2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings, All 32 From The College Perspective

Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2021 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective.

Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2021 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective.


2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings, All 32 From The College Perspective

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No NFL team has ever said it didn’t like its draft class.

It might be awful, it might have been disappointing, and it might have been full of random guesses, but they get who they get and they don’t get upset.

And now everyone makes the attempt to grade draft classes and project how good they’ll be. Here’s how we do it.

1. Assume that every pick after the fourth round was a waste of time, because historically and statistically, it almost certainly was. More credit is given to teams who had a ton of picks – more picks, more spins of the wheel to possibly get a contributor.

2. How many great college football players were selected who also have the freakish NFL tools? If that sounds totally obvious it’s because it is, but after all the hoo-ha you’ve probably heard over the last few days and months, the simplicity of that gets swarmed over by the paralyzing overload of analytical bull-muffins.

3. Value. That’s all relative – your worth is what the NFL draft says it is – but this weird little world of draft analysts all have the same 150ish guys in the same general pecking order. Whether or not the pick actually works is almost all random luck – believe me, it truly is – but what’s skill and art is the ability to draft a player you need before where everyone else thinks he should go.

And finally …

4. Were the needs and holes filled? Did the teams get the position guys they needed with top prospects at the right value? Duh, that’s what drafting is, but again, a lot of teams make it way harder than that.

So from the college football perspective, the 2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings are …

32. Seattle Seahawks

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 28, 2019: 14, 2018: 19

Three picks. Western Michigan WR D’Wayne Eskridge in the second, Oklahoma CB Tre Brown in the fourth, and Florida OT Stone Forsythe in the sixth. They’re all decent prospects – the Brown pick wasn’t great, but it’s Seattle. It drafts guys it wants no matter what – let everyone else be about value.
Seattle Seahawks 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

31. New Orleans Saints

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 31, 2019: 31, 2018: 28

This franchise does just fine for itself despite being really, really mediocre at this whole drafting thing when it comes to value. The first three selections aren’t bad – Stanford CB Paulson Adebo was a steal in the third – but the Saints once again wasted a pick on a quarterback who won’t work. Last year it was Tommy Stevens in the seventh, and this time around it’s Ian Book – and it was in the fourth round.
New Orleans Saints 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

30. Indianapolis Colts

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 5, 2019: 6, 2018: 7

To be kind, the Colts needed pass rushers, and they got them with Kwity Paye out of Michigan at the 21 and Vanderbilt’s Dayo Odeyingbo with a massive reach at the 54. There were some nice ideas after that, but … blah. They needed offensive tackles, and in a draft rich with them, they failed to get one who’ll stick.
Indianapolis Colts 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

29. Los Angeles Rams

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 17, 2019: 11, 2018: 15

To be fair, the Rams did what they could with what they had to work with. They didn’t pick until the 57, and smallish-speedy Louisville WR Tutu Atwell fits the system. Even with nine picks, considering they’re all late, maybe three of them will do anything meaningful – at best.
Los Angeles Rams 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

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28. Houston Texans

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 26, 2019: 25, 2018: 11

Let’s give the Texans a break here by grading on a curve. They had absolutely nothing to work with, and yet they got a guy in Davis Mills in the third round who might just be one of the best quarterbacks in this draft if he can stay healthy. Of course, that pick screamed how the franchise feels about Deshaun Watson, but they kept on going with some nice targets for whoever plays quarterback for them this year.
Houston 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

27. Washington Football Team

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 15, 2019: 5, 2018: 9

Washington took a long snapper in the sixth round. Washington isn’t good enough to be taking a long snapper in the sixth round. It was an okay draft full of random guys – there are a whole lot of big projections. The Football Team 1) didn’t take a quarterback, 2) no, really, it didn’t take a quarterback and it desperately needs one to develop, and 3) … they took a long snapper in the sixth round.
Washington Football Team 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

26. Philadelphia Eagles

CFN Draft Rankings
2020: 27, 2019: 7, 2018: 32

Wide receivers taken in the top ten rarely play up to their draft status, but DeVonta Smith at the ten absolutely had to be done. It would’ve been nice, though, to get Jalen Hurts some more weapons, and it would’ve been even nicer if the second pick – OG/C Landon Dickerson out of Alabama – wasn’t coming off a torn ACL. Basically, the Eagles drafted the The Slim Reaper, and a bunch of guys who likely won’t do much in 2021.
Philadelphia Eagles 2021 NFL Draft Analysis

NEXT: 2021 NFL Draft Team Rankings Top 25

What NFL Draft experts are saying about Raiders selection of S Trevon Moehrig at 43 overall

Day one of the draft, the Raiders addressed the right tackle spot, adding Alabama OT Alex Leatherwood. That pick was controversial to say the least. Day two brought hopes of better value picks along with addressing the Raiders’ next biggest need at …

Day one of the draft, the Raiders addressed the right tackle spot, adding Alabama OT Alex Leatherwood. That pick was controversial to say the least. Day two brought hopes of better value picks along with addressing the Raiders’ next biggest need at free safety. They got both with TCU’s Trevon Moehrig, trading up from 48 to 43 to ensure they got him.

I was a big fan of the selection and the aggressive move to get him. What did the rest of the NFL Draft world have to say?

Luke Easterling, Draft Wire

Grade: A+

I gave the Raiders plenty of grief for their first-round pick, but they balanced it out with a fantastic selection here. After trading up a few spots, the Raiders landed the best safety in this class, even though he was the third one off the board. Moehrig should have been a first-round selection, to the Raiders balanced the reach of Alex Leatherwood with a huge steal here. It all evens out.

Chad Reuter, NFL.com

Grade: A

Losing Erik Harris in free agency opened up a spot for a strong tackler and ballhawk in Moehrig, and the Raiders couldn’t help but trade up for him (not a significant price in this case) once the safety run started at the top of the second round. The back injury he suffered this offseason might have cost him some draft position, but as long as it’s not a long-term issue, he’ll be a starter. Koonce is an active, strong edge rusher of good value in the third round. The team was looking for more depth at that position, and found it. Deablo is a powerful safety, but he was announced as a linebacker on Friday night, just like the Raiders proceeded with Tanner Muse in the third round last year.

Chris Trapasso, CBS Sports

Grade: A+

My No. 1 safety in this class. Will immediately provide a versatile upgrade over what Vegas has at that position. Tall, dynamic movements on the field, ball production. He’s got it all. Raiders need playmakers on defense.

Pro Football Focus

Grade: Elite

Moehrig was the heavy favorite to become the first safety off the board in the 2021 NFL Draft. Instead, he’s the third safety off the board here to Las Vegas behind both Jevon Holland and Richie Grant. Moehrig brings some much-needed playmaking ability in coverage to the Raiders secondary, but it remains to be seen how he fits in Gus Bradley’s defense after playing in a split-field safety defense at TCU. There’s reason to believe he can have success as a single-high safety with his size, smarts and explosiveness.

Eric Edholm, Yahoo! Sports

Grade: A-

Vegas has addressed two big needs with its first two selections. We didn’t love the Alex Leatherwood pick in Round 1. But moving up here to nab Moehrig, a top-25 prospect on our board, is a smart move by GM Mike Mayock. The Raiders needed a center fielder, and Moehrig gives them an instinctive playmaker on the back end who also can cover the slot.

Vinnie Iyer, Sporting News

Grade: A+

The Raiders made up for their offensive head-scratcher on Alex Leatherwood in Round 1 with a true first-rounder in Round 2. Moehrig is the most complete playmaker in a deep class for the position. They needed him to take pressure off Johnathan Abram supporting the second level.

Tashan Reed, The Athletic

Grade: B

He’s one of the most complete safety prospects in this class. Moehrig (6-foot-1, 202 pounds) led all safeties in pass breakups in each of the past two seasons, according to Pro Football Focus. He divided his time between playing free safety, strong safety and across the slot. Moehrig was TCU’s special-teams MVP as a freshman and developed into a team captain last season. The Raiders came into the draft in desperate need of safety help. They had to give up a fourth-round pick to move up, but this pick offers upside at a position of need.

Doug Farrar, Touchdown Wire

Raiders managed to absolutely steal TCU safety Trevon Moehrig, my top-ranked safety, with the 43rd overall pick.

Connor Orr, Sports Illustrated

Trevon Moehrig falling enough to get into trading distance was a boon. Despite some health issues, he could help get their secondary back on track.

Mel Kiper, ESPN

Trevon Moehrig should start over Jeff Heath at free safety. He’s a ballhawk.

2021 NFL draft: Instant grades for every team

Draft Wire editor Luke Easterling gives out his initial grades for every team’s haul in the 2021 NFL draft

Listen, we all know that whatever I say here is simply going to fuel screenshots and @OldTakesExposed tags, in both good ways and bad.

We obviously don’t know anything about how the 2021 NFL draft class is going to turn out for each of the 32 teams, and we won’t for a few years.

But, we’re here to have fun. So that’s what we’re gonna do.

Based on my own player evaluations, and how value met need at every selection, here are my way-too-early grades for every team’s 2021 draft class:

2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings, All 32 From The College Perspective

Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2020 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective.

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Which NFL teams did the best and worst jobs? The 2020 NFL Draft team rankings of all 32 teams, from the college perspective. 


Contact @PeteFiutak

Full 2020 NFL Draft
2021 NFL Draft Top 32 Prospects
1st Round Pick-by-Pick Analysis
2020 NFL Draft Rankings By College: 1-130
2020 NFL Draft Rankings By Conference

Everyone loves their own kids, TikToks, and NFL draft classes – even if they’re awful. And with all three, it takes a while to know if they’re any good.

So how do you rank an NFL Draft class right after the draft weekend?

Some sure-thing stars flame out, some no-names rise up, and all the research and knowledge in the world doesn’t mean a thing if a guy gets hurt.

The goal is to find decent starters – anything other than that is blind luck. Seriously, there’s less than a 15% chance that a pick taken after the top 100 will be a starter for a least three years for your team.

The NFL Draft Team Rankings are based on value – at least the generally acknowledged perceived value of the draft slot – the tools, and the upside of each pick. Also, throw into the equation whether or not the holes and team needs were filled.

With all that in mind, from the college football perspective, the 2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings are …

CFN 2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings, Thoughts
AFC East Buffalo | Miami | NY Jets | New England
AFC North Baltimore | Cincinnati | Cleveland | Pittsburgh
AFC South Houston | Indianapolis | Jacksonville | Tennessee
AFC West Denver | Kansas City | Las Vegas | LA Chargers
NFC East Dallas | NY Giants | Philadelphia | Washington
NFC North Chicago | Detroit | Green Bay | Minnesota
NFC South Atlanta | Carolina | New Orleans | Tennessee
NFC West Arizona | LA Rams | San Francisco | Seattle

32. New England Patriots 2020 NFL Draft

– The New England draft was freaking weird. At times, it was as if Bill Belichick and the Patriots were just picking random names of various college football players. There was little to no value with most of their selections in their respective spots, led by taking PK Justin Rohrwasser from Marshall – controversial tattoo and all – in the fifth. However …


2020 New England Patriots Draft Video
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– There was certainly a plan when it came to the tight ends. Even with UCLA’s Devin Asiasi and Virginia Tech’s Dalton Keene in the third round – two decent prospects – there wasn’t a whole lot of value. There’s also a plan to get to the quarterback with Michigan’s Josh Uche and Alabama’s Anfernee Jennings.

– Kyle Dugger in the second round was a terrific pick. He’s an elite tools talent who should quickly help out an aging secondary, but he needs to be fantastic for this draft to end up working.

There were a whole lot of draft picks to play around with, and there wasn’t any maneuvering to take a shot at one of the sliding quarterbacks – signing Michigan State’s Brian Lewerke as an undrafted free agent. It appears to be Jarrett Stidham or bust.

Best Value Pick: TE Devin Asiasi, UCLA (3rd)
Biggest Reach: PK Justin Rohrwasser, Marshall (5th)
Late Flier That Could Work: OG Michael Onwenu, Michigan (6th)
2019 NFL Draft Ranking: 1
2018 NFL Draft Ranking: 27

2020 New England Patriots Draft Class
2 S Kyle Dugger, Lenoir-Rhyne
2 DE Josh Uche, Michigan
3 LB Anfernee Jennings, Alabama
3 TE Devin Asiasi, UCLA
3 TE Dalton Keene, Virginia Tech
5 PK Justin Rohrwasser, Marshall
6 OG Michael Onwenu, Michigan
6 LB Cassh Maluia, Wyoming
7 C Dustin Woodard, Memphis

NEXT: 2020 NFL Draft Team Rankings, No. 31

2020 NFL draft grades: How experts view the Rams’ haul

The Rams received fairly high marks from the experts for their draft haul.

The Los Angeles Rams pulled off a handful of surprises over the course of their two-day draft haul, including the decision to draft a running back with their first pick and making only one trade all weekend. They strengthened their offense with Cam Akers, Van Jefferson and Brycen Hopkins, though they shockingly waited until their very last pick to add an offensive lineman.

The defense was also bolstered with OLB Terrell Lewis and DB Terrell Burgess, while S Jordan Fuller will contribute on special teams and as a backup safety.

It came as no surprise that the Rams drafted a kicker in Round 7, even after signing two before the draft.

Overall, it’s hard to hate the team’s haul across Days 2 and 3, considering the talent Los Angeles got at key positions – even if they weren’t at the weakest spots on the roster.

We handed out our grades for each pick the Rams made, but here’s how the experts graded the team’s draft:

A: 2
B+: 1
B: 2
B-: 2
C: 2

Draft Wire: B

Another team not far removed from a playoff run, the Rams put together a solid start to their draft, despite not having a first-rounder. There were bigger needs to address, but taking Florida State running back Cam Akers late in the second round to replace Todd Gurley was a solid pick.

Touchdown Wire: C

Without a first-round pick this year, the Rams had to make the most of their picks. They got a couple of interesting developmental players who could succeed wildly in the NFL on a “what-if” basis. Second-round running back Cam Akers managed to be productive in a garbage-fire offense at Florida State, but some of Akers’ college issues (like a sub-par offensive line) will follow him to the NFL. And third-round edge-rusher Terrell Lewis from Alabama has all the traits you want in a high-performance disruptor — he only fell that far because of his lengthy injury history. Safety Terrell Burgess from Utah, another third-round pick, is the surest thing in the Rams’ 2020 class with his ability to cover in both the deep third and the slot. It’s a good haul if everything goes right.

USA TODAY: B

They haven’t picked in the first round since 2016, when QB Jared Goff was the No. 1 overall pick. But surrendering this year’s first-rounder brought CB Jalen Ramsey, and GM Les Snead appeared to pick up four players Friday – RB Cam Akers (Round 2), WR Van Jefferson (Round 2), OLB Terrell Lewis (Round 3) and S Terrell Burgess (Round 3) – who could contribute early to a squad little more than a year removed from the Super Bowl.

Sports Illustrated: A

On the back end don’t be at all surprised if Terrell Burgess plays significant snaps right away. The Rams are very thin at linebacker and, in recent years, have preferred to play a three-safety dime package, keeping just one LB on the field. With Taylor Rapp being a dynamic box player, John Johnson being better down near that area as well and no proven depth behind those two, the runway is clear for Burgess to slide in as the centerfielder on passing downs.

NFL.com: A

Day 1 grade: A-
Day 2 grade: A
Day 3 grade: A
Overall grade: A

Draft analysis: For the fourth straight draft, GM Les Snead didn’t have a first-round pick. But the savvy decision-maker was able to make the most out of the four Day 2 picks (two second-rounders, two third-rounders) he did have in his arsenal. He added future contributors at running back (Akers) and receiver (Jefferson) while getting excellent value at edge (Lewis) and nickel (Burgess). Finding Hopkins in the fourth was an excellent value, while Fuller could be another Kurt Coleman-type pickup at safety. The loss of Cory Littleton in free agency, might make room inside for Johnston to fit in. Although it makes sense for the Rams to want competition at kicker, it is interesting that they opted over Georgia’s Rodrigo Blankenship. Anchrum excelled at tackle for Clemson but will transition inside for the Rams.

Sporting News: B+

The Rams got their replacements for Todd Gurley, Brandin Cooks and Dante Fowler Jr. right off the bat. Lewis was the best pick of the three, but Akers and Jefferson have good opportunities to improve on their college production. Hopkins was a steal later for some depth. There was no early linebacker to help replace Cory LIttleton, but Burgess can be useful in coverage. Les Snead and Sean McVay finish right in the middle.

SB Nation: B-

This grade would be better if the Rams targeted a guard at some point before the seventh round.

ESPN’ Mel Kiper: B-

I didn’t have high grades on any of L.A.’s Day 3 picks, and I’m pretty surprised the Rams took only one offensive lineman, late, particularly with a 38-year-old starting left tackle. That seems like a clear miss here, even if I’m a fan of the first three picks.

Pro Football Focus: C

A quiet Day 1 turned into a busy Day 2, as the Rams had multiple selections in both Rounds 2 and 3. Cam Akers is used to running behind shaky offensive lines at Florida State, and he’s had some success doing so, as evidenced by his 82.8 rushing grade in 2019. Unfortunately, he’ll be running behind another poor offensive line in Los Angeles. The tools are there for him to be a good runner at the NFL level but we still gave him a fourth-round label, which means the value wasn’t there in the second round with some of the other needs on the Rams’ roster. 

Expert NFL draft grade roundup loves Bengals’ 2020 draft class

NFL draft grades smile on what the Cincinnati Bengals did in the 2020 draft.

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The Cincinnati Bengals turned some heads with almost every pick Duke Tobin and Co. made during the 2020 NFL draft.

After the predictable with Joe Burrow, most picks married a nice tandem of value with need, securing the Bengals immediate and long-term impact at notable spots like linebacker and wideout. The NFL draft grades department, understandably, loved the results.

ESPN’s Mel Kiper, for example, slotted the Bengals with a “B+” grade:

Linebackers Logan Wilson (65) and Akeem Davis-Gaither (107) improve one of the league’s worst units from a year ago, and Wilson in particular could be a steal. Khalid Kareem (147) had 26 tackles for loss over the past two seasons.

Cincinnati probably isn’t going to win many games in 2020, but it’s going to be fun to watch. This draft and offseason has set the stage for rise, and I’m excited to see where it goes next.

Draft Wire’s Luke Easterling was especially impressed with how the Bengals handled Day 3, giving out an “A” grade:

Day 3 should be about maximizing value and building depth, and that’s exactly what the Bengals did at every pick to close out their class. The triple-dipped at linebacker by adding Appalachian State’s Akeem Davis-Gaither and Purdue’s Markus Bailey, and were rewarded for their patience at offensive line by landing a versatile blocker in Kansas’ Hakeem Adeniji. Notre Dame pass rusher Khalid Kareem in the fifth round was icing on the cake.

Likewise, Yahoo — while giving out an “A” grade, loved the picks after Round 2, too:

“Wilson was insanely productive (94+ tackles four times) at Wyoming, was PFF’s No. 2 linebacker against the run, and is a 64th percentile Adjusted SPARQ athlete. He should have been in my top-100 rankings to be honest. He’ll be a starter for most of his rookie contract… Davis-Gaither can be an asset as a blitzing linebacker and willing tackler against the run, as evidenced by his 101 tackles last season. He can play meaningful snaps for a rebuilding linebacker group… “

Sports Illustrated’s Andy Benoit went with an “A-” and noted the impending return of Jonah Williams, as well as the long-term outlook for Tee Higgins:

“Getting Burrow to quickly maximize the potential of those tasks will require better play at offensive line and wide receiver, areas the Bengals could address later in this draft but will also improve by default with wide receiver A.J. Green and 2019 first-round left tackle Jonah Williams returning to health. This can be a whole different Bengals offense in 2020, especially if second-round pick, Tee Higgins, builds on the drastic growth he showed from 2018 to ’19 at Clemson and carves out a meaningful role as a rookie in 2020. His college improvements were especially poignant inside—a significant note given that in Taylor’s play-action heavy offense the receivers often align in tight splits, working the middle of the field.”

Pro Football Focus, while going with an “A” mark, went longer on Markus Bailey near the end of the draft:

“With multiple ACL injuries over his career, Bailey’s draft stock is in the hands of doctors now. He’s one of the most productive and versatile linebackers in the class when healthy, though. He ranked inside the top-50 among qualifying off-ball linebackers in PFF grade in 2017 and 2018.”

Then there’s NFL.com, which graded every single day and the draft class as a whole at an “A” mark with interesting perspective on Day 3:

“They started the festivities on Saturday by picking another good linebacker in Davis-Gaither, who will track and attack the ball on defense and special teams. Kareem was an excellent edge rusher selection in Round 5, and Adeniji has a chance to start at guard or tackle very soon. Bailey would have been a top-100 pick if not for his history of knee injuries.”

At this point, it’s a little weird to see an outlier grade that isn’t an “A” for this Bengals’ class. That speaks to the need-value balance — as it should given the team’s position as selecting first in each round. If it pans out, this is the sort of foundational class that alters the direction of a franchsie.

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2020 NFL Draft: Complete grades for every team

Luke Easterling breaks down the 2020 NFL Draft, giving out early grades for all 32 teams

“I’ve been in the revenge business for so long, now that it’s over, I don’t know what to do with the rest of my life.”

So it was for Inigo Montoya after he slew the Six-Fingered Man to avenge his father, and so it is for me at the conclusion of every NFL draft.

Months of breaking down film, digging through team needs, interviewing prospects and more finally comes to a close, and before the next chapter is opened, there’s a calm before the annual storm.

It won’t be long, though, before we’re back at it for the next year’s crop of college talent. Before we get there, let’s take a big-picture look at how each of the 32 teams fared in the 2020 NFL Draft.

Arizona Cardinals

Getting the No. 3 overall prospect at No. 8 overall is a great way to start any draft, and that’s what the Cardinals did when they landed Clemson defensive weapon Isaiah Simmons in the first round.

Trading for DeAndre Hopkins was the best possible way they could have spent their second-round pick, and they landed one of the biggest steals of Day 2 with Houston offensive tackle Josh Jones in the third round.

The fourth round brought two massive defensive tackles in Utah’s Leki Fotu and LSU’s Rashard Lawrence, with Lawrence being one of the draft’s biggest steals of all. Cal linebacker Evan Weaver and Arizona State running back Eno Benjamin were great value picks who are talented enough to make the roster with versatility and special teams ability.

GRADE: A

2020 NFL Draft: Day 2 recap, how to watch Day 3

Everything you need to know heading into the final day of the 2020 NFL Draft

Friday was another wild day of 2020 NFL Draft action, with big surprises all across the second and third rounds.

Here’s everything you need to know about what’s happened so far, and how to get ready for the draft’s final day:

WHAT

2020 NFL Draft, Day 3 (Rounds 4-7)

WHEN

Saturday, April 25th

Noon ET

WATCH

ESPN, ABC, NFL Network

DAY 2 RECAP

Biggest steals, reaches

Winners, losers

2nd round grades

3rd round grades

Team grades through 3 rounds

DAY 3 PREVIEW

4th round mock draft

Best available players

2020 Draft Day 3 Order

Pick No. Team Selection School Trade Notes
107 Cincinnati Bengals
108 Washington Redskins
109 Detroit Lions
110 New York Giants
111 Houston Texans From MIA
112 Los Angeles Chargers
113 Carolina Panthers
114 Arizona Cardinals
115 Cleveland Browns
116 Jacksonville Jaguars
117 Minnesota Vikings From SF
118 Denver Broncos
119 Atlanta Falcons
120 New York Jets
121 Las Vegas Raiders
122 Indianapolis Colts
123 Dallas Cowboys
124 Pittsburgh Steelers
125 New England Patriots From CHI
126 Los Angeles Rams
127 Philadelphia Eagles
128 Buffalo Bills
129 New England Patriots From BAL
130 New Orleans Saints
131 Arizona Cardinals
132 Minnesota Vikings
133 Seattle Seahawks
134 Atlanta Falcons From BAL
135 Pittsburgh Steelers From MIA
136 Miami Dolphins From GB
137 Jacksonville Jaguars From DEN
138 Kansas City Chiefs
139 * New England Patriots From TB
140 * Jacksonville Jaguars From CHI
141 * Miami Dolphins
142 * Washington Redskins
143 * Baltimore Ravens
144 * Seattle Seahawks
145 * Philadephia Eagles
146 * Philadelphia Eagles
Round 5
147 Cincinnati Bengals
148 Carolina Panthers
149 Detroit Lions
150 New York Giants
151 Los Angeles Chargers
152 Carolina Panthers
153 Miami Dolphins
154 Miami Dolphins From PITT
155 Minnesota Vikings From BUF
156 San Francisco 49ers From DEN
157 Jacksonville Jaguars From BAL
158 New York Jets
159 Las Vegas Raiders
160 Cleveland Browns From IND
161 Tampa Bay Buccaneers
162 Washington Redskins From SEA
163 Chicago Bears
164 Dallas Cowboys
165 Jacksonville Jaguars From LA
166 Detroit Lions From PHI
167 Buffalo Bills
168 Philadelphia Eagles From NE
169 New Orleans Saints
170 Baltimore Ravens From MIN
171 Houston Texans
172 New England Patriots From DET
173 Miami Dolphins From LA
174 Tennessee Titans
175 Green Bay Packers
176 Minnesota Vikings From SF
177 Kansas City Chiefs
178 * Denver Broncos
179 * Dallas Cowboys
Round 6
180 Cincinnati Bengals
181 Denver Broncos From WAS
182 Detroit Lions
183 New York Giants
184 Carolina Panthers
185 Miami Dolphins
186 Los Angeles Chargers
187 Cleveland Browns From ARZ
188 Buffalo Bills From CLE
189 Jacksonville Jaguars
190 Philadelphia Eagles From ATL
191 New York Jets
192 Green Bay Packers From LV
193 Indianapolis Colts
194 Tampa Bay Buccaneers
195 New England Patriots From DEN
196 Chicago Bears
197 Indianapolis Colts From MIA
198 Pittsburgh Steelers
199 Los Angeles Rams
200 Chicago Bears From PHI
201 Minnesota Vikings From BUF
202 Arizona Cardinals From NE
203 New Orleans Saints
204 New England Patriots From HOU
205 Minnesota Vikings
206 Jacksonville Jaguars From SEA
207 Buffalo Bills From NE
208 Green Bay Packers From TEN
209 Green Bay Packers
210 San Francisco 49ers
211 New York Jets From KC
212 * New England Patriots
213 * New England Patriots
214 * Seattle Seahawks
Round 7
215 Cincinnati Bengals
216 Washington Redskins
217 San Francisco 49ers From DET
218 New York Giants
219 Minnesota Vikings From MIA
220 Los Angeles Chargers
221 Carolina Panthers
222 Arizona Cardinals
223 Jacksonville Jaguars
224 Tennessee Titans
225 Baltimore Ravens From NYJ
226 Chicago Bears From LV
227 Miami Dolphins From IND
228 Atlanta Falcons From PHI
229 Washington Redskins From DEN
230 New England Patriots From ATL
231 Dallas Cowboys
232 Pittsburgh Steelers
233 Chicago Bears
234 Los Angeles Rams
235 Detroit Lions From NE
236 Green Bay Packers From CLE
237 Tennessee Titans From DEN
238 New York Giants From NO
239 Buffalo Bills From MIN
240 Houston Texans
241 Tampa Bay Buccaneers From NE
242 Green Bay Packers From BAL
243 Tennessee Titans
244 Cleveland Browns From GB
245 Tampa Bay Buccaneers From SF
246 Miami Dolphins From KC
247* New York Giants
248 * Houston Texans
249 * Minnesota Vikings
250 * Houston Texans
251 * Miami Dolphins
252 * Denver Broncos
253 * Minnesota Vikings
254 * Denver Broncos
255 * New York Giants

*compensatory pick

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2020 NFL Draft: Full team grades through 3 rounds

Breaking down every pick through the first three rounds of the 2020 NFL Draft, with complete grades for every team

We’re three rounds into the 2020 NFL Draft, and just like every other year, many teams are making their fans feel emotions at either end of the spectrum following their early picks.

Now that all 32 teams have had the chance to make at least one selection, it’s time to take stock of what each of them have done so far in this year’s draft.

Here are our team grades through the first three rounds:

Arizona Cardinals

Getting the No. 3 overall player in the draft at No. 8 overall is a fantastic start to any class, and that’s what the Cardinals did when they landed Clemson’s Isaiah Simmons in the first round. He’s a rare talent with the ability to play at all three levels of the defense, and he was a steal at that spot.

The Cards got another huge bargain with their next selection, landing an offensive tackle prospect in Houston’s Josh Jones that many had pegged as a late first-rounder. He gives Kyler Murray added protection, and was one of the biggest steals of Day 2.

Throw in the fact that they basically spent their second-round pick on arguably the best wide receiver in football thanks to the DeAndre Hopkins trade, and this draft is a huge win so far for Arizona.

GRADE: A

2020 NFL Draft: Full grades for every 3rd-round pick

Breaking down every third-round pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, with complete grades for every selection

Day 2 of the first-ever virtual NFL Draft has come to an end, and it certainly brought plenty of exciting moments.

Here are our immediate grades for every third-round selection from this year’s draft:

65. Cincinnati Bengals

Logan Wilson | LB | Wyoming

The Bengals went offense with their first two selections, so they followed that up kicking off the third round with a talented defender.

Logan Wilson is a productive and intelligent linebacker who should translate well to the second level. He brings solid lateral agility to the table, and his well-rounded skill set makes him a solid value to kick off the third round. There was some speculation that he would go as high as Round 1, so getting him at this stage of the draft was a solid get for Cincinnati.

GRADE: B+