Draft night in the NFL is a high-speed collision of hope and cold-blooded business. Teams bet hundreds of millions of dollars on twenty-something kids, praying they’ve found the next superstar rather than a cap-clogging mistake. As we head into the 2026 NFL Draft this weekend, the pressure is higher than ever. With Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza locked in as the consensus top pick, the real drama starts at pick number two. But for every blue-chip prospect, there’s a trap waiting to be sprung.
Ty Simpson: The One-Year Wonder Trap
Ty Simpson finally took the reins at Alabama last season and the stat sheet looks like a dream: 3,567 yards and 28 touchdowns. He’s got the pedigree and the arm. However, scouts are quietly terrified of the tape. Simpson spent years sitting behind Bryce Young and Jalen Milroe, and that lack of live fire shows when the pocket gets muddy. He struggled against blitzes in the second half of the 2025 season, and his 6’1″ frame doesn’t give him the “see-over-the-line” luxury Mendoza enjoys.
If the Arizona Cardinals pull the trigger on Simpson at No. 3, they are betting on a player with only 13 starts. I stood on the sidelines during the Rose Bowl and watched Simpson hesitate on three straight third-down reads. In the NFL, that hesitation turns into a sack-fumble. He’s a rhythm passer who crumbles when the beat skips. For a team needing a day-one savior, Simpson feels like a gamble that could set a franchise back five years.
Kadyn Proctor: A Technical Nightmare in a Giant’s Body
You can’t coach 6’7″ and 350 pounds. Kadyn Proctor is a physical marvel who makes elite edge rushers look like high schoolers when his technique holds up. The problem? It rarely holds up for four quarters. Proctor’s footwork became a recurring joke in SEC scouting circles last year. He plays with a high pad level that allows smaller, twitchier rushers to get under his chest and drive him into the quarterback’s lap.
Drafting Proctor in the top ten is a bet on “what could be” rather than “what is.” We’ve seen this before with massive tackles who can’t keep their weight in check or their hands inside the frame. If he doesn’t land with a legendary offensive line coach, he might be the biggest revolving door in the league by October.
Rueben Bain Jr.: The Production vs. Physics Debate
Rueben Bain Jr. led the nation with 83 quarterback pressures in 2025. On paper, he’s a first-round lock. But the NFL combine was a wake-up call for his draft stock. Measuring in with sub-31-inch arms is a massive red flag for an edge defender. Bain won in college through sheer power and a relentless motor, but at the next level, tackles like Parris Johnson Jr. or Joe Alt will use that length to keep him at a distance.
Bain is a classic “tweener.” He’s too small to move inside full-time and too short-armed to win the edge consistently. He reminds me of productive college rushers who disappear once they realize they can’t just bull-rush an NFL veteran. A team taking him in the top 15 is chasing stats that might not translate to the pro game.
Denzel Boston: The Separation Anxiety
Washington’s Denzel Boston is a highlight reel waiting to happen. If the ball is in the air, he’s likely coming down with it. His contested-catch ability is elite, but that’s also the concern: why is every catch contested? Boston lacks the explosive suddenness to create natural separation. In the 2025 season, he rarely beat SEC-caliber corners on pure route running.
In the NFL, “tight windows” are even tighter. If a receiver can’t create an extra yard of space, they better be Larry Fitzgerald. Boston is a high-risk pick for any team looking for a WR1. He has the tools to be a red-zone specialist, but using a premium pick on a guy who can’t get open is how GMs get fired.
| Prospect | Position | Primary Red Flag | 2025 Key Stat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ty Simpson | QB | Limited starting experience (13 games) | 3,567 Pass Yds, 28 TD |
| Kadyn Proctor | OT | Inconsistent footwork/High pad level | 6’7″, 350 lbs |
| Rueben Bain Jr. | ED | Lacks ideal NFL arm length (30 7/8″) | 83 Total Pressures |
| Denzel Boston | WR | Low separation rate vs. press coverage | 18 TDs (Red Zone heavy) |
The 2026 class is top-heavy with talent, but the gap between the “sure things” and the “busts” has never been wider. While everyone is chasing the next Fernando Mendoza, the smart teams will be the ones that avoid the siren song of Ty Simpson’s arm or Kadyn Proctor’s size. The draft isn’t just about who you take—it’s about who you’re smart enough to pass on.

