Top prospects to watch for the 2023 NFL draft

Draft Wire editor Luke Easterling gives you a never-too-early look at the top prospects eligible for the 2023 NFL draft

It’s a time-honored tradition, looking ahead to the next NFL draft before the current set of rookies even have their new jersey numbers assigned.

Such will always be the case here at Draft Wire, where we’ve got you covered year-round with in-depth coverage of every prospect, in every class, every year.

So, let’s get started on that 2023 NFL draft prep, and show you the names you need to know at the top of next year’s class.

Here’s a never-too-early look at the top prospects eligible for the 2023 NFL draft:

4 college players Texans need to scout for 2023 NFL draft

The 2022 NFL draft is over, which means preparation for the 2023 has already begun. Here are four players the Houston Texans should keep in mind.

The 2022 NFL draft is barely over, and while the Houston Texans are scrambling to sign priority free agents, thoughts can’t help but turn to next year’s draft.

The Texans have as optimistic of a draft as they did in 2022 with another set of twin first-round picks. General manager Nick Caserio proved he knows how to draft well, and it only excites Texans fans to think of what he can to do add the finishing touches to a competitive roster.

Here are four players the Texans should keep tabs on throughout the 2022 college season and consider to fill roster needs in the 2023 NFL draft.

2023 NFL Draft: Top 32 Pro Prospects First Look

2023 NFL Draft. The top 32 pro prospects going into the college football season – post-2022 NFL Draft version.

2023 NFL Draft: What returning college players are the best pro prospects going into the 2022 season? 


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2023 NFL Draft Top Pro Prospects: Pre-2022 NFL Draft

The NFL scouting process is always fluid, it’s always inexact, and it’s always going to come down to a big game here, a great performance there, and a big injury that could shake up the entire draft market.

And there’s always someone who comes out of the blue and goes from the “just a guy” category to a top ten overall must-have.

Even though trying to come up with the top 32 pro prospects – representing the potential first round NFL Draft talents – is hit-or-miss, one thing is certain when it comes to the 2023 version …

It’s going to get a LOT more attention than the 2022 draft.

2021 was an explosion of interest with five first round caliber quarterbacks to throw into the league’s star system, and while 2022 is loaded with excellent NFL prospects, it’s a whole different ball game when the skill guys are the stars.

It’s hard to get fired up about 2022 – a very, very good and deep draft – when the best quarterback prospects, the best running backs, the best pass rusher, the best tight end, and the best wide receiver are all eligible in 2023.

So who are those top pro prospects going into the 2022 college football season? The idea here is to create a starting point and a set of expectations, knowing that some of these are dead on, but at least a third of the early calls are WAY off.

And yes, there are at least 32 other prospects who could’ve made this list of the Top 32 Pro Prospects of 2023. We’ll adapt and adjust on the fly during the season.

2023 NFL Draft Top 15 Position Rankings
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Saints either aren’t clear on their vision for the future, or they aren’t executing it well

New Orleans won’t get any compensation after losing Marcus Williams and Terron Armstead. The Saints either aren’t clear on their vision, or they aren’t executing it well:

What do the New Orleans Saints envision their future looking like? Their moves this offseason haven’t resembled the team we’ve known for most of a decade. After their fruitless pursuit of Deshaun Watson, the Saints pivoted to doing a lot of waiting and seeing. They’ve signed a couple of free agents to near-minimum salaries. Sure, they acted quickly to sign a replacement in Marcus Maye knowing that Marcus Williams was leaving in free agency and that Malcolm Jenkins was retiring, and they also pivoted to Jameis Winston after Watson spurned them.

But any sense of urgency to address their greatest position of need has been hidden behind the scenes. New Orleans started the offseason with one of the NFL’s worst depth charts at wide receiver, and they haven’t done much to shake it up. They brought back Deonte Harty and Tre’Quan Smith but balked at Marquez Valdes-Scantling’s contract demands and have been steadily passed over, one by one, as other free agents exit the market to sign elsewhere. If the plan was to build around Winston, the Saints are quickly running out of ways to upgrade his supporting cast. They may have to put all their eggs in one basket and hope they make the right draft picks.

For once, New Orleans has salary cap space to spare; the latest estimates from Over The Cap and Spotrac put them at between $19.5 million and $21.3 million in unspent money. If you ask general manager Mickey Loomis, and some have, he’ll tell you that he wants the team run more conventionally — maybe more comfortably — than fans have grown used to.

Loomis was asked about the team’s salary cap management by NewOrleans.Football’s Nick Underhill, and responded: “Managing it more traditionally? Yeah, ultimately, that’s the goal. But I think this: when your team is in a position of — man, you’ve got this window of opportunity to win a championship, get to the playoffs and do some damage, your tendency is put your chips on the table. We’ve seen a number of teams do that and have success. So, yeah, that’s the position we’ve been in for quite a while and so we’ve kicked that can down the road. But you know, at some point, we have to pay it.”

That describes more of a soft reset than the fire sale some observers around the NFL suggested when Sean Payton stepped down as head coach. Between Payton’s wanderlust and the sun setting on Drew Brees’ career, Loomis was pressured to maximize resources year after year to build the best team possible. It worked, and the Saints won more games than almost anyone from 2017 to 2020, but they’re in a different space now and it’s time to acknowledge that.

So why isn’t Loomis leaning into that philosophy? If he’s looking to absorb some big cap hits these next few years and get the books back in order, fine, that makes sense. It’s the smart approach with the cap about to skyrocket once new broadcasting rights money is injected during the next year or two. But why aren’t the Saints approaching other facets of business as intelligently as they are here?

I’m talking about compensatory draft picks. New Orleans went decades without receiving any comp picks because they were too active in free agency for their own good: only teams that lose more players than they gain qualify for comp picks, and Payton’s all-in approach led to the Saints always being active spenders. That finally changed a few years ago, with the Saints receiving five comp picks over the last two drafts (two of those coming through the NFL’s minority candidates development policy after Terry Fontenot was hired away as a general manager, it should be noted).

For a brief moment it looked like the Saints would be getting two more valuable comp picks in 2023. Marcus Williams and Terron Armstead each left in free agency on deals averaging more than $14 million per year, which projected New Orleans to receive two additional third rounders. That’s huge considering how well the Saints have drafted in the third round lately (finding starters there like Alvin Kamara, Trey Hendrickson, Alex Anzalone, Tre’Quan Smith, Adam Trautman, and Paulson Adebo since 2017).

But then the Saints wiped out one pick by signing Marcus Maye. Which, fine — that’s a step down from Marcus Williams, but the contract isn’t a bad value, and the Saints needed at least one veteran safety after taking so many losses at the position. You can argue that’s worth the value of a third round pick, assuming Maye plays well and doesn’t miss too much time from a DUI suspension that’s been hanging over his head for a full calendar year. I don’t agree, but you can make the argument.

The decision to sign Andy Dalton and lose that other third rounder is unforgivable, though. It’s baffling. Yeah, the comp pick process is dumb — signing Dalton to a one-year, $3 million deal shouldn’t have any impact on Armstead leaving on a five-year, $75 million contract. But it does, the game is the game, and the Saints have to be aware of that, and they’re acting as if they aren’t. They could have waited to sign Dalton or another backup they pray will never get on the field until after the comp pick cutoff date (the Monday after the 2022 NFL draft, May 2). Instead, at best ignorant of the timing, they moved to sign Dalton anyway.

Why? No team would have traded a third round draft pick for Dalton outright, but that’s essentially what the Saints did here. It’s a frustrating misuse of resources. The argument all along was that if Armstead is not re-signed, at least you’ll get great compensation for losing him. Instead all the Saints got is one year with a backup quarterback. For a team that knows the league’s collective bargaining agreement better than anyone, for a team that has worked so aggressively to navigate the salary cap and zig when others zag, this was a really weird missed opportunity.

And that brings us back to Loomis’ comments. If it’s time to pay the piper and lay low for a couple years, operating more conventionally or traditionally to cultivate a healthier salary cap situation, doesn’t it make sense to lean into that and be mindful of other ways to help yourself out? By timing free agent signings to where you can add a player you like without costing yourself a nice draft pick next year? Instead, the Saints come off looking sloppy or even negligent.

Yeah, fans like to say the team doesn’t care about comp picks — but the team didn’t care about the cap, either. That approach is changing. Why isn’t their approach to the draft changing, too? They should be just as aggressive in stacking up draft picks to spend on cheap talent as they were in opening up salary cap room. It’s really tough to square the idea that they don’t care about comp picks when the Saints’ best rookie last season, Paulson Adebo, was someone they acquired because they had enough comp picks to package in a trade to move up for him. There will be other players like Adebo available in the next draft cycle, and the Saints aren’t doing themselves any favors by failing to load up with resources ahead of time to go get them.

But, hey. It’s early. A lot can change between now and then. There are other shoes to drop and other Saints free agents who could be signed away and free up a comp pick or two. At the end of the day, we’re working with projections and educated guesses. Maybe things don’t go like we expect and the Saints still get awarded a good comp pick next year. At this point, all we can do is hope.

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Report: Andy Dalton signing with Saints could jeopardize 2023 comp pick

Report: Andy Dalton signing with the Saints could jeopardize their 2023 compensatory draft pick for Terron Armstead

Oh, come on. There isn’t much to complain about in the New Orleans Saints signing Andy Dalton — but losing a valuable third-round compensatory pick in the 2023 NFL draft to add him could be disastrous. And that’s the scenario outlined by Over The Cap’s Nick Korte, who specializes in projecting the league’s annual comp pick distributions.

Before signing Dalton, the Saints were projected to receive one of the highest-valued comp picks in 2023 after losing standout left tackle Terron Armstead to the Miami Dolphins on a pricey free agent contract. But only teams that have lost more qualifying players (those signed above roughly $3 million or more) factor into the equation, and Dalton landing in New Orleans balances the scales to where that Armstead comp pick is now out of reach.

It doesn’t matter that Dalton’s $3 million per-year average is dwarfed by the $15 million per-year that Armstead is bringing in. Because both players meet the threshold, they both count, and they cancel each other out for New Orleans. Giving up a top-100 draft pick for Dalton would be malpractice. Hopefully the Saints are aware of this; they’ve navigated the comp pick formula carefully over the last few years, managing to add a couple of extra draft picks that have been put to good use.

The good news is that another shoe could drop here. If the Saints lose a free agent like Kwon Alexander or P.J. Williams on a contract that’s comparable to what Dalton costs, the scales would tip back the other way and they could recoup that expected third rounder for Armstead in 2023. But there’s no promise of that happening. New Orleans is just as likely to re-sign each player themselves, retaining the depth and playmaking ability they bring, which wouldn’t factor into the comp pick formula.

Plus, it’s possible that Korte is wrong. He’s put in a lot of work over the years to reverse engineer the NFL’s comp pick formula, which the league oddly protects like it’s a state secret. But he ultimately only deals in projections based off public information. This year he projected the Saints to receive a fourth round pick for Trey Hendrickson and a sixth rounder for Sheldon Rankins. Instead, the NFL awarded New Orleans a third round pick for Hendrickson and said Rankins’ departure was outweighed by the addition of Tanoh Kpassagnon. Maybe the league decides that the Saints losing Trevor Siemian on a $2 million per-year deal (to Chicago, ironically) balances out the Dalton signing at $3 million. We won’t know for sure until next year.

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Saints projected to receive 2023 comp pick after losing Terron Armstead

It’s not much of a consolation prize, but the New Orleans Saints are projected to receive a compensatory 2023 draft pick after losing Terron Armstead to the Dolphins:

We’ll take our silver linings where we can find them. It’s early, and a lot can change between now and then, but the analysts at Over The Cap currently project the New Orleans Saints to receive a third round compensatory pick in the 2023 NFL draft after losing standout left tackle Terron Armstead to the Miami Dolphins. That’s projected to slot in at No. 98 overall, which is also where the Saints are scheduled to make their pick in 2022 as a comp selection following pass rusher Trey Hendrickson’s departure in 2021.

Things can change in a hurry here, though. This is just a projection based off the latest roster moves. If the Saints sign another qualifying comp free agent (a player whose last contract expired, and who is signed at greater than minimum salary) the scales will balance out and they won’t get this pick for Armstead. That’s why they aren’t getting the fourth rounder they were previously projected to receive after losing free safety Marcus Williams — the corresponding move to sign his replacement Marcus Maye negated that pick.

The comp draft pick formula is still tough to figure out, but we know that its biggest considerations are the contract value signed with a new team and how often the player got on the field with their old team. There are other subtleties to it, sure, but that’s where most of the focus goes.

And the only teams that are awarded comp draft picks are those who have lost more players than they gained. Players who have been released by their old teams do not factor into the formula. For years, the Saints were aggressive in free agency under Sean Payton and didn’t qualify for comp picks. That tide has turned a bit in recent years, with New Orleans receiving three comp picks in 2021 and two in 2022.

So, yeah, it’s worth monitoring what New Orleans does next in free agency. Obviously that’s the case regardless of comp pick considerations. But if the Saints are smart about this, they can add some good players who won’t jeopardize future comp picks — like slot receiver Jarvis Landry, offensive guard/tackle Billy Turner, and tight end Kyle Rudolph. Any player cut by their last team could be signed and keep that Armstead pick in play.

At the same time, the Saints have some free agents who could tip the scales further in their favor. Wide receiver Tre’Quan Smith, linebacker Kwon Alexander, and defensive back P.J. Williams are all testing the open market, and if signed by a new team to a contract valued at roughly $3.5 million or more, the Saints could better protect that Armstead pick and recoup the fourth rounder for Marcus Williams. Clearly it isn’t a guarantee that those free agents will earn that kind of money, but it’s possible. If nothing else it goes to show that this is a complicated situation.

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