Difference between revisions of "2018 NFL Draft: Top 300 Prospects"
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− | <br>The Top 300 prospects for the 2018 NFL Draft, per ratings by Field Level Media:<br> <br>Ovr, Pos Rk, Player (*=underclassman), Pos, Ht., Wt., 40, Proj., School, Comment<br> <br>1, 1, Saquon Barkley*, RB, 6-0, 233, 4.40, 1, Penn State, Outstanding all-around athlete and home-run threat with great vision as runner, receiver and return man.<br> <br>2, 1, Quenton Nelson, OG, 6-5, 325, 5.23, 1, Notre Dame, Future All-Pro in Zack Martin mold at guard and enough ability, agility to be LT candidate in right system.<br> <br>3, 1, Sam Darnold*, QB, 6-3?, 221, 4.85, 1, USC, Pro-ready passer with arm strength, leadership skills.<br><br>Must improve decision-making to cut down on TOs.<br> <br>4, 1, Bradley Chubb, DE, 6-4?, 269, 4.65, 1, NC State, Not sudden or dynamic but solid in every possible way with the ability to start tomorrow.<br> <br>5, 1, Tremaine Edmunds*, OLB, 6-4½, 253, 4.54, 1, Virginia Tech, Youngest player in draft is undisciplined, but elite athlete with great burst, range, fluidity.<br><br>Blitzing threat.<br> <br>6, 1, Minkah Fitzpatrick*, S, 6-0?, 204, 4.46, 1, Alabama, Versatile coverage hawk works like a walk-on and fights to be most prepared player on the field.<br> <br>7, 1, Denzel Ward*, CB, 5-10?, 183, 4.32, 1, Ohio State, Most explosive CB in class has speed, quickness to lock up with any receiver inside or outside.<br> <br>8, 1, Roquan Smith*, ILB, 6-0?, 236, 4.51, 1, Georgia, Undersized but smooth, explosive athlete.<br><br>Great range in run game and moves in coverage like a safety.<br> <br>9, 2, Josh Allen*, QB, 6-4?, 237, 4.75, 1, Wyoming, Elite physical tools, including feet, arm strength and touch to mask spotty mechanics. May need some time.<br> <br>10, 1, Vita Vea*, DT, 6-4, 347, 5.10, 1, Washington, Not many humans have his size/athleticism/strength combo.<br>Splits double teams and chases to sideline.<br> <br>11, 2, Derwin James*, S, 6-1¾, 215, 4.47, 1, Florida State, More explosive than Fitzpatrick with the same "sic 'em" mentality and skills to slide around D.<br> <br>12, 2, Da'Ron Payne*, DT, 6-2½, 311, 4.95, 1, Alabama, Highly disruptive, ascending talent anchors vs.<br><br>double teams. Limited pass rush on film, but flashes.<br> <br>13, 1, Calvin Ridley*, WR, 6-0½, 189, 4.43, 1, Alabama, Big-play explosiveness and runs full route tree. Stats limited by offense. Could use more strength vs. press.<br> <br>14, 3, Baker Mayfield, QB, 6-0?, 215, 4.84, 1, Oklahoma, Polarizing prospect impressed teams with football IQ, moxie.<br>Mid-round physical talent has rare instincts.<br> <br>15, 4, Josh Rosen*, QB, 6-4, 226, 4.92, 1, UCLA, Natural passer spins ball to all levels. Bright with good instincts, but injuries, personality turn some off.<br> <br>16, 2, Marcus Davenport, DE, 6-5¾, 264, 4.58, 1, UT San Antonio, Tall with long arms and loose limbs; better overall athlete with higher pass-rush ceiling than Chubb.<br> <br>17, 2, Will Hernandez, OG, 6-2?, 327, 5.15, 1, UTEP, Strength of a powerlifter with surprisingly light feet; instantly erases pursuit with tenacious power.<br> <br>18, 2, Harold Landry, OLB, 6-2?, 252, 4.64, 1, Boston College, DE/OLB hybrid is explosive pass rusher already boasting array of moves.<br><br>Suspect strength shows vs. run.<br> <br>19, 2, Josh Jackson*, CB, 6-0?, 196, 4.48, 1, Iowa, One-year starter and converted WR has sticky mitts; compared to Ronde Barber. Sudden enough?<br> <br>20, 3, Leighton Vander Esch*, OLB, 6-4¼, 256, 4.66, 1, Boise State, Played 8-man football in HS and walked on. Tough vs.<br>run, even better in coverage with high football IQ.<br> <br>21, 2, Derrius Guice*, RB, 5-10½, 224, 4.49, 1, LSU, Self-described ball of knives could be second coming of Marshawn Lynch with even better feet.<br> <br>22, 1, James Daniels*, C, 6-3?, 306, N/A, 1, Iowa, Explosive first step with good body control, punch and mobility.<br><br>Only 20; missed 3 games to knee issues.<br> <br>23, 3, Taven Bryan*, DT, 6-5, 291, 4.98, 1, Florida, Impressive athlete who surges and explodes through gaps. Still developing and must improve mechanics.<br> <br>24, 4, Rashaan Evans, OLB, 6-1?, 232, N/A, 1, Alabama, One-year starter sports good size, build and burst.<br>Speed questions unanswered by skipping 40 twice.<br> <br>25, 5, Lamar Jackson*, QB, 6-2¼, 216, 4.42, 1, Louisville, Ridiculous stats and draft's most electric QB is explosive athlete who lacks accuracy due to shaky mechanics.<br> <br>26, 3, Jaire Alexander*, CB, 5-10¼, 196, 4.38, 1, Louisville, Speedy (4.38 40) punt return ace with playmaking tendencies.<br><br>Carries size, durability questions.<br> <br>27, 3, Isaiah Wynn, OG, 6-2?, 313, 5.06, 1, Georgia, Started 15 games at left tackle in 2017, best suited (height, reach) inside as ready-made LG starter.<br> <br>28, 4, Mike Hughes*, CB, 5-10?, 189, 4.53, 1-2, UCF, Gifted with top competitive grade, exceptional speed and elite swagger.<br>Technique needs ironing out.<br> <br>29, 1, Connor Williams*, OT, 6-5?, 296, 5.05, 1-2, Texas, Former TE is natural mover who plays with more finesse than power. Missed most of '17 to sprained knee.<br> <br>30, 3, Ronnie Harrison*, S, 6-2, 207, 4.65, 1-2, Alabama, HS quarterback with top instincts looks like a LB in uniform.<br><br>Ready-made in-the-box safety and enforcer.<br> <br>31, 4, Maurice Hurst, DT, 6-1¼, 292, 4.97, 1-2, Michigan, Remarkable athlete considering wide frame with explosive first step. Medicals vital (heart condition).<br> <br>32, 2, D.J. Moore*, WR, 6-0, 210, 4.42, 1-2, Maryland, Great production despite QB carousel (school-record 80 catches in '17).<br>A bit slight, but a terror after catch.<br> <br>33, 3, Sony Michel, RB, 5-10?, 214, 4.54, 1-2, Georgia, Great burst through the hole and elusivness at second levels. Shared RB job and wasn't overworked.<br> <br>34, 2, Billy Price, C, 6-3¾, 305, 5.22, 1-2, Ohio State, Out until training camp due to partially torn pec at Combine, but mature leader with great technical traits.<br> <br>35, 1, Dallas Goedert, TE, 6-4?, 256, 4.67, 1-2, South Dakota State, Strong and athletic with the speed to split the seam and adapt to a flex/slot role in NFL.<br> <br>36, 2, Mike McGlinchey, OT, 6-7?, 309, 5.20, 1-2, Notre Dame, Cousin of Falcons QB Matt Ryan took over LT from Ronnie Stanley.<br><br>Steady, polished prospect, if not elite.<br> <br>37, 4, Ronald Jones II*, RB, 5-11, 205, 4.39, 1-2, USC, Ballet feet and balance with springy explosiveness to stop and go. Upside of NFL gamebreaker.<br> <br>38, 5, Isaiah Oliver*, CB, 6-0¼, 201, 4.50, 2, Colorado, Tall and long with ideal man coverage skills and experience vs.<br>No. 1 receiver in pass-crazed Big 12.<br> <br>39, 3, Christian Kirk*, WR, 5-10?, 201, 4.47, 2, Texas A&M, Quicker than fast and not a big vertical threat. Likely contributor from Day 1 as a slot WR and returner.<br> <br>40, 3, Sam Hubbard*, DE, 6-5?, 270, 4.97, 2, Ohio State, Smart, hard-nosed edge rusher who competes on every play.<br><br>Limited burst, athleticism.<br> <br>41, 4, Justin Reid*, S, 6-0½, 207, 4.40, 2, Stanford, Little brother of NFL S Eric Reid, Justin is a tenacious prospect with the wheels and vision to start now.<br> <br>42, 5, Harrison Phillips, DT, 6-3¼, 307, 5.21, 2, Stanford, Former wrestler diagnoses quicking and has long arms, strong hands to control blocks.<br>Scheme versatile.<br> <br>43, 4, Courtland Sutton*, WR, 6-3?, 218, 4.54, 2, SMU, Potential to be true No. 1 WR with excellent size, speed combo if he can separate with more consistency.<br> <br>44, 2, Hayden Hurst*, TE, 6-4½, 250, 4.67, 2, South Carolina, Ball skills and effort to win in traffic and get downfield.<br><br>Dinged for age (25 as a rookie), limited route tree.<br> <br>45, 6, Carlton Davis*, CB, 6-1, 206, 4.53, 2, Auburn, Sturdy, RB-like build and agile enough to contribute as a No. 1 cornerback. First-team All-SEC in 2017.<br> <br>46, 3, Mike Gesicki, TE, 6-5½, 247, 4.54, 2, Penn State, All-American workout at Combine, long arms and explosive movements to thrive in one-on-ones.<br> <br>47, 5, Lorenzo Carter, OLB, 6-4?, 250, 4.50, 2, Georgia, Jaw-dropping athlete gained versatility at UGA.<br><br>Needs to develop pass rush technique, strength in NFL.<br> <br>48, 4, Arden Key*, DE, 6-4?, 238, 4.89, 2, LSU, Gifted athlete and more of a hybrid edge rusher if off-field concerns don't scare away suitors.<br> <br>49, 5, D.J. Chark, WR, 6-2?, 199, 4.34, 2, LSU, Former track star tore up pre-draft workouts.<br>Highly inconsistent, but height, speed to blow top off defenses.<br> <br>50, 5, Rasheem Green*, DE, 6-4¼, 275, 4.73, 2, USC, Scheme-versatile with growth potential, Green has plus size and athleticism put could wind up at left end.<br> <br>51, 3, Kolton Miller*, OT, 6-8?, 309, 4.95, 2, UCLA, Possesses all the tools, moving and mirroring well into 2nd level.<br><br>Still takes false steps and power a concern.<br> <br>52, 4, Martinas Rankin, OT, 6-4?, 308, 5.25, 2, Mississippi State, Trained pre-draft to show versatility at all 5 OL spots, including snapping. Flexibility key with avg. quickness.<br> <br>53, 5, Tyrell Crosby, OT, 6-4?, 309, 5.23, 2, Oregon, Powerfully built and strong with mean streak vs.<br>run. Modest agility will have most teams view him as RT.<br> <br>54, 7, Anthony Averett, CB, 5-11?, 183, 4.36, 2, Alabama, Ran 4.36 and claims he's even faster, having Nick Saban as spotter and slot experience are huge plusses.<br> <br>55, 8, Donte Jackson*, CB, 5-10½, 178, 4.32, 2, LSU, Tied for top 40 time among CBs.<br><br>Competes even without prototype size, weight and length.<br> <br>56, 6, Nathan Shepherd, DT, 6-3¾, 315, 5.09, 2, Fort Hays State, Well-traveled, including 2 years out of sport. NFL starter kit for a body and dominated at Senior Bowl.<br> <br>57, 6, Mason Rudolph, QB, 6-4?, 235, 4.90, 2, Oklahoma State, 42-game starter was uber-productive in fast-paced offense.<br><br>Big pocket passer with good arm lacks mobility.<br> <br>58, 5, Nick Chubb, RB, 5-10?, 227, 4.52, 2, Georgia, One-speed runner with good vision, patience. Good feet with powerful legs to be short-yardage ace.<br> <br>59, 7, Tim Settle*, DT, 6-2¾, 329, 5.37, 2, Virginia Tech, Draws comparisons to Vince Wilfork for being so nimble at his size.<br>Bursts hard, developing instincts.<br> <br>60, 6, Brian O'Neill*, OT, 6-6?, 297, 4.82, 2-3, Pittsburgh, Former TE has intriguing tools for teams featuring outside zone, sweeps, screens. Struggles against power.<br> <br>61, 4, Mark Andrews*, TE, 6-5?, 256, 4.58, 2-3, Oklahoma, Extra wideout for Sooners with 15 career red-zone receptions.<br><br>Size potential to be a blocker.<br> <br>62, 6, Anthony Miller, WR, 5-11?, 201, 4.49, 2-3, Memphis, 3-level threat with speed, ball skills and elusiveness. Medical key after Jones fracture in bowl game.<br> <br>63, 6, Kerryon Johnson*, RB, 5-11½, 213, 4.56, 2-3, Auburn, Versatile weapon. Natural runner with return game experience and polish as a receiver.<br> <br>64, 5, Jessie Bates III*, S, 6-1?, 200, 4.50, 2-3, Wake Forest, Corner or safety, Bates is a fluid mover with short-area quickness to be utiltity defensive back.<br> <br>65, 7, Dante Pettis, WR, 6-0½, 186, N/A, 2-3, Washington, Athletic bloodlines, set NCAA record with 9 punt return TDs.<br><br>Very elusive, some questions about 40 time.<br> <br>66, 6, Uchenna Nwosu, OLB, 6-2?, 251, 4.65, 2-3, USC, Former safety recruit blossomed in '17. 'Tweener with quick 1st step and good awareness; liability vs. run.<br> <br>67, 7, Rashaad Penny, RB, 5-11, 220, 4.46, 2-3, San Diego State, Durable (54 G) and hyper-productive, capable of big plays and contributions as runner-receiver-returner.<br> <br>68, 3, Frank Ragnow, C, 6-5?, 312, 5.18, 2-3, Arkansas, Charged with 0 sacks over past three seasons in SEC.<br><br>Intense competitor with traits to step in as a starter.<br> <br>69, 4, Austin Corbett, OG, 6-4?, 306, 5.15, 2-3, Nevada, College OT needs to slide inside and showed promise in OG workouts. Pro makeup and locker room leader.<br> <br>70, 8, James Washington, WR, 5-11, 213, 4.54, 3, Oklahoma State, Biletnikoff winner with 74-1,549-13 as senior.<br>Big play waiting to happen. Limited route tree in college.<br> <br>71, 9, Deon Cain*, WR, 6-1?, 202, 4.43, 3, Clemson, Good blend of size, speed athleticism with big-play moves. Stats haven't yet matched explosive upside.<br> <br>72, 10, Equanimeous St. Brown*, WR, 6-4¾, 214, 4.48, 3, Notre Dame, Dangerous deep threat who lines up all over field.<br><br>Gifted; needs to stay on more routes, win contested balls.<br> <br>73, 8, Derrick Nnadi, DT, 6-1, 317, 5.38, 3, Florida State, Bit undersized but sports ideal build. Animal in weight room. Should excel eating blocks vs. run.<br> <br>74, 9, B.J. Hill, DT, 6-3¼, 311, 4.99, 3, NC State, Solid run defender can shed blocks and make plays in the hole.<br>Limited length and pass rush potential.<br> <br>75, 9, M.J. Stewart, CB, 5-10?, 200, 4.54, 3, North Carolina, Broke up 41 passes and embraces being challenged in coverage, but limited by average speed.<br> <br>76, 7, Jerome Baker*, OLB, 6-1?, 229, 4.53, 3, Ohio State, Undersized "Will" with tremendous athleticism and range in run game.<br><br>Only 21, needs time to develop.<br> <br>77, 6, Da'Shawn Hand, DE, 6-3?, 297, 4.83, 3, Alabama, Big and powerful with some DT traits, Hand can set the edge and is nearly immovable vs. the run.<br> <br>78, 5, Braden Smith, OG, 6-6¼, 315, 5.20, 3, Auburn, Bullying upper-body strength and plays with the alley-fighter's mentality OL coaches covet.<br> <br>79, 8, Obo Okoronkwo, OLB, 6-1?, 253, 4.77, 3, Oklahoma, "Obo" threatens edge with great burst, balance.<br><br>Liability in run game, projecting as sub-package rusher.<br> <br>80, 7, Jalyn Holmes, DE, 6-4?, 283, 4.82, 3, Ohio State, Strength, size and bull rush must be respected. Drives through blocks to stuff run and could fit at DT.<br> <br>81, 5, Ian Thomas, TE, 6-3?, 259, 4.65, 3, Indiana, Smooth mover with quick-twitch movements could take off with NFL coaching and stabliity.<br> <br>82, 7, Chukwuma Okorafor, OT, 6-6, 320, 5.31, 3, Western Michigan, Moved to U.S.<br><br>as teen. Excellent size, movement skills, but needs work on technique, physical attitude.<br> <br>83, 10, Duke Dawson, CB, 5-10?, 197, 4.46, 3, Florida, Hybrid defender started three positions at UF and could do same in NFL: thick but smooth in reverse.<br> <br>84, 8, Jamarco Jones, OT, 6-4, 299, 5.50, 3, Ohio State, Steadily improved despite lacking great athleticism or power.<br><br>Reliable - if unspectacular - potential starter.<br> <br>85, 8, Duke Ejiofor, DE, 6-3?, 267, 4.84, 3, Wake Forest, Hurt too often to be considered in top 64 but productive - 17 sacks past two seasons - when healthy.<br> <br>86, 9, Kemoko Turay, DE, 6-4?, 253, 4.65, 3, Rutgers, Great explosion off the snap, closing on running backs and quarterbacks with intent.<br><br>Shoulder issues.<br> <br>87, 9, Malik Jefferson*, OLB, 6-2¼, 236, 4.52, 3, Texas, Dynamic athlete with high ceiling, low floor. Dangerous blitzer, but poor awareness and inconsisent tackler.<br> <br>88, 11, DaeSean Hamilton, WR, 6-0?, 203, 4.47, 3, Penn State, PSU's all-time leader with 214 catches is crafty route-runner who moves chains and is great in locker room.<br> <br>89, 6, Kyzir White, S, 6-1?, 218, 4.69, 3, West Virginia, Best near line of scrimmage with special teams value, but no clear NFL fit despite high-intensity style.<br> <br>90, 1, Michael Dickson*, P, 6-3, 205, N/A, 3, Texas, School-record 226 punts and 45.3-yard avg.<br><br>Ray Guy winner has booming leg with directional accuracy.<br> <br>91, 7, Marcus Allen, S, 6-2?, 215, 4.63, 3, Penn State, Versatile playmaker and team leader who delivered big hits but can be caught on his heels in coverage.<br> <br>92, 10, Tyquan Lewis, DE, 6-3¼, 269, 4.71, 3, Ohio State, Better suited to beat guards with interior rush but could wind up on the edge with plus competitiveness.<br> <br>93, 9, Geron Christian*, OT, 6-5?, 298, 5.33, 3, Louisville, Raw but possesses excellent tools to develop.<br><br>Great length and hoops background is evident in athletic feet.<br> <br>94, 10, Deadrin Senat, DT, 6-0, 314, 5.16, 3, South Florida, Thick, squatty build to maintain leverage and anchor vs. double teams. Clogger doesn't threaten as rusher.<br> <br>95, 11, RJ McIntosh*, DT, 6-4½, 286, N/A, 3, Miami, Great effort on, off field, but game needs polish.<br>Significant interior pass rush upside to develop.<br> <br>96, 8, Royce Freeman, RB, 5-11½, 229, 4.54, 3-4, Oregon, Runs in third gear. Elite leg drive, power to rip through tackles and push the pile at the goal line.<br> <br>97, 2, Josey Jewell, ILB, 6-1, 234, 4.82, 3-4, Iowa, Tackling machine (437 for career) isn't an elite athlete, but natural instincts, passion to contribute early.<br> <br>98, 10, Jeff Holland*, OLB, 6-1?, 249, 4.79, 3-4, Auburn, Blossomed in lone year as starter with 10 sacks, 13 TFL.<br><br>Projects as 3-4 OLB, sub-package rusher early on.<br> <br>99, 11, Isaac Yiadom, CB, 6-0?, 190, 4.52, 3-4, Boston College, Three-year starter at BC in NFL-type defensive schemes. Hustle and effort are certain, size/speed aren't.<br> <br>100, 10, Orlando Brown*, OT, 6-7?, 345, 5.85, 3-4, Oklahoma, Son of late "Zeus" started 40 games at LT, but stock was hammered by historically poor Combine workout.<br> <br>101, 3, Micah Kiser, ILB, 6-0?, 238, 4.66, 3-4, Virginia, Great instincts, eyes and discipline in run game.<br><br>Good blitzer and scheme-versatile. Liability in coverage.<br> <br>102, 12, Antonio Callaway*, WR, 5-10?, 200, 4.41, 3-4, Florida, Electric on the field, major red flags off it. Major wild card declared early after being suspended all of '17.<br> <br>103, 12, Kevin Toliver*, CB, 6-2, 192, 4.52, 3-4, LSU, Plays with leverage and has top size and length.<br>Could be a steal if he takes to NFL discipline, coaching.<br> <br>104, 13, Tarvarus McFadden*, CB, 6-2¼, 204, 4.68, 3-4, Florida State, Slow for a corner (4.68), makes up for shortcomings with long arms; likely only fits zone scheme.<br> <br>105, 7, Mike White, QB, 6-4?, 224, 5.09, 3-4, Western Kentucky, Has excellent size, arm, and willing to hang in pocket.<br><br>Highly inconsistent passer but natural skills to mold.<br> <br>106, 8, Terrell Edmunds*, S, 6-0½, 217, 4.47, 4, Virginia Tech, Trustworthy and strong in run support, limited potential as a centerfielder in man defense.<br> <br>107, 4, Mason Cole, C, 6-4?, 305, 5.23, 4, Michigan, Started program-record 51 games.<br><br>Lacks length or size for NFL OT, but has frame, agility to succeed inside.<br> <br>108, 13, Michael Gallup, WR, 6-0¾, 205, 4.51, 4, Colorado State, Lines up all over formation with good - not great - size, athleticism. Potential No. 2 could contribute early.<br> <br>109, 12, Trenton Thompson*, DT, 6-2?, 288, 5.06, 4, Georgia, Combines above-average tools with great motor.<br><br>Stays low, plays hard but production limited by injuries.<br> <br>110, 9, Nyheim Hines*, RB, 5-8?, 198, 4.38, 4, NC State, Swiss Army role for Wolfpack; ideal third-down back entering league with potential to be much more.<br> <br>111, 11, Josh Sweat*, DE, 6-4¾, 251, 4.53, 4, Florida State, History of knee injuries.<br>Fast, lean and explosive, changing direction on a dime and closing in a blink.<br> <br>112, 14, Holton Hill*, CB, 6-1?, 196, 4.49, 4, Texas, Off-field matters spoiled UT tenure. Gifted, capable in man or zone if he silences grabby hands.<br> <br>113, 14, J'Mon Moore, WR, 6-2?, 207, 4.60, 4, Missouri, Great size, length, fluidity with explosive playmaking skills, but very raw and feasted on limited route tree.<br> <br>114, 10, Bo Scarbrough*, RB, 6-1?, 228, 4.52, 4, Alabama, Built like LB-S and runs like one, seeking contact.<br><br>High-cut runner, limited wiggle and durability.<br> <br>115, 15, Rashaan Gaulden*, CB, 6-0¾, 197, 4.52, 4, Tennessee, Sprinter with first-class speed and abundant natural gifts can serve many purposes at next level.<br> <br>116, 12, Andrew Brown, DE, 6-3?, 296, 5.03, 4, Virginia, Superior run stopper with limited rush repertoire and tenacity to play anywhere on the D-line.<br> <br>117, 13, Folorunso Fatukasi, DT, 6-3¾, 318, 5.29, 4, UConn, "Foley" was disruptive despite limited stats.<br><br>Powerful and scheme-versatile with improved technique.<br> <br>118, 8, Luke Falk, QB, 6-3?, 215, 4.85, 4, Washington State, Highly productive in Mike Leach offense. Accurate, but lacks arm strength and takes far too many hits.<br> <br>119, 16, Nick Nelson*, CB, 5-10?, 200, 4.52, 4, Wisconsin, Suffered torn meniscus in workout with Lions.<br>Short yet confident, coordinated athlete with leadership.<br> <br>120, 11, Darius Leonard, OLB, 6-2, 234, 4.70, 4, South Carolina State, Good hustle, range, and stood out in games against FBS teams. Needs strength, but not much room to add.<br> <br>121, 11, John Kelly*, RB, 5-9?, 216, 4.65, 4, Tennessee, Shared team lead in catches in '17 with workhorse mentality.<br><br>Short with limited speed, agility.<br> <br>122, 11, Will Richardson*, OT, 6-5?, 306, 5.26, 4, NC State, Charged with zero sacks in past 400 pass-blocking snaps. Guard-like frame difficult to move; off-field flags.<br> <br>123, 12, Mark Walton*, RB, 5-9?, 202, 4.60, 4, Miami, Season-ending injury four games into 2017.<br>Shifty, sudden but too small to be bell-cow RB.<br> <br>124, 17, J.C. Jackson*, CB, 5-9¾, 201, 4.46, 4, Maryland, On the red list for character; talented enough. Made most of second chance at Maryland past two seasons.<br> <br>125, 15, Keke Coutee*, WR, 5-9¾, 181, 4.43, 4, Texas Tech, Dynamic in space with terrific speed, quickness.<br><br>Great slot potential and vertical upside with added strength.<br> <br>126, 16, Tre'Quan Smith*, WR, 6-2, 210, 4.49, 4, UCF, Above-the-rim target regularly makes acrobatic grabs. Strong intangibles, but lack of elite speed may hinder.<br> <br>127, 9, Armani Watts, S, 5-10½, 202, 4.65, 4, Texas A&M, Four-year starter with special teams traits but enough speed and agility to contribute in coverage.<br> <br>128, 12, Shaquem Griffin, OLB, 6-0?, 227, 4.38, 4, UCF, Stole Combine with great workout minus amputated left hand.<br><br>Can fly; skills to contribute in defined role.<br> <br>129, 13, Chad Thomas, DE, 6-5, 281, 4.92, 4, Miami, Mr. Olympia phsyique and 81 1/2-inch arms to be a mismatch-type, third rusher instantly.<br> <br>130, 18, Davontae Harris, CB, 5-11, 205, 4.43, 4, Illinois State, Tops on team in tackles and passes defended.<br>More physical than nifty, but finds his way to ball.<br> <br>131, 19, Tony Brown, CB, 5-11?, 199, 4.35, 4, Alabama, Nickel defender with elite speed to mix and match in secondary; didn't finish enough plays.<br> <br>132, 6, Dalton Schultz, TE, 6-5?, 244, 4.74, 4, Stanford, Pro-style product viewed more as a No.<br><br>2 tight end, blocks angry and fits tradition of Stanford TE.<br> <br>133, 6, Wyatt Teller, OG, 6-4½, 301, 5.24, 4-5, Virginia Tech, Broad frame and finishes blocks while rarely winding up on the ground, but 2017 play too inconsistent.<br> <br>134, 13, Akrum Wadley, RB, 5-9?, 194, 4.54, 4-5, Iowa, Ran behind FB, also lined up in slot, returned kicks.<br>Not used and abused as one-year starter (536 carries).<br> <br>135, 5, Scott Quessenberry, C, 6-4, 315, 5.09, 4-5, UCLA, Explodes off the snap with low center of gravity. Experience at all three interior positions increases value.<br> <br>136, 14, Breeland Speaks*, DE, 6-2?, 283, 4.87, 4-5, Ole Miss, Very raw, Speaks shows enticing flashes in between long lapses.<br><br>Too talented to ignore but needs polish.<br> <br>137, 13, Fred Warner, OLB, 6-3?, 236, 4.64, 4-5, BYU, Built like a big safety and showed off athleticism at Combine. Attacks run; needs strength, better technique.<br> <br>138, 20, Parry Nickerson, CB, 5-10, 182, 4.34, 4-5, Tulane, Four-year starter's history of knee issues overshadows ball skills, but is he big enough to hold up?<br> <br>139, 9, Kyle Lauletta, QB, 6-2?, 222, 4.81, 4-5, Richmond, Senior Bowl MVP lacks rocket arm, but gets ball out quick, makes smart decisions and exploits weaknesses.<br> <br>140, 12, Desmond Harrison, OT, 6-6, 292, 4.90, 4-5, West Georgia, Value all about great physical tools.<br><br>Many travels included dismissal from Texas for drug-related incidents.<br> <br>141, 7, Tony Adams, OG, 6-2, 315, 5.48, 4-5, NC State, Reliable, not elite, starter (school-record 47 at NC State) with hands and balance honed playing tennis.<br> <br>142, 17, Allen Lazard, WR, 6-5, 225, 4.55, 4-5, Iowa State, Wields big frame effectively to box out defenders.<br><br>Doesn't scare DBs with speed, too often playing like a TE.<br> <br>143, 10, Godwin Igwebuike, S, 5-11?, 213, 4.44, 5, Northwestern, Looks the part, limitations in speed and pure athleticism push him down draft boards.<br> <br>144, 7, Durham Smythe, TE, 6-5?, 253, 4.81, 5, Notre Dame, Huge target with massive mitts and focused catch process.<br>Below-average speed, athleticism.<br> <br>145, 13, Alex Cappa, OT, 6-5¾, 305, 5.39, 5, Humboldt State, Dominated lower level with technique and physicality and plays with mean streak. Disappointing Combine.<br> <br>146, 14, Hercules Mata'afa*, DT, 6-2¼, 254, 4.76, 5, Washington State, Explodes out of stance and lives in the backfield with high motor.<br><br>Too small to survive inside vs. run.<br> <br>147, 15, Kylie Fitts, DE, 6-3¾, 263, 4.69, 5, Utah, Freakish workout at NFL Combine might get him over-drafted but too many injuries to overlook.<br> <br>148, 18, Cedrick Wilson, WR, 6-2, 188, 4.55, 5, Boise State, Productive WR on slants, crossers and vertical routes who needs increased strength to break more tackles.<br> <br>149, 11, Quin Blanding, S, 6-2, 207, 4.63, 5, Virginia, Holds ACC tackles record (495) for DB.<br><br>No special qualities jump off film, which screams special teamer.<br> <br>150, 14, Kalen Ballage, RB, 6-1½, 228, 4.46, 5, Arizona State, Strong, sturdy, balanced. Runs through contact and offers upside in return game but fumbles are issue.<br> <br>151, 2, JK Scott, P, 6-5¼, 207, 4.83, 5, Alabama, 2x Ray Guy finalist allowed only four returns in '17.<br>Powerful leg with hang time; can handle kickoff duties.<br> <br>152, 12, Jordan Whitehead*, S, 5-10?, 198, 4.60, 5, Pittsburgh, Used to counter mismatches at Pitt. Encountered off-field issues. Unique, swift athlete.<br> <br>153, 19, Simmie Cobbs*, WR, 6-3?, 220, 4.64, 5, Indiana, Plays to timed speed, but shows extra gear vertically and bull for CBs to deal with height, width, length.<br> <br>154, 20, Deontay Burnett*, WR, 5-11?, 186, 4.53, 5, USC, Sam Darnold's fave target led Pac-12 with 86 catches in '17.<br><br>Limited to slot and small hands a concern.<br> <br>155, 21, Marcell Ateman, WR, 6-4½, 216, 4.62, 5, Oklahoma State, Size, ball skills to intrigue teams. Needs to develop route-running, but could be red-zone threat early on.<br> <br>156, 16, Dorance Armstrong Jr.*, DE, 6-3?, 257, 4.87, 5, Kansas, A fit for wide-9 rush technique or candidate for OLB conversion as a rush specialist.<br> <br>157, 14, Joe Noteboom, OT, 6-5, 309, 4.96, 5, TCU, Good size, length and quickness to handle speed rushes.<br><br>Also highly inconsistent with sloppy technique.<br> <br>158, 4, Genard Avery, ILB, 6-0, 248, 4.59, 5, Memphis, HS powerlifter opened eyes with combine testing. Not fluid, but plays physically inside, outside or on edge.<br> <br>159, 15, Brandon Parker, OT, 6-7?, 305, 5.40, 5, North Carolina A&T, Started all 48 career games at LT, allowing no sacks.<br><br>NFL tools to develop with additional strength.<br> <br>160, 22, Jordan Lasley*, WR, 6-1, 203, 4.50, 5, UCLA, Explosive athlete who is faster on film than at Combine. Several issues off-field and too many drops on it.<br> <br>161, 1, Jaylen Samuels, FB, 5-11½, 225, 4.54, 5, NC State, True 'tweener with TE and RB skills might ultimately be best in West Coast offense at fullback.<br> <br>162, 8, Chris Herndon, TE, 6-3¾, 253, 4.78, 5, Miami, Thick and athletic with directional mobility to become a top route runner and receiving tight end.<br> <br>163, 9, Troy Fumagalli, TE, 6-4¾, 247, 4.88, 5, Wisconsin, Excellent natural hands.<br><br>Still works like a walk-on. No evidence he can become a playmaker.<br> <br>164, 8, Sean Welsh, OG, 6-3, 300, 5.33, 5, Iowa, RG-RT skill set and background in a program known for churning out NFL OL, but limited athletically.<br> <br>165, 10, Tyler Conklin, TE, 6-3, 254, 4.80, 5, Central Michigan, Smooth stride and sweet hops but slightly shorter than NFL prototype and untested vs.<br><br>top competition.<br> <br>166, 16, Timon Parris, OT, 6-6, 320, N/A, 5, Stony Brook, Raw and powerful, seeking to become 1st Stony Brook OL drafted. Recovering from broken leg (October).<br> <br>167, 21, Taron Johnson, CB, 5-11?, 192, 4.50, 5, Weber State, On the small side - issue vs.<br>run - with a maxed-out frame and untested against elite wide receivers.<br> <br>168, 5, Tegray Scales, ILB, 6-0?, 230, 4.77, 5, Indiana, Sniffs out plays quickly and plays faster than timed speed. Below average size; struggles taking on blocks.<br> <br>169, 15, Kendrick Norton*, DT, 6-2, 312, 5.25, 5, Miami, Ken Jr.'s son sports ideal size, length, motor to clog run lanes.<br><br>OK athlete is likely two-down run stuffer.<br> <br>170, 22, Quenton Meeks*, CB, 6-1, 209, 4.55, 5-6, Stanford, Lacks pure speed and suddenness to be a starter. Enough attitude and size to make the roster.<br> <br>171, 16, Justin Jones, DT, 6-2½, 309, 5.09, 5-6, NC State, Strong for his size, playing low and delivering power.<br><br>Improved stock with strong week at Senior Bowl.<br> <br>172, 23, Auden Tate*, WR, 6-4?, 228, 4.68, 5-6, Florida State, Size is biggest asset, especially in traffic - which is usually heavy due to lack of elite speed and athleticism.<br> <br>173, 13, Dane Cruikshank, S, 6-1, 209, 4.41, 5-6, Arizona, Great burst and speed with clear football instincts and played his best in primetime moments.<br> <br>174, 14, DeShon Elliott*, S, 6-0?, 210, 4.58, 5-6, Texas, Single-speed safety with no extra gear to chase long, can cover deficiencies with heady play.<br> <br>175, 17, Marquis Haynes, DE, 6-2?, 235, 4.67, 5-6, Ole Miss, Posted 32.0 career sacks but offers little beyond burst due to size, reach and leverage shortcomings.<br> <br>176, 17, Toby Weathersby*, OT, 6-4?, 317, 5.34, 5-6, LSU, Started solely on right side.<br><br>Struggles with speed, maintaining blocks. Could have used another year at LSU.<br> <br>177, 23, Darius Phillips, CB, 5-9?, 193, 4.54, 5-6, Western Michigan, Undersized extra corner in the NFL will need to scrap to win has the gifts and guts to get it done.<br> <br>178, 14, Leon Jacobs, OLB, 6-1?, 246, 4.48, 5-6, Wisconsin, Raw athlete with relentless motor lacks technical pass rush skills.<br><br>'Tweener could prove diamond in rough.<br> <br>179, 11, Will Dissly, TE, 6-4, 267, 4.87, 5-6, Washington, Converted defensive end still learning to block and run refined routes; size warrants a shot.<br> <br>180, 1, Daniel Carlson, K, 6-5, 213, N/A, 6, Auburn, 3x Lou Groza finalist has soccer background and booming leg.<br>Tested in big games but not much weather.<br> <br>181, 2, Dimitri Flowers, FB, 6-1?, 248, 4.83, 6, Oklahoma, Son of 2000 first-rounder Erik Flowers. Physical and savvy blocker can do some damage as receiver.<br> <br>182, 24, D.J. Reed*, CB, 6-0, 188, 4.51, 6, Kansas State, Not big but tough and determined.<br><br>Ace return man had KO and punt returns for TDs at Kansas State.<br> <br>183, 18, Kentavius Street, DE, 6-2¼, 280, 4.87, 6, NC State, Strong-side end with the size and power to develop into a rotational end or low-upside starter.<br> <br>184, 19, Ade Aruna, DE, 6-4?, 262, 4.61, 6, Tulane, Toolsy prospect with great lower-half explosion, first step, long speed.<br><br>Raw, needs NFL redshirt.<br> <br>185, 15, Siran Neal, S, 6-0, 206, 4.56, 6, Jacksonville State, NFL body type, low-level college resume. Advanced football mind with versatile traits, experience.<br> <br>186, 9, Skyler Phillips, OG, 6-2½, 314, 5.09, 6, Idaho State, Requisite strength and stone hands to play inside but stiff on the hoof and ineffective blocking LBs.<br> <br>187, 6, Jack Cichy, ILB, 6-2?, 238, 4.55, 6, Wisconsin, Former walk-on always in right place at right time.<br><br>Long injury history (pec, ACL); hasn't played since '16.<br> <br>188, 15, Mike McCray, OLB, 6-1?, 243, 4.76, 6, Michigan, Animal vs. run with size, length, physicality to fend off blocks. Average speed; may fare best inside in 3-4.<br> <br>189, 18, Matt Pryor, OT, 6-7, 358, N/A, 6, TCU, Surprisingly nimble for gigantic frame with long arms (36") and big hands (11").<br><br>Too many negative plays.<br> <br>190, 24, Korey Robertson*, WR, 6-1, 212, 4.56, 6, Southern Miss, "D-Block" has so-so straight-line speed, but is quick in and out of breaks and slippery after the catch.<br> <br>191, 16, Trayvon Henderson, S, 6-0?, 204, 4.59, 6, Hawai'i, See-ball, get-ball mentality to climb NFL depth chart, unafraid of special teams path.<br> <br>192, 16, Josh Adams*, RB, 6-1?, 213, 4.52, 6, Notre Dame, Runs to and through contact.<br><br>Limited in open space and upright running style equates to NFL punishment.<br> <br>193, 20, John Franklin-Myers, DE, 6-4, 283, 4.75, 6, Stephen F. Austin, NFL size but is more potential than polish with scouts sweating his limited production at SFA.<br> <br>194, 25, Michael Joseph, CB, 6-0?, 187, 4.53, 6, Dubuque, DIII POY.<br>Self-made prospect and gifted ballhawk with playmaking tendencies, average speed.<br> <br>195, 3, Nick Bawden, FB, 6-2, 245, N/A, 6, San Diego State, Surprising attack mentality for converted QB, transformed physically and emotionally to fit position.<br> <br>196, 12, Jordan Akins, TE, 6-3, 249, 4.93, 6, UCF, Former Texas Rangers MLB farmhand has the long arms and coordination to develop as backup TE.<br> <br>197, 17, Poona Ford, DT, 5-11?, 306, 5.09, 6, Texas, Undersized and lacks dominant trait, but utilizes natural leverage, strong hands to flash rush potential.<br> <br>198, 19, Cole Madison, OT, 6-5, 313, 5.33, 6, Washington State, Former WR is quick with his hands and feet.<br><br>Not a mauler with great raw strength and may move inside.<br> <br>199, 7, Azeem Victor, ILB, 6-2?, 240, 4.72, 6, Washington, Piqued as Soph. with instincts, physical presence v. run. Slowed with added weight; suspended twice in '17.<br> <br>200, 25, Daurice Fountain, WR, 6-1?, 209, 4.54, 6, Northern Iowa, Shrine Game MVP was Combine snub but freakish athleticism stood out at pro day.<br><br>Very raw, needs time.<br> <br>201, 17, Darrel Williams, RB, 6-0, 225, 4.68, 6, LSU, Reliable receiver who runs with vision and brings big-play flair due to first step, make-you-miss moves.<br> <br>202, 17, Tre Flowers, S, 6-3¾, 202, 4.45, 6, Oklahoma State, Four-year starter for Cowboys, average athletic ability brings too many limitations at next level.<br> <br>203, 16, Oren Burks, OLB, 6-3?, 233, 4.59, 6, Vanderbilt, Speed and experience at safety show in coverage, but inconsistent vs.<br><br>run and needs time to develop.<br> <br>204, 6, Will Clapp*, C, 6-4½, 314, 5.39, 6, LSU, Three-year starter in SEC versatile along the interior, but an average athlete who must increase strength.<br> <br>205, 26, Chris Campbell, CB, 6-0¾, 195, 4.55, 6, Penn State, Physical and knows how to win and use his body to prevent receivers from getting deep.<br> <br>206, 20, Jamil Demby, OT, 6-4?, 335, 5.58, 6, Maine, Big, muscular, powerful 2x team captain. Below average athleticism exposed vs.<br><br>run could lead to OG move.<br> <br>207, 17, Dorian O'Daniel, OLB, 6-0?, 223, 4.61, 6, Clemson, Body of a big safety, reyling on speed, quickness. Lacks play strength, but could be special teams demon.<br> <br>208, 18, Bilal Nichols, DT, 6-4, 306, 4.96, 6, Delaware, Good size with room to add mass, and adds versatility down the line to compensate for raw technique.<br> <br>209, 10, Kurt Benkert, QB, 6-2?, 218, 4.95, 6, Virginia, Tools and playmaking ability warrant a look, but highly erratic pocket movement and how he scans field.<br> <br>210, 27, Grant Haley, CB, 5-9, 190, 4.44, 6, Penn State, Undersized with short arms, he's springy in short areas and excels as a slot option and returner.<br> <br>211, 26, Trey Quinn*, WR, 5-11?, 203, 4.55, 6, SMU, Former track star also threw no-no at '08 Little League WS.<br><br>Modest pre-draft workouts; slot prospect.<br> <br>212, 27, Dylan Cantrell, WR, 6-2?, 226, 4.59, 6, Texas Tech, One-trick pony who needs to make circus catches due to lack of speed. Outstanding body control.<br> <br>213, 28, Darren Carrington, WR, 6-2¼, 199, 4.78, 6, Utah, Very good downfield target finished at Utah after boot from Oregon following laundry list of off-field issues.<br> <br>214, 13, Ryan Izzo*, TE, 6-4?, 256, 4.94, 6-7, Florida State, Left school one year early.<br><br>Offers only modest speed and blocking potential. Developmental prospect.<br> <br>215, 18, Chase Edmonds, RB, 5-9?, 205, 4.55, 6-7, Fordham, Compact runner with yo-yo movement to elude tackles; top three-cone, short shuttle for RBs at Combine.<br> <br>216, 10, Colby Gossett, OG, 6-4?, 315, 5.20, 6-7, Appalachian State, Started at RG and RT but limited agility and stone legs render him an NFL backup or swing reserve.<br> <br>217, 29, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, WR, 6-4, 206, 4.37, 6-7, South Florida, Track speed shows on film, getting on top of DBs in a flash.<br><br>Plays smaller than size and very much a project.<br> <br>218, 18, Troy Apke, S, 6-1¼, 200, 4.34, 6-7, Penn State, Underdog with great workout numbers and good - not special - on-field results at college level.<br> <br>219, 19, Roc Thomas, RB, 5-10, 198, 4.56, 6-7, Jacksonville State, Spin doctor with impeccable body control ranked No.<br>2 as HS RB recruit behind Leonard Fournette.<br> <br>220, 2, Eddy Pineiro*, K, 6-0, 185, N/A, 6-7, Florida, Left Gators early as program's most accurate kicker, including better than than 90% from 40-plus.<br> <br>221, 11, Taylor Hearn*, OG, 6-4, 330, 5.45, 6-7, Clemson, Short arms limit effectivenss vs.<br><br>NFL speed and length; top grades for toughness, competitiveness.<br> <br>222, 20, Justin Jackson, RB, 6-0, 193, 4.50, 6-7, Northwestern, Too small to be fulltime RB but had 122 career catches, beckoning third-down or slot role in NFL.<br> <br>223, 21, Marcell Frazier, DE, 6-4, 261, 4.66, 6-7, Missouri, Football junkie and high-effort end who does just enough to keep on the final 53 as a rookie.<br> <br>224, 28, Brandon Facyson, CB, 6-1½, 203, 4.53, 7, Virginia Tech, Advanced football instincts but mostly average testing, appears to have a special teams ceiling.<br> <br>225, 21, Phillip Lindsay, RB, 5-7, 184, 4.41, 7, Colorado, Slashing runner with no-quit mantra and track background set school record (5926) for total yards.<br> <br>226, 14, David Wells, TE, 6-6, 256, 4.75, 7, San Diego State, Mostly a blocker, Wells can catch what hits his hands but will be used as a third offensive tackle in NFL.<br> <br>227, 29, Levi Wallace, CB, 6-0¼, 179, 4.63, 7, Alabama, Smooth, fluid mover with wide receiver traits will need to bulk up to contend with pumped-up pros.<br> <br>228, 8, Nick DeLuca, ILB, 6-2?, 251, 4.85, 7, North Dakota State, Classic Mike 'backer who diagnoses plays before they develop.<br><br>Old-school thumper needs right scheme.<br> <br>229, 18, Keishawn Bierria, OLB, 6-0?, 230, 4.79, 7, Washington, Terrific leader who brings intense physical edge, but exposed vs. better athletes, especially in coverage.<br> <br>230, 19, Davin Bellamy, OLB, 6-3¾, 255, N/A, 7, Georgia, Athleticism to win early and threaten QB.<br><br>Lanky build lacks strength and gets bullied vs. run.<br> <br>231, 30, Javon Wims, WR, 6-2?, 215, 4.53, 7, Georgia, Well-traveled athlete emerged as UGA's leading receiver in '17. Excellent size for 50-50s; needs route work.<br> <br>232, 20, Skai Moore, OLB, 6-2¼, 226, 4.73, 7, South Carolina, Uber-productive, leading team in tackles 4x.<br><br>Great instincts, but lacks size and is liability in coverage.<br> <br>233, 22, Trevon Young, DE, 6-3?, 258, 4.78, 7, Louisville, Two hip surgeries since Dec. 2015; looked like a first-round talent previous. Has 3-4 OLB skill set.<br> <br>234, 30, Avonte Maddox, CB, 5-9?, 184, 4.39, 7, Pittsburgh, Wins every footrace and was team captain; some team will jump on his playmaking ability.<br> <br>235, 23, Olasunkanmi Adeniyi*, DE, 6-1?, 248, 4.81, 7, Toledo, Pass-rush specialist who could convert to OLB in 3-4 defense.<br><br>Only 20 and plays with non-stop motor.<br> <br>236, 19, P.J. Hall, DT, 6-0, 308, 4.83, 7, Sam Houston State, Combine snub grabbed attention with impressive pro day. FCS dominator could prove late-round steal.<br> <br>237, 31, D'Montre Wade, CB, 5-11?, 206, 5.20, 7, Murray State, Upside limited by heavy legs, but safety and return role could beckon based on excellent ball skills.<br> <br>238, 9, Shaun Dion Hamilton, ILB, 5-11¾, 228, 4.76, 7, Alabama, Nick Saban lauds football smarts.<br><br>Quick and makes plays behind the line, but significant injury red flags.<br> <br>239, 21, Peter Kalambayi, OLB, 6-3, 252, 4.57, 7, Stanford, Better athlete than player stood out at Combine. With improved technique, could develop into starter.<br> <br>240, 31, Jaleel Scott, WR, 6-4¾, 218, 4.56, 7, New Mexico State, Great size, athleticism, and hoops background shows on contested balls.<br><br>Untapped potential, but very raw.<br> <br>241, 11, Chase Litton*, QB, 6-5, 232, 4.94, 7, Marshall, Tall, with quick release and competitive nature. Lacks mobility and great accuracy, but tools to develop.<br> <br>242, 19, Damon Webb, S, 5-10¾, 209, 4.62, 7, Ohio State, Rangy and aggressive, was coach in the huddle for Bucks and was trained at cornerback.<br> <br>243, 32, Jordan Thomas, CB, 6-0?, 187, 4.64, 7, Oklahoma, Fits evolving NFL prototype with plus ball skills if pro coaches can sell him on self-confidence.<br> <br>244, 20, John Atkins, DT, 6-2?, 321, 5.38, 7, Georgia, Classic two-gapper won't stuff the stat sheet or scare many QBs, but could thrive as rotational space-eater.<br> <br>245, 7, Brian Allen, C, 6-1, 300, 5.34, 7, Michigan State, Undersized and doesn't check many boxes for physical traits.<br><br>Scrappy blocker who struggles against size.<br> <br>246, 20, Natrell Jamerson, S, 5-10?, 201, 4.40, 7, Wisconsin, WR-turned-CB-turned-S could wear many hats to keep his NFL locker. Not ready for fulltime role.<br> <br>247, 21, Brett Toth, OT, 6-6, 305, 5.09, 7, Army, Movement skills of a TE with athleticism in pass pro.<br>May not play until 2020 due to duty commitment.<br> <br>248, 22, Kamryn Pettway*, RB, 6-0, 235, 4.74, 7, Auburn, Strong north-south runner who could be used as an NFL fourth-quarter "closer" due to physical style.<br> <br>249, 32, Braxton Berrios, WR, 5-8?, 184, 4.52, 7, Miami, Valedictorian of UM biz school has bright future off field.<br><br>Steroetipical slot WR on it and very small target.<br> <br>250, 33, Greg Stroman, CB, 5-11, 182, 4.48, 7, Virginia Tech, Good athlete avoids collisions and wants to be a cover-only perimeter cornerback.<br> <br>251, 10, Kenny Young, ILB, 6-1, 236, 4.60, 7, UCLA, Experience across the 2nd level.<br>All-out player - almost to a fault - with 3-down skills if he can get stronger.<br> <br>252, 15, Adam Breneman, TE, 6-4, 241, 4.81, 7, UMass, 149 career receptions but history of knee injuries already prompted one retirement (2016, Penn State).<br> <br>253, 3, Johnny Townsend, P, 6-1, 209, N/A, 7-FA, Florida, Strong leg and posted 46.2-yard career average.<br><br>Tends to out-kick coverage, leading to return yards.<br> <br>254, 21, Tracy Walker, S, 6-0?, 206, 4.50, 7-FA, Louisiana, Has the wingspan of a small plane and basketball body type and enough range to have a chance.<br> <br>255, 12, Brendan Mahon, OG, 6-4½, 312, 5.11, 7-FA, Penn State, Experience everywhere up front and on special teams enough to get him shot at final roster.<br> <br>256, 16, Jordan Thomas, TE, 6-5½, 265, 4.74, 7-FA, Mississippi State, JUCO product was essentially a massive wide receiver at Miss.<br><br>State. Long arms, big hands, no separation.<br> <br>257, 24, Joe Ostman, DE, 6-2, 248, 4.81, 7-FA, Central Michigan, Full effort Tasmanian devil-type pass rusher with 46.5 career tackles for loss, 28.0 sacks at CMU.<br> <br>258, 23, Zachary Crabtree, OT, 6-6¼, 313, N/A, 7-FA, Oklahoma State, RT prospect with size, length combo to hold up vs.<br>run. Heavy feet limit effectiveness blocking on move.<br> <br>259, 33, Quadree Henderson*, WR, 5-8, 190, 4.50, 7-FA, Pittsburgh, Undersized playmaker an explosive return threat and potential slot/gadget option for creative coordinator.<br> <br>260, 22, Tray Matthews, S, 6-0?, 209, 4.57, 7-FA, Auburn, Two-way college safety best when seeking contact and could wind up a special teams lifer.<br> <br>261, 12, Nic Shimonek, QB, 6-3, 220, 4.88, 7-FA, Texas Tech, Good size, accuracy as potential developmental arm.<br><br>Late-game struggles and tends to stare targets down.<br> <br>262, 13, Cody O'Connell, OG, 6-8½, 363, 5.64, 7-FA, Washington State, Seasoned pass protector at left guard, ideal position in NFL is right tackle because of height, knee bend.<br> <br>263, 14, KC McDermott, OG, 6-6, 300, 5.09, 7-FA, Miami, Plus effort but limited agility and quickness force McDermott to take the long road to NFL career.<br> <br>264, | + | <br>The Top 300 prospects for the 2018 NFL Draft, per ratings by Field Level Media:<br> <br>Ovr, Pos Rk, Player (*=underclassman), Pos, Ht., Wt., 40, Proj., School, Comment<br> <br>1, 1, Saquon Barkley*, RB, 6-0, 233, 4.40, 1, Penn State, Outstanding all-around athlete and home-run threat with great vision as runner, receiver and return man.<br> <br>2, 1, Quenton Nelson, OG, 6-5, 325, 5.23, 1, Notre Dame, Future All-Pro in Zack Martin mold at guard and enough ability, agility to be LT candidate in right system.<br> <br>3, 1, Sam Darnold*, QB, 6-3?, 221, 4.85, 1, USC, Pro-ready passer with arm strength, leadership skills.<br><br>Must improve decision-making to cut down on TOs.<br> <br>4, 1, Bradley Chubb, DE, 6-4?, 269, 4.65, 1, NC State, Not sudden or dynamic but solid in every possible way with the ability to start tomorrow.<br> <br>5, 1, Tremaine Edmunds*, OLB, 6-4½, 253, 4.54, 1, Virginia Tech, Youngest player in draft is undisciplined, but elite athlete with great burst, range, fluidity.<br><br>Blitzing threat.<br> <br>6, 1, Minkah Fitzpatrick*, S, 6-0?, 204, 4.46, 1, Alabama, Versatile coverage hawk works like a walk-on and fights to be most prepared player on the field.<br> <br>7, 1, Denzel Ward*, CB, 5-10?, 183, 4.32, 1, Ohio State, Most explosive CB in class has speed, quickness to lock up with any receiver inside or outside.<br> <br>8, 1, Roquan Smith*, ILB, 6-0?, 236, 4.51, 1, Georgia, Undersized but smooth, explosive athlete.<br><br>Great range in run game and moves in coverage like a safety.<br> <br>9, 2, Josh Allen*, QB, 6-4?, 237, 4.75, 1, Wyoming, Elite physical tools, including feet, arm strength and touch to mask spotty mechanics. May need some time.<br> <br>10, 1, Vita Vea*, DT, 6-4, 347, 5.10, 1, Washington, Not many humans have his size/athleticism/strength combo.<br>Splits double teams and chases to sideline.<br> <br>11, 2, Derwin James*, S, 6-1¾, 215, 4.47, 1, Florida State, More explosive than Fitzpatrick with the same "sic 'em" mentality and skills to slide around D.<br> <br>12, 2, Da'Ron Payne*, DT, 6-2½, 311, 4.95, 1, Alabama, Highly disruptive, ascending talent anchors vs.<br><br>double teams. Limited pass rush on film, but flashes.<br> <br>13, 1, Calvin Ridley*, WR, 6-0½, 189, 4.43, 1, Alabama, Big-play explosiveness and runs full route tree. Stats limited by offense. Could use more strength vs. press.<br> <br>14, 3, Baker Mayfield, QB, 6-0?, 215, 4.84, 1, Oklahoma, Polarizing prospect impressed teams with football IQ, moxie.<br>Mid-round physical talent has rare instincts.<br> <br>15, 4, Josh Rosen*, QB, 6-4, 226, 4.92, 1, UCLA, Natural passer spins ball to all levels. Bright with good instincts, but injuries, personality turn some off.<br> <br>16, 2, Marcus Davenport, DE, 6-5¾, 264, 4.58, 1, UT San Antonio, Tall with long arms and loose limbs; better overall athlete with higher pass-rush ceiling than Chubb.<br> <br>17, 2, Will Hernandez, OG, 6-2?, 327, 5.15, 1, UTEP, Strength of a powerlifter with surprisingly light feet; instantly erases pursuit with tenacious power.<br> <br>18, 2, Harold Landry, OLB, 6-2?, 252, 4.64, 1, Boston College, DE/OLB hybrid is explosive pass rusher already boasting array of moves.<br><br>Suspect strength shows vs. run.<br> <br>19, 2, Josh Jackson*, CB, 6-0?, 196, 4.48, 1, Iowa, One-year starter and converted WR has sticky mitts; compared to Ronde Barber. Sudden enough?<br> <br>20, 3, Leighton Vander Esch*, OLB, 6-4¼, 256, 4.66, 1, Boise State, Played 8-man football in HS and walked on. Tough vs.<br>run, even better in coverage with high football IQ.<br> <br>21, 2, Derrius Guice*, RB, 5-10½, 224, 4.49, 1, LSU, Self-described ball of knives could be second coming of Marshawn Lynch with even better feet.<br> <br>22, 1, James Daniels*, C, 6-3?, 306, N/A, 1, Iowa, Explosive first step with good body control, punch and mobility.<br><br>Only 20; missed 3 games to knee issues.<br> <br>23, 3, Taven Bryan*, DT, 6-5, 291, 4.98, 1, Florida, Impressive athlete who surges and explodes through gaps. Still developing and must improve mechanics.<br> <br>24, 4, Rashaan Evans, OLB, 6-1?, 232, N/A, 1, Alabama, One-year starter sports good size, build and burst.<br>Speed questions unanswered by skipping 40 twice.<br> <br>25, 5, Lamar Jackson*, QB, 6-2¼, 216, 4.42, 1, Louisville, Ridiculous stats and draft's most electric QB is explosive athlete who lacks accuracy due to shaky mechanics.<br> <br>26, 3, Jaire Alexander*, CB, 5-10¼, 196, 4.38, 1, Louisville, Speedy (4.38 40) punt return ace with playmaking tendencies.<br><br>Carries size, durability questions.<br> <br>27, 3, Isaiah Wynn, OG, 6-2?, 313, 5.06, 1, Georgia, Started 15 games at left tackle in 2017, best suited (height, reach) inside as ready-made LG starter.<br> <br>28, 4, Mike Hughes*, CB, 5-10?, 189, 4.53, 1-2, UCF, Gifted with top competitive grade, exceptional speed and elite swagger.<br>Technique needs ironing out.<br> <br>29, 1, Connor Williams*, OT, 6-5?, 296, 5.05, 1-2, Texas, Former TE is natural mover who plays with more finesse than power. Missed most of '17 to sprained knee.<br> <br>30, 3, Ronnie Harrison*, S, 6-2, 207, 4.65, 1-2, Alabama, HS quarterback with top instincts looks like a LB in uniform.<br><br>Ready-made in-the-box safety and enforcer.<br> <br>31, 4, Maurice Hurst, DT, 6-1¼, 292, 4.97, 1-2, Michigan, Remarkable athlete considering wide frame with explosive first step. Medicals vital (heart condition).<br> <br>32, 2, D.J. Moore*, WR, 6-0, 210, 4.42, 1-2, Maryland, Great production despite QB carousel (school-record 80 catches in '17).<br>A bit slight, but a terror after catch.<br> <br>33, 3, Sony Michel, RB, 5-10?, 214, 4.54, 1-2, Georgia, Great burst through the hole and elusivness at second levels. Shared RB job and wasn't overworked.<br> <br>34, 2, Billy Price, C, 6-3¾, 305, 5.22, 1-2, Ohio State, Out until training camp due to partially torn pec at Combine, but mature leader with great technical traits.<br> <br>35, 1, Dallas Goedert, TE, 6-4?, 256, 4.67, 1-2, South Dakota State, Strong and athletic with the speed to split the seam and adapt to a flex/slot role in NFL.<br> <br>36, 2, Mike McGlinchey, OT, 6-7?, 309, 5.20, 1-2, Notre Dame, Cousin of Falcons QB Matt Ryan took over LT from Ronnie Stanley.<br><br>Steady, polished prospect, if not elite.<br> <br>37, 4, Ronald Jones II*, RB, 5-11, 205, 4.39, 1-2, USC, Ballet feet and balance with springy explosiveness to stop and go. Upside of NFL gamebreaker.<br> <br>38, 5, Isaiah Oliver*, CB, 6-0¼, 201, 4.50, 2, Colorado, Tall and long with ideal man coverage skills and experience vs.<br>No. 1 receiver in pass-crazed Big 12.<br> <br>39, 3, Christian Kirk*, WR, 5-10?, 201, 4.47, 2, Texas A&M, Quicker than fast and not a big vertical threat. Likely contributor from Day 1 as a slot WR and returner.<br> <br>40, 3, Sam Hubbard*, DE, 6-5?, 270, 4.97, 2, Ohio State, Smart, hard-nosed edge rusher who competes on every play.<br><br>Limited burst, athleticism.<br> <br>41, 4, Justin Reid*, S, 6-0½, 207, 4.40, 2, Stanford, Little brother of NFL S Eric Reid, Justin is a tenacious prospect with the wheels and vision to start now.<br> <br>42, 5, Harrison Phillips, DT, 6-3¼, 307, 5.21, 2, Stanford, Former wrestler diagnoses quicking and has long arms, strong hands to control blocks.<br>Scheme versatile.<br> <br>43, 4, Courtland Sutton*, WR, 6-3?, 218, 4.54, 2, SMU, Potential to be true No. 1 WR with excellent size, speed combo if he can separate with more consistency.<br> <br>44, 2, Hayden Hurst*, TE, 6-4½, 250, 4.67, 2, South Carolina, Ball skills and effort to win in traffic and get downfield.<br><br>Dinged for age (25 as a rookie), limited route tree.<br> <br>45, 6, Carlton Davis*, CB, 6-1, 206, 4.53, 2, Auburn, Sturdy, RB-like build and agile enough to contribute as a No. 1 cornerback. First-team All-SEC in 2017.<br> <br>46, 3, Mike Gesicki, TE, 6-5½, 247, 4.54, 2, Penn State, All-American workout at Combine, long arms and explosive movements to thrive in one-on-ones.<br> <br>47, 5, Lorenzo Carter, OLB, 6-4?, 250, 4.50, 2, Georgia, Jaw-dropping athlete gained versatility at UGA.<br><br>Needs to develop pass rush technique, strength in NFL.<br> <br>48, 4, Arden Key*, DE, 6-4?, 238, 4.89, 2, LSU, Gifted athlete and more of a hybrid edge rusher if off-field concerns don't scare away suitors.<br> <br>49, 5, D.J. Chark, WR, 6-2?, 199, 4.34, 2, LSU, Former track star tore up pre-draft workouts.<br>Highly inconsistent, but height, speed to blow top off defenses.<br> <br>50, 5, Rasheem Green*, DE, 6-4¼, 275, 4.73, 2, USC, Scheme-versatile with growth potential, Green has plus size and athleticism put could wind up at left end.<br> <br>51, 3, Kolton Miller*, OT, 6-8?, 309, 4.95, 2, UCLA, Possesses all the tools, moving and mirroring well into 2nd level.<br><br>Still takes false steps and power a concern.<br> <br>52, 4, Martinas Rankin, OT, 6-4?, 308, 5.25, 2, Mississippi State, Trained pre-draft to show versatility at all 5 OL spots, including snapping. Flexibility key with avg. quickness.<br> <br>53, 5, Tyrell Crosby, OT, 6-4?, 309, 5.23, 2, Oregon, Powerfully built and strong with mean streak vs.<br>run. Modest agility will have most teams view him as RT.<br> <br>54, 7, Anthony Averett, CB, 5-11?, 183, 4.36, 2, Alabama, Ran 4.36 and claims he's even faster, having Nick Saban as spotter and slot experience are huge plusses.<br> <br>55, 8, Donte Jackson*, CB, 5-10½, 178, 4.32, 2, LSU, Tied for top 40 time among CBs.<br><br>Competes even without prototype size, weight and length.<br> <br>56, 6, Nathan Shepherd, DT, 6-3¾, 315, 5.09, 2, Fort Hays State, Well-traveled, including 2 years out of sport. NFL starter kit for a body and dominated at Senior Bowl.<br> <br>57, 6, Mason Rudolph, QB, 6-4?, 235, 4.90, 2, Oklahoma State, 42-game starter was uber-productive in fast-paced offense.<br><br>Big pocket passer with good arm lacks mobility.<br> <br>58, 5, Nick Chubb, RB, 5-10?, 227, 4.52, 2, Georgia, One-speed runner with good vision, patience. Good feet with powerful legs to be short-yardage ace.<br> <br>59, 7, Tim Settle*, DT, 6-2¾, 329, 5.37, 2, Virginia Tech, Draws comparisons to Vince Wilfork for being so nimble at his size.<br>Bursts hard, developing instincts.<br> <br>60, 6, Brian O'Neill*, OT, 6-6?, 297, 4.82, 2-3, Pittsburgh, Former TE has intriguing tools for teams featuring outside zone, sweeps, screens. Struggles against power.<br> <br>61, 4, Mark Andrews*, TE, 6-5?, 256, 4.58, 2-3, Oklahoma, Extra wideout for Sooners with 15 career red-zone receptions.<br><br>Size potential to be a blocker.<br> <br>62, 6, Anthony Miller, WR, 5-11?, 201, 4.49, 2-3, Memphis, 3-level threat with speed, ball skills and elusiveness. Medical key after Jones fracture in bowl game.<br> <br>63, 6, Kerryon Johnson*, RB, 5-11½, 213, 4.56, 2-3, Auburn, Versatile weapon. Natural runner with return game experience and polish as a receiver.<br> <br>64, 5, Jessie Bates III*, S, 6-1?, 200, 4.50, 2-3, Wake Forest, Corner or safety, Bates is a fluid mover with short-area quickness to be utiltity defensive back.<br> <br>65, 7, Dante Pettis, WR, 6-0½, 186, N/A, 2-3, Washington, Athletic bloodlines, set NCAA record with 9 punt return TDs.<br><br>Very elusive, some questions about 40 time.<br> <br>66, 6, Uchenna Nwosu, OLB, 6-2?, 251, 4.65, 2-3, USC, Former safety recruit blossomed in '17. 'Tweener with quick 1st step and good awareness; liability vs. run.<br> <br>67, 7, Rashaad Penny, RB, 5-11, 220, 4.46, 2-3, San Diego State, Durable (54 G) and hyper-productive, capable of big plays and contributions as runner-receiver-returner.<br> <br>68, 3, Frank Ragnow, C, 6-5?, 312, 5.18, 2-3, Arkansas, Charged with 0 sacks over past three seasons in SEC.<br><br>Intense competitor with traits to step in as a starter.<br> <br>69, 4, Austin Corbett, OG, 6-4?, 306, 5.15, 2-3, Nevada, College OT needs to slide inside and showed promise in OG workouts. Pro makeup and locker room leader.<br> <br>70, 8, James Washington, WR, 5-11, 213, 4.54, 3, Oklahoma State, Biletnikoff winner with 74-1,549-13 as senior.<br>Big play waiting to happen. Limited route tree in college.<br> <br>71, 9, Deon Cain*, WR, 6-1?, 202, 4.43, 3, Clemson, Good blend of size, speed athleticism with big-play moves. Stats haven't yet matched explosive upside.<br> <br>72, 10, Equanimeous St. Brown*, WR, 6-4¾, 214, 4.48, 3, Notre Dame, Dangerous deep threat who lines up all over field.<br><br>Gifted; needs to stay on more routes, win contested balls.<br> <br>73, 8, Derrick Nnadi, DT, 6-1, 317, 5.38, 3, Florida State, Bit undersized but sports ideal build. Animal in weight room. Should excel eating blocks vs. run.<br> <br>74, 9, B.J. Hill, DT, 6-3¼, 311, 4.99, 3, NC State, Solid run defender can shed blocks and make plays in the hole.<br>Limited length and pass rush potential.<br> <br>75, 9, M.J. Stewart, CB, 5-10?, 200, 4.54, 3, North Carolina, Broke up 41 passes and embraces being challenged in coverage, but limited by average speed.<br> <br>76, 7, Jerome Baker*, OLB, 6-1?, 229, 4.53, 3, Ohio State, Undersized "Will" with tremendous athleticism and range in run game.<br><br>Only 21, needs time to develop.<br> <br>77, 6, Da'Shawn Hand, DE, 6-3?, 297, 4.83, 3, Alabama, Big and powerful with some DT traits, Hand can set the edge and is nearly immovable vs. the run.<br> <br>78, 5, Braden Smith, OG, 6-6¼, 315, 5.20, 3, Auburn, Bullying upper-body strength and plays with the alley-fighter's mentality OL coaches covet.<br> <br>79, 8, Obo Okoronkwo, OLB, 6-1?, 253, 4.77, 3, Oklahoma, "Obo" threatens edge with great burst, balance.<br><br>Liability in run game, projecting as sub-package rusher.<br> <br>80, 7, Jalyn Holmes, DE, 6-4?, 283, 4.82, 3, Ohio State, Strength, size and bull rush must be respected. Drives through blocks to stuff run and could fit at DT.<br> <br>81, 5, Ian Thomas, TE, 6-3?, 259, 4.65, 3, Indiana, Smooth mover with quick-twitch movements could take off with NFL coaching and stabliity.<br> <br>82, 7, Chukwuma Okorafor, OT, 6-6, 320, 5.31, 3, Western Michigan, Moved to U.S.<br><br>as teen. Excellent size, movement skills, but needs work on technique, physical attitude.<br> <br>83, 10, Duke Dawson, CB, 5-10?, 197, 4.46, 3, Florida, Hybrid defender started three positions at UF and could do same in NFL: thick but smooth in reverse.<br> <br>84, 8, Jamarco Jones, OT, 6-4, 299, 5.50, 3, Ohio State, Steadily improved despite lacking great athleticism or power.<br><br>Reliable - if unspectacular - potential starter.<br> <br>85, 8, Duke Ejiofor, DE, 6-3?, 267, 4.84, 3, Wake Forest, Hurt too often to be considered in top 64 but productive - 17 sacks past two seasons - when healthy.<br> <br>86, 9, Kemoko Turay, DE, 6-4?, 253, 4.65, 3, Rutgers, Great explosion off the snap, closing on running backs and quarterbacks with intent.<br><br>Shoulder issues.<br> <br>87, 9, Malik Jefferson*, OLB, 6-2¼, 236, 4.52, 3, Texas, Dynamic athlete with high ceiling, low floor. Dangerous blitzer, but poor awareness and inconsisent tackler.<br> <br>88, 11, DaeSean Hamilton, WR, 6-0?, 203, 4.47, 3, Penn State, PSU's all-time leader with 214 catches is crafty route-runner who moves chains and is great in locker room.<br> <br>89, 6, Kyzir White, S, 6-1?, 218, 4.69, 3, West Virginia, Best near line of scrimmage with special teams value, but no clear NFL fit despite high-intensity style.<br> <br>90, 1, Michael Dickson*, P, 6-3, 205, N/A, 3, Texas, School-record 226 punts and 45.3-yard avg.<br><br>Ray Guy winner has booming leg with directional accuracy.<br> <br>91, 7, Marcus Allen, S, 6-2?, 215, 4.63, 3, Penn State, Versatile playmaker and team leader who delivered big hits but can be caught on his heels in coverage.<br> <br>92, 10, Tyquan Lewis, DE, 6-3¼, 269, 4.71, 3, Ohio State, Better suited to beat guards with interior rush but could wind up on the edge with plus competitiveness.<br> <br>93, 9, Geron Christian*, OT, 6-5?, 298, 5.33, 3, Louisville, Raw but possesses excellent tools to develop.<br><br>Great length and hoops background is evident in athletic feet.<br> <br>94, 10, Deadrin Senat, DT, 6-0, 314, 5.16, 3, South Florida, Thick, squatty build to maintain leverage and anchor vs. double teams. Clogger doesn't threaten as rusher.<br> <br>95, 11, RJ McIntosh*, DT, 6-4½, 286, N/A, 3, Miami, Great effort on, off field, but game needs polish.<br>Significant interior pass rush upside to develop.<br> <br>96, 8, Royce Freeman, RB, 5-11½, 229, 4.54, 3-4, Oregon, Runs in third gear. Elite leg drive, power to rip through tackles and push the pile at the goal line.<br> <br>97, 2, Josey Jewell, ILB, 6-1, 234, 4.82, 3-4, Iowa, Tackling machine (437 for career) isn't an elite athlete, but natural instincts, passion to contribute early.<br> <br>98, 10, Jeff Holland*, OLB, 6-1?, 249, 4.79, 3-4, Auburn, Blossomed in lone year as starter with 10 sacks, 13 TFL.<br><br>Projects as 3-4 OLB, sub-package rusher early on.<br> <br>99, 11, Isaac Yiadom, CB, 6-0?, 190, 4.52, 3-4, Boston College, Three-year starter at BC in NFL-type defensive schemes. Hustle and effort are certain, size/speed aren't.<br> <br>100, 10, Orlando Brown*, OT, 6-7?, 345, 5.85, 3-4, Oklahoma, Son of late "Zeus" started 40 games at LT, but stock was hammered by historically poor Combine workout.<br> <br>101, 3, Micah Kiser, ILB, 6-0?, 238, 4.66, 3-4, Virginia, Great instincts, eyes and discipline in run game.<br><br>Good blitzer and scheme-versatile. Liability in coverage.<br> <br>102, 12, Antonio Callaway*, WR, 5-10?, 200, 4.41, 3-4, Florida, Electric on the field, major red flags off it. Major wild card declared early after being suspended all of '17.<br> <br>103, 12, Kevin Toliver*, CB, 6-2, 192, 4.52, 3-4, LSU, Plays with leverage and has top size and length.<br>Could be a steal if he takes to NFL discipline, coaching.<br> <br>104, 13, Tarvarus McFadden*, CB, 6-2¼, 204, 4.68, 3-4, Florida State, Slow for a corner (4.68), makes up for shortcomings with long arms; likely only fits zone scheme.<br> <br>105, 7, Mike White, QB, 6-4?, 224, 5.09, 3-4, Western Kentucky, Has excellent size, arm, and willing to hang in pocket.<br><br>Highly inconsistent passer but natural skills to mold.<br> <br>106, 8, Terrell Edmunds*, S, 6-0½, 217, 4.47, 4, Virginia Tech, Trustworthy and strong in run support, limited potential as a centerfielder in man defense.<br> <br>107, 4, Mason Cole, C, 6-4?, 305, 5.23, 4, Michigan, Started program-record 51 games.<br><br>Lacks length or size for NFL OT, but has frame, agility to succeed inside.<br> <br>108, 13, Michael Gallup, WR, 6-0¾, 205, 4.51, 4, Colorado State, Lines up all over formation with good - not great - size, athleticism. Potential No. 2 could contribute early.<br> <br>109, 12, Trenton Thompson*, DT, 6-2?, 288, 5.06, 4, Georgia, Combines above-average tools with great motor.<br><br>Stays low, plays hard but production limited by injuries.<br> <br>110, 9, Nyheim Hines*, RB, 5-8?, 198, 4.38, 4, NC State, Swiss Army role for Wolfpack; ideal third-down back entering league with potential to be much more.<br> <br>111, 11, Josh Sweat*, DE, 6-4¾, 251, 4.53, 4, Florida State, History of knee injuries.<br>Fast, lean and explosive, changing direction on a dime and closing in a blink.<br> <br>112, 14, Holton Hill*, CB, 6-1?, 196, 4.49, 4, Texas, Off-field matters spoiled UT tenure. Gifted, capable in man or zone if he silences grabby hands.<br> <br>113, 14, J'Mon Moore, WR, 6-2?, 207, 4.60, 4, Missouri, Great size, length, fluidity with explosive playmaking skills, but very raw and feasted on limited route tree.<br> <br>114, 10, Bo Scarbrough*, RB, 6-1?, 228, 4.52, 4, Alabama, Built like LB-S and runs like one, seeking contact.<br><br>High-cut runner, limited wiggle and durability.<br> <br>115, 15, Rashaan Gaulden*, CB, 6-0¾, 197, 4.52, 4, Tennessee, Sprinter with first-class speed and abundant natural gifts can serve many purposes at next level.<br> <br>116, 12, Andrew Brown, DE, 6-3?, 296, 5.03, 4, Virginia, Superior run stopper with limited rush repertoire and tenacity to play anywhere on the D-line.<br> <br>117, 13, Folorunso Fatukasi, DT, 6-3¾, 318, 5.29, 4, UConn, "Foley" was disruptive despite limited stats.<br><br>Powerful and scheme-versatile with improved technique.<br> <br>118, 8, Luke Falk, QB, 6-3?, 215, 4.85, 4, Washington State, Highly productive in Mike Leach offense. Accurate, but lacks arm strength and takes far too many hits.<br> <br>119, 16, Nick Nelson*, CB, 5-10?, 200, 4.52, 4, Wisconsin, Suffered torn meniscus in workout with Lions.<br>Short yet confident, coordinated athlete with leadership.<br> <br>120, 11, Darius Leonard, OLB, 6-2, 234, 4.70, 4, South Carolina State, Good hustle, range, and stood out in games against FBS teams. Needs strength, but not much room to add.<br> <br>121, 11, John Kelly*, RB, 5-9?, 216, 4.65, 4, Tennessee, Shared team lead in catches in '17 with workhorse mentality.<br><br>Short with limited speed, agility.<br> <br>122, 11, Will Richardson*, OT, 6-5?, 306, 5.26, 4, NC State, Charged with zero sacks in past 400 pass-blocking snaps. Guard-like frame difficult to move; off-field flags.<br> <br>123, 12, Mark Walton*, RB, 5-9?, 202, 4.60, 4, Miami, Season-ending injury four games into 2017.<br>Shifty, sudden but too small to be bell-cow RB.<br> <br>124, 17, J.C. Jackson*, CB, 5-9¾, 201, 4.46, 4, Maryland, On the red list for character; talented enough. Made most of second chance at Maryland past two seasons.<br> <br>125, 15, Keke Coutee*, WR, 5-9¾, 181, 4.43, 4, Texas Tech, Dynamic in space with terrific speed, quickness.<br><br>Great slot potential and vertical upside with added strength.<br> <br>126, 16, Tre'Quan Smith*, WR, 6-2, 210, 4.49, 4, UCF, Above-the-rim target regularly makes acrobatic grabs. Strong intangibles, but lack of elite speed may hinder.<br> <br>127, 9, Armani Watts, S, 5-10½, 202, 4.65, 4, Texas A&M, Four-year starter with special teams traits but enough speed and agility to contribute in coverage.<br> <br>128, 12, Shaquem Griffin, OLB, 6-0?, 227, 4.38, 4, UCF, Stole Combine with great workout minus amputated left hand.<br><br>Can fly; skills to contribute in defined role.<br> <br>129, 13, Chad Thomas, DE, 6-5, 281, 4.92, 4, Miami, Mr. Olympia phsyique and 81 1/2-inch arms to be a mismatch-type, third rusher instantly.<br> <br>130, 18, Davontae Harris, CB, 5-11, 205, 4.43, 4, Illinois State, Tops on team in tackles and passes defended.<br>More physical than nifty, but finds his way to ball.<br> <br>131, 19, Tony Brown, CB, 5-11?, 199, 4.35, 4, Alabama, Nickel defender with elite speed to mix and match in secondary; didn't finish enough plays.<br> <br>132, 6, Dalton Schultz, TE, 6-5?, 244, 4.74, 4, Stanford, Pro-style product viewed more as a No.<br><br>2 tight end, blocks angry and fits tradition of Stanford TE.<br> <br>133, 6, Wyatt Teller, OG, 6-4½, 301, 5.24, 4-5, Virginia Tech, Broad frame and finishes blocks while rarely winding up on the ground, but 2017 play too inconsistent.<br> <br>134, 13, Akrum Wadley, RB, 5-9?, 194, 4.54, 4-5, Iowa, Ran behind FB, also lined up in slot, returned kicks.<br>Not used and abused as one-year starter (536 carries).<br> <br>135, 5, Scott Quessenberry, C, 6-4, 315, 5.09, 4-5, UCLA, Explodes off the snap with low center of gravity. Experience at all three interior positions increases value.<br> <br>136, 14, Breeland Speaks*, DE, 6-2?, 283, 4.87, 4-5, Ole Miss, Very raw, Speaks shows enticing flashes in between long lapses.<br><br>Too talented to ignore but needs polish.<br> <br>137, 13, Fred Warner, OLB, 6-3?, 236, 4.64, 4-5, BYU, Built like a big safety and showed off athleticism at Combine. Attacks run; needs strength, better technique.<br> <br>138, 20, Parry Nickerson, CB, 5-10, 182, 4.34, 4-5, Tulane, Four-year starter's history of knee issues overshadows ball skills, but is he big enough to hold up?<br> <br>139, 9, Kyle Lauletta, QB, 6-2?, 222, 4.81, 4-5, Richmond, Senior Bowl MVP lacks rocket arm, but gets ball out quick, makes smart decisions and exploits weaknesses.<br> <br>140, 12, Desmond Harrison, OT, 6-6, 292, 4.90, 4-5, West Georgia, Value all about great physical tools.<br><br>Many travels included dismissal from Texas for drug-related incidents.<br> <br>141, 7, Tony Adams, OG, 6-2, 315, 5.48, 4-5, NC State, Reliable, not elite, starter (school-record 47 at NC State) with hands and balance honed playing tennis.<br> <br>142, 17, Allen Lazard, WR, 6-5, 225, 4.55, 4-5, Iowa State, Wields big frame effectively to box out defenders.<br><br>Doesn't scare DBs with speed, too often playing like a TE.<br> <br>143, 10, Godwin Igwebuike, S, 5-11?, 213, 4.44, 5, Northwestern, Looks the part, limitations in speed and pure athleticism push him down draft boards.<br> <br>144, 7, Durham Smythe, TE, 6-5?, 253, 4.81, 5, Notre Dame, Huge target with massive mitts and focused catch process.<br>Below-average speed, athleticism.<br> <br>145, 13, Alex Cappa, OT, 6-5¾, 305, 5.39, 5, Humboldt State, Dominated lower level with technique and physicality and plays with mean streak. Disappointing Combine.<br> <br>146, 14, Hercules Mata'afa*, DT, 6-2¼, 254, 4.76, 5, Washington State, Explodes out of stance and lives in the backfield with high motor.<br><br>Too small to survive inside vs. run.<br> <br>147, 15, Kylie Fitts, DE, 6-3¾, 263, 4.69, 5, Utah, Freakish workout at NFL Combine might get him over-drafted but too many injuries to overlook.<br> <br>148, 18, Cedrick Wilson, WR, 6-2, 188, 4.55, 5, Boise State, Productive WR on slants, crossers and vertical routes who needs increased strength to break more tackles.<br> <br>149, 11, Quin Blanding, S, 6-2, 207, 4.63, 5, Virginia, Holds ACC tackles record (495) for DB.<br><br>No special qualities jump off film, which screams special teamer.<br> <br>150, 14, Kalen Ballage, RB, 6-1½, 228, 4.46, 5, Arizona State, Strong, sturdy, balanced. Runs through contact and offers upside in return game but fumbles are issue.<br> <br>151, 2, JK Scott, P, 6-5¼, 207, 4.83, 5, Alabama, 2x Ray Guy finalist allowed only four returns in '17.<br>Powerful leg with hang time; can handle kickoff duties.<br> <br>152, 12, Jordan Whitehead*, S, 5-10?, 198, 4.60, 5, Pittsburgh, Used to counter mismatches at Pitt. Encountered off-field issues. Unique, swift athlete.<br> <br>153, 19, Simmie Cobbs*, WR, 6-3?, 220, 4.64, 5, Indiana, Plays to timed speed, but shows extra gear vertically and bull for CBs to deal with height, width, length.<br> <br>154, 20, Deontay Burnett*, WR, 5-11?, 186, 4.53, 5, USC, Sam Darnold's fave target led Pac-12 with 86 catches in '17.<br><br>Limited to slot and small hands a concern.<br> <br>155, 21, Marcell Ateman, WR, 6-4½, 216, 4.62, 5, Oklahoma State, Size, ball skills to intrigue teams. Needs to develop route-running, but could be red-zone threat early on.<br> <br>156, 16, Dorance Armstrong Jr.*, DE, 6-3?, 257, 4.87, 5, Kansas, A fit for wide-9 rush technique or candidate for OLB conversion as a rush specialist.<br> <br>157, 14, Joe Noteboom, OT, 6-5, 309, 4.96, 5, TCU, Good size, length and quickness to handle speed rushes.<br><br>Also highly inconsistent with sloppy technique.<br> <br>158, 4, Genard Avery, ILB, 6-0, 248, 4.59, 5, Memphis, HS powerlifter opened eyes with combine testing. Not fluid, but plays physically inside, outside or on edge.<br> <br>159, 15, Brandon Parker, OT, 6-7?, 305, 5.40, 5, North Carolina A&T, Started all 48 career games at LT, allowing no sacks.<br><br>NFL tools to develop with additional strength.<br> <br>160, 22, Jordan Lasley*, WR, 6-1, 203, 4.50, 5, UCLA, Explosive athlete who is faster on film than at Combine. Several issues off-field and too many drops on it.<br> <br>161, 1, Jaylen Samuels, FB, 5-11½, 225, 4.54, 5, NC State, True 'tweener with TE and RB skills might ultimately be best in West Coast offense at fullback.<br> <br>162, 8, Chris Herndon, TE, 6-3¾, 253, 4.78, 5, Miami, Thick and athletic with directional mobility to become a top route runner and receiving tight end.<br> <br>163, 9, Troy Fumagalli, TE, 6-4¾, 247, 4.88, 5, Wisconsin, Excellent natural hands.<br><br>Still works like a walk-on. No evidence he can become a playmaker.<br> <br>164, 8, Sean Welsh, OG, 6-3, 300, 5.33, 5, Iowa, RG-RT skill set and background in a program known for churning out NFL OL, but limited athletically.<br> <br>165, 10, Tyler Conklin, TE, 6-3, 254, 4.80, 5, Central Michigan, Smooth stride and sweet hops but slightly shorter than NFL prototype and untested vs.<br><br>top competition.<br> <br>166, 16, Timon Parris, OT, 6-6, 320, N/A, 5, Stony Brook, Raw and powerful, seeking to become 1st Stony Brook OL drafted. Recovering from broken leg (October).<br> <br>167, 21, Taron Johnson, CB, 5-11?, 192, 4.50, 5, Weber State, On the small side - issue vs.<br>run - with a maxed-out frame and untested against elite wide receivers.<br> <br>168, 5, Tegray Scales, ILB, 6-0?, 230, 4.77, 5, Indiana, Sniffs out plays quickly and plays faster than timed speed. Below average size; struggles taking on blocks.<br> <br>169, 15, Kendrick Norton*, DT, 6-2, 312, 5.25, 5, Miami, Ken Jr.'s son sports ideal size, length, motor to clog run lanes.<br><br>OK athlete is likely two-down run stuffer.<br> <br>170, 22, Quenton Meeks*, CB, 6-1, 209, 4.55, 5-6, Stanford, Lacks pure speed and suddenness to be a starter. Enough attitude and size to make the roster.<br> <br>171, 16, Justin Jones, DT, 6-2½, 309, 5.09, 5-6, NC State, Strong for his size, playing low and delivering power.<br><br>Improved stock with strong week at Senior Bowl.<br> <br>172, 23, Auden Tate*, WR, 6-4?, 228, 4.68, 5-6, Florida State, Size is biggest asset, especially in traffic - which is usually heavy due to lack of elite speed and athleticism.<br> <br>173, 13, Dane Cruikshank, S, 6-1, 209, 4.41, 5-6, Arizona, Great burst and speed with clear football instincts and played his best in primetime moments.<br> <br>174, 14, DeShon Elliott*, S, 6-0?, 210, 4.58, 5-6, Texas, Single-speed safety with no extra gear to chase long, can cover deficiencies with heady play.<br> <br>175, 17, Marquis Haynes, DE, 6-2?, 235, 4.67, 5-6, Ole Miss, Posted 32.0 career sacks but offers little beyond burst due to size, reach and leverage shortcomings.<br> <br>176, 17, Toby Weathersby*, OT, 6-4?, 317, 5.34, 5-6, LSU, Started solely on right side.<br><br>Struggles with speed, maintaining blocks. Could have used another year at LSU.<br> <br>177, 23, Darius Phillips, CB, 5-9?, 193, 4.54, 5-6, Western Michigan, Undersized extra corner in the NFL will need to scrap to win has the gifts and guts to get it done.<br> <br>178, 14, Leon Jacobs, OLB, 6-1?, 246, 4.48, 5-6, Wisconsin, Raw athlete with relentless motor lacks technical pass rush skills.<br><br>'Tweener could prove diamond in rough.<br> <br>179, 11, Will Dissly, TE, 6-4, 267, 4.87, 5-6, Washington, Converted defensive end still learning to block and run refined routes; size warrants a shot.<br> <br>180, 1, Daniel Carlson, K, 6-5, 213, N/A, 6, Auburn, 3x Lou Groza finalist has soccer background and booming leg.<br>Tested in big games but not much weather.<br> <br>181, 2, Dimitri Flowers, FB, 6-1?, 248, 4.83, 6, Oklahoma, Son of 2000 first-rounder Erik Flowers. Physical and savvy blocker can do some damage as receiver.<br> <br>182, 24, D.J. Reed*, CB, 6-0, 188, 4.51, 6, Kansas State, Not big but tough and determined.<br><br>Ace return man had KO and punt returns for TDs at Kansas State.<br> <br>183, 18, Kentavius Street, DE, 6-2¼, 280, 4.87, 6, NC State, Strong-side end with the size and power to develop into a rotational end or low-upside starter.<br> <br>184, 19, Ade Aruna, DE, 6-4?, 262, 4.61, 6, Tulane, Toolsy prospect with great lower-half explosion, first step, long speed.<br><br>Raw, needs NFL redshirt.<br> <br>185, 15, Siran Neal, S, 6-0, 206, 4.56, 6, Jacksonville State, NFL body type, low-level college resume. Advanced football mind with versatile traits, experience.<br> <br>186, 9, Skyler Phillips, OG, 6-2½, 314, 5.09, 6, Idaho State, Requisite strength and stone hands to play inside but stiff on the hoof and ineffective blocking LBs.<br> <br>187, 6, Jack Cichy, ILB, 6-2?, 238, 4.55, 6, Wisconsin, Former walk-on always in right place at right time.<br><br>Long injury history (pec, ACL); hasn't played since '16.<br> <br>188, 15, Mike McCray, OLB, 6-1?, 243, 4.76, 6, Michigan, Animal vs. run with size, length, physicality to fend off blocks. Average speed; may fare best inside in 3-4.<br> <br>189, 18, Matt Pryor, OT, 6-7, 358, N/A, 6, TCU, Surprisingly nimble for gigantic frame with long arms (36") and big hands (11").<br><br>Too many negative plays.<br> <br>190, 24, Korey Robertson*, WR, 6-1, 212, 4.56, 6, Southern Miss, "D-Block" has so-so straight-line speed, but is quick in and out of breaks and slippery after the catch.<br> <br>191, 16, Trayvon Henderson, S, 6-0?, 204, 4.59, 6, Hawai'i, See-ball, get-ball mentality to climb NFL depth chart, unafraid of special teams path.<br> <br>192, 16, Josh Adams*, RB, 6-1?, 213, 4.52, 6, Notre Dame, Runs to and through contact.<br><br>Limited in open space and upright running style equates to NFL punishment.<br> <br>193, 20, John Franklin-Myers, DE, 6-4, 283, 4.75, 6, Stephen F. Austin, NFL size but is more potential than polish with scouts sweating his limited production at SFA.<br> <br>194, 25, Michael Joseph, CB, 6-0?, 187, 4.53, 6, Dubuque, DIII POY.<br>Self-made prospect and gifted ballhawk with playmaking tendencies, average speed.<br> <br>195, 3, Nick Bawden, FB, 6-2, 245, N/A, 6, San Diego State, Surprising attack mentality for converted QB, transformed physically and emotionally to fit position.<br> <br>196, 12, Jordan Akins, TE, 6-3, 249, 4.93, 6, UCF, Former Texas Rangers MLB farmhand has the long arms and coordination to develop as backup TE.<br> <br>197, 17, Poona Ford, DT, 5-11?, 306, 5.09, 6, Texas, Undersized and lacks dominant trait, but utilizes natural leverage, strong hands to flash rush potential.<br> <br>198, 19, Cole Madison, OT, 6-5, 313, 5.33, 6, Washington State, Former WR is quick with his hands and feet.<br><br>Not a mauler with great raw strength and may move inside.<br> <br>199, 7, Azeem Victor, ILB, 6-2?, 240, 4.72, 6, Washington, Piqued as Soph. with instincts, physical presence v. run. Slowed with added weight; suspended twice in '17.<br> <br>200, 25, Daurice Fountain, WR, 6-1?, 209, 4.54, 6, Northern Iowa, Shrine Game MVP was Combine snub but freakish athleticism stood out at pro day.<br><br>Very raw, needs time.<br> <br>201, 17, Darrel Williams, RB, 6-0, 225, 4.68, 6, LSU, Reliable receiver who runs with vision and brings big-play flair due to first step, make-you-miss moves.<br> <br>202, 17, Tre Flowers, S, 6-3¾, 202, 4.45, 6, Oklahoma State, Four-year starter for Cowboys, average athletic ability brings too many limitations at next level.<br> <br>203, 16, Oren Burks, OLB, 6-3?, 233, 4.59, 6, Vanderbilt, Speed and experience at safety show in coverage, but inconsistent vs.<br><br>run and needs time to develop.<br> <br>204, 6, Will Clapp*, C, 6-4½, 314, 5.39, 6, LSU, Three-year starter in SEC versatile along the interior, but an average athlete who must increase strength.<br> <br>205, 26, Chris Campbell, CB, 6-0¾, 195, 4.55, 6, Penn State, Physical and knows how to win and use his body to prevent receivers from getting deep.<br> <br>206, 20, Jamil Demby, OT, 6-4?, 335, 5.58, 6, Maine, Big, muscular, powerful 2x team captain. Below average athleticism exposed vs.<br><br>run could lead to OG move.<br> <br>207, 17, Dorian O'Daniel, OLB, 6-0?, 223, 4.61, 6, Clemson, Body of a big safety, reyling on speed, quickness. Lacks play strength, but could be special teams demon.<br> <br>208, 18, Bilal Nichols, DT, 6-4, 306, 4.96, 6, Delaware, Good size with room to add mass, and adds versatility down the line to compensate for raw technique.<br> <br>209, 10, Kurt Benkert, QB, 6-2?, 218, 4.95, 6, Virginia, Tools and playmaking ability warrant a look, but highly erratic pocket movement and how he scans field.<br> <br>210, 27, Grant Haley, CB, 5-9, 190, 4.44, 6, Penn State, Undersized with short arms, he's springy in short areas and excels as a slot option and returner.<br> <br>211, 26, Trey Quinn*, WR, 5-11?, 203, 4.55, 6, SMU, Former track star also threw no-no at '08 Little League WS.<br><br>Modest pre-draft workouts; slot prospect.<br> <br>212, 27, Dylan Cantrell, WR, 6-2?, 226, 4.59, 6, Texas Tech, One-trick pony who needs to make circus catches due to lack of speed. Outstanding body control.<br> <br>213, 28, Darren Carrington, WR, 6-2¼, 199, 4.78, 6, Utah, Very good downfield target finished at Utah after boot from Oregon following laundry list of off-field issues.<br> <br>214, 13, Ryan Izzo*, TE, 6-4?, 256, 4.94, 6-7, Florida State, Left school one year early.<br><br>Offers only modest speed and blocking potential. Developmental prospect.<br> <br>215, 18, Chase Edmonds, RB, 5-9?, 205, 4.55, 6-7, Fordham, Compact runner with yo-yo movement to elude tackles; top three-cone, short shuttle for RBs at Combine.<br> <br>216, 10, Colby Gossett, OG, 6-4?, 315, 5.20, 6-7, Appalachian State, Started at RG and RT but limited agility and stone legs render him an NFL backup or swing reserve.<br> <br>217, 29, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, WR, 6-4, 206, 4.37, 6-7, South Florida, Track speed shows on film, getting on top of DBs in a flash.<br><br>Plays smaller than size and very much a project.<br> <br>218, 18, Troy Apke, S, 6-1¼, 200, 4.34, 6-7, Penn State, Underdog with great workout numbers and good - not special - on-field results at college level.<br> <br>219, 19, Roc Thomas, RB, 5-10, 198, 4.56, 6-7, Jacksonville State, Spin doctor with impeccable body control ranked No.<br>2 as HS RB recruit behind Leonard Fournette.<br> <br>220, 2, Eddy Pineiro*, K, 6-0, 185, N/A, 6-7, Florida, Left Gators early as program's most accurate kicker, including better than than 90% from 40-plus.<br> <br>221, 11, Taylor Hearn*, OG, 6-4, 330, 5.45, 6-7, Clemson, Short arms limit effectivenss vs.<br><br>NFL speed and length; top grades for toughness, competitiveness.<br> <br>222, 20, Justin Jackson, RB, 6-0, 193, 4.50, 6-7, Northwestern, Too small to be fulltime RB but had 122 career catches, beckoning third-down or slot role in NFL.<br> <br>223, 21, Marcell Frazier, DE, 6-4, 261, 4.66, 6-7, Missouri, Football junkie and high-effort end who does just enough to keep on the final 53 as a rookie.<br> <br>224, 28, Brandon Facyson, CB, 6-1½, 203, 4.53, 7, Virginia Tech, Advanced football instincts but mostly average testing, appears to have a special teams ceiling.<br> <br>225, 21, Phillip Lindsay, RB, 5-7, 184, 4.41, 7, Colorado, Slashing runner with no-quit mantra and track background set school record (5926) for total yards.<br> <br>226, 14, David Wells, TE, 6-6, 256, 4.75, 7, San Diego State, Mostly a blocker, Wells can catch what hits his hands but will be used as a third offensive tackle in NFL.<br> <br>227, 29, Levi Wallace, CB, 6-0¼, 179, 4.63, 7, Alabama, Smooth, fluid mover with wide receiver traits will need to bulk up to contend with pumped-up pros.<br> <br>228, 8, Nick DeLuca, ILB, 6-2?, 251, 4.85, 7, North Dakota State, Classic Mike 'backer who diagnoses plays before they develop.<br><br>Old-school thumper needs right scheme.<br> <br>229, 18, Keishawn Bierria, OLB, 6-0?, 230, 4.79, 7, Washington, Terrific leader who brings intense physical edge, but exposed vs. better athletes, especially in coverage.<br> <br>230, 19, Davin Bellamy, OLB, 6-3¾, 255, N/A, 7, Georgia, Athleticism to win early and threaten QB.<br><br>Lanky build lacks strength and gets bullied vs. run.<br> <br>231, 30, Javon Wims, WR, 6-2?, 215, 4.53, 7, Georgia, Well-traveled athlete emerged as UGA's leading receiver in '17. Excellent size for 50-50s; needs route work.<br> <br>232, 20, Skai Moore, OLB, 6-2¼, 226, 4.73, 7, South Carolina, Uber-productive, leading team in tackles 4x.<br><br>Great instincts, but lacks size and is liability in coverage.<br> <br>233, 22, Trevon Young, DE, 6-3?, 258, 4.78, 7, Louisville, Two hip surgeries since Dec. 2015; looked like a first-round talent previous. Has 3-4 OLB skill set.<br> <br>234, 30, Avonte Maddox, CB, 5-9?, 184, 4.39, 7, Pittsburgh, Wins every footrace and was team captain; some team will jump on his playmaking ability.<br> <br>235, 23, Olasunkanmi Adeniyi*, DE, 6-1?, 248, 4.81, 7, Toledo, Pass-rush specialist who could convert to OLB in 3-4 defense.<br><br>Only 20 and plays with non-stop motor.<br> <br>236, 19, P.J. Hall, DT, 6-0, 308, 4.83, 7, Sam Houston State, Combine snub grabbed attention with impressive pro day. FCS dominator could prove late-round steal.<br> <br>237, 31, D'Montre Wade, CB, 5-11?, 206, 5.20, 7, Murray State, Upside limited by heavy legs, but safety and return role could beckon based on excellent ball skills.<br> <br>238, 9, Shaun Dion Hamilton, ILB, 5-11¾, 228, 4.76, 7, Alabama, Nick Saban lauds football smarts.<br><br>Quick and makes plays behind the line, but significant injury red flags.<br> <br>239, 21, Peter Kalambayi, OLB, 6-3, 252, 4.57, 7, Stanford, Better athlete than player stood out at Combine. With improved technique, could develop into starter.<br> <br>240, 31, Jaleel Scott, WR, 6-4¾, 218, 4.56, 7, New Mexico State, Great size, athleticism, and hoops background shows on contested balls.<br><br>Untapped potential, but very raw.<br> <br>241, 11, Chase Litton*, QB, 6-5, 232, 4.94, 7, Marshall, Tall, with quick release and competitive nature. Lacks mobility and great accuracy, but tools to develop.<br> <br>242, 19, Damon Webb, S, 5-10¾, 209, 4.62, 7, Ohio State, Rangy and aggressive, was coach in the huddle for Bucks and was trained at cornerback.<br> <br>243, 32, Jordan Thomas, CB, 6-0?, 187, 4.64, 7, Oklahoma, Fits evolving NFL prototype with plus ball skills if pro coaches can sell him on self-confidence.<br> <br>244, 20, John Atkins, DT, 6-2?, 321, 5.38, 7, Georgia, Classic two-gapper won't stuff the stat sheet or scare many QBs, but could thrive as rotational space-eater.<br> <br>245, 7, Brian Allen, C, 6-1, 300, 5.34, 7, Michigan State, Undersized and doesn't check many boxes for physical traits.<br><br>Scrappy blocker who struggles against size.<br> <br>246, 20, Natrell Jamerson, S, 5-10?, 201, 4.40, 7, Wisconsin, WR-turned-CB-turned-S could wear many hats to keep his NFL locker. Not ready for fulltime role.<br> <br>247, 21, Brett Toth, OT, 6-6, 305, 5.09, 7, Army, Movement skills of a TE with athleticism in pass pro.<br>May not play until 2020 due to duty commitment.<br> <br>248, 22, Kamryn Pettway*, RB, 6-0, 235, 4.74, 7, Auburn, Strong north-south runner who could be used as an NFL fourth-quarter "closer" due to physical style.<br> <br>249, 32, Braxton Berrios, WR, 5-8?, 184, 4.52, 7, Miami, Valedictorian of UM biz school has bright future off field.<br><br>Steroetipical slot WR on it and very small target.<br> <br>250, 33, Greg Stroman, CB, 5-11, 182, 4.48, 7, Virginia Tech, Good athlete avoids collisions and wants to be a cover-only perimeter cornerback.<br> <br>251, 10, Kenny Young, ILB, 6-1, 236, 4.60, 7, UCLA, Experience across the 2nd level.<br>All-out player - almost to a fault - with 3-down skills if he can get stronger.<br> <br>252, 15, Adam Breneman, TE, 6-4, 241, 4.81, 7, UMass, 149 career receptions but history of knee injuries already prompted one retirement (2016, Penn State).<br> <br>253, 3, Johnny Townsend, P, 6-1, 209, N/A, 7-FA, Florida, Strong leg and posted 46.2-yard career average.<br><br>Tends to out-kick coverage, leading to return yards.<br> <br>254, 21, Tracy Walker, S, 6-0?, 206, 4.50, 7-FA, Louisiana, Has the wingspan of a small plane and basketball body type and enough range to have a chance.<br> <br>255, 12, Brendan Mahon, OG, 6-4½, 312, 5.11, 7-FA, Penn State, Experience everywhere up front and on special teams enough to get him shot at final roster.<br> <br>256, 16, Jordan Thomas, TE, 6-5½, 265, 4.74, 7-FA, Mississippi State, JUCO product was essentially a massive wide receiver at Miss.<br><br>State. Long arms, big hands, no separation.<br> <br>257, 24, Joe Ostman, DE, 6-2, 248, 4.81, 7-FA, Central Michigan, Full effort Tasmanian devil-type pass rusher with 46.5 career tackles for loss, [https://pinfaves.com/peter-jackson-weight-loss/ https://pinfaves.com/peter-jackson-weight-loss/] 28.0 sacks at CMU.<br> <br>258, 23, Zachary Crabtree, OT, 6-6¼, 313, N/A, 7-FA, Oklahoma State, RT prospect with size, length combo to hold up vs.<br>run. Heavy feet limit effectiveness blocking on move.<br> <br>259, 33, Quadree Henderson*, WR, 5-8, 190, 4.50, 7-FA, Pittsburgh, Undersized playmaker an explosive return threat and potential slot/gadget option for creative coordinator.<br> <br>260, 22, Tray Matthews, S, 6-0?, 209, 4.57, 7-FA, Auburn, Two-way college safety best when seeking contact and could wind up a special teams lifer.<br> <br>261, 12, Nic Shimonek, QB, 6-3, 220, 4.88, 7-FA, Texas Tech, Good size, accuracy as potential developmental arm.<br><br>Late-game struggles and tends to stare targets down.<br> <br>262, 13, Cody O'Connell, OG, 6-8½, 363, 5.64, 7-FA, Washington State, Seasoned pass protector at left guard, ideal position in NFL is right tackle because of height, knee bend.<br> <br>263, 14, KC McDermott, OG, 6-6, 300, 5.09, 7-FA, Miami, Plus effort but limited agility and quickness force McDermott to take the long road to NFL career.<br> <br>264, 23, Ito Smith, RB, 5-9, 201, 4.48, 7-FA, Southern Miss, Averaged 5.5 yards per carry (820 attempts) thanks to sudden burst, all-direction agility.<br> <br>265, 1, Tanner Carew, LS, 6-1, 243, 5.00, 7-FA, Oregon, Seeking to become only 4th LS drafted since '10.<br><br>Highly trained at position and snaps cleanly with velocity.<br> <br>266, 8, Coleman Shelton, C, 6-3, 292, 5.24, 7-FA, Washington, Lacks great play strength and anchor, but technique and experience across line could earn him reserve role.<br> <br>267, 15, Jaryd Jones-Smith, OG, 6-6½, 317, 5.22, 7-FA, Pittsburgh, Poor functional strength but looked natural as a pass protector at right tackle; worth a look.<br> <br>268, 34, Danny Johnson, CB, 5-9¼, 181, 4.44, 7-FA, Southern, Special punt return option and extra cornerback with NFL-caliber speed unlikely to contribute on D.<br> <br>269, 23, Nick Gates*, OT, 6-5?, 295, 5.46, 7-FA, Nebraska, Three-year starter at OT mirrors well, but his lack of length is a concern even with potential move to OG.<br> <br>270, 34, Richie James*, WR, 5-10, 183, 4.48, 7-FA, Middle Tennessee, Former HS QB limited to slot due to lack of size.<br><br>Shifty with separation quickness and dangerous with ball.<br> <br>271, 21, James Looney, DT, 6-3, 287, 4.89, 7-FA, California, Began at Wake Forest, moved to Cal in '14. Lacks mass; may provide versatility as end/inside sub.<br> <br>272, 24, Jordan Wilkins, RB, 6-1, 217, 4.70, 7-FA, Mississippi, Served academic suspension in 2016, lead team in rushing in '17.<br><br>Powerful legs, finishes runs.<br> <br>273, 22, Garret Dooley, OLB, 6-2?, 248, 4.80, 7-FA, Wisconsin, Good play strength and strong hand usage, but limited athlete may struggle to make impact in NFL.<br> <br>274, 4, Joseph Davidson, P, 6-7, 232, N/A, 7-FA, Bowling Green, Tall left-footer averaged more than 44 yards per attempt three seasons.<br><br>Needs to work on hang time.<br> <br>275, 35, Deatrick Nichols, CB, 5-10, 185, 4.45, 7-FA, South Florida, Short on height and arm length to contend with NFL receivers, best inside with help over the top.<br> <br>276, 36, Kameron Kelly, CB, 6-1?, 204, 4.66, 7-FA, San Diego State, Not fast enough to play corner every down, his feet give him a chance as a utility defender.<br> <br>277, 35, Jester Weah, WR, 6-2, 210, 4.43, 7-FA, Pittsburgh, Big WR ran well at Combine, but foot speed remains big question mark.<br><br>Uses body well to catch in crowds.<br> <br>278, 24, Dejon Allen, OT, 6-2, 285, N/A, FA, Hawai'i, Undersized but athletic, his NFL paycheck may come at OG due to lack of length. Versatility a big bonus.<br> <br>279, 13, Riley Ferguson, QB, 6-2¾, 212, 4.98, FA, Memphis, Former UT starter landed at Memphis after CC stint.<br>Scans field well and is accuracte. OK arm, slight build.<br> <br>280, 37, Andre Chachere, CB, 6-0, 197, 4.49, FA, San Jose State, Needs a zone scheme and coach to light the fire to become a viable regular at cornerback.<br> <br>281, 38, Rashard Fant, CB, 5-9½, 179, 4.45, FA, Indiana, Swift and speedy with 36 starts in Big Ten, scouts worry he'll be in on plays but not finish them.<br> <br>282, 11, Christian Sam*, ILB, 6-1, 244, 4.75, FA, Arizona State, Well-built and suited for inside work, able to take on ballcarriers solo.<br><br>3-down 'backer if passion is there.<br> <br>283, 23, Dominick Sanders, S, 5-11¼, 193, 4.56, FA, Georgia, Undeniable ball skills as safety and return man with 53 starts; some view him as CB option.<br> <br>284, 25, Justin Lawler, DE, 6-3?, 265, 5.06, FA, SMU, Undeveloped rush repertoire despite results (15.5 TFLs in 2017) but has NFL body type.<br> <br>285, 3, Michael Badgley, K, 5-10, 183, 4.94, FA, Miami, Good all-around athlete was 4-year kicker.<br><br>Will push for someone's job if he can improve deep accuracy.<br> <br>286, 22, Kahlil McKenzie*, DT, 6-2¾, 314, 5.15, FA, Tennessee, Son of Raiders GM Reggie; Good frame, upper-body strength, but project who doesn't play up to size.<br> <br>287, 24, Cole Reyes, S, 6-1?, 213, 4.58, FA, North Dakota, Limited speed and range and unproven against elite-level athletes.<br><br>Developmental option.<br> <br>288, 36, Byron Pringle*, WR, 6-1, 205, 4.46, FA, Kansas State, Already 24, chose to leave early for pros. Averaged 24.1 YPC in 2017, but can he beat NFL press coverage?<br> <br>289, 25, Joshua Kalu, S, 6-0, 203, 4.58, FA, Nebraska, Capable of lining up at safety, cornerback and nickel with good instincts and study habits to stick.<br> <br>290, 12, Joel Iyiegbuniwe*, ILB, 6-1, 229, 4.60, FA, Western Kentucky, Made NFL jump after 1st-team all-conference season. Good athlete in coverage but gets stuck on blocks.<br> <br>291, 37, Jake Wieneke, WR, 6-4, 221, 4.67, FA, South Dakota State, Lack of speed is main detriment for big, long WR.<br><br>Quality route-runner who could be dangerous in red zone.<br> <br>292, 23, Ja'Von Rolland-Jones, OLB, 6-2, 215, 4.88, FA, North Dakota, FBS' all-time sack leader (42) brings hustle, but low level of competition flags enhanced by poor workouts.<br> <br>293, 23, Lowell Lotulelei, DT, 6-1?, 315, N/A, FA, Utah, Former frosh All-American fell off table in '17.<br><br>Questions about desire, work ethic may leave him undrafted.<br> <br>294, 16, Sam Jones*, OG, 6-4?, 290, 5.30, FA, Arizona State, Left school early after coach was fired and has enough athletic upside to warrant late-round flier.<br> <br>295, 17, K.J. Malone, OG, 6-4, 303, 5.34, FA, LSU, Son of NBA HOF'er Karl Malone has the frame, feet to stay outside but requires significant polish.<br> <br>296, 24, Jamiyus Pittman, DT, 6-1, 284, N/A, FA, Central Florida, Played outside for Scott Frost; short, stout prospect projects best inside.<br><br>More effort than upside talent.<br> <br>297, 13, Chris Worley, ILB, 6-1?, 238, 4.86, FA, Ohio State, Timed speed matches the film and plays stiff. Does bring strong intangibles and strikes ballcarriers hard.<br> <br>298, 26, Sean Chandler, S, 5-10½, 205, 4.61, FA, Temple, Tweener who could find a path forward due to versatile experience at CB and S, special teams ability.<br> <br>299, 14, Logan Woodside, QB, 6-1, 201, 4.79, FA, Toledo, Lack of size will take him off many draft boards.<br><br>Needs right offense to maximize football IQ, accuracy.<br> <br>300, 14, Jason Cabinda, ILB, 6-1, 239, N/A, FA, Penn State, Willing chaser and tackler was 3-year starter, but limited athleticism will leave him fighting for roster spot.<br> <br>--Field Level Media<br><br>adverts.addToArray({"pos":"inread_player"})Advertisement |
Revision as of 13:57, 3 December 2022
The Top 300 prospects for the 2018 NFL Draft, per ratings by Field Level Media:
Ovr, Pos Rk, Player (*=underclassman), Pos, Ht., Wt., 40, Proj., School, Comment
1, 1, Saquon Barkley*, RB, 6-0, 233, 4.40, 1, Penn State, Outstanding all-around athlete and home-run threat with great vision as runner, receiver and return man.
2, 1, Quenton Nelson, OG, 6-5, 325, 5.23, 1, Notre Dame, Future All-Pro in Zack Martin mold at guard and enough ability, agility to be LT candidate in right system.
3, 1, Sam Darnold*, QB, 6-3?, 221, 4.85, 1, USC, Pro-ready passer with arm strength, leadership skills.
Must improve decision-making to cut down on TOs.
4, 1, Bradley Chubb, DE, 6-4?, 269, 4.65, 1, NC State, Not sudden or dynamic but solid in every possible way with the ability to start tomorrow.
5, 1, Tremaine Edmunds*, OLB, 6-4½, 253, 4.54, 1, Virginia Tech, Youngest player in draft is undisciplined, but elite athlete with great burst, range, fluidity.
Blitzing threat.
6, 1, Minkah Fitzpatrick*, S, 6-0?, 204, 4.46, 1, Alabama, Versatile coverage hawk works like a walk-on and fights to be most prepared player on the field.
7, 1, Denzel Ward*, CB, 5-10?, 183, 4.32, 1, Ohio State, Most explosive CB in class has speed, quickness to lock up with any receiver inside or outside.
8, 1, Roquan Smith*, ILB, 6-0?, 236, 4.51, 1, Georgia, Undersized but smooth, explosive athlete.
Great range in run game and moves in coverage like a safety.
9, 2, Josh Allen*, QB, 6-4?, 237, 4.75, 1, Wyoming, Elite physical tools, including feet, arm strength and touch to mask spotty mechanics. May need some time.
10, 1, Vita Vea*, DT, 6-4, 347, 5.10, 1, Washington, Not many humans have his size/athleticism/strength combo.
Splits double teams and chases to sideline.
11, 2, Derwin James*, S, 6-1¾, 215, 4.47, 1, Florida State, More explosive than Fitzpatrick with the same "sic 'em" mentality and skills to slide around D.
12, 2, Da'Ron Payne*, DT, 6-2½, 311, 4.95, 1, Alabama, Highly disruptive, ascending talent anchors vs.
double teams. Limited pass rush on film, but flashes.
13, 1, Calvin Ridley*, WR, 6-0½, 189, 4.43, 1, Alabama, Big-play explosiveness and runs full route tree. Stats limited by offense. Could use more strength vs. press.
14, 3, Baker Mayfield, QB, 6-0?, 215, 4.84, 1, Oklahoma, Polarizing prospect impressed teams with football IQ, moxie.
Mid-round physical talent has rare instincts.
15, 4, Josh Rosen*, QB, 6-4, 226, 4.92, 1, UCLA, Natural passer spins ball to all levels. Bright with good instincts, but injuries, personality turn some off.
16, 2, Marcus Davenport, DE, 6-5¾, 264, 4.58, 1, UT San Antonio, Tall with long arms and loose limbs; better overall athlete with higher pass-rush ceiling than Chubb.
17, 2, Will Hernandez, OG, 6-2?, 327, 5.15, 1, UTEP, Strength of a powerlifter with surprisingly light feet; instantly erases pursuit with tenacious power.
18, 2, Harold Landry, OLB, 6-2?, 252, 4.64, 1, Boston College, DE/OLB hybrid is explosive pass rusher already boasting array of moves.
Suspect strength shows vs. run.
19, 2, Josh Jackson*, CB, 6-0?, 196, 4.48, 1, Iowa, One-year starter and converted WR has sticky mitts; compared to Ronde Barber. Sudden enough?
20, 3, Leighton Vander Esch*, OLB, 6-4¼, 256, 4.66, 1, Boise State, Played 8-man football in HS and walked on. Tough vs.
run, even better in coverage with high football IQ.
21, 2, Derrius Guice*, RB, 5-10½, 224, 4.49, 1, LSU, Self-described ball of knives could be second coming of Marshawn Lynch with even better feet.
22, 1, James Daniels*, C, 6-3?, 306, N/A, 1, Iowa, Explosive first step with good body control, punch and mobility.
Only 20; missed 3 games to knee issues.
23, 3, Taven Bryan*, DT, 6-5, 291, 4.98, 1, Florida, Impressive athlete who surges and explodes through gaps. Still developing and must improve mechanics.
24, 4, Rashaan Evans, OLB, 6-1?, 232, N/A, 1, Alabama, One-year starter sports good size, build and burst.
Speed questions unanswered by skipping 40 twice.
25, 5, Lamar Jackson*, QB, 6-2¼, 216, 4.42, 1, Louisville, Ridiculous stats and draft's most electric QB is explosive athlete who lacks accuracy due to shaky mechanics.
26, 3, Jaire Alexander*, CB, 5-10¼, 196, 4.38, 1, Louisville, Speedy (4.38 40) punt return ace with playmaking tendencies.
Carries size, durability questions.
27, 3, Isaiah Wynn, OG, 6-2?, 313, 5.06, 1, Georgia, Started 15 games at left tackle in 2017, best suited (height, reach) inside as ready-made LG starter.
28, 4, Mike Hughes*, CB, 5-10?, 189, 4.53, 1-2, UCF, Gifted with top competitive grade, exceptional speed and elite swagger.
Technique needs ironing out.
29, 1, Connor Williams*, OT, 6-5?, 296, 5.05, 1-2, Texas, Former TE is natural mover who plays with more finesse than power. Missed most of '17 to sprained knee.
30, 3, Ronnie Harrison*, S, 6-2, 207, 4.65, 1-2, Alabama, HS quarterback with top instincts looks like a LB in uniform.
Ready-made in-the-box safety and enforcer.
31, 4, Maurice Hurst, DT, 6-1¼, 292, 4.97, 1-2, Michigan, Remarkable athlete considering wide frame with explosive first step. Medicals vital (heart condition).
32, 2, D.J. Moore*, WR, 6-0, 210, 4.42, 1-2, Maryland, Great production despite QB carousel (school-record 80 catches in '17).
A bit slight, but a terror after catch.
33, 3, Sony Michel, RB, 5-10?, 214, 4.54, 1-2, Georgia, Great burst through the hole and elusivness at second levels. Shared RB job and wasn't overworked.
34, 2, Billy Price, C, 6-3¾, 305, 5.22, 1-2, Ohio State, Out until training camp due to partially torn pec at Combine, but mature leader with great technical traits.
35, 1, Dallas Goedert, TE, 6-4?, 256, 4.67, 1-2, South Dakota State, Strong and athletic with the speed to split the seam and adapt to a flex/slot role in NFL.
36, 2, Mike McGlinchey, OT, 6-7?, 309, 5.20, 1-2, Notre Dame, Cousin of Falcons QB Matt Ryan took over LT from Ronnie Stanley.
Steady, polished prospect, if not elite.
37, 4, Ronald Jones II*, RB, 5-11, 205, 4.39, 1-2, USC, Ballet feet and balance with springy explosiveness to stop and go. Upside of NFL gamebreaker.
38, 5, Isaiah Oliver*, CB, 6-0¼, 201, 4.50, 2, Colorado, Tall and long with ideal man coverage skills and experience vs.
No. 1 receiver in pass-crazed Big 12.
39, 3, Christian Kirk*, WR, 5-10?, 201, 4.47, 2, Texas A&M, Quicker than fast and not a big vertical threat. Likely contributor from Day 1 as a slot WR and returner.
40, 3, Sam Hubbard*, DE, 6-5?, 270, 4.97, 2, Ohio State, Smart, hard-nosed edge rusher who competes on every play.
Limited burst, athleticism.
41, 4, Justin Reid*, S, 6-0½, 207, 4.40, 2, Stanford, Little brother of NFL S Eric Reid, Justin is a tenacious prospect with the wheels and vision to start now.
42, 5, Harrison Phillips, DT, 6-3¼, 307, 5.21, 2, Stanford, Former wrestler diagnoses quicking and has long arms, strong hands to control blocks.
Scheme versatile.
43, 4, Courtland Sutton*, WR, 6-3?, 218, 4.54, 2, SMU, Potential to be true No. 1 WR with excellent size, speed combo if he can separate with more consistency.
44, 2, Hayden Hurst*, TE, 6-4½, 250, 4.67, 2, South Carolina, Ball skills and effort to win in traffic and get downfield.
Dinged for age (25 as a rookie), limited route tree.
45, 6, Carlton Davis*, CB, 6-1, 206, 4.53, 2, Auburn, Sturdy, RB-like build and agile enough to contribute as a No. 1 cornerback. First-team All-SEC in 2017.
46, 3, Mike Gesicki, TE, 6-5½, 247, 4.54, 2, Penn State, All-American workout at Combine, long arms and explosive movements to thrive in one-on-ones.
47, 5, Lorenzo Carter, OLB, 6-4?, 250, 4.50, 2, Georgia, Jaw-dropping athlete gained versatility at UGA.
Needs to develop pass rush technique, strength in NFL.
48, 4, Arden Key*, DE, 6-4?, 238, 4.89, 2, LSU, Gifted athlete and more of a hybrid edge rusher if off-field concerns don't scare away suitors.
49, 5, D.J. Chark, WR, 6-2?, 199, 4.34, 2, LSU, Former track star tore up pre-draft workouts.
Highly inconsistent, but height, speed to blow top off defenses.
50, 5, Rasheem Green*, DE, 6-4¼, 275, 4.73, 2, USC, Scheme-versatile with growth potential, Green has plus size and athleticism put could wind up at left end.
51, 3, Kolton Miller*, OT, 6-8?, 309, 4.95, 2, UCLA, Possesses all the tools, moving and mirroring well into 2nd level.
Still takes false steps and power a concern.
52, 4, Martinas Rankin, OT, 6-4?, 308, 5.25, 2, Mississippi State, Trained pre-draft to show versatility at all 5 OL spots, including snapping. Flexibility key with avg. quickness.
53, 5, Tyrell Crosby, OT, 6-4?, 309, 5.23, 2, Oregon, Powerfully built and strong with mean streak vs.
run. Modest agility will have most teams view him as RT.
54, 7, Anthony Averett, CB, 5-11?, 183, 4.36, 2, Alabama, Ran 4.36 and claims he's even faster, having Nick Saban as spotter and slot experience are huge plusses.
55, 8, Donte Jackson*, CB, 5-10½, 178, 4.32, 2, LSU, Tied for top 40 time among CBs.
Competes even without prototype size, weight and length.
56, 6, Nathan Shepherd, DT, 6-3¾, 315, 5.09, 2, Fort Hays State, Well-traveled, including 2 years out of sport. NFL starter kit for a body and dominated at Senior Bowl.
57, 6, Mason Rudolph, QB, 6-4?, 235, 4.90, 2, Oklahoma State, 42-game starter was uber-productive in fast-paced offense.
Big pocket passer with good arm lacks mobility.
58, 5, Nick Chubb, RB, 5-10?, 227, 4.52, 2, Georgia, One-speed runner with good vision, patience. Good feet with powerful legs to be short-yardage ace.
59, 7, Tim Settle*, DT, 6-2¾, 329, 5.37, 2, Virginia Tech, Draws comparisons to Vince Wilfork for being so nimble at his size.
Bursts hard, developing instincts.
60, 6, Brian O'Neill*, OT, 6-6?, 297, 4.82, 2-3, Pittsburgh, Former TE has intriguing tools for teams featuring outside zone, sweeps, screens. Struggles against power.
61, 4, Mark Andrews*, TE, 6-5?, 256, 4.58, 2-3, Oklahoma, Extra wideout for Sooners with 15 career red-zone receptions.
Size potential to be a blocker.
62, 6, Anthony Miller, WR, 5-11?, 201, 4.49, 2-3, Memphis, 3-level threat with speed, ball skills and elusiveness. Medical key after Jones fracture in bowl game.
63, 6, Kerryon Johnson*, RB, 5-11½, 213, 4.56, 2-3, Auburn, Versatile weapon. Natural runner with return game experience and polish as a receiver.
64, 5, Jessie Bates III*, S, 6-1?, 200, 4.50, 2-3, Wake Forest, Corner or safety, Bates is a fluid mover with short-area quickness to be utiltity defensive back.
65, 7, Dante Pettis, WR, 6-0½, 186, N/A, 2-3, Washington, Athletic bloodlines, set NCAA record with 9 punt return TDs.
Very elusive, some questions about 40 time.
66, 6, Uchenna Nwosu, OLB, 6-2?, 251, 4.65, 2-3, USC, Former safety recruit blossomed in '17. 'Tweener with quick 1st step and good awareness; liability vs. run.
67, 7, Rashaad Penny, RB, 5-11, 220, 4.46, 2-3, San Diego State, Durable (54 G) and hyper-productive, capable of big plays and contributions as runner-receiver-returner.
68, 3, Frank Ragnow, C, 6-5?, 312, 5.18, 2-3, Arkansas, Charged with 0 sacks over past three seasons in SEC.
Intense competitor with traits to step in as a starter.
69, 4, Austin Corbett, OG, 6-4?, 306, 5.15, 2-3, Nevada, College OT needs to slide inside and showed promise in OG workouts. Pro makeup and locker room leader.
70, 8, James Washington, WR, 5-11, 213, 4.54, 3, Oklahoma State, Biletnikoff winner with 74-1,549-13 as senior.
Big play waiting to happen. Limited route tree in college.
71, 9, Deon Cain*, WR, 6-1?, 202, 4.43, 3, Clemson, Good blend of size, speed athleticism with big-play moves. Stats haven't yet matched explosive upside.
72, 10, Equanimeous St. Brown*, WR, 6-4¾, 214, 4.48, 3, Notre Dame, Dangerous deep threat who lines up all over field.
Gifted; needs to stay on more routes, win contested balls.
73, 8, Derrick Nnadi, DT, 6-1, 317, 5.38, 3, Florida State, Bit undersized but sports ideal build. Animal in weight room. Should excel eating blocks vs. run.
74, 9, B.J. Hill, DT, 6-3¼, 311, 4.99, 3, NC State, Solid run defender can shed blocks and make plays in the hole.
Limited length and pass rush potential.
75, 9, M.J. Stewart, CB, 5-10?, 200, 4.54, 3, North Carolina, Broke up 41 passes and embraces being challenged in coverage, but limited by average speed.
76, 7, Jerome Baker*, OLB, 6-1?, 229, 4.53, 3, Ohio State, Undersized "Will" with tremendous athleticism and range in run game.
Only 21, needs time to develop.
77, 6, Da'Shawn Hand, DE, 6-3?, 297, 4.83, 3, Alabama, Big and powerful with some DT traits, Hand can set the edge and is nearly immovable vs. the run.
78, 5, Braden Smith, OG, 6-6¼, 315, 5.20, 3, Auburn, Bullying upper-body strength and plays with the alley-fighter's mentality OL coaches covet.
79, 8, Obo Okoronkwo, OLB, 6-1?, 253, 4.77, 3, Oklahoma, "Obo" threatens edge with great burst, balance.
Liability in run game, projecting as sub-package rusher.
80, 7, Jalyn Holmes, DE, 6-4?, 283, 4.82, 3, Ohio State, Strength, size and bull rush must be respected. Drives through blocks to stuff run and could fit at DT.
81, 5, Ian Thomas, TE, 6-3?, 259, 4.65, 3, Indiana, Smooth mover with quick-twitch movements could take off with NFL coaching and stabliity.
82, 7, Chukwuma Okorafor, OT, 6-6, 320, 5.31, 3, Western Michigan, Moved to U.S.
as teen. Excellent size, movement skills, but needs work on technique, physical attitude.
83, 10, Duke Dawson, CB, 5-10?, 197, 4.46, 3, Florida, Hybrid defender started three positions at UF and could do same in NFL: thick but smooth in reverse.
84, 8, Jamarco Jones, OT, 6-4, 299, 5.50, 3, Ohio State, Steadily improved despite lacking great athleticism or power.
Reliable - if unspectacular - potential starter.
85, 8, Duke Ejiofor, DE, 6-3?, 267, 4.84, 3, Wake Forest, Hurt too often to be considered in top 64 but productive - 17 sacks past two seasons - when healthy.
86, 9, Kemoko Turay, DE, 6-4?, 253, 4.65, 3, Rutgers, Great explosion off the snap, closing on running backs and quarterbacks with intent.
Shoulder issues.
87, 9, Malik Jefferson*, OLB, 6-2¼, 236, 4.52, 3, Texas, Dynamic athlete with high ceiling, low floor. Dangerous blitzer, but poor awareness and inconsisent tackler.
88, 11, DaeSean Hamilton, WR, 6-0?, 203, 4.47, 3, Penn State, PSU's all-time leader with 214 catches is crafty route-runner who moves chains and is great in locker room.
89, 6, Kyzir White, S, 6-1?, 218, 4.69, 3, West Virginia, Best near line of scrimmage with special teams value, but no clear NFL fit despite high-intensity style.
90, 1, Michael Dickson*, P, 6-3, 205, N/A, 3, Texas, School-record 226 punts and 45.3-yard avg.
Ray Guy winner has booming leg with directional accuracy.
91, 7, Marcus Allen, S, 6-2?, 215, 4.63, 3, Penn State, Versatile playmaker and team leader who delivered big hits but can be caught on his heels in coverage.
92, 10, Tyquan Lewis, DE, 6-3¼, 269, 4.71, 3, Ohio State, Better suited to beat guards with interior rush but could wind up on the edge with plus competitiveness.
93, 9, Geron Christian*, OT, 6-5?, 298, 5.33, 3, Louisville, Raw but possesses excellent tools to develop.
Great length and hoops background is evident in athletic feet.
94, 10, Deadrin Senat, DT, 6-0, 314, 5.16, 3, South Florida, Thick, squatty build to maintain leverage and anchor vs. double teams. Clogger doesn't threaten as rusher.
95, 11, RJ McIntosh*, DT, 6-4½, 286, N/A, 3, Miami, Great effort on, off field, but game needs polish.
Significant interior pass rush upside to develop.
96, 8, Royce Freeman, RB, 5-11½, 229, 4.54, 3-4, Oregon, Runs in third gear. Elite leg drive, power to rip through tackles and push the pile at the goal line.
97, 2, Josey Jewell, ILB, 6-1, 234, 4.82, 3-4, Iowa, Tackling machine (437 for career) isn't an elite athlete, but natural instincts, passion to contribute early.
98, 10, Jeff Holland*, OLB, 6-1?, 249, 4.79, 3-4, Auburn, Blossomed in lone year as starter with 10 sacks, 13 TFL.
Projects as 3-4 OLB, sub-package rusher early on.
99, 11, Isaac Yiadom, CB, 6-0?, 190, 4.52, 3-4, Boston College, Three-year starter at BC in NFL-type defensive schemes. Hustle and effort are certain, size/speed aren't.
100, 10, Orlando Brown*, OT, 6-7?, 345, 5.85, 3-4, Oklahoma, Son of late "Zeus" started 40 games at LT, but stock was hammered by historically poor Combine workout.
101, 3, Micah Kiser, ILB, 6-0?, 238, 4.66, 3-4, Virginia, Great instincts, eyes and discipline in run game.
Good blitzer and scheme-versatile. Liability in coverage.
102, 12, Antonio Callaway*, WR, 5-10?, 200, 4.41, 3-4, Florida, Electric on the field, major red flags off it. Major wild card declared early after being suspended all of '17.
103, 12, Kevin Toliver*, CB, 6-2, 192, 4.52, 3-4, LSU, Plays with leverage and has top size and length.
Could be a steal if he takes to NFL discipline, coaching.
104, 13, Tarvarus McFadden*, CB, 6-2¼, 204, 4.68, 3-4, Florida State, Slow for a corner (4.68), makes up for shortcomings with long arms; likely only fits zone scheme.
105, 7, Mike White, QB, 6-4?, 224, 5.09, 3-4, Western Kentucky, Has excellent size, arm, and willing to hang in pocket.
Highly inconsistent passer but natural skills to mold.
106, 8, Terrell Edmunds*, S, 6-0½, 217, 4.47, 4, Virginia Tech, Trustworthy and strong in run support, limited potential as a centerfielder in man defense.
107, 4, Mason Cole, C, 6-4?, 305, 5.23, 4, Michigan, Started program-record 51 games.
Lacks length or size for NFL OT, but has frame, agility to succeed inside.
108, 13, Michael Gallup, WR, 6-0¾, 205, 4.51, 4, Colorado State, Lines up all over formation with good - not great - size, athleticism. Potential No. 2 could contribute early.
109, 12, Trenton Thompson*, DT, 6-2?, 288, 5.06, 4, Georgia, Combines above-average tools with great motor.
Stays low, plays hard but production limited by injuries.
110, 9, Nyheim Hines*, RB, 5-8?, 198, 4.38, 4, NC State, Swiss Army role for Wolfpack; ideal third-down back entering league with potential to be much more.
111, 11, Josh Sweat*, DE, 6-4¾, 251, 4.53, 4, Florida State, History of knee injuries.
Fast, lean and explosive, changing direction on a dime and closing in a blink.
112, 14, Holton Hill*, CB, 6-1?, 196, 4.49, 4, Texas, Off-field matters spoiled UT tenure. Gifted, capable in man or zone if he silences grabby hands.
113, 14, J'Mon Moore, WR, 6-2?, 207, 4.60, 4, Missouri, Great size, length, fluidity with explosive playmaking skills, but very raw and feasted on limited route tree.
114, 10, Bo Scarbrough*, RB, 6-1?, 228, 4.52, 4, Alabama, Built like LB-S and runs like one, seeking contact.
High-cut runner, limited wiggle and durability.
115, 15, Rashaan Gaulden*, CB, 6-0¾, 197, 4.52, 4, Tennessee, Sprinter with first-class speed and abundant natural gifts can serve many purposes at next level.
116, 12, Andrew Brown, DE, 6-3?, 296, 5.03, 4, Virginia, Superior run stopper with limited rush repertoire and tenacity to play anywhere on the D-line.
117, 13, Folorunso Fatukasi, DT, 6-3¾, 318, 5.29, 4, UConn, "Foley" was disruptive despite limited stats.
Powerful and scheme-versatile with improved technique.
118, 8, Luke Falk, QB, 6-3?, 215, 4.85, 4, Washington State, Highly productive in Mike Leach offense. Accurate, but lacks arm strength and takes far too many hits.
119, 16, Nick Nelson*, CB, 5-10?, 200, 4.52, 4, Wisconsin, Suffered torn meniscus in workout with Lions.
Short yet confident, coordinated athlete with leadership.
120, 11, Darius Leonard, OLB, 6-2, 234, 4.70, 4, South Carolina State, Good hustle, range, and stood out in games against FBS teams. Needs strength, but not much room to add.
121, 11, John Kelly*, RB, 5-9?, 216, 4.65, 4, Tennessee, Shared team lead in catches in '17 with workhorse mentality.
Short with limited speed, agility.
122, 11, Will Richardson*, OT, 6-5?, 306, 5.26, 4, NC State, Charged with zero sacks in past 400 pass-blocking snaps. Guard-like frame difficult to move; off-field flags.
123, 12, Mark Walton*, RB, 5-9?, 202, 4.60, 4, Miami, Season-ending injury four games into 2017.
Shifty, sudden but too small to be bell-cow RB.
124, 17, J.C. Jackson*, CB, 5-9¾, 201, 4.46, 4, Maryland, On the red list for character; talented enough. Made most of second chance at Maryland past two seasons.
125, 15, Keke Coutee*, WR, 5-9¾, 181, 4.43, 4, Texas Tech, Dynamic in space with terrific speed, quickness.
Great slot potential and vertical upside with added strength.
126, 16, Tre'Quan Smith*, WR, 6-2, 210, 4.49, 4, UCF, Above-the-rim target regularly makes acrobatic grabs. Strong intangibles, but lack of elite speed may hinder.
127, 9, Armani Watts, S, 5-10½, 202, 4.65, 4, Texas A&M, Four-year starter with special teams traits but enough speed and agility to contribute in coverage.
128, 12, Shaquem Griffin, OLB, 6-0?, 227, 4.38, 4, UCF, Stole Combine with great workout minus amputated left hand.
Can fly; skills to contribute in defined role.
129, 13, Chad Thomas, DE, 6-5, 281, 4.92, 4, Miami, Mr. Olympia phsyique and 81 1/2-inch arms to be a mismatch-type, third rusher instantly.
130, 18, Davontae Harris, CB, 5-11, 205, 4.43, 4, Illinois State, Tops on team in tackles and passes defended.
More physical than nifty, but finds his way to ball.
131, 19, Tony Brown, CB, 5-11?, 199, 4.35, 4, Alabama, Nickel defender with elite speed to mix and match in secondary; didn't finish enough plays.
132, 6, Dalton Schultz, TE, 6-5?, 244, 4.74, 4, Stanford, Pro-style product viewed more as a No.
2 tight end, blocks angry and fits tradition of Stanford TE.
133, 6, Wyatt Teller, OG, 6-4½, 301, 5.24, 4-5, Virginia Tech, Broad frame and finishes blocks while rarely winding up on the ground, but 2017 play too inconsistent.
134, 13, Akrum Wadley, RB, 5-9?, 194, 4.54, 4-5, Iowa, Ran behind FB, also lined up in slot, returned kicks.
Not used and abused as one-year starter (536 carries).
135, 5, Scott Quessenberry, C, 6-4, 315, 5.09, 4-5, UCLA, Explodes off the snap with low center of gravity. Experience at all three interior positions increases value.
136, 14, Breeland Speaks*, DE, 6-2?, 283, 4.87, 4-5, Ole Miss, Very raw, Speaks shows enticing flashes in between long lapses.
Too talented to ignore but needs polish.
137, 13, Fred Warner, OLB, 6-3?, 236, 4.64, 4-5, BYU, Built like a big safety and showed off athleticism at Combine. Attacks run; needs strength, better technique.
138, 20, Parry Nickerson, CB, 5-10, 182, 4.34, 4-5, Tulane, Four-year starter's history of knee issues overshadows ball skills, but is he big enough to hold up?
139, 9, Kyle Lauletta, QB, 6-2?, 222, 4.81, 4-5, Richmond, Senior Bowl MVP lacks rocket arm, but gets ball out quick, makes smart decisions and exploits weaknesses.
140, 12, Desmond Harrison, OT, 6-6, 292, 4.90, 4-5, West Georgia, Value all about great physical tools.
Many travels included dismissal from Texas for drug-related incidents.
141, 7, Tony Adams, OG, 6-2, 315, 5.48, 4-5, NC State, Reliable, not elite, starter (school-record 47 at NC State) with hands and balance honed playing tennis.
142, 17, Allen Lazard, WR, 6-5, 225, 4.55, 4-5, Iowa State, Wields big frame effectively to box out defenders.
Doesn't scare DBs with speed, too often playing like a TE.
143, 10, Godwin Igwebuike, S, 5-11?, 213, 4.44, 5, Northwestern, Looks the part, limitations in speed and pure athleticism push him down draft boards.
144, 7, Durham Smythe, TE, 6-5?, 253, 4.81, 5, Notre Dame, Huge target with massive mitts and focused catch process.
Below-average speed, athleticism.
145, 13, Alex Cappa, OT, 6-5¾, 305, 5.39, 5, Humboldt State, Dominated lower level with technique and physicality and plays with mean streak. Disappointing Combine.
146, 14, Hercules Mata'afa*, DT, 6-2¼, 254, 4.76, 5, Washington State, Explodes out of stance and lives in the backfield with high motor.
Too small to survive inside vs. run.
147, 15, Kylie Fitts, DE, 6-3¾, 263, 4.69, 5, Utah, Freakish workout at NFL Combine might get him over-drafted but too many injuries to overlook.
148, 18, Cedrick Wilson, WR, 6-2, 188, 4.55, 5, Boise State, Productive WR on slants, crossers and vertical routes who needs increased strength to break more tackles.
149, 11, Quin Blanding, S, 6-2, 207, 4.63, 5, Virginia, Holds ACC tackles record (495) for DB.
No special qualities jump off film, which screams special teamer.
150, 14, Kalen Ballage, RB, 6-1½, 228, 4.46, 5, Arizona State, Strong, sturdy, balanced. Runs through contact and offers upside in return game but fumbles are issue.
151, 2, JK Scott, P, 6-5¼, 207, 4.83, 5, Alabama, 2x Ray Guy finalist allowed only four returns in '17.
Powerful leg with hang time; can handle kickoff duties.
152, 12, Jordan Whitehead*, S, 5-10?, 198, 4.60, 5, Pittsburgh, Used to counter mismatches at Pitt. Encountered off-field issues. Unique, swift athlete.
153, 19, Simmie Cobbs*, WR, 6-3?, 220, 4.64, 5, Indiana, Plays to timed speed, but shows extra gear vertically and bull for CBs to deal with height, width, length.
154, 20, Deontay Burnett*, WR, 5-11?, 186, 4.53, 5, USC, Sam Darnold's fave target led Pac-12 with 86 catches in '17.
Limited to slot and small hands a concern.
155, 21, Marcell Ateman, WR, 6-4½, 216, 4.62, 5, Oklahoma State, Size, ball skills to intrigue teams. Needs to develop route-running, but could be red-zone threat early on.
156, 16, Dorance Armstrong Jr.*, DE, 6-3?, 257, 4.87, 5, Kansas, A fit for wide-9 rush technique or candidate for OLB conversion as a rush specialist.
157, 14, Joe Noteboom, OT, 6-5, 309, 4.96, 5, TCU, Good size, length and quickness to handle speed rushes.
Also highly inconsistent with sloppy technique.
158, 4, Genard Avery, ILB, 6-0, 248, 4.59, 5, Memphis, HS powerlifter opened eyes with combine testing. Not fluid, but plays physically inside, outside or on edge.
159, 15, Brandon Parker, OT, 6-7?, 305, 5.40, 5, North Carolina A&T, Started all 48 career games at LT, allowing no sacks.
NFL tools to develop with additional strength.
160, 22, Jordan Lasley*, WR, 6-1, 203, 4.50, 5, UCLA, Explosive athlete who is faster on film than at Combine. Several issues off-field and too many drops on it.
161, 1, Jaylen Samuels, FB, 5-11½, 225, 4.54, 5, NC State, True 'tweener with TE and RB skills might ultimately be best in West Coast offense at fullback.
162, 8, Chris Herndon, TE, 6-3¾, 253, 4.78, 5, Miami, Thick and athletic with directional mobility to become a top route runner and receiving tight end.
163, 9, Troy Fumagalli, TE, 6-4¾, 247, 4.88, 5, Wisconsin, Excellent natural hands.
Still works like a walk-on. No evidence he can become a playmaker.
164, 8, Sean Welsh, OG, 6-3, 300, 5.33, 5, Iowa, RG-RT skill set and background in a program known for churning out NFL OL, but limited athletically.
165, 10, Tyler Conklin, TE, 6-3, 254, 4.80, 5, Central Michigan, Smooth stride and sweet hops but slightly shorter than NFL prototype and untested vs.
top competition.
166, 16, Timon Parris, OT, 6-6, 320, N/A, 5, Stony Brook, Raw and powerful, seeking to become 1st Stony Brook OL drafted. Recovering from broken leg (October).
167, 21, Taron Johnson, CB, 5-11?, 192, 4.50, 5, Weber State, On the small side - issue vs.
run - with a maxed-out frame and untested against elite wide receivers.
168, 5, Tegray Scales, ILB, 6-0?, 230, 4.77, 5, Indiana, Sniffs out plays quickly and plays faster than timed speed. Below average size; struggles taking on blocks.
169, 15, Kendrick Norton*, DT, 6-2, 312, 5.25, 5, Miami, Ken Jr.'s son sports ideal size, length, motor to clog run lanes.
OK athlete is likely two-down run stuffer.
170, 22, Quenton Meeks*, CB, 6-1, 209, 4.55, 5-6, Stanford, Lacks pure speed and suddenness to be a starter. Enough attitude and size to make the roster.
171, 16, Justin Jones, DT, 6-2½, 309, 5.09, 5-6, NC State, Strong for his size, playing low and delivering power.
Improved stock with strong week at Senior Bowl.
172, 23, Auden Tate*, WR, 6-4?, 228, 4.68, 5-6, Florida State, Size is biggest asset, especially in traffic - which is usually heavy due to lack of elite speed and athleticism.
173, 13, Dane Cruikshank, S, 6-1, 209, 4.41, 5-6, Arizona, Great burst and speed with clear football instincts and played his best in primetime moments.
174, 14, DeShon Elliott*, S, 6-0?, 210, 4.58, 5-6, Texas, Single-speed safety with no extra gear to chase long, can cover deficiencies with heady play.
175, 17, Marquis Haynes, DE, 6-2?, 235, 4.67, 5-6, Ole Miss, Posted 32.0 career sacks but offers little beyond burst due to size, reach and leverage shortcomings.
176, 17, Toby Weathersby*, OT, 6-4?, 317, 5.34, 5-6, LSU, Started solely on right side.
Struggles with speed, maintaining blocks. Could have used another year at LSU.
177, 23, Darius Phillips, CB, 5-9?, 193, 4.54, 5-6, Western Michigan, Undersized extra corner in the NFL will need to scrap to win has the gifts and guts to get it done.
178, 14, Leon Jacobs, OLB, 6-1?, 246, 4.48, 5-6, Wisconsin, Raw athlete with relentless motor lacks technical pass rush skills.
'Tweener could prove diamond in rough.
179, 11, Will Dissly, TE, 6-4, 267, 4.87, 5-6, Washington, Converted defensive end still learning to block and run refined routes; size warrants a shot.
180, 1, Daniel Carlson, K, 6-5, 213, N/A, 6, Auburn, 3x Lou Groza finalist has soccer background and booming leg.
Tested in big games but not much weather.
181, 2, Dimitri Flowers, FB, 6-1?, 248, 4.83, 6, Oklahoma, Son of 2000 first-rounder Erik Flowers. Physical and savvy blocker can do some damage as receiver.
182, 24, D.J. Reed*, CB, 6-0, 188, 4.51, 6, Kansas State, Not big but tough and determined.
Ace return man had KO and punt returns for TDs at Kansas State.
183, 18, Kentavius Street, DE, 6-2¼, 280, 4.87, 6, NC State, Strong-side end with the size and power to develop into a rotational end or low-upside starter.
184, 19, Ade Aruna, DE, 6-4?, 262, 4.61, 6, Tulane, Toolsy prospect with great lower-half explosion, first step, long speed.
Raw, needs NFL redshirt.
185, 15, Siran Neal, S, 6-0, 206, 4.56, 6, Jacksonville State, NFL body type, low-level college resume. Advanced football mind with versatile traits, experience.
186, 9, Skyler Phillips, OG, 6-2½, 314, 5.09, 6, Idaho State, Requisite strength and stone hands to play inside but stiff on the hoof and ineffective blocking LBs.
187, 6, Jack Cichy, ILB, 6-2?, 238, 4.55, 6, Wisconsin, Former walk-on always in right place at right time.
Long injury history (pec, ACL); hasn't played since '16.
188, 15, Mike McCray, OLB, 6-1?, 243, 4.76, 6, Michigan, Animal vs. run with size, length, physicality to fend off blocks. Average speed; may fare best inside in 3-4.
189, 18, Matt Pryor, OT, 6-7, 358, N/A, 6, TCU, Surprisingly nimble for gigantic frame with long arms (36") and big hands (11").
Too many negative plays.
190, 24, Korey Robertson*, WR, 6-1, 212, 4.56, 6, Southern Miss, "D-Block" has so-so straight-line speed, but is quick in and out of breaks and slippery after the catch.
191, 16, Trayvon Henderson, S, 6-0?, 204, 4.59, 6, Hawai'i, See-ball, get-ball mentality to climb NFL depth chart, unafraid of special teams path.
192, 16, Josh Adams*, RB, 6-1?, 213, 4.52, 6, Notre Dame, Runs to and through contact.
Limited in open space and upright running style equates to NFL punishment.
193, 20, John Franklin-Myers, DE, 6-4, 283, 4.75, 6, Stephen F. Austin, NFL size but is more potential than polish with scouts sweating his limited production at SFA.
194, 25, Michael Joseph, CB, 6-0?, 187, 4.53, 6, Dubuque, DIII POY.
Self-made prospect and gifted ballhawk with playmaking tendencies, average speed.
195, 3, Nick Bawden, FB, 6-2, 245, N/A, 6, San Diego State, Surprising attack mentality for converted QB, transformed physically and emotionally to fit position.
196, 12, Jordan Akins, TE, 6-3, 249, 4.93, 6, UCF, Former Texas Rangers MLB farmhand has the long arms and coordination to develop as backup TE.
197, 17, Poona Ford, DT, 5-11?, 306, 5.09, 6, Texas, Undersized and lacks dominant trait, but utilizes natural leverage, strong hands to flash rush potential.
198, 19, Cole Madison, OT, 6-5, 313, 5.33, 6, Washington State, Former WR is quick with his hands and feet.
Not a mauler with great raw strength and may move inside.
199, 7, Azeem Victor, ILB, 6-2?, 240, 4.72, 6, Washington, Piqued as Soph. with instincts, physical presence v. run. Slowed with added weight; suspended twice in '17.
200, 25, Daurice Fountain, WR, 6-1?, 209, 4.54, 6, Northern Iowa, Shrine Game MVP was Combine snub but freakish athleticism stood out at pro day.
Very raw, needs time.
201, 17, Darrel Williams, RB, 6-0, 225, 4.68, 6, LSU, Reliable receiver who runs with vision and brings big-play flair due to first step, make-you-miss moves.
202, 17, Tre Flowers, S, 6-3¾, 202, 4.45, 6, Oklahoma State, Four-year starter for Cowboys, average athletic ability brings too many limitations at next level.
203, 16, Oren Burks, OLB, 6-3?, 233, 4.59, 6, Vanderbilt, Speed and experience at safety show in coverage, but inconsistent vs.
run and needs time to develop.
204, 6, Will Clapp*, C, 6-4½, 314, 5.39, 6, LSU, Three-year starter in SEC versatile along the interior, but an average athlete who must increase strength.
205, 26, Chris Campbell, CB, 6-0¾, 195, 4.55, 6, Penn State, Physical and knows how to win and use his body to prevent receivers from getting deep.
206, 20, Jamil Demby, OT, 6-4?, 335, 5.58, 6, Maine, Big, muscular, powerful 2x team captain. Below average athleticism exposed vs.
run could lead to OG move.
207, 17, Dorian O'Daniel, OLB, 6-0?, 223, 4.61, 6, Clemson, Body of a big safety, reyling on speed, quickness. Lacks play strength, but could be special teams demon.
208, 18, Bilal Nichols, DT, 6-4, 306, 4.96, 6, Delaware, Good size with room to add mass, and adds versatility down the line to compensate for raw technique.
209, 10, Kurt Benkert, QB, 6-2?, 218, 4.95, 6, Virginia, Tools and playmaking ability warrant a look, but highly erratic pocket movement and how he scans field.
210, 27, Grant Haley, CB, 5-9, 190, 4.44, 6, Penn State, Undersized with short arms, he's springy in short areas and excels as a slot option and returner.
211, 26, Trey Quinn*, WR, 5-11?, 203, 4.55, 6, SMU, Former track star also threw no-no at '08 Little League WS.
Modest pre-draft workouts; slot prospect.
212, 27, Dylan Cantrell, WR, 6-2?, 226, 4.59, 6, Texas Tech, One-trick pony who needs to make circus catches due to lack of speed. Outstanding body control.
213, 28, Darren Carrington, WR, 6-2¼, 199, 4.78, 6, Utah, Very good downfield target finished at Utah after boot from Oregon following laundry list of off-field issues.
214, 13, Ryan Izzo*, TE, 6-4?, 256, 4.94, 6-7, Florida State, Left school one year early.
Offers only modest speed and blocking potential. Developmental prospect.
215, 18, Chase Edmonds, RB, 5-9?, 205, 4.55, 6-7, Fordham, Compact runner with yo-yo movement to elude tackles; top three-cone, short shuttle for RBs at Combine.
216, 10, Colby Gossett, OG, 6-4?, 315, 5.20, 6-7, Appalachian State, Started at RG and RT but limited agility and stone legs render him an NFL backup or swing reserve.
217, 29, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, WR, 6-4, 206, 4.37, 6-7, South Florida, Track speed shows on film, getting on top of DBs in a flash.
Plays smaller than size and very much a project.
218, 18, Troy Apke, S, 6-1¼, 200, 4.34, 6-7, Penn State, Underdog with great workout numbers and good - not special - on-field results at college level.
219, 19, Roc Thomas, RB, 5-10, 198, 4.56, 6-7, Jacksonville State, Spin doctor with impeccable body control ranked No.
2 as HS RB recruit behind Leonard Fournette.
220, 2, Eddy Pineiro*, K, 6-0, 185, N/A, 6-7, Florida, Left Gators early as program's most accurate kicker, including better than than 90% from 40-plus.
221, 11, Taylor Hearn*, OG, 6-4, 330, 5.45, 6-7, Clemson, Short arms limit effectivenss vs.
NFL speed and length; top grades for toughness, competitiveness.
222, 20, Justin Jackson, RB, 6-0, 193, 4.50, 6-7, Northwestern, Too small to be fulltime RB but had 122 career catches, beckoning third-down or slot role in NFL.
223, 21, Marcell Frazier, DE, 6-4, 261, 4.66, 6-7, Missouri, Football junkie and high-effort end who does just enough to keep on the final 53 as a rookie.
224, 28, Brandon Facyson, CB, 6-1½, 203, 4.53, 7, Virginia Tech, Advanced football instincts but mostly average testing, appears to have a special teams ceiling.
225, 21, Phillip Lindsay, RB, 5-7, 184, 4.41, 7, Colorado, Slashing runner with no-quit mantra and track background set school record (5926) for total yards.
226, 14, David Wells, TE, 6-6, 256, 4.75, 7, San Diego State, Mostly a blocker, Wells can catch what hits his hands but will be used as a third offensive tackle in NFL.
227, 29, Levi Wallace, CB, 6-0¼, 179, 4.63, 7, Alabama, Smooth, fluid mover with wide receiver traits will need to bulk up to contend with pumped-up pros.
228, 8, Nick DeLuca, ILB, 6-2?, 251, 4.85, 7, North Dakota State, Classic Mike 'backer who diagnoses plays before they develop.
Old-school thumper needs right scheme.
229, 18, Keishawn Bierria, OLB, 6-0?, 230, 4.79, 7, Washington, Terrific leader who brings intense physical edge, but exposed vs. better athletes, especially in coverage.
230, 19, Davin Bellamy, OLB, 6-3¾, 255, N/A, 7, Georgia, Athleticism to win early and threaten QB.
Lanky build lacks strength and gets bullied vs. run.
231, 30, Javon Wims, WR, 6-2?, 215, 4.53, 7, Georgia, Well-traveled athlete emerged as UGA's leading receiver in '17. Excellent size for 50-50s; needs route work.
232, 20, Skai Moore, OLB, 6-2¼, 226, 4.73, 7, South Carolina, Uber-productive, leading team in tackles 4x.
Great instincts, but lacks size and is liability in coverage.
233, 22, Trevon Young, DE, 6-3?, 258, 4.78, 7, Louisville, Two hip surgeries since Dec. 2015; looked like a first-round talent previous. Has 3-4 OLB skill set.
234, 30, Avonte Maddox, CB, 5-9?, 184, 4.39, 7, Pittsburgh, Wins every footrace and was team captain; some team will jump on his playmaking ability.
235, 23, Olasunkanmi Adeniyi*, DE, 6-1?, 248, 4.81, 7, Toledo, Pass-rush specialist who could convert to OLB in 3-4 defense.
Only 20 and plays with non-stop motor.
236, 19, P.J. Hall, DT, 6-0, 308, 4.83, 7, Sam Houston State, Combine snub grabbed attention with impressive pro day. FCS dominator could prove late-round steal.
237, 31, D'Montre Wade, CB, 5-11?, 206, 5.20, 7, Murray State, Upside limited by heavy legs, but safety and return role could beckon based on excellent ball skills.
238, 9, Shaun Dion Hamilton, ILB, 5-11¾, 228, 4.76, 7, Alabama, Nick Saban lauds football smarts.
Quick and makes plays behind the line, but significant injury red flags.
239, 21, Peter Kalambayi, OLB, 6-3, 252, 4.57, 7, Stanford, Better athlete than player stood out at Combine. With improved technique, could develop into starter.
240, 31, Jaleel Scott, WR, 6-4¾, 218, 4.56, 7, New Mexico State, Great size, athleticism, and hoops background shows on contested balls.
Untapped potential, but very raw.
241, 11, Chase Litton*, QB, 6-5, 232, 4.94, 7, Marshall, Tall, with quick release and competitive nature. Lacks mobility and great accuracy, but tools to develop.
242, 19, Damon Webb, S, 5-10¾, 209, 4.62, 7, Ohio State, Rangy and aggressive, was coach in the huddle for Bucks and was trained at cornerback.
243, 32, Jordan Thomas, CB, 6-0?, 187, 4.64, 7, Oklahoma, Fits evolving NFL prototype with plus ball skills if pro coaches can sell him on self-confidence.
244, 20, John Atkins, DT, 6-2?, 321, 5.38, 7, Georgia, Classic two-gapper won't stuff the stat sheet or scare many QBs, but could thrive as rotational space-eater.
245, 7, Brian Allen, C, 6-1, 300, 5.34, 7, Michigan State, Undersized and doesn't check many boxes for physical traits.
Scrappy blocker who struggles against size.
246, 20, Natrell Jamerson, S, 5-10?, 201, 4.40, 7, Wisconsin, WR-turned-CB-turned-S could wear many hats to keep his NFL locker. Not ready for fulltime role.
247, 21, Brett Toth, OT, 6-6, 305, 5.09, 7, Army, Movement skills of a TE with athleticism in pass pro.
May not play until 2020 due to duty commitment.
248, 22, Kamryn Pettway*, RB, 6-0, 235, 4.74, 7, Auburn, Strong north-south runner who could be used as an NFL fourth-quarter "closer" due to physical style.
249, 32, Braxton Berrios, WR, 5-8?, 184, 4.52, 7, Miami, Valedictorian of UM biz school has bright future off field.
Steroetipical slot WR on it and very small target.
250, 33, Greg Stroman, CB, 5-11, 182, 4.48, 7, Virginia Tech, Good athlete avoids collisions and wants to be a cover-only perimeter cornerback.
251, 10, Kenny Young, ILB, 6-1, 236, 4.60, 7, UCLA, Experience across the 2nd level.
All-out player - almost to a fault - with 3-down skills if he can get stronger.
252, 15, Adam Breneman, TE, 6-4, 241, 4.81, 7, UMass, 149 career receptions but history of knee injuries already prompted one retirement (2016, Penn State).
253, 3, Johnny Townsend, P, 6-1, 209, N/A, 7-FA, Florida, Strong leg and posted 46.2-yard career average.
Tends to out-kick coverage, leading to return yards.
254, 21, Tracy Walker, S, 6-0?, 206, 4.50, 7-FA, Louisiana, Has the wingspan of a small plane and basketball body type and enough range to have a chance.
255, 12, Brendan Mahon, OG, 6-4½, 312, 5.11, 7-FA, Penn State, Experience everywhere up front and on special teams enough to get him shot at final roster.
256, 16, Jordan Thomas, TE, 6-5½, 265, 4.74, 7-FA, Mississippi State, JUCO product was essentially a massive wide receiver at Miss.
State. Long arms, big hands, no separation.
257, 24, Joe Ostman, DE, 6-2, 248, 4.81, 7-FA, Central Michigan, Full effort Tasmanian devil-type pass rusher with 46.5 career tackles for loss, https://pinfaves.com/peter-jackson-weight-loss/ 28.0 sacks at CMU.
258, 23, Zachary Crabtree, OT, 6-6¼, 313, N/A, 7-FA, Oklahoma State, RT prospect with size, length combo to hold up vs.
run. Heavy feet limit effectiveness blocking on move.
259, 33, Quadree Henderson*, WR, 5-8, 190, 4.50, 7-FA, Pittsburgh, Undersized playmaker an explosive return threat and potential slot/gadget option for creative coordinator.
260, 22, Tray Matthews, S, 6-0?, 209, 4.57, 7-FA, Auburn, Two-way college safety best when seeking contact and could wind up a special teams lifer.
261, 12, Nic Shimonek, QB, 6-3, 220, 4.88, 7-FA, Texas Tech, Good size, accuracy as potential developmental arm.
Late-game struggles and tends to stare targets down.
262, 13, Cody O'Connell, OG, 6-8½, 363, 5.64, 7-FA, Washington State, Seasoned pass protector at left guard, ideal position in NFL is right tackle because of height, knee bend.
263, 14, KC McDermott, OG, 6-6, 300, 5.09, 7-FA, Miami, Plus effort but limited agility and quickness force McDermott to take the long road to NFL career.
264, 23, Ito Smith, RB, 5-9, 201, 4.48, 7-FA, Southern Miss, Averaged 5.5 yards per carry (820 attempts) thanks to sudden burst, all-direction agility.
265, 1, Tanner Carew, LS, 6-1, 243, 5.00, 7-FA, Oregon, Seeking to become only 4th LS drafted since '10.
Highly trained at position and snaps cleanly with velocity.
266, 8, Coleman Shelton, C, 6-3, 292, 5.24, 7-FA, Washington, Lacks great play strength and anchor, but technique and experience across line could earn him reserve role.
267, 15, Jaryd Jones-Smith, OG, 6-6½, 317, 5.22, 7-FA, Pittsburgh, Poor functional strength but looked natural as a pass protector at right tackle; worth a look.
268, 34, Danny Johnson, CB, 5-9¼, 181, 4.44, 7-FA, Southern, Special punt return option and extra cornerback with NFL-caliber speed unlikely to contribute on D.
269, 23, Nick Gates*, OT, 6-5?, 295, 5.46, 7-FA, Nebraska, Three-year starter at OT mirrors well, but his lack of length is a concern even with potential move to OG.
270, 34, Richie James*, WR, 5-10, 183, 4.48, 7-FA, Middle Tennessee, Former HS QB limited to slot due to lack of size.
Shifty with separation quickness and dangerous with ball.
271, 21, James Looney, DT, 6-3, 287, 4.89, 7-FA, California, Began at Wake Forest, moved to Cal in '14. Lacks mass; may provide versatility as end/inside sub.
272, 24, Jordan Wilkins, RB, 6-1, 217, 4.70, 7-FA, Mississippi, Served academic suspension in 2016, lead team in rushing in '17.
Powerful legs, finishes runs.
273, 22, Garret Dooley, OLB, 6-2?, 248, 4.80, 7-FA, Wisconsin, Good play strength and strong hand usage, but limited athlete may struggle to make impact in NFL.
274, 4, Joseph Davidson, P, 6-7, 232, N/A, 7-FA, Bowling Green, Tall left-footer averaged more than 44 yards per attempt three seasons.
Needs to work on hang time.
275, 35, Deatrick Nichols, CB, 5-10, 185, 4.45, 7-FA, South Florida, Short on height and arm length to contend with NFL receivers, best inside with help over the top.
276, 36, Kameron Kelly, CB, 6-1?, 204, 4.66, 7-FA, San Diego State, Not fast enough to play corner every down, his feet give him a chance as a utility defender.
277, 35, Jester Weah, WR, 6-2, 210, 4.43, 7-FA, Pittsburgh, Big WR ran well at Combine, but foot speed remains big question mark.
Uses body well to catch in crowds.
278, 24, Dejon Allen, OT, 6-2, 285, N/A, FA, Hawai'i, Undersized but athletic, his NFL paycheck may come at OG due to lack of length. Versatility a big bonus.
279, 13, Riley Ferguson, QB, 6-2¾, 212, 4.98, FA, Memphis, Former UT starter landed at Memphis after CC stint.
Scans field well and is accuracte. OK arm, slight build.
280, 37, Andre Chachere, CB, 6-0, 197, 4.49, FA, San Jose State, Needs a zone scheme and coach to light the fire to become a viable regular at cornerback.
281, 38, Rashard Fant, CB, 5-9½, 179, 4.45, FA, Indiana, Swift and speedy with 36 starts in Big Ten, scouts worry he'll be in on plays but not finish them.
282, 11, Christian Sam*, ILB, 6-1, 244, 4.75, FA, Arizona State, Well-built and suited for inside work, able to take on ballcarriers solo.
3-down 'backer if passion is there.
283, 23, Dominick Sanders, S, 5-11¼, 193, 4.56, FA, Georgia, Undeniable ball skills as safety and return man with 53 starts; some view him as CB option.
284, 25, Justin Lawler, DE, 6-3?, 265, 5.06, FA, SMU, Undeveloped rush repertoire despite results (15.5 TFLs in 2017) but has NFL body type.
285, 3, Michael Badgley, K, 5-10, 183, 4.94, FA, Miami, Good all-around athlete was 4-year kicker.
Will push for someone's job if he can improve deep accuracy.
286, 22, Kahlil McKenzie*, DT, 6-2¾, 314, 5.15, FA, Tennessee, Son of Raiders GM Reggie; Good frame, upper-body strength, but project who doesn't play up to size.
287, 24, Cole Reyes, S, 6-1?, 213, 4.58, FA, North Dakota, Limited speed and range and unproven against elite-level athletes.
Developmental option.
288, 36, Byron Pringle*, WR, 6-1, 205, 4.46, FA, Kansas State, Already 24, chose to leave early for pros. Averaged 24.1 YPC in 2017, but can he beat NFL press coverage?
289, 25, Joshua Kalu, S, 6-0, 203, 4.58, FA, Nebraska, Capable of lining up at safety, cornerback and nickel with good instincts and study habits to stick.
290, 12, Joel Iyiegbuniwe*, ILB, 6-1, 229, 4.60, FA, Western Kentucky, Made NFL jump after 1st-team all-conference season. Good athlete in coverage but gets stuck on blocks.
291, 37, Jake Wieneke, WR, 6-4, 221, 4.67, FA, South Dakota State, Lack of speed is main detriment for big, long WR.
Quality route-runner who could be dangerous in red zone.
292, 23, Ja'Von Rolland-Jones, OLB, 6-2, 215, 4.88, FA, North Dakota, FBS' all-time sack leader (42) brings hustle, but low level of competition flags enhanced by poor workouts.
293, 23, Lowell Lotulelei, DT, 6-1?, 315, N/A, FA, Utah, Former frosh All-American fell off table in '17.
Questions about desire, work ethic may leave him undrafted.
294, 16, Sam Jones*, OG, 6-4?, 290, 5.30, FA, Arizona State, Left school early after coach was fired and has enough athletic upside to warrant late-round flier.
295, 17, K.J. Malone, OG, 6-4, 303, 5.34, FA, LSU, Son of NBA HOF'er Karl Malone has the frame, feet to stay outside but requires significant polish.
296, 24, Jamiyus Pittman, DT, 6-1, 284, N/A, FA, Central Florida, Played outside for Scott Frost; short, stout prospect projects best inside.
More effort than upside talent.
297, 13, Chris Worley, ILB, 6-1?, 238, 4.86, FA, Ohio State, Timed speed matches the film and plays stiff. Does bring strong intangibles and strikes ballcarriers hard.
298, 26, Sean Chandler, S, 5-10½, 205, 4.61, FA, Temple, Tweener who could find a path forward due to versatile experience at CB and S, special teams ability.
299, 14, Logan Woodside, QB, 6-1, 201, 4.79, FA, Toledo, Lack of size will take him off many draft boards.
Needs right offense to maximize football IQ, accuracy.
300, 14, Jason Cabinda, ILB, 6-1, 239, N/A, FA, Penn State, Willing chaser and tackler was 3-year starter, but limited athleticism will leave him fighting for roster spot.
--Field Level Media
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