Author: Nathan Cooper

  • 2025 SIS ACC All-Conference Team

    2025 SIS ACC All-Conference Team

    It’s  time to release our SIS All-Conference teams. We used our all-encompassing player value stat, Total Points, along with other metrics and our scouting work as leading references in putting together our team of selections for 2025, plus some honorable mentions.

    You can learn more about Total Points and the statistics referenced within this article here.

    These picks are meant to honor this season’s best-of-the-best in the ACC.

    1st Team Offense

    Position Name School
    QB Haynes King Georgia Tech
    RB Marcellous Hawkins Virginia Tech
    WR Malachi Toney Miami FL
    WR Duce Robinson Florida State
    TE Jeremiah Hasley Duke
    FLEX Hollywood Smothers NC State
    OT Francis Mauigoa Miami FL
    OT Melvin Siani Wake Forest
    OG Keylan Rutledge Georgia Tech
    OG Anez Cooper Miami FL
    OC Joshua Bates SMU

    The ACC was led by Haynes King, who led all players in the conference with 112 Total Points. His teammate, Keyland Rutledge, accumulated 34 Total Points (2nd-best among all ACC offensive linemen) and tied for the 2nd-fewest blown blocks (6) among all ACC OL who played at least 500 snaps.

    Miami was well represented on our All-Conference Team, especially the 1st Team Offense. True freshman Malachi Toney’s 45 Total Points led all ACC WRs. Additionally, his 31 broken/missed tackles were by far the most among ACC WRs and his 7 receiving touchdowns tied for most. He also had no drops. Francis Mauigoa and Anez Cooper both made the team from the Hurricanes’ offensive line. Mauigoa’s 37 Total Points were leaders among the conference’s offensive linemen. Both had a miniscule 0.9% blown block rate, and Cooper’s 0.3% blown block rate in pass pro was 2nd-best among ACC OL (minimum 500 snaps).

    1st Team Defense

    Position Name School
    DT Clay Patterson Stanford
    DT Kemari Copeland Virginia Tech
    EDGE Akheem Mesidor Miami FL
    EDGE Rueben Bain Jr. Miami FL
    LB Rasheem Biles Pittsburgh
    LB Kyle Louis Pittsburgh
    CB Hezekiah Masses California
    CB Ashton Hampton Clemson
    S Ahmaad Moses SMU
    S Nick Andersen Wake Forest
    FLEX Jakobe Thomas Miami FL

    Miami also saw three players find their way onto the 1st Team Defense. Rueben Bain Jr. and Akheem Mesidor were one of the top edge duos in the country. Not only were they 1-2 in the conference in Total Points for all defensive linemen, but Bain’s 51 pressures led the conference and Mesidor’s 45 were 3rd.

    Similar can be said about Pitt’s linebacker duo of Rasheem Biles and Kyle Louis. Biles’ 62 Total Points led all ACC defensive players and was 2nd in the country among LBs. That resulted in a spot as a 1st Team All-American. While he couldn’t match his incredible numbers from 2024, Louis still put together another great season in 2025, with 85 tackles, 3 sacks, and 2 interceptions.

    1st Team Specialists

    Position Name School
    K Aidan Birr Georgia Tech
    P Jack Stonehouse Syracuse
    Returner Caullin Lacy Louisville

    Aidan Birr’s 25 made field goals (on 28 attempts) for the Yellow Jackets were five more than anyone else in the conference.

    Granted Syracuse’s Jack Stonehouse punted more than anyone in the conference, he led the ACC in net average (43.9), was 3rd in gross punt average (46.5), and added 14 punts inside the 20 with 25 forced fair catches.

    The only player in the conference with multiple return touchdowns was Louisville’s Caullin Lacy, who had two punt return touchdowns on the season. His 461 punt return yards were nearly 200 more than 2nd in the conference, and he also added 234 yards on kick returns.

    2nd Team Offense

    Position Name School
    QB Darian Mensah Duke
    RB J’Mari Taylor Virginia
    WR Cooper Barkate Duke
    WR Chris Bell Louisville
    TE Justin Joly NC State
    FLEX Trell Harris Virginia
    OT Markel Bell Miami FL
    OT Blake Miller Clemson
    OG Noah Josey Virginia
    OG Addison Nichols SMU
    OC Luke Petitbon Florida State

    Duke’s Darian Mensah highlights the 2nd Team by garnering 107 Total Points in 2025, 2nd-most in the conference. However, his 110 Passing Total Points ranked 1st.

    Justin Joly tied the conference-lead with 7 receiving touchdowns and 0 drops on 67 targets.

    2nd Team Defense

    Position Name School
    DT Aidan Keanaaina California
    DT Jeffrey M’ba SMU
    EDGE Clev Lubin Louisville
    EDGE Mitchell Melton Virginia
    LB Sammy Brown Clemson
    LB Caden Fordham NC State
    CB Brent Austin California
    CB Avieon Terrell Clemson
    S KP Price Boston College
    S Carter Davis Boston College
    FLEX Kavir Bains-Marquez Pittsburgh

    Clev Lubin’s 6.5 sacks were 5th-best in the conference, while his 42 pressures were 7th.

    Brent Austin didn’t record any interceptions for Cal in 2025, but his 13 passes defensed were 2nd-most in the ACC.

    2nd Team Specialists

    Position Name School
    K Luca Lombardo Boston College
    P Marshall Nichols Georgia Tech
    Returner Carlos Hernandez Wake Forest

    Luca Lombardo went 16-for-17 on field goal attempts and hit all 35 of his extra points for Boston College.

    Wake Forest’s Carlos Hernandez had a punt return touchdown to go along with 279 punt return yards, 2nd-most in the ACC.

    Honorable Mentions

    Name School
    TE Sam Roush Stanford
    DT Aaron Hall Duke
    EDGE Isaiah Smith SMU
    EDGE Will Heldt Clemson
    S Ricardo Jones Clemson
    QB Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele California
    QB Chandler Morris Virginia

    Among the Honorable Mentions, those deserving of an extra shoutout are Stanford’s Sam Roush and Clemson’s Ricardo Jones. Roush’s 545 receiving yards were tops among ACC TEs and his 163 yards after contact were 5th-most among anyone in the conference. While Jones gave up a couple touchdowns, his 6 interceptions led the conference even though he was targeted only 21 times all season.

    Total Points, stats, and ranks as of 12/4/2025

  • Which Teams Had The Best Draft Classes: 2019-2022?

    Which Teams Had The Best Draft Classes: 2019-2022?

    Photo: Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire

    Overall Total Points Score Rankings from 2019-2022

    In 2019, we began the SIS Football Rookie Handbook. Every year since, we have written scouting reports and graded players for the NFL Draft. While it’s not a bad thing to grade draft classes immediately after the draft each year, it’s much more productive and accurate to wait until they’ve played for three years in the NFL. With that, we’ve now been able to grade each of the 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022 draft classes’ first three seasons.

    To catch the first part of the article which lays out how the 2022 draft class did specifically, click here.

    Overall TP Score Ranks

    Now that we’re four years into this, we can begin to take a broader look across seasons. 

    – With that, the Chiefs have the highest average TP Score across the last four seasons with 64.41, over ten points higher than the Jaguars (54.08) in 2nd. The Lions, with 51.08, round out the top 3. Check out the entire list in the Appendix.

    – Conversely, the Rams are the only team with an average ranking in the bottom 6, and they also rank dead last with an average TP Score of just 23.47, though the Vikings are on their heels thanks to their  No. 31 ranking this year. Like the past three years, the Rams haven’t made a 1st-round pick in any of these seasons, so it’s likely they aren’t going to get a high-end impact player, but it’s telling that they’ve struggled to find much value in the later rounds of drafts.

    Now the real question is how do our initial rankings compare to those numbers? 

    – The Chiefs have had the highest average TP Score in four years, but we’ve given them the 3rd-worst cumulative ranking post-draft. Omitting L’Jarius Snead in 2020 played into that, and that’s clearly the biggest miss on our part. However, it’s worth noting that they’ve been able to take players who fit their scheme perfectly and make them work when those same players may not fit elsewhere.

    – Additionally, our average top 10 post-draft teams who also have an average TP Score rank in the top 10 include the Jaguars, Lions, and Bengals. Conversely, matches in the bottom 10 include Steelers, Vikings, and Rams. Teams we match in the middle 12 include the Cowboys, Bills, Dolphins, Packers, Commanders, and Titans.

    – While we’ve been way too low on the Chiefs post-draft each year, conversely, we’ve been way too high on the Panthers. We’ve averaged giving them the 3rd-best (tied) class across the four seasons immediately after the draft, but they have just the 29th-best TP Score. Aside from ranking 5th in 2020, they’ve ranked exactly 29th the other three years. Panthers fans hope Bryce Young and team can improve their ranking next season.

    How do we compare to the consensus?

    Rene Bugner, @RNBWCV on X, puts out a consensus report card based on many of the post-draft grades each year to find a consensus ranking of the teams. His post for the 2022 draft class grades can be found here. Using this, we can determine how our post-draft rankings compared to the consensus three years later based on TP Score.

    If we compare ourselves against the consensus for the 2022 draft class, we were closer on 15 of the teams, the consensus was closer on 11, and both either had the same consensus ranking or tied in terms of differential for the remaining six teams.

    Our post-draft ranking agreed with the consensus for the Jets (No. 1), Browns (No. 21), 49ers (No. 28), and Rams (No. 31).

    Some of our biggest misses, as referenced in the other article, were the Panthers, Colts, and Cowboys.

    The consensus felt the Panthers would be middle of the pack (No. 15), which was much closer to their No. 29 ranking than our No. 5.

    The Colts ranked No. 12 by the consensus and finished No. 13, much closer than us at No. 30.

    Finally, while the Cowboys had the 3rd-best TP Score, we ranked them No. 20 and consensus felt they were No. 24.

    The biggest wins for us compared to the consensus were the Saints, Jaguars, and Titans.

    The consensus felt New Orleans had the 25th-best class, but we hit them exactly at No. 10.

    The Jaguars finished No. 12 in TP Score, and we had them No. 9 against the consensus at No. 22.

    Finally, the Titans finished ranked 24th in TP Score, and we had them ranked No. 16 while the consensus felt they had the No. 7 class.

    While our grades and rankings are far from perfect, they have stacked up well against the consensus. Considering ties count as a half-point, only one year have we not equaled or bettered the consensus, and that was our first season in 2019 (48%). We were closer on 59% of teams in 2020, we tied the consensus in 2021 at 50%, and we were at 56% in 2022.

    If you want to see each individual year’s article, you can find 2019 here, 2020 here, 2021 here, and 2022 here.

    Our scouting and grading process is much different than most non-NFL team evaluators out there, and one could argue that TP Score isn’t a sufficient means for grading the classes, but we’ll stack our numbers up against any of them.

    Appendix

    Average TP Score and ranking across all four seasons (the 2019-2022 draft classes each after their first three seasons in 2021-2024)

    Team Avg TP Rank Avg TP Score
    Chiefs 1 64.41
    Jaguars 2 54.08
    Lions 3 51.08
    Saints 4 47.90
    49ers 5 47.10
    Chargers 6 46.86
    Broncos 7 46.70
    Bengals 8 45.45
    Jets 9 45.21
    Buccaneers 10 44.70
    Cowboys 11 44.32
    Bears 12 43.76
    Bills 13 43.47
    Dolphins 14 41.13
    Packers 15 40.87
    Seahawks 16 40.81
    Commanders 17 39.50
    Falcons 18 38.59
    Titans 19 38.52
    Ravens 20 36.95
    Colts 21 36.49
    Cardinals 22 36.37
    Steelers 23 36.14
    Eagles 24 36.11
    Giants 25 35.85
    Texans 26 35.84
    Browns 27 35.77
    Raiders 28 35.46
    Panthers 29 28.15
    Patriots 30 27.90
    Vikings 31 23.55
    Rams 32 23.47

     

  • Reviewing Our Grades for the 2022 NFL Draft Class

    Reviewing Our Grades for the 2022 NFL Draft Class

    Photo: Brandon Sloter/Icon Sportswire

    Introduction

    While many crave all the NFL Draft Team Grades that publications put out the day after the draft, including us on both accounts, there are a lot of unknowns at that point. Of course, we all have our own NFL Draft prospect rankings heading into that weekend, but those players have yet to play a snap in the NFL. So, how can we really grade a team’s draft class if those players haven’t yet stepped onto an NFL field?

    It usually takes at least three years to see how well a draft class turned out. While said publications, including us, don’t want to wait three years before putting out their grades on a draft class, we do both. This is the time that teams must decide on 5th-year options for their 1st-round picks. Additionally, this gives these players a rookie season and two full years after that to get settled in and playing time under their belt.

    Three years ago, Sports Info Solutions published our very first NFL Draft website. After three years in book form, we moved our reports, articles, stats, leaderboards, and team pages onto the web for the first time. After the 2022 NFL Draft, we, just as many others, posted our NFL Draft Team Grades, which can be seen here. It’s worth noting we don’t give out letter grades like most. We rank the teams from 1 to 32 in terms of how much talent they got as an entire class based on our pre-draft player grades.

    Just as I did last year, in the article you can see here, I’ve developed a system to evaluate the draft classes using Total Points relative to position as the foundation. Three seasons have now gone by since the 2022 NFL Draft. So, let’s use that to truly see how each team did with getting value from its selections and draft class as a whole.

    Our TLDR Top Things to Know

    1. We ranked the Jets No. 1 in our 2022 post-draft ranking. Three years later, the Seahawks rank No. 1 according to our stat for assessing it, Total Points Score (TP Score), followed by the Jets, Cowboys, Lions, and Packers.
    2. The Dolphins ranked last both in our original rankings in 2022 and in TP Score three years later.
    3. The Seahawks, Packers, and Chiefs accrued the most raw Total Points from their draft classes.
    4. Brock Purdy, Kerby Joseph, and Kyle Hamilton were top 3 in Total Points across the past three seasons.

    How much value did teams get?

    Let’s take a look at how we ranked teams after the 2022 NFL Draft and then who got the most and least value. See the Appendix at the bottom to see how all 32 teams ranked in our 2022 rankings and in TP Score.

    Here are the teams we ranked at the top immediately following the draft back in 2022. To see our scouting grading scale, check out our NFL Draft site.

    Top 5 Teams in 2022 Post-Draft Rankings
    Team Book Rank Grade
    Jets 1 6.53
    Eagles 2 6.46
    Lions 3 6.45
    Ravens 4 6.43
    Panthers 5 6.40

    TP Score will be defined below, but here are the top 5 teams based on how much value they received from their draft class.

    Top 5 Teams in TP Score
    Team TP Rank TP Score
    Seahawks 1 76.67
    Jets 2 75.43
    Cowboys 3 66.96
    Lions 4 66.00
    Packers 5 64.54

    In our post-draft rankings in 2022, we tabbed the Jets as the No. 1 draft class, and they just got edged out by the Seahawks for No. 1 three years later. The Jets drafted the two Rookies of the Year in Garrett Wilson and Sauce Gardner, not to mention adding Jermaine Johnson, all in the 1st round.

    While we felt the Seahawks drafted a strong class post-draft, we ranked them 7th, we were a little low on Riq Woolen (6.4) and Abraham Lucas (6.3) compared to how they performed. Not only did the Seahawks accumulate the best TP Score, they also had the most raw Total Points among the class with 414.

    Seattle Seahawks

    Player College Grade Total Points 2022-2024
    OT Charles Cross Mississippi State 6.9 67
    ED Boye Mafe Minnesota 6.6 73
    RB Kenneth Walker III Michigan State 6.6 79
    OT Abraham Lucas Washington State 6.3 45
    CB Coby Bryant Cincinnati 6.7 45
    CB Riq Woolen UTSA 6.4 97
    ED Tyreke Smith Ohio State 5.9 0
    WR Bo Melton Rutgers 5.9 6
    WR Dareke Young Lenoir-Rhyne 5.8 2

    We also had the Lions in our top 5, and they ended up there again three years later. Despite a midseason injury in 2024, Aidan Hutchinson has been dominant and has only continued to improve each year he’s been in the league. Additionally, drafting Kerby Joseph in the 3rd round was arguably one of the biggest steals of the draft. His 136 Total Points over the past three seasons was 2nd-most overall and most among all non-QBs. It’s easy to see how the Lions are up here after drafting two players who were top 5 in Total Points.

    As for the Cowboys, we were high on Tyler Smith (SIS No. 5 OT), Damone Clark (SIS No. 2 MLB), and Jalen Tolbert (SIS No. 16 WR), as all received 6.4 or above grades from us, but Sam Williams (33 TP), Jake Ferguson (51 TP), DaRon Bland (91 TP), and John Ridgeway (20 TP) were also above-average players and big-time contributors who we had graded as backups.

    The Packers rounded out the top 5 in TP Score with the 2nd-most raw Total Points (411). We ranked them 12th immediately following the 2022 Draft, having given 6 of their 11 picks a 6.3 grade or better. However, we were a little lower on Romeo Doubs (SIS No. 32 WR) and Zach Tom (SIS No. 16 OT), who combined for 97 Total Points.

    Conversely, here are the bottom 5 teams from our 2022 rankings.

    Bottom 5 Teams in 2022 Post-Draft Rankings
    Team Book Rank Grade
    49ers 28 5.98
    Buccaneers 29 5.94
    Colts 30 5.90
    Rams 31 5.86
    Dolphins 32 5.80

    Based on TP Score, here are the worst teams in terms of getting value from their 2021 draft picks.

    Bottom 5 Teams in TP Score
    Team TP Rank TP Score
    Rams 28 23.13
    Panthers 29 19.44
    Raiders 30 14.97
    Vikings 31 13.97
    Dolphins 32 1.50

    The big bullseye here was the Dolphins. We were very low on their draft class initially, and they haven’t done anything to disprove that. Even though they had only four picks in the draft, and none until late in Round 3, only one of them was one we had graded above a 5.8. We graded Channing Tindall a 6.6, but he has only accumulated 1 Total Point in the past three seasons, as he’s hardly played any defense and mainly been a special teams player. Erik Ezukanma was our top 5.8 receiver (SIS No. 36 WR) and has only 2 Total Points. Their other two picks we didn’t have on the site and have combined for 3 Total Points. So, the grand total for Miami’s draft class was 6 Total Points.

    While we ranked the Rams (31st) low initially, we were a little off on the Raiders (17th) and Vikings (19th) and completely missed on the Panthers (5th).

    The Panthers have gotten 100 Total Points from their six draft picks. Ikem Ekwonu (SIS No. 3 OT) and Cade Mays (SIS No. 6 OG) have been about what we expected, but they haven’t gotten much of anything from the rest of their class, especially Amare Barno (SIS No. 14 ED), who only has 8 Total Points despite our 6.5 starting grade.

    Determining Total Points Score

    In case you missed previous articles, let’s explain the process of creating each team’s TP Score. When looking back to see how good or bad a specific draft class was, there are two main points to detect:

    1. How productive were the draft picks on the field?
    2. How much talent did the team draft relative to the amount of picks they made? 

    As in: Did they hit on one player or did they hit on multiple players?

    To determine the value of the draft classes, I used Total Points, our flagship player value stat, from across the last three seasons. However, for those of you who are familiar with Total Points, it gives a lot of extra weight to quarterbacks. With that said, Brock Purdy alone would have had the 17th-best draft class with his 195 Total Points if we just used raw Total Points.

    While there is a reason we weigh quarterbacks so much more compared to other positions (they are pretty important), using that raw number in this sense isn’t going to make for a perfect match. While getting your franchise quarterback is a huge win, especially with the last pick of the draft, it doesn’t automatically give you a top class. This year, San Francisco ended up 18th in TP Score, and I think most would agree they had an average-at-best class aside from Purdy.

    Answering question 2 takes into account how well a team drafted throughout the entirety of the draft class. I found the average Total Points per player from the 2022 class at each position, including UDFAs who have taken at least one offensive or defensive snap, since they were also available to be selected.

    The positional averages are shown in the table below.

    Pos TP per Player
    QB 36.4
    RB 12.3
    WR 12.1
    TE 15.3
    OL 27.1
    DE 22.1
    DT 7.1
    LB 17.6
    CB 35.9
    S 29.3

    The TP Score, as referenced earlier, is what’s used to rank the teams. It is calculated as follows:

    1. Add up the Total Points from the entire team’s draft class
    2. Divide that number by the number of selections the team had
    3. Multiply that number by the percentage of draft picks that were above the average Total Points for their given position
    4. Add that to the original Total Points per draft pick

    In these 4 steps, we are essentially answering how productive the draft class was and how many picks were “hits”. Let’s run through an example using our No. 2 team, the New York Jets.

    Here is their draft class:

    Pos Player Total Points
    CB Sauce Gardner 112
    WR Garrett Wilson 53
    DE Jermaine Johnson 45
    RB Breece Hall 41
    TE Jeremy Ruckert 10
    OL Max Mitchell 17
    DE Micheal Clemons 30

     

    Add up the Total Points from the entire team’s draft class

    308

    Divide that number by the number of selections the team had

    308 Total Points divided by 7 selections equals 44.00

    Multiply that number by the percentage of draft picks that were above the average Total Points for their given position

    Gardner, Wilson, Johnson, Hall, and Clemons all accumulated a Total Points number that was above average compared to their position groups

    44.00 times 71.4% (5 out of 7) equals 31.43

    Add that to the original Total Points per draft pick

    44.00 plus 31.43 equals 75.43, which is their TP Score

    So, to summarize, we took the team’s Total Points gained from these players, dispersed it throughout the entire class and then gave a bump based on how many above-average players they drafted.

    Now that we know how the teams ranked and how the TP Score is calculated, let’s dive into some of the other details.

    Other Key Takeaways

    – The Cowboys and Eagles hit on at least 75% of their picks in 2022. Dallas hit on 7 of 9 picks, while Philadelphia hit on 4 of 5. Interestingly enough, none of the three players who weren’t hits among the teams accumulated any Total Points. Additionally, the Packers, Giants, and Jets get shoutouts for being just under 75%. The Packers and Giants hit on 8 of their 11 picks, while the Jets hit on 5 of their 7.

    – The Packers and Giants having eight hits were the most of any team. The Packers ranked 5th in TP Score and the Giants ranked 11th. Both were top 7 in raw Total Points. Of Green Bay’s eight hits, all but 1 had more than 32 Total Points, suggesting massive contribution from their draft class. Funny enough, the same can almost be said for the Giants, as only one hit was under 31 Total Points. The kicker in the difference between these two teams is that the Packers had four players with 56+ Total Points, while the Giants only had two.

    – The Dolphins were the only team to not draft at least one player who has played above the positional average compared to the rest of the draft class. Additionally, the Vikings drafted only 1 in their 10 picks and the Raiders had just 1 in their 6 selections. Furthermore, in addition to Miami (Channing Tindall) and Buffalo (Kaiir Elam), the Vikings (Lewis Cine), 49ers (Drake Jackson), Rams (Logan Bruss), and Titans (Treylon Burks) were the only teams whose first draft selection wasn’t an above-average player. This is now the third year in a row that’s been the case for Tennessee and Los Angeles.

    – The three teams with the most raw Total Points are the Seahawks (414), Packers (411), and Chiefs (408). It’s funny how things change, as Seattle accumulated the least amount of Total Points with their 2021 class. Green Bay and Kansas City ranked 5th and 6th, respectively. We detailed Seattle and Green Bay already, so for the Chiefs, they hit a huge home run with Trent McDuffie (SIS No. 3 CB), in addition to getting huge contributions from George Karlaftis (SIS No. 4 ED), Bryan Cook (SIS No. 7 S), Leo Chenal (SIS No. 3 MLB), and Jaylen Watson (SIS No. 41 CB). That’s not to mention Joshua Williams (SIS No. 28 CB), whose 34 Total Points actually just missed the average in a deep cornerback class.

    – The Dolphins (6), Raiders (77), and Panthers (100) totaled the least amount of Total Points from their draft class. For Las Vegas, it received 73 of their 77 Total Points from Dylan Parham (SIS No. 4 OG), their first selection. Thayer Munford (SIS No. 9 OG) did get 21 Total Points, but Zamir White (SIS No. 5 RB) has been a huge disappointment, accumulating -19 Total Points during his time.

    – Of the 18 players whose options were picked up, minus Derek Stingley Jr. since he received an extension, the only two who didn’t rank in the top 8 of their position group among the class were Ikem Ekwonu, whose 65 Total Points placed him 10th among offensive linemen, and Daxton Hill, whose 44 Total Points placed him 11th among safeties.

    How do our Initial Grades Compare?

    75% (24/32) of our initial ranks were in the correct half, meaning a team we ranked between 1 and 16 or 17 and 32 was ultimately in that tier, which is a huge success compared to last season and our best percentage ever. Not only did we get three direct hits, 12 teams were within three spots and 24 teams were only a single-digit difference from post-draft to now.

    The biggest differences in our initial grades and these final rankings were the Panthers (24 spots), Cowboys (17 spots) and Colts (17 spots). While we were way too high on Carolina post-draft, as previously mentioned, we were far too low on Dallas and Indianapolis. We had the Cowboys 20th post-draft and they ended up 3rd, whereas the Colts were initially ranked 30th and ended up 13th.

    For Indianapolis, Bernard Raimann (SIS No. 6 OT) and Alec Pierce (SIS No. 12 WR) were the only players we graded above a 5.9. We missed on including Rodney Thomas II and Drew Ogletree on the site at all, as they combined for 73 Total Points. Additionally, we graded Nick Cross (SIS No. 19 S) as a 5.8 backup, but he’s accumulated 59 Total Points himself.

    Some other players we unfortunately omitted from the site were Christian Benford, Kader Kohou, and Tony Adams. Benford’s 93 Total Points is tied for 6th-most among CBs in big-time CB class and not too far outside the top 10 overall. Kohou and Adams each have accumulated 90 and 64 Total Points, respectively.

    What were some of our biggest misses elsewhere? Brock Purdy is one of the biggest names in the class. While he’s a bit of an anomaly as the last selection in the draft, we graded him as a 5.8 and the 10-best QB in the class, yet he led all 2022 draftees in Total Points. Additionally, Martin Emerson Jr. was our 37th-ranked CB, but his 103 Total Points put him in the top 10.

    Let’s take a look at some of our biggest wins.

    Four of our top 5 safeties going into the draft ended up top 5 in Total Points at the position, with only Daxton Hill (SIS No. 3 S) missing out and Reed Blankenship (SIS No. 28 S) in his place. Additionally, Rasheed Walker (SIS No. 7 OT), who was drafted in the 7th round, has accumulated 56 Total Points for the Packers which is 13th-best among all OL.

    Tyquan Thornton was our 27th-ranked WR and was drafted in the 2nd round, but has only 12 Total Points in 28 games. Velus Jones Jr. (SIS No. 25 WR) was drafted in the 3rd round and has just 3 Total Points in 29 games. JT Woods, our 30th-ranked safety, was also drafted in the 3rd round and has only accumulated 1 Total Point in 13 games. Finally, Montrell Washington, who was the first non-ST player drafted that we didn’t get a formal look on, was drafted in the 5th round and has just 1 Total Point in 22 games, primarily as a returner on special teams.

    The table below shows the top Total Points earners across the past three seasons from the draft class and how we graded and ranked them on our site pre-draft.

    Rank Position Player Total Points SIS Grade SIS Pos Rank
    1 QB Brock Purdy 195 5.8 10
    2 S Kerby Joseph 136 6.7 5
    3 S Kyle Hamilton 120 7.0 1
    4 DE Aidan Hutchinson 116 7.0 1 (ED)
    5 CB Derek Stingley Jr. 115 6.9 1
    6 CB Trent McDuffie 113 6.8 3
    7 CB Sauce Gardner 112 6.8 2
    8 CB Martin Emerson Jr. 103 5.8 37
    9 C Tyler Linderbaum 97 6.8 1
    10 CB Riq Woolen 97 6.4 14

    As mentioned before, we were a bit low on Purdy, Emerson, and Woolen. However, the other seven were in our top 5 at the position, including our top 3 cornerbacks. It’s easy to see why the Lions and Ravens ranked so high in TP Score and in our post-draft rankings, as each has two players on this list. That’s not to mention each of our top 2 in TP Score, the Seahawks and Jets, having a player here as well.

    Conclusion

    Nobody really knows how a draft class is going to turn out immediately after the draft, yet it still makes sense to grade and/or rank the teams based on player grades for an initial reaction. 

    Post-draft grades are great in a sense, but they should be taken with a grain of salt. Once three years go by and we’ve seen what these players have done in the NFL, we can get a better sense of how good the team drafted.

    These rankings are all about finding which teams drafted the best draft class as a whole, not just who got the best player. While there are some players who didn’t play for the team that drafted them for the entirety of the past three seasons, that wasn’t taken into account since those decisions came after the initial drafting of these players, which is what this is based on. 

    An example of that from this class is Jack Jones. He was drafted by the Patriots and has 93 Total Points, but played only 18 games and 575 snaps for them across 2022 and part of 2023 before playing 24 games and nearly 1,400 snaps across the past season and a half for the Raiders, where he had five interceptions and three pick-sixes.

    It’s not a perfect science, but it does a good job at pulling player value and seeing how well teams drafted as a whole class relative to the amount of selections they were afforded.

    Three years later, the comparison between our initial rankings and these rankings are the best they’ve ever been (in both our grading and our scouting process). Considering this was the first year of our new website, we were afforded more time during the draft process. Previously, the Handbook was completed by the end of January, so we didn’t have the luxury of factoring in Combine or Pro Day results. Having a website allowed us to also spend February, March, and April finalizing these reports and grades and using all the data available up to the draft to be sure they were the best they could be. With that extra time, we were able to add 92 more players to the site for a total of 410 compared to just 318 in 2021. That also allowed us to get 8 more players featured on the site who were drafted.

    We hope this article next year continues to show the growth we made in Year 2 of our website and Year 5 overall. As with everything we do here, we hope this improves year over year and can look back and say we kept getting better every day.

    Appendix

    2022 SIS Post-Draft Rankings based on the SIS NFL Draft site

    Team Site Rank Grade
    1 Jets 6.53
    2 Eagles 6.46
    3 Lions 6.45
    4 Ravens 6.43
    5 Panthers 6.40
    6 Texans 6.38
    7 Seahawks 6.34
    8 Falcons 6.30
    9 Jaguars 6.30
    10 Saints 6.30
    11 Giants 6.28
    12 Packers 6.27
    13 Chiefs 6.27
    14 Bengals 6.23
    15 Commanders 6.19
    16 Titans 6.17
    17 Raiders 6.15
    18 Patriots 6.14
    19 Vikings 6.10
    20 Cowboys 6.10
    21 Browns 6.09
    22 Cardinals 6.08
    23 Bears 6.05
    24 Bills 6.04
    25 Broncos 6.02
    26 Steelers 6.01
    27 Chargers 6.00
    28 49ers 5.98
    29 Buccaneers 5.94
    30 Colts 5.90
    31 Rams 5.86
    32 Dolphins 5.80

    TP Rank based on TP Score and how much value each team got from their draft picks over the last three seasons

    Team TP Rank TP Score
    Seahawks 1 76.67
    Jets 2 75.43
    Cowboys 3 66.96
    Lions 4 66.00
    Packers 5 64.54
    Chiefs 6 61.20
    Ravens 7 54.37
    Eagles 8 54.00
    Bills 9 53.81
    Saints 10 53.44
    Giants 11 50.88
    Jaguars 12 49.80
    Colts 13 48.14
    Buccaneers 14 45.38
    Texans 15 42.05
    Bengals 16 41.75
    Falcons 17 41.06
    49ers 18 39.52
    Steelers 19 36.73
    Chargers 20 32.83
    Bears 21 28.69
    Commanders 22 26.06
    Cardinals 23 25.71
    Titans 24 25.63
    Patriots 25 24.18
    Browns 26 24.15
    Broncos 27 23.26
    Rams 28 23.13
    Panthers 29 19.44
    Raiders 30 14.97
    Vikings 31 13.97
    Dolphins 32 1.50

     

  • 2025 SIS NFL Draft Grades

    2025 SIS NFL Draft Grades

    If you want our full thoughts on the players your team has added plus any UDFA, you can check out our Big Board for tons of great information. And if you’d like to contribute to next year’s draft cycle, consider applying to our Football Data Scout position.

    Welcome to our annual NFL Draft Report Card, in which we grade both the teams and ourselves on how well they fared in this NFL Draft.

    Using our grades, we attempted to rank each team’s draft class. Just like in our article from last season, we assigned all players who were drafted but not on the site a 5.4, which is the equivalent to a training camp body. We took those grades for each player and divided that by the number of selections the team had.

    These rankings do not account for positional value, the value of where players were drafted, or trades teams made; it is literally based on the grades we gave the players who were drafted and how much talent we feel teams got from their selections compared to the number of picks they made.

    And with that, the 2025 Best Draft Class, with an average grade of 6.50, goes to the Cleveland Browns. Much of the talk will be getting Shedeur Sanders in the 5th Round, but they grabbed our No. 2 overall prospect, Mason Graham, at pick No. 5 as well.

    The Browns draft class is in the table below.

    Cleveland Browns 2025 Draft Class
    Pick Position Player College Grade
    5 DT Mason Graham Michigan 6.9
    33 WLB Carson Schwesinger UCLA 6.6
    36 RB Quinshon Judkins Ohio State 6.6
    67 TE Harold Fannin Jr. Bowling Green 6.6
    94 QB Dillon Gabriel Oregon 5.9
    126 RB Dylan Sampson Tennessee 6.2
    144 QB Shedeur Sanders Colorado 6.7

    The Browns take our top spot after having our 2nd-worst spot in 2024. They made a shocking trade early in the draft by trading away the chance to take Travis Hunter and moving back three spots with the Jaguars. However, they did still get the chance to take the No. 2 overall player on our board in DT Mason Graham.

    Due to the trade with Jacksonville, Cleveland ended up with 2 of the first 4 picks in Round 2. The Browns used the first one on Carson Schwesinger out of UCLA. The linebacker class was thin overall. Schwesinger was our No. 2 WLB behind Jihaad Campbell.

    Cleveland doubled up at two separate positions during the draft, and running back was one of them. With their second Round 2 selection, they took Quinshon Judkins out of Ohio State, 1 of 2 in-state players they drafted. We had Judkins ranked No. 4 among RBs, just behind his Ohio State teammate, who was still on the board. Then, in the 4th round, they selected Dylan Sampson (SIS No. 13 RB) out of Tennessee.

    Arguably the most notable thing to come out of the entire draft was the fact the Browns selected two quarterbacks, and not only that, but who they were and the order they took them in. Late in Round 3, they opted to take Dillon Gabriel from Oregon, who was the 5th QB taken to that point, but the No. 10 QB on our board. Then, they traded up in the 5th round to finally end Shedeur Sanders’ fall. Both Gabriel and Sanders create a very crowded and competitive QB room, as they join Joe Flacco, Kenny Pickett, and Deshaun Watson.

    Not to be forgotten is Harold Fannin Jr. (SIS No. 3 TE, No. 44 Overall), who they selected early in Round 3. Another in-state player from Bowling Green, Fannin crushed numerous TE records in 2024 and should look to compete for snaps in the passing game from day 1.

    SIS Top Draft Classes
    Year Team Previous Season Following Season 2nd Season
    2019 Tennessee Titans 9-7 (No Playoffs) 9-7 (L, AFC Champ) 11-5 (L, Wild Card)
    2020 Cleveland Browns 6-10 (No Playoffs) 11-5 (L, Divisional) 8-9
    2021 Detroit Lions 5-11 (No Playoffs) 3-13-1 9-8
    2022 New York Jets 4-13 (No Playoffs) 7-10 7-10
    2023 Carolina Panthers 7-10 (No Playoffs) 2-15 5-12
    2024 Chicago Bears 7-10 (No Playoffs) 5-12 ?
    2025 Cleveland Browns 3-14 (No Playoffs) ? ?

    Since we grade players based on what they will be at the beginning of Year 2, let’s widen the table of our recent Draft Class winners. 

    After winning as top class in 2019, the Titans made consecutive playoff appearances. While the Browns made the playoffs the next year, the turmoil in that locker room in 2021 forced a fall to 8-9. The Lions did take a dip in 2021 in the first year of a new regime, but they took a huge step forward in 2022, nearly making the playoffs, and then making consecutive playoff appearances the past two seasons. 

    As for the Jets, they improved their record in 2022 and had both the Offensive (Garrett Wilson) and Defensive (Sauce Gardner) Rookies of the Year, but expectations fell in 2023 when Aaron Rodgers went down in Week 1. The Panthers were tough to watch in 2023, but he showed a lot of confidence and a big turnaround in the back half of 2024. The Bears and Caleb Williams went through some growing pains during his rookie season, but they’ve revamped the roster under new head coach Ben Johnson to be able to compete with the rest of the NFC North.

    What does that mean for the Browns this time around? This is the second time they’ve made our top spot immediately after the draft. The last time, they made the playoffs the next season. They now have five QBs competing for the starting job. They’ve revamped the RB room with Nick Chubb’s recent injury history. And, they added Graham and Schwesinger to a defense that already has Myles Garrett, and his new contract, and Denzel Ward. The AFC North is a tough division, and whether or not they are banking on one of these QBs to be their franchise guy or wait for next year’s class, they are building a solid foundation.

    Now, let’s check out how the rest of the teams fared in our rankings. Here are the draft classes ranked in order of their grade:

    2025 Final Rankings
    Rank Team # of Picks Draft Grade
    1 Browns 7 6.50
    2 Falcons 5 6.44
    3 Bengals 6 6.42
    4 Giants 7 6.34
    5 Chiefs 7 6.33
    6 Titans 9 6.30
    7 Cardinals 7 6.29
    8 Jets 7 6.27
    9 Panthers 8 6.26
    10 Saints 9 6.24
    11 Jaguars 9 6.23
    12 Cowboys 9 6.23
    13 Bears 8 6.23
    14 Buccaneers 6 6.22
    15 Bills 9 6.17
    16 Eagles 10 6.16
    17 Dolphins 8 6.15
    18 Steelers 7 6.14
    19 Lions 7 6.14
    20 Texans 9 6.12
    21 Commanders 5 6.12
    22 Seahawks 11 6.12
    23 Raiders 11 6.11
    24 Colts 8 6.09
    25 Vikings 5 6.08
    26 Packers 8 6.08
    27 Ravens 11 6.07
    28 Chargers 9 6.06
    29 Rams 6 6.05
    30 Patriots 11 6.02
    31 Broncos 7 6.01
    32 49ers 11 6.00

    The Falcons were aggressive to address their edge group, drafting Jalon Walker (SIS No. 2 ED, No. 9 Overall) and then trading back into the 1st round for James Pearce Jr. (SIS No. 7 ED, No. 29 Overall), en route to our No. 2 class. The Bengals, Giants, and Chiefs rounded out the top 5. New York took Abdul Carter (SIS No. 1 ED, No. 4 Overall) at pick No. 3 and then traded back into Round 1 for their potential franchise quarterback in Jaxson Dart, then took three straight players with a 6.5 grade. Additionally, the Titans got Cam Ward No. 1 overall on their way to our No. 6 class.

    The bottom three teams for 2025, listed 30 to 32, were the Patriots, Broncos, and 49ers

    Philadelphia had our No. 30 class last year and won the Super Bowl. Much like the Eagles last year where they crushed their first two picks (Quinyon Mitchel and Cooper DeJean), the Patriots took LSU’s Will Campbell (SIS No. 1 OT, No. 5 Overall) and Ohio State’s TreVeyon Henderson (SIS No. 3 RB, No. 33 Overall) with their first two picks. They also drafted Georgia’s Jared Wilson (SIS No. 2 OC), Florida State’s Joshua Farmer (SIS No. 5 DT), and LSU’s Bradyn Swinson (SIS No. 14 ED), who we had graded at 6.4 or 6.5. While Kyle Williams (SIS No. 13 WR) has some upside, we felt he’s a No. 4 receiver and they took him early in Round 3. Their final four selections weren’t included on our site and included two special teamers.

    The top 2 players on our board that the Broncos took were Texas’ Jahdae Barron (SIS No. 3 CB, No. 36 Overall) and Illinois’ Pat Bryant (SIS No. 11 WR). UCF’s RJ Harvey (SIS No. 17 RB) and LSU’s Sai’vion Jones (SIS No. 19 ED) graded out as versatile backups for us. Their other selections included a top backup edge rusher, a punter, and a multi-sport developmental tight end.

    This year’s worst class goes to the 49ers. San Francisco had 11 selections, and while grading out high for us can be difficult with a lot of selections, they still had a chance to do so. Georgia’s Mykel Williams (SIS No. 8 ED, No. 34 Overall) was a solid 1st round selection, despite them having their pick of any EDGE besides Abdul Carter. Texas’ Alfred Collins (SIS No. 4 DT) and Oregon’s Jordan James (SIS No. 7 RB), both with 6.5 grades, should be strong role players. Their other eight selections graded out as 5.9 top backups or worse according to our scouts, including Nick Martin (SIS No. 6 MLB) and Upton Scout (SIS No. 16 CB) who were both selected in Round 3.

    How we did

    We always grade ourselves on how many players were drafted that we had featured on our NFL Draft website. 

    On Site/Drafted Pct
    2025 241-of-257 94%
    2024 241-of-257 94%
    2023 238-of-259 92%
    2022 226-of-262 86%
    2021 218-of-259 84%
    2020 199-of-255 78%
    2019 174-of-254 69%

    When taking out specialists, which we currently don’t write up, there were only 12 players drafted who weren’t on the site and only 5 of which we didn’t formally watch. That’s over 98% of the NFL Draft covered! Plus, many players we had on the site who didn’t get drafted have already signed free agent deals with teams.

    Key Facts

    * With only 16 players drafted this year who weren’t featured on the site, many teams added a lot of talent in this year’s draft. Only four teams drafted more than one player who wasn’t featured on the site: the Patriots (4), Bears (2), Packers (2), and Broncos (2), though New England and Denver selected special teamers, who we don’t feature.

    * All four teams in the NFC South ranked in our top 14 this year, further suggesting that it can be any team’s division this year and moving forward.

    * The Panthers still have the best average SIS Draft Class rank and grade average over our seven seasons doing this. While it certainly hasn’t translated to wins, maybe this class will get them back on track in an open division. The Titans, Lions, Bengals, and Falcons round out the top 5 draft class ranks. 

    The Colts continue to bring up the rear. Their No. 11 ranking in 2023 is the only time they’ve ever ranked better than this year’s No. 24, so it may be a while before they climb up the rankings and the standings.

    * For the first time ever, our entire Top 100 Big Board was selected during the draft. Our top 5 UDFAs were Cobee Bryant (SIS No. 12 CB, No. 101 Overall), Seth McLaughlin (SIS No. 3 OC, No. 103 Overall), Xavier Restrepo (SIS No. 12 WR, No. 105 Overall), Zy Alexander (SIS No. 15 CB, No. 111 Overall), and Logan Brown (SIS No. 11 OT, No. 114 Overall). Restrepo has reportedly signed a UDFA deal with the Titans, pairing him up with his former QB in Cam Ward. The top UDFA on our board the past two seasons (Ivan Pace Jr. in 2023 and Leonard Taylor III in 2024) made our All-Rookie Team, so that could bode well for Bryant this year.

    How the NFL Draft Site Compared to the Draft

    Let’s take a look at how the website stacks up to the NFL’s thinking of where players were selected. 

    On offense, the first player drafted at every position except TE was the No. 1 player on our board. Colston Loveland was the first TE off the board, but was our No. 2 ranked TE.

    On defense, the top player at each position matched the first player drafted for all except MLB. Demetrius Knight Jr. was the first MLB taken, while he was our No. 2 player at the position.

    Wide receiver and offensive tackle were the only two positions in which the top 5 drafted matched our top 5 of the position in some order. Every other position with the exception of NT, ED, MLB, WLB, and CB had only one player off, while those just mentioned each had two.

    Overdrafted?

    Only two players graded below a 6.6 were drafted in Round 1. Jaxson Dart (SIS No. 4 QB, No. 90 Overall) by the Giants at No. 25 and Maxwell Hairston (SIS No. 9 CB, No. 94 Overall) by the Bills at No. 30 were both given a 6.4 grade by our scouts.

    Only two non-Top 100 players were drafted in Round 2: Louisville’s Tyler Shough (SIS No. 5 QB) and the aforementioned RJ Harvey. Shough has a great shot to start in New Orleans and just missed our Top 100 while we feel Harvey is a three-down backup.

    Two players graded at 5.8 were selected by the end of Round 3. Minnesota’s Justin Walley (SIS No. 25 CB) by the Colts and USC’s Jaylin Smith (SIS No. 27) by the Texans. Both were near the top of our 5.8 CBs, but that was a bit rich based on who we had graded higher.

    The first eligible player (non-specialist) taken who we did not give a strong enough grade to reach the threshold we set for the website was Maryland LB Ruben Hyppolite II, drafted by the Bears in the 4th round, No. 132 overall. There were only four other players drafted that we didn’t get a formal look at. Those were Tommy Mellott, Marcus Bryant, Junior Bergen, and Kobee Minor.

    Underdrafted?

    The only 6.7 or better player not drafted in the top three rounds was Shedeur Sanders (SIS No. 2 QB, No. 32 Overall), and he went No. 144 to Cleveland.

    Kyle Kennard (SIS No. 9 ED, No. 43 Overall) was the only 6.6 not drafted by day 3, and he was selected No. 125 by the Chargers.

    All of our 6.5 or better players were drafted by the end of Round 5, so there wasn’t much top-end talent left for picking in the final rounds of the draft this year.

    Conclusion

    Every year the SIS scouting department looks to make improvements, and this year was no different. With the SIS Football Operation growing the way it is and us assisting some other departments for much of the draft process this year, our time scouting was even more limited than normal. However, we got a huge help from some of our Data scouts and Live Data scouts in January and February to knock out many of the final first looks we needed to get on players.

    Our six-man scouting team, consisting of Nathan Cooper, Jordan Edwards, Jeff Dean, Ben Hrkach, Chad Tedder, and Jeremy Percy, with the help of the rest of our full-time football operations staff, put in the hard work to finalize over 625 reports, of which 389 were featured on our NFL Draft site, plus get looks at another 60+ players to see if they were worthy of being written up.

    Having nearly the same amount of players on the site this year compared to last year, seeing the same amount of players drafted who were featured on the site is encouraging. While the number of players we didn’t get looks on grew from 2 to 5, we still consider this year a success. As we noted, our Top-100 evaluations were a big success with 82 of our top 100 drafted in the first 100 picks, a 10-point improvement from our previous best from last year. Plus, it was great to see all of our Top 100 players off the board by the end of Round 5.

    We want to thank the hard work our engineering, R&D, and product teams put in this year to get our own internal draft site back up and running and looking better than ever! We’re excited to continue to grow it each year and make it the best one out there.

    Please continue to check out our NFL Draft website as the offseason continues. If you’d like to be involved in our scouting and charting processes next year, consider applying to our Football Data Scout position. We’re taking applications and interviewing for next year’s class now.

  • 2025 Sports Info Solutions Operations Staff 3-Round Mock Draft

    2025 Sports Info Solutions Operations Staff 3-Round Mock Draft

    In an NFL Draft that possesses a lot of talent at the top with really good depth in a handful of positions, what are teams going to do come Draft night?

    How many QBs go in Round 1? When does the first RB come off the board? How many trench players will we see in the first round?

    Using traditional scouting and analytics in conjunction with the NFL Draft site, the Sports Info Solutions Operations department tried its hand at attempting to answer all the burning questions and more in a 3-Round Mock Draft.

    Where are your favorite players going to land?

    Who is your favorite team going to select?

    Those questions and more are about to be answered. Find out now!

    Round 1
    Pick Team Scout Player College
    1 Titans Nathan QB Cam Ward Miami FL
    2 Browns Nathan CB/WR Travis Hunter Colorado
    3 Giants Jared ED Abdul Carter Penn State
    4 Patriots Stephen OT Will Campbell LSU
    5 Jaguars Jeremy RB Ashton Jeanty Boise State
    6 Raiders Chad DT Mason Graham Michigan
    7 Jets Anthony OT Armand Membou Missouri
    8 Panthers Jordan ED Jalon Walker Georgia
    9 Saints Chad QB Shedeur Sanders Colorado
    10 Bears Anthony OT Kelvin Banks Jr. Texas
    11 49ers Jordan DT Walter Nolen Ole Miss
    12 Cowboys Chad WR Tetairoa McMillan Arizona
    13 Dolphins Conner OT Josh Simmons Ohio State
    14 Colts Jeremy TE Colston Loveland Michigan
    15 Falcons Jordan ED Mike Green Marshall
    16 Cardinals Ben ED Mykel Williams Georgia
    17 Bengals Ben WLB Jihaad Campbell Alabama
    18 Seahawks Jeff WR Emeka Egbuka Ohio State
    19 Buccaneers Conner ED Donovan Ezeiruaku Boston College
    20 Broncos Jeremy TE Tyler Warren Penn State
    21 Steelers JD QB Jalen Milroe Alabama
    22 Chargers Ryan NT Kenneth Grant Michigan
    23 Packers Jeff CB Will Johnson Michigan
    24 Vikings Jeff S Malaki Starks Georgia
    25 Texans Ryan OT Josh Conerly Jr. Oregon
    26 Rams JD CB Jahdae Barron Texas
    27 Ravens Kyle OG Tyler Booker Alabama
    28 Lions Nathan ED Shemar Stewart Texas A&M
    29 Commanders Kyle ED James Pearce Jr Tennessee
    30 Bills Evan CB Trey Amos Ole Miss
    31 Chiefs Nathan DT Derrick Harmon Oregon
    32 Eagles Ben RB Omarion Hampton North Carolina
    Round 2
    Pick Team Scout Player College
    33 Browns Nathan QB Jaxson Dart Ole Miss
    34 Giants Jared OC Grey Zabel North Dakota State
    35 Titans Dan WR Luther Burden III Missouri
    36 Jaguars Jeremy WR Matthew Golden Texas
    37 Raiders Chad OG Donovan Jackson Ohio State
    38 Patriots Stephen WR Jayden Higgins Iowa State
    39 Bears Anthony RB TreVeyon Henderson Ohio State
    40 Saints Chad ED Nic Scourton Texas A&M
    41 Bears Anthony S Xavier Watts Notre Dame
    42 Jets Anthony TE Harold Fannin Jr. Bowling Green
    43 49ers Jordan OT Aireontae Ersery Minnesota
    44 Cowboys Chad RB Quinshon Judkins Ohio State
    45 Colts Jeremy WLB Carson Schwesinger UCLA
    46 Falcons Jordan CB Shavon Revel Jr. East Carolina
    47 Cardinals Ben NT Tyleik Williams Ohio State
    48 Dolphins Conner CB Azareye’h Thomas Florida State
    49 Bengals Ben S Nick Emmanwori South Carolina
    50 Seahawks Jeff OG Jonah Savaiinaea Arizona
    51 Broncos Jeremy WR Jaylin Noel Iowa State
    52 Seahawks Jeff CB Benjamin Morrison Notre Dame
    53 Buccaneers Conner ED Princely Umanmielen Ole Miss
    54 Packers Jeff OG Wyatt Milum West Virginia
    55 Chargers Ryan RB Kaleb Johnson Iowa
    56 Bills Evan WR Elic Ayomanor Stanford
    57 Panthers Jordan TE Mason Taylor LSU
    58 Texans Ryan WR Kyle Williams Washington State
    59 Ravens Kyle S Kevin Winston Jr Penn State
    60 Lions Nathan OG Tate Ratledge Georgia
    61 Commanders Kyle CB Maxwell Hairston Kentucky
    62 Bills Evan DT Alfred Collins Texas
    63 Chiefs Nathan OT Anthony Belton NC State
    64 Eagles Ben DT Darius Alexander Toledo
    Round 3
    Pick Team Scout Player College
    65 Giants Jared QB Tyler Shough Louisville
    66 Chiefs Nathan WR Tre Harris Ole Miss
    67 Browns Nathan WR Jack Bech TCU
    68 Raiders Chad RB Cam Skattebo Arizona State
    69 Patriots Stephen ED Jack Sawyer Ohio State
    70 Jaguars Jeremy DT Joshua Farmer Florida State
    71 Saints Chad CB Quincy Riley Louisville
    72 Bears Anthony ED Kyle Kennard South Carolina
    73 Jets Anthony OG Marcus Mbow Purdue
    74 Panthers Jordan S Andrew Mukuba Texas
    75 49ers Jordan ED JT Tuimoloau Ohio State
    76 Cowboys Chad ED Landon Jackson Arkansas
    77 Patriots Stephen RB Dylan Sampson Tennessee
    78 Cardinals Ben CB Darien Porter Iowa State
    79 Texans Ryan OG Miles Frazier LSU
    80 Colts Jeremy OG Dylan Fairchild Georgia
    81 Bengals Ben DT Omarr Norman-Lott Tennessee
    82 Seahawks Jeff WR Savion Williams TCU
    83 Steelers JD DT T.J. Sanders South Carolina
    84 Buccaneers Conner MLB Danny Stutsman Oklahoma
    85 Broncos Jeremy C Jared Wilson Georgia
    86 Chargers Ryan TE Elijah Arroyo Miami FL
    87 Packers Jeff ED Barryn Sorrell Texas
    88 Jaguars Jeremy OT Emery Jones Jr. LSU
    89 Texans Ryan DT Shemar Turner Texas A&M
    90 Rams JD OT Ozzy Trapilo Boston College
    91 Ravens Kyle ED Bradyn Swinson LSU
    92 Seahawks Jeff S Malachi Moore Alabama
    93 Saints Chad WR Jalen Royals Utah State
    94 Browns Nathan DT Deone Walker Kentucky
    95 Chiefs Nathan MLB Demetrius Knight Jr. South Carolina
    96 Eagles Ben TE Terrance Ferguson Oregon
    97 Vikings Jeff CB Jacob Parrish Kansas State
    98 Dolphins Conner OT Charles Grant William & Mary
    99 Giants Jared DT Ty Robinson Nebraska
    100 49ers Jordan ED Oluwafemi Oladejo UCLA
    101 Rams JD S Jonas Sanker Virginia
    102 Lions Nathan WR Pat Bryant Illinois

    The members of the SIS Operations staff who took part in this Mock Draft are: Nathan Cooper, Jordan Edwards, Jeff Dean, Ben Hrkach, Chad Tedder, Jeremy Percy, Conner Hrabal, Ryan Rubinstein, Jared Maslin, JD Allen, Kyle Shatto, Anthony Haage, Dan Foehrenbach, Stephen Marciello, and Evan Butler.

  • Nathan Cooper’s 2025 First & Final 7-Round Mock NFL Draft

    Nathan Cooper’s 2025 First & Final 7-Round Mock NFL Draft

    Photo: Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire

    Every year since before I can remember, I do my own Mock Draft. I only do one, and it’s done within a day or two prior to Draft Day.

    Not only do I try to tackle the first round, but I predict the entire draft, all 257 picks.

    When do the QBs get taken? How many offensive tackles and edge rushers land in Round 1? Who will be Mr. Irrelevant?

    Without projecting trades and, instead, trying to match some players to teams, I attempt to answer those questions and more now.

    Round 1
    Pick Team Player College
    1 Titans QB Cam Ward Miami FL
    2 Browns CB/WR Travis Hunter Colorado
    3 Giants ED Abdul Carter Penn State
    4 Patriots OL Will Campbell LSU
    5 Jaguars RB Ashton Jeanty Boise State
    6 Raiders OL Armand Membou Missouri
    7 Jets TE Tyler Warren Penn State
    8 Panthers ED Jalon Walker Georgia
    9 Saints CB Jahdae Barron Texas
    10 Bears OL Kelvin Banks Jr. Texas
    11 49ers DT Walter Nolen Ole Miss
    12 Cowboys WR Tetairoa McMillan Arizona
    13 Dolphins DT Mason Graham Michigan
    14 Colts TE Colston Loveland Michigan
    15 Falcons ED Mykel Williams Georgia
    16 Cardinals CB Will Johnson Michigan
    17 Bengals ED Mike Green Marshall
    18 Seahawks OL Grey Zabel North Dakota State
    19 Buccaneers LB Jihaad Campbell Alabama
    20 Broncos RB Omarion Hampton North Carolina
    21 Steelers QB Shedeur Sanders Colorado
    22 Chargers DT Kenneth Grant Michigan
    23 Packers WR Matthew Golden Texas
    24 Vikings S Malaki Starks Georgia
    25 Texans OL Josh Simmons Ohio State
    26 Rams CB Trey Amos Ole Miss
    27 Ravens ED Shemar Stewart Texas A&M
    28 Lions ED Donovan Ezeiruaku Boston College
    29 Commanders ED James Pearce Jr. Tennessee
    30 Bills WR Emeka Egbuka Ohio State
    31 Chiefs OL Donovan Jackson Ohio State
    32 Eagles TE Mason Taylor LSU
    Round 2
    Pick Team Player College
    33 Browns QB Jalen Milroe Alabama
    34 Giants QB Jaxson Dart Ole Miss
    35 Titans WR Luther Burden III Missouri
    36 Jaguars DT Derrick Harmon Oregon
    37 Raiders RB TreVeyon Henderson Ohio State
    38 Patriots ED Nic Scourton Texas A&M
    39 Bears RB Quinshon Judkins Ohio State
    40 Saints OL Tyler Booker Alabama
    41 Bears ED JT Tuimoloau Ohio State
    42 Jets S Nick Emmanwori South Carolina
    43 49ers LB Carson Schwesinger UCLA
    44 Cowboys CB Maxwell Hairston Kentucky
    45 Colts ED Barryn Sorrell Texas
    46 Falcons OL Josh Conerly Jr. Oregon
    47 Cardinals OL Wyatt Milum West Virginia
    48 Dolphins CB Azareye’h Thomas Florida State
    49 Bengals DT Alfred Collins Texas
    50 Seahawks ED Princely Umanmielen Ole Miss
    51 Broncos WR Jaylin Noel Iowa State
    52 Seahawks OL Aireontae Ersery Minnesota
    53 Buccaneers CB Shavon Revel Jr. East Carolina
    54 Packers OL Jonah Savaiinaea Arizona
    55 Chargers DT Joshua Farmer Florida State
    56 Bills DT Tyleik Williams Ohio State
    57 Panthers CB Benjamin Morrison Notre Dame
    58 Texans DT Darius Alexander Toledo
    59 Ravens OL Tate Ratledge Georgia
    60 Lions WR Jayden Higgins Iowa State
    61 Commanders S Xavier Watts Notre Dame
    62 Bills CB Jacob Parrish Kansas State
    63 Chiefs RB Kaleb Johnson Iowa
    64 Eagles OL Marcus Mbow Purdue
    Round 3
    Pick Team Player College
    65 Giants OL Emery Jones Jr. LSU
    66 Chiefs OL Anthony Belton NC State
    67 Browns ED Oluwafemi Oladejo UCLA
    68 Raiders WR Tre Harris Ole Miss
    69 Patriots DT Omarr Norman-Lott Tennessee
    70 Jaguars CB Darien Porter Iowa State
    71 Saints QB Tyler Shough Louisville
    72 Bears OL Miles Frazier LSU
    73 Jets OL Ozzy Trapilo Boston College
    74 Panthers WR Jack Bech TCU
    75 49ers OL Charles Grant William & Mary
    76 Cowboys RB Cam Skattebo Arizona State
    77 Patriots OL Dylan Fairchild Georgia
    78 Cardinals WR Elic Ayomanor Stanford
    79 Texans CB Quincy Riley Louisville
    80 Colts LB Danny Stutsman Oklahoma
    81 Bengals WR Kyle Williams Washington State
    82 Seahawks DT T.J. Sanders South Carolina
    83 Steelers OL Jared Wilson Georgia
    84 Buccaneers DT Shemar Turner Texas A&M
    85 Broncos OL Jackson Slater Sacramento State
    86 Chargers CB Nohl Williams California
    87 Packers CB Zah Frazier UTSA
    88 Jaguars ED Josaiah Stewart Michigan
    89 Texans WR Savion Williams TCU
    90 Rams TE Elijah Arroyo Miami FL
    91 Ravens DL Deone Walker Kentucky
    92 Seahawks WR Jalen Royals Utah State
    93 Saints ED Bradyn Swinson LSU
    94 Browns RB Jordan James Oregon
    95 Chiefs ED Landon Jackson Arkansas
    96 Eagles S Kevin Winston Jr. Penn State
    97 Vikings CB Cobee Bryant Kansas
    98 Dolphins TE Terrance Ferguson Oregon
    99 Giants LB Demetrius Knight Jr. South Carolina
    100 49ers ED Kyle Kennard South Carolina
    101 Rams DT Jordan Phillips Maryland
    102 Lions S Jonas Sanker Virginia
    Round 4
    Pick Team Player College
    103 Titans ED Jordan Burch Oregon
    104 Browns OL Chase Lundt UConn
    105 Giants RB Dylan Sampson Tennessee
    106 Patriots RB Bhayshul Tuten Virginia Tech
    107 Jaguars LB Barrett Carter Clemson
    108 Raiders CB Zy Alexander LSU
    109 Bills LB Jeffrey Bassa Oregon
    110 Jets WR Tai Felton Maryland
    111 Panthers S Andrew Mukuba Texas
    112 Saints OL Logan Brown Kansas
    113 49ers CB Upton Stout Western Kentucky
    114 Panthers DT Jamaree Caldwell Oregon
    115 Cardinals OL Seth McLaughlin Ohio State
    116 Dolphins WR Isaiah Bond Texas
    117 Colts CB Bilhal Kone Western Michigan
    118 Falcons WR Pat Bryant Illinois
    119 Bengals LB Teddye Buchanan California
    120 Titans DT Vernon Broughton Texas
    121 Buccaneers WR Jaylin Lane Virginia Tech
    122 Broncos OL Hollin Pierce Rutgers
    123 Steelers RB DJ Giddens Kansas State
    124 Packers LB Cody Simon Ohio State
    125 Chargers RB Devin Neal Kansas
    126 Jaguars TE Harold Fannin Jr. Bowling Green
    127 Rams ED Jack Sawyer Ohio State
    128 Commanders CB Caleb Ransaw Tulane
    129 Ravens DT Jay Toia UCLA
    130 Lions OL Joshua Gray Oregon State
    131 Saints WR Xavier Restrepo Miami FL
    132 Bills ED Ashton Gillotte Louisville
    133 Chiefs WR Isaac TeSlaa Arkansas
    134 Eagles DT Ty Robinson Nebraska
    135 Dolphins OL Cameron Williams Texas
    136 Ravens OL Ajani Cornelius Oregon
    137 Seahawks CB Tommi Hill Nebraska
    138 49ers RB RJ Harvey UCF
    Round 5
    Pick Team Player College
    139 Vikings DT JJ Pegues Ole Miss
    140 Panthers OL Caleb Rogers Texas Tech
    141 Titans TE Gunnar Helm Texas
    142 Jaguars WR Dont’e Thornton Tennessee
    143 Raiders S Malachi Moore Alabama
    144 Patriots DT CJ West Indiana
    145 Jets LB Nick Martin Oklahoma State
    146 Panthers ED Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins Georgia
    147 49ers WR Tory Horton Colorado State
    148 Bears LB Cody Lindenberg Minnesota
    149 Cowboys OL Joe Huber Wisconsin
    150 Dolphins QB Quinn Ewers Texas
    151 Colts OL Luke Kandra Cincinnati
    152 Cardinals OL Jalen Rivers Miami FL
    153 Bengals S Maxen Hook Toledo
    154 Giants CB Robert Longerbeam Rutgers
    155 Dolphins OL Drew Kendall Boston College
    156 Steelers WR Tez Johnson Oregon
    157 Buccaneers OL Thomas Perry Middlebury
    158 Chargers TE Oronde Gadsden II Syracuse
    159 Packers RB Jaydon Blue Texas
    160 49ers WR Kobe Hudson UCF
    161 Eagles OL Xavier Truss Georgia
    162 Jets CB Jaylin Smith USC
    163 Panthers RB Jarquez Hunter Auburn
    164 Eagles WR Arian Smith Georgia
    165 Eagles RB Donovan Edwards Michigan
    166 Texans OL Clay Webb Jacksonville State
    167 Titans OL Jalen Travis Iowa State
    168 Eagles CB Mac McWilliams UCF
    169 Bills OL Bryce Cabeldue Kansas
    170 Bills RB Ollie Gordon II Oklahoma State
    171 Patriots LB Smael Mondon Jr. Georgia
    172 Seahawks LB Chris Paul Jr. Ole Miss
    173 Bills WR Ricky White III UNLV
    174 Cowboys OL Carson Vinson Alabama A&M
    175 Seahawks DL Cam Jackson Florida
    176 Ravens WR Nick Nash San Jose State
    Round 6
    Pick Team Player College
    177 Bills ED Sai’vion Jones LSU
    178 Titans CB Marcus Harris California
    179 Browns TE Jackson Hawes Georgia Tech
    180 Raiders DL Rylie Mills Notre Dame
    181 Chargers WR KeAndre Lambert-Smith Auburn
    182 Jaguars OL Myles Hinton Michigan
    183 Ravens S Lathan Ransom Ohio State
    184 Saints S Marques Sigle Kansas State
    185 Steelers RB Damian Martinez Miami FL
    186 Jets TE Moliki Matavao UCLA
    187 Vikings QB Will Howard Ohio State
    188 Titans OL Garrett Dellinger LSU
    189 Colts RB LeQuint Allen Syracuse
    190 Rams WR Konata Mumpfield Pittsburgh
    191 Broncos TE Thomas Fidone II Nebraska
    192 Browns LB Francisco Mauigoa Miami FL
    193 Bengals CB Justin Walley Minnesota
    194 Jaguars OL Hayden Conner Texas
    195 Rams QB Kyle McCord Syracuse
    196 Lions CB Alijah Huzzie North Carolina
    197 Broncos S Sebastian Castro Iowa
    198 Packers DL Nash Hutmacher Nebraska
    199 Chargers OL Branson Taylor Pittsburgh
    200 Browns S Jaylen Reed Penn State
    201 Rams OL Caleb Etienne BYU
    202 Rams DL Howard Cross III Notre Dame
    203 Ravens LB Jack Kiser Notre Dame
    204 Cowboys S Billy Bowman Jr. Oklahoma
    205 Commanders OL Jack Nelson Wisconsin
    206 Bills OL Aiden Williams Minnesota-Duluth
    207 Jets ED Tyler Baron Miami FL
    208 Broncos LB Collin Oliver Oklahoma State
    209 Chargers OL Connor Colby Iowa
    210 Ravens CB Fentrell Cypress II Florida State
    211 Cowboys OL Willie Lampkin North Carolina
    212 Ravens ED Que Robinson Alabama
    213 Raiders ED Jalen McLeod Auburn
    214 Chargers ED Antwaun Powell-Ryland Virginia Tech
    215 Raiders OL Marcus Tate Clemson
    216 Browns DL Tonka Hemingway South Carolina
    Round 7
    Pick Team Player College
    217 Cowboys LB Shemar James Florida
    218 Falcons OL Jonah Monheim USC
    219 Giants ED Fadil Diggs Syracuse
    220 Patriots QB Kurtis Rourke Indiana
    221 Jaguars S Malik Verdon Iowa State
    222 Raiders WR Isaiah Neyor Nebraska
    223 Seahawks ED Ahmed Hassanein Boise State
    224 Dolphins ED David Walker Central Arkansas
    225 Cardinals LB Kobe King Penn State
    226 Chiefs DL Aeneas Peebles Virginia Tech
    227 49ers OL Jake Majors Texas
    228 Lions DL Ty Hamilton Ohio State
    229 Steelers CB Dorian Strong Virginia Tech
    230 Panthers QB Dillon Gabriel Oregon
    231 Dolphins WR Ja’Corey Brooks Louisville
    232 Colts WR Andrew Armstrong Arkansas
    233 Bears CB Johnathan Edwards Tulane
    234 Seahawks RB Woody Marks USC
    235 Buccaneers OL Jordan Williams Georgia Tech
    236 Texans S Craig Woodson California
    237 Packers OL Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan Oregon State
    238 Patriots ED Jared Ivey Ole Miss
    239 Cowboys CB Melvin Smith Jr. Southern Arkansas
    240 Bears WR Jackson Meeks Syracuse
    241 Texans LB Chandler Martin Memphis
    242 Falcons DL Nazir Stackhouse Georgia
    243 Ravens K Andres Borregales Miami FL
    244 Lions ED Elijah Ponder Cal Poly
    245 Commanders RB Trevor Etienne Georgia
    246 Giants OL Torricelli Simpkins III South Carolina
    247 Cowboys WR Bru McCoy Tennessee
    248 Saints DL Cam Horsley Boston College
    249 49ers K Ryan Fitzgerald Florida State
    250 Packers CB BJ Adams UCF
    251 Chiefs LB Kain Medrano UCLA
    252 49ers TE Jake Briningstool Clemson
    253 Dolphins ED Elijah Roberts SMU
    254 Saints DL Jared Harrison-Hunte SMU
    255 Browns WR Theo Wease Jr. Missouri
    256 Chargers CB Denzel Burke Ohio State
    257 Chiefs OL Brandon Crenshaw-Dickson Florida

    Be sure to check my pre-Draft content on Twitter @ncoopdraft, the SIS Football account @football_sis, and check out all of our content on this year’s class on the NFL Draft site.

  • 2025 SIS Final Big Board Rankings

    2025 SIS Final Big Board Rankings

    For rankings and player profiles on all the players, and much more, go check out the Big Board, Draft Matrix, and Stats Leaderboards.

    Edge rushers, offensive linemen, and defensive linemen dominate our Top 100 this year, while the expected No. 1 overall pick is the No. 20 player on our board.

    There are 18 edge rushers who appear in our Top 100, led by Abdul Carter from Penn State and Jalon Walker from Georgia.

    Offensive line will be a position teams target the first two days of the draft, as we have 19 who are ranked in our Top 100, including Will Campbell (No. 4) and Armand Membou (No. 8), who are in the Top 10.

    Along with ED on defense, this year’s defensive tackle/nose tackle class is heavy as well. Mason Graham leads the way as our No. 2 ranked player overall and 1 of 12 at the position in our Top 100.

    Cam Ward, the front-runner for the No. 1 overall pick, is our No. 20 ranked player overall. At quarterback, just Ward, Shedeur Sanders (No. 32), Jalen Milroe (No. 65), and Jaxson Dart (No. 90) rank in our Top 100.

    For rankings and player profiles on all the players, and much more, go check out the Big Board, Draft Matrix, and Stats Leaderboards.

    Check out the entire list of 389 players below:

    Rank Position Name College Grade
    1 CB Travis Hunter Colorado 7.2
    2 DT Mason Graham Michigan 6.9
    3 RB Ashton Jeanty Boise State 6.9
    4 ED Abdul Carter Penn State 6.8
    5 OT Will Campbell LSU 6.8
    6 TE Tyler Warren Penn State 6.8
    7 RB Omarion Hampton North Carolina 6.8
    8 OT Armand Membou Missouri 6.7
    9 ED Jalon Walker Georgia 6.7
    10 CB Will Johnson Michigan 6.7
    11 WR Tetairoa McMillan Arizona 6.7
    12 WILL Jihaad Campbell Alabama 6.7
    13 TE Colston Loveland Michigan 6.7
    14 OG Tyler Booker Alabama 6.7
    15 WR Emeka Egbuka Ohio State 6.7
    16 OT Kelvin Banks Jr. Texas 6.7
    17 WR Luther Burden III Missouri 6.7
    18 OT Josh Simmons Ohio State 6.7
    19 DT Walter Nolen Ole Miss 6.7
    20 QB Cam Ward Miami (FL) 6.7
    21 ED Mike Green Marshall 6.7
    22 ED Shemar Stewart Texas A&M 6.7
    23 S Malaki Starks Georgia 6.7
    24 ED Donovan Ezeiruaku Boston College 6.7
    25 OG Donovan Jackson Ohio State 6.7
    26 DT Derrick Harmon Oregon 6.7
    27 NT Kenneth Grant Michigan 6.7
    28 ED Nic Scourton Texas A&M 6.7
    29 ED James Pearce Jr. Tennessee 6.7
    30 S Xavier Watts Notre Dame 6.7
    31 NT Tyleik Williams Ohio State 6.7
    32 QB Shedeur Sanders Colorado 6.7
    33 RB TreVeyon Henderson Ohio State 6.7
    34 ED Mykel Williams Georgia 6.6
    35 OT Josh Conerly Jr. Oregon 6.6
    36 CB Jahdae Barron Texas 6.6
    37 WR Matthew Golden Texas 6.6
    38 CB Trey Amos Ole Miss 6.6
    39 CB Azareye’h Thomas Florida State 6.6
    40 OG Wyatt Milum West Virginia 6.6
    41 OG Jonah Savaiinaea Arizona 6.6
    42 RB Quinshon Judkins Ohio State 6.6
    43 ED Kyle Kennard South Carolina 6.6
    44 TE Harold Fannin Jr. Bowling Green 6.6
    45 CB Benjamin Morrison Notre Dame 6.6
    46 WR Jayden Higgins Iowa State 6.6
    47 TE Elijah Arroyo Miami (FL) 6.6
    48 OC Grey Zabel North Dakota State 6.6
    49 WILL Carson Schwesinger UCLA 6.6
    50 RB Kaleb Johnson Iowa 6.6
    51 TE Mason Taylor LSU 6.5
    52 OG Tate Ratledge Georgia 6.5
    53 ED JT Tuimoloau Ohio State 6.5
    54 DT Alfred Collins Texas 6.5
    55 ED Landon Jackson Arkansas 6.5
    56 WR Jaylin Noel Iowa State 6.5
    57 ED Barryn Sorrell Texas 6.5
    58 CB Shavon Revel Jr. East Carolina 6.5
    59 OT Aireontae Ersery Minnesota 6.5
    60 WR Tre Harris Ole Miss 6.5
    61 OT Emery Jones Jr. LSU 6.5
    62 ED Princely Umanmielen Ole Miss 6.5
    63 DT Joshua Farmer Florida State 6.5
    64 ED Bradyn Swinson LSU 6.5
    65 QB Jalen Milroe Alabama 6.5
    66 RB Cam Skattebo Arizona State 6.5
    67 DT Omarr Norman-Lott Tennessee 6.5
    68 WR Elic Ayomanor Stanford 6.5
    69 WILL Barrett Carter Clemson 6.5
    70 OT Ozzy Trapilo Boston College 6.5
    71 DT Darius Alexander Toledo 6.5
    72 TE Terrance Ferguson Oregon 6.5
    73 DT T.J. Sanders South Carolina 6.5
    74 DT Shemar Turner Texas A&M 6.5
    75 OG Marcus Mbow Purdue 6.5
    76 TE Gunnar Helm Texas 6.5
    77 RB Jordan James Oregon 6.5
    78 ED Jordan Burch Oregon 6.5
    79 OT Anthony Belton NC State 6.5
    80 ED Ashton Gillotte Louisville 6.5
    81 MIKE Danny Stutsman Oklahoma 6.5
    82 ED Oluwafemi Oladejo UCLA 6.5
    83 ED Jack Sawyer Ohio State 6.5
    84 MIKE Demetrius Knight Jr. South Carolina 6.5
    85 CB Quincy Riley Louisville 6.5
    86 DT Deone Walker Kentucky 6.5
    87 WILL Jeffrey Bassa Oregon 6.5
    88 WR Savion Williams TCU 6.5
    89 RB Bhayshul Tuten Virginia Tech 6.5
    90 QB Jaxson Dart Ole Miss 6.4
    91 S Nick Emmanwori South Carolina 6.4
    92 WR Jack Bech TCU 6.4
    93 OG Miles Frazier LSU 6.4
    94 CB Maxwell Hairston Kentucky 6.4
    95 CB Jacob Parrish Kansas State 6.4
    96 S Kevin Winston Jr. Penn State 6.4
    97 S Andrew Mukuba Texas 6.4
    98 CB Darien Porter Iowa State 6.4
    99 OC Jared Wilson Georgia 6.4
    100 OG Dylan Fairchild Georgia 6.4
    101 CB Cobee Bryant Kansas 6.4
    102 S Malachi Moore Alabama 6.4
    103 OC Seth McLaughlin Ohio State 6.4
    104 WR Pat Bryant Illinois 6.4
    105 WR Xavier Restrepo Miami (FL) 6.4
    106 S Jonas Sanker Virginia 6.4
    107 OC Drew Kendall Boston College 6.4
    108 S Lathan Ransom Ohio State 6.4
    109 CB Zah Frazier UTSA 6.4
    110 CB Denzel Burke Ohio State 6.4
    111 CB Zy Alexander LSU 6.4
    112 OT Charles Grant William & Mary 6.3
    113 QB Tyler Shough Louisville 6.3
    114 OT Logan Brown Kansas 6.3
    115 QB Quinn Ewers Texas 6.3
    116 OT Chase Lundt UConn 6.3
    117 RB LeQuint Allen Syracuse 6.3
    118 RB Jaydon Blue Texas 6.3
    119 RB Brashard Smith SMU 6.3
    120 RB Woody Marks USC 6.3
    121 OT Hollin Pierce Rutgers 6.3
    122 ED Sai’vion Jones LSU 6.2
    123 ED Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins Georgia 6.2
    124 DT Ty Robinson Nebraska 6.2
    125 DT JJ Pegues Ole Miss 6.2
    126 RB Dylan Sampson Tennessee 6.2
    127 RB Devin Neal Kansas 6.2
    128 S Billy Bowman Jr. Oklahoma 6.2
    129 S Sebastian Castro Iowa 6.2
    130 OT Cameron Williams Texas 6.2
    131 RB DJ Giddens Kansas State 6.2
    132 OT Jalen Rivers Miami (FL) 6.2
    133 RB Jarquez Hunter Auburn 6.2
    134 RB RJ Harvey UCF 6.2
    135 OG Jackson Slater Sacramento State 6.2
    136 WILL Smael Mondon Jr. Georgia 6.2
    137 RB Donovan Edwards Michigan 6.2
    138 QB Will Howard Ohio State 6.2
    139 RB Raheim Sanders South Carolina 6.2
    140 RB Damien Martinez Miami (FL) 6.2
    141 ED Jalen McLeod Auburn 6.2
    142 OT Ajani Cornelius Oregon 6.2
    143 OG Joshua Gray Oregon State 6.2
    144 RB Ollie Gordon II Oklahoma State 6.2
    145 OT Xavier Truss Georgia 6.2
    146 OG Joe Huber Wisconsin 6.2
    147 RB Ja’Quinden Jackson Arkansas 6.2
    148 OC Thomas Perry Middlebury 6.2
    149 RB Trevor Etienne Georgia 6.2
    150 RB Corey Kiner Cincinnati 6.2
    151 OG Luke Kandra Cincinnati 6.2
    152 OG Caleb Rogers Texas Tech 6.2
    153 RB Tahj Brooks Texas Tech 6.2
    154 MIKE Cody Simon Ohio State 6.2
    155 RB Kyle Monangai Rutgers 6.2
    156 OG Bryce Cabeldue Kansas 6.2
    157 OG Clay Webb Jacksonville State 6.2
    158 OG Garrett Dellinger LSU 6.2
    159 RB Phil Mafah Clemson 6.2
    160 RB Kalel Mullings Michigan 6.2
    161 ED Josaiah Stewart Michigan 5.9
    162 WR Kyle Williams Washington State 5.9
    163 DT Vernon Broughton Texas 5.9
    164 WR Jalen Royals Utah State 5.9
    165 QB Kyle McCord Syracuse 5.9
    166 WILL Teddye Buchanan California 5.9
    167 WR Tai Felton Maryland 5.9
    168 ED Tyler Baron Miami (FL) 5.9
    169 S Maxen Hook Toledo 5.9
    170 WILL Shemar James Florida 5.9
    171 WR Jaylin Lane Virginia Tech 5.9
    172 WR Isaiah Bond Texas 5.9
    173 ED Antwaun Powell-Ryland Virginia Tech 5.9
    174 WR Tory Horton Colorado State 5.9
    175 WILL Chris Paul Jr. Ole Miss 5.9
    176 NT Jamaree Caldwell Oregon 5.9
    177 NT Jay Toia UCLA 5.9
    178 CB Upton Stout Western Kentucky 5.9
    179 ED Fadil Diggs Syracuse 5.9
    180 WR Tez Johnson Oregon 5.9
    181 NT Jordan Phillips Maryland 5.9
    182 ED Ahmed Hassanein Boise State 5.9
    183 TE Mitchell Evans Notre Dame 5.9
    184 NT CJ West Indiana 5.9
    185 ED Tyler Batty BYU 5.9
    186 WILL Jack Kiser Notre Dame 5.9
    187 WR Nick Nash San Jose State 5.9
    188 WILL Collin Oliver Oklahoma State 5.9
    189 WR Kobe Hudson UCF 5.9
    190 DT Rylie Mills Notre Dame 5.9
    191 CB Nohl Williams California 5.9
    192 WILL Tyreem Powell Rutgers 5.9
    193 CB Bilhal Kone Western Michigan 5.9
    194 MIKE Francisco Mauigoa Miami (FL) 5.9
    195 DT Aeneas Peebles Virginia Tech 5.9
    196 WR Arian Smith Georgia 5.9
    197 MIKE Cody Lindenberg Minnesota 5.9
    198 MIKE Nick Martin Oklahoma State 5.9
    199 ED Que Robinson Alabama 5.9
    200 DT Howard Cross III Notre Dame 5.9
    201 ED Jared Ivey Ole Miss 5.9
    202 CB Fentrell Cypress II Florida State 5.9
    203 CB Tommi Hill Nebraska 5.9
    204 DT Tonka Hemingway South Carolina 5.9
    205 OT Jalen Travis Iowa State 5.9
    206 ED Elijah Ponder Cal Poly 5.9
    207 WR Konata Mumpfield Pittsburgh 5.9
    208 S Malik Verdon Iowa State 5.9
    209 CB Robert Longerbeam Rutgers 5.9
    210 NT Cam Jackson Florida 5.9
    211 ED David Walker Central Arkansas 5.9
    212 CB Marcus Harris California 5.9
    213 MIKE Matt Jones Baylor 5.9
    214 WR Ricky White III UNLV 5.9
    215 WR Isaac TeSlaa Arkansas 5.9
    216 CB Caleb Ransaw Tulane 5.9
    217 CB Dorian Strong Virginia Tech 5.9
    218 WR KeAndre Lambert-Smith Auburn 5.9
    219 DT Ty Hamilton Ohio State 5.9
    220 S Jaylen Reed Penn State 5.9
    221 NT Nash Hutmacher Nebraska 5.9
    222 S Hunter Wohler Wisconsin 5.9
    223 QB Kurtis Rourke Indiana 5.9
    224 NT Cam Horsley Boston College 5.9
    225 WR Ja’Corey Brooks Louisville 5.9
    226 WILL Kain Medrano UCLA 5.9
    227 S Keondre Jackson Illinois State 5.9
    228 ED Kaimon Rucker North Carolina 5.9
    229 QB Dillon Gabriel Oregon 5.9
    230 OT Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan Oregon State 5.9
    231 QB Taylor Elgersma Laurier 5.9
    232 OT Carson Vinson Alabama A&M 5.9
    233 WR Jackson Meeks Syracuse 5.9
    234 QB Graham Mertz Florida 5.9
    235 WR Andrew Armstrong Arkansas 5.9
    236 S Marques Sigle Kansas State 5.9
    237 WR Will Sheppard Colorado 5.9
    238 NT Nazir Stackhouse Georgia 5.9
    239 NT Zeek Biggers Georgia Tech 5.9
    240 WR Zakhari Franklin Illinois 5.9
    241 S Kenny Gallop Jr. Howard 5.9
    242 TE Thomas Fidone II Nebraska 5.9
    243 OT Myles Hinton Michigan 5.9
    244 OT Jack Nelson Wisconsin 5.9
    245 TE Oronde Gadsden II Syracuse 5.8
    246 WR Dont’e Thornton Jr. Tennessee 5.8
    247 CB Justin Walley Minnesota 5.8
    248 ED Jah Joyner Minnesota 5.8
    249 TE Jackson Hawes Georgia Tech 5.8
    250 TE Moliki Matavao UCLA 5.8
    251 CB Melvin Smith Jr. Southern Arkansas 5.8
    252 S Jordan Hancock Ohio State 5.8
    253 TE Jake Briningstool Clemson 5.8
    254 TE CJ Dippre Alabama 5.8
    255 CB Jaylin Smith USC 5.8
    256 WR Isaiah Neyor Nebraska 5.8
    257 WR Daniel Jackson Minnesota 5.8
    258 MIKE Kobe King Penn State 5.8
    259 S Craig Woodson California 5.8
    260 WILL Eugene Asante Auburn 5.8
    261 CB Jason Marshall Jr. Florida 5.8
    262 NT Yahya Black Iowa 5.8
    263 CB Johnathan Edwards Tulane 5.8
    264 CB Jermari Harris Iowa 5.8
    265 CB Mello Dotson Kansas 5.8
    266 S Alijah Clark Syracuse 5.8
    267 OT Branson Taylor Pittsburgh 5.8
    268 TE Joshua Simon South Carolina 5.8
    269 WR Sam Brown Jr. Miami (FL) 5.8
    270 CB Zemaiah Vaughn Utah 5.8
    271 S R.J. Mickens Clemson 5.8
    272 ED Elijah Roberts SMU 5.8
    273 NT Elijah Simmons Tennessee 5.8
    274 DT Andre Jefferson Lenoir-Rhyne 5.8
    275 QB Riley Leonard Notre Dame 5.8
    276 DT Jared Harrison-Hunte SMU 5.8
    277 S Akili Arnold USC 5.8
    278 DT Thor Griffith Louisville 5.8
    279 DT Tim Smith Alabama 5.8
    280 MIKE Carson Bruener Washington 5.8
    281 WR Jordan Watkins Ole Miss 5.8
    282 WR Jacolby George Miami (FL) 5.8
    283 DT James Carpenter Indiana 5.8
    284 MIKE Chandler Martin Memphis 5.8
    285 DT Junior Tafuna Utah 5.8
    286 DT Eric Gregory Arkansas 5.8
    287 CB Alijah Huzzie North Carolina 5.8
    288 WILL Bam Martin-Scott South Carolina 5.8
    289 TE Gavin Bartholomew Pittsburgh 5.8
    290 QB Max Brosmer Minnesota 5.8
    291 QB Seth Henigan Memphis 5.8
    292 WR JP Richardson TCU 5.8
    293 DT Warren Brinson Georgia 5.8
    294 ED Ethan Downs Oklahoma 5.8
    295 WR Elijhah Badger Florida 5.8
    296 WILL Justin Barron Syracuse 5.8
    297 S Dan Jackson Georgia 5.8
    298 DT Paris Shand LSU 5.8
    299 CB Mac McWilliams UCF 5.8
    300 DT Simeon Barrow Jr. Miami (FL) 5.8
    301 WILL Jackson Woodard UNLV 5.8
    302 CB Jabbar Muhammad Oregon 5.8
    303 WR Da’Quan Felton Virginia Tech 5.8
    304 TE Jalin Conyers Texas Tech 5.8
    305 S Dante Trader Jr. Maryland 5.8
    306 WILL Jailin Walker Indiana 5.8
    307 WR Theo Wease Jr. Missouri 5.8
    308 S Rayuan Lane III Navy 5.8
    309 MIKE Jay Higgins Iowa 5.8
    310 MIKE Karene Reid Utah 5.8
    311 S Kitan Crawford Nevada 5.8
    312 CB BJ Adams UCF 5.8
    313 MIKE Jamon Dumas-Johnson Kentucky 5.8
    314 QB Brady Cook Missouri 5.8
    315 WR Chimere Dike Florida 5.8
    316 CB Aydan White NC State 5.8
    317 DT Omari Thomas Tennessee 5.8
    318 DT Sean Martin West Virginia 5.8
    319 MIKE D’Eryk Jackson Kentucky 5.8
    320 CB Jakob Robinson BYU 5.8
    321 S Donovan McMillon Pittsburgh 5.8
    322 TE Brant Kuithe Utah 5.8
    323 WR Traeshon Holden Oregon 5.8
    324 WR Bru McCoy Tennessee 5.8
    325 CB Korie Black Oklahoma State 5.8
    326 TE Luke Lachey Iowa 5.8
    327 TE Ben Yurosek Georgia 5.8
    328 WR Silas Bolden Texas 5.8
    329 WR Jimmy Horn Jr. Colorado 5.8
    330 WR LaJohntay Wester Colorado 5.8
    331 TE Bryson Nesbit North Carolina 5.8
    332 DT Payton Page Clemson 5.8
    333 S Shamari Simmons Arizona State 5.8
    334 CB Nikko Reed Oregon 5.8
    335 ED J.J. Weaver Kentucky 5.8
    336 CB Corey Thornton Louisville 5.8
    337 DT Jahvaree Ritzie North Carolina 5.8
    338 DT Xavier Carlton California 5.8
    339 QB Cam Miller North Dakota State 5.8
    340 CB Dontae Manning Oregon 5.8
    341 WR Antwane Wells Jr. Ole Miss 5.8
    342 ED Johnny Walker Jr. Missouri 5.8
    343 ED BJ Green II Colorado 5.8
    344 TE Carter Runyon Towson 5.8
    345 WR Taylor Morin Wake Forest 5.8
    346 S Bryan Addison UCLA 5.8
    347 OT Jordan Williams Georgia Tech 5.8
    348 WR Dominic Lovett Georgia 5.8
    349 WR Kaden Prather Maryland 5.8
    350 OT Brandon Crenshaw-Dickson Florida 5.8
    351 S Deshawn Pace UCF 5.8
    352 TE Kole Taylor West Virginia 5.8
    353 DT Octavious Oxendine Kentucky 5.8
    354 WR Beaux Collins Notre Dame 5.8
    355 WILL R.J. Moten Florida 5.8
    356 CB O’Donnell Fortune South Carolina 5.8
    357 WR Efton Chism III Eastern Washington 5.8
    358 WILL Shaun Dolac Buffalo 5.8
    359 ED Nate Matlack Pittsburgh 5.8
    360 ED Chico Bennett Jr. Virginia 5.8
    361 DT Kyonte Hamilton Rutgers 5.8
    362 OT Aiden Williams Minnesota-Duluth 5.8
    363 WR Roc Taylor Memphis 5.8
    364 TE Mark Redman Louisville 5.8
    365 OC Willie Lampkin North Carolina 5.7
    366 OC Jonah Monheim USC 5.7
    367 OG Hayden Conner Texas 5.7
    368 OG Marcus Tate Clemson 5.7
    369 OG Connor Colby Iowa 5.7
    370 OC Jake Majors Texas 5.7
    371 OC Jacob Bayer Arkansas State 5.7
    372 NT DeAndre Jules South Carolina 5.7
    373 OT Esa Pole Washington State 5.7
    374 MIKE Debo Williams South Carolina 5.7
    375 NT Joe Evans UTSA 5.7
    376 OT Dalton Cooper Oklahoma State 5.7
    377 OT Caleb Etienne BYU 5.7
    378 MIKE Jestin Jacobs Oregon 5.7
    379 OC Gus Hartwig Purdue 5.7
    380 TE Robbie Ouzts Alabama 5.7
    381 OC Eli Cox Kentucky 5.7
    382 OG Tyler Cooper Minnesota 5.7
    383 MIKE Noah Martin Samford 5.7
    384 DT Tommy Akingbesote Maryland 5.7
    385 OG Torricelli Simpkins III South Carolina 5.7
    386 OC Joe Michalski Oklahoma State 5.7
    387 RB Jacory Croskey-Merritt Arizona 5.6
    388 RB Marcus Yarns Delaware 5.6
    389 RB Montrell Johnson Jr. Florida 5.6
  • 2024 SIS All-Rookie Team

    2024 SIS All-Rookie Team

    Sports Info Solutions, a leader in the football analytics space, is pleased to announce its 5th annual NFL All-Rookie Teams. 

    The teams were selected using a combination of advanced stats and voting among members of our football operations staff, with emphasis placed upon SIS’ player value stat, Total Points. 

    As we do every year, we adjust the positional structure of this team to make sure to honor as many top performers as possible from this season.

    Here are the 2024 Sports Info Solutions award winners and All-Rookie Teams:

    Rookies of the Year

    This could’ve gone a few different ways, but Jayden Daniels of the Commanders showed the consistency all season to take home our Offensive Rookie of the Year.

    Defensive Rookie of the Year goes to Jared Verse of the Rams after a season in which he led all rookies and ranked second among all players in pressures.

    Cam Little was one of the few bright spots for the Jaguars, as he kicked his way to earning our Special Teams Rookie of the Year.

    For the second year in a row, the Rookie Class of the Year goes to the Los Angeles Rams. This was another close call, but with Verse leading the way, four Rams made our two teams and six total rookies accumulated double-digits in Total Points, most in the NFL.

    1st-Team Offense
    Position Player Team
    Quarterback Jayden Daniels Commanders
    Running Back Bucky Irving Buccaneers
    Running Back Ray Davis Bills
    Wide Receiver Brian Thomas Jr. Jaguars
    Wide Receiver Malik Nabers Giants
    Tight End Brock Bowers Raiders
    Tackle Joe Alt Chargers
    Tackle Taliese Fuaga Saints
    Guard Dominick Puni 49ers
    Guard Jackson Powers-Johnson Raiders
    Center Beaux Limmer Rams

    Quarterback: Jayden Daniels, Commanders

    Jayden Daniels led all rookies this year with 113 Total Points. He looked calm and poised as a passer this season, ranking in the top 10 in completion percentage (69%), Catchable Pass Percentage (87.6%), and IQR (105.9), but he stood out as a runner. Daniels’ 891 yards rushing was 2nd only to Lamar Jackson’s 915 among quarterbacks. However, when looking at value, Daniels earned the most rushing Total Points among QBs with 41.

    Running Back: Bucky Irving, Buccaneers

    Not only did Bucky Irving lead all rookie running backs in Total Points by a wide margin, he was 3rd in the entire NFL. His 32 rushing Total Points ranked 3rd and his 16 receiving Total Points ranked 5th at the position. He led all NFL RBs with 26 missed tackles and was stuffed at the line the least amount of any back with at least 200 carries (29 times). A true 3rd-down back, Irving caught 47 of his 52 targets for 392 yards (9th-most) and dropped only 1 pass.

    Running Back: Ray Davis, Bills

    As a Bills backup running back, Ray Davis ran for 442 yards in 2024. Of that, 323 of those yards came after contact. Davis averaged 2.9 YAC per attempt with a 17% broken and missed tackle rate. As a receiver, he caught 17-of-19 targets for 189 yards and 3 touchdowns with a 2.1 yards per route run, which ranked 3rd among RBs with at least 10 targets.

    Wide Receiver: Brian Thomas Jr., Jaguars

    LSU really does seem to be WRU in the NFL as four of the top seven WRs in receiving yards hail from there, with Brian Thomas Jr. being one of them. Thomas led all rookies in just about every category. He ranked 3rd at the position in receiving yards (1,282), 4th in Receiving Total Points (34), tied-5th in receiving touchdowns (10), and tied-7th in yards per route run (2.6).

    Wide Receiver: Malik Nabers, Giants

    One of the other LSU receivers is Malik Nabers. Nabers didn’t trail too far behind Thomas in most categories. His 109 receptions ranked 3rd among NFL WRs and his 1,204 receiving yards ranked 7th. He also added a 16.5% broken and missed tackle rate and all this combined gave him 21 Receiving Points Earned.

    Tight End: Brock Bowers, Raiders

    After Sam LaPorta broke almost all of the rookie tight end records last year, Brock Bowers came in and broke most of LaPorta’s records this year. He recorded 112 catches for 1,194 yards and 5 touchdowns in 2024. His 112 receptions led all tight ends and was 3rd-most among all players. Additionally, his 1,194 yards ranked tied for 8th among all pass catchers. Bowers also drew 4 defensive pass interference calls as a rookie, which was 2nd-most among all TEs.

    Tackle: Joe Alt, Chargers

    Joe Alt lived up to the expectations of being the first offensive lineman drafted in the 2024 NFL Draft and a 7.0 grade from us on our NFL Draft site. Alt led all rookie tackles with 32 Total Points and was 10th among all OTs in that stat. Additionally, his 6 Total Points Above Average ranked 11th overall and his 2.7% blown block rate ranked tied-20th among OTs with at least 500 snaps.

    Tackle: Taliese Fuaga, Saints

    Taliese Fuaga wasn’t far behind Alt in most categories. His 31 Total Points ranked 14th and his 17 Pass Block Total Points ranked 16th. He also added a blown block rate of just 3.8%.

    Guard: Dominick Puni, 49ers

    Dominick Puni finished 2024 with a 3.2% blown block rate while his 30 Total Points ranked 23nd among OGs with at least 500 snaps (1st among rookies) and his 2 Total Points Above Average as a pass blocker ranked 23rd.

    Guard: Jackson Powers-Johnson, Raiders

    Jackson Powers-Johnson proved to be an interior force for the Raiders in a down 2024 season, adding 21 Total Points (3rd among rookies. His 2.3% blown block rate was tied-28th best among OGs with at least 500 snaps (1st among rookies).

    Center: Beaux Limmer, Rams

    Beaux Limmer won out as 1st Team center among 4 viable candidates. His 29 Total Points was tied-3rd among rookie OCs and 15th among all OCs. His 5 Total Points Above Average ranked 11th and his 2.0% blown block rate ranked tied-15th among OCs with at least 500 snaps.

    1st-Team Defense
    Position Player Team
    Interior Defensive Lineman Braden Fiske Rams
    Interior Defensive Lineman T’Vondre Sweat Titans
    Edge Jared Verse Rams
    Edge Laiatu Latu Colts
    Linebacker Edgerrin Cooper Packers
    Linebacker Tyrice Knight Seahawks
    Cornerback Kamari Lassiter Texans
    Cornerback Tarheeb Still Chargers
    Defensive Back Cooper DeJean Eagles
    Safety Calen Bullock Texans
    Safety Malik Mustapha 49ers

    Interior Defensive Lineman: Braden Fiske, Rams

    After moving from Western Michigan to Florida State, Braden Fiske’s play continued to improve. That can also be said about his move from Florida State to the NFL. Fiske’s 8.5 sacks led all rookies, regardless of position, and ranked 3rd among NFL DTs. He accumulated 45 pressures, which was 7th-best among DTs, and his 22 Total Points against the pass ranked 6th. He’ll need to improve against the run, but he’s already proven to be a strong interior pass rusher.

    Interior Defensive Lineman: T’Vondre Sweat, Titans

    There was no question T’Vondre Sweat would be a stalwart run defender in the middle of a defensive line in the NFL, but the biggest knock was if he could rush the passer enough to be considered a high-end nose tackle. He may have only gotten home for 1 sack, but his 21 pressures was tied for 36th among all DTs. While his run defense was solid, he had only 7 Total Points in the run game compared to 14 as a pass rusher.

    Edge: Jared Verse, Rams

    Our pick for Defensive Rookie of the Year, Jared Verse was a complete player all year long. Not only did he lead rookie edges with 46 Total Points, he led all rookies in Total Points outside of quarterback. While he may have had only 4.5 sacks, his 72 pressures was 2nd-best in the NFL. Additionally, his 17% pressure rate ranked 9th among all DE/LB with at least 20 pressures. Even though he was a menace as a pass rusher, he was a standout against the run. Among all DE/LB, his 21 Total Points against the run ranked 7th and his 11 Points Above Average ranked 5th.

    Edge: Laiatu Latu, Colts

    Laiatu Latu used his big bag of tricks to get 36 pressures on quarterbacks this season, 3rd-most among rookie EDGEs. Among his 18 Total Points, he gained 13 as a pass rusher. His 4 sacks also ranked just behind Jared Verse.

    Linebacker: Edgerrin Cooper, Packers

    Edgerrin Cooper was known for his versatility to line up on the edge and off the ball coming out of Texas A&M, and he did just that in Green Bay as well. Not only did he rack up 77 total tackles, he also had 3.5 sacks, a forced fumble, 2 fumble recoveries, and 17 tackles for loss. In coverage, Cooper allowed only 9 completions and added an interception and 2 pass defenses. 

    Linebacker: Tyrice Knight, Seahawks

    Tyrice Knight accumulated 87 tackles in the middle of the Seahawks defense in 2024. With that, he had a broken and missed tackle rate of only 5.4%. In coverage, he allowed only 6 catches and gave up -8.2 Expected Points Added, 5th among all LBs.

    Cornerback: Kamari Lassiter, Texans

    Kamari Lassiter’s 41 Total Points tied for tops among rookie CBs. Additionally, Lassiter’s 28 Total Points in coverage ranked 8th among all CBs. His 14 Total Points Above Average ranked 5th, just behind his teammate, Derek Stingley Jr. Lassiter also added 3 interceptions and 7 pass breakups. Lassiter and Stingley give Houston a 1-2 punch at cornerback that should make it difficult for opposing offenses for years to come.

    Cornerback: Tarheeb Still, Chargers

    While Tarheeb Still had a strong overall season, he didn’t play until Week 4. His breakout game came against the Falcons in Week 12 when he picked off Kirk Cousins twice, including returning one for a touchdown. Still’s 41 Total Points overall tied Lassiter for most among rookie CBs and his 32 Total Points in pass defense ranked 4th among all CBs. While he did pick off 4 passes in 2024, he did give up 4 touchdowns.

    Defensive Back: Cooper DeJean, Eagles

    In 14 defensive games, Cooper DeJean allowed only 21 completions on 37 targets his way. His 175 yards allowed was 4th-fewest among all CBs with at least 25 targets and the three players with fewer all played in fewer games, played fewer snaps, and saw fewer targets than DeJean. While he didn’t record an interception, he didn’t allow a touchdown either, and he forced a fumble, and recovered three more.

    Safety: Calen Bullock, Texans

    Calen Bullock led all rookie safeties with 43 Total Points in 2024. Additionally, his 31 Total Points against the pass ranked 7th among all safeties. Bullock finished the season with 5 interceptions, one more than he had completions allowed. His 4 completions allowed (on 17 targets) were tied for 10th-fewest among safeties with at least 5 targets. Those that allowed fewer than 4 completions all were targeted less and played way fewer snaps than Bullock.

    Safety: Malik Mustapha, 49ers

    Speaking of one of the safeties with fewer completions allowed than Bullock, Malik Mustapha allowed only 1 catch on 11 targets this season and that play netted only 1 yard. He added an interception, 2 dropped interceptions, and 4 pass breakups. A much more balanced safety, Mustapha accumulated 19 Total Points against the pass and 16 against the run. He finished the season with 71 total tackles and 3 tackles for loss.

    1st-Team Specialists
    Position Player Team
    Kicker Cam Little Jaguars
    Punter Tory Taylor Bears
    Returner Brandon Codrington Bills

    Kicker: Cam Little, Jaguars

    Cam Little finished the 2024 campaign going 27-of-29 on field goals and a perfect 27-of-27 on extra points for Jacksonville. He also hit 5-of-6 field goals from 50+. Overall, Little’s 27 made field goals were 13th-most in the NFL. His 19 Total Points were 12 better than Will Reichard among rookies.

    Punter: Tory Taylor, Bears

    For someone who wasn’t supposed to do much punting this year, Tory Taylor sure did a lot of it. It’s a good thing he’s pretty good at it. His 82 punts and 3,911 punt yards were both 2nd-most in the NFL. While he didn’t have a huge average (47.7 gross), he forced 23 fair catches (tied-6th), knocked 22 punts inside the 20 (tied-5th), and 7 punts inside the 10 (tied-8th).

    Returner: Brandon Codrington, Bills

    Brandon Codrington went from being undrafted out of North Carolina Central to making our 1st Team as a returner. He saw only 69 snaps the entire season on the defensive side of the ball, but he made the most of his 126 special teams snaps. On 11 kick returns, he accumulated 306 yards for an average of nearly 28 yards per return. As a punt returner, he returned 27 punts for 313 yards. His 11.6 yards per punt return was 5th-most of any returner with at least 10 punt returns. His 619 total return yards ranked 2nd-most among rookies and 7th-best in the entire NFL.

    In all, seven offensive 1st Teamers and three defensive 1st Teamers received a 6.7 final grade or higher from us in our draft rankings last season, suggesting those players will at least be high-end three-down starters beginning their second season. Additionally, all eleven offensive players and eight defenders received a grade of at least 6.2. We’ll see if they begin 2025 the way they played this season to warrant those final grades, but we like their chances.

    Below, you can find our All-Rookie 2nd Teams which include big names like Bo Nix, Ladd McConkey, Chop Robinson, and Renardo Green.

    2nd-Team Offense
    Position Player Team
    Quarterback Bo Nix Broncos
    Running Back Isaac Guerendo 49ers
    Running Back Tyrone Tracy Jr. Giants
    Wide Receiver Ladd McConkey Chargers
    Wide Receiver Xavier Worthy Chiefs
    Tight End AJ Barner Seahawks
    Tackle JC Latham Titans
    Tackle Brandon Coleman Commanders
    Guard Mason McCormick Steelers
    Guard Isaiah Adams Cardinals
    Center Zach Frazier Steelers
    2nd-Team Defense
    Position Player Team
    Interior Defensive Lineman Leonard Taylor III Jets
    Interior Defensive Lineman Jer’Zhan Newton Commanders
    Edge Chop Robinson Dolphins
    Edge Dallas Turner Vikings
    Linebacker Payton Wilson Steelers
    Linebacker Omar Speights Rams
    Cornerback Terrion Arnold Lions
    Cornerback Renardo Green 49ers
    Defensive Back Nate Wiggins Ravens
    Safety Tyler Nubin Giants
    Safety Evan Williams Packers

     

    2nd-Team Specialists
    Position Player Team
    Kicker Will Reichard Vikings
    Punter Ryan Rehkow Bengals
    Returner Jha’Quan Jackson Titans

     

    We want to highlight some of the close calls and honorable mentions who didn’t quite make the cut.

    Some players on offense who just missed out include Trey Benson (RB), Tip Reiman (TE), Amarius Mims (OT), Roger Rosengarten (OT), Olu Fashanu (Jets), Layden Robinson (OG), Graham Barton (OC) and Cooper Beebe (OC). Centers Graham Barton and Cooper Beebe were more than deserving of making the teams and would have just about any other year, but unfortunately only two could make it.

    Some players on defense who just missed the cut include Marist Liufau (LB), Mike Sainristil (CB), Quinyon Mitchell (CB), Kameron Kinchens (S), and Tykee Smith (S).

    On special teams, the kicker and punter spots were clearcut, but we had 11 different returners with votes for the two spots. Codrington and Jackson made the teams, but there was some competition. Like Brandon Aubrey last year, we wanted to mention Jake Bates this year. While he’s not eligible by NFL’s standards to be a rookie, Bates deserves a shoutout here. A former college soccer player turned UFL kicker, Aubrey went 26-of-29 in his first NFL season, including hitting 6-of-8 attempts from 50+.

    While there was some clear delineation between both teams, there were a couple close calls between the two. There was a heavy conversation for the second 1st-Team guard spot between Jackson Powers-Johnson and Mason McCormick.  Also, Cooper DeJean and Renardo Green were neck-and-neck for the defensive back (No. 3 CB) spot, but DeJean won out.

    Last year, it was Ivan Pace Jr. (No. 51 on our Big Board) who made 1st-Team LB. This year, it’s Leonard Taylor (No. 46) who made it as 2nd-Team IDL.

    As mentioned earlier, each year we change some of the positions to account for the depth at certain areas specific to this draft class. This year, there was a fair amount of talent across the board, so we didn’t have to adjust much. Additionally, with the secondary as packed as it was, we went with the 5th DB position again instead of a normal hybrid position.

    You can check out last year’s article here to see how we structured the teams. Again, the entire idea of these teams is to highlight the best players across the league, and we feel we did that.

    With all but just five teams represented among these selections, this once again signifies that plenty of talent is being dispersed throughout the league. Over our five years of selecting these teams, the Pittsburgh Steelers have the most selections with 15, one more than the Detroit Lions. On the flipside, the Arizona Cardinals and Carolina Panthers have just 4.

    This was another fun draft class to watch, and we’re excited to see their growth each year in the league. Stay tuned to see what we’ll have to say about the next generation of NFL stars as they head into the 2025 NFL Draft.

    Stats and ranks accurate as of 1/9/2024

  • Reviewing Our Grades for the 2021 NFL Draft Class

    Reviewing Our Grades for the 2021 NFL Draft Class

    Introduction

    While many crave all the NFL Draft Team Grades that publications put out the day after the draft, including us on both accounts, there are a lot of unknowns at that point. Of course, we all have our own NFL Draft prospect rankings heading into that weekend, but those players have yet to play a snap in the NFL. So, how can we really grade a team’s draft class if those players haven’t yet stepped onto an NFL field?

    It usually takes at least three years to see how well a draft class turned out. While said publications, including us, don’t want to wait three years before putting out their grades on a draft class, we do both. This is the time that teams must decide on 5th-year options for their 1st Round picks. Additionally, this gives these players a rookie season and two full years after that to get settled in and playing time under their belt.

    Three years ago, Sports Info Solutions published the 3rd edition of The SIS Football Rookie Handbook. After the 2021 NFL Draft, we, just as many others, posted our NFL Draft Team Grades, which can be seen here. It’s worth noting we don’t give out letter grades like most. We rank the teams from 1 to 32 in terms of how much talent they got as an entire class.

    Just as I did last year, in the article you can see here, I’ve developed a system to evaluate the draft classes using Total Points relative to position as the foundation. Three seasons have now gone by since the 2021 NFL Draft. So, let’s use that to truly see how each team did with getting value from its selections and draft class as a whole.

    Our TLDR Top Things To Know

    1. We ranked the Lions No. 1 in our 2021 post-draft ranking. Three years later the Chiefs rank No. 1 according to our stat for assessing it, Total Points Score (TP Score), followed by the Lions, Jaguars, Dolphins, and Bears.
    2.  The Rams ranked last both in our original rankings in 2021 and in TP Score three years later.
    3. The Jaguars, Broncos, and Jets accrued the most Total Points from their draft classes

    How much value did teams get?

    Let’s take a look at how we ranked teams after the 2021 NFL Draft and then who got the most and least value. See the Appendix below to see how all 32 teams ranked in our 2021 rankings and in TP Score.

    Here are the teams we ranked at the top immediately following the draft back in 2021. To see our scouting grading scale, check out our NFL Draft site.

    Top 5 Teams in 2021 Post-Draft Rankings
    Team Book Rank Grade
    Lions 1 6.60
    Dolphins 2 6.46
    Browns 3 6.44
    Jaguars 4 6.40
    Falcons 5 6.38

    TP Score will be defined below, but here are the top 5 teams based on how much value they received from their draft class.

    Top 5 Teams in TP Score
    Team TP Rank TP Score
    Chiefs 1 83.33
    Lions 2 80.82
    Jaguars 3 80.72
    Dolphins 4 66.22
    Bears 5 65.39

    In our post-draft rankings in 2021, we tabbed the Lions as the No. 1 draft class, and they just got edged out by the Chiefs for No. 1 three years later. In Brad Holmes’ first draft with the Lions, he was able to draft two of the top 10 players in Total Points over the last three years: Penei Sewell and Amon-Ra St. Brown, with both signing contract extensions just before the Draft.

    We also had the Jaguars and Dolphins in our top 5 who also ended up there after three seasons. Trevor Lawrence has been a mixed bag, but when he’s looked good, he’s been really good, amassing the most Total Points in the draft class. Additionally, Tyson Campbell’s 116 Total Points is the 6th-most. The Dolphins nailed their first four picks in Jaylen Waddle (59 Total Points), Jaelan Phillips (80), Jevon Holland (91), and Liam Eichenberg (61).

    As for the Chiefs, we were high on Nick Bolton, Creed Humphrey, and Trey Smith, grading them as 6.6 or 6.7 players, but they even surpassed those expectations, as we ranked them 21st post-draft. Between the three of them, they totaled 263 Total Points and would’ve ranked 10th among full teams themselves. While Joshua Kaindoh and Cornell Powell didn’t contribute much, they still hit on four of their six picks, which is a great percentage.

    The Bears round out the top 5 of TP Score, and we originally ranked them 16th immediately following the 2021 Draft. Justin Fields finally started to turn the corner, though he was traded to Pittsburgh this offseason. We were also high on Teven Jenkins, but the other five members of their class graded out between a 5.9 and 6.3 for us. We felt they would all contribute, but most, especially Larry Borom and Khalil Herbert, exceeded our expectations.

    Conversely, here are the bottom 5 teams from our 2021 rankings.

    Bottom 5 Teams in 2021 Post-Draft Rankings
    Team Book Rank Grade
    Bills 28 6.14
    Saints 29 6.12
    Cowboys 30 6.11
    Colts 31 6.07
    Rams 32 5.82

    Based on TP Score, here are the worst teams in terms of getting value from their 2021 draft picks.

    Bottom 5 Teams in TP Score
    Team TP Rank TP Score
    Giants 28 20.22
    Panthers 29 20.02
    Seahawks 30 20.00
    Vikings 31 17.08
    Rams 32 15.48

    The big bullseye here was the Rams. We were very low on their draft class initially, and they haven’t done anything to disprove that. While we admit omitting Ernest Jones from the book was a big miss on our part, he garnered 75 of their 114 Total Points from the entire class. He and Ben Skowronek were the only picks to play above average relative to their position among the draft class.

    While we ranked the Seahawks (26th) and Vikings (23rd) low initially, we missed on the Giants (12th) and Panthers (9th).

    Kadarius Toney and Azeez Ojulari have been above-average players, but Aaron Robinson and Rodarius Williams (SIS No. 5 CB) have been disappointing in New York. As for Carolina, aside from their three above-average players (Jaycee Horn, Brady Christensen, and Tommy Tremble), six of their eight other picks we felt were 6.4s or better, but they’ve only combined for a total of 26 Total Points.

    Determining Total Points Score

    In case you missed last year’s article, let’s explain the process of creating each team’s TP Score. When looking back to see how good or bad a specific draft class was, there are two main points to detect:

    1. How productive were the draft picks on the field?
    2. How much talent did the team draft relative to the amount of picks they made? 

    As in: Did they hit on one player or did they hit on multiple players?

    To determine the value of the draft classes, I used Total Points, our flagship player value stat, from across the last three seasons. However, for those of you who are familiar with Total Points, it gives a lot of extra weight to quarterbacks. With that said, Trevor Lawrence alone would have had the 14th best draft class with his 232 Total Points if we just used raw Total Points.

    While there is a reason we weigh quarterbacks so much more compared to other positions (they are pretty important), using that raw number in this sense isn’t going to make for a perfect match. While getting your franchise quarterback is a huge win, it doesn’t automatically give you a top class. This year, Jacksonville ended up with the 3rd-highest TP Score, and I think most would agree they had a good class, but not the best.

    Now, answering question 2 takes into account how well a team drafted throughout the entirety of the draft class. I found the average Total Points per player from the 2021 class at each position, including UDFAs who have taken at least one offensive or defensive snap, since they were also available to be selected.

    The positional averages are shown in the table below.

    Pos TP per Player
    QB 56.7
    RB 8.5
    WR 12.6
    TE 15.2
    OL 30.1
    DE 17.2
    DT 12.4
    LB 23.2
    CB 34.3
    S 30.1

     

    The TP Score, as referenced earlier, is what’s used to rank the teams. It is calculated as follows:

    1. Add up the Total Points from the entire team’s draft class
    2. Divide that number by the number of selections the team had
    3. Multiply that number by the percentage of draft picks that were above the average Total Points for their given position
    4. Add that to the original Total Points per draft pick

    In these 4 steps, we are essentially answering how productive the draft class was and how many picks were “hits”. Let’s run through an example using our No. 1 team, the Kansas City Chiefs.

    Here is their draft class:

    Pos Player Total Points
    LB Nick Bolton 75
    OL Creed Humphrey 103
    DE Joshua Kaindoh 0
    TE Noah Gray 37
    WR Cornell Powell 0
    OL Trey Smith 85

     

    Add up the Total Points from the entire team’s draft class

    300

    Divide that number by the number of selections the team had

    300 Total Points divided by 6 selections equals 50.00

    Multiply that number by the percentage of draft picks that were above the average Total Points for their given position

    Bolton, Humphrey, Gray, and Smith all accumulated a Total Points number that was above average compared to their position groups

    50.00 times 66.7% (4 out of 6) equals 33.33

    Add that to the original Total Points per draft pick

    50.00 plus 33.33 equals 83.33, which is their TP Score

    So, to summarize, we took the team’s Total Points gained from these players, dispersed it throughout the entire class and then gave a bump based on how many above-average players they drafted.

    Now that we know how the teams ranked and how the TP Score is calculated, let’s dive into some of the other details.

    Other Key Takeaways

    – No teams hit on at least 75% of their picks that year. At least two teams did that in each of the past two seasons, but none did with this class. However, the Bears and Lions went 5-of-7 (71%), the Chiefs went 4-of-6 (67%), and the Jets went 6-of-10 (60%). Levi Onwuzurike of the Lions came less than a half-point short of the DT average or he would’ve given Detroit a sixth hit and the No. 1 class.

    – The Jets’ six hits were the most of any team. They ranked 7th in TP Score. They hit on six of their first seven picks, getting at least 30 Total Points from each of them, though three of them have played significant snaps for other teams. Zach Wilson has been traded to Denver and hasn’t been anything like what Jets fans hoped, but he did sneak into being an above-average player in what was a brutal quarterback class.

    – Every team drafted at least one player who has played above the positional average compared to the rest of the draft class. However, the Saints (Payton Turner), Raiders (Alex Leatherwood), 49ers (Trey Lance), Titans (Caleb Farley), Seahawks (Dee Eskridge), Rams (Tutu Atwell), and Texans (Davis Mills) were the only teams whose first draft selection wasn’t an above-average player. This is the second year in a row that’s been the case for Las Vegas, Tennessee, Los Angeles, and Houston.

    – The three teams with the most raw Total Points are the Jaguars (467), Broncos (388), and Jets (360). Jacksonville leading the way isn’t a surprise given how valuable Trevor Lawrence has been. Denver and New York ranked No. 6 and No. 7 in TP Score, as well. We detailed the Jets already, so for the Broncos, they hit a massive home run with Patrick Surtain II, who has accumulated 161 Total Points, 2nd-most in the class behind Lawrence.

    – The Seahawks (45), Giants (91), and Rams (114) totaled the least amount of Total Points from their 2021 draft class. Seattle didn’t have a pick in Round 1 and had only three picks total. They missed with their first selection Dee Eskridge in Round 2. Their only hit was Tre Brown in the 4th Round, as he’s accumulated 35 of their 45 Total Points.

    – Of the three first-rounders who weren’t above-average players (not including Alex Leatherwood), it’s no surprise none of them got their 5th-year Option picked up. Of the 16 players whose options were picked up, minus those who received extensions, the only one who didn’t rank in the top 8 of their position group among the class was Alijah Vera-Tucker. His 48 Total Points placed him 16th among the offensive linemen.

    – Now that we’re three years into this, we can begin to take a broader look across seasons. 

    The Chiefs have the highest average TP Score across the last three seasons with 65.48, nearly 10 points higher than the Jaguars in 2nd. Check out the entire list in the Appendix.

    – Conversely, the Rams are the only team with an average ranking in the bottom 8, and they also rank dead last with an average TP Score of just 23.58. As a whole, this does make some sense. They haven’t made a 1st-Round pick in any of these seasons, so it’s likely they aren’t going to get a high-end impact player, but it’s telling that they’ve struggled to find much value in the later rounds of drafts.

    – Now the real question is how do our initial rankings compare to those numbers? 

    The Chiefs have had the highest average TP Score in three years, but we’ve given them the 2nd-worst cumulative ranking post-draft. Omitting L’Jarius Snead in 2020 played into that, but that’s clearly the biggest miss on our part. However, it’s worth noting that they’ve been able to take players who fit their scheme perfectly and make them work when they may not elsewhere.

    Additionally, our average top 10 post-draft teams who also have an average TP Score rank in the top 10 include the Bengals, Dolphins, Jaguars, and Broncos. Conversely, matches in the bottom 10 include the Colts, Seahawks, and Vikings. Teams we match in the middle 12 include the Titans, Cowboys, and Jets.

    While we’ve been way too low on the Chiefs post-draft each year, conversely, we’ve been way too high on the Ravens. We’ve averaged giving them the 5th-best (tied) class across the three seasons immediately after the draft, but they have just the 25th-best TP Score.

    How do our Initial Grades Compare?

    44% (14/32) of our initial ranks were in the correct half, meaning a team we ranked between 1 and 16 or 17 and 32 was ultimately in that tier, which is a dip from the last two seasons. However, we hit 3 of the top 5 and the last-ranked Rams. Additionally, 17 of the teams were only a single-digit difference from post-draft to now.

    The biggest differences in our initial grades and these final rankings were the Chiefs (20 spots), Saints (20 spots), and the Panthers (20 spots). We had Kansas City and New Orleans fairly low post-draft and we were high on Carolina. The Saints and Panthers flip-flopped, as we ranked the Saints 29th initially and they ended up 9th, whereas the Panthers were initially ranked 9th and ended up 29th. The 20-spot difference as the biggest difference is an improvement over previous years.

    For New Orleans, even with Payton Turner, who we felt was a versatile backup with a 6.2 grade, not working out, Pete Werner and Paulson Adebo have been outstanding and exceeded our initial grades. We graded them as a 6.2 and 6.4, respectively.

    Some players we unfortunately omitted from the Handbook were Brandon Stephens, Ernest Jones, and Dan Moore Jr. Stephens’ 94 Total Points is 4th-most among CBs in the class and just outside the top 10 overall. Jones and Moore each have accumulated 75 and 68 Total Points, respectively.

    What were some of our biggest misses elsewhere? All three players selected in Round 3 that we didn’t feature in the book have been big contributors. That includes Stephens, Jones, and Milton Williams. Additionally, while we felt Tyson Campbell (6.5 grade, SIS No. 12 CB) and Paulson Adebo (6.4 grade, SIS No. 15 CB) would be No. 3 CBs by Year 2, which is a strong role given today’s NFL, they’ve outperformed those grades, ranking No. 2 and No. 3, respectively, among CBs in the class and were top 6 in Total Points overall.

    Let’s take a look at some of our biggest wins. 

    Excluding Dan Moore Jr., the other five players selected in Round 4 that we didn’t feature in the book (Kene Nwangwu, Zech McPhearson, Janarius Robinson, Buddy Johnson, and Jacob Harris), have combined for -1 Total Point.

    Anthony Schwartz was our 36th-ranked WR and was drafted in the 3rd Round, but has -5 Total Points in 25 games, worst among all WRs in the class. Three other players drafted in the 4th Round ranked low on our boards and have struggled. Josh Ball (SIS No. 20 OT) has -1 Total Point (worst among OL). Jordan Smith (SIS No. 26 ED) has -1 Total Point (worst among DE/EDGE). Joshua Kaindoh was our last-ranked EDGE (No. 31) and has 0 Total Points, only played in three games, and is no longer on the team.

    The table below shows the top Total Points earners across the past three seasons from the draft class and how we graded and ranked them in the Handbook pre-draft.

    Rank Position Player Total Points SIS Grade SIS Pos Rank
    1 QB Trevor Lawrence 232 7.2 1
    2 CB Patrick Surtain II 161 7.0 1
    3 LB Micah Parsons 148 6.7 4
    4 CB Paulson Adebo 132 6.4 15
    5 QB Justin Fields 132 6.9 2
    6 CB Tyson Campbell 116 6.5 12
    7 OG Landon Dickerson 113 6.7 3 (OC)
    8 WR Amon-Ra St. Brown 111 6.4 11
    9 QB Mac Jones 111 6.6 5
    10 OT Penei Sewell 106 7.2 1

    As mentioned before, we were a bit low on Adebo and Campbell. We graded Parsons as a Will linebacker with some pass-rush upside, but had no idea the impact he’d eventually make in the NFL. It’s easy to see why Detroit and Jacksonville ranked in our top 3 in TP Score, and top 4 post-draft, as each have two players on this list.

    Conclusion

    Nobody really knows how a draft class is going to turn out immediately after the draft, yet it still makes sense to grade and rank the teams based on player grades for an initial reaction. 

    Post-draft grades are great in a sense, but they should be taken with a grain of salt. Once three years go by and we’ve seen what these players have done in the NFL, we can get a better sense of how good the team drafted.

    These rankings are all about finding which teams drafted the best draft class as a whole, not just who got the best player. While there are some players who didn’t play for the team that drafted them for the entirety of the past three seasons, that wasn’t taken into account since those decisions came after the initial drafting of these players, which is what this is based on. 

    An example of that from this class is Jason Pinnock, who was drafted by the Jets and has 54 Total Points, but played only 12 games and about 200 snaps for them in 2021 before playing 30 games and nearly 1,500 snaps across the past two seasons for the Giants.

    It’s not a perfect science, but it does a good job at pulling player value and seeing how well teams drafted as a whole class relative to the amount of selections they were afforded.

    Three years later, the comparison between our initial rankings and these rankings aren’t terrible for Year 3 (in both our grading and our scouting process). We made some improvements from Year 2 to Year 3, like adding 34 more players to the Handbook and featuring 19 (6%) more who were drafted. Though, we hope this article next year takes a large positive swing as we went into Year 4 in the 2022 draft cycle and the first year with our new website. As with everything we do here, we hope this improves year over year and can look back and say we kept getting better every day.

    Appendix

    2021 SIS Post-Draft Rankings based on the SIS Football Rookie Handbook

    Team Book Rank Grade
    Lions 1 6.60
    Dolphins 2 6.46
    Browns 3 6.44
    Jaguars 4 6.40
    Falcons 5 6.38
    Packers 6 6.37
    Chargers 7 6.37
    Broncos 8 6.36
    Panthers 9 6.35
    Patriots 10 6.35
    Bengals 11 6.34
    Giants 12 6.32
    49ers 13 6.30
    Titans 14 6.30
    Raiders 15 6.30
    Bears 16 6.30
    Texans 17 6.30
    Ravens 18 6.28
    Eagles 19 6.26
    Steelers 20 6.23
    Chiefs 21 6.23
    Jets 22 6.22
    Vikings 23 6.20
    Cardinals 24 6.20
    Buccaneers 25 6.20
    Seahawks 26 6.20
    Washington 27 6.14
    Bills 28 6.14
    Saints 29 6.12
    Cowboys 30 6.11
    Colts 31 6.07
    Rams 32 5.82

     

    TP Rank based on TP Score and how much value each team got from their draft picks over the last three seasons

     

    Team TP Rank TP Score
    Chiefs 1 83.33
    Lions 2 80.82
    Jaguars 3 80.72
    Dolphins 4 66.22
    Bears 5 65.39
    Broncos 6 58.20
    Jets 7 57.60
    Commanders 8 47.55
    Saints 9 46.89
    Texans 10 45.12
    Bills 11 41.42
    49ers 12 39.75
    Eagles 13 39.32
    Falcons 14 36.89
    Steelers 15 36.00
    Cowboys 16 35.83
    Patriots 17 35.23
    Colts 18 35.02
    Raiders 19 34.29
    Chargers 20 33.04
    Ravens 21 32.31
    Browns 22 31.88
    Packers 23 29.37
    Cardinals 24 28.98
    Titans 25 24.00
    Bengals 26 22.75
    Buccaneers 27 22.59
    Giants 28 20.22
    Panthers 29 20.02
    Seahawks 30 20.00
    Vikings 31 17.08
    Rams 32 15.48

     

    Average TP Score and ranking across all three seasons (the 2019-2021 draft classes after their first three seasons in 2022-2024)

     

    Team Avg TP Rank Avg TP Score
    Chiefs 1 65.48
    Jaguars 2 55.50
    Broncos 3 54.52
    Dolphins 4 54.34
    Chargers 5 51.53
    49ers 6 49.63
    Bears 7 48.78
    Bengals 8 46.69
    Lions 9 46.10
    Saints 10 46.06
    Buccaneers 11 44.48
    Commanders 12 43.97
    Titans 13 42.82
    Raiders 14 42.29
    Bills 15 40.02
    Cardinals 16 39.92
    Browns 17 39.65
    Falcons 18 37.77
    Cowboys 19 36.77
    Steelers 20 35.94
    Jets 21 35.14
    Texans 22 33.77
    Packers 23 32.98
    Colts 24 32.60
    Ravens 25 31.15
    Panthers 26 31.05
    Giants 27 30.84
    Eagles 28 30.14
    Patriots 29 29.14
    Seahawks 30 28.85
    Vikings 31 26.75
    Rams 32 23.58

     

  • 2024 SIS NFL Draft Team Grades

    2024 SIS NFL Draft Team Grades

    If you want our full thoughts on the players your team has added plus any UDFA, you can check out our Big Board for tons of great information. And if you’d like to contribute to next year’s draft cycle, consider applying to our Football Data Scout position.

    Welcome to our annual NFL Draft Report Card, in which we grade both the teams and ourselves on how well they fared in this NFL Draft.

    First off, we grade ourselves on how many players were drafted that we had featured on our NFL Draft website. After having 69% (174 of 254) of drafted players in the book in 2019, 78% (199 of 255) in 2020, 84% (218 of 259) in 2021, 86% (226 of 262) in 2022 (Year 1 online), and 92% (238 of 259) in 2023, we finished the 2024 draft cycle with 94% (241 of 257).

    When taking out specialists and international players, which we currently don’t write up, there were only 10 players drafted who weren’t on the site and only 2 of which we didn’t formally watch. That’s over 99% of the NFL Draft covered! Plus, many players we had on the site who didn’t get drafted have already signed free agent deals with teams.

    Using our grades, we attempted to rank each team’s draft class. Just like in our article from last season, we assigned all players who were drafted but not on the site a 5.4, which is the equivalent to a training camp body. We took those grades for each player and divided that by the number of selections the team had.

    These rankings do not account for positional value, the value of where players were drafted, or trades teams made; it is literally based on the grades we gave the players who were drafted and how much talent we feel teams got from their selections compared to the number of picks they made.

    And with that, the 2024 Best Draft Class, with an average grade of 6.46, goes to the Chicago Bears. They may have only had five draft picks, but they made the most of them. Even with drafting a punter in the 4th Round, they still managed to obtain good talent with their selections.

    The Bears draft class is in the table below.

    Chicago Bears 2024 Draft Class
    Pick Position Player College Grade
    1 QB Caleb Williams USC 7.0
    9 WR Rome Odunze Washington 6.9
    75 OT Kiran Amegadjie Yale 6.5
    122 P Tory Taylor Iowa 5.4
    144 ED Austin Booker Kansas 6.5

    After trading away the No. 1 pick in 2023 to give the Panthers Bryce Young and our top Draft Class, the Bears took their quarterback of the future in USC’s Caleb Williams. Williams was our top-ranked QB and our No. 2 player overall.

    With their second selection of Round 1, Chicago grabbed wide receiver Rome Odunze out of Washington. Odunze was our No. 3 WR, but No. 5 player overall. In almost any other draft, he’s likely the top WR on the board, but he’s behind Marvin Harrison Jr. and Malik Nabers in this class. However, that shouldn’t impact his play at the next level. He’ll partner up with DJ Moore and recently-acquired Keenan Allen to form a legit three-headed monster at receiver.

    With no picks in the 2nd Round, the Bears next selection came at No. 75 when they selected tackle Kiran Amegadjie (SIS No. 10 OT, No. 56 Overall) out of Yale. Unfortunately, Amegadjie missed all but four games in 2023 due to injury. With that injury, he hasn’t played a ton of football and is very raw, but the measurables and what he’s shown while he has been on the field suggests he has a lot of upside.

    Their final two picks were Tory Taylor, punter out of Iowa, and edge rusher Austin Booker (SIS No. 6 ED, No. 50 Overall), out of Kansas. Taylor may be turning 27-years-old soon, but he’s one of the better punter prospects to come out in recent years. Booker was a great value in the 5th Round, as the Bears traded back in to take him since he was still on the board.

    SIS Top Draft Classes
    Year Team Previous Season Following Season 2nd Season
    2019 Tennessee Titans 9-7 (No Playoffs) 9-7 (L, AFC Champ) 11-5 (L, Wild Card)
    2020 Cleveland Browns 6-10 (No Playoffs) 11-5 (L, Divisional) 8-9
    2021 Detroit Lions 5-11 (No Playoffs) 3-13-1 9-8
    2022 New York Jets 4-13 (No Playoffs) 7-10 7-10
    2023 Carolina Panthers 7-10 (No Playoffs) 2-15 ?
    2024 Chicago Bears 7-10 (No Playoffs) ? ?

    Since we grade players based on what they will be at the beginning of Year 2, let’s widen the table of our recent Draft Class winners.

    After winning as top class in 2019, the Titans made consecutive playoff appearances. While the Browns made the playoffs the next year, the turmoil in that locker room in 2021 forced a fall to 8-9. The Lions did take a dip in 2021 in the first year of a new regime, but they took a huge step forward in 2022, nearly making the playoffs, and then going all the way to the NFC Championship this past season.

    As for the Jets, they improved their record in 2022 and had both the Offensive and Defensive Rookies of the Year (Garret Wilson and Sauce Gardner), but expectations fell in 2023 when Aaron Rodgers went down in Week 1. The Panthers were tough to watch last season, and Bryce Young really struggled, but he wasn’t helped much with a coaching change midseason and a rough roster around him.

    What does that mean for the Bears? They decided to move on from Justin Fields and will now have this year’s No. 1 overall pick lining up at quarterback to go with a ton of weapons on the offensive side. The team likely isn’t in a position to compete for a Super Bowl just yet, but they have a lot of the core pieces to make a run sooner rather than later. Don’t be shocked if the NFC North is one of the toughest divisions in football in 2024.

    Now, let’s check out how the rest of the teams fared in our rankings. Here are the draft classes ranked in order of their grade:

    2024 Final Rankings
    Rank Team # of Picks Draft Grade
    1 Bears 5 6.46
    2 Giants 6 6.42
    3 Lions 6 6.38
    4 Titans 7 6.31
    5 Steelers 7 6.29
    6 Chiefs 7 6.27
    7 Broncos 7 6.26
    8 Patriots 8 6.24
    9 Panthers 7 6.23
    10 Cardinals 12 6.21
    11 Chargers 9 6.20
    12 Raiders 8 6.20
    13 Buccaneers 7 6.19
    14 Rams 10 6.18
    15 Ravens 9 6.17
    16 Texans 9 6.17
    17 49ers 8 6.16
    18 Saints 7 6.16
    19 Commanders 9 6.13
    20 Jets 7 6.11
    21 Bengals 10 6.10
    22 Vikings 7 6.10
    23 Seahawks 8 6.09
    24 Falcons 8 6.09
    25 Bills 10 6.08
    26 Cowboys 8 6.08
    27 Packers 11 6.07
    28 Colts 9 6.07
    29 Dolphins 7 6.06
    30 Eagles 9 6.04
    31 Browns 6 5.95
    32 Jaguars 9 5.93

    Some thought the Giants could draft a quarterback, but they decided not to, taking our No. 4 overall player, Malik Nabers, instead. The Lions, Titans, and Steelers rounded out the top 5. Detroit was able to grab four players from our top 100 in their six selections. They’ve had Top-8 classes all four years of the Brad Holmes/Dan Campbell era. Additionally, the Panthers put together the No. 9 class after last year’s No. 1, as they look to get back on track.

    The bottom three teams for 2023, listed 30 to 32, were the Eagles, Browns, and Jaguars

    We’ll preface this by saying the Eagles knocked their first two picks out of the park, grabbing two of our top 6 cornerbacks in Quinyon Mitchell (SIS No. 3 CB, No. 18 Overall) and Cooper DeJean (SIS No. 6 CB, No. 34 Overall). They also added running back Will Shipley (SIS No. 5 RB) in the 4th Round, who we feel could be a difference maker on 3rd downs. However, the rest of their picks, while most have a lot of upside with high ceilings, we feel they are backups early on in their careers. Their Top-2 draft classes from the past two years have set them up in a good spot moving forward regardless how most of this year’s class shakes out.

    The Browns only had six picks this year with their first one not coming until Round 2 and only three in the top 200 picks, but they only took one player we felt was going to be a starter by his second season: guard Zak Zinter (SIS No. 8 OG). Understandably, we were a bit lower on defensive tackle Michael Hall Jr. (SIS DT No. 12) than consensus, as we feel he’s a top backup early in his career. The rest of their picks should prove as strong depth, but it may be a few years until they become solid starters.

    This year’s worst class goes to the Jaguars. This comes a year after they ranked No. 31. They traded back and selected Brian Thomas Jr. (SIS No. 5 WR, No. 23 Overall), who should become a strong target and deep threat for Trevor Lawrence, but aside from him, only Javon Foster (SIS No. 15 OT) graded out as better than a top backup. While Maason Smith (SIS No. 13 DT) has the measurables and a high ceiling, we thought a mid-2nd Round pick was a bit of a reach.

    The 49ers took home our worst class in 2023 and still made the Super Bowl, so there is still hope for Jacksonville moving forward.

    Key Facts

    * With only 16 players drafted this year who weren’t featured on the site, many teams added a lot of talent in this year’s draft. Only two teams drafted more than one player who wasn’t featured on the site: the Colts and Vikings, though one of Minnesota’s picks was a kicker.

    * All four teams in the AFC West ranked in our top 12 this year, further suggesting that the division could get back on track as being one of the toughest in the NFL.

    * Typically teams with a lot of picks rank near the bottom just due to sheer volume and only a limited number of quality players, but the Cardinals need a shoutout this year. Even with drafting 12 players, they came in with the No. 10 ranking for us. Getting Marvin Harrison Jr., our No. 1 overall player, at No. 4 helped set them up for success throughout, but they also drafted four other players who we graded a 6.5 as starting-level players.

    * The Panthers have the best average SIS Draft Class rank over our six seasons doing this. However, the Panthers and Lions are tied with the best grade average based on our player grades over that same span. The Titans, Raiders, and Ravens round out the top 5 draft class ranks. Compared to last year, Baltimore dropped a spot to fifth, Tennessee and Las Vegas entered the top 5, and Philadelphia dropped out. The Colts continue to bring up the rear. Last year’s No. 11 ranking is the only time they’ve ever ranked in our top 25, so it may be a while before they climb up the rankings.

    * Only four players from our top 100 went undrafted this year, but each quickly signed UDFA deals with teams soon after the draft concluded. Leonard Taylor III (SIS No. 5 DT, No. 46 Overall) has signed with the Jets. Gabriel Murphy (SIS No. 9 ED, No. 61 Overall) has signed with the Vikings. Jalen Sundell (SIS No. 6 OG, No. 72 Overall) has signed with the Browns. Tight end Dallin Holker (SIS No. 6 TE, No. 75 Overall) has signed with the Saints.

    Ivan Pace Jr. went undrafted last year after being labeled our No. 51 overall player, and he played his way into Minnesota’s starting lineup and onto our All-Rookie Team.

    How the NFL Draft Site Compared to the Draft

    Let’s take a look at how the website stacks up to the NFL’s thinking of where players were selected. 

    On offense, the first player drafted at every position except RB was the No. 1 player on our board. Jonathon Brooks was the first running back off the board, but was our No. 2 ranked RB.

    On defense, the top player at each position matched the first player drafted for nose tackle, middle linebacker, and safety. At defensive tackle, edge rusher, Will linebacker, and cornerback, the top player drafted at the position was either our No. 2 or No. 3 player.

    The top 5 quarterbacks that went off the board matched our top 5, but in a slightly different order. The positions that had four of the top 5 going off the board that matched our rankings were wide receiver, tackle (matched the top 4), center, nose tackle, edge, and cornerback. The only two players we graded within the top 5 of their position group who were not drafted were DT Leonard Taylor III (previously mentioned) and Nathan Pickering (SIS No. 5 NT), though Pickering was ranked No. 376 on our board.

    Overdrafted?

    Bo Nix (SIS No. 6 QB) was our only player graded as a 6.3 or lower to be drafted in Round 1 and was actually ranked outside our top 100. Denver looks to be a perfect fit for him, but he’s got some things to prove before showing he can potentially be a win-with quarterback, which is why we graded him as a circumstantial starter/quality backup.

    The only offensive player we graded a 5.9 who went off the board before Round 3 was Ben Sinnott (SIS No. 7 TE) who was drafted at No. 53. His athletic testing numbers suggest he’s got high upside, but the athleticism didn’t translate to the field enough to warrant a starting grade early in his career.

    As mentioned before, Maason Smith and Michael Hall Jr. were both off the board in Round 2, but we had a 5.9 top backup grade on both of them. Both are young and have high ceilings, but we feel it may take a couple years of development before they can become impact starters.

    Staying on the defensive side of the ball, Edgerrin Cooper (SIS No. 3 WLB) was taken with pick No. 45. He may have been our No. 3 WLB, but we also only had a 5.9 grade on him. He’s a ridiculous athlete with a ton of upside, but it’ll be a couple years before he reaches a starting level. Additionally, Marshawn Kneeland (SIS No. 14 ED) was taken No. 56 overall. He has some potential versatility, but we also graded him as a 5.9 top backup.

    Some other players we believe were taken too early for the roles we project them to are Tip Reiman, Marist Liufau, and Jalyx Hunt, three players who were Top-100 selections and received grades a notch below a top backup.

    The first eligible player (non-specialist or international player) taken who we did not give a strong enough grade to reach the threshold we set for the website was Falcons WR Casey Washington, taken in the 6th round, No. 187 overall. Additionally, the first player who went off the board that we didn’t get a formal look or report on was Texans LB Jamal Hill who went one pick later at No. 188. The only other player we didn’t get a look at was Michael Jurgens who was selected by the Vikings in the 7th Round at No. 230.

    Underdrafted?

    Tight end Ja’Tavion Sanders (SIS No. 2 TE, No. 25 Overall) was the only 6.7 not selected inside the top 100, and he went to the Panthers with the first pick of Round 4 at No. 101.

    The Lions scooped up Mekhi Wingo (SIS No. 3 DT, No. 39 Overall) and Christian Mahogany (SIS No. 5 OG, No. 51 Overall) in the 6th Round, which we feel is great value.

    The only other 6.5 or above players selected in the final two rounds was Walter Rouse (SIS No. 12 OT, No. 70 Overall) by the Vikings at pick No. 177 and Beaux Limmer (SIS No. 3 OC, No. 49 Overall) who went to the Rams at pick No. 217. We like all of these players’ chances to come in and outperform their draft positions.

    Conclusion

    Every year the SIS scouting department looks to make improvements, and this year was no different. With the SIS Football Operation growing the way it is, our time is somewhat limited when it comes to scouting. However, we got a huge help from some of our Live Data scouts in January and February to knock out many of the final first looks we needed to get on players.

    Our six-man scouting team, consisting of Nathan Cooper, Jordan Edwards, Jeff Dean, Ben Hrkach, Chad Tedder, and Jeremy Percy, put in the hard work to finalize over 670 reports, of which 388 were featured on our NFL Draft site. This is the first time in three years we put less than 400 players on the site, but that’s due to a limited number of draftable players because of the COVID year and us tightening up our grading.

    Even with having less players on the site, the number of drafted non-specialist/fullback/international players not featured on our site went down again, as did the number of players drafted on whom we didn’t have eyes on at all (only 2 out of 257!). As we noted, our Top-100 evaluations were a big success with 72 of our top 100 drafted in the first 100 picks and only four not selected at all.

    That the first player not featured on the website, outside of the specialists/international players, was drafted in the 6th round is also a huge success. With Qwan’tez Stiggers and Travis Clayton being drafted out of the CFL and as an English rugby player, respectively, we may just have to start expanding our reach moving forward.

    We want to thank The 33rd Team for allowing us to house our draft content on their site this year, as we really feel like it helped expand the reach of our scouting reports and showed everyone the type of quality reports and data we produce.

    Please continue to check out our NFL Draft website as the offseason continues. If you’d like to be involved in our scouting and charting processes next year, consider applying to our Football Data Scout position. We’re taking applications and interviewing for next year’s class now.