Patriots Not Yet Willing To Trade First-Rounder For A.J. Brown
APRIL 23: No talks are expected this weekend, according to NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport. However, the Eagles and Patriots are expected to reengage down the road, with Rapoport pointing to negotiations coming around the June date when a trade becomes financially reasonable for Philadelphia.
It would be logical for the clubs to speak on a trade leading up to that date, and Brown could theoretically join the Patriots for their minicamp if traded soon after June 1. But the teams look set to put this issue on the back burner for now.
APRIL 22: Although the Eagles trading A.J. Brown to the Patriots after June 1 is starting to look like a foregone conclusion, the door remains open for another team to top New England with a better offer.
On draft eve, the Pats are not believed to be ready to send a first-round pick to the Eagles for Brown, FOX’s Jay Glazer reports. The Eagles have long wanted a first-round pick headlining a Brown trade haul, as it would make the mercurial wide receiver’s dead money hit — even in a post-June 1 trade — easier to stomach. The returns the Bears and Dolphins respectively received for D.J. Moore and Jaylen Waddle surely did nothing to diminish the Eagles’ asking price.
The Broncos sent the Dolphins first- and third-round picks for Waddle, with a fourth-round pick swap also part of that trade, while the Bears collected a second-rounder for Moore and a fifth. Brown is more accomplished than both players, riding a streak of four straight 1,000-yard seasons and totaling six such slates in a seven-year career. But Brown gripes about his usage in Philly’s offense have been commonplace. A midgame dustup with Nick Sirianni also fueled the fire for a trade finally coming to pass, and a March report viewed a trade as “inevitable.”
A report earlier this week pegged the Patriots — Brown’s long-rumored destination, which would bring about a reunion with Mike Vrabel — as being ready to acquire the eighth-year receiver after June 1. In PFR’s latest chat, I posited a potential trade that involved a 2028 first-round pick and a Day 2 choice in 2027. The Eagles structured their Carson Wentz trade this way, collecting a 2022 conditional first-round pick from the Colts to go with a 2021 third. Philly also accepted a 2026 third-round pick from the Jets for Haason Reddick in 2024.
Teams are displaying reluctance to part with 2027 first-round picks, as that draft class is viewed as stronger than this one, and it will be interesting to see if another team will rival the Pats for Brown. For a bit now, New England has been the clear frontrunner. Glazer reiterates the Pats’ pole position here, mentioning a potential standoff in the event the defending AFC champs do not put a first on the table.
How the draft unfolds will shape other teams’ needs, potentially opening the door to more bids coming in for Brown before June 2. Philly would certainly welcome a bidding war, and how this draft class’ top receivers are dispersed may crystalize offer strength.
The other question here, naturally, covers the scenario in which the Eagles keep Brown and try to make it work with one of the most talented skill-position players in franchise history. Posturing on that front will undoubtedly come, but as it stands, this relationship looks to be on life support. The Patriots would not be inclined to increase their offer significantly based on what is coming out of Philly now. PFR readers believe a trade will happen. Will/should it involve a first-round pick?
Bills, Panthers Interested In Texas Tech LB Jacob Rodriguez
Ohio State’s Sonny Styles is the top-ranked off-ball linebacker in this year’s class. Styles is a lock to go in the first round on Thursday. Texas Tech’s Jacob Rodriguez could be the second player at the position to come off the board, Jeremy Fowler of ESPN reports. The Bills and Panthers have done “extensive homework” on Rodriguez, per Fowler.
Whether Rodriguez will sneak into the first round is an option question, but fellow LB CJ Allen (Georgia) reportedly has a chance to go in the top 32. If Rodriguez has surpassed Allen in the pecking order, he may hear his name called tonight. The Panthers are set to pick 19th, while the Bills are scheduled for 26th. Unlike the Bills, the Panthers have a second-rounder, though Rodriguez may not fall to their choice (No. 51). Both Dane Brugler of The Athletic (No. 40) and Daniel Jeremiah of NFL.com (No. 42) consider Rodriguez a top-45 prospect.
Rodriguez is coming off an excellent run in the Red Raiders’ defense, but he was initially a quarterback at Virginia in 2021. He transferred to Texas Tech the next year and switched to linebacker. It’s fair to say it was a wise decision.
The 6-foot-1, 231-pound Rodriguez broke out during a 127-tackle 2024 campaign in which he recorded five sacks, forced three fumbles, returned one for a touchdown and intercepted a pass over 14 games. As impressive as Rodriguez’s production was that year, his output last season was downright jaw-dropping. While his sack total fell to one, he put up 128 tackles, forced a whopping seven fumbles and pulled in four interceptions. Rodriguez subsequently garnered major accolades. The unanimous All-American finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting, won Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year, and took home the Bronko Nagurski Trophy (nation’s best defender) and the Butkus Award (nation’s top LB), among other honors.
Set to turn 24 years old in September, Rodriguez could start immediately for the team that drafts him. If Buffalo takes him, he could step in alongside either Terrel Bernard or Dorian Williams in the middle of defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard‘s newly installed 3-4 base. The Panthers made a big free agent investment in former Jaguar Devin Lloyd, whom they added on a three-year, $45MM deal, but could attempt to upgrade over Trevin Wallace.
Miami QB Carson Beck’s Stock Soaring
The 2026 draft class is not strong at the quarterback position behind projected No. 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza.
Alabama’s Ty Simpson is widely seen as the QB2 who could also be drafted on Day 1, but no other passers are expected to hear their name called until Day 2.
However, Miami’s Carson Beck has been a late riser in the pre-draft process. He now seen as a likely second-round pick with the potential to sneak into the first to a quarterback-needy team, perhaps one that is less enamored with Simpson.
“The quarterback who is going to go higher than every projection has had him in the process is Carson Beck,” NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero said this week on the Rich Eisen Show.
“There was a lot that teams had to sort through going back to Georgia,” Pelissero explained, referencing some off-field questions about Beck. But the 24-year-old answered some of those questions during the pre-draft process, raising his stock in the process.
Pelissero believes that Beck would be taken in the second round, but says there is “at least a non-trivial chance” that he is selected in the first.
“I would not 100% rule out the idea of Carson Beck somehow finding his way into the bottom of Round 1,” Pelissero said.
That assessment is shared by CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz, who has spoken to multiple sources that predicted a late first- or early second-round landing spot for Beck. His star has fallen in the public eye since his time at Georgia, but some evaluators believe he brings pro-ready football I.Q. and throwing ability.
Beck was mentioned by ESPN’s Matt Miller as a “potential sleeper” for the Jets in the middle rounds, though his rising stock may preclude that. New York is thought to be targeting the 2027 draft class for their next franchise quarterback, anyway, but they may prefer the certainty of drafting Beck now rather than waiting to see how next year’s class (and their draft slot) work out.
Chiefs High On DE Rueben Bain Jr.
Sinking to 6-11 after the Eagles’ Super Bowl LIX romp nixed a threepeat bid, the Chiefs hold a top-10 pick entering a draft for the first time since 2013. Kansas City famously traded up to No. 10 for Patrick Mahomes in 2017, but the Mahomes era has featured late-first-round investments due to the sustained success he has brought as a starter.
The Chiefs went 6-8 in games Mahomes finished, regressing after historic close-game success over the previous two seasons, and lost their final three without him. That produced the No. 9 overall pick. Clear needs exist for the AFC dynasty, which lost its top two cornerbacks (Trent McDuffie, Jaylen Watson) while having some questions at defensive end and wide receiver.
Ely Allen’s PFR mock draft sent Miami edge rusher Rueben Bain Jr. to Kansas City, and ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler indicates the Chiefs are “firmly” in on the talented sack artist. The Chiefs have a need opposite George Karlaftis, after the team mustered only 33 sacks last season, and will see future Hall of Fame defensive tackle Chris Jones turn 32 this year. Bain would provide a much-needed reinforcement, as 2023 first-round pick Felix Anudike-Uzomah has not panned out through three seasons.
The Chiefs also released Mike Danna and let Charles Omenihu walk in free agency. Capitalizing on this draft’s bevy of first-round-caliber EDGE options makes sense. Bain’s below-average arm length has clouded his draft stock to a degree, though some uncertainty came out of the D-end’s Combine measurements. The Chiefs are comfortable with Bain’s sub-31-inch arm length, per Fowler colleague Matt Miller.
The Chiefs’ Andy Reid-era history of overlooking character red flags could also factor in here. In 2024, Bain was cited for careless driving in an accident that left a woman — one of four passengers in Bain’s vehicle — in a coma for three months before her eventual passing. According to police crash records, Bain’s vehicle struck another car before colliding with the “concrete barriers on both sides of the highway.” No suspected use of drugs or alcohol emerged; no tests to determine such use were performed at the time.
Although this news became public earlier this month, teams have known about the incident for a while. It has not been expected to dock Bain’s stock much. While the Titans might be out on him, a significant first-round fall is not expected. Teams have been viewed as higher on Bain than draft pundits. The Chiefs met with Bain this month. Bain tallied 9.5 sacks and 15.5 tackles for loss to help Miami to the CFP title game; he totaled 7.5 sacks as a freshman in 2023.
Latest On Giants’ First-Round Plans
The Giants adding the No. 10 overall pick in the Dexter Lawrence trade has complicated the first round for the NFC East franchise. A lot is in play as John Harbaugh finalizes preparations for his first New York draft.
Tied to the likes of Jeremiyah Love, Sonny Styles, Caleb Downs, Jordyn Tyson and also potentially bolstering their O-line, the Giants have several directions they can now go holding two top-10 choices. The Giants are believed to want to help Jaxson Dart in this year’s first round, per ESPN.com’s Matt Miller, and Love links have piled up. But it is quite possible the Notre Dame running back is off the board by No. 5.
How the board falls at 5 may dictate what the Giants do at 10, with CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones expecting Big Blue to draft a player on each side of the ball by night’s end. It would be interesting to see the Giants take Love at 5 and perhaps Tyson or Carnell Tate at 10, but if the team does draft either Love or Tyson at 5, finding a defender at 10 might be difficult.
It is quite possible Styles and Downs will be off the board by No. 10, perhaps ramping up the pressure on New York — presuming it wants at least one of the Ohio State defenders — to go defense then offense. Downs appears more likely than Styles to be available at 10, and before the Bengals and Giants made the above-referenced trade, Ely Allen’s PFR mock draft had the safety falling to Cincinnati in that spot. But it is very possible both go off the board in the top nine, and in a scenario where the Giants end up with Love or Tyson at 5, they might need to look closely at their O-line options due to Styles and Downs potentially being spoken for by 10.
Love may be too difficult to pass on at 5, but Miller adds the Giants do not expect him to be there by then. That said, Miller notes the team would pick the former Fighting Irish star if he is available. That simplifies this process to a degree, but with Love links to the Cardinals and Titans, it is obviously possible the Giants will need to turn to their second choice (at least) at 5.
Tyson may be part of that equation, as the Arizona State wideout has vaulted up the board — with his recent workout showing the skillset that has tantalized teams amid an injury-plagued career. Giants coaches are “very high on” Tyson, Miller colleague Jeremy Fowler adds. No team did more work on Tyson than the Giants, per Miller.
Joe Schoen was at the prospect’s modified pro day in Tempe, Ariz., and that included a dinner with the fast-rising pass catcher. If the Giants do not believe Tyson will be available at 10, adding him early and taking their chances with one of the Ohio State defenders or an O-lineman may be the play (in the event Love is gone by 5).
The team has also been connected to Tate, and Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer mocks the ex-Buckeyes receiver to New York at No. 5. The team likes both players, per Breer, but Tate would give New York a much safer prospect — albeit one with less upside — in this premium draft slot.
Tyson will be a higher-variance prospect, while Tate — Ohio State’s WR2 behind Jeremiah Smith over the past two years — would slot in alongside Malik Nabers. The latter’s recent ACL tear could impact the Giants on Tyson, but if the NFC East team is truly sold on the Arizona State product’s upside, passing for a safer option may not go over too well should Tyson hit elsewhere.
WR KC Concepcion Rising Up Draft Board Despite Maturity Concerns
Texas A&M wide receiver KC Concepcion is “considered a riser” as the 2026 NFL Draft nears, per ESPN’s Matt Miller. Once seen as a borderline first-rounder, he now seems likely to hear his name called on the first night.
Concepcion, 21, was a three-year starter in college with two solid seasons at NC State before taking a sizable leap in 2025 in College Station. He recorded 61 catches for 919 receiving yards (15.0 yards per reception), many of which he picked up after the catch. He is a smooth, athletic separator with grit and toughness at the catch point and in the run game, though his drop rate is worryingly high.
Altogether, Concepcion profiles as a first-round talent at one of the league’s most important (and expensive) positions. Hitting on a rookie receiver offers a ton of surplus value relative to the exploding positional market, and his blend of athleticism, production, and versatility as a gadget weapon on offense and returner on special teams should seal his first-round status.
However, “teams have had to dig through questions about maturity” regarding Concepcion, per Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer. However, Texas A&M head coach Mike Elko has praised his former star wideout’s “tremendous” work ethic (via The Athletic’s Dane Brugler), so the source for these concerns is not clear. Concepcion also spoke at the Combine about overcoming a stutter and the resulting negative treatment he received, demonstrating some resiliency.
If clubs are comfortable with Concepcion’s maturity level, then he should be drafted sometime on Thursday night. A fall out of the first round would indicate more significant issues that have been flagged by multiple teams.
Eagles Still Interested In Jonathan Greenard; Vikings Aiming To Retain OLB
The Eagles pursued Trey Hendrickson in free agency, but their edge rusher haul has not brought clear starters. Philadelphia added Arnold Ebiketie and Joe Tryon-Shoyinka to a group housing Nolan Smith and Jalyx Hunt. It would stand to reason Howie Roseman is looking for more help after the Jaelan Phillips free agency defection.
Believed to be close to a deal to retain the 2025 trade pickup, the Eagles watched Phillips leave for a monster Panthers offer (four years, $120MM). They then discussed Jonathan Greenard with the Vikings, but Minnesota has held onto its two-year edge rusher. The Vikings are still believed to want a “premium” Day 2 pick for Greenard, according to ESPN’s Dan Graziano. Greenard has been seeking a contract update, but nothing has transpired on that front either.
Minnesota is still aiming to hold onto Greenard, but Graziano adds talks could pick up during the draft. Though, discussions on Greenard have “lost steam” recently. With more than 24 hours until Day 2 begins, the NFC teams could continue negotiations surrounding the seventh-year pass rusher. The Eagles hold the Nos. 54, 68 and 96 picks in this year’s draft.
The Vikings will assuredly target the No. 54 selection, and with Greenard having two years left on his deal, that would be reasonable for the NFC North team to target. Still, the Vikings are “really trying” to keep Greenard, per ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler. That can be partially translated to the Vikes setting a high asking price. Philly does appear open to extending Greenard, who combined for 24.5 sacks from 2023-24 before an injury-shortened 2025 season.
The Bears gave up a second-round pick for Montez Sweat, while the Dolphins surrendered first- and fourth-rounders for Bradley Chubb. Both players were in contract years and required immediate extensions. It is unclear if Greenard will force the issue, but with two years left on his $76MM pact, he does not have considerable leverage. Greenard joins the Steelers’ Alex Highsmith as possibly attainable edge rushers with two years left on upper-middle-class contracts, though Greenard appears more attainable than Highsmith. Like Pittsburgh, Minnesota would have two EDGE starters ready if a trade occurs; the Vikes have Andrew Van Ginkel and 2024 first-rounder Dallas Turner rostered as well.
Philadelphia is looking to make a draft-weekend deal, per Graziano. While this seemingly pertains to a veteran, Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer notes the team has made calls exploring trade-up opportunities. Philly holds the No. 23 overall pick tonight. No A.J. Brown move is expected until at least June 2, with that date making a trade financially realistic (which it presently is not), but it may take longer due to the Eagles and Patriots not being aligned on trade compensation presently.
We heard a bit ago the Eagles would target offense early in this draft. The team has chosen defenders with seven of its past eight first- or second-round picks, with 2022 second-rounder Cam Jurgens the most recent offensive player picked in this range. Specifically, The Athletic’s Zach Berman points to a pass catcher or a tackle to be prioritized early.
The Eagles trading Brown probably means a Day 1 or Day 2 receiver pick will be necessary, even after the team traded for Dontayvion Wicks and signed Marquise Brown. While the team also re-signed Dallas Goedert, he will turn 32 by season’s end and is only on a one-year deal. Philly has seen Lane Johnson run into frequent health trouble, and while the potential Hall of Famer is returning for a 14th season, he will turn 36 this year. Landon Dickerson is only 27, but he also considered retirement this offseason. A first-round O-line investment is on Philly’s radar.
Saints Eyeing EDGE-Based Trade-Up?
APRIL 23: NFL insider Jordan Schultz echoes the idea that New Orleans will be a team to watch regarding a move up the top-10 order. After the Jets make their selection at No. 2, it will be interesting to see how willing teams like the Cardinals are to work out a Saints swap.
APRIL 22: Mickey Loomis has made some memorable moves to climb up draft boards during his 23 years overseeing the Saints’ war room, and the longstanding GM is back on the radar for another such move.
The Saints have been mentioned as a team to monitor with regards to trading up for an edge rusher, according to NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport, who names Arvell Reese as a specific player to watch — should he make it past the Jets. The Cardinals have shown steady interest in trading down from No. 3, and Daniel Jeremiah’s final 2026 mock has Arizona dealing that pick to New Orleans and moving down five spots.
[RELATED: Saints Open To Trading Spencer Rattler?]
New Orleans traded its 2023 first-round pick in a package to move up for Chris Olave in 2022, doing so before making a second trade to climb up the board for Olave. Four years earlier, Loomis and Sean Payton traded their 2019 first-rounder to move back into Round 1 for Marcus Davenport. The team traded up for linebacker Stephone Anthony in the 2015 first round, doing so after already taking Andrus Peat.
The Saints climbed up (via the Cardinals) from No. 27 to No. 20 for Brandin Cooks in 2014. The Saints traded their 2012 first to the Patriots to select Mark Ingram in the 2011 first round, moved up three spots for defensive end Sedrick Ellis in 2008 and climbed up three spots for tackle Jammal Brown in 2005. Loomis’ first draft as GM (2003) involved another trade-up with the Cardinals, who slid down 11 spots to give the Saints access to D-tackle Johnathan Sullivan.
Not all of these moves worked out, certainly, with Sullivan and Anthony becoming busts quickly. But Loomis — who does not appear to be on the hot seat despite a five-year playoff drought — has not traded down in a first round. The Saints have been linked to a wide receiver in Round 1, being previously mentioned as the floor for Ohio State’s Carnell Tate at No. 8. But Olave’s likely extension may be influencing the NFC South club here. The Saints are more likely to address their receiver issue on Day 2, according to EssentiallySports.com’s Tony Pauline.
The team has told agents it did not want to overinvest at receiver this offseason, per Pauline. While a rookie contract would complement a $30MM-plus-AAV Olave accord, the Saints also may be leery of sacrificing other areas to add a No. 2 wideout. The position has long been mentioned as a target in this draft; it just may not happen until Round 2.
One of them may be edge rusher. The team has not re-signed Cameron Jordan and could use help opposite Chase Young, where longtime sidekick option Carl Granderson resides at age 29. Granderson is under contract for two more years, but the Saints’ annual restructure frenzy has his cap number set to climb from $9.47MM this year to $20.92MM in 2027.
Reese might not cost what a quarterback would in a trade-up scenario, but if he makes it past the Jets at No. 2, teams will be calling. That could be an opportunity for the Cardinals to move down, though they have been linked to Jeremiyah Love in recent days. The Jets may also be coming around on Reese at 2, though Jeremiah still has David Bailey going to New York there. It is not known if the Saints view Bailey — a more polished pass-rushing prospect than Reese, a hybrid LB — as worthy of a trade-up, but Loomis’ history advises fans to not rule out a climb up the board early.
Cardinals See Arvell Reese As EDGE; Unlikely To Trade Up For Ty Simpson
The first pick of the 2026 NFL draft is essentially set. The Raiders will selected quarterback Fernando Mendoza shortly after proceedings start on Thursday night, with the Jets deciding between Texas Tech’s David Bailey and Ohio State’s Arvell Reese at No. 2.
The Cardinals will then be in the driver’s seat with plenty of options. They could take whichever of the Jets’ targets is still available, or pivot to a trade back for a team looking to come up, likely for an edge rusher or Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love. With a new, offensive-minded head coach in Mike LaFleur, Arizona could also take Love themselves.
Their decision will likely still depend on what the Jets do. New York seems to have settled on Reese, a hybrid linebacker/edge defender with a ton of NFL potential. But deciding to draft Bailey would not be a surprise, and the Cardinals would then have a shot at Reese.
Arizona has drafted hybrid linebackers in the first round of past drafts, including Isaiah Simmons in 2020 and Zaven Collins in 2021. Those picks did not quite work out, as both players struggled to find a role in the Cardinals defense.
But Reese may be a different beast. The Cardinals do see him as an edge rusher, per Howard Balzer of CardsWire, and may not move him around the defense as they did with Simmons and Collins. That would allow him to focus on harnessing his notable athleticism into pass rushing production rather than taking on a more diverse, complicated set of roles.
Arizona has also been increasingly linked with Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson over the past month. They currently lack a long-term starter with Jacoby Brissett and Gardner Minshew tapped as stopgap options in 2026. However, the Cardinals are not expected to be aggressive pursuing Simpson, despite some chatter of a trade back up into the first round. Though the team likes him, per Balzer, they will only take him if he falls to one of their picks – likely No. 34 overall, the first pick in the second round. They may even see if he falls to their third-rounder (No. 65) with many teams seemingly targeting the 2027 quarterback class instead.
The Cardinals will draft a quarterback this weekend, Balzer adds, but they have explored the depth of the class. They have shown interest in NDSU’s Cole Payton, and several other passers coming out of Power 5 schools could also be on their radar. But it will all depend on how far those players fall. Arizona’s roster is full of holes, likely inspiring them to prioritize talent and value at each selection rather than honing in on individual positions.
OL-Heavy First Round Expected
This draft is expected to bring the rare instance of a running back, safety and off-ball linebacker each chosen in the top 10. Beyond the Jeremiyah Love, Caleb Downs and Sonny Styles inclusions, this draft lacks quarterback depth — at least at the top of the prospect pool — and does not feature a surefire top-10 cornerback.
In terms of high-end volume, offensive line may be where this group stands out. Although no blockers are certain to go in the top five, ESPN’s Dan Graziano notes as many as 10 could come off the board in Round 1. Various executives have informed veteran insider Jordan Schultz simulations are seeing nine O-linemen go in the first round.
The Nos. 10-14 spots may be where the run begins, per Schultz, and Graziano names a host of teams as interested parties. The Lions (No. 17), Panthers (No. 19), Steelers (No. 21), Chargers (No. 22), Eagles (No. 23), Browns (Nos. 6, 24), 49ers (No. 27), Chiefs (Nos. 9, 29) and Patriots (No. 31) are among the teams who would “love” to exit Round 1 with an O-lineman added.
Cleveland’s O-line interest has been well documented, and Graziano adds the team wants to leave the first round with a tackle and a receiver. The Browns traded for Tytus Howard to play right tackle but have injury-prone Dawand Jones penciled in at LT; Jones’ place on the depth chart may well change based on a transaction tonight. Detroit has been linked to tackles following Taylor Decker‘s release. Kansas City was loosely tied to Trent Williams, but the longtime San Francisco LT has reached an extension to stay in the Bay Area.
The collection of teams Graziano mentioned would lend to the O-line run beginning in the back half of the first round, and FOX’s Jay Glazer points to seven or eight being off the board by the early 20s. That could influence trade-up moves from teams who view the first round as essential to restocking their front fives.
Francis Mauigoa (Miami), Spencer Fano (Utah), Vega Ioane (Penn State), Monroe Freeling (Georgia), Kadyn Proctor (Alabama) and Blake Miller (Clemson) look like the safest bets to be chosen in Round 1. Mauigoa and Fano have been connected to Cleveland at No. 6, while Ioane-Giants ties have circulated after Ravens connections emerged. Ioane may be viewed as the safest bet among the whole lot, as Glazer adds NFL personnel staffers have him among four players in this class (along with Downs, Love and Fernando Mendoza) as the surest candidates to rise to the Pro Bowl level.
The Chiefs using their No. 9 pick on a blocker would not be surprising, Graziano adds, and it would mean back-to-back years with a first-round lineman chosen. Kansas City has a right tackle vacancy following its Jawaan Taylor release. While Jaylon Moore (two years, $30MM) is an overpriced backup, the ex-49er entered last season behind Taylor and Josh Simmons — the Chiefs’ No. 32 overall pick in 2025.
Caleb Lomu (Utah) and Max Iheanachor (Arizona State) also land in Daniel Jeremiah’s NFL.com top 32. Both were busy on the “30” visit circuit. Although Keylan Rutledge comes in 47th on Jeremiah’s big board — as the next O-lineman listed — ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler adds the Texans have done plenty of work on the Georgia Tech guard. The Texans have been connected to further bolstering their O-line — a recent trouble spot — early in this year’s draft. Houston met with Lomu, Iheanachor and Miller recently, and Proctor visited in March.

