, though. He is a young, hot-and-cold interior defensive lineman — and a talent worth drafting in the top 100.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


142. T Caedan Wallace, Penn State

Wallace has a lot of experience and good athleticism. His versatility makes him an ideal swing tackle.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


143. CB Chau Smith-Wade, Washington State

Smith-Wade is the manifestation of the phrase “It's not the size of the dog in the fight but the size of the fight in the dog.” His lack of NFL measurables limits his potential as an outside cornerback, but his short-area movement could yield a starting role in the slot.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


144. WR Isaiah Williams, Illinois

Williams is a specific type of small slot receiver, but one whose quickness can make him a tough speed matchup against slower nickel defenders. He has WR4/5 potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


145. HB Will Shipley, Clemson

Shipley can bring a lot of versatility to a team as a runner, receiver and special teamer. He is elusive and quick with a skill set fit for a zone-blocking scheme, but right now, his lack of strength and power hold him back from being a true offensive weapon.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


146. WR Luke McCaffrey, Rice

McCaffrey is a big slot type of receiver with the route-running chops to make up for decent athleticism. His reliable hands in traffic make him a good depth receiver and a potential WR3 in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


147. WR Cornelius Johnson, Michigan

Johnson seems more talented than his production suggests. His NFL role is likely that of a WR4 or WR5.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


148. S Malik Mustapha, Wake Forest

Mustapha has a tone-setting skill set and mentality as a throwback strong safety. He does not have the fluidity or long speed to be relied upon in single-high roles, but his toughness, power and motor make him an ideal depth safety to draft and develop.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


149. ED Gabriel Murphy, UCLA

Murphy is lacking in physical gifts, but he mitigates that with fantastic hand usage and a wisdom of what works as a pass-rusher. He can find a rotational contributing role as an on-ball outside linebacker in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


150. LB Cedric Gray, North Carolina

Gray is an adequate athlete for WILL linebacker responsibilities, but his play recognition must improve to become an NFL starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

151. CB Myles Harden, South Dakota

Harden doesn't have much experience in the slot, but a nickel role would emphasize his strengths (quickness, run support and competitiveness) and mitigate his NFL concerns (long speed and length). He could be a starting nickel at some point.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


152. WR Jha'Quan Jackson, Tulane

Jackson is primarily a slot receiver and despite some size limitations, he has the production on a per-snap basis and big-play ability to carve out an NFL career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


153. CB D.J. James, Auburn

James brings the competitiveness and mentality you want from a cornerback. His lack of top speed and strength likely limit him to a rotational or spot-starter role.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


154. T Christian Jones, Texas

Jones has a ton of experience, good length and good linear athleticism for zone-blocking schemes. However, he still has some bad tendencies to clean up before he can be considered a rotational or starting tackle in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


155. TE Jaheim Bell, Florida State

Bell is undoubtedly a roster depth piece because of the many roles he can play. He needs to develop a better feel for zone coverage as a receiver, and he needs to maintain better blocks.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


156. CB Cam Hart, Notre Dame

Overall, Hart has ideal length and experience to play as a mid-round off-coverage cornerback in a zone-heavy system.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


157. TE Dallin Holker, Colorado State

Holker is a well-rounded, versatile tight end who can be a good depth piece to pay in multi-tight end offenses, but he likely lacks the top-tier athleticism to be a TE1.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


158. DI Tyler Davis, Clemson

Davis has the football intelligence and mentality of a depth/rotational defensive lineman for any front. His physical limitations hinder his pass-rush efficacy and block shedding, but because of his intangibles, he could still become a spot starter at some point.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


159. HB Jaden Shirden, Monmouth

Shirden is a high-speed processor with quick feet and good burst to be a potential speed back in a rotation behind zone-blocking schemes.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


160. WR Jalen Coker, Holy Cross

Coker will have to overcome his limited athleticism, but he is a smart and versatile route runner with reliable hands. He should be a draft-and-develop WR4/5.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


161. WR Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint, Georgia

Rosemy-Jacksaint lacks difference-making NFL athleticism, but he is a determined, intelligent player who can round out a receiver room with special teams experience to boot. Expect him to be a priority Day 3 depth player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


162. WR Jordan Whittington, Texas

Whittington projects as a slot receiver at the NFL level, one with a thicker build for yards after the catch and contact. Unfortunately, his extensive injury history may factor into his limited athletic profile. Nonetheless, he has been healthy the last two seasons and can be a versatile depth player at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


163. G Zak Zinter, Michigan

Zinter's movement limitations will likely limit him to man/gap schemes if he is to be successful at the next level, but he does have sufficient power to get a shot at a starting role at some point in such systems.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


164. ED Javontae Jean-Baptiste, Notre Dame

There are flashes of impactful speed-rush elements that pave the way for Jean-Baptiste to become a pass-rush specialist as a 3-4 outside linebacker in the NFL. He must get stronger if he wants to become more than that.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


165. ED Nelson Ceaser, Houston

Ceasar projects as a versatile outside linebacker who can be productive in a rotational role in late-down situations.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


166. CB Decamerion Richardson, Mississippi State

Richardson is a good athlete to bet on early on Day 3, but he has to anticipate better to remain in control down the field and to get his hands on the football every now and then.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


167. QB Jordan Travis, Florida State

Travis is a good athlete, a tough competitor and a QB with great intangibles for out-of-structure plays. His follow-through fundamentals are a mess, likely due to him needing more power on most throws, which leads to inconsistencies. He is a developmental quarterback who will be a fan favorite no matter where he goes (likely on Day 3).

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


168. LB Trevin Wallace, Kentucky

Wallace is a top-tier athlete for the position, but he must improve his anticipation and recognition in order to truly be a difference-maker with his physical gifts.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


169. ED Braiden McGregor, Michigan

McGregor has the mindset of a future NFL player to stick around in the league in a 3-4 scheme but may lack the length and strength needed to ever be a consistent starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

170. WR Anthony Gould, Oregon State

Gould's speed will give him a shot in the NFL as a depth receiver and a special teams player. He projects as a slot-only player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


171. T Walter Rouse, Oklahoma

Rouse is an experienced and well-built offensive tackle prospect with good size, length and football intelligence for a man/gap run scheme. In pass protection, he must improve his foot speed and consistency with leverage in order to become a starter at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


172. S Kitan Oladapo, Oregon State

Oladapo was one of college football's best run-defending safeties in 2023. His ability as a tackler gives him a chance to make an impact right away on special teams and in a rotational role.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


173. CB Kamal Hadden, Tennessee

If you draft by the motto of “just draft talented players and let the coaches do the rest,” Hadden will be a top-100 player. However, the honest assessment is he still has a ways to go in his run-defense and press-coverage techniques before he can showcase his physical gifts in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


174. C Beaux Limmer, Arkansas

Limmer is an experienced offensive lineman with consistent fundamentals, especially hand placement and leverage. He could use more weight to anchor better, but he should be a good depth player with starting potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


175. LB JD Bertrand, Notre Dame

Bertrand is a tough, smart and competitive prospect, albeit undersized, who projects as a rotational/backup inside linebacker for 4-3 or 3-4 schemes.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


176. HB Cody Schrader, Missouri

Schrader may lack the overall athleticism/size to be a consistent difference-maker beyond his offensive line, but he has everything else you'd want to try to make up for it: vision, elusiveness, determination and a physical running style.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


177. CB Kalen King, Penn State

Although King has a lot of athletic potential at outside cornerback, his anticipation, instincts and technique are too inconsistent. He projects as a mid-round prospect who needs time to develop, but he offers a starting-caliber ceiling.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


178. LB Steele Chambers, Ohio State

Chambers plays the position with aggression and decisiveness to be an inside linebacker for 3-4 fronts, but he may just simply lack the overall size required to be a starter at the NFL level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


179. T Javon Foster, Missouri

Foster has good length and experience to be a preferred backup offensive tackle in a zone-blocking scheme with enough dependability to be considered a potential starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


180. CB Nehemiah Pritchett, Auburn

Pritchett's quickness and special teams experience make him a cornerback to draft and develop. But unless he gets stronger, it will be tough to keep him on the field in a full-time role in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


181. T KT Leveston, Kansas State

Leveston has the build, strength and movement ability of a starting guard in the NFL, but his hand work must improve.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


182. P Tory Taylor, Iowa

Taylor earned a 73.0-plus punting grade in four straight seasons. Coming off a season that saw him rank 11th in the nation with a PFF punting grade of 81.4, he is an NFL-level punter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


183. HB Kimani Vidal, Troy

Vidal is a rocked-up, explosive athlete, but his vision for space needs to speed up for him to earn a rotational role in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


184. S Josh Proctor, Ohio State

Proctor has lined up in the slot, in the box and as a deep safety. He's a better run defender than he is in coverage, but at a minimum, he is capable of sticking around on special teams in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


185. ED Myles Cole, Texas Tech

Six-year players with limited production don't often come packed with potential, but Cole breaks the mold. His length and athleticism give him front versatility, and if he can gain some extra power and hone in on pass-rush moves, he can be a contributing player in some way.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


186. WR Tayvion Robinson, Kentucky

Robinson is an NFL-caliber athlete for a slot receiver, but he is a very inconsistent player in a handful of categories. He is a nice draft-and-develop option for Day 3.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


187. ED Grayson Murphy, UCLA

Murphy's speed and strength are not imposing, but he is a more advanced pass-rusher with good initial pass-rush moves and run-defense fundamentals, making him a good depth option.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


188. LB Darius Muasau, UCLA

Muasau plays a style of linebacker every defensive coach will love, but he needs to add more strength and must anticipate with more regularity to make up for outlier measurables to be more than a special teamer.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


189. CB Josh Newton, TCU

Newton's 2022 season was much better than his 2023 season, during which he primarily played as a press-man coverage defender. Depending on which facet teams believe in more, he could be drafted anywhere from the second to the fifth round.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

190. HB Isaac Guerendo, Louisville

Guerendo has an NFL-level floor as a third-down back. He must continue to improve his vision and decisiveness to become an early-down contributor.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


191. LB Ty'Ron Hopper, Missouri

Despite his less impressive measurables, Hopper is a good athlete with potential as a coverage defender and pass-rusher. His play speed is a pro and a con for him. If he can be more appropriate about when to turn on the jets and when to be patient, he could be a contributing linebacker and special teams standout.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


192. CB Johnny Dixon, Penn State

Dixon might be a rotational matchup specialist against smaller receivers in the NFL. He is fiery in his approach to the position and possesses adequate agility for the NFL level. If he can become a more reliable tackler, he certainly has the coverage skills to see the field in some capacity.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


193. S Beau Brade, Maryland

Brade's biggest issue is his tackling, as he's missed at least 19.0% of his tackle attempts over the last two seasons. He'll have to improve that if he wants to stay in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


194. G Javion Cohen, Miami Fl

Cohen gives you the power you're looking for as an NFL guard in a man/gap run scheme. To get and keep a starting role, he needs to improve flexibility and anticipation to improve his balance and become a more reliable pass protector.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


195. DI Logan Lee, Iowa

Lee has a unique build and skill set, and a move to edge defender might be in his future. But if you get get a bit more weight on him, he has the quickness and effort to be a potential rotational contributor in an even front as a 3-technique defensive tackle.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


196. ED Jaylen Harrell, Michigan

Harrell's smaller size and lack of power limit his ceiling as a pass-rusher, but he does have the speed game to be a pass-rushing specialist at outside linebacker for a 3-4 defense. He may enter the NFL as an edge rusher, but he might end up finding a better role as an off-ball linebacker.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


197. ED Justin Eboigbe, Alabama

Eboigbe brings valuable size and length to the defensive line, and though he likely won't be a consistent pass-rush presence, his strength and size in the run game make for a high-floor, mid-round player who can be scheme versatile.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


198. LB Michael Barrett, Michigan

Barrett is a natural football player, but he's too small to play linebacker and not athletic enough to play safety. He projects as a potential special teams ace with some defensive responsibilities in dime situations.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


199. HB Rasheen Ali, Marshall

Ali has good vision and one-cut ability to succeed as a depth player in a zone-blocking scheme.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


200. CB Dwight McGlothern, Arkansas

McGlothern has some fantastic ball production thanks to top-tier instincts in off-coverage, but his freelancing is a gift and a curse. He's a true boom-or-bust player, not just for his career but on a play-by-play basis.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


201. S Trey Taylor, Air Force

Taylor has decent all-around size, body control and football intelligence to put himself in the right positions consistently. His lack of a top gear limits how much he can be relied upon as a back-end defender, but he can be a solid depth and special teams defensive back.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


202. TE Tip Reiman, Illinois

Reiman is a throwback tight end with size and physicality. He is limited as a lateral athlete but has the potential to be a TE2 in an NFL offense that likes bigger tight ends.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


203. HB Dylan Laube, New Hampshire

Laube's receiving and special teams ability should yield a long NFL career, but his lack of true NFL size and power might limit his ceiling.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


204. S Dominique Hampton, Washington

Hampton is coming off a six-year college career and started in his final two years. He's a solid tackler but failed to earn a 70.0-plus PFF coverage grade in each of the past two seasons.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


205. DI McKinnley Jackson, Texas A&M

Jackson is a slippery one-gap penetrating defensive lineman who can play nose and 3-technique in a 4-3 scheme. A lack of arm length limits his pass-rush/starter potential, but he can be successful as a depth pass-rusher in a rotation.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


206. DI Keith Randolph Jr., Illinois

Randolph projects as a depth player who can align as a 3-4 technique in even fronts. His gap-shooting mentality will give him some splash plays, but he is inconsistent right now beyond that.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


207. LB Curtis Jacobs, Penn State

Jacobs is a good athlete with starting potential movement skills, but he must get stronger and continue to improve his coverage instincts to shorten throwing windows.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


208. HB Jase McClellan, Alabama

McClellan is a solid athlete with above-average contact balance. He can be a potential committee back in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


209. HB Dillon Johnson, Washington

Johnson is a decent all-around athlete, but he lacks a distinguishing trait that would make him stand out at the NFL level. His most likely projection is as a third-down back.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


210. DI Gabe Hall, Baylor

Hall is a very alluring player because of what he brings to the defensive line from a physical and athletic standpoint. He has good rotational potential, but he must become more consistent in his anchor and run-defense responsibilities.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


211. S James Williams, Miami Fl

Williams earned PFF coverage grades of 78.1, 88.5 and 85.5 over the past three years. His athletic testing may limit him to more of a box role, but his on-field production gives him a chance to make an impact in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


212. DI Myles Murphy, North Carolina

Murphy is likely to be an early-downs-only player early in his career after producing just 14 total pressures from 245 pass-rushing snaps in 2023. His 71.5 run-defense grade shows that he still has the chance to be a rotational player at the next level, though.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


213. TE AJ Barner, Michigan

Though Barner won't give you much in the receiving game, he is an ideal TE2/3 for a team that likes to run heavy formations.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


214. DI Jordan Jefferson, LSU

Jefferson has the power of an NFL defensive lineman. He needs to speed up how quickly he gets into the backfield in order to really gain a rotational role in the pros.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


215. ED Jalen Green, James Madison

Green comes in a compact build that limits where you can play him as an edge rusher, but he's a feisty player who consistently plays with good natural leverage. You don't want to make a living betting on size outliers, but (pending recovery from knee surgery) he can be a good depth player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

216. HB Carson Steele, UCLA

Steele won't be a home-run hitter in the NFL, but he can be a short-yardage, third-down back with his powerful running style.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


217. QB Joe Milton III, Tennessee

Milton has NFL-level tools but lacks the processing, instincts and accuracy to be considered a potential starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


218. T Ethan Driskell, Marshall

Driskell is a massive and powerful left tackle who would work well in a man/gap scheme where his job is to vertically displace defenders. Even with his slow foot speed, if he can improve his hand placement, he can be a depth tackle prospect.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


219. DI Jowon Briggs, Cincinnati

Briggs spent more snaps lined up over opposing offensive tackles in 2023 than earlier in his career, and his production suffered for it. His best season was in 2022 when he earned a 77.4 PFF grade and lined up in the A or B gaps on almost all his snaps.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


220. DI Khristian Boyd, Northern Iowa

Boyd likely lacks the length to be a consistent difference-maker in the passing game, but his power and size make him a good candidate to be a backup defensive lineman in odd or even fronts.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


221. T Sataoa Laumea, Utah

Laumea's power profile is that of a potential starting guard. His footwork and anticipation must improve to match the speed of NFL rushers.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


222. HB Emani Bailey, TCU

Bailey forced 70 missed tackles on running plays in 2023, which trailed only two players in this draft class. He's limited athletically, though, and it will be tough to see him translate that elusiveness to the NFL with those limitations.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


223. S Tyler Owens, Texas Tech

Owens has the prototypical size to play the position in the NFL and tested as an explosive athlete this spring. He will likely take some time to develop in the NFL, though, having played just 961 snaps in his college career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


224. ED Cedric Johnson, Ole Miss

Johnson has the mold of an athlete that teams would want to draft and develop, but he must continue to improve his hand speed and usage when rushing the passer. He must also work on getting off blocks if he is going to get the playing time needed to showcase that above-average weight-adjust athletic ability.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


225. CB Elijah Jones, Boston College

Jones has the length and movement skills to find a role as a backup outside corner for a team that likes to play a lot of press-man coverage.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


226. WR Casey Washington, Illinois

Washington closed out his college career with a terrific 218-yard performance against Northwestern. Although his production wasn't consistent throughout his time in college, he did show a safe pair of hands, dropping just three of his 83 catchable passes over the past two seasons.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


227. DI Jaden Crumedy, Mississippi State

The pass-rush production just isn't there for Crumedy, but his 72.8 run-defense grade in 2023 proves that he does have the ability to develop into a rotational player on the defensive line.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


228. S Jaylin Simpson, Auburn

Simpson's cornerback background gives him good versatility as a free safety/slot defender in two-deep safety systems. His overall size would make him an outlier as a contributor, but his movement skills give him a shot to be that as a Day 3 developmental player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


229. K Will Reichard, Alabama

Coming into this season, the only real question surrounding Reichard was whether he could consistently kick field goals of 50-plus yards. He went five-for-five from that distance in 2023, cementing his status as a draftable kicker.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


230. QB Carter Bradley, South Alabama

Bradley is an intriguing prospect with a decent arm, an encouraging playstyle and good mechanics. How quickly he can learn to read NFL defenses and how much he can improve on touch throws is his key to locking down a preferred backup spot.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


231. WR Joshua Cephus, UTSA

Cephus is limited as an athlete, which will hurt him, given that he weighed 193 pounds this spring. He is coming off his most productive season, averaging 2.39 yards per route run, but he will likely have to make it on special teams to stay in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


232. TE Tanner McLachlan, Arizona

McLachlan is a good enough athlete for his size to get an opportunity as a big slot receiver, but his lack of a blocking profile will make him a liability as an in-line tight end.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


233. DI Justin Rogers, Auburn

Rogers is a big body on the defensive line, but his production hasn't matched that to date. His best season came in 2022 when he earned a 70.9 run-defense grade.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


234. HB Frank Gore Jr., Southern Miss

Gore's vision and feel for the game are good enough to have him fighting for a roster spot at the next level, but his limited athleticism could force him into a depth or rotational role.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


235. T Nathan Thomas, Louisiana

If you keep things in a phone booth, Thomas has the power profile to make the roster as a depth offensive tackle in a man/gap offense.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


236. T Jalen Sundell, North Dakota State

Sundell has experience at both tackle and center. While the competition level at a smaller school will be a knock on him as a player, he did produce in 2023. He gave up just nine total pressures from 406 pass-blocking snaps last season, and he has the skill set to develop at the NFL level with the right coaching.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


237. QB Austin Reed, Western Kentucky

Reed has a moxie some teams could like enough to make him an early Day 3 pick, but his lack of passing traits and natural touch will limit him to a backup role.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


238. WR Bub Means, Pittsburgh

Means is a vertical receiver who has a good physical profile for a streamlined role (fast, strong, big catch radius for contested opportunities deep). He can be a depth WR4/5 for a team that likes to push the ball vertically.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


239. DI Fabien Lovett Sr., Florida State

Lovett is a stout run defender with plus measurables to play in between the B gaps in the NFL. His lack of pass-rush ability will likely limit him to a rotational player at best, but he can be a useful one.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


240. K Cam Little, Arkansas

Little never missed an extra point and connected on 82.8% of his field-goal attempts in college. He was good on four of his five attempts of 50-plus yards in 2023, and he's good enough to earn a shot in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

241. ED Solomon Byrd, USC

Byrd shows promise, with good upper body strength as a 3-4 outside linebacker, but his fundamentals must become more consistent if he is to be a reliable depth piece.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


242. CB Ryan Watts, Texas

Watts failed to earn a single 70.0-plus coverage grade over his career. That said, his size, tackling ability and prowess against the run mean that he'll likely get a chance to stick around on special teams.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


243. ED Eyabi Okie-Anoma, Charlotte

Eyabi Okie-Anoma is a talented player with a complicated college football past. He remains a developmental edge rusher with good speed-to-power potential, but his game still needs a lot of refinement.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


244. LB Nathaniel Watson, Mississippi State

Watson is a classic between-the-tackles kind of linebacker who wins with strength and length, but his athletic limitations will likely limit him to early-down work and special teams duties.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


245. DI Marcus Harris, Auburn

Harris is a one-gap penetrating 3-technique defensive tackle for a 4-3 defense whose measurables and run-defense limitations likely limit him to a rotational role as a pass-rusher.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


246. CB Tarheeb Still, Maryland

A solid athlete who was a better run defender than he was in coverage in college, Still is the type of player who can stick around in the NFL if he can impress on special teams.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


247. LB Jaylan Ford, Texas

Ford projects as a high-energy depth linebacker as a MIKE who could be a consistent contributor on special teams.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


248. CB M.J. Devonshire, Pittsburgh

Last season wasn't an ideal season for Devonshire, but he looked much more like a player who could make it in the NFL in 2022. That 2022 season saw him earn a 76.1 PFF coverage grade and rack up nine combined pass breakups and interceptions.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


249. C Dylan McMahon, NC State

McMahon is a versatile interior offensive lineman who wins with quickness and consistent fundamentals. However, he likely lacks the length and strength of a starting-caliber NFL offensive lineman.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


250. QB Devin Leary, Kentucky

Leary is a controlled passer with reliable mechanics, but his lack of playmaking ability and accuracy when things break down limit his ceiling.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


251. CB Daequan Hardy, Penn State

Hardy is a smaller slot cornerback who plays with a lot of confidence despite his lack of size. He is quick but likely lacks the top-gear speed necessary for successful secondary play at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


252. S Daijahn Anthony, Ole Miss

Anthony spent just one season at Ole Miss, and it turned out to be his best season in college. While he's not an incredible athlete, he isn't so limited that it prevents him from having the chance to develop.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


253. T Donovan Jennings, USF

Jennings was a good pass-blocker in college, earning an 82.0 PFF pass-blocking grade and allowing just 18 total pressures from 459 pass-blocking snaps. He's not as good a run-blocker as you would like for someone his size, but he has draftable skills.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


254. QB Sam Hartman, Notre Dame

Hartman is an experienced quarterback with some decent mobility, but he lacks the arm strength to become a starter or preferred backup in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


255. WR Lideatrick Griffin, Mississippi State

Griffin will be drafted due to his kick- and punt-return ability. He has the athletic mold of more of a flanker or slot receiver, but he needs to be more consistent with his hands while diversifying his route tree to be more than just a go-ball receiver.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


256. T Frank Crum, Wyoming

Crum really struggled as a pass-blocker down the stretch in 2023, with 15 of his 20 pressures allowed last season coming in the final seven games. And that's a big concern for his NFL prospects, given the level of talent he will face when he gets to the league.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


257. T Delmar Glaze, Maryland

While he isn't a dominant run-blocker, two key things will attract NFL teams to Glaze as a prospect. He was a good pass-blocker in college (he earned an 80.0-plus PFF pass-blocking grade in each of the past two seasons), and he has played over 1,000 snaps at both tackle spots.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


258. HB Deshaun Fenwick, Oregon State

Fenwick is good at generating yards after contact and averaged 3.3 yards after contact per attempt over his career. He was never a big workload guy in college, but he is a very good athlete, having posted a 90th percentile or better PFF Game Athleticism Score in each of the past three seasons.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


259. TE Trey Knox, South Carolina

Knox posted a 93rd-percentile PFF Game Athleticism Score in 2023 and showcased a solid pair of hands, dropping just two of his 39 catchable passes last season.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


260. HB Kendall Milton, Georgia

What you see is what you get with Milton, who is a strong north-to-south runner with plus pass-blocking ability. However, his injury history and lack of a true playmaker's mentality in space will likely limit him to depth-back and special-teams roles.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

261. LB Edefuan Ulofoshio, Washington

Ulofoshio's journey of hard work and perseverance will have NFL teams enamored. However, his below-average athletic ability limits his ceiling as a likely Day 3 depth linebacker.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


262. K Harrison Mevis, Missouri

Mevis has an NFL-caliber leg and missed just one field goal from inside 40 yards in 2023. He was less consistent from further out, but there's enough there for him to get a shot at winning a job in training camp.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


263. G Layden Robinson, Texas A&M

Robinson is a good project interior lineman for a zone-blocking scheme. He needs to work on his pass-blocking consistency to become a preferred depth player or a starter.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


264. K Joshua Karty, Stanford

Karty missed just two field goals from inside 50 yards in his entire college career. He was 8-for-15 from beyond 50 and has a real chance to hear his name called on Day 3.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


265. HB Miyan Williams, Ohio State

Williams is a no-nonsense north-to-south back whose production typically originated behind zone-blocking concepts, where he could get a head of steam and move past the line. His athletic limitations, looming knee rehab and lack of consistency in the passing game make him a fringe prospect.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


266. ED David Ugwoegbu, Houston

Ugwoegbu currently lacks pass-rush moves and nuance as an edge defender. However, as an off-ball linebacker (where he played primarily before 2023), he could be a depth roster special teammer.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


267. QB Taulia Tagovailoa, Maryland

Tagovailoa is a decent athlete and can make plays out of structure, but his lack of size and true arm talent, coupled with passing inconsistencies, will make it difficult for him to stick in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


268. ED Eric Watts, UConn

Watts's frame offers alluring potential as a 4-3 defensive end, but his flexibility, hand placement consistency and balance/lower body strength must improve.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


269. S Omar Brown, Nebraska

After impressing at Northern Iowa early in his career, Brown moved to Nebraska and closed out his college career with an impressive 2023 season. Good against the run and in coverage (he earned an 84.5 PFF grade last season), Brown is good enough to be a depth player with development potential.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


270. ED Zion Tupuola-Fetui, Washington

Tupuola-Fetui is an experienced, high-energy, 3-4 outside linebacker who can make a name for himself as a special teamer, but he must get stronger to become a rotational player on an NFL defense.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


271. WR David White Jr., Western Carolina

White has the size to make an impact at the next level, but his collegiate production was inconsistent. His big-play ability makes him an intriguing option as an undrafted free agent or late Day 3 pick.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


272. T Andrew Coker, TCU

Coker was a dependable pass-blocker in college, notably allowing only 21 total pressures from 435 pass-blocking snaps in his final season. He struggled to be a difference-maker as a run-blocker, though, earning just one 65.0-plus run-blocking grade in his career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


273. CB Josh Wallace, Michigan

Wallace is coming off his best season. He earned a PFF coverage grade of 84.9 and allowed just 21 receptions from 367 coverage snaps. He made an impact against the run and missed just 4.8% of the tackles he attempted, so he could be a core special teams guy earlier in his career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


274. T Trente Jones, Michigan

Jones put on some really nice performances down the stretch in starts against Iowa and Alabama. He was good enough both in pass protection and as a run-blocker to at least get a call as an undrafted free agent.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


275. CB A.J. Woods, Pittsburgh

Woods is coming off a career-worst 60.1 PFF grade. He looked like a draftable prospect coming into the year but may need to stick as an undrafted free agent at this point.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


276. CB Marcellas Dial, South Carolina

Dial's 2023 season was his best, as he allowed just 29 receptions from 449 coverage snaps and earned a 78.2 PFF coverage grade. He has the ability to stick as a fourth or fifth cornerback on an NFL depth chart.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


277. TE Jack Westover, Washington

Westover showcased a safe pair of hands in 2023, dropping just one of the 47 catchable passes thrown his way. He also posted a 98th-percentile PFF Game Athleticism Score, so he could be a good sleeper pick late in the draft or as an undrafted free agent.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


278. QB Jack Plummer, Louisville

Plummer has some of the best touch throws in the class, but when asked to fire up the arm strength to an NFL level, he leaves you wanting more. He projects as a practice squad or depth quarterback at the NFL level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


279. T Anim Dankwah, Howard

Dankwah has ideal size, and that's almost certain to keep some teams interested. The production wasn't there in college, though. His career-best PFF grade is only 65.0, and that was the only time he graded above 60.0 over a season.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

280. G C.J. Hanson, Holy Cross

Hanson's PFF run-blocking grade has improved progressively over the past three seasons, while his PFF run-blocking grade has decreased progressively. He has shown enough flashes in his career to make him worthy of a late-round flier or UDFA pick.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


281. CB Willie Roberts, Louisiana Tech

Roberts impressed in both of his seasons at Louisiana Tech and allowed just 15 receptions from 331 coverage snaps in 2023. He has the chance to develop as a late-round draft pick and could be a fifth cornerback on an NFL depth chart early in his career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


282. WR Zakhari Franklin, Ole Miss

Franklin was productive enough at UTSA before struggling after an injury in his lone season at Ole Miss. His 4.49-second 40-yard dash time will likely keep teams interested on Day 3.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


283. DI Zion Logue, Georgia

Logue earned a 72.7 run-defense grade in 2023, his best season at the college level. He never played more than 351 snaps in a season, though, and he faces a battle to hear his name called on Day 3.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


284. QB Kedon Slovis, BYU

Slovis has ample experience but not enough production, intangibles or passing traits to be a potential starter or preferred backup in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


285. DI Evan Anderson, FAU

Anderson is a big body in the middle of the defensive line and earned an 83.7 run-defense grade in 2023. He doesn't dominate as much as you would like for someone his size, but the size alone may be enough to keep teams intrigued.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


286. C Andrew Raym, Oklahoma

Raym was solid in pass protection in 2023, earning a 70.3 PFF pass-blocking grade. He struggled to make an impact as a run-blocker though, with his grade in that regard coming out to just 60.2.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


287. S Kenny Logan Jr., Kansas

Logan earned an 84.1 coverage grade and a 69.2 run-defense grade in 2023. That's good enough to get a chance to stick as a fourth safety and core special teams guy early in his career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


288. LB Dallas Gant, Toledo

Gant transferred from Ohio State to get more playing time and made the most of it when he landed at Toledo. A sure tackler who impressed as a run defender and in coverage, he's good enough to hear his name called on draft weekend.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


289. P Ryan Rehkow, BYU

Rehkow earned a 74.0-plus punting grade in four consecutive seasons, but he was at his best in 2023, with his 87.0 grade good for the fourth-best in the nation.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


290. T Josiah Ezirim, Eastern Kentucky

Ezirim allowed just 13 total pressures — and no sacks or hits — from 490 pass-blocking snaps at Eastern Kentucky in 2023. He also earned an 84.3 PFF run-blocking grade, so while the level of his competition was lower than a lot of other tackles in this class, there is enough there to work with.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


291. C Drake Nugent, Michigan

Nugent brings good experience to the table but lacks the physical ability and build to be a starter or rotational lineman at the NFL level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


292. ED Trajan Jeffcoat, Arkansas

Jeffcoat earned a 68.3 PFF grade in his lone season at Arkansas, the best mark of his career. He didn't dominate, but he was productive enough that, after some development, he could stick as a rotational player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


293. C Nick Gargiulo, South Carolina

Gargiulo had three strong seasons at Yale before transferring to South Carolina. He struggled in his lone season in the SEC, which might give teams pause about his NFL prospects.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


294. TE Brevyn Spann-Ford, Minnesota

Spann-Ford's unique size will be his biggest asset when it comes to his chances of making an NFL roster, but his game right now is of a depth or practice squad player.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


295. P Austin McNamara, Texas Tech

One of the best punters in college throughout his career, McNamara earned an 87.6 punting grade in 2023. In all, 26 of his 55 punts landed inside the opposing 20-yard line. He's good enough to be drafted on Day 3.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


296. LB Jontrey Hunter, Georgia State

Hunter's sixth season in college was his best, as he finished the campaign with a career-best 76.9 PFF grade. He struggled to lock up as a tackler, missing 19.4% of his attempts in 2023, something that could hurt his chances of sticking around on special teams at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


297. CB Jarius Monroe, Tulane

Monroe was good enough in coverage (79.9 coverage grade) and in run defense (83.3) to get a shot at the next level. His size could give him the chance to make it as a vice on punt returns.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board

298. C Kingsley Eguakun, Florida

Eguakun failed to earn a PFF grade above 65.0 in any of his five college seasons. Given that he failed to make any real impact at the college level, staying in the NFL might be a tall task.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


299. CB Deantre Prince, Ole Miss

Prince allowed just 24 receptions across 446 coverage snaps in 2023, earning a 75.0 coverage grade in the process. He's good enough against the run, too, making him an ideal candidate to earn playing time on special teams.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


300. WR Hayden Hatten, Idaho

Hatten dropped just one of the 177 catchable passes thrown his way over the past two seasons and earned a 90.6 receiving grade in 2023. However, he's limited as an athlete, which will mean he'll have an uphill battle to stick around in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


301. T Karsen Barnhart, Michigan

Barnhart started at three different spots on Michigan‘s national championship-winning team and was at his best in pass protection when he kicked inside to right guard. He gave up just two pressures from 175 pass-blocking snaps at that position, which might mean that he kicks inside full-time in the NFL.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


302. LB Easton Gibbs, Wyoming

Gibbs is coming off his best season, but he lacks size and tested poorly this spring. If he is going to make it in the NFL, he'll likely need to stick on special teams early in his career.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


303. HB Isaiah Johnson, North Texas

Johnson was solid enough when he was called upon to run the ball, but he was never a featured player at the college level. He forced 41 missed tackles on 191 carries in four seasons at North Texas, so he may draw enough intrigue for a team to be interested late in the draft.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


304. C Charles Turner, LSU

Turner earned a solid 80.2 pass-blocking grade last season, allowing just nine pressures from 471 pass-blocking snaps. However, his career-best run-blocking grade is just 65.1, so he will need to improve on that to have a chance at the next level.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


305. TE Isaac Rex, BYU

Rex has the size to be a weapon in the red zone, but he lacks the production as a receiver and the strength as a run-blocker. He averaged more than 1.50 yards per route run in just one season in college.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


306. LB Aaron Casey, Indiana

Casey lacks size and athleticism, and this shows whenever he drops into coverage. He earned a PFF coverage grade of just 48.2 last year. If he can improve his tackling — he missed 18.6% of his tackle attempts last season — he might be able to make an impact on special teams.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


307. S Mark Perry, TCU

Parry improved after transferring from Colorado to TCU, be he earned a sub-66.0 coverage grade in every season of his career. He'll face an uphill battle to make an NFL roster.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


308. ED Khalid Duke, Kansas State

Duke is a high-energy and fearless edge rusher who could be used in pass-rush situations, but his lack of size will limit his upside.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


309. QB John Rhys Plumlee, UCF

Plumlee is a good athlete who will likely make his biggest NFL contributions as a receiver or a quarterback in special packages.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


310. C Matt Lee, Miami Fl

Lee transferred to Miami after a strong 2022 season with UCF and had another impressive season. He allowed just four total pressures from 434 pass-blocking snaps and earned a 73.7 run-blocking grade.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


311. G X'Zauvea Gadlin, Liberty

Gadlin earned 70.0-plus run- and pass-blocking grades in each of the past two seasons after transferring from Tulsa to Liberty. His athletic limitations will be tough to overcome, but he played well enough over the past two seasons to at least get a chance.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


312. LB Omar Speights, LSU

Speights is a good athlete, but he is undersized. He failed to earn a 70.0-plus coverage grade in any season in college, something that would have helped ease concerns about his size.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


313. QB Jason Bean, Kansas

Bean is almost 25 years old, and while he was solid in his final college season, his NFL prospects are limited. He produced a big-time throw on 8.1% of his passing attempts in 2023 and could get a chance as a third option on a teams depth chart.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


314. S Demani Richardson, Texas A&M

Richardson was a solid run defender throughout his college career, but he struggled in coverage in 2023, earning a 62.6 coverage grade. His tackling ability will give him the chance to stick on special teams somewhere.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


315. HB Jawhar Jordan, Louisville

Jordan is undersized and limited as an athlete, but he forced 32 missed tackles on 181 carries in 2023, earning a 90.7 rushing grade in the process. That should be enough for him to earn him a spot as an undrafted free agent at worst.

Three-year grades and scouting report: Available in the PFF big board


 

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