The Raiders lead my too early (and too quick) ranking of draft classes, plus Diego Pavia among undrafted prospects to watch
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Quarterback landing spots, 2026 NFL draft class rankings & Diego Pavia UDFA watch
HENDERSON, NEVADA - APRIL 24: Quarterback Fernando Mendoza (C), selected yesterday by the Las Vegas Raiders as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL draft, speaks as Raiders general manager John Spytek (L) and head coach Klint Kubiak (R) look on. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images) Ethan Miller

By
Jacob Robinson
April 26, 2026Updated 3:23 pm EDT
It’s over. Already.
After three days, a record-setting
805,000 fans in attendance and 257 picks, the 2026 NFL Draft class is settled.
A few teams did better than others. Everyone
did better than the Jaguars.
As we wait for Dane Brugler’s 32-team ranking, below is how I stack the hauls. This is based on player quality (and
quantity), positional values and needs met. For example, the Cowboys got better top-end talent and value from their picks, but I slightly prefer the Dolphins’ 13-player class.
Yes, it’s too early for this. Yes, I did it anyways.
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Ranking draft classes
We have to start with the Raiders, of course. In hindsight, a draft class’ best quarterback will almost always be its most valuable player, and Fernando Mendoza has the best shot of becoming that guy.
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In my book, that alone is reason enough for the Raiders to lead any post-draft ranking. But they also picked up
plenty of value afterward, including top-20 prospect Jermod McCoy, a strong press cornerback whom they drafted in the fourth round. If healthy, he counts as the biggest value of the entire draft, and
this video explains the injury that led to his fall.
Back to quarterbacks for a minute: The first one drafted in each class has a better pro career than his QB classmates
40 percent of the time, historically. That drops to 13 percent for the second and third quarterbacks drafted, in this case the Rams’ Ty Simpson and Cardinals’ Carson Beck. Here’s where passers landed:
Then there’s the Eagles. Their No. 7 ranking on my list doesn’t take into account their
savvy trade for Jonathan Greenard, the former Vikings edge rusher who had 24.5 sacks from 2023 to 2024 before an injury-plagued 2025. He’s just 29. Even the 6-foot-3 Cole Payton is a promising backup quarterback.
What a haul. We all wish our GM was Howie Roseman. Again.
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It’s not all bad for the 49ers, No. 31 in my rankings. Drafting
receiver De’Zhaun Stribling with the 33rd pick felt like a reach. He was the 77th player in
composite rankings and 67th in “
The Beast,” after all.
But closer inspection reveals a sensible choice. On the livestream of “The Athletic Football Show,” Dane explained Stribling had been quietly jumping up draft boards. Teams loved his 4.36 speed at 207 pounds, plus his dependable hands and run blocking. And as our film guru Ted Nguyen explains, Stribling’s a
perfect fit for Kyle Shanahan’s offense as “a supercharged version of Jauan Jennings.”
We’ll have so much more over the rest of the week. For today, let’s look at the top UDFAs. You’ll recognize the most notable. (But first, a Jeff T. update.)