| Pick | Team | Player | Pos. | School |
| Round 1 |
| 1 |
Chiefs
| Luke Joeckel | OT | Texas A&M |
| Though you can question the logic, Luke Joeckel provides an extremely safe pick for Andy Reid, who is looking to re-tool and contend in a wide-open AFC West. Joeckel can come in and play the Right Side for now, and transition to the left side later, much like the Cowboys did with Tyron Smith. |
| 2 |
Jaguars
| Geno Smith | QB | West Virginia |
| Simply put, Blaine Gabbert has been an abject failure. The Jaguars need a new face to the organization, and although new Head Coach Gus Bradley knows defense, the chance to draft the top QB in the draft can't be passed up. |
| 3 |
Raiders
| Sharrif Floyd | DT | Florida |
| Still growing into his body, Floyd steps in and contributes immediately to a Raiders line that lost Desmond Bryant and Richard Seymour. Floyd's nimble feet and violent hands should provide immediate interior passrush to a unit still being re-tooled by Reggie McKenzie. |
| 4 |
Eagles
| Sheldon Richardson | DT | Missouri |
| The Eagles nab Richardson to play the strong side End in their new 3-4 alignment. With 34 inch arms, a variety of block shedding moves, and a nonstop motor, Richardson is an active defender that just needs to add some functional strength to become truly dominant. |
| 5 |
Lions
| Eric Fisher | OT | Central Michigan |
| With Jeff Backus' retirement, the Lions have a big hole on Matt Stafford's blindside. In order for their pass-heavy offense to function properly, they'll need to add a classic franchise LT early on, and luckily, Fisher is available here. |
| 6 |
Browns
| Dee Milliner | DC | Alabama |
| The Browns select Dee Milliner to pair with Joe Haden, and form a very formidable coverage tandem. An active run defender that played press-bail and zone in Alabama's defense, Milliner will transition easily into Ray Horton's exotic coverage looks and schemes. |
| 7 |
Cardinals
| Lane Johnson | OT | Oklahoma |
| Although Bobby Massie improved by season's end, the Cardinals pass protection was among the worst in the league. Levi Brown has never fully matured, and De'Anthony Baptiste must be replaced, so the Cardinals grab Lane Johnson, the athletic former QB and TE to do so. |
| 8 |
Bills
| Ezekiel Ansah | DE | BYU |
| Mark Anderson has been a disappointment in Buffalo, so the Bills take the inexperienced but physically gifted Ansah at Pick Number 8. Ansah should be able to contribute to the defense in terms of passrush pressure immediately, and the Bills will hope he develops as an all-around player with more experience. |
| 9 |
Jets
| Kenny Vaccaro | FS | Texas |
| Laron Landry and Yeremiah Bell have moved on to new teams, which leaves the Jets in dire straits in terms of safety. Kenny Vaccaro is the top talent at this position, and can play in the box, or in the deep half interchangeably. |
| 10 |
Titans
| Jonathan Cooper | OG | North Carolina |
| Although they signed Andy Levitre, the Titans add another fantastic interior blocker in Jonathan Cooper. If they want CJ2.5YPC to go back to CJ2K, he's going to need to stay clean, and have some holes opened up in front of him. It's also very likely that the Titans will add some form of the read-option to maximize Jake Locker's skill set in 2013. Cooper as a fantastic move blocker, gets the nod over Chance Warmack, who many consider to be the draft's top G. |
| 11 |
Chargers
| Chance Warmack | OG | Alabama |
| The Chargers would have loved for a tackle to fall to them, but instead opt for the guy that many referred to as the best player in the draft at different times during the season. Warmack bolsters the interior of the Chargers offensive line, and more than makes up for the departure of Louis Vasquez. |
| 12 |
Dolphins
| Xavier Rhodes | DC | Florida State |
| Sean Smith exits, Xavier Rhodes enters. A tall, well-built corner that is comfortable pressing, Rhodes will prove alluring as a height/weight/speed prospect, and fills a need for Miami at cornerback. |
| 13 |
Jets
F/TB
| Star Lotulelei | DT | Utah |
| Having let Roy Miller get away in free agency to the Jaguars, the Buccaneers need a nose tackle to occupy blockers, defend the run, and allow Gerald McCoy to expose one-on-one blocking. Lotulelei fits the bill at pick #13. |
| 14 |
Panthers
| Sylvester Williams | DT | North Carolina |
| Carolina may be happy with Luke Kuechly, but still probably wishes they had drafted Fletcher Cox, instead. Although Kuechly had a great rookie campaign, the effect of interior passrush pressure cannot be understated, and the Panthers haven't had that since George Bush was in office. They look to end that drought now, by picking Williams, the former Junior College standout. |
| 15 |
Saints
| Barkevious Mingo | OB | LSU |
| Mingo may have been told to contain during his final season as an LSU tiger, but in New Orleans, Rob Ryan will turn him loose, and allow him to use his natural acceleration and quickness to get after the QB on most downs. |
| 16 |
Rams
| John Cyprien | SS | Florida International |
| Dallas selects the versatile and athletic Jordan to play SAM for their new 4-3 Under front. A lengthy, rangy, player, the Cowboys invest in his upside and hope he develops a variety of passrush moves to go along with his ability in coverage. |
| 17 |
Steelers
| Jarvis Jones | OB | Georgia |
| The Steelers have had success with turning short edge rushers into stars. Jason Worlids has never really lived up to his draft status, the Steelers need pressure from the weakside, now that James Harrison is gone. If the team doctors clear Jones, he'd fit that role perfectly, and has some of the same knack for playmaking that made Harrison so popular in Pittsburgh. |
| 18 |
Cowboys
| Dion Jordan | DE | Oregon |
| Dallas selects the versatile and athletic Jordan to play SAM for their new 4-3 Cover 2 defense. A lengthy, rangy player, the Cowboys invest in his upside and hope he develops a variety of passrush moves to go along with his ability in coverage. |
| 19 |
Giants
| Desmond Trufant | DC | Washington |
| The Giants add Trufant to repair a frayed and fried secondary. Although Cory Webster re-negotiated down from his outrageous cap figure, the Giants are probably still anxious to add competition and talent to their defensive backfield. |
| 20 |
Bears
| Terron Armstead | OT | Arkansas-Pine Bluff |
| The Bears make a surprise pick and grab small-school standout Terron Armstead. Lost in the headlines of the combine's winners was Armstead, who put up better workout numbers than fellow draft eligible Lane Johnson. Armstead comes in and starts right away on the right side, with the ability to possibly move to the left, later. |
| 21 |
Bengals
| Arthur Brown | OB | Kansas State |
| The quick and violent Arthur Brown joins Mike Zimmer's attacking defense and adds competence in coverage, as well as another capable passrusher for zone blitzes. With the ability to play on the weakside or middle linebacker spot, the Bengals have the luxury of playing Brown and Vontaze Burfict together, which should create a formidable LB corps in their base look. |
| 22 |
Rams
F/WAS
| Alec Ogletree | IB | Georgia |
| The Rams take Ogletree, one of the special athletic talents in the draft, either to play weakside linebacker, or to replace the underwhelming James Laurinaitis in the middle. A former safety, Ogletree has shown the cover skills necessary for a modern NFL linebacker, and the Rams are not afraid of taking a chance on a player with character questions, if they believe he can help their team. |
| 23 |
Vikings
| Bjoern Werner | DE | Florida State |
| Because 3-4 Defenses have proliferated throughout the league, Werner slides all the way to Minnesota, who scoops him up as the best player available. Jared Allen is not getting any younger, and Leslie Frazier can find ways to get Werner on the field to pressure the QB in packages, until he's ready to take over at RE. In a division with Jay Cutler, Matt Stafford and Aaron Rodgers, too many passrushers is not enough. |
| 24 |
Colts
| Keenan Allen | WR | California |
| A laterally explosive and smooth route runner that's drawn comparisons to Reggie Wayne, Keenan Allen makes a perfect long-term receiver for Andrew Luck to throw to. The Colts are thrilled to grab Allen at this spot, as he suffered through the atrocious play of his half-brother, Zach Maynard, during his final season at California. |
| 25 |
Vikings
F/SEA
| Cordarrelle Patterson | WR | Tennessee |
| Having signed a polished route-runner to move the chains and create a working relationship with Christian Ponder, the Vikings can take a chance on the lightning bolt Patterson. Cordarelle can immediately step into the Vikings offense and make plays in some of the same ways that Percy Harvin did: on bubble screens, from the backfield, or on reverses. |
| 26 |
Packers
| Tyler Eifert | TE | Notre Dame |
| Eifert's athletic ability makes him the clear #1 tight end in the class. Ted Thompson picks him here to improve the Packers TE package, that previously had to make the most out of the limited physical talents of Tom Crabtree. |
| 27 |
Texans
| DeAndre Hopkins | WR | Clemson |
| An immediate #2 WR with #1 WR upside for when Andre Johnson hangs them up, the Texans are pleased to take DeAndre Hopkins at #27. Hopkins does a great job of setting receivers up by making all his routes appear similarly, and does a great job of fighting for the ball with sure, strong hands. |
| 28 |
Broncos
| Cornellius Carradine | DE | Florida State |
| Although some consider Carradine to be the better passrusher Florida State fielded this season, questions about his ACL recovery and ability to contribute in '13 will prevent him from being selected in the top 20. Denver stops Carradine's freefall and gets a great natural passrusher to replace Elvis Dumervil. |
| 29 |
Patriots
| Tavon Austin | WR | West Virginia |
| If Tom Brady wants to add any more rings to his collection, he's going to have to get some wide receivers very quickly. Although intermediate threats like Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez are very productive, the Patriots desperately need a deep threat. Danny Amendola's 6 yard receptions are essentially an extension of the running game, and the Patriots don't have much else at wideout. Austin compares most closely to Desean Jackson, with more violence on the hoof. His diminutive size will prevent him from being picked higher, but he should fit nicely into New England's system. |
| 30 |
Falcons
| Datone Jones | DE | UCLA |
| The Osi Umenyiora signing doesn't prevent the Falcons from drafting Datone Jones, who dominated competition at the Senior Bowl, and projects as a strong side 4-3 Defensive End. Jones could be the kind of player that offers the versatility to slide inside to collapse the pocket on passing downs. |
| 31 |
49ers
| Jesse Williams | DT | Alabama |
| Isaac Sopoaga is in Philly, and the 49ers need a Nose Tackle. Williams can step in right away, and fill that run stuffing role, playing approximately 30-40% of the Niners snaps. Williams has enough athletic talent, short-area quickness and versatility to possibly take over for Antonio Smith at Defensive End in a year or two. |
| 32 |
Ravens
| Kevin Minter | IB | LSU |
| Faced with replacing both Ray Lewis and Ellerbee, Ozzie Newsome selects the thumping Kevin Minter out of LSU. Minter is a punisher in the run game, and should fit in well to what the Ravens like to do on defense, as they try to defend their title. |
| Round 2 |
| 33 |
Jaguars
| Damontre Moore | DE | Texas A&M |
| Having grabbed their franchise signal caller in the first round, Bradley gets a passrusher on defense. Though he didn't test well, Moore was very productive against SEC competition, has experience in as an end and OLB, and should play the role of LEO for Gus Bradley's 4-3 Under scheme. |
| 34 |
49ers
F/KC
| Matt Elam | SS | Florida |
| Known for his ballhawking skills, Dashon Goldson also laid wood in run support. Elam steps into that role immediately, and will learn the finer points of playing the deep half as he goes. |
| 35 |
Eagles
| DJ Fluker | OT | Alabama |
| The Eagles reported interest in Jake Long, Eric Winston and other tackles leads one to believe that they'd like to move Todd Herremans back inside, and replace failed first rounder Danny Watkins. Fluker may fit more naturally as a guard, but his former offensive line coach at Alabama, now the Eagles O-Line coach, should be the best judge of that. |
| 36 |
Lions
| Corey Lemonier | DE | Auburn |
| Lemonier adds speed and power to the Lions edge rushing, and should be in position to contribute immediately to their defensive line from the 9 technique. |
| 37 |
Bengals
F/OAK
| Giovani Bernard | RB | North Carolina |
| Though competent, Ben Jarvu Green-Ellis is a 3 yards and a cloud of dust back. The Bengals need a more explosive back with better passcatching skills to relieve some pressure on Andy Dalton, and to command some attention from a defense focused on AJ Green. |
| 38 |
Cardinals
| Ryan Nassib | QB | Syracuse |
| The Cardinals take Nassib to run their offense. A big, solid passer with a great feel for short and intermediate throws, QB Guru Bruce Arians will work with Nassib's physical tools to develop his downfield accuracy. |
| 39 |
Jets
| EJ Manuel | QB | Florida State |
| Marty Morninwheg gets a QB of the future to work with. Manuel brings the best combination of arm-strength, mobility, and experience to the table, and Mornhinwheg will look to replicate the success he enjoyed in Philadelphia with Donovan McNabb. |
| 40 |
Titans
| Kiko Alonso | IB | Oregon |
| Alonso provides an immediate upgrade from overachiever Colin McCarthy and adds a dimension of violence to an up and coming Tennessee linebacking corps. |
| 41 |
Bills
| Tyler Wilson | QB | Arkansas |
| Had Bobby Petrino not crashed his motorbike so fatefully, Wilson could have been in the discussion for top 10 in the first round, as opposed to the second. Nevertheless, Wilson will have to prove his feel for pressure, and downfield arm-strength and accuracy are fit for the weather conditions in upstate New York. |
| 42 |
Dolphins
| Khaseem Green | OB | Rutgers |
| A natural playmaker, Green may not have timed well at the combine, but displays the instincts, acceleration and balance to contribute at an extremely high level in the NFL. |
| 43 |
Buccaneers
| Alex Okafor | DE | Texas |
| Having lost Mike Bennett in free agency to Seattle, the Bucs add more talent to their defensive line in the form of Alex Okafor. Steady and solid, Okafor's production has been overlooked on a bad Texas defense, and he should be a steal at this pick. |
| 44 |
Panthers
| Markus Wheaton | WR | Oregon State |
| This year's vertical burner, Wheaton will give Cam Newton another deep threat to eventually take over for Steve Smith. |
| 45 |
Chargers
| Phillip Thomas | FS | Fresno State |
| Thomas joins Eric Weddle in the effort to rebuild and re-tool San Diego's secondary. |
| 46 |
Rams
| Quinton Patton | WR | Louisiana Tech |
| Patton provides St. Louis with a polished route runner. With the explosive Givens in the slot, Jared Cook at TE, and Quick and Patton on the outside, Sam Bradford should have plenty of talent in a make or break year for his career. |
| 47 |
Cowboys
| Menelik Watson | OT | Florida State |
| Dallas takes another high upside physical specimen to replace Doug Free, who's been a disappointment from almost the moment Jerry Jones extended him. Watson has a lot to learn, but will intrigue teams because of his physical attributes. |
| 48 |
Steelers
| Eddie Lacy | RB | Alabama |
| 49 |
Giants
| Travis Kelce | TE | Cincinnati |
| 50 |
Bears
| Manti Te'o | IB | Notre Dame |
| 51 |
Commanders
| Johnathan Hankins | DT | Ohio State |
| 52 |
Vikings
| Zavier Gooden | OB | Missouri |
| 53 |
Bengals
| Larry Warford | OG | Kentucky |
| 54 |
Dolphins
F/IND
| Christine Michael | RB | Texas A&M |
| 55 |
Packers
| DJ Swearinger | FS | South Carolina |
| 56 |
Seahawks
| Kawaan Short | DT | Purdue |
| 57 |
Texans
| Brandon Williams | DT | Missouri Southern State |
| 58 |
Broncos
| Darius Slay | DC | Mississippi State |
| 59 |
Patriots
| Quanterus Smith | DE | Western Kentucky |
| 60 |
Falcons
| Zach Ertz | TE | Stanford |
| 61 |
49ers
| Jamar Taylor | DC | Boise State |
| 62 |
Ravens
| Bacarri Rambo | FS | Georgia |
| Round 3 |
| 63 |
Chiefs
| Margus Hunt | DE | SMU |
| 64 |
Jaguars
| Johnthan Banks | DC | Mississippi State |
| 65 |
Lions
| Michael Buchanan | DE | Illinois |
| 66 |
Raiders
| Gavin Escobar | TE | San Diego State |
| 67 |
Eagles
| Jordan Poyer | DC | Oregon State |
| 68 |
Browns
| Justin Pugh | OT | Syracuse |
| 69 |
Cardinals
| Travis Frederick | OC | Wisconsin |
| 70 |
Titans
| Robert Alford | DC | SE Louisiana |
| 71 |
Bills
| Robert Woods | WR | Southern Cal |
| 72 |
Jets
| Terrance Williams | WR | Baylor |
| 73 |
Buccaneers
| Logan Ryan | DC | Rutgers |
| 74 |
49ers
F/CAR
| Ace Sanders | WR | South Carolina |
| 75 |
Saints
| Justin Hunter | WR | Tennessee |
| 76 |
Chargers
| Matt Barkley | QB | Southern Cal |
| 77 |
Dolphins
| DJ Hayden | DC | Houston |
| 78 |
Rams
| Johnathan Franklin | RB | UCLA |
| 79 |
Steelers
| Joe Kruger | DE | Utah |
| 80 |
Cowboys
| Andre Ellington | RB | Clemson |
| 81 |
Giants
| Kevin Reddick | IB | North Carolina |
| 82 |
Dolphins
F/CHI
| Brian Winters | OT | Kent State |
| 83 |
Vikings
| Kyle Long | OT | Oregon |
| 84 |
Bengals
| Eric Reid | FS | LSU |
| 85 |
Commanders
| Johnathan Jenkins | DT | Georgia |
| 86 |
Colts
| Duke Williams | SS | Nevada |
| 87 |
Seahawks
| David Quessenberry | OT | San Jose State |
| 88 |
Packers
| Malliciah Goodman | DE | Clemson |
| 89 |
Texans
| Sio Moore | OB | Connecticut |
| 90 |
Broncos
| Shawn Williams | SS | Georgia |
| 91 |
Patriots
| Sam Montgomery | DE | LSU |
| 92 |
Falcons
| Marquise Goodwin | WR | Texas |
| 93 |
49ers
| Jordan Reed | TE | Florida |
| 94 |
Ravens
| Blidi Wreh-Wilson | DC | Connecticut |