The 2025 NFL Mock Draft 2.0: Power, Paranoia, and the Pursuit of Glory

1. Tennessee Titans – Cam Ward, QB, Miami (Fla.)
Every dynasty has its reckoning, and the Titans find themselves at the crossroads of fate. A franchise that’s flirted with success, only to be undone by its own short-sighted decisions, now faces the harshest truth of all: a quarterback carousel that never stops spinning leads nowhere.
The ghosts of past missteps still haunt Nissan Stadium, but new general manager Mike Borgonzi sits at the head of the table, phone lines burning with offers. “We’ve had some calls,” he mutters, a hint of calculation in his voice. He knows the game. He knows the stakes. The Titans need their next great quarterback, a leader who can withstand the storm.
Enter Cam Ward. Tough. Fearless. A gunslinger in every sense of the word. The kind of quarterback Brian Callahan needs to run his offense with the precision of a well-orchestrated heist. Ward isn’t just a pick—he’s the bet they place on their future. The question is: Will it pay off, or will Tennessee become another forgotten story of what could’ve been?
2. Cleveland Browns – Abdul Carter, DE, Penn State
No one wants to talk about it, but Deshaun Watson’s shadow still lingers over Cleveland like an unpaid debt. The Browns are playing the long con, hedging their bets, waiting for an escape hatch.
But a franchise can’t live in purgatory forever. It has to make a move, has to show some teeth. Abdul Carter is a statement. A 6’3″, 250-pound enforcer who doesn’t need a microphone to tell you he’s in charge—he lets his game do the talking.
Myles Garrett remains the crown jewel of Cleveland’s defense, but for how long? There are whispers of trade offers, backdoor dealings. In this league, loyalty is just another chip at the poker table. Carter gives Cleveland leverage, an heir to the throne, a battering ram coming off the edge. If the Browns are truly about winning, this is a pick that signals war.
3. New York Giants – Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado
The Giants are a sleeping giant, and everyone in New York knows it. A city that lives on nostalgia—Parcells, Eli, the echoes of Super Bowls past. But in the present? A rudderless ship lost at sea, a fanbase growing impatient, waiting for someone to bring them back to shore.
Joe Schoen knows the deal. Daniel Jones was never the answer, just a placeholder in a long, drawn-out saga. Now, the franchise turns its gaze toward the next prodigy.
Shedeur Sanders isn’t just a quarterback—he’s a movement. The son of Prime Time, a player who carries the weight of expectation like a boxer walking into Madison Square Garden under the brightest lights. He’s got the poise, the arm, the confidence. But New York can break a man faster than any blitzing linebacker.
The Giants don’t just need a quarterback—they need a savior. If Sanders embraces the stage, this pick becomes legendary. If he crumbles? Just another cautionary tale.
4. New England Patriots – Travis Hunter, CB/WR, Colorado
Boston. Cold, calculating, built on the legacy of a dynasty now drifting into the rearview. Belichick is gone, and with him, the ruthless efficiency that once defined the Patriots. What’s left is a team searching for identity.
Travis Hunter is a generational talent, a two-way player with the kind of raw ability that makes scouts salivate. But the Patriots can’t even agree on what to do with him. Is he the next great lockdown corner? Or the electrifying playmaker they’ve been missing on offense?
One thing’s for sure: Hunter isn’t the type to fade into obscurity. He’s the wild card in this draft, a man with a destiny yet to be written. In the right hands, he could be New England’s next legend. In the wrong ones? Another wasted opportunity in the post-Brady era.
5. Jacksonville Jaguars – Mason Graham, DT, Michigan
Jacksonville is tired of being an afterthought. A team that has tasted success, only to see it slip away like sand through their fingers. James Gladstone, fresh off the Rams’ war room, understands the game—this is about trench warfare, about building a team from the inside out.
Mason Graham is a blue-collar enforcer, a disruptor in the middle who plays with the kind of nastiness that can change a defense’s DNA. He won’t be Aaron Donald, but he doesn’t need to be. What he will be is an anchor, a player who makes quarterbacks think twice before stepping up in the pocket.
The Jaguars want to be more than just another playoff hopeful. They want respect. Graham is the type of pick that brings it.
6. Las Vegas Raiders – Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise State
Vegas. A city of sin, a franchise that thrives on chaos. The Raiders are in a constant battle with themselves, never fully committing to a rebuild, never quite pushing all their chips in.
This pick isn’t about luxury—it’s about survival. Josh Jacobs is gone, the running game is in shambles, and Vegas needs a back who can carry the load. Ashton Jeanty runs like he’s got a score to settle, like every yard he gains is personal.
The Raiders could go quarterback, but the whispers around town say they’ll make their move in free agency. Maybe it’s Sam Darnold, maybe it’s a wildcard. Either way, Jeanty becomes the new identity of this offense. The question is, will it be enough?
7. New York Jets – Tyler Warren, TE, Penn State
Aaron Rodgers came to town with the promise of a new era. Then his Achilles snapped, and with it, the Jets’ season. Now, the front office is scrambling to make sure it doesn’t happen again.
Tyler Warren is the kind of player who doesn’t just fit a scheme—he defines it. A tough, physical, do-it-all tight end who can be Rodgers’ safety blanket or the next guy up when the inevitable changing of the guard happens.
The Jets have talent, but talent alone doesn’t win championships. Warren is a culture pick, a guy who brings an edge to an offense that’s still trying to find its teeth.
8. Carolina Panthers – Jalon Walker, LB, Georgia
Carolina is in the business of redemption. Bryce Young needs protection, but what this team really needs is a spark—a player who brings energy to a franchise stuck in limbo.
Jalon Walker is a chess piece, a defender who can be deployed in a multitude of ways. He’s raw, but his upside is undeniable. Carolina isn’t afraid of a gamble, and in a division where defense can still win games, Walker might be the kind of player who helps shift the tide.
9. New Orleans Saints – Tetairoa McMillan, WR, Arizona
New Orleans has always had a flair for the dramatic. The Saints are a franchise built on moments—on Drew Brees carving up secondaries, on Sean Payton’s bravado, on a city that lives and breathes football. But the lights have dimmed. The Saints are running on fumes, stuck in the purgatory of mediocrity.
Derek Carr is still here, for now. But if they’re going to make this work, he needs weapons. Tetairoa McMillan isn’t just a receiver—he’s a presence. A towering 6’5” maestro of contested catches, built for the late-game heroics that define legacies. Pair him with Chris Olave, and suddenly, New Orleans has something. Something real.
But talent alone won’t save this team. They need leadership, they need identity. The Saints are at a crossroads. This pick? Just the beginning of their redemption arc.
10. Chicago Bears – Will Campbell, OT, LSU
The Bears have been rebuilding since the days of Mike Ditka’s mustache, but now? Now they might finally be onto something. Caleb Williams is in the fold, the future of the franchise. But the kid needs protection, and Chicago’s front office knows it.
Will Campbell is a cornerstone. Tough. Mean. The kind of offensive lineman who thrives in the frozen wastelands of Soldier Field. In another world, he’s the type of guy who would’ve been an enforcer for Al Capone. In this one? He’s the guy making sure Caleb Williams doesn’t get his head taken off.
This pick is about survival. And in Chicago, survival is everything.
11. San Francisco 49ers – Will Johnson, CB, Michigan
In San Francisco, defense isn’t just part of the game—it’s a way of life. The 49ers build their team like a mob family: disciplined, physical, relentless.
Charvarius Ward might be on his way out, and in a division full of aerial assassins—Metcalf, Nacua, Kupp—the Niners need reinforcements. Will Johnson is that guy. 6’1”, 203 pounds, a cornerback who plays like he was born to shut down the league’s best.
The 49ers don’t miss often on first-round picks. This one? A continuation of their legacy.
12. Dallas Cowboys – Walter Nolen, DT, Mississippi
The Cowboys. America’s Team. A franchise built on spectacle, on headlines, on Jerry Jones lighting cigars and making deals. But when the bright lights fade, the reality is clear: they need muscle up front.
Walter Nolen is that muscle. A 6’4”, 290-pound wrecking ball who plays with the controlled chaos of a fighter in the tenth round. The Cowboys have spent too many years relying on stars to bail them out. Nolen is a trench warrior. A man who can change games by himself.
If Dallas wants to be more than just a sideshow, they need picks like this.
13. Miami Dolphins – Kelvin Banks Jr., OT/G, Texas
South Beach is all about flash. But the Dolphins’ offensive line? More like a sandcastle waiting to be washed away by the tide.
With Terron Armstead out the door, the Dolphins don’t have time for experiments. Kelvin Banks Jr. is a sure thing. A three-year starter. A proven mauler. A player who could solidify the trenches and keep Tua Tagovailoa upright.
Mike McDaniel wants speed, precision, efficiency. This pick ensures all three.
14. Indianapolis Colts – Malaki Starks, S, Georgia
In Indy, defense has always been about legacy. From Bob Sanders to Dwight Freeney, the Colts thrive when they have enforcers on the field. And under new defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo, they need someone who can adapt.
Malaki Starks is that chess piece. A Swiss Army knife in the secondary. The type of guy who sees things before they happen. Whether he’s dropping into coverage or creeping into the box to blow up a run, Starks gives the Colts a new identity.
This is a pick that changes the culture.
15. Atlanta Falcons – Mike Green, DE/OLB, Marshall
Atlanta has had a pass rush problem for years. No team has spent more time chasing ghosts in the pocket, watching quarterbacks carve them up with surgical precision. Enough is enough.
Mike Green isn’t a household name—yet. But 17 sacks in a season? That speaks for itself. He’s got the hunger. The relentlessness. He’s the kind of player who could make Atlanta’s defense feared again.
If this works out, Green won’t just be a draft pick. He’ll be a franchise legend.
16. Arizona Cardinals – Mykel Williams, DE, Georgia
Jonathan Gannon has a vision for this team. Tough. Physical. Smart. But a vision is worthless without the right pieces.
Mykel Williams is a freak of nature. 6’5”, 265 pounds, explosive off the edge. A player who can set the tone for a defense still searching for its identity.
The Cardinals aren’t here to play nice. This pick proves it.
17. Cincinnati Bengals – Shemar Stewart, DE, Texas A&M
The Bengals are on the clock, but in reality, they’ve been on the clock for years. A franchise teetering between a championship window and the risk of fading back into obscurity. Joe Burrow can’t do it all. He needs a defense that can take over when it counts.
Shemar Stewart is a 6’5″, 281-pound nightmare for offensive linemen. A disruptor. A chaos agent. Trey Hendrickson’s future is murky, and Cincinnati needs insurance.
This isn’t a luxury pick. This is a necessity.
18. Seattle Seahawks – Armand Membou, OT/G, Missouri
Seattle’s offensive line is an issue no one wants to talk about. But in the cold reality of the NFC West, where pass rushers lurk like sharks in dark water, you either build a wall or watch your quarterback get eaten alive.
Armand Membou is built for this. 6’3”, 332 pounds of mean streak. A guard with the kind of raw strength that makes defensive linemen reconsider their career choices. If Seattle wants to get back to its bully-ball roots, this is where it starts.
19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio State
Chris Godwin’s future in Tampa is as shaky as a Florida thunderstorm. If he walks, the Buccaneers need an answer, and fast.
Emeka Egbuka isn’t just another receiver. He’s a precision route-runner, a playmaker, a guy who can make life easier for Baker Mayfield—or whoever ends up under center.
If Tampa Bay wants to keep up in an NFC South race that’s turning into a knife fight, they need more firepower. Egbuka brings it.
20. Denver Broncos – Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan
Sean Payton is a man with a vision. He’s seen what a dominant tight end can do for an offense. Colston Loveland is the prototype.
Big. Physical. A tight end who moves like a wide receiver and blocks like a left tackle. A weapon for a team that’s desperate to build something sustainable.
If Denver wants to keep Bo Nix—or whoever they bet on—upright and successful, Loveland is a foundational piece.
21. Pittsburgh Steelers – Jahdae Barron, CB, Texas
Mike Tomlin doesn’t do finesse. The Steelers are a team built on defense, on controlled violence, on secondary players who make wide receivers second-guess their routes.
Jahdae Barron is a corner with instincts. He finds the ball, he disrupts passing lanes, he plays with the kind of intensity Tomlin loves.
This is a Steelers pick through and through.
22. Los Angeles Chargers – Omarion Hampton, RB, North Carolina
Jim Harbaugh knows one thing above all else: You build a team from the trenches and the run game. In his world, passing is just something you do when you have to.
Omarion Hampton is a Harbaugh-style running back. Tough. Relentless. A runner who turns three yards into five, five into eight, and breaks defenses in the fourth quarter.
The Chargers want to control games. This is how they start.
23. Green Bay Packers – Azareye’h Thomas, CB, Florida State
Green Bay doesn’t do splashy moves. They build, they develop, they let their system work. But sometimes, even the Packers have to admit they need a difference-maker.
Azareye’h Thomas is a long, rangy corner who thrives in press coverage. He’s the kind of player who can replace Jaire Alexander if the front office moves on.
This pick isn’t about 2025. It’s about 2027 and beyond.
24. Minnesota Vikings – Tyler Booker, G, Alabama
Kirk Cousins is gone. The Vikings are in the middle of a transition. But before they start looking at their next quarterback, they need to fix the trenches.
Tyler Booker is a monster. A physically dominant guard who sets the tone in the run game and can protect the passer.
Minnesota has to rebuild smart. This is the first step.
25. Houston Texans – Kenneth Grant, DT, Michigan
DeMeco Ryans is building something. It’s violent, it’s aggressive, and it’s built on defensive line play.
Kenneth Grant is a 342-pound force in the middle. A player who can eat blocks, disrupt the run, and let Will Anderson Jr. do what he does best—destroy quarterbacks.
This is the kind of pick that makes a defense terrifying.
26. Los Angeles Rams – Josh Simmons, OT, Ohio State
The Rams are at a crossroads. They still have Matthew Stafford, but they need to start thinking about sustainability. That starts up front.
Josh Simmons is a technician. A left tackle with the kind of footwork and discipline that makes him a perfect fit for Sean McVay’s offense.
If the Rams want to extend their championship window, they need this pick.
27. Baltimore Ravens – Jihaad Campbell, LB, Alabama
Baltimore is always thinking two steps ahead. That’s how they stay great.
Jihaad Campbell is an Alabama linebacker. That means he’s fast, instinctual, and built to hit. He gives the Ravens versatility on defense and an eventual replacement for Roquan Smith.
This is what Baltimore does. They reload.
28. Detroit Lions – Jack Sawyer, DE, Ohio State
Dan Campbell wants warriors. He doesn’t want finesse. He wants grit, toughness, and players who play every snap like it’s their last.
Jack Sawyer isn’t a polished pass-rusher, but he plays with the kind of relentless motor that fits Detroit’s culture perfectly.
This is a pick that just makes sense.
29. Washington Commanders – Matthew Golden, WR, Texas
Jayden Daniels is the new franchise quarterback. Now, Washington has to get him weapons.
Matthew Golden is a smooth route-runner with big-play ability. The kind of guy who makes a young QB’s life easier.
This pick is about building an offense that works.
30. Buffalo Bills – Derrick Harmon, DT, Oregon
The Bills are still chasing that elusive Super Bowl. If they’re going to get there, they need to be tougher up front.
Derrick Harmon gives them a dominant interior presence. A player who can collapse pockets and take pressure off the edges.
Buffalo isn’t messing around.
31. Kansas City Chiefs – Nick Emmanwori, S, South Carolina
The Chiefs don’t need much. But Justin Reid isn’t getting younger, and Kansas City thrives on smart, versatile defenders.
Nick Emmanwori is a 6’3”, 227-pound safety who can play anywhere. He fits the Chiefs’ mold perfectly.
This is how dynasties stay dynasties.
32. Philadelphia Eagles – James Pearce Jr., DE, Tennessee
Howie Roseman doesn’t just draft. He makes chess moves.
James Pearce Jr. is a freak athlete. A pass rusher with an insane first step and the kind of explosiveness that turns good defenses into great ones.
The Eagles never stop building. That’s why they win.
Final Thoughts:
Some teams just made their future. Some just made their mistakes. In the NFL, it’s never just a draft—it’s a war. And the real games? They start now.