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Follow every pick of the 2026 NFL Draft with PFT’s live tracker.
What does Lane bring to Ravens' offense?
Matthew Berry and Lawrence Jackson Jr. evaluate the game of USC's Ja'Kobi Lane and analyze how the wide receiver can help Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens.

Rotoworld Player News

All Player News
  • PHI Guard
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    Morris (6’5/334) is a traits-laden interior prospect with a rare blend of size, power and movement skills, posting an elite 9.96 RAS with top-tier explosiveness (95th percentile broad, 82nd percentile vertical) and speed scores for a 334-pound blocker. Morris delivered a strong pass-protection season with an 83.7 PBLK grade, allowing just 4 total pressures and zero sacks across 426 pass-block reps, good for a 99.5 percent block efficiency rating. His game is built on overwhelming upper-body strength and grip, flashing the ability to stonewall rushers when his hands land cleanly while also showing surprising mobility to climb and adjust in space. However, Morris remains an uneven technician, playing with a consistently high pad level and outside hand placement that limit his ability to sustain blocks and allow athletic interior defenders to create leakage. His base can narrow under duress, impacting balance and mirror ability despite his athletic profile, and his run blocking (67.2 RBLK in 2025) lacks consistent displacement relative to his physical tools. Morris projects as a developmental guard with starting upside due to his size and advanced athleticism.
  • LAC Guard
    Harkey is a former tight end whose athletic profile and positional versatility give him intriguing upside as a developmental swing lineman. At 6’6”, 308 with 31 3/4” arms and a 31” vertical (87th%), Harkey brings above-average movement skills that show up when he’s asked to climb, pull or operate in space, a carryover from his TE background. He logged time at both right tackle and right guard in 2025, earning a 74.0 PFF pass-block grade while flashing active hands and a willingness to stay engaged and hunt for work in protection. Harkey plays with heavy hands and a physical finishing mentality, using his upper-body strength to latch and control reps once he’s in position. However, his shorter arms and occasional over-aggression can lead to losses at the point of attack, and his penalty issues (9 in 2025) highlight inconsistencies in timing and technique. He took time adjusting to the speed and complexity of Power Five competition after transferring from Texas State, and an ankle injury in 2025 interrupted some of that development curve. With his athletic background, positional flexibility and flashes of power, Harkey projects as a swing lineman whose ceiling hinges on cleaning up penalties and refining his pass-protection mechanics.
  • HOU Wide Receiver
    Spending all five of his college seasons at Boston College, Bond(5’11/190) enters the NFL as the Eagles’ all-time receptions leader. His highest-volume season was as a redshirt senior in 2025, tallying 88 receptions for 993 yards and a touchdown. Bond is a fluid route-runner whose compact frame gives him balance and the ability to drive through contact after the catch. Though he is not a fast downfield runner nor does he have a large frame to make contested catches, Bond can excel in the intermediate area with quick-game route-running. At the next level, Bond profiles best as a ball-carrier in space. With a few years of practice reps, Bond could emerge as an underneath option for C.J. Stroud.
  • DET Defensive Tackle
    Gill-Howard (6’0/280) is a late-blooming interior disruptor whose production arc spiked after transferring to Texas Tech, posting an 88.6 overall grade with a career-best 90.0 pass-rush grade in 2025 despite a limited 165-snap sample. Over his final two seasons he generated 41 pressures and 6 sacks, including a strong 17-hurry campaign in 2024, showcasing a penetrating skill set built on quickness rather than mass. Gill-Howard’s 54 career pressures on just 906 total snaps reflect an efficient interior rusher capable of creating disruption in rotational usage, while adding 52 run stops with a commendable 8.6% missed tackle rate. Athletically, his 5.61 RAS is dragged down by poor size metrics at 6’0”, 280 pounds with subpar length (30 ¾”), but he compensates with good explosion (30.5” vertical) and above-average short-area movement skills that show up on tape.
  • JAC Wide Receiver
    Williams is listed at 6-foot-1, 205 pounds on Stanford’s website, but we don’t have an official measurement on him because he didn’t test at the Combine and didn’t seem to be on the draft industrial complex’s radar. He did measure in at 6'0/203 at Stanford’s Pro Day, where he somehow managed a 5.76 RAS. Not exactly emblematic of a future NFL wideout. Neither NFL.com’s Lance Zeirliein nor The Athletic’s Dane Brugler wrote him up, to say nothing of our own Eric Froton. Williams started his career at USC in 2022 before transferring to Wisconsin then ending up in Palo Alto. He did manage 59 receptions in 2025, leading the team and producing 749 yards and six scores. Maybe he’s good. We frankly couldn’t tell you. We are told he was an 81 OVR on EA Sports College Football 26. Jaguars GM James Gladstone is hoping he’s pulled a fast one on the league, but it’s just as likely he’s playing himself.
  • LAC Tackle
    Taylor (6’7"/314) is a rugged, multi-position veteran with over 3,100 career snaps and experience logging 100-plus reps at four different offensive line spots, projecting as a high-IQ interior chess piece. Taylor posted a steady 2025 campaign with a 71.4 pass block grade and somewhat elevated 97.4 percent block efficiency rate, allowing five sacks and 22 pressures across 537 pass-blocking snaps, while continuing a multi-year trend of reliable, assignment-sound play. His game is built on coordination and hand carriage, consistently marrying feet, hands and eyes to absorb and redirect force, giving him a strong transition profile into a “phone booth” NFL role. Taylor brings above-average testing (9.20 RAS) with good explosion and functional movement skills, though his play strength doesn’t always translate into consistent displacement at the point of attack. His upright pad level and lack of consistent leverage limit his ability to generate push in the run game despite a respectable 72.3 run block grade in 2025, and he wins more with positioning than raw power. Taylor’s intelligence, toughness, and versatility stand out, but his ceiling is capped by middling anchor consistency and a lack of dominant traits. He projects as a pliable interior swing lineman with emergency tackle flexibility, offering valuable depth in schemes where his processing, technique, and positional versatility can keep him active on game days.
  • SF Wide Receiver #11
    The 49ers have already made it abundantly clear that Aiyuk will not be playing for them moving forward after a saga that included the team removing his guaranteed money for not showing up to rehab sessions. Rapoport added that the Commanders have had continued interest in the veteran wide receiver but have been hesitant to discuss trade talks under the assumption that the 49ers will be releasing Aiyuk, bringing us to the stalemate at hand. Either way, Rapoport believes Aiyuk will be playing the 2027 season in Washington.
  • GB Cornerback
    Jackson is coming off a down year in which he defended just one pass. He logged nine in 2024, along with two interceptions, 52 tackles and two TFLs. A knee injury suffered in Jackson’s high school senior season slowed his development. It was reported locally as a torn tendon and as a “patella injury” by The Athletic’s Dane Brugler. Jackson reportedly reinjured the knee as a college freshman, and it bothered him throughout the 2022 season. The former record-setting high school sprinter encouragingly clocked a 4.41-second 40 at the NFL Scouting Combine and measured in at 6’1/194.
  • MIA Guard
    Campbell (6’2/313) is a durable, three-year starter with a gap-scheme profile built on power, leverage and toughness in tight quarters. Campbell logged over 2,600 career snaps and turned in a solid 2025 season with a 77.6 PFF pass-block grade, allowing 1 sack and 18 pressures on 484 pass-blocking snaps. He wins with core strength, hand resets and the ability to drop a firm anchor, consistently holding his ground against bull rushers while flashing strong second-phase blocking ability in the run game. Campbell tested as a solid athlete with a 7.90 RAS, highlighted by elite straight-line speed (5.01 forty, 1.75 10-yard split), but his play speed and lateral mobility remain average, particularly when asked to operate in space. He can struggle with balance and timing on combo blocks, often leaning into contact and losing control when defenders counter late in the rep. His effectiveness dips outside of gap and inside-zone concepts, reinforcing his scheme-dependent projection. With size, experience and pro-ready strength, Campbell profiles as a developmental swing interior lineman who can provide depth and spot-start value in a power-based offense.
  • SEA Wide Receiver
    Henderson (6’1”/185) is an undersized receiver who finally earned a meaningful role in his fourth collegiate season after transferring to Kansas in 2025. A former four-star recruit who originally committed to Alabama as a running back in 2022, Henderson never logged a rush attempt while with the Tide and eventually switched to receiver. In his lone season with the Jayhawks he totaled 45 receptions for 766 yards and five touchdowns while averaging 17.0 YPR and a 15 ADOT. He displayed an impressive ability to create after the catch, averaging a 7.0 yards after the catch per reception. He flashed as a return man throughout his college career, returning 25 kicks for 570 yards and one touchdown, and can also contribute on the punt coverage team.

Podcasts

NFL Draft

Matthew Berry and Lawrence Jackson Jr. react to the Cardinals selecting a quarterback in Miami’s Carson Beck, analyzing what Arizona’s newest signal-caller brings to the NFL.
Matthew Berry and Lawrence Jackson Jr. react to the Steelers drafting Drew Allar in the third round of the 2026 NFL Draft and examine the opportunity the former Penn State quarterback has in Pittsburgh.
Both the Giants and Jets had top-five picks and multiple selections in the first round Thursday. Who came out ahead?
Chris Simms and Connor Rogers react to the Titans picking Ohio State wide receiver Carnell Tate at No. 4 overall, breaking down the ramifications of the first stunner of the 2026 NFL Draft.
Between shoring up the defense and positive developments with George Pickens, things are going the Cowboys’ way.
Mike Florio and Chris Simms explain why the Rams’ decision to draft Ty Simpson in the first round is so surprising.
Chris Simms and Connor Rogers react to the Cardinals picking Jeremiyah Love at No. 3 overall, analyzing what the Notre Dame running back will bring to Arizona.

LATEST VIDEOS

How does Alabama’s Bernard fit with Steelers?
Matthew Berry and Lawrence Jackson Jr. analyze the Steelers trading up to select Alabama’s Germie Bernard and break down how the wide receiver can carve out a role for himself in the “Steel City.”

PFT

University of Tennessee cornerback Jermod McCoy was projected as a first-round draft choice until a medical recheck revealed he could need another knee surgery.
The Bengals used the final pick of the fourth round on Georgia wide receiver Colbie Young, who might have gone higher than No. 140 overall if not for an off-the-field red flag.
McVay says Stafford will decide for himself how long he continues to play for the Rams.

Matthew Berry

Matthew Berry, Lawrence Jackson and Jay Croucher discuss the Seattle Seahawks closing out the first round drafting Notre Dame running back Jadarian Price.
Matthew Berry, Lawrence Jackson and Jay Croucher react to the New York Jets trading back into the first round to select wide receiver Omar Cooper Jr 30th overall.
Matthew Berry, Lawrence Jackson and Jay Croucher break down the Cleveland Browns drafting wide receiver KC Concepcion to give the Browns offense a weapon on the outside.
Matthew Berry, Jay Croucher and Lawrence Jackson discuss Makai Lemon heading to the Philadelphia Eagles and how he fits into the wide receiver room for Jalen Hurts.

Rotoworld Fantasy Football

The 49ers made a surprising move to draft Ole Miss WR De’Zhaun Stribling at the top of the second round. Cleveland stopped the slide of Washington receiver Denzel Boston.
Kyle Dvorchak analyzes the Eagles taking “extremely dynamic weapon” Makai Lemon with the 20th overall pick in 2026 NFL Draft, previewing his fit in Philadelphia and outlining how his arrival impacts A.J. Brown’s future.
Kyle Dvorchak discusses Jeremiyah Love’s fit with the “crowded, messy backfield” of the Arizona Cardinals, discussing why Tyler Allgeier could be “a real thorn in the side” to the No. 3 overall pick’s touchdown equity.

Don’t Miss

Mike Florio and Chris Simms are breaking down all the latest NFL news with honesty, candor, and authenticity. Download the latest podcast now.
Matthew Berry, George Savaricas, Jay Croucher and Lawrence Jackson provide the latest NFL news and updates to help viewers set their lineups up until kickoff during the season.

More NFL News

ESPN had largely ignored the Mike Vrabel situation, for most of the 16 days since it emerged.
Mike Florio examines the Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks adding Notre Dame running back Jadarian Price and what he adds to the title-winning squad.
After being selected at No. 1 overall, Mendoza said he’s feels like the Raiders are a perfect fit.
Mike Florio talks about Tennessee moving back into the first round to draft Keldric Faulk, who could be a good partner with Jeffrey Simmons.
Mike Florio discusses the Texans moving up to get offensive lineman Keylan Rutledge and whether he’s the piece to shore up their woes at the position.
Mike Florio reacts to the Jets going offense again in the first round, getting another pass catcher in national champion Omar Cooper Jr.
Kansas City replenishes their defensive line with Clemson tackle Peter Woods and Mike Florio discusses why the Chiefs went with him late in the first round.
Seahawks General Manager John Schneider said this week that it was no secret that he wanted to trade down on Thursday night, but it takes two to tango and Schneider couldn’t find a dance partner.