Points: Round 1 • Round 2 • Round 3 • Round 4 • Round 5 • Round 6 • Round 7

33. Buccaneers: Logan Hall, DL, Houston

Grade A- Tampa Bay is older in front of its defensive line, this covers a significant need with a truly flexible, uniquely shaped walkway. Hall can win with pass-rush moves and / or power in many points ahead.

34. Packers: Christian Watson, WR, North Dakota St.

Grade: C + The draft process followed. Tall, fast, bent. Raw routes, not a major YAC threat. He should be used properly outside the gate to highlight his talents. Awesome speed and explosiveness. Very useful in the jet sweeping / end-around game. Big upside down. Expensive trade but finally a receiver for Green Bay.

35. Titans: Roger McReary, CB, Auburn

Grade A. First round talent that lasted only until Round 2 due to short arms. Three years of SEC star film. Explosion, sudden ability to change direction. The recovery speed is there. Strong on the line. Cursed good football player. Fits the Tennessee Coverage Program.

36. Jets: Breece Hall, RB, Iowa St.

Degree: B Minimal movement to get a full, triple back. Hall does not play in his training, but controls all the boxes of a runner with subtle nuances. Awesome ball skills / shooting ability as well. Maybe an early tick for an RB? Hall and Michael Carter are now a fun, complementary duo.

37. Texans: Jalen Pitre, S, Baylor

Grade A. It was given to him freely in college and he was a supreme playmaker. Incredibly sudden. Great blitz. A tick in the smaller size. More CB slot than pure security. Not incredibly fast. If he is given the power as a freelancer, he can become a star.

38. Falcons: Arnold Ebiketie, EDGE, Penn State

Grade A. First cycle film and features. The only reason it was available is because it is not huge. Plans of burst, bend, passage, conversion of speed into force. Super consistent. The Falcons need desperate stars in their front seven in defense beyond Grady Jarrett. The exchange is not very expensive.

39. Bears: Kyler Gordon, CB, Washington

Grade: B + She feels right about him. Bedi, unique athlete with explosive flashes. No crazy speed or ball skills. Awesome, tough defender. Chicago just needs to add talent to its entire roster. They take it in a premium position with Gordon.

40. Seahawks: Boye Mafe, EDGE, Minnesota

Grade A- Older perspective but ascending hurried. I’m getting better every season in Minnesota. Super explosive. Quality hand work. The Bend is also there. It also covers an important need. Seattle needed to get more juice abroad.

41. Seahawks: Kenneth Walker III, RB, Michigan St.

Grade: C + Full RB. Ability to miss. Thick lower half that gives way to amazing contact balance. He does not play until he is 40. It is not an HR hitter. Was this a great need? However, Seattle likes to run the ball. No QB?

42. Vikings: Andrew Booth, CB, Clemson

Grade A- First-round caliber talent who fell due to injury during the pre-draft process. Lightning legs, non-articulated hips. Flashes of surreal skills with a ball. Tackling is a hit or a loss. Human / belt flexibility. He could flourish in the star he learns from Patrick Peterson for a season.

43. Giants: Wan’Dale Robinson, WR, Kentucky

Grade: B- Moved down, chose an extremely slippery, specialist in changing direction in the WR. Small at high speed. Small catch radius and not contact balance monster. He will jog the defenders to the next level. It’s not as great on the YAC as the size would indicate. Fun choice for Giants. But a touch early.

44. Texans: John Metchie III, WR, Alabama

Grade: C- Vertical specialist. He ran a variety of intricate routes in Alabama. He watches it on his shoulder amazingly. Not too fast deep. Minimal YAC. Smaller frame. The transaction for a specialist is a bit strange.

45. Ravens: David Ojabo, EDGE, Michigan

Grade: B + Incredibly high upside down due to the explosion / bending and the movement of the flashing pass-rush. He suffered Achilles in his professional, so the rookie season is doubtful. Such a shrewd choice of the Ravens. With more power — needed – Ojabo can be an eternal Pro Bowl rusher.

46. ​​Lions: Josh Paschal, EDGE, Kentucky

Degree: B Fire hair, with low center of gravity power. Manual work is decent. On the ground a little more than you would like. Logical turn but not specialty. Three down rusher, facing a need in Detroit. Even double in position.

47. Administrators: Phidarian Mathis, DT, Alabama

Degree: B More players in the Crimson Tide trenches for Washington. Mathis is a complete DT. Burglary, ability of two gaps, ability to rush on the field. Hand work. All he hides is that he is a bigger candidate. It will reset the OL and push the pocket. But weren’t there bigger needs?

48. Bears: Jaquan Brisker, S, Penn St.

Grade A- A long, explosive, tough security that sparkled in cover in the role of a robber. It is not a lockdown-the-slot type. Smart player without nonsense. Sample size and speed. More side aid in Chicago.

49. Saints: Alontae Taylor, CB, Tennessee

Grade: C + Biggest candidate who is an explosive engine on the field. Best in the belt when he can watch the QB and jump. It will offer terrifying successes. High speed. The ability to change direction is average for the position, which limits coverage from person to person upside down. Long hands. The lost tackles come out in the movie.

50. Patriots: Tyquan Thornton, WR, Baylor

Grade A- Main sleep in WR. Not just 4.28 fast. Performs clear, well-sold routes. Very natural hand grip. He grabs the ball from his frame effortlessly. This is exactly what the Patriots needed aggressively. Thorny though. It is not expensive to go up.

51. Eagles: Cam Jurgens, C, Nebraska

Grade A- Huge choice, even if it will be Jason Kelce’s backup in 2022. Jurgens is an explosive, well-balanced dude internally. Controls the length frame. With more power, he could be an All-Pro guy in Philadelphia.

52. Steelers: George Pickens, WR, Georgia

Grade A. There is the Pittsburgh Round 2 WR. Pickens has first-rate talent and first-cycle film. Tall, long, sudden, huge catch radius. Bad behavior on the field. The torn ACL and maybe some maturity problems knocked him off the board. Real WR1 features.

53. Colts: Alec Pierce, WR, Cincinnati

Grade: C + Colts original selection. They like the size / sport samples and Pierce shook his workout. Big, tall, explosive. The routes are a bit rounded. The change of direction is a bit harsh. He plays decently in a big downfield. Minimum YAC capabilities.

54. Leaders: Skyy Moore, WR, Western Michigan

Grade: A + Absolute nail. He does everything well. The only downside is that it is a touch below 5-10. Destroys press coverage. Lightning routes. It bounces off the tackers after being caught. Huge catch radius. He will become an instant star with Patrick Machomes.

55. Cardinals: Trey McBride, TE, Colorado State

Grade: B + It was the focus of his college offense. A very refined, polished player who will split from below and in the middle. He does everything well. It is not a real asset but only an average as a blocker. More weapons for Kyler = good thing.

56. Cowboys: Sam Williams, EDGE, Mississippi

Grade A- The heaviest hands in the draft at EDGE. Serious bull rush too. You need to use your hands a little more often. Dense. Burst is good, but it does not play at the speed it showed in the combination. Some off-field worries. Meets a need.

57. Buccaneers: Luke Goedeke, OG, Central Michigan

Grade: C + Small area speed is shown in the movie. The same with his hand. Very often he lets the hurried ones into his frame and occasionally stops moving his legs in the pass pro. Smart decision to keep OL stocked. It needs to get stronger. Many bad wins in the cinema.

58. Falcons: Troy Andersen, LB, Montana State

Degree: B Exciting perspective. Former QB. Go to LB and be extremely productive at FCS level. Big and very athletic. He flies in football. Large tackle radius. It will take some time for him to acclimatize as a cover player. Great need covered though.

59. Vikings: Ed Ingram, G, LSU

Grade: C- Puree type inside. Moments of punitive power. The balance is not good. The ability to recover is significantly lacking. Like the work of his hand. A zone exclusion plan does not exactly fit. Strange choice, though the interior OL had to be tackled.

60. Bengals: Cam Taylor-Britt, CB, Nebraska

Grade: B + Sleep at point CB. Loud, explosive, fast. The recovery ability is excellent. Apparently he always finds football. Occasionally he had difficulty getting out of his leg. The Bengals do not have many needs, they probably did not need to double in the second half, but Taylor-Britt is a very good player.

61. 49ers: Drake Jackson, EDGE, USC

Grade: B + The dark horse to be one end of the road. High intake. The weight was up and down in college. Huge combination of explosion / bending in the corner. He doesn’t have much else in his game yet, and now he can learn pass-rush moves from Nick Bosa. It must also be strengthened. Quality choice to open the San Fran draft.

62. Leaders: Bryan Cook, S, Cincinnati

Grade: B- General type of field in security in quality defense in college. He is not a particular athlete with every stretch of the imagination, but he can hit jets in short bursts. Head, assignment sound. He can wear many hats but he does not excel in any field. A tick early but it covers a need.

63. Accounts: James Cook, RB, Georgia

Grade: B + Explosive, multidimensional weapon in RB. Not entirely his brother in terms of explosiveness, but close. Smooth movements on the field. Effortless athlete. Not crazy fleeting or balance of contact. Like the RB value in RD2 much more after two exchanges.

64. Broncos: Nick Bonito, ETZE, Oklahoma

Grade A- Smaller, stocky, passable …