Month: April 2025

Bills Select CB Maxwell Hairston At No. 30

To no surprise, the Bills have gone the cornerback route with their top pick. Buffalo has selected Kentucky cornerback Maxwell Hairston at No. 30 overall. A relatively new-look secondary will now feature the former Wildcat in 2025.

Hairston put himself on the map with a school-record three interceptions returned for touchdowns in 2023, but he followed up the five-pick campaign with only one interception and five passes defensed in an abbreviated 2024, though that singular pick was also returned for a score.

Hairston’s ball-skills draw the most attention, but he works with a keen awareness of how the defense around him is unfolding. Obviously, the shoulder injury that caused him to miss five games last year is something to watch moving forward, but as long as he stays healthy, the Bills have landed a playmaker on the outside.

Buffalo relied heavily on Christian Benford in 2024 as Rasul Douglas and Kaiir Elam — both since departed — returned middling campaigns. The team brought back a familiar face in free agency in Dane Jackson, but Jackson didn’t fare much better than Douglas and Elam during his time in Carolina. Hairston should be able to slide into a starting role as a rookie, but if he needs a bit of time to develop, another familiar, veteran face, Tre’Davious White, should be able to hold down the position to start 2025.

Ely Allen contributed to this post.

Commanders Draft Josh Conerly Jr. At No. 29

The Commanders have added further along the offensive line with their first-round pick. Washington has selected Oregon offensive tackle Josh Conerly Jr. at No. 29.

Following Oregon teammate Derrick Harmon off the board in the 20s, Conerly represents the second big swing the Commanders have taken at tackle this offseason. They traded for Laremy Tunsil on Day 1 of free agency; on Day 1 of the draft, they have likely landed their other tackle.

A Washington O-line investment came up this week, and Conerly had been rumored as a target. Rather than potentially replacing Nick Allegretti at guard, the Commanders appear prepared to displace Andrew Wylie at right tackle. Wylie is returning but doing so after accepting a pay cut. The team is prepared to slide Brandon Coleman to the right side, but the 2024 third-round pick — a 12-game LT starter as a rookie — now looks more likely to end up as the Commanders’ swing tackle. Wylie has a past as a guard, but his future in the nation’s capital suddenly looks foggy.

Conerly will head to D.C. after elevating his stock during the Ducks’ Big Ten debut. Working as Oregon’s left tackle, Conerly finished as a first-team all-conference pick for a team that advanced to the CFP quarterfinals. Tunsil has not played anywhere but left tackle since giving way to Branden Albert as a Dolphins rookie in 2016, when he played guard, so Conerly will need to shift to the right side. Most of the tackles chosen in last year’s first round flipped sides, and Conerly will have a full offseason program to develop at RT.

The Commanders had worked with a Day 2 pick and a stopgap (Cornelius Lucas) at LT last season, with a middling veteran (Wylie) on the right side. After Jayden Daniels dazzled as the runaway Offensive Rookie of the Year, the franchise is serious about upgrading their new star QB’s edge protection. Although Conerly has much to learn at the pro level, Daniels will be in line to be better protected in 2025.

Adam La Rose contributed to this post.

Lions Draft DT Tyleik Williams At No. 28

The Lions have continued a strong opening night along the defensive line. Detroit has selected Ohio State’s Tyleik Williams at No. 28.

Despite rostering D.J. Reader and extending Alim McNeill, the Lions were continually mentioned as a potential landing spot for defensive line prospects during the pre-draft process. The organization ultimately landed on Williams, who has garnered increased attention in the weeks leading up to the draft.

The Ohio State product is plenty familiar to Buckeyes fans, having appeared in 51 games across four seasons. He showed some top-end pass-rush ability as a freshman, finishing with five sacks. Since then, he’s only compiled 6.5 sacks, but he still did enough to draw the attention of NFL teams. Listed at six-foot-three and 330 pounds, there’s hope that Williams can command multiple blockers when he’s playing at his best.

There may not be an immediate role for Williams in Detroit, but the rookie will surely be counted on moving forward. In addition to Reader and McNeill, the Lions also signed Levi Onwuzurike to a one-year deal in March. That’s enough depth to temporarily bury the rookie on the depth chart.

Considering that depth, there was some speculation that the organization would pursue an Aidan Hutchinson wingman with their first-round selection. However, the organization also understood that Reader will turn 31 in July and McNeill is coming off an ACL tear. If either of those players see a drop off, the team already had a solution in their 2025 first-round pick.

Ben Levine contributed to this post.

Ravens Draft S Malaki Starks At No. 27

The first safety has come off the board. Georgia’s Malaki Starks has, to little surprise, been selected by the Ravens at No. 27 overall. A team whose biggest needs were in the trenches, Baltimore instead addresses the weakest part of their defense from the early part of the 2024 season.

Starks was praised during his time in Athens for his leadership ability, often taking responsibility for his teammates’ alignments as much as his own. Playing most of his time in the defensive backfield, Starks also found plenty of time in the box and nickel spots on the Bulldogs defense.

Though the Ravens brought him in to address a pass defense that was the second-worst in the league over the course of the 2024 season, Starks biggest strengths were in run defense, as he frequently allowed big plays on defense last year. Baltimore will hope that handing over green-dot duties to players like Kyle Hamilton and Roquan Smith will allow Starks to focus on his own assignments and let his instincts take over in coverage. The Ravens will hope to see the version of Starks from 2023 that limited big plays while logging 19 passes defensed and five interceptions in his first two seasons.

What’s interesting is that, after a Week 10 shootout with the Bengals, the Ravens pass defense became one of the best in the NFL, allowing just 172 passing yards per game and just five touchdowns to six interceptions over that time. The difference came when the team cut Eddie Jackson and permanently benched Marcus Williams, instead planting Hamilton back at safety alongside Ar’Darius Washington. With Washington recently signing his restricted free agent tender, both starters are set to return in 2025, so Starks fit in Baltimore becomes intriguing.

Because Starks showed a tendency to get beat over the top in 2024, when his eyes got caught in the offensive backfield or when he got mixed up by crossing intermediate routes, the team may continue using Hamilton and Washington in the defensive backfield, choosing to utilize Starks in the box or nickel role, though Marlon Humphrey has typically manned the slot lately. Regardless, Baltimore has an embarrassment of riches in the secondary, and they seem to be doing everything to make sure their pass defense doesn’t leak early in the year again in 2025.

Ely Allen contributed to this post.

Falcons Acquire No. 26, Draft James Pearce

The Falcons are the latest team to trade back into the first round. Atlanta has swapped picks 46 and 202, along with the team’s 2026 first-rounder, sending those to the Rams. In return, Los Angeles has sent Nos. 26 and 101 to Atlanta, per ESPN’s Field Yates.

[RELATED: Falcons Draft Jalon Walker At No. 15]

With the newly acquired 26th pick, the Falcons have drafted Tennessee edge rusher James Pearce. The team has thus double-dipped along the edge. The team already added Georgia linebacker/pass rusher Jalon Walker earlier this evening.

The Falcons were reportedly hot for pass rushers heading into tonight, with Pearce and Marshall’s Mike Green frequently listed as potential fits. Things obviously changed when Walker unexpectedly fell all the way to No. 15, but the organization was apparently so enamored with Pearce that it swung a significant trade to add its second pass rusher tonight.

This will go toward addressing one of the NFL’s longest-standing needs, as the Falcons have been unable to generate a consistent pass rush in many years. The team also parted with its top rush presence, 10-year starter Grady Jarrett, who became a cap casualty.

Pearce is certainly deserving of the investment. The Tennessee product broke out in 2023, finishing with 10 sacks and 15 tackles for loss en route to an All-SEC nod. He earned that honor again in 2024, finishing with another 7.5 sacks while establishing himself as a sure-thing first-round pick.

There have been some concerns about Pearce’s maturity heading into the draft, which probably explains why the prospect ended up landing late in the first round. The Falcons clearly believe their staff can get the most out of the prospect, and the team is likely hoping Walker may also coax some effort out of their second first-round pick. This trade comes a year after the Falcons attempted to move back into Round 1 for a pass rusher, after their shocking Michael Penix Jr. investment at No. 8, but could not swing a deal. Atlanta’s pass rush suffered, and Pearce will be expected to make significant contributions next season.

The Falcons finished with the second-lowest sack total in the NFL last year, so the team will be relying on both rookies to turn around their pass-rush fortunes. Leonard Floyd will be penciled in for one of those OLB spots, and the two rooks will temporarily compete with former second-round pick Arnold Ebiketie for the other starting spot. For what was once a weak position for the Falcons, the team has quickly turned their OLB corps into a strength.

Ben Levine contributed to this post.

Vikings Draft G Donovan Jackson At No. 24

The Vikings were busy adding up front in free agency, and that has continued via the draft. Minnesota has selected Ohio State guard Donovan Jackson at No. 24.

Only entering the draft with four picks, the Vikings nevertheless used their top 2025 draft asset to complete an interior O-line overhaul. After signing ex-Colts Ryan Kelly and Will Fries in free agency, Minnesota is adding Jackson, who played both guard and tackle at Ohio State last season. In the NFL, however, Jackson is expected to line up inside.

Set at tackle, in rostering Brian O’Neill and a recovering Christian Darrisaw, the Vikings changed up significantly inside. They traded benched guard Ed Ingram, a 2022 second-round pick, to the Texans. Dalton Risner, a two-year stopgap of sorts, has not re-signed. It should be expected Jackson will usurp Blake Brandel at one of the guard positions, while Fries mans the other spot after the Vikes won a free agent derby to land one of this year’s top available blockers.

Jackson gave the Vikings plenty of tape to study. He started at guard throughout the 2022 and ’23 seasons, at a program known for churning out O-line talent, and slid to left tackle after Josh Simmons suffered a patellar tendon tear last season. Despite this Buckeyes nucleus’ profile rising thanks to the late-season charge to the national title last season, Jackson was already on the NFL radar after earning first-team All-Big Ten acclaim in 2022 and ’23 as a guard. He repeated that feat last season, helping Ohio State (and transfer QB Will Howard) to a championship.

The Vikes having Jackson also should help them from a roster-building sense, as Darrisaw is on a top-five LT contract while O’Neill is attached to an upper-crust RT deal. The team also gave Fries top-10 guard money to commit to the Twin Cities, while Kelly is signed to a short-term deal at a mid-market center rate.

Adam La Rose contributed to this post.

Packers Draft WR Matthew Golden At No. 23

Many Packers’ fans have gotten their wish. The draft’s hosts have selected Texas receiver Matthew Golden at No. 23 overall. While the franchise has seen plenty of Day 2 receivers (Davante Adams, Randall Cobb, Jordy Nelson) in their recent history, Golden is the first Day 1 wide receiver for Green Bay since 2002, before he was even born.

Green Bay fielded trade calls, Ian Rapoport of NFL Network reports, and discussions were held with the Eagles, per Fox Sports’ Jordan Schultz. Instead, the Packers have chosen to break with recent tradition and take a first-round wideout.

After two promising seasons at Houston, Golden transferred to Austin and had a breakout season, logging 987 receiving yards and nine touchdowns. While he put forward a decent campaign for most of the year, he blew up over the last four games of the Longhorns’ season, averaging 102.8 yards over the stretch of the SEC Championship Game and Texas’ three playoff games. He only added to the intrigue in Indianapolis when he ran a 4.29 40-yard dash at the combine.

Golden joins an already youthful and diverse receiving corps in Green Bay. Currently manned by Jayden Reed, Christian Watson, Romeo Doubs, Dontayvion Wicks, Bo Melton, and Mecole Hardman, the Packers wide receivers group is going to have quite a bit of competition for roster spots come the end of August. Golden fits in the mold more of Reed, Melton, and Hardman, but he enters the NFL with a higher pedigree than any of those players did.

Regardless, Jordan Love has a new target in Green Bay. With Doubs, Watson, and Hardman all set to play through contract years in 2025, Golden gives the team an option if they’re unable to secure everyone they’d like to lock down long-term.

Ely Allen contributed to this post.

Chargers Draft Omarion Hampton At No. 22

The second running back has come off the board. North Carolina’s Omarion Hampton will go 22nd overall by the Chargers.

Hampton will join a new-look RB corps for the Chargers. Last year, the team navigated into the post-Austin Ekeler era. With Jim Harbaugh running the show, the Chargers relied on some of John Harbaugh’s former favorites in 2024.

J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards were plenty productive in their roles, especially the former. Dobbins returned from a lost 2023 campaign to have one of the best seasons of his career, finishing with 1,058 yards from scrimmage and nine touchdowns. However, both of the vets naturally missed time during the season, and the team was clearly valuing availability heading into the offseason.

That explains why the team opted for Najee Harris as their veteran addition. While the former Steelers RB never truly lived up to his draft billing, he’s about as reliable as you can get at the position. Harris topped 1,000 rushing yards in each of his four seasons in Pittsburgh, and he famously never missed a regular season game.

Now, the team can pair their veteran acquisition with a dynamic rookie RB. Hampton made a name for himself in three seasons at North Carolina. He had a breakout campaign in 2023 and followed that up with an even better 2024 season. Hampton finished last year with 2,033 yards from scrimmage and 17 touchdowns. He also hauled in a career-high 38 receptions, stats that bode well for his pass-catching prowess in the NFL.

The Chargers still have some worthy depth in Hassan Haskins and Kimani Vidal, so Hampton may not be handed an immediate role. However, the rookie possesses more upside than anyone on the depth chart, and there’s a good chance he’s leading the position in touches by the end of the 2025 campaign.

Ben Levine contributed to this post.

Steelers Draft DT Derrick Harmon At No. 21

The Steelers have neither added a quarterback at No. 21 nor traded down. Pittsburgh has instead selected Oregon defensive tackle Derrick Harmon.

As the shots of Shedeur Sanders created intrigue leading up to the pick, the Steelers went another way with their first-round choice. Harmon will bring a younger piece alongside Cam Heyward up front in Pittsburgh, which has tabled its much-publicized QB need.

A recent report also indicated the Steelers had placed a first-round grade on Jaxson Dart, but that same offering noted Harmon was a Round 1 target. Harmon relocated to Eugene after three years at Michigan State, using his Ducks stay to solidify first-round status. He had entered Thursday as a lock to go in Round 1, and the Steelers made him the fourth interior D-lineman off the board. The Steelers brought Harmon in on a “30” visit as well. Although he checked in as a lower-profile pick compared to Sanders, it is becoming clear the gap between Cam Ward and the other QB talents in this prospect pool is wide.

A three-star recruit, Harmon entered the transfer portal after the Spartans fired HC Mel Tucker. After briefly recommitting to Michigan State, he reentered and chose Oregon. With the Ducks, Harmon put up career-best numbers by registering five sacks, 11 tackles for loss and two forced fumbles. The 311-pounder’s quickness and power make him a menace inside the tackles, but he also showed the ability to line up outside. This could give the Steelers options, as Heyward prepares to play an age-36 season after securing an extension last year.

The Steelers have been connected to Dart as recently as today, but they came into the draft not planning to use a first-round pick on a quarterback. They join the Browns, Giants and Saints to have punted on a QB need in Round 1, creating an interesting situation to close out the night. The Steelers are still courting Aaron Rodgers, after nearly two months, and could circle back to Kirk Cousins. Omar Khan and Co. wanted to make a QB investment in this draft or in 2026. The Steelers traded their second-round pick for D.K. Metcalf, however, limiting their options after the Harmon move.

Broncos Draft CB Jahdae Barron At No. 20

After making calls related to moves up and down the board, the Broncos wound up staying put at No. 20. Instead of adding a skill-position prospect at that spot, Denver has selected Texas cornerback Jahdae Barron.

Barron was used all over the secondary in Austin, although he’s probably destined to be a cornerback in the NFL. Some pundits believe the prospect was the second-best CB (behind Travis Hunter) in this year’s draft, and he reinforced that sentiment with a strong showing during the 2024 campaign.

Despite dealing with a nagging ankle injury, Barron still appeared in all 16 games for Texas last season. He finished the year with five interceptions and 11 interceptions, earning him the Jim Thorpe Award, awarded to the top defensive back in college football. The Broncos had already invested in their secondary in free agency, signing Talanoa Hufanga. They will now pair Barron with a strong DB corps.

At 5-foot-11 and 200 pounds, there’s a chance the rookie temporarily takes over as a nickelback while he builds up some NFL strength. The Broncos still have Patrick Surtain and Riley Moss on the outside, with Ja’Quan McMillian providing depth at any of the CB spots. With all those options, the Broncos could take advantage of the rookie’s versatility to assure he’s constantly on the field. Either way, Barron should see a significant role in 2025.

There was some speculation that the Broncos could look to add to their offense with this pick. After hitting on their Bo Nix selection, settling on their OL depth, and adding TE Evan Engram in free agency, the team really only had holes at running back and wide receiver. Instead, the front office decided to add to their defense, and they added one of the most versatile defensive backs in the draft. Barring a late reentry into the first round, the Broncos will have their Day 2 picks to help round out Nix’s weaponry cadre.

Ben Levine contributed to this report.