General managers are not sleeping right now. They are staring at whiteboards until 3 a.m., trying to separate smokescreens from reality. We are days away from Roger Goodell taking the podium in Pittsburgh, and the 2026 NFL Draft rumors are officially burning hot. Between blockbuster trade demands and late-rising college stars, the top half of the first round is a minefield. Let’s cut through the noise and break down the verified buzz.
The Monster in New York: Dexter Lawrence Trade Demands
The New York Giants have a massive problem. Star defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence wants out, and the asking price is astronomical. According to multiple New York Post and CBS Sports reports, general manager Joe Schoen wants a top-10 pick in this week’s draft, or a later first-round pick attached to serious draft capital.
Lawrence skipped the start of the Giants’ offseason workout program this past Tuesday. He wants a new deal, feeling severely underpaid as the defensive tackle market exploded around his 2023 extension. The issue? The Giants hold the leverage. Lawrence has two years remaining on his four-year, $90 million contract. Furthermore, his production fell off a cliff last season.
After dominating the trenches for years, injuries limited his 2025 impact. He managed just half a sack, 31 combined tackles, and eight quarterback hits. Still, you do not easily replace a 28-year-old, three-time Pro Bowler. When healthy, Lawrence eats double-teams for breakfast. Teams staring at a top-10 pick must decide: do you draft an unproven rookie edge rusher, or trade the farm for a known, albeit expensive, superstar?
First-Round Quarterback Shock: Ty Simpson Rising
Fernando Mendoza is the undisputed top quarterback on the board. But what happens after that? Alabama’s Ty Simpson is suddenly generating massive first-round heat.
Simpson waited in the wings in Tuscaloosa for three years. When he finally took the starting job in 2025, he launched a missile. He completed 64.5% of his passes, throwing for 3,567 yards, 28 touchdowns, and just five interceptions. He secured a 145.2 passer rating and dragged Alabama to the College Football Playoff quarterfinals before running into a buzzsaw against the Indiana Hoosiers in the Rose Bowl.
Simpson didn’t just manage games; he dictated them. He read SEC defenses like a veteran.
— National Scout Analysis
Simpson suffered a fractured rib against Indiana, a brutal end to an otherwise stellar campaign. But teams love his resilience and his football pedigree—his father is a long-time college head coach. Do not be shocked if a quarterback-needy team trades back into the late first round to secure his fifth-year option.
The Jets’ No. 2 Pick: A Tale of Two Edge Rushers
The New York Jets hold the No. 2 and No. 16 overall picks. With the second pick, they are staring directly at two defensive nightmares: Ohio State’s Arvell Reese and Texas Tech’s David Bailey.
Reese is a physical freak who earned All-American honors with 6.5 sacks and 69 combined tackles. But Bailey brings a terrifying, proven pass-rush arsenal. Bailey earned his economics degree in three years at Stanford before transferring to Texas Tech, where he completely wrecked Big 12 offenses.
| Prospect | 2025 Sacks | 2025 Tackles for Loss | Forced Fumbles |
|---|---|---|---|
| David Bailey (Texas Tech) | 14.5 | 19.5 | 3 |
| Arvell Reese (Ohio State) | 6.5 | N/A | 0 |
Bailey’s 14.5 sacks tied for the FBS lead. He converts speed to power effortlessly. The Jets desperately need an immediate impact player to rush the passer, and Bailey’s advanced technique makes him the safest bet on the board.
Jeremiyah Love: Bringing the Desert to Life
If you want pure electricity, look at Jeremiyah Love. SNY reports massive buzz connecting the Notre Dame running back to the Arizona Cardinals at the No. 3 pick.
Love is not just a football player; he is a track star and an avid anime fan who even conceptualized his own comic book, “Jeremonstar.” That creativity translates directly to the gridiron. Last season, he won the Doak Walker Award and finished third in Heisman voting. He shredded defenses for 1,372 rushing yards and 18 touchdowns, averaging a staggering 6.9 yards per carry. He added 280 receiving yards and three scores through the air.
- Broke Notre Dame’s program record for total touchdowns in a season (21).
- Ripped off a 98-yard touchdown run in the playoffs against Indiana.
- Scored 17.5 touchdowns per season on average between 2024 and 2025.
Running backs rarely go this high in the modern draft. But Love breaks all the rules. He possesses rare breakaway speed combined with the patience to let his blocks develop. The Cardinals need an offensive identity, and drafting Love immediately forces opposing coordinators to change their defensive schemes.

