NFL free agency is here, with the legal tampering window opening Monday at noon ET and the new league year commencing Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET.
Who are the best players available for your team to sign? We’re tracking all of them right here. We will update this story throughout free agency, removing players who agree to deals and adding some who were released.
The number preceding a player’s name shows where he landed in our final rankings. Players released March 5 or later will not have a ranking. You can see the status of all of the Top 150 free agents here. Ages (in parentheses) are as of Sept. 9, the scheduled date of the 2026 season opener. For more details on our methodology, scroll to the bottom of the page.
1. Trey Hendrickson, Edge, Bengals (31)Contract projection: 3 years, $99 million
Hendrickson has been one of the most productive pass rushers in the NFL over the past five seasons. He has the third-most sacks in the league since 2020 with 74.5, and he played in only seven games last season due to a core-muscle injury that required surgery. Hendrickson plays with a relentless, urgent motor that puts crushing pressure on a tackle’s outside shoulder. He turns the corner and finishes with a straight-line burst, always hunting for the ball. He has 15 career forced fumbles.
Hendrickson is dominant with his hands to swipe past a tackle’s strike. He also features numerous changeups off his wide moves, including lethal speed-to-power that takes advantage of a tackle’s momentum. Hendrickson is a capable edge setter in the run game, but he tops this list primarily because of his pass-rush production.
3. Devin Lloyd, LB, Jaguars (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $76 million
A 2022 first-round pick, Lloyd put his game fully together in 2025 as one of the best off-ball linebackers in the league. He is an explosive playmaker with a well-rounded skill set. Lloyd is elite in coverage, physical in the run game and disruptive as a blitzer. He has sideline-to-sideline speed.
Lloyd showed off his ball skills in 2025, finishing with five interceptions, tied for second-most in the league. He can take on climbing guards as a run defender and win those matchups. He also had a career-high 28 pressures and finished third in pressure rate among off-ball linebackers.
4. Daniel Jones, QB, Colts (29)Contract projection: 4 years, $168 million
The Colts placed the transition tag on Jones ahead of the March 3 deadline. He will be due $37.8 million if he plays 2026 on the transition tag. He remains free to negotiate and sign an offer sheet with any team. The Colts would then have the right to match that offer sheet. Since Jones is still technically available, we will be keeping him in our rankings. In all likelihood, though, he will be returning to Indianapolis. The Colts have until July 15 to sign Jones to a long-term extension.
Jones signed a one-year, $14 million deal with the Colts last offseason and won the starting job over Anthony Richardson Sr. in training camp. He got off to an incredible start under coach and play caller Shane Steichen in 2025, leading one of the top offenses in football over the first half of the year. In Week 12, Jones fractured his left fibula. He played through the injury before tearing his right Achilles tendon in Week 14 and missing the rest of the season. Jones has said he expects to be ready for training camp in 2026.
The most obvious comparison here is Kirk Cousins, who tore his Achilles in October 2023, hit free agency and signed a four-year, $180 million contract with the Falcons. In 2024, Cousins threw 16 interceptions in 14 games and got benched in December for rookie Michael Penix Jr. Jones is seven years younger than Cousins was then. Will the Cousins experience change Jones’ market?
Jones is accurate and mobile. He played with excellent timing and rhythm within Steichen’s offense. He has the arm strength to push the ball deep, and he gives his playmakers a chance when he identifies one-on-one matchups downfield. Jones ranked seventh in EPA per dropback before his injury.
NR. Taylor Decker, T, Lions (33)Contract projection: 1 year, $21 million
Decker had two years remaining on his deal with the Lions, but he announced on Instagram that he and the team could not find “common ground” in negotiations. Upon his release, Decker will become the best left tackle in a very thin class. He turns 33 in August, and he battled right shoulder issues this past season that limited him to 14 starts. After considering retirement, he said in February he would play another season.
When he was on the field, Decker was a complete player. He has firm hands and consistent technique as a pass protector. He shows a strong base and is rarely off-balance. There is very little wasted movement in his lower half in pass protection, and he has the anticipation to shut down rush lanes. Decker can also play in space. He is an excellent starting option for any team seeking a stopgap left tackle, as long as the medical evaluations check out.
11. Odafe Oweh, Edge, Chargers (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $92 million
Oweh, a 2021 first-round pick, entered 2025 with the Ravens, playing on his fifth-year option. He did not have a sack through five games. Ahead of a Week 6 matchup with the Dolphins, the Chargers traded for Oweh. He had a sack in his Chargers debut and finished the regular season with 7.5. He added three sacks in the Chargers’ playoff loss to the Patriots. He benefited from playing in defensive coordinator Jesse Minter’s scheme alongside rushers Khalil Mack and Tuli Tuipulotu.
Oweh is an ascending player who started to show more variety in his pass-rush arsenal after joining the Chargers, including an inside spin move that is a changeup off his cross-chop to the edge. The change-of-scenery created a robust market for Oweh, as his traits coalesced into consistent production.
12. Rasheed Walker, T, Packers (26)Contract projection: 4 years, $88 million
Walker is an athletic big man with good movement skills. He has quick lateral feet to shut down wide angles and steer rushers wide. His active hands in pass protection make up for a less-than-ideal anchor. He relies on his upper-body strength in this phase. Walker fires off the ball in the run game and is a powerful player when he gets his momentum moving forward. A seventh-round pick in 2022, Walker has made 48 starts at left tackle over the past three seasons. He is the best tackle in this year’s free-agent class.
14. Jermaine Eluemunor, T, Giants (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $42 million
Eluemunor had a career season in 2025, finishing with a 98 percent pass blocking efficiency, tied for sixth among all tackles. He is undersized with short arms, but his core strength is his superpower. He can sink onto his heels and withstand bull rushes in pass protection. He can drive run defenders laterally with abdominal torque. He is a crafty run blocker who uses a one-arm strike to stun defenders and move them out of gaps. He has bowling-ball energy as a run blocker. Eluemunor is an unorthodox but very effective player.
17. Braden Smith, T, Colts (30)Contract projection: 3 years, $53.5 million
Smith has been the Colts’ starting right tackle since he was drafted in the second round in 2018. He is a short-armed tackle who wins in pass protection as a polished technician. Smith plays with outstanding posture, balance and leverage. He smothers momentum once he gets his hands on a rusher and has impressive upper-body strength. Smith has some limitations as a run blocker, lacking consistency when working downhill. But he is a solid mover who can be effective on outside-zone runs.
18. Isaac Seumalo, G, Steelers (32)Contract projection: 2 years, $28 million
Seumalo has started at left and right guard in his career. He has been the Steelers’ starting left guard the past three seasons after starting at right guard for the Eagles in 2022. Seumalo is a dense, compact, powerful guard with a sturdy base and heavy hands. He has experienced eyes and instincts to identify blitzes, stunts and free runners. He is a smooth short-area mover who is effective as a puller.
19. Kevin Byard, S, Bears (33)Contract projection: 2 years, $25 million
Byard is one of the premier ball hawks in the NFL. He led the league in interceptions this past season with seven. No player has more interceptions than Byard since he joined the league in 2018. He is an experienced free safety with good eyes, instincts, reactions and ball skills in the deep part of the field. He is able to read the quarterback’s eyes without getting out of position.
Byard is at his best playing deep, but he can still run the alley and hit when necessary, and he can shoot gaps when he is rotated into the box. Byard is functional in space, and he is a reliable last line of defense.
21. Jauan Jennings, WR, 49ers (29)Contract projection: 3 years, $42 million
Jennings is a big, physical receiver who can win through contact. He was a red zone weapon in 2025, finishing with seven touchdowns inside the 20, tied for the third-most in the NFL. Jennings is an asset as a blocker in the run game, the best blocking receiver in this free-agent class. Jennings plays with urgency and edge, and he is explosive in his releases off the line of scrimmage.

Riq Woolen is one of several players from the Super Bowl-champion Seahawks who are free agents. (Bob Donnan / Imagn Images)
24. Riq Woolen, CB, Seahawks (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $76 million
Woolen is one of several pending free agents from the Seahawks’ Super Bowl defense. He has a rare combination of size and speed at outside corner. He has the size to challenge receivers at the line of scrimmage and the speed to run with anybody on the field. Woolen is explosive when closing on routes, especially across the field or to the flat.
He can get caught with his eyes on the backfield, which, at times, makes him late to trigger on routes. But he can recover because he is so fast and explosive. Woolen has 30 penalties since he was drafted in 2022, the most in the league in that span among DBs. He had nine penalties in 2025, including the playoffs.
26. Boye Mafe, Edge, Seahawks (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $73 million
Mafe was a rotational piece on Seattle’s loaded Super Bowl defensive front in 2025. He played 50 percent of the defense’s snaps under coach Mike Macdonald, but he has upside in more of a full-time starter role. Mafe is an elite athlete with a high motor and closing speed in space. He is also disruptive against the run. He needs to refine his pass-rushing moves to take the next step in his career.
28. Romeo Doubs, WR, Packers (26)Contract projection: 4 years, $61 million
Doubs understands leverage and spacing, and he has great feel and instincts on possession routes like slants, shallow digs and hitches. He has sturdy hands through contact, especially in the short area of the field. Doubs was almost exclusively an outside receiver for coach Matt LaFleur in Green Bay, but he has the route running and skills to play more inside as a power slot. Doubs is particularly deceptive on outs, creating regular separation at the top of these routes. He is also a very willing blocker.
29. Dallas Goedert, TE, Eagles (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $25.5 million
Goedert is a big target in the passing game over the middle and down the seam. He has good instincts to create lanes for the quarterback, especially against zone coverage. He is entering his age-31 season, but he is still a smooth athlete. He has more linear athleticism than short-area burst.
Goedert is not overly sudden coming out of breaks. He is functional enough as a blocker. He has the size and length to match up with edge rushers, though this is not necessarily a strength of his game. He can lose off the ball and struggles to sustain blocks at times.
32. Rashid Shaheed, WR, Seahawks (28)Contract projection: 3 years, $39 million
Seattle general manager John Schneider traded for Shaheed at the deadline, sending fourth- and fifth-round picks to New Orleans, and it turned out to be one of the best personnel moves of the season. Shaheed made several huge plays for the Seahawks down the stretch of the regular season and into the postseason. He is one of the league’s most electric returners. He had a punt-return touchdown in a key Week 16 overtime win over the Rams. He had a game-opening kick-return touchdown in the divisional round against the 49ers. And he had a 51-yard reception in the conference championship game against the Rams.
Shaheed is a true burner who commands attention in the deep part of the field. His speed creates air in the coverage and opportunities for his teammates. He is not always friendly to the quarterback on non-deep routes, and he needs to do a better job working back to the ball.
34. David Edwards, G, Bills (29)Contract projection: 3 years, $50 million
Edwards was the Bills’ starting left guard in 2025. That is where he has the most NFL experience, though he did play some right guard as a rookie with the Rams in 2019. A college tackle, Edwards is a tall, long guard who leverages his length well to get early hands on rushers, corral penetrating run defenders and bench press run defenders out of gaps. Edwards is a little tight in his lower half, which limits his foot quickness and leads to some losses against twitchier interior players. He shows good timing on combo blocks and is effective climbing to the second level in the run game.
37. Joey Bosa, Edge, Bills (31)Contract projection: 1 year, $11.5 million
After nine seasons with the Chargers, Bosa signed a one-year deal with the Bills last offseason, and he produced his best single-season pressure rate since 2022. Bosa remains explosive off the ball, and he creates consistent commotion as a rusher and run defender. He still has some of the best pass-rush hands in the game.
Bosa is a slippery run defender who can penetrate, but he missed a third of his tackle attempts this past season. He does not separate late in rushes like he used to, and he does not have quite the same burst after dealing with numerous injuries in his career. But he can contribute as a No. 2 rusher.
38. Calvin Austin III, WR, Steelers (27)Contract projection: 3 years, $33 million
Austin is a small receiver with elite speed, quickness and explosiveness. Despite his size, Austin can play on the outside because of his speed and release package. He has sudden change of direction in his releases and route running. Austin is dangerous after the catch, and he can create on engineered touches. He did not get enough of those in coordinator Arthur Smith’s offense. Austin has a ton of upside in an offensive system that uses him more creatively.
39. Elijah Wilkinson, T, Falcons (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $16 million
Wilkinson started 17 games at right tackle after starter Kaleb McGary suffered a season-ending injury in training camp. He is not a plus athlete, but he makes up for it with timing and instincts. His hand usage is very consistent. He times his initial punch well to get into the chest of rushers and establish extension.
Wilkinson is very calm in pass protection. He trusts his hands, allowing him to recover mid-rep when his movement skills let him down. He is a better pass protector than run blocker. Wilkinson should be viewed as a functional, capable starter at right tackle.
40. Kyler Murray, QB, Cardinals (29)Contract projection: 1 year, $1.3 million
The Cardinals informed Murray they will be releasing him on March 11, the first day of the new league year. Murray, after seven years in Arizona, will be looking for a change of scenery. His traits are worth a shot in a starting competition for 2026.
Murray is a gifted scrambler and off-script playmaker. He has elite arm strength, though he can spray some throws, especially when driving the ball to the sideline on intermediate routes. Murray is a small quarterback, and his stature impacts how effectively he operates from the pocket and sees the middle of the field. He does not play with great anticipation, which leads to windows closing. He relies on his arm strength to bail him out in these situations, but that is a tough way to live in the NFL. Murray has the arm talent to change speeds and trajectories on his throws. He is very capable of throwing with touch when the situation calls for it. A more structured offense could help Murray’s timing and rhythm issues. However, you do not want to dampen his off-script creativity, which is the best part of his game. This is a tough balance.
Murray is still due $36.8 million in guaranteed money from the Cardinals. Any salary he makes from his next team would offset that $36.8 million. So we are projecting a minimum contract for Murray.
43. K’Lavon Chaisson, Edge, Patriots (27)Contract projection: 3 years, $48 million
Chaisson signed a cheap one-year deal with the Patriots last season, and he had a career year during New England’s run to the Super Bowl. He set career highs in sacks (7.5) and pressures (54), then added three sacks and 20 pressures in four playoff games. His previous career high in pressures was 29. He is a smaller speed rusher with explosiveness and twitch. He is not effective or willing as a run defender. As a result, he is more of a known-passing-down player than an every-down edge defender.
44. Nahshon Wright, CB, Bears (27)Contract projection: 3 years, $40.5 million
Wright is an extremely tall corner at over 6-4. His five interceptions were tied for second-most in the league last season. Wright excels from an off alignment. He is patient, has good eyes and uses his big frame to slow receivers’ momentum. He turns to find the ball down the field and has receiver-like ball skills in 50-50 situations.
Wright is not a sudden athlete and does not have the burst to stop, plant and accelerate consistently against sharp route runners. He can lag behind on in-breaking routes and give up separation on those reps. Despite his size, Wright is not as good from press alignments, where his change-of-direction skills can get exposed. He is solid in run support and can shed pullers and set an edge.
46. Chig Okonkwo, TE, Titans (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $46 million
Okonkwo is very undersized for the position, but he has elite speed and athleticism. He has real yards-after-the-catch ability and contact balance, and he is a vertical threat in the passing game. Okonkwo shows off light, quick feet in and out of his breaks as a route runner. He is a move tight end. His size precludes him from impacting the game as an inline blocker. He is more effective when aligned in the backfield as a fullback, when he can function as a lead blocker and fit up linebackers with some momentum.
48. David Onyemata, IDL, Falcons (33)Contract projection: 1 year, $9.5 million
Onyemata turned 33 in November, but he looks like a much younger player on film. He has a mean, nasty, physical and violent play style. He is a you-better-come-ready kind of interior defender. He can play out of multiple alignments, from a 0 technique over the center out to a 4i technique on the inside shoulder of the tackle. Onyemata is a very solid all-around interior lineman. He is impactful as a penetrator in the run game and rushes with a high motor.
50. Jalen Thompson, S, Cardinals (28)Contract projection: 4 years, $61 million
Thompson is a rangy free safety with some man coverage ability against running backs, tight ends and receivers. He has the eyes and burst to bait quarterbacks into throws and make plays on the ball. He has not had an interception since 2023, and you would love more recent ball production out of a true centerfield safety. But he is capable of impacting the game in this way. He had eight interceptions from 2021 to ‘23.
51. Rico Dowdle, RB, Panthers (28)Contract projection: 2 years, $14 million
Dowdle is a big, physical, decisive runner who is urgent upfield with short-area burst. He is explosive through holes and threatening to the edge, both on designed rushes and bounces. Dowdle regularly falls forward through tackles, especially amid congestion at the line of scrimmage. He runs through arm tackles and maintains leg drive through contact. He lacks upper-level long speed in the open field.
52. Travis Kelce, TE, Chiefs (36)Contract projection: 1 year, $10 million
Kelce ranked 24th in yards per route among tight ends with at least 20 targets last season. He is no longer the kind of player who can carry a passing offense as a No. 1 option, but he could still be a productive complementary move tight end. He remains very savvy in short areas, with a rare sense of when to turn back for the ball against off and zone coverages. He takes direct angles after the catch to eat up yardage.
Kelce tied for the lead among tight ends with eight drops, a single-season career worst. He is not as deceptive at the top of routes as he once was. He is not an advantage player as a run blocker, and he is a liability as a chipper in pass protection.
53. Keenan Allen, WR, Chargers (34)Contract projection: 1 year, $9 million
The Chargers and Allen reunited in August 2025, and Allen had a fine season. His rapport with quarterback Justin Herbert resumed immediately. Allen led the NFL with 29 conversion receptions on third down. His spatial awareness and route running make him extremely productive in these clutch moments. Even when defenses know the ball is going to Allen, he can win. And that part of his game will continue to age well. Allen can still play. That much is clear.
54. Jadeveon Clowney, Edge, Cowboys (33)Contract projection: 1 year, $12 million
Clowney had a 19.1 percent pressure rate in 2025, which ranked fourth among all players with at least 200 pass-rush snaps. He is still a physically dominant player as a pass rusher and run defender. Clowney has played for six teams in the past seven seasons. He remains a viable plug-and-play starter on the edge for any defense looking for a one-year No. 2.
55. Aaron Rodgers, QB, Steelers (42)Contract projection: 1 year, $12.5 million
Rodgers quarterbacked the Steelers to a 10-7 finish and a playoff berth. He still has the arm strength and talent to make most NFL throws. What is evident is that Rodgers wants to get the ball out quickly and avoid hits. He had the lowest time-to-throw in the NFL at 2.52 seconds. He was hit on 10.8 percent of his dropbacks, the fifth-lowest rate in the league.
If there is even a hint of pressure, Rodgers moves to his checkdown. His 119 attempts to running backs ranked second among all quarterbacks. He is skittish in the pocket at this stage of his career. Quick game, checkdowns and go balls make up the bulk of how he wants to play.
57. Quay Walker, LB, Packers (26)Contract projection: 2 years, $17 million
A first-round pick in 2022, Walker has premium athletic traits, with the speed to carry vertical routes in coverage, particularly as a middle-of-the-field runner in Cover 2. He has good instincts and reactions as an underneath zone defender when he can drive on checkdowns. Overall, though, Walker has not yet lived up to his draft slot.
He is sometimes late to diagnose against the run, which allows interior offensive linemen to climb up to him at the second level. He can get swallowed up as a blitzer — he ranked 35th in pass-rush efficiency among off-ball linebackers with at least 50 pass-rush snaps. The potential is there. When Walker diagnoses against the run and triggers, he can fire downhill and be disruptive in that phase.
59. Stefon Diggs, WR, Patriots (32)Contract projection: 1 year, $14 million
Diggs signed a three-year, $63.5 million deal with the Patriots last offseason. He was coming off a torn ACL he suffered in 2024. He put together a quality season, emerging as a security blanket for Drake Maye as New England made a run to the Super Bowl, but was released this month. Diggs played fewer than 55 percent of the offensive snaps but was highly efficient. He finished seventh in yards per route run among receivers with at least 50 targets. Diggs is a polished route runner. He is very capable as a possession receiver underneath, winning with his change-of-direction skills. Diggs mixes his speeds well to create separation. He has the awareness to find soft spots against zone coverage and open spaces in scramble drills. He split his time with New England between the outside and the slot. Diggs was getting open in the Super Bowl. Amid heavy pressure, Maye missed him at least three times.
Diggs faces felony charges of strangulation or suffocation stemming from a December incident involving his private chef. He is scheduled to appear in court April 1 after his initial arraignment was postponed so he could play in the Super Bowl.
60. Deebo Samuel Sr., WR, Commanders (30)Contract projection: 1 year, $12.5 million
Samuel is a dangerous ball carrier and yards-after-the-catch player who can provide a lift on shallow crossers, screens, jet sweeps and handoffs. He is savvy against zone coverage, with a sense for finding vacated holes in the middle of the field. He is not a consistent separator against tight coverage. He is not as explosive as he once was, and he is coming off his worst scrimmage yards output since 2020. Samuel is limited as a true receiver, but he can be productive in the right offense with the right play caller.
61. Joel Bitonio, G, Browns (34)Contract projection: 1 year, $6.5 million
Bitonio has been a mainstay at left guard for the Browns for over a decade. He has missed just two starts in the past five years. He turns 35 in October, and he is mulling retirement. His age understandably shows up in his movement skills at times. But he still has above-average play strength, and he has well-rounded functionality as a run blocker and pass protector. He is not at the top of his position anymore, but he could elevate an offensive line with good pieces around him.
62. Kevin Zeitler, G, Titans (36)Contract projection: 1 year, $5 million
Zeitler continues to be a high-quality, reliable, effective, consistent run blocker, as he has been throughout his career. He turns 36 in March, and as such, he is limited as a mover. He will allow some breakdowns in pass protection, and he had a quad injury in the Titans’ season finale. If he continues playing, Zeitler remains a good option for a team searching for run-blocking juice.
63. Jaquan Brisker, S, Bears (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $42 million
Brisker is a solid blitzer and run defender from depth. His 12 pressures ranked seventh among safeties in 2025. He will be attractive for defenses that major in two-high pre-snap shells. He can play in the deep part of the field, and he has the burst to impact the run game from an out-of-the-box alignment.
Brisker is not a physically imposing run defender when you get a hat on him. He lacks some pop against bigger blockers, and there was some up-and-down tackling on film. Offenses can also pick on Brisker in coverage at times by flooding zones and running rub routes.
64. Da’Shawn Hand, IDL, Chargers (30)Contract projection: 2 years, $15 million
Hand signed a one-year, $2.75 million contract with the Chargers in free agency last offseason. He was their most consistent interior run defender, and he considerably outperformed this deal. Hand is more of a pocket pusher as a pass rusher, but he can withstand double-teams as a run defender. He should be an attractive piece for schemes that play with light boxes and, therefore, require stout, physical interior defensive linemen.
65. Cameron Jordan, Edge, Saints (37)Contract projection: 1 year, $8 million
Jordan is still a disruptive and productive run defender on the edge. Last season, he posted his best pressure rate (11.2 percent) since 2020 and highest sack total (10.5) since 2021. He clearly still has gas in the tank, but he turns 37 in July, and retirement could be on the table.
66. Nick Cross, S, Colts (24)Contract projection: 3 years, $21 million
Cross is a box safety who can defend the run and blitz. He ranked third among safeties with 16 pressures last season. He also led all free-agent safeties in splash plays with 30. He is functional as a deep-half and post safety. He has decent ball skills. But Cross is less instinctive as a coverage player than as a run defender and blitzer.
67. Fred Johnson, T, Eagles (29)Contract projection: 3 years, $18 million
Johnson started eight games last season at right tackle in place of Lane Johnson, who landed on IR with a Lisfranc injury. Fred Johnson is a physical run blocker who creates movement with relentless leg drive. He plays with good pad level despite being 6-7, sinking his hips to lower his center of gravity. Sometimes that can lead to him leaning over his toes. Johnson uses long strides in his pass protection sets to take wide angles away from rushers. He could get a chance to start somewhere full-time in 2026.
68. Rachaad White, RB, Buccaneers (27)Contract projection: 2 years, $11 million
White is a tall, upright runner with quick feet. He is more finesse than physicality as a runner. He is patient, but that patience is a blessing and a curse. Sometimes he finds a crease. Sometimes he is not urgent enough and allows defenders into the play. He is a smooth athlete for his size.
70. Kirk Cousins, QB, Falcons (38)Contract projection: 1 year, $1.3 million
The Falcons informed Cousins they will release him before his roster bonus is due March 13. Cousins started the Falcons’ final seven games after Michael Penix Jr. suffered a season-ending torn ACL. During this stretch, Cousins showed he is still a viable veteran bridge option for QB-needy teams.
At this stage of his career, Cousins is a limited athlete, both when escaping the pocket and on designed quarterback movement. But he is very willing to stand in the pocket and deliver through hits, including when working to the backside of route concepts. He showed some up-and-down accuracy on film, but he is still seeing the field well and throwing with anticipation and zip to intermediate areas. Cousins is a capable point guard. He can distribute effectively in the right offensive infrastructure. He will need a solid offensive line and good weapons around him.
Cousins is due $10 million in guaranteed money from the Falcons in 2026. That is effectively a bridge-QB salary. We will project a veteran minimum contract for Cousins, as that money will offset the $10 million guaranteed.
71. Noah Fant, TE, Bengals (28)Contract projection: 2 years, $17 million
Fant is a long, fast athlete who can push vertically in the passing game. His ability down the field is the best part of his game. He lacks power as a run blocker. He is a little stiff on shorter routes coming in and out of his breaks. He has alignment versatility inline, in the slot or outside.
74. Luke Fortner, C, Saints (28)Contract projection: 3 years, $18 million
The Saints traded for Fortner in August. He got a chance to start after Erik McCoy went down with a season-ending injury and performed well. He is a natural pass protector with sound eyes and instincts. He leverages his length well and can anchor down when he needs to. He also pulls the chair on occasion to take advantage of overaggressive rushers. Fortner is not a physically imposing run blocker, but he gets the job done primarily with athleticism. He can move laterally, climb to the second level, pull and play in space.
76. David Njoku, TE, Browns (30)Contract projection: 1 year, $9.5 million
Njoku is an explosive height-weight-speed athlete, particularly after the catch. He has contested-catch ability down the field. He has tremendous feet in and out of breaks. Njoku lost touches and snaps to rookie Harold Fannin Jr. over the second half of the season, which led to a more middling stat line. Njoku should be a better blocker, given his frame. He shows flashes in this phase but is not nearly consistent enough.
77. Wyatt Teller, G, Browns (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $20 million
Teller was an All-Pro at right guard with the Browns in 2020 and 2021. He is no longer that level of player, but he is still good enough to start somewhere in 2026. Teller has battled some injuries in recent years. His 2025 season ended because of a calf injury. He also had a knee injury in 2024. He was limited to 13 games in both seasons. Teller remains an effective, physical mauler in the run game. He was more up and down in pass protection in 2025.
78. Dylan Parham, G, Raiders (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $36 million
Parham has quick feet to mirror rushers and get himself out of compromised positions as a pass protector. He lacks the pad level and power to generate consistent movement in the run game. The pad level issues also show up in pass protection against bull rushes. He loses balance and leverage too often, and he is susceptible on T-E stunts. He lacks some feel and awareness in these situations.
79. Al-Quadin Muhammad, Edge, Lions (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $18 million
Muhammad set a career high with 11 sacks in 2025. He is undersized and does not have premium athletic traits for the position, but he has a real knack for how to get to the quarterback. He stays active through contact, particularly with his hands, to separate late in reps. He was one of the most efficient pass rushers in football last season, finishing 14th in pressure rate among all players with at least 250 pass-rush snaps. He projects as a high-level situational third edge rusher.
81. Malcolm Koonce, Edge, Raiders (28)Contract projection: 2 years, $22 million
Koonce is a disruptive pass rusher who uses unorthodox hesitation moves. He puts rushers to sleep and then explodes. He will flash as a run defender, but he is not consistent enough in this phase to be a true above-average starter. He projects best as a situational rusher who can come on for obvious passing downs.
82. Kaden Elliss, LB, Falcons (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $19 million
Elliss is a solid, all-around off-ball linebacker with well-rounded skills. He has good size and is a good athlete. The best part of his game is his feel as a zone dropper in coverage. Elliss had a career-high six passes defended in 2025, and he has 12 over the past three seasons with Atlanta.
83. Alohi Gilman, S, Ravens (28)Contract projection: 3 years, $28 million
The Ravens acquired Gilman in the October trade that sent Odafe Oweh to the Chargers. Gilman is a reliable deep-field safety who has elite instincts. As an undersized player, he relies on those instincts to be starting caliber. Gilman’s football IQ allows him to anticipate plays and route combinations. He is always on the hunt for the football, ripping at it when making tackles down the field. He has five forced fumbles in his career.
85. Alijah Vera-Tucker, G, Jets (27)Contract projection: 1 year, $3 million
Vera-Tucker was on pace to be very high in these rankings after the 2024 season. But he tore his triceps before the start of the 2025 regular season and missed the entire year. He has now suffered three season-ending injuries in five years in the NFL. He tore the triceps on his other arm in 2022 and was limited to five games. He tore his Achilles in 2023 and was limited to seven games.
The tape is really good when he is on the field. Vera-Tucker is super athletic and has excellent hands in pass protection. But can teams trust him to stay healthy? Vera-Tucker is worth a flier, but a contingency plan is needed.
87. Nakobe Dean, LB, Eagles (25)Contract projection: 4 years, $40 million
Dean is one of the best blitzing linebackers in the league, and he appears to be shot out of a cannon on those reps. He is a matchup advantage against running backs as a pass rusher, with a 35.7 percent pressure rate on 28 pass-rushing snaps. Dean is small and a limited athlete. His size prevents him from being an impactful run defender. He relies on instinct and anticipation as a zone-coverage defender.
88. Darren Waller, TE, Dolphins (33)Contract projection: 1 year, $7 million
Waller came out of retirement and played nine games for the Dolphins last season after being traded there from the Giants. He does not have quite the same long speed as he used to, but he is still an effective pass catcher. He remains a ball winner in contested-catch situations. Waller ranked seventh in yards per route last season among tight ends with at least 100 routes.
89. Logan Hall, IDL, Buccaneers (26)Contract projection: 3 years, $25 million
Hall is a tall interior defensive lineman with workable tools, athleticism and explosiveness. His flashes as a run defender and pass rusher are very intriguing, but he plays a little out of control at times. He can look clumsy and needs more refinement in all phases, but there is a ton of upside with the traits. Hall had a career-high 32 pressures in 2025.
90. Reed Blankenship, S, Eagles (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $42 million
Blankenship had seven interceptions over two seasons from 2023 to ‘24, and he won a Super Bowl as a starting safety in 2024. But he took a step back in a contract year in 2025. His eyes were inconsistent, and he lacked agility in tighter coverage. Part of that could have been related to the unsettled spot next to him at safety. Rookie second-round pick Andrew Mukuba fractured his ankle in Week 12 and missed the rest of the season. The Eagles tried multiple starters next to Blankenship, including Sydney Brown and Marcus Epps.
92. Joe Flacco, QB, Bengals (41)Contract projection: 1 year, $6.25 million
Flacco was traded from the Browns to the Bengals ahead of Week 6 to replace Jake Browning, who had replaced the injured Joe Burrow. In six starts from Week 6 to Week 12, Flacco completed 61.6 percent of his passes for 1,636 yards, 13 touchdowns and four interceptions. He was fifth in the league in passing yards over that span and ranked 15th in EPA per dropback. Flacco kept the Bengals competitive despite their horrific defense.
With Flacco starting, the Bengals beat the Steelers and suffered one-score losses to the Bears and Patriots. All three of those were playoff teams. Flacco’s mobility is a limiting factor at this stage of his career. But his arm is still live, and he can drive the ball to intermediate and deep areas of the field. He can throw with touch and play with timing in quick game. Flacco showed enough to be a bridge option in 2026.
93. Tony Jefferson, S, Chargers (34)Contract projection: 2 years, $10 million
Jefferson was working as a scouting intern in the Ravens’ personnel department in 2023. He came out of retirement in 2024. In 2025, he rediscovered his pre-retirement form, setting a career high with four interceptions. He uses instincts and awareness to be around the ball frequently, and he has a quick trigger to fire downhill on screens and underneath throws.
94. Jonah Williams, T, Cardinals (28)Contract projection: 1 year, $7 million
Williams signed a two-year, $30 million deal with the Cardinals in 2024. He played in just 15 games over two seasons in Arizona, battling a knee injury in 2024 and a shoulder injury in 2025. Williams is pretty savvy as a pass protector, though jumpy feet can get him out of position at times. He is not very violent at contact, and he loses the initial hand-fighting battle too often. Functional tackle play is hard to find in the NFL, and teams could do a lot worse than Williams as a starting right tackle — if he can stay on the field.
NR. Geno Smith, QB, Raiders (35)Contract projection: 1 year, $1.3 million
The Raiders traded for Smith last offseason before signing him to a two-year extension with $58.5 million guaranteed. The Raiders fired coach Pete Carroll after one season, and they are now moving on from Smith as Klint Kubiak takes over the head job.
The book is out on how to defend Smith, and that makes him a limited option as a starter. He has difficulty reading out two-high coverages, particularly the disguised looks that have become very popular in recent seasons. Against two-high looks — quarters, Cover 2, Cover 6 and 2-man — in 2025, Smith ranked last among 33 qualified quarterbacks in EPA per dropback, according to TruMedia. For reference, he averaged -0.35 EPA per dropback. The quarterback in 32nd, the Vikings’ J.J. McCarthy, averaged -0.13. Against one-high looks — Cover 1 man and Cover 3 zone — Smith is more capable because he can identify his one-on-one matchups on the outside and push the ball downfield. He had a positive EPA per dropback against these coverages.
Smith is due $18.5 million in guaranteed money from the Raiders in 2026. Any money he signs for in 2026 will offset that guaranteed money. So we are projecting a veteran-minimum deal.
95. Jamaree Salyer, T, Chargers (26)Contract projection: 2 years, $8 million
Multiple regimes in Los Angeles tried to move Salyer inside to guard. He has not performed well there. But when he has been given a chance at left tackle, he has played good football. Salyer made 14 starts at left tackle in 2022 in place of Rashawn Slater. He made five starts at left tackle in 2025, including in the playoffs. He is a below-average athlete for the position and has slow feet. But he understands leverage, angles, hand placement and timing. He is an effective pass protector, and he allowed only 11 pressures after taking over the starting job in Week 13. He should get a look as a starter at left tackle.
96. Chris Paul, G, Commanders (27)Contract projection: 3 years, $21 million
Paul is a heavy-set guard who uses his wide base to smother rushers. He lacks pop and physicality as a run blocker. He is elite in pass protection. He is well below average as a run blocker. He will be a fit in places with a more pass-happy offense. He will not be a fit in other places that are looking for run blocking.
97. Jawaan Taylor, T, Chiefs (28)Contract projection: 2 years, $14 million
Taylor signed a four-year, $80 million deal with the Chiefs in the 2023 offseason. Over three seasons in Kansas City, he started 52 games at right tackle, including the postseason, winning a Super Bowl in 2023. Taylor will have a market because of his experience. He has made 120 career starts, including the postseason. But he is not an above-average right tackle based on how he played in 2025. Taylor lacks some urgency and physicality in his game. He has a shaky anchor against bull rushers. Overall, he can survive as a pass protector, but he is very limited as a run blocker, and he has a major penalty problem. Taylor has been flagged 49 times over the past three seasons, 12 more than any other NFL player.
99. Alex Singleton, LB, Broncos (32)Contract projection: 2 years, $19 million
Singleton is a physical, violent off-ball linebacker who plays with an edge. He is at his best when moving downhill as a run defender and blitzer. He is willing and eager to take on climbing interior linemen, and the film shows he loves contact. Singleton ranked 12th in pass-rush win rate among off-ball linebackers with at least 80 pass-rush snaps. He is less instinctive as a coverage player, particularly in zone coverage.
102. Greg Van Roten, G, Giants (36)Contract projection: 1 year, $4 million
Van Roten has experience at right guard, left guard and center in his NFL career, but he has played predominantly right guard in recent seasons. That is where he started for the Giants for the past two seasons. He is a decent pass protector with a strong upper body to consistently win hand-fighting battles. Van Roten struggles to sustain blocks as a run blocker and gets shed too often later in reps. Entering his age-36 season, he is a limited athlete by NFL standards.
103. Kwity Paye, Edge, Colts (27)Contract projection: 4 years, $50 million
A 2021 first-round pick, Paye is a physical run defender and edge setter who lacks juice as a pass rusher. He is more of a pocket pusher. He does not have diversity in his moves and goes most often to a bull rush. Paye does not have the power as a pass rusher to win often in this way. In 2025, he ranked 54th in pass-rush efficiency among 64 edge rushers with at least 300 pass-rush snaps.
105. Denico Autry, IDL, Texans (36)Contract projection: 1 year, $8.5 million
Autry is an explosive, disruptive situational interior pass rusher. He tied for 16th in pass-rush efficiency among interior defensive linemen with at least 200 pass-rush snaps. Autry played 57 percent of his snaps on third down for Houston, and he was not asked to defend the run very often. That should be his role in 2026, in Houston or elsewhere.
106. Leo Chenal, LB, Chiefs (25)Contract projection: 3 years, $24 million
Chenal is a versatile chess piece who can wear a number of hats. He can play off the ball, on the edge and even on the interior in certain packages. He can rush the passer, defend the run and play in coverage. He has good closing speed in space as a tackler, and he is excellent moving sideline to sideline while defending stretch runs, flat routes and bootlegs. Fit and usage will be important to Chenal’s success.
107. Roger McCreary, CB, Rams (26)Contract projection: 3 years, $36 million
The Rams acquired McCreary from the Titans via trade in October. He got injured on the first snap of his Rams debut in Week 12 and did not return until Week 17. McCreary was primarily a nickel in Tennessee, but he played more on the outside in the playoffs for the Rams. He can play both spots and has inside-outside flexibility. McCreary has good eyes and instincts. He is physical both as a run defender and coverage player.
108. Roy Lopez, IDL, Lions (29)Contract projection: 2 years, $12 million
Lopez is a stout run-stuffing nose tackle who has a strong lower half and quick feet. He has some pass-rush upside and stays moving to find lanes to the outside. Lopez is also a capable pocket pusher. Lopez can cover two gaps, stacking blockers before shedding and making tackles. He can also stand up double-teams in the run game.
109. Tim Settle, IDL, Texans (29)Contract projection: 3 years, $21 million
Settle suffered a season-ending foot injury in November that required surgery. Before the injury, he put some good football on tape. Settle is a physical, twitchy, violent interior player who can push the pocket as a pass rusher. He can also reset the line of scrimmage in the run game and shoot gaps as a penetrator. Settle turns 29 in July. This year’s interior defensive line class is full of older veteran players. He is one of the few under-30 interior defensive linemen with some upside.
110. Yosh Nijman, T, Panthers (30)Contract projection: 3 years, $18 million
Nijman spot started at left and right tackle this past season for the Panthers. He is big, powerful and explosive as a people mover in the run game. Nijman needs to play with better pad level in pass protection. His upright posture can lead to losses outside and on bull rushes. He is also an inconsistent striker in pass protection. But when he does win the strike battle, he has a strong upper body to sustain and a workable base.
111. Bobby Wagner, LB, Commanders (36)Contract projection: 1 year, $8 million
Wagner is not the athlete he once was, which affects him in man and zone coverage and as a sideline-to-sideline runner. But he still has the instincts, savvy and anticipation to make plays as a run defender and blitzer. Wagner ranked fifth among all off-ball linebackers with 47 splash plays in 2025.

Russell Wilson, who started three games for the Giants in 2025, will be joining his fourth team in four years in 2026. (Vincent Carchietta / Imagn Images)
113. Russell Wilson, QB, Giants (37)Contract projection: 1 year, $8.5 million
Wilson signed a one-year deal with the Giants last offseason and started the first three games of the season before losing his job to rookie Jaxson Dart. Wilson is firmly a backup at this stage of his career. He can still move and scramble and throw on the run. But he is too quick to bail out of the pocket, and he runs into pressure at times. Wilson has arm talent, especially down the field, but he lacks consistent accuracy. And he does not see the field well enough, missing open receivers in the middle of the field specifically.
114. Cam Robinson, T, Browns (30)Contract projection: 1 year, $10.5 million
Robinson was the Browns’ starting left tackle in 2025. He has 114 career starts at left tackle, and that experience is valuable. Robinson has a firm, violent initial punch, and his best pass-protection reps are when he is able to strike first into a rusher’s chest. But he gets caught off-balance and leaning over his toes too often in the run game and in pass protection. Despite his big frame, he does not have a consistently strong base, and he loses on bull rushes. Robinson is a solid lateral blocker on outside zone and crack tosses, but he is not an effective downhill run blocker.
115. Greg Dulcich, TE, Dolphins (26)Contract projection: 2 years, $12 million
Dulcich was waived by the Giants on cutdown day. He signed with the Dolphins’ practice squad and was activated in Week 8. Among tight ends with at least 100 routes, he finished second in yards per route behind only the Bills’ Dalton Kincaid. Dulcich has vertical speed and is aggressive and physical after the catch, particularly on screens.
118. Jaylinn Hawkins, S, Patriots (29)Contract projection: 2 years, $12 million
Hawkins bounced around from the Falcons to the Chargers to the Patriots from 2023 to ‘24. But he found a home in New England under Vrabel, and he started 19 games at safety for the Patriots in 2025, including all four playoff games. Hawkins is a stable presence in the deep part of the field and has the instincts to drive from depth. He lacks an elite trait.
119. Kingsley Enagbare, Edge, Packers (26)Contract projection: 3 years, $18.75 million
Enagbare has intriguing tools as a long edge defender with explosiveness. Those tools show up most often as a run defender. He had eight run tackles for a loss or no gain in 2025, including the postseason. Enagbare lacks refinement as a pass rusher, and that has impacted his ability to take a production step in that phase. He has just 11.5 career sacks in four seasons, and his 10.6 percent pressure rate in 2025 ranked 96th among defensive linemen with at least 200 pass-rush snaps.
120. Cobie Durant, CB, Rams (28)Contract projection: 4 years, $41 million
Durant is an undersized corner who is able to function on the outside because of his speed and ball skills. He has 26 passes defended in four NFL seasons. Of his three interceptions in 2025, two came when he ripped the ball away from a targeted receiver. Durant is better in off-zone coverage. He can lose the physicality battle at the line of scrimmage because of his frame.
NR. Darnell Mooney, WR, Falcons (28)Contract projection: 2 years, $17 million
Mooney is a speed receiver with inside-outside flexibility and sudden twitch out of his breaks. He played more in the slot over his first four NFL seasons with the Bears. He played more on the outside with the Falcons. Mooney’s production dipped in 2025 after he put up nearly 1,000 yards and was second on the team in targets in 2024. In 2025, he ranked fourth behind Drake London, Kyle Pitts and Bijan Robinson.
Mooney sinks his hips well when breaking off comeback routes, taking advantage of cushions provided by DBs respecting his speed. He is a viable WR3 option, and his alignment flexibility provides value.
123. Sebastian Joseph-Day, IDL, Titans (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $16 million
Joseph-Day is a run-stuffing nose tackle. He has quietly performed well in Tennessee over the past two seasons after he was waived by the Chargers at the back end of a big free-agent contract. Joseph-Day finished fourth in stop rate among interior defensive linemen with at least 150 run snaps. He ranked in the top 20 in combined run tackles that went for a loss or no gain. Joseph-Day added 19 pressures as a pass rusher.
125. Arden Key, Edge, Titans (30)Contract projection: 3 years, $22.5 million
Key has at least 30 pressures in each of the past five seasons, including 112 over the past three seasons with the Titans. He is long and physical. He can win as a pass rusher with power or with speed around the edge, and he is a solid run defender. Key would fit well as a veteran third edge on a good defense.
NR. Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Miami Dolphins (28)Contract projection: 1 year, $1.215 million
New coach Jeff Hafley and new general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan decided the best option was moving on from Tagovailoa despite some debilitating cap consequences. The Dolphins have designated Tagovailoa as post-June 1 cut just two years into a $212.4 million contract extension. They will be taking on a record $99.2 million in dead money over the next two seasons, including $67.4 million in 2025 alone. This decision should tell you all you need to know about where Tagovailoa is in his career. His arm strength is a limiting factor in his performance. When Tagovailoa was operating at a high level in previous seasons, he was throwing with elite timing, anticipation and accuracy. That part of his game has deteriorated. With 76 starts in his career, Tagovailoa has experience. He should be a backup somewhere in 2026. The Dolphins owe Tagovailoa $54 million guaranteed in 2026. Any money he signs for elsewhere will offset those guarantees. So he will likely sign for the veteran minimum.
126. Brandin Cooks, WR, Bills (32)Contract projection: 1 year, $5 million
Cooks requested his release from the Saints in late November, and the Bills picked him up for the stretch run. Cooks caught four passes for 101 yards in a Week 17 loss to the Eagles. He was then an important player during the Bills’ two-game playoff run, playing 75 snaps and catching five passes for 78 yards. He is still a deceptive route runner, and he has the long speed to threaten defenses vertically.
127. Greg Newsome II, CB, Jaguars (26)Contract projection: 4 years, $48 million
The Browns traded Newsome to the Jaguars in October in exchange for Tyson Campbell. He started 12 games for Jacksonville, including their playoff loss to the Bills. Newsome has the premium long speed to recover on deep routes, and he is at his best as a cloud corner in Cover 2, when he can get depth, fire downhill and finish on routes to the flat. But Newsome is late to recognize and anticipate in other areas. He gives up separation too easily in the short area of the field and gets turned around too often. His slender build also prevents him from impacting the run game.
128. Javon Hargrave, IDL, Vikings (33)Contract projection: 1 year, $6.5 million
Hargrave signed a two-year, $30 million deal with the Vikings last offseason. Minnesota is expected to release Hargrave one year into that contract if it cannot find a trade partner. Hargrave is not the force he once was. He had 11 sacks with the Eagles in 2022. But he still has disruptive moments as a pass rusher and run defender. He should find a rotational role somewhere in the league this offseason.
129. Aaron Jones, RB, Vikings (31)Contract projection: 1 year, $5.25 million
The Vikings are expected to release Jones if they cannot find a trade partner. Jones missed most of the first half of the 2025 season because of a hamstring injury, and he turned 31 in December. He still has vision and burst as a runner. He is a smooth athlete and a capable pass catcher and route runner, particularly out of the backfield. He is also a quality pass protector. At this stage of his career, Jones should be eyed as a third-down back in a committee.

Projecting Marshon Lattimore’s future ceiling depends on how he recovers from a torn ACL suffered in Week 9 last season. (Butch Dill / Associated Press)
130. Marshon Lattimore, CB, Commanders (30)Contract projection: 1 year, $5 million
The Commanders have informed Lattimore they will release him before the new league year to save cap space. Lattimore is coming off a torn ACL he suffered in Week 9 last season. He turns 30 in May. As such, we are projecting a one-year prove-it deal for the 2017 first-round pick. Lattimore is a tall, physical corner who can play press coverage. He is too grabby in coverage, and his 44 penalties since 2017 are the fourth-most among DBs in that span. Before his injury, he still showed the speed to carry vertical routes and play bump-and-run coverage. He would be a fit in a man-heavy scheme. Projecting his future production depends on how he recovers from his knee injury.
131. Emanuel Wilson, RB, Packers (27)Contract projection: 2 years, $7.5 million
Wilson entered the offseason as a restricted free agent after accruing his third NFL season in 2025. The Packers, however, are not expected to tender Wilson, according to ESPN. That means he will become an unrestricted free agent when the new league year begins March 11. Wilson is a big, bruising back who can play through contract. He has light feet at the line of scrimmage to move laterally, find creases and avoid tackles for loss. He is not confident or effective as a pass protector. Wilson lacks an explosive element to his game, and he does not have the juice to carry a running game by himself. But he is a nice complementary piece for a team looking for some size and physicality in the backfield.
132. Michael Carter, RB, Cardinals (27)Contract projection: 1 year, $3 million
Carter is a small back with burst and wiggle. He can be overwhelmed at the contact point at times because of his size. He is at his best to the outside where he can run away from defenders, and he fits best in a run scheme that tries to attack the edges. Carter lacks some deception as a route runner out of the backfield.
133. Jacob Martin, Edge, Commanders (30)Contract projection: 2 years, $15 million
Martin had a career-high 45 pressures in 2025. He has an active motor as a pass rusher and run defender, with the quick twitch to find open lanes. Martin is small by NFL edge standards, which impacts his effectiveness. But he uses that limited frame well. He has compact power and can drive through tackles with a long arm.
134. Calais Campbell, IDL, Cardinals (40)Contract projection: 1 year, $4 million
If Campbell decides to keep playing, he will be entering his 19th NFL season. He is still a handful to deal with at his size, but his age is showing up to a degree. He is not very explosive. He wins as a run defender and pass rusher with strength, power and quick hands. He is a rotational piece at this stage of his career.
135. Daniel Faalele, G, Ravens (26)Contract projection: 2 years, $11 million
Faalele is a giant guard who can generate some movement in the run game. He started at right guard for the Ravens last season. Faalele is not coordinated in his lower half. He lacks balance, has slow feet, gets over his toes too often and has very limited change-of-direction skills. He can smother rushers when they try to play through his chest, but he struggles to move laterally and close down rushing lanes.
136. Tyreek Hill, WR, Dolphins (32)Contract projection: 1 year, $5 million
The Dolphins’ new regime of coach Jeff Hafley and GM Jon-Eric Sullivan cut Hill as part of a roster purge that included other veterans like edge rusher Bradley Chubb and guard James Daniels. Hill suffered a devastating knee injury in Week 4 last season, which included a dislocation and multiple ligament tears. He relies on his speed, twitch and explosiveness. How will the injury affect those essential elements of Hill’s game, as he enters his age-32 season?
The unknown impacts his ranking here and his projected market. Before his injury, Hill ranked fourth in yards per route run among receivers with at least 50 routes. If he continues playing, Hill might have to sign a cheaper one-year deal with heavy incentives.
137. Leonard Floyd, Edge, Falcons (34)Contract projection: 1 year, $8 million
Floyd still has the juice to press tackles to the corner as a rotational rusher. He produced pressure on 13 percent of his pass-rush snaps, a rate that ranked in the top 50 among all players with at least 200 pass-rushing snaps. It topped his pressure rate from each of the previous three seasons.

Christian Kirk had 239 yards on 28 receptions in 13 games with the Texans last season, after three years with the Jaguars. (Brian Fluharty / Imagn Images)
138. Christian Kirk, WR, Texans (29)Contract projection: 3 years, $24 million
Even if the stats do not show it, Kirk can still separate in the short and intermediate areas of the field with sharp route running. He is at his best in the slot and should be able to carve out a role in that position in a good passing offense.
140. Nick Scott, S, Panthers (31)Contract projection: 2 years, $8 million
Scott is a veteran, experienced free safety who is comfortable playing in the deep part of the field in two-high and single-high looks. He fits as a third safety for defenses that use one of their starting safeties as a big nickel or dime ‘backer in certain packages, an application that has become more common across the league in recent seasons.
141. Xavier Woods, S, Titans (31)Contract projection: 1 year, $4 million
The Titans cut Woods in February. He is an experienced free safety with 121 career starts. Woods is very comfortable playing the deep part of the field, both as a center fielder and a two-deep safety. He can run and hit from depth when asked to. Woods is not a factor in the box as a run defender. He can find a role as a rotational deep-field safety.
142. Bobby Okereke, LB, Giants (30)Contract projection: 2 years, $9 million
The Giants released Okereke this month after three seasons. A three-year captain in New York, Okereke was the team’s Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee in 2025. He has awareness, instincts and feel as a zone coverage defender, but he lacks some pop as a downhill player when taking on blocks against the run and screens. He will need to play next to a run-game thumper if a defense wants to harness his best attributes.
143. Vederian Lowe, T, Patriots (27)Contract projection: 2 years, $12 million
Lowe started four games at left tackle in place of Will Campbell late in the season. He is functional but limited as a pass protector and run blocker. Lowe is a decent athlete with light feet and violent, heavy hands on his initial strike. But he lacks some power in his lower half and gives up his outside shoulder too often to speed and bendy rushers.
144. Von Miller, Edge, Commanders (37)Contract projection: 1 year, $10 million
Miller can still fill a role on an NFL roster as a situational pass rusher. His 13.2 percent pressure rate was just behind players like the Broncos’ Jonathon Cooper (13.3 percent) and the Seahawks’ Uchenna Nwosu (13.5). Miller can still press the outside shoulders of tackles and win around the edge. He still has a pretty sudden inside spin move, though obviously not as sudden as it was during his heyday.
145. Kareem Hunt, RB, Chiefs (31)Contract projection: 1 year, $4.5 million
Hunt is a physical between-the-tackles runner who led all running backs with at least 50 rushes in EPA per rush. He scored eight touchdowns in 2025, all in the red zone. Hunt lacks an explosive element to his game, ranking 62nd among RBs in explosive rush rate. Only two of his 163 designed rushes went for 15 yards or more. Hunt is a contact hitter: high batting average, no home run power.
147. Isiah Pacheco, RB, Chiefs (27)Contract projection: 2 years, $10.5 million
Pacheco is a feisty runner with a violent play style. His best trait is how aggressively he takes on contact, but he is not a tackle-breaker or creator. He forced only 13 missed tackles on 139 rushing attempts.
148. Trey Pipkins, T, Chargers (30)Contract projection: 2 years, $14 million
Pipkins has started at left tackle, right tackle and right guard over seven seasons with the Chargers. His best position, by far, is right tackle. When healthy, Pipkins is a mid-level starter at that spot. He has dramatically improved as a pass protector since he was a third-round pick out of Sioux Falls in 2019. Pipkins, however, struggles to stay healthy. In 2025, he missed time with ankle and knee injuries.
149. Marquise Brown, WR, Chiefs (29)Contract projection: 1 year, $6 million
Brown is a viable third receiver in a good receiving group. He has some speed to stretch the field vertically. He has some wiggle and deception in his route running. But he does not have an elite trait. Brown ranked 57th among qualified receivers in yards per route in 2025.
150. Tyrod Taylor, QB, Jets (37)Contract projection: 1 year, $5 million
Taylor started four games for the Jets last season before he was knocked out of a Week 14 game against the Dolphins with a groin injury. He can give an offense a chance in a backup role because of his athleticism and scrambling ability. Taylor still has some zip on his passes to the outside. He has 62 career starts.
Methodology and statistical notes
Players were scouted and then graded on a 2.0 to 8.0 scale. Grades were primarily based on performance on tape, but they also included factors such as age, upside, public injury information and positional value. For reference, a 5.0 grade represented an average starter at a specific position. The lowest grade for a player in these rankings was 4.5. The highest was 7.3.
Contract projections are based on positional market assessments and expected production over the length of the deal. Some projections were updated after the initial rankings were published based on new insights and information about their markets. The contract projections are for total base values. For instance, Los Angeles Chargers defensive lineman Teair Tart was a pending unrestricted free agent before he signed an extension in January. That deal is worth up to $37.5 million over three years, including all incentives. The base value that hits the cap, however, is $30 million over three years. Our projections are for base value against the cap, not max value including incentives.
All statistics are courtesy of TruMedia and apply to the 2025 regular season unless otherwise noted.