PITTSBURGH — The Lombardi Trophy has been hoisted, the confetti has been swept from SoFi Stadium, and the NFL calendar has officially flipped to 2026. We are exactly 74 days away from the commish walking to the podium in Pittsburgh, but the real games begin now.
With the Combine looming later this month and free agency set to explode in March, team needs are about to shift like sand in a desert wind. But right now? We have a clear picture of the desperation at the bottom of the league. The Las Vegas Raiders are done with half-measures at quarterback. The Giants are entering the John Harbaugh era. And the Jets? They hold the keys to the entire first round.
Here is our first swing at the 2026 NFL Draft board.
The Top 10: Quarterbacks, Pass Rushers, and Panic Buttons
1. Las Vegas Raiders (3-14)
The Pick: QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana
Vegas finally gets off the carousel. You don’t pass on a guy who threw 39 touchdowns and willed Indiana—yes, Indiana—to a National Championship. Mendoza isn’t just a stat-sheet stuffer; he’s 6-foot-5, composed, and played his best football when the lights were brightest in the College Football Playoff. The Raiders haven’t taken a QB in round one since JaMarcus Russell in 2007. This time, they get it right.
2. New York Jets (3-14)
The Pick: EDGE Arvell Reese, Ohio State
New York holds four picks in the top 50, a war chest for a roster that needs CPR. Head coach Aaron Glenn wants dogs, and Reese is the alpha of the pack. He racked up 6.5 sacks and 69 tackles for the Buckeyes in 2025, but the tape shows a terrifying versatility. He can put his hand in the dirt or drop into space and erase tight ends. A perfect chess piece for Glenn’s aggressive scheme.
3. Arizona Cardinals (3-14)
The Pick: T Spencer Fano, Utah
Kyler Murray’s future is murky, but whoever takes snaps in the desert needs to stay upright. Fano is a violent technician who anchors a Utah line that mauled opponents all season. Pairing him with Paris Johnson Jr. gives Arizona legitimate bookends for the next decade. It’s not the sexy pick, but it’s the one that stops 3-14 from happening again.
4. Tennessee Titans (3-14)
The Pick: WR Carnell Tate, Ohio State
Cam Ward spent his rookie year running for his life and throwing to ghosts. The Titans’ offense needs juice, specifically a guy who can win 50/50 balls. Tate averaged 17.2 yards per catch in 2025, proving he can stretch the field or move the chains on third down. Elic Ayomanor is a nice piece, but Tate is a WR1.
5. New York Giants (4-13)
The Pick: CB Mansoor Delane, LSU
Welcome to New York, John Harbaugh. The new boss inherits a 28th-ranked defense that couldn’t stop a nosebleed last year. He starts the fix in the secondary. Delane is a sticky cover corner with ball skills (6 INTs in two years) who isn’t afraid to tackle in the run game. He fits the “Raven way” Harbaugh is bringing to the Big Apple.
6. Cleveland Browns (5-12)
The Pick: T Francis Mauigoa, Miami
Fifty-one sacks surrendered in 2025. You can’t evaluate your quarterback or call a playbook when the pocket collapses in two seconds. Mauigoa is a road-grader with elite size who essentially erased ACC pass rushers last season. Cleveland has to protect the investment.
7. Washington Commanders (5-12)
The Pick: EDGE David Bailey, Texas Tech
Washington’s defense finished dead last in yards allowed (384.3 ypg). That changes today. Bailey exploded for 14.5 sacks and 19.5 TFLs in 2025, showing a get-off that NFL tackles will struggle to handle. He adds instant voltage to a pass rush that felt stagnant far too often.
8. New Orleans Saints (6-11)
The Pick: RB Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame
Tyler Shough showed flashes, but he needs a safety valve. Love is arguably the most electric playmaker in the entire class—a home run hitter who can score from anywhere on the field. The Saints offense lacked explosiveness; Love fixes that Day 1.
9. Kansas City Chiefs (6-11)
The Pick: DL Rueben Bain Jr., Miami
It’s rare to see Mahomes and Co. picking this high, and they capitalize by grabbing a monster. The Chiefs managed just 35 sacks last year. Bain (9.5 sacks, 71 pressures) is a disruptor who wrecks game plans from the interior. He brings the nasty streak that KC’s front seven desperately missed.
10. Cincinnati Bengals (6-11)
The Pick: S Caleb Downs, Ohio State
The Bengals haven’t been the same defensively since Jessie Bates Jr. walked. Downs is the closest thing to a clone we’ve seen—high IQ, elite instincts, and a eraser on the back end. He stabilizes a unit that has looked lost for three seasons.
The Mid-Round: Playoff Hopefuls Reload
11. Miami Dolphins (7-10)
The Pick: CB Jermod McCoy, Tennessee
Jeff Hafley was hired to fix the defense, specifically a secondary that allowed a 72% completion rate (dead last in the NFL). McCoy is a gamble coming off an ACL tear, but his 2024 tape was top-five pick quality. If the medicals check out, this is the steal of the draft for Hafley’s system.
12. Dallas Cowboys (7-9-1)
The Pick: LB Sonny Styles, Ohio State
Dallas needs speed in the middle. Styles is a converted safety who retained his range while bulking up to linebacker size. He can run sideline-to-sideline and cover tight ends, giving the Cowboys the modern linebacker they’ve been searching for.
13. Los Angeles Rams (12-5)
The Pick: CB Colton Hood, Tennessee
Sean McVay’s squad got torched for 334 yards through the air in the NFC Championship Game. The Rams haven’t drafted a corner in the top 100 in six years. That streak ends now. Hood is polished, physical, and ready to start immediately.
14. Baltimore Ravens (8-9)
The Pick: G Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State
This is a classic Ravens pick. If Tyler Linderbaum walks in free agency, the interior line becomes a massive liability. Ioane is a mauler with nimble feet who fits Baltimore’s physical identity perfectly. He’s not flashy, but he moves grown men against their will.
15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (8-9)
The Pick: EDGE Keldric Faulk, Auburn
With Jamel Dean and Lavonte David potentially exiting, the Bucs need youth. Faulk is a project, but at 6-foot-6, 270 pounds, he’s a project worth taking. His 2.0 sacks in 2025 don’t scream “star,” but the athletic profile screams “Pro Bowler if developed correctly.”
16. New York Jets (via trade/pick)
The Pick: WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State
After going defense at No. 2, the Jets flip the field. Tyson is a production machine who can line up anywhere. Putting him opposite Garrett Wilson gives New York a legitimate 1-2 punch that defenses have to respect.
17. Detroit Lions (9-8)
The Pick: T Kadyn Proctor, Alabama
Dan Campbell wants to bite kneecaps? Kadyn Proctor wants to swallow them whole. The 6-foot-7, 366-pound giant had a rollercoaster career at Bama but finished as an absolute force. Whether he plays tackle or kicks inside to guard, he restores the “bully” identity to Detroit’s offensive line.
“We watched the tape on Mendoza. The kid doesn’t blink. You hit him, he laughs. You blitz him, he burns you. That’s the Raider way.” — Anonymous AFC West Scout
What’s Next?
The Combine in Indianapolis kicks off later this month, and that’s where the separation happens. Keep an eye on Jermod McCoy’s medicals and Kadyn Proctor’s weigh-in. If Proctor shows up under 360 and moves well, he won’t make it to pick 17. Meanwhile, if the Raiders get cold feet on a QB, the trade market for that No. 1 pick will be absolute chaos.

