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2024 NFL Draft grades for every team: Patriots, Chiefs with awesome hauls; Cowboys, others receive poor marks

Written by on April 28, 2024

2024 NFL Draft grades for every team: Patriots, Chiefs with awesome hauls; Cowboys, others receive poor marks

2024 NFL Draft grades for every team: Patriots, Chiefs with awesome hauls; Cowboys, others receive poor marks

Let’s grade every club’s 2024 draft class

nfldraft-v3.png
Keytron Jordan, CBS Sports

The 2024 NFL Draft has concluded, which means only one thing — draft grades are here. Below you will find the full draft classes for all 32 teams with individual grades, analysis for every class and a final overall grade. This is my seminal analysis every year. 

The first-round grades are from Pete Prisco. Just about all of the individual grades were from me starting in Round 2 through Mr. Irrelevant at the end of the draft. Any grades with an asterisk were from my guy Josh Edwards. 

For these team grades, I’m not utilizing an intricate formula, but I am taking the average of each individual grade with more weight given to the earlier picks. And factoring in my own grades for Round 1 picks. 

Let’s get to it.

Arizona Cardinals 

RoundPick PlayerGrade
14Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio StateB+

1

27

Darius Robinson, EDGE, Missouri

B

2

43

Max Melton, CB, Rutgers

A-

3

66

Trey Benson, RB, Florida State

A-

3

71

Isaiah Adams, IOL, Illinois

C+

3

82

Tip Reiman, TE, Illinois

B-

3

90

Elijah Jones, CB, Boston College

A-

4

104

Dadrion Taylor-Demerson, S, Texas Tech

A-

5

138

Xavier Thomas, EDGE, Clemson

B

5162Christian Jones, OT, TexasA
6191Tejhaun Palmer, WR, UABC
7226Jaden Davis, CB, Miami (Fla.)C-

Holy gigantic class for the Cardinals. But I love it. The more rolls at the table, the better. Harrison is an instant 1,000-yard “X” receiver, Robinson can make noise Year 1 if he’s deployed inside more than on the edge, and Trey Benson was my RB1 in this class. So fast and elusive. 

Reiman is enormous and provided glimmers of receiving prowess, and the Melton and Jones pairing gives the Cardinals two highly explosive outside cornerbacks. Thomas can be a useful situational outside rusher, and Jones has starter upside. Arizona added athletic specimens at a variety of positions to a roster that desperately needed an infusion of sheer talent. Go have a beer, or two, Monti Ossenfort. On me. You crushed this draft. 

 Grade: A-

Atlanta Falcons 

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

8

Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington

B-

2

35

Ruke Orhorhoro, DL, Clemson 

B

3

74

Bralen Trice, EDGE, Washington

A-

4

109

Brandon Dorlus, DL, Oregon

A-

5

143

JD Bertrand, LB, Notre Dame

C

6

186

Jase McClellan, RB, Alabama

C+

6187Casey Washington, WR, IllinoisC
6197Zion Logue, DL, GeorgiaC+

There’s no one right way to build a team, and let’s such say my drafting philosophy doesn’t jive with Falcons GM Terry Fontenot. And that’s fine. The Penix pick makes my head hurt, and a sizable trade up for a defensive tackle in Round 2? Don’t get me wrong, Orhorhoro was one of my favorite interior rushers — he’s big, strong, and explosive — but trading multiple picks to get him? 

Trice and Dorlus have a distinct possibility to become the two best value selections from this class. They’re so diverse in how they can get to the quarterback from their respective positions, and Dorlus can align anywhere. Bertand is heady but misses too many tackles for my liking, and Washington is an inflexible back-shoulder type. And no cornerback?!

Grade: C

Baltimore Ravens 

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

30

Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson

B+

2

62

Roger Rosengarten, OT, Washington

A+

3

93

Adisa Isaac, EDGE, Penn State

B+

4

113

Devontez Walker, WR, North Carolina

C+

4

130

T.J. Tampa, CB, Iowa State

B

5165Rasheen Ali, RB, MarshallB
6218Devin Leary, QB, KentuckyB-
7228Nick Samac, IOL, Michigan StateA
7250Sanoussi Kane, S, PurdueC+

Even with trusty right-hand man Joe Hortiz now GM’ing the Chargers, Ravens shot-caller Eric Costa once again proved why he’s one of the shrewest GMs in the league with this draft haul. 

Wiggins absolutely flies and has serious man-to-man coverage capabilities. Rosengarten is another high-caliber athlete at a vital position. Isaac was a bit of a gamble, but the payoff could be massive, and the same is true for Walker. If nothing else, he can be a serious vertical threat in a sizable frame. This offense needs that. Tampa is a little stiff but plays with that classic Ravens physicality at the line of scrimmage. 

Samac gives me major Bradley Bozeman vibes. Late-round selection with awesome balance and run-game mastery. Leary has a strong arm and can connect on anticipatory throws. Not a super sexy class. But a job well done. 

Grade: B+

Buffalo Bills

RoundPickPlayerGrade

2

33

Keon Coleman, WR, Florida State

C-

2

60

Cole Bishop, S, Utah

A-

3

95

DeWayne Carter, DL, Duke

B+

4

128

Ray Davis, RB, Kentucky

C

5

141

Sedrick Van Pran-Granger, IOL, Georgia

A-

5

160

Edefuan Ulofoshio, LB, Washington

A-

5168Javon Solomon, LB, TroyA
6204Tylan Grable, OT, UCFB
6219Daequan Hardy, CB, Penn StateA-
7221Travis Clayton, IOL, EnglandC+

Coleman didn’t do it for me on film. For his size and athletic profile — and he’s not stiff, just doesn’t routinely get open — I expected him to be more dominant in traffic tracking the ball deep. Buffalo then countered with a stellar selection — Bishop in Round 2. He’s going to be a star with Sean McDermott. 

Carter is high-floor rusher, and the Bills had a sneaky need at defensive tackle because Ed Oliver was previously the only upfield interior rusher on the roster. I would’ve gone in many other directions instead of Davis. After that, Van-Pran Granger can be a high-caliber starter in time, and Ulofoshio is a smooth operator, another with a high floor. Solomon is the exact type of smaller, bendier outside rusher this roster has desperately needed, and Hardy is uber-talented at cornerback. My disagreement with the first selection sinks this grade a bit, and I’m surprised they didn’t double-dip at receiver. 

Grade: B

Carolina Panthers

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

32Xavier Legette, WR, South CarolinaB+

2

46Jonathon Brooks, RB, TexasB-

3

72Trevin Wallace, LB, KentuckyC

4

101Ja’Tavion Sanders, TE, TexasB

5

157Chau Smith-Wade, CB, Washington StateB+

6

200Jaden Crumedy, DL, Mississippi StateC+
7240Michael Barrett, LB, MichiganC+

I’m afraid the Panthers drafted Jonathan Mingo 2.0 with Legette in Round 2. Brooks is a premier talent — although I think the hype went a little out of control late in the process. I would’ve liked to see a better pure separator for Bryce Young, even after signing Diontae Johnson in free agency. 

Wallace is a fun, active linebacker but has some rawness to his game, and Sanders’ film wasn’t as tremendous as I expected for a former top recruit with quality production at Texas. Smith-Wade can be the best player from this class because of his twitch and feistiness as a tackler. 

Grade: C+

Chicago Bears

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

1Caleb Williams, QB, USCA-

1

9Rome Odunze, WR, WashingtonB+

3

75Kiran Amegadjie, OT, YaleA-

4

122Tory Taylor, P, IowaC-
5144Austin Booker, DL, KansasB

Small but impactful class from Ryan Poles, and he added a pick late by trading a fourth-round pick in 2025 to get a high-upside outside rusher, which was a clear need. 

Williams and Odunze can be a tremendous duo at the two most vital positions in the game today, and Amegadjie can be a powerful tackle or guard thanks to his girth, length, leg churn, and, simply, how much nastiness exudes off his body when he’s getting after it. 

Wasn’t a gigantic fan of a punter — never am in the draft — but Taylor was clearly the most talented punter in the class. 

Grade: A-

Cincinnati Bengals

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

18Amarius Mims, OT, GeorgiaB-

2

49Kris Jenkins, DL, MichiganA-

3

80Jermaine Burton, WR, AlabamaA

3

97McKinnley Jackson, DL, Texas A&MB

4

115Erick All, TE, IowaB

5

149Josh Newton, CB, TCUA-
6194Tanner McLachlan, TE, ArizonaB+
6214Cedric Johnson, EDGE, Ole MissA
7224Daijahn Anthony, S, Ole MissA-
7237Matt Lee, IOL, Miami (Fla.)A-

The Bengals attacked their needs with authority in this class. Defensive tackle. Tight end. Edge rusher. Even added a pair of offensive linemen, and started with Mims who, if healthy, can eventually be the best blocker from this class. 

Jenkins and Jackson are two different defensive tackle types. Jenkins was the finest run defender in the class. Jackson is a nose tackle by frame and has three-technique talent getting up the field after the quarterback. I am a tick concerned about his poor workout. 

Burton is not your classic Round 3 receiver — he has borderline first-round talent as one of the truly premier vertical threat. All and McLachlan are two reasonable talented pass-catching tight ends, and keep an eye on Johnson as an ascending rusher who can climb the depth chart because of his explosiveness and glimpses of hand work. 

Grade: A-

Cleveland Browns

RoundPickPlayerGrade

2

54Michael Hall Jr., DL, Ohio StateA+

3

85Zak Zinter, IOL, MichiganC-

5

156Jamari Thrash, WR, LouisvilleA

6

206Nathaniel Watson, LB, Mississippi StateB+

7

227Myles Harden, CB, South DakotaA+

7

243Jowon Briggs, DL, CincinnatiB-

I hardly noticed the Browns didn’t have a first-round pick in this draft because of the fine job GM Andrew Berry and Co. did. Hall has the goods to eventually become the finest defensive tackle from this class. Oh yeah, Zinter. I didn’t love that pick. He’s very stiff and coming off an injury. 

After that, Thrash was spectacular at Louisville at all three levels because of his twitch, route-running nuance, and run-after-the-catch creativity. Watson is a towering off-ball linebacker who rarely misses a tackle in the box, and Harden is a magnificent athlete who can outplay his draft position. Briggs has an athletic frame and penetrating style. Sneaky-good class from Cleveland. 

Grade: A-

Dallas Cowboys

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

29Tyler Guyton, OT, OklahomaB

2

56Marshawn Kneeland, EDGE, Western MichiganB-

3

73Cooper Beebe, IOL, Kansas StateB+

3

87Marist Liufau, LB, Notre DameC+

5

174Caelen Carson, CB, Wake Forest B+

6

216Ryan Flournoy, WR, Southeast Missouri StateA
7233Nathan Thomas, IOL, Louisiana A
7244Justin Rogers, DL, AuburnC

I, personally, am not sure what the Cowboys are doing. Ok, well I do know they stood by their word and attempted to rebuild the offensive line. I commend that. I loved Beebe in Round 2 and particularly Thomas in Round 7. 

Guyton is very much a project who doesn’t quite play to his workout. Kneeland is another project-y type who never came close to dominating in the MAC. Liufau plays with his hair on fire. I like that. Minimal coverage chops beyond following crossers, and he misses tackles at too high a rate for my liking. 

Flournoy can be the gem of this class. Size, burst, long speed, and power through contact. It’s all there with him, and the receiver group did need a little jolt. 

Grade: C+

Denver Broncos

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

12Bo Nix, QB, OregonC-

3

76Jonah Elliss, EDGE, UtahA-

4

102Troy Franklin, WR, OregonA+

5

145Kris Abrams-Draine, CB, MissouriA+

6

147Audric Estime, RB, Notre DameA-

7

235Devaughn Vele, WR, UtahB
7256Nick Gargiulo, IOL, South CarolinaB-

The Broncos did admirable work even without a second-round pick, although I don’t have as much confidence in Nix as Sean Payton. 

Elliss is a supercharged edge rusher with untapped potential around the corner. Franklin, and particularly Abrams-Draine, have the refined skill sets to be stars as Day 3 selections. Estime has unusual wiggle for being a crazy-wide powerful rusher. This was a class in which the Broncos had to add weapons beyond getting a quarterback, and they did that. Plus, they didn’t mortgage the future in landing said quarterback, 

Grade: B+

Detroit Lions 

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

24Terrion Arnold, CB, AlabamaB

2

61Ennis Rakestraw Jr., CB, MissouriB

4

126Giovanni Manu, OT, University of British ColumbiaD+

4

132Sione Vaki, S, UtahC+

6

189Mekhi Wingo, DL, LSUB

6

210Christian Mahogany, IOL, Boston CollegeB

The Lions were ultra aggressive in this draft, which aligns with the demeanor of Dan Campbell. Not a brilliant idea team-building wise, however the Lions are clearly very close. Rakestraw plays with similar chippiness. 

Arnold is squeaky clean and has upside because of his complete game. Vaki is such an energetic safety who can do everything in any defensive back position. He’s just small. Wingo can get up the field from the inside. For as much as I love what the Lions have done over the past three years, especially in the draft, after the back-to-back cornerback picks, I didn’t love what Detroit did in this draft.

Grade: B-

Green Bay Packers 

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

25Jordan Morgan, OT, ArizonaC+

2

45Edgerrin Cooper, LB, Texas A&MB+

2

58Javon Bullard, S, GeorgiaA-

3

88MarShawn Lloyd, RB, USCA

3

91Ty’Ron Hopper, LB, MissouriC+

4

111Evan Williams, S, OregonB-
5163Jacob Monk, IOL, DukeA-
5169Kitan Oladapo, CB, Oregon StateA
6202Travis Glover, OT, Georgia StateB+
7245Michael Pratt, QB, TulaneB+
7255Kalen King, CB, Penn StateB+

Packers GM Brian Gutekunst has become my draft spirit animal. Loads of picks every year. Always takes fliers on athletic offensive linemen in the middle of the draft and Day 3 and constantly swings trades to move up and down the board. 

Morgan was picked a tick early, while Cooper needs to improve in coverage but has freaky athleticism ranging to the football. Lloyd is the perfect add to Matt LaFleur’s zone-blocking scheme because he’s thick with elite burst and wiggle. Williams is one of the most active safeties in the class, and Oladapo is a true specimen at the same position. Matchup with tight end type. 

After going skill-position heavy the past few years in the draft, Gutekunst prioritized the trenches and building out the secondary.  

Grade: B+

Houston Texans

RoundPickPlayerGrade

2

42Kamari Lassiter, CB, GeorgiaB+

2

59Blake Fisher, OT, Notre DameB-

3

78Calen Bullock, S, USCA

4

123Cade Stover, TE, Ohio StateB+

6

188Jamal Hill, LB, OregonB

6

205Jawhar Jordan, RB, LouisvilleD+
7238Solomon Byrd, DL, USCB+
7247Marcus Harris, DL, AuburnB-
7249LaDarius Henderson, IOL, MichiganB-

Nothing incredibly flashy here from GM Nick Caserio, but the flash came earlier this offseason, didn’t it? Lassiter is your classic, well-coached Georgia cornerback. Fisher is a tremendous combo blocker and Bullock has ridiculous middle-of-the-field range. 

Stover will be a useful tight end for a decade. The next few picks after that were questionable, but I am fascinated to see if Byrd plays as athletically as he looked on the field or to his epically bad workout. 

 Grade: B

Indianapolis Colts

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

15Laiatu Latu, EDGE, UCLAB-

2

52Adonai Mitchell, WR, TexasA

3

79Matt Goncalves, OT, PittsburghA-

4

117Tanor Bortolini, IOL, WisconsinC+

5

142Anthony Gould, WR, Oregon StateB-

5

151Jaylon Carlies, S, MissouriB-
5164Jaylin Simpson, S, AuburnA-
6201Micah Abraham, CB, MarshallC+
7234Jonah Laulu, EDGE, OklahomaC

GM Chris Ballard has a thing for athleticism, and I dig that. But in the past he’s picked extreme athletes who weren’t actually good football players. Latu has an incredibly high ceiling because of his pass-rush arsenal, Mitchell was a fantastic find at No. 52, and Goncalves can be a quality swing tackle or guard. 

Bortolini has potential because of his athletic chops, and Gould ab-so-lutely flies down the field. Carlies and Simpson are two totally different safeties. I love adding the blend of a rangy middle-of-the-field type and an in-the-box masher. 

Grade: B+

Jacksonville Jaguars

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

23Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSUB+

2

48Maason Smith, DL, LSUB-

3

96Jarrian Jones, S, Florida StateB

4

114Javon Foster, OT, MissouriB+

4

116Jordan Jefferson, DL, LSUD+

5

153Deantre Prince, CB, Ole MissB
5167Keilan Robinson, RB, TexasC-
6212Cam Little, K, ArkansasB-
7236Myles Cole, LB, Texas TechB

After Thomas Jr. in Round 1, which happened after a trade back, I liked but didn’t love what the Jaguars did. Smith has immense upside but never quite put it together at LSU, and Jones was one of the better nickel corners in the class. Foster has girth to play with power consistently. After that, their Day 3 picks left a lot to be desired in my estimation. Just minimal upside with those selections. 

Grade: B-

Kansas City Chiefs

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

28Xavier Worthy, WR, TexasA

2

63Kingsley Suamataia, OT, BYUB

4

131Jared Wiley, TE, TCUB+

4

133Jaden Hicks, S, Washington StateA+

5

159Hunter Nourzad, IOL, Penn StateA-

6

211Kamal Hadden, CB, TennesseeB+
7248C.J. Hanson, IOL, Holy CrossA-

GM Brett Veach went on a heater with this draft class. Worthy and Suamataia were two awesome additions, even if the latter has some rough edges to his game right now. Wiley can really separate at the tight end position, and I think the Chiefs know a thing or two about that type of tight end. 

Hicks had no business going in Round 4. He’s an intimidating do-everything safety. Nourzad is a true battler at center, and Hanson gave me Cole Strange vibes when I watched his Holy Cross film. With some huge offensive line contracts upcoming for the Chiefs, this was a smart class. 

Grade: A

Los Angeles Chargers

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

5Joe Alt, OT, Notre DameB

2

34Ladd McConkey, WR, GeorgiaA

3

69Junior Colson, LB, MichiganB

4

105Justin Eboigbe, DL, AlabamaC+

5

137Tarheeb Still, CB, MarylandC+

5

140Cam Hart, CB, Notre DameB-
6181Kimani Vidal, RB, TroyA
7225Brenden Rice, WR, USCB+
7253Cornelius Johnson, WR, MichiganC+

Rollercoaster draft for the Chargers. I wasn’t as high on Alt as everyone else but certainly understood him going at No. 5. McConkey is a fun separator with deceptive run-after-the-catch talent. But then, I didn’t see it with Colson outside of how stellar of a tackler he was. 

After that, it took until the Round 6 selection of Vidal for me to get back on board with this draft. And Vidal can eventually become the RB1 there in Los Angeles. You heard it here first. Rice and Johnson are essentially the same receiver, but Rice has more downfield juice. They aren’t get-open pass catchers but Linear downfield assets. 

Grade: B-

Los Angeles Rams

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

19Jared Verse, EDGE, Florida StateB+

2

39Braden Fiske, DL, Florida StateB-

3

83Blake Corum, RB, MichiganC+

3

99Kamren Kinchens, S, Miami (Fla.)B

5

154Brennan Jackson, LB, Washington StateB+
6196Tyler Davis, DL, ClemsonA
6209Joshua Karty, K, StanfordC+
6213Jordan Whittington, WR, TexasC

6

217Beaux Limmer, IOL, ArkansasA
7254KT Leveston, OT, Kansas StateB-

Les Snead is one of the most underrated GMs in the NFL. He proved that again with this draft. The Florida State duo with the first two picks — spectacular. Older but instant-impact types. Neither Corum nor Kinchens are premier athletes; they just handle their jobs at a high level. Jackson has some upside as a thick but sleek edge rusher, and Davis is one of the preeminent run-stopping defensive tackles in this class. 

Oh, and Limmer is an eventual starter given his time destroying worlds in the SEC as an explosive and powerful pivot.

Grade: B+

Las Vegas Raiders

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

13Brock Bowers, TE, GeorgiaC

2

44Jackson Powers-Johnson, IOL, OregonA

3

77Delmar Glaze, OT, MarylandA-

4

112Decamerion Richardson, CB, Mississippi StateA-

5

148Tommy Eichenberg, LB, Ohio StateA-

6

208Dylan Laube, RB, New HampshireA-
7223Trey Taylor, S, Air ForceA
7229M.J. Devonshire, CB, PittsburghB+

GM Tom Telesco got another opportunity to run a draft and did not squander it. Bowers fell into their lap, and everyone thought Powers-Johnson would be a first-round pick. Glaze is a smooth athlete who can stay at tackle, and Richardson is a long plus athlete, which is precisely what this defense desperately needs to add. Eichenberg already plays like he’s a five-year veteran, and, vitally, makes plays in coverage with good regularity. 

Laube will outplay his draft position because of his receiving talent and deceptive side-to-side juking skill. Taylor and Devonshire have the athleticism to outplay their respective draft positions.

Grade: A-

Miami Dolphins

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

21Chop Robinson, EDGE, Penn StateA

2

55Patrick Paul, OT, HoustonC-

4

120Jaylen Wright, RB, TennesseeB-

5

158Mohamed Kamara, DL, Colorado StateB

6

184Malik Washington, WR, VirginiaA+

6

198Patrick McMorris, S, CaliforniaC
7241Tahj Washington, WR, USCB+

I like many of the prospects the Dolphins picked, but their plan was somewhat confusing. Robinson was my EDGE1. Sensible. Paul is the opposite of a scheme fit for what McDaniel asks of his blockers. Wright is a rocket when given space, which is fun, but now the running back room is super crowded. 

I’m all about adding more weapons at receiver today, but two slot types? Although Malik Washington was a second-round talent on my board, which is why I gave that a perfect grade. 

 Grade: B-

Minnesota Vikings

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

10J.J. McCarthy, QB, MichiganC+

1

17Dallas Turner, EDGE, AlabamaA

4

108Khyree Jackson, CB, OregonA

6

177Walter Rouse, OT, OklahomaB

6

203Will Reichard, K, AlabamaC+

7

230Michael Jurgens, IOL, Wake ForestB
7232Levi Drake Rodriguez, DL,Texas A&M University-CommerceC+

We have to applaud the Vikings for not having to trade the farm to get a quarterback in this class. Essentially, McCarthy fell into their lap. Turner’s upside is through the roof. But the trade up was expensive, especially considering what they traded to originally obtain the No. 23 pick. 

Jackson is the ideal long, press-man cornerback for Brian Flores to deploy, and Rouse can eventually become a powerful tackle. Reichard will represent an upgrade at kicker. 

 Grade: B+

New England Patriots

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

3Drake Maye, QB, UNCB

2

37Ja’Lynn Polk, WR, WashingtonB-

3

68Caedan Wallace, IOL, Penn StateC-

4

103Layden Robinson, IOL, Texas A&MB+

4

110Javon Baker, WR, UCFA+

6

180Marcellas Dial, CB, South CarolinaA-
6193Joe Milton III, QB, Tennessee C+
7231Jaheim Bell, TE, Florida StateA+

The first non-Bill Belichick draft in 20-plus years for the Patriots went… amazingly. I’m serious. Maye at No. 3. Spectacular. Polk is a fun, versatile piece who tracks the ball awesomely, as does the fourth-round pick Baker, who has future No. 1 wideout upside. 

Robinson has a tremendous burst and power combination at guard, and Bell was the steal of the seventh-round. I have no idea how he lasted this far into the draft. He’s a chiseled and athletic yards-after-the-catch weapon. 

 Grade: A

New Orleans Saints

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

14Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon StateB+

2

41Kool-Aid McKinstry, CB, AlabamaB+

5

150Spencer Rattler, QB, South CarolinaA-

5

170Bub Means, WR, PittsburghB+

5

175Jaylan Ford, LB, TexasB

6

199Khristian Boyd, DL, Northern IowaB+
7239Josiah Ezirim, IOL, Eastern KentuckyA

The Saints needed offensive tackle badly and added two big, powerful ones with their first and last picks in this draft. The McKinstry trade up was costly, but he is a first-round talent with a high floor. Rattler is a nice roll of the dice in Round 4, and Means can be another downfield weapon for Derek Carr in this offense. That was needed beyond Rashid Shaheed

Grade: B

New York Giants

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

6Malik Nabers, WR, LSUA+

2

47Tyler Nubin, S, MinnesotaB-

3

70Andru Phillips, CB, KentuckyB-

4

107Theo Johnson, TE, Penn StateB+

5

166Tyrone Tracy Jr., RB, PurdueA

6

183Darius Muasau, LB, UCLAA-

The Giants’ theme was pinpointing big-time athletes in this class. Nabers was my WR1, so fine start there. Phillips was one of the most impressive plant-and-drive corner in the class, and Johnson was the most athletic tight end with his best football in front of him. 

Tracy can threaten Devin Singletary for the RB1 and, if he can shore up his tackling, Muasau’s play-recognition skills are spectacular. He beats blockers with relative ease, too. 

Grade: B+

New York Jets

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

11Olu Fashanu, OT, Penn StateB-

2

65Malach Corley, WR, Western Kentucky B

4

134Braelon Allen, RB, WisconsinB+

5

171Jordan Travis, QB, Florida StateB-

5

173Isaiah Davis, RB, South Dakota StateC

5

176Qwan’tez Stiggers, CB, Toronto Argonauts
 
C+
7257Jaylen Key, S, AlabamaC+

Fashanu and Corley to start — magnificent. Allen is the best pass protection back in this class and has effortless power through contact given his supreme size. I didn’t understand why New York would then add another running back a round later. Travis is an ascending quarterback with improvisational skill who can throw with anticipation. 

Grade: B-

Philadelphia Eagles

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

22Quinyon Mitchell, CB, ToledoB+

2

40Cooper DeJean, CB, IowaA-

3

94Jalyx Hunt, LB, Houston BaptistB-

4

127Will Shipley, RB, ClemsonC+

5

152Ainias Smith, WR, Texas A&MA

5

155Jeremiah Trotter Jr., LB, ClemsonA
5172Trevor Keegan, IOL, MichiganD+
6185Johnny Wilson, WR, Florida StateA-
6190Dylan McMahon, IOL, N.C. StateC+

GM Howie Roseman knows how to balance the draft as well as any GM in the league. Sometimes he’s ultra aggressive, other times he trades back multiple times and lets the draft come to him. Either way, it always feels like quality prospects fall into his lap, doesn’t it?

Mitchell AND DeJean? HELLO. Hunt has immense upside based on what he showed in 2023 at Houston Baptist, which came after a switch from safety at Cornell. Smith and Wilson are two divergent specimens but both experienced productive collegiate careers at marquee programs. And Trotter has the coverage ability and range to be a star in Philadelphia, just like his dad. 

 Grade: A-

Pittsburgh Steelers

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

20Troy Fautanu, IOL, WashingtonB

2

51Zach Frazier, IOL, West VirginiaA-

3

84Roman Wilson, WR, MichiganB-

3

98Payton Wilson, LB, N.C. StateA-

4

119Mason McCormick, IOL, South Dakota StateA

6

178Logan Lee, DL, IowaB-
6195Ryan Watts, CB, TexasB+

The Steelers absolutely needed to address the offensive line in this draft, and did exactly that. Fautanu didn’t do it for me on film because of his lack of strength, but his mobility unquestionably jumped off the film. Frazier is an instant starter at center, and the Wilson duo in Round 3 perfectly filled needs. 

McCormick feels like a future starter at guard because of his athletic gifts, power, and awareness.

Grade: B+

Seattle Seahawks 

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

16Byron Murphy II, DL, TexasA

3

81Christian Haynes, IOL, UConnA+

4

118Tyrice Knight, LB, UTEPC+

4

121A.J. Barner, TE, MichiganA-

5

136Nehemiah Pritchett, CB, AuburnB-

6

179Sataoa Laumea, IOL, UtahA+
6192D.J. James, CB, AuburnA
6207Mike Jerrell, OT, FindlayB-

Scattered draft here from Seattle. Murphy was the finest, most explosive rusher in the class with run-stopping prowess. Haynes is a rocket at guard in an ideal guard frame with length. Barner has the dynamic movement skill and reliable hands to be a better pro than he was in college. Laumea is another masher on the interior. James’ feet are lightning quick, and he plays the ball aggressively on a routine basis. 

 Grade: B+

San Francisco 49ers

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

31Ricky Pearsall, WR, FloridaC-

2

64Renardo Green, CB, Florida StateA

3

86Dominick Puni, IOL, KansasA-

4

124Malik Mustapha, CB, Wake ForestB+

4

129Isaac Guerendo, RB, LouisvilleB-

4

135Jacob Cowing, WR, ArizonaA-
6215Jarrett Kingston, IOL, USCB+
7251Tatum Bethune, LB, Florida StateB

Very 49ers draft here. Pearsall feels like a future boundary weapon who’ll get open with great regularity in Kyle Shanahan’s system. Puni can play anywhere along the offensive line, and Mustapha is a chippy, split-field safety. Green is one of the steadiest cornerbacks in the class — I mean that — and Cowing has the juice to uncover at all three levels. 

Grade: B+

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

26Graham Barton, IOL, DukeA

2

57Chris Braswell, EDGE, AlabamaA+

3

89Tykee Smith, S, GeorgiaB-

3

92Jalen McMillan, WR, BuccaneersB+

4

125Bucky Irving, RB, OregonA

6

220Elijah Klein, IOL, UTEPC
7246Devin Culp, TE, WashingtonB+

I liked the Braswell pick much more than the Barton selection, and McMillan will be a favorite target of Baker Mayfield because of his route-running skill, speed, and ball-tracking talent. Irving has the inherent elusiveness to outplay his draft position and poor pre-draft workout. Smith is a powerful rocket of a safety who tackles like a veteran. 

Grade: B

Tennessee Titans

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

7JC Latham, OT, AlabamaB+

2

38T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas C-

4

106Cedric Gray, LB, North CarolinaA-

5

146Jarvis Brownlee Jr., CB, Louisville B-

6

182Jha’Quan Jackson, WR, TulaneB+

7

242James Williams, S, Miami (Fla.)A-
7252Jaylen Harrell, LB, MichiganA

The Latham pick was a bit surprising, yet it wasn’t a brutal selection. Sweat in the top 40 was. After that, GM Ran Carthon pieced together a rock-solid haul. Gray is one of the younger but polished off-ball linebackers in the class, and Jackson can really get down the field with elite burst and long speed. 

Williams finds the football frequently because of his length and movement skill. Don’t sleep on Harrell, either. He’s young and really flashed as a pure outside rusher with a diverse set of pass-rush moves at Michigan. 

 Grade: B-

Washington Commanders

RoundPickPlayerGrade

1

2Jayden Daniels, QB, LSUA

2

36Johnny Newton, DL, IllinoisA+

2

50Mike Sainristil, CB, MichiganB+

2

53Ben Sinnott, TE, Kansas StateA+

3

67Brandon Coleman, OT, TCUA

3

100Luke McCaffrey, WR, RiceB+
5139Jordan Magee, LB, TempleA-
5161Dominique Hampton, S, WashingtonB-
7222Javontae Jean-Baptiste, DL, Notre DameA-

GM Adam Peters began his tenure in Washington with a bang. Daniels, Newton, Sainristil, Sinnott, Coleman, McCaffrey. My word. Those are all plus athletes with clean film who excel in their specific roles. Magee is a bendy off-ball linebacker with serious juice, and Hampton, while older, has as much athletic prowess as anyone in the class. 

  Grade: A

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The post 2024 NFL Draft grades for every team: Patriots, Chiefs with awesome hauls; Cowboys, others receive poor marks first appeared on CBS Sports.


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