This is real hard. There are just not enough picks, and I didn't like the trades I was proposed. Didn't feel like spending the time to propose my own. Pretty average draft. Not something I would expect out of JS....especially not a WR in the first, but I liked him.
KC Concepcion
WR
Texas A&M
Height: 6 - 0 |
Weight: 196 lbs |
RAS: N/A
KC Concepcion will be a darling of analytically-minded evaluators after his true freshman breakout at NC State. In his very first collegiate season, Concepcion caught 71 passes for 839 yards and 10 TDs, and added 320 yards on the ground at 7.8 yards per attempt -- good for 1,159 total yards from scrimmage and a total yardage share over 25%. His second season at NC State was much less efficient, but in a new environment in 2025, Concepcion was able to reclaim his standing in the NFL Draft pecking order. At 5'11", 187 pounds, Concepcion is a human joystick with incredible throttle control, change-of-direction, and spatial feel -- traits that lend well to natural separation, RAC ability, and usage versatility. He can still clean up focus drops at times, but his hand technique and catch-point control is otherwise sound. He's an incredibly dynamic RAC weapon, and he's shown he can beat press coverage with calculated quickness and bouts of targeted physicality, suggesting true impact starter and multi-alignment upside as a movement-Z receiver.
Keionte Scott
CB
Miami (FL)
Height: 5 - 11 |
Weight: 193 lbs |
RAS: N/A
Keionte Scott emerged as one of the stars of Miami's National Championship run, and he has similarly ascended as an extremely compelling 2026 NFL Draft prospect. After drawing little national interest out of high school, Scott began his career at Snow College. After a two-year stretch that saw Scott serve as a team captain and two-time JUCO All-American, he transferred to Auburn. For two years, Scott served as a rotational player for the Tigers, at times battling through injuries, before reaching his final evolution at Miami. In 2025 with the Hurricanes, he amassed 13 tackles for loss, five sacks, and two pick-sixes, while earning a PFSN CB Impact grade of 85. As a versatile nickel defender, Scott has one of the strongest foundations in the entire class. He's an uber-explosive long-striding closer, a springy coverage and support defender, and an elite processor with a fast-flowing style and relentless physicality. He'll be an older rookie, but Scott has immediate impact potential as a nickel, with schematic versatility but a particular affinity for off-man and zone.
Drew Shelton
OT
Penn State
Height: 6 - 5 |
Weight: 313 lbs |
RAS: 8.70
Drew Shelton should be near the top of your list if you want a lineman who provides both positional versatility and security at left tackle. Shelton burned his redshirt in 2022 and started five games as a true freshman, and was used as a rotational lineman across the front in 2023. He saved his best yet for 2024, starting all 16 games on the blindside while locking down NFL-caliber opponents each week. 2025 was a slight step back for Shelton, whose non-elite anchor strength and apex-sealing range were exposed, particularly by superlative talents such as Arvel Reese. Nevertheless, he's a compelling prospect with potential Top 100 appeal. At 6'5", 307 pounds, Shelton's length and overall measureables are close to average, but he's a quick-footed and nimble short-area mover and a fluid athlete, whose violent hands present pop in the run game and menacing finishing ability on snatch-and-traps in the pass game. A technically-sound pass protector and a dutiful run blocker with a tenacious edge, Shelton has NFL starter ability and projected interior flex.
Josh Cuevas
TE
Alabama
Height: 6 - 4 |
Weight: 245 lbs |
RAS: 7.57
Josh Cuevas emerged as a redshirt freshman at Cal Poly, catching 58 passes for 678 yards and six touchdowns. That early emergence put him on the radar of Power conference schools, and he transferred to Washington in 2023 as a result. Cuevas was primarily a rotational TE during Washington's Championship runner-up season, but flashed promise as a big-play threat. When Kalen DeBoer left Washington for Alabama, Cuevas was one of many who followed. He soon re-emerged as the team's TE1 in 2025, racking up 37 catches for 411 yards and four scores, earning a PFSN TE Impact grade of 79.6. Cuevas stands out as a well-rounded utility TE, whose value has always first come from his usage versatility and blocking. Despite having a shorter, short-armed frame, Cuevas is an explosive attacker with good compact mass, elite natural leverage, and eye-catching hand power at engagement. He can square up, drive, and displace defenders within multiple roles, and while his shorter arms affect his sustain in pass protection at times, he holds up well there, too. Meanwhile, as a receiver, Cuevas has good stem IQ, zone instincts, and sturdy hand strength through contact. He likely doesn't quite have the flexibility, speed, or length to be a premier TE1, but he's a high-quality TE2 on day one, and could see stretches as a competent starter.