The first day of the 2024 NFL Draft did not disappoint as six quarterbacks were taken with the first 12 picks. Many other records were also set, mostly on the offensive side of the ball, as 23 players were recorded on Thursday.
Day 2 of the 2024 NFL Draft always brings surprises and plenty of talent is still available. You can follow along below throughout the day on Friday as I grade all the third round picks as well as the other four rounds below. Be sure to refresh this page throughout the night to get the latest notes.
Be sure to refresh this page throughout the weekend for the latest grades. If you want to do all of this, track the top prospects available and access all of the draft picks on one page, you can do so in our draft tracker. And track every pick on our live blog and all deals in our deal tracker.
Notes: Round 1 • 2nd round • Round 3 • Round 4 • Round 5 • Round 6 • Round 7
65. Jets: Malachi Corley, WR, Western Kentucky
Category B
Angry WR who plays like an RB with the ball in his hands. Some route tree experience, but primarily deployed as a gadget type and featured insane contact balance in college. Fun addition as an expansion to the Jets racing game. Just a niche guy.
66. Cardinals: Trey Benson, RB, Florida State
Rating: A+
My RB1 in this class. Big, sleek, fast, incredibly elusive despite high pad level. A balance so difficult to shake. Breakaway speed when taking a turn and can also gain among the trees. The Cardinals needed a bell cow. They have one.
67. Commanders: Brandon Coleman, OT, TCU
Grade: A
A big, strong OT who probably transitions to guard at the next level. The measurables are impressive and it’s a special engine for its size. Weapon at second level because of this combination. Bursting and finishing capacity. Can recover and handwork is polished. Lateral speed sometimes a little slow. I love this pick for Washington after Daniels in the first round. Grade: A
68. Patriots: Caedan Wallace, OT, Penn State
Grade: C-
Large framed OT with heavy feet. Average athlete at best. Plays with good poise and precision at the second level and has quality power, but the overall athletic profile was often in serious jeopardy in college. A concern for his future in the NFL. New England needed to add some depth to the OL. Worried about his potential.
69. Chargers: Junior Colson, LB, Michigan
Category B
He is linked to Jim Harbaugh and fills a need at off-ball LB. Best tackling linebacker in the class, by far. Flashed some coverage chops in 2023 but not a specialty. I haven’t seen top-notch range or speed in football. Consistently beating blocks with decent skills and ball skills need to show up more in the NFL.
70. Giants: Andru Phillips, CB, Kentucky
Category B-
CB silky and smooth inside out. Some serious juice in her lower half. Not incredibly long but perfect size for playing nickel in the NFL. Incredibly willing to support the run, but misses many tackles. Faster than fast but definitely not slow. I wish there was more ball production in college. Kind of chippy.
71. Cardinals: Isaiah Adams, IOL, Illinois
Grade: C+
College offensive tackle whose home will be inside the NFL. This is not a burst-based blocker. Just fluid to get across the line of scrimmage on stretch runs and understand his athletic limitations in order to win with angles and leverage. Flashed a good attack power point. Second level patience can improve. Can play OT in a pinch.
72. Panthers: Trevin Wallace, LB, Kentucky
Grade:
73. Cowboys: Cooper Beebe, IOL, Kansas State
Grade:
74. Falcons: Bralen Trice, EDGE, Washington
Grade:
75. Bear
76. Broncos
77. The Looters
78. Eagles
79. Cardinals
80. Bengals
81. Sea Falcons
82. Colts
83. Rams
84. Steelers
85. Browns
86. Texans
87. Cowboys
88. Packers
89. Buccaneers
90. Cardinals
91. Packers
92. Buccaneers
93. Crows
94. 49ers
95. Bills
96. Jaguar
97. Bengals
98. Steelers
99. Rams
100. Commanders