2022 NFL draft: Updated OT rankings

Draft Wire editor Luke Easterling updates his rankings for the top offensive tackle prospects in the 2022 NFL draft

The 2022 NFL Scouting Combine is in the books, and the pro day circuit is in full swing, which means it’s time to take an updated look at our prospect rankings for the 2022 NFL draft.

Here’s how we stack this year’s offensive tackle class:

2022 NFL draft: Updated RB rankings

Draft Wire editor Luke Easterling updates his rankings for the top running back prospects in the 2022 NFL draft

The 2022 NFL Scouting Combine is in the books, and the pro day circuit is in full swing, which means it’s time to take an updated look at our prospect rankings for the 2022 NFL draft.

Here’s how we stack this year’s running back class:

College Football News’ 2021 NFL draft rankings by school: Where’s UGA?

College Football News released 2021 NFL draft rankings by college. Where did Georgia football finish?

College Football News recently released its 2021 NFL draft rankings by college, ranking all the teams that had a player selected in last week’s event.

Here are the rules, per the writer behind the rankings, Pete Fiutak:

A school gets 7 points for each first-round draft pick, 6 for a second, 5 for a third, 4 for a fourth, 3 for a fifth, 2 for a sixth, and 1 for a seventh-round selection.

Georgia had nine players selected in the draft, a school record. Alabama and Ohio State each had 10 players.

Related: All the Georgia Bulldogs selected in the 2021 NFL draft

Fiutak ranked Georgia third, with 40 total points.

Georgia had one first-round pick (7 points), two second-round picks (12), three third-rounders (15), one fifth (3), one in the sixth (2) and a seventh-round pick (1).

Trailing Georgia is rival Florida, which finished fifth with 35 points. Other teams of note include Clemson checking in sixth, LSU at eighth, Auburn tied for 30th and Tennessee tied for – wait for it – 35th with 7 points and two draft picks.

The Bulldogs definitely made a statement in this draft and may even look to break draft their record next season.

2021 NFL Draft: Rankings By College. Which Schools Won The Draft?

NFL Draft Rankings By Conference Last 5 Years: 2021 CFN Program Analysis

After the 2021 NFL Draft, the CFN 5-Year Program Analysis ranks the college football conferences based on how many players were drafted.

Which college programs are doing the best jobs of cranking out the pro talents? Here are the rankings by conference of the college teams and how many players they sent to the NFL over the last five years.


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How have each of the college football conferences done at sending players to the NFL Draft over the last five years? Come up with a slew of great teams and great seasons, get players drafted, get recruits more interested in your program.

After the 2021 NFL Draft, here are the rankings by team and conference over the last five years.

NFL Draft Rankings Over The Last 5 Years: Players Drafted By Conference Average

Average number of players drafted per conference over the last five years

1. SEC 21

2. Big Ten 14.21

3. Pac-12 13.17

4. ACC 13.14

5. Big 12 10.3

6. American Athletic 7

7. Independents 6.29

8. Mountain West 3.26

9. Conference USA 2.5

10. MAC 2.36

11. Sun Belt 2.1

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NFL Draft Rankings Over The Last 5 Years: By Conference

11. Sun Belt NFL Draft Picks 2017-2021

1 Louisiana 7

2 Appalachian State 4

3 Georgia Southern 3

T4 Coastal Carolina 2

T4 South Alabama 2

T6 Georgia State 1

T6 Troy 1

T6 ULM 1

T9 Arkansas State 0

T9 Texas State 0

NFL Draft Picks 2017-2021: 21

NEXT: NFL Draft Rankings By Conference Over The Last 5 Years: No. 10

NFL Draft Rankings By College Last 5 Years: 2021 CFN Program Analysis

In the CFN 5-Year Program Analysis, here are the 1-130 rankings of the college teams and how many guys they sent to the NFL Draft.

In the CFN 5-Year Program Analysis, here are the 1-130 rankings of the college teams and how many guys they sent to the NFL Draft.


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Colleges love to sell the idea that if you come play for their team, you have a real shot at going to the NFL. Recruits might like the schools for their academics and the atmosphere and the program and … they all dream of the pros.

In the 5-Year Program Analysis, here are the rankings of the teams based on who had the most players drafted.

One note, unlike all of the other categories in the 5-Year Program Analysis that go from 2016 to 2020, this one is from 2017 NFL Draft to the 2021 version.

NFL Draft Rankings: 2021 5-Year Program Analysis

T124 Arkansas State

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 0
2020: T122, 2019: T121

T124 Army

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 0
2020: T122, 2019: T121

T124 Kent State

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 0
2020: T122, 2019: T121

T124 Old Dominion

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 0
2020: T122, 2019: T121

T124 Rice

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 0
2020: T122, 2019: T110

T124 Texas State

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 0
2020: T122, 2019: T95

T124 UNLV

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 0
2020: T122, 2019: T121

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T111 Air Force

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T110

T111 Ball State

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T121

T111 Bowling Green

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T110

T111 Georgia State

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T110

T111 Liberty

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T121

T111 Middle Tennessee

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T96, 2019: T95

T111 Navy

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T96, 2019: T95

T111 Nevada

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T110

T111 New Mexico

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T110

T111 North Texas

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T122, 2019: T121

T111 Troy

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T109, 2019: T110

T111 UAB

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T122, 2019: T95

T111 UTSA

5-Year NFL Draft Total: 1
2020: T96, 2019: T95

NEXT: NFL Draft Rankings: 2021 5-Year Program Analysis Top 110

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

2021 NFL Draft: College Football Conference Rankings. How Did The Leagues Do?

Which college football conference won the 2021 NFL Draft? Where do they all rank when it comes to sending players to the next level?

Which college football conference won the 2021 NFL Draft? Where do they all rank when it comes to sending players to the next level?


2021 NFL Draft: College Conference Rankings

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2021 NFL Draft: Team Analysis, Picks, 
AFC East Buffalo | Miami | NY Jets | New England
AFC North Baltimore | Cincinnati | Cleveland | Pitt
AFC South Houston | Indy | Jacksonville | Tenn
AFC West Denver | KC | Las Vegas | LA Chargers
NFC East Dallas | NY Giants | Phil | Washington
NFC North Chicago | Detroit | Green BayMinn
NFC South Atlanta | Carolina | New Orleans | TB
NFC West Arizona | LA Rams | San Fran | Seattle

How did all the college football conferences do in the 2021 NFL Draft?

Who gets the big bragging rights and which conference were lagging behind a bit?

A conference gets 7 points for each first round draft pick, 6 for a second, 5 for a third, 4 for a fourth, 3 for a fifth, 2 for a sixth, and 1 for a seventh round selection.

12. Sun Belt (8 points)

A conference gets 7 points for each first round draft pick, 6 for a second, 5 for a third, 4 for a fourth, 3 for a fifth, 2 for a sixth, and 1 for a seventh round selection.

TOTAL PICKS BY ROUNDS
1st 0, 2nd 0, 3rd 0, 4th 0, 5th 1, 6th 2, 7th 1
NFL Draft Conference Rankings
2020: 11, 2019: 11, 2018: 11

Team Winner: Appalachian State, 1 player, 3 points
5 (178) Green Bay – CB Shemar Jean-Charles

T2 Coastal Carolina 2
T2 Louisiana 2
4 South Alabama 1
T5 Arkansas State 0
T5 Georgia Southern 0
T5 Georgia State 0
T5 Texas State 0
T5 Troy 0
T5 ULM 0

11. Mountain West (11 points)

A conference gets 7 points for each first round draft pick, 6 for a second, 5 for a third, 4 for a fourth, 3 for a fifth, 2 for a sixth, and 1 for a seventh round selection.

TOTAL PICKS BY ROUNDS
1st 0, 2nd 0, 3rd 0, 4th 2, 5th 1, 6th 0, 7th 0
NFL Draft Conference Rankings
2020: 8, 2019: 9, 2018: 7

Team Winner: Boise State, 2 players, 7 points
4 (124) Washington – TE John Bates
5 (183) Atlanta – CB Avery Williams

2 San Diego State 4
T3 Air Force 0
T3 Colorado State 0
T3 Fresno State 0
T3 Hawaii 0
T3 New Mexico 0
T3 Nevada 0
T3 San Jose State 0
T3 UNLV 0
T3 Utah State 0
T3 Wyoming 0

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T9. MAC (17 points)

TOTAL PICKS BY ROUNDS
1st 0, 2nd 1, 3rd 1, 4th 0, 5th 2, 6th 0, 7th 0
NFL Draft Conference Rankings
2020: 11, 2019: 8, 2018: 10

Conference Winner: Western Michigan, 2 players, 9 points overall
Seattle 2 (56) Seattle – WR D’Wayne Eskridge
San Francisco 5 (155) San Francisco – OG Jaylon Moore

2 Buffalo 5
3 Miami University 3
T4 Akron 0
T4 Ball State 0
T4 Bowling Green 0
T4 Central Michigan 0
T4 Eastern Michigan 0
T4 Kent State 0
T4 Miami University 0
T4 Northern Illinois 0
T4 Ohio 0
T4 Toledo 0

T9. Conference USA (17 points)

A conference gets 7 points for each first round draft pick, 6 for a second, 5 for a third, 4 for a fourth, 3 for a fifth, 2 for a sixth, and 1 for a seventh round selection.

TOTAL PICKS BY ROUNDS
1st 0, 2nd 0, 3rd 1, 4th 3, 5th 0, 6th 0, 7th 0
NFL Draft Conference Rankings
2020: 9, 2019: 10, 2018: 8

Team Winner: Louisiana Tech, 1 player, 5 points
3 (73) Philadelphia – DE Milton Williams

T2 UAB 4
T2 North Texas 4
T2 Marshall 4
T5 Charlotte 0
T5 Florida Atlantic 0
T5 FIU 0
T5 Middle Tennessee 0
T5 Old Dominion 0
T5 Rice 0
T5 Southern Miss 0
T5 UTEP 0
T5 UTSA 0
T5 WKU 0

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8. FCS, non-FBS (36 points)

A conference – and in this case, a whole level of college football – gets 7 points for each first round draft pick, 6 for a second, 5 for a third, 4 for a fourth, 3 for a fifth, 2 for a sixth, and 1 for a seventh round selection.

TOTAL PICKS BY ROUNDS
1st 1, 2nd 1, 3rd 2, 4th 2, 5th 1, 6th 0, 7th 2
NFL Draft Conference Rankings
2020: 9, 2019: 10, 2018: 8

Team Winner: North Dakota State, 2 players, 13 points
1 (03) San Francisco – QB Trey Lance
2 (53) Tennessee – OT Dillon Radunz

2 Northern Iowa 9
3 Wisconsin-Whitewater 5
4 Central Arkansas 4
5 Central Missouri 3
T6 Charleston (WV) 1
T6 Concordia-St. Paul 1

NEXT: 2021 NFL Draft Conference Rankings No. 7

2021 NFL Draft: Rankings By College. Which Schools Won The Draft?

Which college football programs won the 2021 NFL Draft? Where do they all rank when it comes to sending players to the next level?

Which college football programs won the 2021 NFL Draft? Where do they all rank when it comes to sending players to the next level?


2021 NFL Draft: College Conference Rankings

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2021 NFL Draft: Team Analysis Picks 
AFC East Buffalo | Miami | NY Jets | New England
AFC North Baltimore | Cincinnati | Cleveland | Pitt
AFC South Houston | Indy | Jacksonville | Tenn
AFC West Denver | KC | Las Vegas | LA Chargers
NFC East Dallas | NY Giants | Phil | Washington
NFC North Chicago | Detroit | Green BayMinn
NFC South Atlanta | Carolina | New Orleans | TB
NFC West Arizona | LA Rams | San Fran | Seattle

Did your get guys drafted? That means absolutely everything in the recruiting game – at least it’s a huge help. Which schools get to brag a bit more than others?

One thing to remember if you school didn’t have a ton of players selected. Sometimes that means the team is returning loaded with veterans. However this is a big weekend for the schools at the top.

A school gets 7 points for each first round draft pick, 6 for a second, 5 for a third, 4 for a fourth, 3 for a fifth, 2 for a sixth, and 1 for a seventh round selection.

T84 Baylor 1

7 (240) Washington – LB William Bradley-King

T84 Charleston (WV) 1

7 (229) Indianapolis – WR Mike Strachan

T84 Concordia-St. Paul 1

7 (252) Los Angeles Rams – LB Chris Garrett

T84 Kansas State 1

7 (235) Cincinnati – DE Wyatt Hubert

T83 Maryland 1

7 (233) Los Angeles Rams – RB Jake Funk

T84 South Alabama 1

7 (255) New Orleans – WR Kawaan Baker

T84 UMass 1

7 (231) Miami – OT Larnel Coleman

T78 Arizona State 2

6 (187) Atlanta – WR Frank Darby

T78 Arkansas 2

6 (207) New York Jets – DT Jonathan Marshall Arkansas

T78 Coastal Carolina 2

6 (191) Philadelphia – DE Tarron Jackson

T78 Colorado 2

6 (197) New England – OT William Sherman

T78 Louisiana 2

6 (194) San Francisco – RB Elijah Mitchell

T78 Mississippi State 2

7 (256) Green Bay – RB Kylin Hill

T71 Appalachian State 3

5 (178) Green Bay – CB Shemar Jean-Charles

T71 Central Missouri 3

5 (168) Minnesota – TE Zach Davison

T71 Georgia Tech 3

7 (254) Pittsburgh – P Pressley Harvin

T71 Indiana 3

5 (164) Denver – S Jamar Johnson

T71 Memphis 3

5 (150) Philadelphia – RB Kenneth Gainwell

T71 Miami University 3

5 (161) Buffalo – OT Tommy Doyle

T71 West Virginia 3

5 (153) Cleveland – LB Tony Fields

T61 Arizona 4

6 (195) Houston – DT Roy Lopez
6 (196) New York Giants – RB Gary Brightwell

T61 Cal 4

4 (125) Minnesota – CB Camryn Bynum

T61 Central Arkansas 4

4 (130) Los Angeles Rams – CB Robert Rochell

T61 East Carolina 4

4 (139) Cincinnati – OT D’Ante Smith

T61 Iowa State 4

4 (119) Minnesota – RB Kene Nwangwu

T61 Marshall 4

4 (138) Dallas – OT Josh Ball

T61 Nebraska 4

5 (159) Los Angeles Chargers – OT Brenden Jaimes
7 (238) Dallas – OG Matt Farniok

T61 North Texas 4

4 (129) Tampa Bay – WR Jaelon Darden

T61 San Diego State 4

4 (108) Atlanta – CB Darren Hall

T61 UAB 4

4 (121) Jacksonville – DE Jordan Smith UAB

T55 Buffalo 5

3 (79) Las Vegas – EDGE Malcolm Koonce

T55 Louisiana Tech 5

3 (73) Philadelphia – DE Milton Williams

T55 NC State 5

3 (72) Detroit – DT Alim McNeill

T55 Texas Tech 5

4 (123) Philadelphia – CB Zech McPhearson
7 (236) Buffalo – OG Jack Anderson

T55 Tulane 5

4 (111) Cincinnati – DE Cameron Sample
7 (234) Philadelphia – LB Patrick Johnson

T55 Wisconsin-Whitewater 5

3 (98) Denver – OG/C Quinn Meinerz

T52 Oregon State 6

3 (99) Dallas – CB Nashon Wright
7 (257) Detroit – RB Jermar Jefferson

T52 Vanderbilt 6

2 (54) Indianapolis – DE Dayo Odeyingbo

T52 Wake Forest 6

2 (61) Buffalo – DE Carlos Basham

NEXT: 2020 NFL Draft Rankings By College: Top 51

Rams Big Board: Top 101 prospects for LA in the 2021 NFL draft

Ranking the 101 best prospects for the Los Angeles Rams in the 2021 NFL draft.

For the fifth straight year, the Los Angeles Rams are expected to sit out the first round of the draft, being without a top-32 selection due to the Jalen Ramsey trade from 2019. Their first pick will be at No. 57 overall, followed by selections at Nos. 88 and 103 in Round 3.

They won’t have a shot to draft the top prospects but there will be plenty of options available in the second round for Los Angeles. We’ve ranked the top 101 prospects for the Rams in the draft, laying out the best players they could have a chance to select.

Obviously, this list doesn’t include the very best prospects in the class who Los Angeles has no shot to select, players such as Kyle Pitts, Jaylen Waddle, Rashawn Slater, Penei Sewell and Kwity Paye. That doesn’t mean every player listed below will be available at No. 57, but even the ones unlikely to reach the Rams’ first pick could be trade-up targets if they experience a draft-day fall.

And so, here is our 2021 Rams Big Board, giving you an idea of which players Los Angeles could land in the draft.

2021 NFL Draft Top 105 Pro Prospects, Three Rounds: From The College Perspective

Who are the best pro prospects in the 2021 NFL Draft? From the college perspective, who are the best players on the board through 3 rounds?

Who are the best 105 pro prospects in the 2021 NFL Draft? From the college perspective, who are the best players on the board through the first three rounds?


2021 NFL Draft Top 105 Prospects: Best Players on the Board, Three Rounds

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CFN 2021 NFL Draft Prospect Rankings
from the college perspective …
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG & C
DE & Edge | DT | LB | CB | Safeties
Greatest Draft Picks For Each College
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
32 Greatest Draft Picks of All-Time

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Which 105 pro prospects matter the most in the 2021 NFL Draft?

From the college football perspective, who are the ones who’ll be the must-have talents, and how good are they no matter what the position?

And why 105? That’s how many picks are in the first three rounds. Anything after that is blind luck – you have to try not to get a starter in the first round, the second round is 50/50, and the third is dicey before it all falls off a cliff.

Always take the best player available, and here they are – at least from the college perspective after several years of watching and analyzing these guys.

One note, this isn’t a mock draft. The teams listed who have the picks at each spot don’t have anything to do with the players ranked in each spot. They show the draft order and who might still be in range. 


105 DE/EDGE Ronnie Perkins, Oklahoma

Bottom Line: The raw wheels and tools might be just okay, and he’ll get blasted by the big NFL blockers, but don’t ask how the sausage is made. He makes a whole lot of big momentum plays happen and has a rare knack of being a tone-setter to take defenses to another level.
Who Has This Pick: New Orleans

104 WR Amon-Ra St. Brown, USC

Bottom Line: For all the nice overall numbers and the smooth-as-silk style, he should be a complementary target and not a No. 1. The skills are there, but he doesn’t have any one thing that stands out as elite at an NFL level.
Who Has This Pick: Los Angeles Rams

103 CB Kary Vincent, LSU

Bottom Line: The 4.33 track star speed is there, the production as a star for a national championship team is there, and the ability to get into the backfield is there. He’ll get erased by blockers and will have problems with physical targets, but no one’s running by him.
Who Has This Pick: Los Angeles Rams

102 WR Amari Rodgers, Clemson

Bottom Line: He’s built like a running back, but he catches a whole lot of passes – and drops a lot, too. He’s quick enough to produce in a variety of ways as a runner, receiver, and return man.
Who Has This Pick: San Francisco

101 DE/EDGE Patrick Johnson, Tulane

Bottom Line: Really more of a linebacker at 6-2 and 240 pounds, he doesn’t look like a normal NFL pass rusher but he was highly productive for three years. Expect energy and sensational technical ability on every play.
Who Has This Pick: Detroit

100 WR Dyami Brown, North Carolina

Bottom Line: He’ll drop one pass, and then he’ll make the spectacular grab. He’s hardly the perfect receiver prospect – he’s too small and not necessarily a blazer – but he plays fast and makes a whole lot of big, dynamic plays.
Who Has This Pick: Tennessee

99 DT Marlon Tuipulotu, USC

Bottom Line: A tad smallish at 6-2 and 307, his lack of mass didn’t matter as he made a whole lot of stops against the run. Make him a part of your rotation and he’ll do a whole lot of things right with a whole lot of effort.
Who Has This Pick: Dallas

98 DE/EDGE Chris Rumph, Duke

Bottom Line: Way small at 244 pounds, he might not be a true NFL defensive end, but you’re not getting him to stop the run. You want him as a situational pass rusher, and the guy who made 17.5 sacks and 33 tackles for loss can get the job done.
Who Has This Pick: New Orleans

97 C Creed Humphrey, Oklahoma

Bottom Line: He doesn’t quite look the part bulk-wise and he’s not an elite athlete for the position, but he’s been a brilliant blocker and leader for a line that sure-as-shoot knew how to get the job done for a fast-paced high-powered offense.
Who Has This Pick: Los Angeles Chargers

96 LB Baron Browning, Ohio State

Bottom Line: This is what an NFL linebacker looks like with size, bulk, and the toughness to hold up against the run. However, he needs to play up to the look if someone wants him on the outside. Put him inside and good things will happen.
Who Has This Pick: New England

95 DT Daviyon Nixon, Iowa

Bottom Line: A high-end interior pass rusher at a bargain-basement value, he turned into a playmaker last season who lived behind the line. Even at his 313-pound size he’s not amazing against the run, but he’ll make up for it beybeing disruptive.
Who Has This Pick: Tampa Bay

94 OG Deonte Brown, Alabama

Bottom Line: He’s the rare top Alabama pro prospect who doesn’t come out of central casting, but he’s a big, thick bulldozer of a blocker who’ll do everything right and be the one to anchor your ground game.
Who Has This Pick: Kansas City

93 RB Michael Carter, North Carolina

Bottom Line: What do you need done? He’ll catch, return kicks, and he can tear off big runs in chunks as part of a rotation. He might not be a blazer, but keep feeding him and he’ll break off something big.
Who Has This Pick: Buffalo

92 OG/OT Trey Smith, Tennessee

Bottom Line: This might be crazy-stupid low for this guy. No one has had to deal with more adversity, and on the field, he’s a big, tough, former superstar recruit who has the blasting ability to be a Pro Bowl value pick as long as all his health concerns are just fine.
Who Has This Pick: Green Bay

91 S Ar’Darius Washington, Washington

Bottom Line: Just 5-8 and not big enough to be any sort of intimidating force, he makes up for it with attitude. Good luck finding a tougher football player with more energy in the draft – he’ll make every tackle possible.
Who Has This Pick: Cleveland

90 QB Jamie Newman, Georgia

Bottom Line: There’s a good-value, low-risk factor to him in a draft that’s going to be scrutinized forever for the quarterbacks taken up top. He has NFL tools with the shot to be one of the big stars out of the group if he gets a little while to work on his game behind a Hall of Fame talent – looking at you, Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay.
Who Has This Pick: Minnesota

89 C Landon Dickerson, Alabama

Bottom Line: As long as he can stay healthy, and as long as he doesn’t have to get on the move, he’s a special center prospect who’ll slide a bit. If he can stay in one piece, he’s a ten-year quarterback for your line.
Who Has This Pick: Cleveland

88 WR Tamorrion Terry, Florida State

Bottom Line: He’s a 6-3, 207-pound 4.4 receiver with home run hitting skills. He might not be your No. 1 target, but he’s a matchup nightmare as your No. 3 who’ll average mega-yards per catch.
Who Has This Pick: Los Angeles Rams

87 QB Kyle Trask, Florida

Bottom Line: Before the bowl game disaster, he was on a better pace last year than Joe Burrow was in 2019. He might have a whole lot of things to work on, but the guy threw for over 4,000 yards and 43 touchdowns in 11 SEC games.
Who Has This Pick: Pittsburgh

86 OG Jackson Carman, Clemson

Bottom Line: There are several versatile linemen in this draft, but the 6-5, 317-pound Carman can work fine for just about everyone. He’s not going to be a thumper inside, but he brings a little something to everyone’s offensive style.
Who Has This Pick: New York Jets

NEXT: 2021 NFL Draft Third Round Prospects, Best Players On The Board, Part 2