Welcome to Day 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft!
The Denver Broncos start the day with just a single pick in the first three rounds. That pick being the 62nd pick in the late second round. That should put us on track to see their first pick in the draft around 7:20pm mile high time. Then again, they could trade up or trade down, so don’t bank on that projection!
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One thing we do know, we’ll need to wait a while. There are 30 picks to be made and once done we’ll have to wait around for the potential possibility of Denver moving back into the late third round.
Let’s get to it!
2026 NFL Draft Results – Second Round
R2, Pick 33: San Francisco 49ers (via NYJ)
De’Zhaun Striblin, WR, Ole Miss
Stribling’s 6’2″ frame and contested-catch radius give Shanahan/Kubiak offense boundary X-receiver that wins outside leverage. SEC route polish translates to Niners’ timing-based concept tree — digs, deep overs, back-shoulder shots. Blocks in run game, non-negotiable in this scheme. YAC ability through broken tackles fits wide-zone bootleg play-action. Three-down WR projection in motion-heavy offense.
R2, Pick 34: Arizona Cardinals
Chase Bisontis, OG, Texas A&M
Athletic guard profile drops into Mike LaFleur’s Shanahan-tree install — wide-zone run game demands mobile interior linemen who pull, climb to second level, and seal backside cuts. Bisontis’ SEC reps against elite 3-techs prove the anchor in pass-pro. Justin Frye’s OL room gets a Day 1 starter with scheme-diverse tape (gap, zone, pull). Physical finisher sets tone for young offense under new staff. Ten-year interior starter ceiling.
R2, Pick 35: Buffalo Bills
TJ Parker, EDGE, Clemson
Parker drops into Jim Leonhard’s new multiple-front defense — scheme built around five-man pressure flexibility and stand-up edge versatility. Clemson product comes with three-year starter pedigree, bend around the arc, and counters that convert speed to power. OLB coach Bobby April III (Stanford DC background) gets pass-rush piece to develop. Attacking scheme under rookie HC Joe Brady needs juice off the edge — Parker’s first-step quickness delivers. Rotational rusher Year 1, double-digit sack projection by 2027.
R2, Pick 36: Houston Texans (via LV)
Kayden McDonald, DT, Ohio State
McDonald’s 320+ frame anchors DeMeco Ryans’ aggressive front as two-gap nose or shaded 1-tech. Run-stuffer archetype frees edge rushers to hunt QB by eating double-teams interior. Ohio State produced him against Big Ten mauler guards — translates immediately. Matt Burke’s defense rotates interior heavily; McDonald gives 30+ snaps of clog-the-middle early-down work. Short-area quickness better than listed weight suggests — flashes pass-rush push on stunts. Three-down potential by Year 2.
R2, Pick 37: New York Giants
Colton Hood, CB, Tennessee
Hood fits Dennard Wilson’s new press-man-heavy defense — scheme built on disruption at line of scrimmage and match coverage principles (inherited from Wilson’s Titans tenure). Tennessee produced long, physical corners; Hood’s 6’1″ frame and hip fluidity check both boxes. Harbaugh’s tough-minded identity demands tackling at corner — Hood delivers in run support. Boundary starter trajectory. Matt Nagy offense keeps defense on short fields; Hood needs to cover one-on-one, which this scheme asks of its CB2.
R2, Pick 38: Las Vegas Raiders (via HOU via WAS)
Treydan Stukes, CB, Arizona
Stukes fits Rob Leonard’s first-year defense — promoted DC brings Miami’s attacking front principles, paired with DB coach Joe Woods’ zone-match coverage DNA (Cover-3/quarters). Stukes’ length and ball skills from Arizona project clean to off-coverage assignments where he can read-and-react rather than play sticky man. Rookie HC Kubiak inherited barren secondary; Stukes steps in as boundary corner with CB2 ceiling. Physical press snaps when scheme dials up, off-zone default. Tackles in run support — required of Pac-12 corners playing option-heavy offenses.
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R2, Pick 39: Cleveland Browns
Denzel Boston, WR, Washington
Boston’s 6’4″ frame and contested-catch profile slot perfectly into Todd Monken’s vertical passing attack — new HC brings Ravens-era shot-play DNA and Georgia’s X-receiver template (Ladd McConkey, AD Mitchell). Boundary jump-ball target that wins in red zone and on back-shoulder fades. Play-action shot plays demand size outside to stress safeties — Boston delivers. Pac-12 press reps translate; needs route-tree expansion but catch radius gives rookie QB margin for error. Day 1 starter outside, 700-yard floor.
R2, Pick 40: Kansas City Chiefs
R Mason Thomas, EDGE, Ohio State
Thomas brings explosive first-step quickness Spagnuolo’s blitz-heavy scheme craves — designed-rusher who wins on stunts, twists, and sub-package pressure packages. Ohio State produced him against tackles preparing for NFL — translates fast. Slightly undersized for full-time base end role; lives in passing-down rotation Year 1. Bend, dip, and counter-rush plan more developed than typical rookie edge. Reid/Spags Super Bowl window stays open with cheap pass-rush juice on rookie deal. Sub-rusher Year 1, 25-snap starter projection.
R2, Pick 41: Cincinnati Bengals
Cashius Howell, EDGE, Texas A&M
Howell drops into Al Golden’s second-year defense — DC’s Notre Dame 3-4 hybrid roots favor stand-up edge rushers who win with speed and bend off boundary. Howell’s first-step burst and flexible hips fit OLB role in odd fronts, hand-down rusher in nickel. Aggressive scheme calls for designed pressures; Howell’s pass-rush plan (cross-chops, dip-and-rip) plays up in those reps. Bengals defense surrendered too much edge contain in 2025 — Howell adds speed off ball. Rotational rusher Year 1, full-time on third downs.
R2, Pick 42: New Orleans Saints
Christen Miller, DT, Georgia
Miller fits Brandon Staley’s 3-4 scheme — DC favors athletic, versatile interior linemen who two-gap on early downs and slide to penetrating 3-tech in nickel sub-packages. Georgia developed Miller as scheme-flex DL playing 0, 3, and 5-techs. Length and play-strength control gaps without sacrificing pass-rush juice on stunts. Kellen Moore offense will trade scoring punches; Staley needs DL who hold up snap counts. Miller’s SEC reps against elite OL erase rookie acclimation curve. Three-down piece by midseason.
R2, Pick 43: Miami Dolphins
Jacob Rodriguez, ILB, Texas Tech
Rodriguez fits Jeff Hafley’s first-year defense — new HC brings Packers/BC zone-shell DNA built on light boxes, two-deep coverage, and LBs flowing fast to space. Texas Tech reps in Big 12 spread offenses prepped him for sideline-to-sideline pursuit and coverage drops over slot/RB out of backfield. Hafley demands smart processors at MIKE — Rodriguez communicates fronts and fits gaps clean. Three-down ILB ceiling, special teams floor early. Fits Cover-2 era second-level athleticism Miami lacked.
R2, Pick 44: Detroit Lions (via NYJ via DAL)
Derrick Moore, DE, Michigan
Moore embodies Dan Campbell’s tone-setting identity — Michigan DE built on physicality, hand violence, and run-set discipline. Kelvin Sheppard’s second-year defense rotates edges heavily; Moore steps in as base 4-3 strong-side end who holds C-gap and converts speed-to-power on passing downs. Big Ten reps against NFL-bound tackles erase rookie polish gap. Drew Petzing offense will keep games close — defense needs three-down edge contributors. Moore’s bend not elite, but motor, leverage, and finish play up. Heavy rotation Year 1, full-time starter 2027.
R2, Pick 45: Baltimore Ravens
Zion Young, EDGE, Missouri
Young joins Anthony Weaver’s first-year defense in Baltimore — DC reunites with Ravens organization where he played, brings multi-front attacking scheme paired with new HC Jesse Minter’s zone-match coverage roots. Young’s 6’4″/270 frame profiles as 4-3 base end or stand-up OLB in odd fronts — scheme versatility Weaver demands. SEC reps developed run-set discipline; bend and finish needed for full-time pass-rush. Power-rush plan over speed wins NFL transition. Rotational rusher Year 1 in Weaver’s deep DL rotation, three-down piece by 2027.
R2, Pick 46: Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Josiah Trotter, ILB, Missouri
Trotter slots into Todd Bowles’ blitz-heavy attacking scheme — Bucs HC/DC dials up pressures from every level, demanding ILBs who time green-dog blitzes and execute man coverage on RBs/TEs out of backfield. Trotter pedigree (father Jeremiah Sr., brother Jeremiah Jr.) translates to advanced pre-snap recognition Bowles’ system rewards. SEC reps prepared him for downhill triggers and tackling in space. Coverage chops needed in nickel — Trotter delivers. Three-down ILB ceiling, special teams floor while learning Bowles’ check-heavy communication. 2027 starter trajectory.
R2, Pick 47: Pittsburgh Steelers (via IND)
Germie Bernard, WR, Alabama
Bernard fits Mike McCarthy’s West Coast offense — new HC calling plays demands precise route-runners working middle of field on slants, drags, and option routes. Alabama produced him as savvy possession receiver with Y-iso flex (slot or boundary). Reliable hands and YAC after catch on shallow concepts give McCarthy designed-touch player. Steelers’ QB room demands route precision over freelance ability — Bernard delivers. WR2/slot starter projection, third-down chain-mover archetype. Steady 60-catch floor, ceiling unlocks if QB play stabilizes.
R2, Pick 48: Atlanta Falcons
Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson
Terrell joins Jeff Ulbrich’s retained defense — DC’s blitz-heavy multi-coverage scheme demands corners comfortable in press-man on island and disciplined in pattern-match zones. Clemson lineage (brother A.J., NFL CB1 type) eases pro transition with same coaching tree and technique foundation. Long-limbed, fluid hips, plus ball production in ACC. Ulbrich loves dialing pressure — Terrell’s ability to play press without safety help maximizes blitz timing. Boundary CB2 starter Year 1, ascending into shutdown role by 2027 in scheme that asks corners to win one-on-one.
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R2, Pick 49: Carolina Panthers (via MIN)
Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech
Hunter fits Ejiro Evero’s 3-4 base — DC’s Vic Fangio coaching tree leans on two-high safety shells and demands DL who eat double-teams to free off-ball linebackers. Hunter’s mass and play-strength profile as nose tackle in odd fronts, kicks to 1-tech in nickel sub-packages. Run-stuffer archetype that holds A-gap on early downs lets Evero stay base personnel longer. Pass-rush juice limited but stunt-game disruptor. Canales offense will keep Panthers in close games — Evero needs interior anchors to win first down. Two-down rotational starter Year 1.
R2, Pick 50: New York Jets (via DET)
D’Angelo Ponds, CB, Indiana
Ponds drops into Aaron Glenn’s defense — Jets HC takes over play-calling in 2026 and brings Lions-tree multiple front with man-coverage principles on outside, match zones inside. Ponds’ compact frame and short-area quickness profile as nickel/slot corner where Glenn loves blitzing off the slot. Indiana produced him with elite ball production (high PD/INT marks) — fits scheme that asks corners to play sticky in man. Boundary CB if outside reps open up; primary fit is nickel where he can cover slot WRs and trigger downhill in run support. Year 1 starter at slot, three-down piece in sub-packages.
R2, Pick 51: Minnesota Vikings (via CAR)
Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati
Golday fits Brian Flores’ chaos defense — DC’s exotic fronts and simulated pressures demand LBs who diagnose mid-snap, blitz off-ball at full speed, and execute man coverage on TEs/RBs. Cincinnati produced him in a Big 12 spread environment where LBs cover ground and process in space — direct translation to Flores’ green-dog timing and mug-front looks. Versatility unlocks Flores’ best wrinkle: disguised pressure where any LB can rush. Mike or Will fit, special teams floor. Three-down ceiling depends on coverage processing — Flores will accelerate that curve. Year 2 starter projection.
R2, Pick 52: Green Bay Packers
Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina
Cisse fits Jonathan Gannon’s first-year defense — new DC brings Eagles/Cardinals zone-match scheme built on two-high safety shells, off-coverage corner principles, and disguise. Cisse’s frame and zone-eye traits from SEC translate to scheme that asks corners to read QB and break on routes rather than play sticky press. Length and ball production fit Gannon’s “hawks the ball” coverage philosophy — simulated pressures generate underthrows and Gannon’s corners must capitalize. Boundary CB2 starter trajectory; nickel-eligible if asked. Year 1 rotational, full-time outside corner by 2027.
R2, Pick 53: Indianapolis Colts (via PIT)
CJ Allen, ILB, Georgia
Allen fits Lou Anarumo’s second-year defense — DC’s chaos scheme demands ILBs who diagnose pre-snap, blitz with timing, and execute coverage assignments inside Anarumo’s exotic disguises. Georgia’s pro-style defense developed Allen’s recognition skills against NFL-caliber offenses (Texas, Tennessee, Alabama). Linebackers coach James Bettcher (Cardinals/Giants DC pedigree) accelerates the technique curve. Mike-LB starter projection; Allen’s downhill trigger fits Anarumo’s run-first defensive identity in AFC South. Three-down ceiling unlocked by coverage ability against TEs. Year 1 rotational, 2027 starter.
R2, Pick 54: Philadelphia Eagles
Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt
Stowers fits Sean Mannion’s first-year offensive install — new OC brings Packers/LaFleur play-action tree paired with Sirianni’s RPO-heavy 12-personnel base. Stowers’ athleticism (former QB convert) and receiver-leaning skillset profile as Y/F flex piece who flexes wide, motions across formation, and works seams in play-action shots. Run-blocking still developing, but Eagles ground game leans on RB/OL identity, freeing Stowers as designed-touch player. TE coach Ryan Mahaffey (run game coordinator title) accelerates inline reps. Move-TE role Year 1, full-time receiving piece by 2027.
R2, Pick 55: New England Patriots (via LAC)
Gabe Jacas, EDGE, Illinois
Jacas fits Vrabel’s pressure-first defense — new HC inherited Patriots culture overhaul and runs multiple fronts (3-4/4-3 hybrid) with stand-up edge versatility. DC Zak Kuhr’s first-year scheme leans on Vrabel-Bowen DNA: aggressive contain edges who set hard against the run before unleashing pass-rush. Jacas’ Big Ten production and power-rush profile fits SAM/strong-side end role. Hand usage and counters more advanced than typical mid-round edge. Vrabel famously develops late-round/Day 2 edges (Harold Landry, Bud Dupree). Rotational pass-rusher Year 1, three-down piece by 2027.
R2, Pick 56: Jacksonville Jaguars
Nate Boerkircher, TE, Texas A&M
Boerkircher fits Liam Coen’s wide-zone-rooted offense — McVay/Shanahan tree leans heavily on 12-personnel sets where second TE blocks edge in run game and leaks into flat/seam off play-action. Texas A&M produced him as Y-inline body type with reliable hand usage as point-of-attack blocker. Coen demands TE2 who can replicate WR splits while sealing C-gap on outside zone. Run game coordinator Brian Picucci accelerates technique reps. Limited receiving ceiling but blocking value Day 1 makes him a Sunday roster lock — three-phase TE archetype Coen built around in Tampa.
R2, Pick 57: Chicago Bears
Logan Jones, C, Iowa
Jones fits Ben Johnson’s offense — HC’s Lions-rooted scheme blends outside zone with gap/power and demands centers who reach nose tackles, climb to second level, and execute combo blocks with both guards. Iowa’s OL development factory produced Jones with elite technique foundation and snap-quickness for shotgun-heavy attacks. Press Taylor’s promotion preserves scheme continuity. Johnson’s run game leans on athletic interior — Jones’ mobility unlocks pin-and-pull, mid-zone, and split-flow concepts. Day 1 starter in middle, anchors Caleb Williams’ pocket. Ten-year center profile.
R2, Pick 58: Cleveland Browns (via SF)
Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo
McNeil-Warren fits Mike Rutenberg’s defensive vision — DC inherits Cleveland’s elite four-down attacking front but adds disguised coverages and DB-level pressures from back-end. Safety play becomes scheme-critical: rotating post-snap, walking down to slot, blitzing off edge. Toledo’s MAC defense developed McNeil-Warren as multi-role piece (deep post, robber, walk-down). Range and tackling in space let Rutenberg stay aggressive without exposing back end. Hybrid box-safety/free-safety profile maximizes disguise. Year 1 sub-package starter, full-time strong safety projection by 2027 in scheme that demands range and physicality.
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R2, Pick 59: Houston Texans
Marlin Klein, TE, Michigan
Klein fits Nick Caley’s offense — second-year OC came from Rams/Patriots tree where TE was scheme centerpiece (heavy 12-personnel, condensed splits, play-action shots). Michigan developed Klein as pro-style inline blocker in run game, which Caley demands at point of attack. German-born late football starter with elite athletic upside; receiving game raw but ceiling is rare given size/speed combination. DeMeco Ryans wants ground-and-pound balance — Klein adds Y-inline body type missing in pass-first sets. Developmental TE2 Year 1, breakout candidate by 2027 if route refinement clicks.
R2, Pick 60: Tennessee Titans (via CHI via BUF)
Anthony Hill Jr., ILB, Texas
Hill fits Gus Bradley’s Cover-3 single-high scheme — DC’s defense demands MIKE-LBs who flow fast to alleys, drop hook-to-curl in zone, and tackle in space. Texas reps prepared Hill against pro-style spread offenses; sideline-to-sideline range and downhill trigger make him scheme-perfect. Robert Saleh’s wide-9 front frees off-ball LBs to run downhill — Hill’s 4.5 short-area burst capitalizes. Three-down ILB ceiling rare at this draft slot. Hill’s coverage chops vs. RBs/TEs unlock nickel package without coming off the field. Day 1 starter, defensive cornerstone projection.
R2, Pick 61: Los Angeles Rams
Max Klare, TE, Ohio State
Klare fits Sean McVay’s offense — HC retains play-calling and runs motion-heavy 11/12-personnel scheme that prizes TEs who flex wide, work seams off play-action, and create matchup problems against base personnel. Klare’s receiving-leaning skillset (move-TE prototype with Purdue/Ohio State route polish) gives McVay matchup chess piece against zone teams. Kliff Kingsbury’s spread DNA in assistant HC role unlocks more 11-personnel TE-flex usage. Run-blocking still developing but McVay’s offense designs around TE strengths. F-back/joker role Day 1, designed-touch receiver Year 2.
R2, Pick 62: Buffalo Bills (via DEN)
Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State
Igbinosun fits Jim Leonhard’s defense — DC’s multiple-front scheme leans on flexible coverage shells and demands corners who can play press, off, and zone-match without scheme tells. Ohio State developed Igbinosun as 6’2″ boundary press-man corner against Big Ten X-receivers. Length disrupts route timing — fits Leonhard’s pressure packages where windows must close fast. Penalty discipline must improve at NFL level (handsy in phase). Joe Brady’s offense requires defense to win extended drives — Igbinosun’s red-zone fade contestation a scheme bonus. Boundary CB2 starter Year 1, ascending into CB1 by 2027.
R2, Pick 63: Los Angeles Chargers (via NE)
Jake Slaughter, OG, Florida
Slaughter fits Mike McDaniel’s first-year offense in LA — new OC brings Shanahan-tree wide-zone scheme that demands mobile interior linemen who reach 1-techs, climb to second level, and pull on counter/lead blocks. Harbaugh’s smashmouth identity layered with McDaniel’s outside zone creates hybrid scheme requiring guards who win in space and at point of attack. Florida produced Slaughter as athletic interior body with SEC reps against elite 3-techs. OL coach Butch Barry (came from Miami with McDaniel) ensures scheme-language continuity. Day 1 starter at LG/RG, ten-year interior anchor profile.
R2, Pick 64: Seattle Seahawks
Bud Clark, S, TCU
Clark fits Mike Macdonald’s structured defense — HC’s scheme runs disguised post-snap rotations from two-high to single-high looks and demands free safeties with elite range to cover deep middle when shells flip. DC Aden Durde executes Macdonald’s vision built on coverage variety, not blitz volume. TCU produced Clark with ball-hawk profile (high INT/PD totals) and processing speed for split-safety reads. Range/instincts > tackling, but Macdonald’s scheme insulates safeties from dirty fits via structure. Single-high free safety projection, dime rotation Year 1, full-time starter trajectory.
2026 NFL Draft Results – Third Round
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R3, Pick 65: Arizona Cardinals – Carson Beck, QB, Miami
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R3, Pick 66: Denver Broncos – Tyler Onyedim, DL, Texas A&M
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R3, Pick 67: Las Vegas Raiders – Keyron Crawford, EDGE, Auburn
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R3, Pick 68: Philadelphia Eagles – Markel Bell, OT, Miami
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R3, Pick 69: Chicago Bears – Sam Roush, TE, Stanford
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R3, Pick 70: San Francisco 49ers – Romello Height, EDGE, Texas Tech
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R3, Pick 71: Washington Commanders – Antonio Williams, WR, Clemson
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R3, Pick 72: Cincinnati Bengals – Tacario Davis, CB, Washington
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R3, Pick 73: New Orleans Saints – Oscar Delp, TE, Georgia
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R3, Pick 74: New York Giants – Malachi Fields, WR, Notre Dame
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R3, Pick 75: Miami Dolphins – Caleb Douglas, WR, Texas Tech
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R3, Pick 76: Pittsburgh Steelers – Drew Allar, QB, Penn State
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R3, Pick 77: Green Bay Packers – Chris McClellan, DT, Missouri
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R3, Pick 78: Indianapolis Colts – A.J. Haulcy, S, LSU
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R3, Pick 79: Atlanta Falcons – Zachariah Branch, WR, Georgia
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R3, Pick 80: Baltimore Ravens – Ja’Kobi Lane, WR, USC
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R3, Pick 81: Jacksonville Jaguars – Albert Regis, DT, Texas A&M
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R3, Pick 82: Minnesota Vikings – Domonique Orange, DT, Iowa State
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R3, Pick 83: Carolina Panthers – Chris Brazzell II, Wr, Tennessee
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R3, Pick 84: Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State
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R3, Pick 85: Pittsburgh Steelers – Daylen Everette, CB, Georgia
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R3, Pick 86: Cleveland Browns – Austin Barber, OT, Florida
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R3, Pick 87: Miami Dolphins – Will Kacmarek, TE, Ohio State
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R3, Pick 88: Jacksonville Jaguars – Emmanuel Pregnon, OG, Oregon
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R3, Pick 89: Chicago Bears – Zavion Thomas, WR, LSU
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R3, Pick 90: San Francisco 49ers – Kaelon Black, RB, Indiana
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R3, Pick 91: Las Vegas Raiders – Trey Zuhn III, C, Texas A&M
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R3, Pick 92: Dallas Cowboys
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R3, Pick 93: Los Angeles Rams
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R3, Pick 94: Miami Dolphins
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R3, Pick 95: New England Patriots
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R3, Pick 96: Seattle Seahawks
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R3, Pick 97: Minnesota Vikings
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R3, Pick 98: Minnesota Vikings
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R3, Pick 99: Pittsburgh Steelers
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R3, Pick 100: Jacksonville Jaguars
