2025 NFL Undrafted Free Agents For The NFC: Max Brosmer, Marcus Yarns, Nick Nash, And More

2025 NFL Undrafted Free Agents For The NFC: Max Brosmer, Marcus Yarns, Nick Nash, And More

Thor Nystrom dives deep to uncover the 2025 NFL Undrafted Free Agents for the NFC, featuring players who were bypassed at the NFL Draft.

Thor Nystrom dives deep to uncover the 2025 NFL Undrafted Free Agents for the NFC, featuring players who were bypassed at the NFL Draft.

Welcome to my annual UDFA class rankings series. The NFC edition.

A couple notes on process before we get going. My ranking methodology is based exclusively on my pre-draft rankings. Not every UDFA signed during this process is listed in the tables below—only those in my pre-draft position rankings (top-750 overall). If the prospect made the Thor500—my 500-player Big Board—his overall ranking is shown in the “Rk” column. 

Check back Thursday for the accompanying AFC UDFA class rankings piece. 

1. Minnesota Vikings

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Logan Brown97OT960633119.5Ryan Van Demark
Tommi Hill175CB226004213Fabian Moreau
Tyler Batty259EDGE3060552718.77Isaiah Thomas
Max Brosmer277QB126016218Shane Buechele
Joe Huber302OG1760513108.98Trevor Keegan
Tre Stewart330RB3350931922.24Ito Smith
Zemaiah Vaughn352CB4760241868.48Elijah Jones
Chaz Chambliss359EDGE4460222458.98Alex Tchangam
Benjamin Yurosek384TE1860422458.02Grant Calcaterra
Austin Keys433LB4260222297.55Dallas Gant
Bryson Nesbit479TE2460502383.8Matt Bushman
Matt Harmon486EDGE5460562458.49Michael Buchanan
Silas Bolden489WR6550741622.69JJ Nelson
Robert LewisWR7951001863.42Shi Smith
Keenan GarberCB7151111929.7Kendall Sheffield
Myles PriceWR9250841785.27
Zeke CorrellOC2260263035.25
Brody GrebeEDGE6060122459.74

This is the third consecutive year that the Vikings have finished top 5 in my UDFA rankings. GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah has clearly prioritized this phase of the process. Over the past three years, six UDFAs have made the Vikings' Week 1 roster: Ryan Wright, Ivan Pace Jr., Gabriel Murphy, Taki Taimani, Bo Richter, and Dwight McGlothern.

This time around, the Vikings had a built-in advantage to make their argument to agents. Minnesota used a tied-for-league-low five draft picks while spending the second-least draft equity (ahead of only the Rams, who traded their R1 pick). 

The Vikings’ class is headlined by Kansas OL Logan Brown, my top-ranked overall UDFA. Brown, seen as a mid-rounder by most analysts heading into the draft, is going to make this roster. The Vikings have little in the way of proven OL depth behind Blake Brandel and Justin Skule

Because of that, OG Joe Huber is also someone to monitor in camp. Brown and Huber—former teammates at Wisconsin—will battle 2024 draft picks Walter Rouse and Michael Jurgens in camp for bench spots.

QB Max Brosmer and RB Tre Stewart, meanwhile, will take on QB3 Brett Rypien and RB3 Ty Chandler, respectively. Each has a legitimate shot. Because of the team’s precarious depth situation at tight end, TEs Benjamin Yurosek and Bryson Nesbit might ultimately be battling with one another for a roster spot. If neither impresses this summer, look for the Vikings to be monitoring August tight end cuts from other rosters.

EDGE Tyler Batty was right on the draftable line for me. He’s a four-year starter at BYU with a north/south game, generating speed-to-power. Batty has the frame and game to hang around as a 3-4 defensive end.

An NFL coach—not on the Vikings staff—told me after the draft that LB Austin Keys might have been a fifth-rounder were it not for injuries. This coach believes Keys will beat out sixth-round pick LB Kobe King if Keys stays healthy this summer.

2. Atlanta Falcons

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Cobee Bryant102CB126000180Aaron Colvin
Joshua Gray189OC560512998.9Danny Pinter
Nick Nash225WR3060242036Seth Williams
Malik Verdon341S2260372199.15Hamsah Nasirildeen
Dontae Manning360CB4851121847.52M.J. Devonshire
Joshua Simon363TE1760412398.77Alize Mack
Simeon Barrow Jr.382DL4060132839.05Drake Nevis
JorDan Williams413OT356052318Julian Pearl
Nate Carter457RB4350922009.13Blake Watson

The team that tied with the Vikings for least-picked players in the draft? The Atlanta Falcons. 

During the draft, the Falcons—always full of surprises under GM Terry Fontenot—showed ludicrous aggression in trading next year’s R1 pick to acquire James Pearce Jr. That same sort of aggression bled over into the UDFA free-for-all. 

Whereas Minnesota has made a regular home in the top-5 of my UDFA rankings the past three years, Atlanta’s UDFA strategy this process was in stark contrast to recent years. The previous two cycles, the Falcons finished bottom-4 in my UDFA rankings—including No. 32 a year ago.

This time, Fontenot came out swinging with three UDFAs that I had draftable grades on, each one ranked in my top-225 overall. It was shocking to see CB Cobee Bryant fall out of the draft. An NFL source told me that poor interviews played a part in that. Either way, Bryant picked the right spot—Atlanta has precious little depth at CB.

I believe OL Joshua Gray will make the roster as the backup center to Ryan Neuzil. The Falcons don’t currently have one of those, and Gray appears to have been signed for that reason. Gray has position versatility and can also provide guard depth.

The Falcons have very little behind starting slot WR Ray-Ray McCloud, giving WR Nick Nash a clear path to win a Week 1 gig on the roster. The Falcons would like to get bigger in the slot, and Nash can help with that.

3. Seattle Seahawks

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Jared Ivey119EDGE1960572742.01Denico Autry
Zy Alexander139CB1760131873.48Eli Ricks
Isas Waxter256CB3360132057.49Juanyeh Thomas
Thor Griffith290DL356020305Beau Allen
Jackson Woodard308LB2660212304.39Cameron McGrone
Seth Coleman339EDGE4160342467.16Israel Ifeanyi
Amari Kight376OT3060532993Geron Christian
Marcus Wehr385OG2260232957.85Ben Claxton
Kam Alexander394CB5251061838.73Brandon Hughes
Tyrone Broden422WR5560511949.39Matt Landers
Connor O'Toole464EDGE5360332489.5Jackson Jeffcoat
Cam StoneCB7350901913.51Tyronne Drakeford
Wy'Kevious ThomasDL5360153015.03
Jalan GainesEDGE7060302425.46
Brandon BrownDL5560103135.59

I thought the Seahawks had one of the NFL’s better draft classes. They followed that up with a top-3 overall UDFA haul in the NFL.

EDGE Jared Ivey is a skilled power end with speed limitations and lower-body stiffness. Ivey’s combination of muscle and hand usage is likely to turn him into a long-term NFL backup. His pass-rushing production from last year—his 31 hurries were No. 14 in the FBS—is the thing he’s going to lose in translation.

CB Zy Alexander is another productive defender from the SEC with an ideal frame but poor athletic testing numbers. Alexander is an experienced press-man corner who was 81st-percentile PFF coverage grade last season. Blessed with long arms and sound technique, Alexander ranked No. 2 in this class with a 3.2% missed tackle rate last season.

LB Jackson Woodard is an intriguing sleeper who profiles as a strong special teamer—he played 634 special teams snaps over five seasons in college and could immediately be a core special-teamer in the pros. A former walk-on at Arkansas, Woodard made good the last two seasons at UNLV. He was the Mountain West Defensive Player of the Year and a Second-Team All-American in 2024.

WR Tyrone Broden and EDGE Connor O'Toole are two other deep-deep sleepers who flashed on special teams in college and have projectable traits.

4. Philadelphia Eagles

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Hollin Pierce133OT126083341Caleb Jones
Maxen Hook220S1760042018.51Geno Stone
Kaimon Rucker233EDGE276012255Javon Solomon
Montrell Johnson Jr.285RB2951132129.63Joshua Kelley
BJ Mayes343CB4660041875.38Holton Hill
ShunDerrick Powell356RB3550711837.46Raymond Calais
Taylor MorinWR8551011868.96
Ife AdeyiWR9050821819.56
Maliq CarrTE4060352504.61
Ridge TexadaCB9050801866.5

In my metrics, there was a huge drop-off between the top-3 classes above and the rest of the pack. The classes between No. 4 (Eagles) and No. 8 (Bengals) overall were all packed closely together.

This is the fourth-consecutive process that the Eagles have finished with a top-8 UDFA class by my metrics. Philadelphia’s UDFA class consisted of three players with draftable grades on my board, headlined by OT Hollin Pierce.

There are some Mekhi Becton vibes, here. Pierce weighed more than 450 pounds in high school. He started playing football and ultimately lost more than 100 pounds, turning himself into a Second Team All-Big Ten performer in his fourth and final year as a starter.

Pierce has utterly ludicrous length, with a wingspan of 7-foot-4. His lateral shuffling has gotten smoother and quicker as he’s lost weight and improved his technique, playing up the effect of that length even more. Pierce is a hammer coming forward in the run game. Pierce needs to work on lowering his pad level in the run game. In pass-pro, his biggest issue is counter-moves that force the big fella to quickly adjust to rushers crossing his face.

Another name to keep an eye on here is S Maxen Hook, a first-team All-MAC selection in 2024. He finished top-25 in the FBS last year with 8.92 tackles per game. The Eagles, light on safety depth, have the room to roster Hook this fall if he impresses in camp.

WR Taylor Morin, Wake Forest's all-time leading receiver, is ostensibly being brought in as punt return insurance. Britain Covey signed with the Rams on Monday.

5. Green Bay Packers

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Nazir Stackhouse188DL2260363276.06Dontavius Russell
Jamon Dumas-Johnson194LB1660062368.99Micah Kiser
Tyler Cooper323OG1860503028.46Karsen Barnhart
Jalen White380RB3660002057.73Jon Cornish
Tyron Herring389CB5160102014.27Montaric Brown
Amar Johnson411RB3950962058.8Karan Higdon
Julian FlemingWR7460172145.78Jadon Haselwood
Kahzir BrownCB7560112237.3
Luke GundersonLB5360172419.29
Connor ShayLB5860142279.19

Green Bay’s UDFA class checked in top-5 in the NFC and No. 9 overall in the NFL.

The above list doesn’t include one of their higher-priced acquisitions, UNLV nickel defender Johnathan Baldwin, who finished just outside my position rankings at the safety position. Baldwin received $115,000 in contract guarantees. 

Baldwin, along with CBs Tyron Herring and Kahzir Brown, made good decisions in picking Green Bay. Following the departures of CBs Eric Stokes, Corey Ballentine, and Robert Rochelle in free agency—only Nate Hobbs was added—the Packers’ cornerback depth is spotty. And that’s before resolution to the Jaire Alexander saga. Alexander reportedly nixed a trade around the draft because he wouldn’t rework his contract.

Elsewhere, I saw DT Nazir Stackhouse and LB Jamon Dumas-Johnson as top-200 prospects—each has a very real chance to win a bench spot. The same is true for the winner of the camp battle between UDFA RBs Jalen White and Amar Johnson. Green Bay doesn’t have much behind Josh Jacobs and MarShawn Lloyd on the depth chart.

6. New York Giants

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
O'Donnell Fortune193CB2560061892.6Johnthan Banks
Da'Quan Felton229WR3160452148.3Osirus Mitchell
Beaux Collins311WR4060311989.09Justyn Ross
Antwane Wells Jr.327WR4360062015.74Cornell Powell
TJ Moore368CB4960031877.53Shaun Wade
Terrence Spence415CB5660061907.56Xavier Crawford
Trace Ford452EDGE5260232498.32Jordan Brailford
Makari PaigeS3760301976.73Jonathan Dowling
Jordan BlyWR8751061758.96
Ja'Khi DouglasWR9450901866.13
Dylan PoirierOC2460233038.48
Jaydon HillCB8151171946.66

In the UDFA free-for-all, the Giants clearly prioritized two position groups: receiver and defensive back.

CB O'Donnell Fortune is a fifth-year prospect with poor testing numbers and raw elements to his game on the field. But he’s well-built—tall and long—and I like his instincts in zone coverage. Fortune isn’t explosive, but he’s a fluid mover who doesn’t waste motion, and he gets good downhill jumps when his eyes are on the quarterback. When Fortune arrives on time, his length is a problem at the catch point. Last year, Fortune had a 91st-percentile PFF coverage grade as a boundary CB and 94th-percentile in zone coverage.

The Giants added three WRs in my pre-draft top-330: Da'Quan Felton, Beaux Collins, and Juice Wells. New York didn’t use a pick on a WR in the draft. Their UDFA strategy showed a clear desire to add size to the room. Expect the winner of this three-man camp battle to make the roster.

WR Felton has all the size, athleticism, and physicality he needs for the NFL, and he’s a really good blocker. On the boundary, he’s capable of getting downtown. But his routes and ball skills both need work, and that combination in an older prospect clearly spooked the NFL.

If you would have told me after WR Antwane “Juice” Wells’ true junior season that he would one day go undrafted, I wouldn’t have believed you. As a sophomore in 2021 at James Madison, he had an absurd 83-1,250-15 receiving line. 

The next year, Wells led the SEC in receiving (928 yards) at South Carolina despite starting only six games (13 appearances). But Wells fractured his left foot working out in Summer 2023. He rushed back from surgery, but was a non-factor in three games in September before an aggravation of the injury shut down the rest of his season. 

Wells transferred to Ole Miss for his final season and finished No. 4 in both catches and yards. He has skill at the catch point, and gets his Juice nickname from his YAC ability, but Wells is a mediocre athlete with a history of foot injuries. Signing with the Giants reunites him with R1 QB Jaxson Dart.

7. Carolina Panthers

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Luke Kandra211OG1360463209.35Keith Williams
Jared Harrison-Hunte247DL2860332909.2Rodney Gunter
Kobe Hudson321WR4260061933.94Keelan Cole
Bam Martin-Scott332LB3260232317.5Ty'Ron Hopper
Ryan Fitzgerald364K25110194Chris Boswell
Jacolby George401WR5251121743.75Titus Young
Peny Boone432RB4151152264.64Anthony Dixon
Corey Thornton436CB6060041935.28Alex Austin
Jack Henderson468S3260172039.38JT Woods
Mike ReidCB7060132035.98Iman Marshall
Ethan GarbersQB2260232072.29Chase Garbers
Moose Muhammad IIIWR8360021953.97
Michael TarquinOT536050302
Isaac GiffordS5060022038.18
Jaaron JosephCB8760022055.33

OG Luke Kandra, a multi-year standout starter in the Big 12, had the size, strength, and athletic profile of a Day 3 interior offensive lineman. But Kandra has stiff hips—making it difficult to consistently win the leverage game—and has feet that can get stuck in the mud on sudden direction changes. It’s possible that he’s a Quadruple-A player, but it’s also possible that Kandra will wind up being a valued depth piece.

DT Jared Harrison-Hunte is raw and old—25 as a rookie—but he’s a fun developmental flier. A former basketball player and a great athlete, Harrison-Hunte didn’t begin playing football until his junior year in high school. He was mostly a rotational player for five years at Miami, but Harrison-Hunte had a scintillating TFL/snap rate. Last year as a full-time starter at SMU, he posted 6.5 sacks and 8.5 TFL. 

K Ryan Fitzgerald was probably a little chapped that two kickers were picked in the draft and he wasn’t one of them—but he couldn’t have asked for a better landing spot than this. Eddy Pineiro wasn’t re-signed. The only competition for Fitzgerald— first-team All-American in 2024—is perennial camp leg Matthew Wright.

8. New Orleans Saints

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Marcus Yarns208RB2151071937.72Trung Candidate
James Burnip254P16063235Logan Cooke
Tyreem Powell319LB2960442396.03Kuony Deng
Jasheen Davis381EDGE4660302514.82Keshawn Banks
Hunter Dekkers412QB1760172107.55Lefty Devito
Torricelli Simpkins IIIOG2960453124.12Will Clapp
Chris TyreeWR8050911929.52KeVontae Turpin
Easton KiltyOG3260473083.05
Omari ThomasDL6060352994.8
Elliott DavisonS6051161897.81

I’m a big fan of Delaware RB Marcus Yarns, an undersized speed demon. He runs with shot-out-of-a-cannon urgency and keeps to his straight-line path. Yarns is a really interesting weapon in the passing game.  

He was an unfair assignment for FCS linebackers or safeties. Yarns would sprint past them on wheel routes, or leave them in the dust with a one-cut direction change on an angle route. Among all RBs in this class, only Yarns posted 1.8 YPRR or better each of the last two seasons.

Yarns looked like a natural on concepts where Delaware shifted him into the slot (7.6% of snaps). In 2023, only three running backs in the FCS or FBS had 20-or-more catches with an aDOT higher than Yarns’ 3.2. And despite missing time with injury in 2024, only nine D-1 RBs had more catches with a higher aDOT than Yarns. The NFL asked Yarns to work out as a receiver at the NFL Combine—that’s a second developmental bullet if the RB thing doesn’t work out.

I thought P James Burnip was better than Jeremy Crawshaw—the only punter taken in this year’s draft. Burnip, my top-ranked punter, will battle incumbent Matthew Hayballa 2024 UDFA signing, and a fellow Australian. I expect Burnip to win that competition.

9. San Francisco 49ers

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Isaiah Neyor212WR2860422189.9Justin Shorter
Corey Kiner320RB3250852093.95Cody Schraeder
Drew Moss419OC1360333039.28Luke Wypler
Jakob Robinson443CB6151021817.67Josiah Scott
Sebastian Valdez470DL4760333019.28Thomas Booker
Stone BlantonLB4660172274.71David Woodward
Ty FrenchLB5660102247.26
James BurgessCB9160221911.74

WR Isaiah Neyor is a worthy size/speed dart-throw with a real shot to stick. Neyor looked like a potential future star at Wyoming in 2021, posting a 44-878-12 line. But he suffered a non-contact ACL injury the next summer after transferring to Texas—between that and an ensuing re-injury to the same knee, his next two seasons were basically wiped out. Neyor had 34 catches last year after landing at Nebraska.

But Neyor is huge—6-foot-4, 218 pounds with a nearly 7-foot wingspan—and he has big league speed and explosion, with a 4.40 40 and a 38-inch vertical. Neyor is a north/south linear mover who needs to show he could develop into a Marquez Valdes-Scantling-esque field-stretcher.

RB Corey Kiner has poor measurables, but he’s a deep-deep sleeper to monitor in the RB-friendly environment he’s found himself in. Kiner is a tackle-breaker who moves better on the field than his pre-draft testing indicated. Kiner had a 91st-percentile in-game athleticism score, according to Reel Analytics.

10. Washington Commanders

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Fentrell Cypress II217CB2860011828.58Kiondre Thomas
Ja'Corey Brooks271WR3660201884.15Tyler Vaughns
Deandre Jules334DL3860353162.48JorDan Jackson
Car'lin Vigers405CB5360122058Khyree Jackson
Timothy McKay471OG266037311Jon Gaines II
Maurice Smith487OC1560232965.97Jake Grove
Robert McDanielS4560202118.84Marcus Allen
Trey RuckerS395115203Kaevon Merriweather
Ricky BarberDL6360112964.85
Kam ArnoldLB5960052279.31

Washington’s UDFA class checked in at No. 20 overall in the NFL.The Commanders signed one player I had a draftable grade on, Florida State CB Fentrell Cypress II. 

Cypress is a sixth-year prospect with 38 career starts in college. His calling cards are length, 4.43 speed, and peskiness at the catch point (93rd-percentile forced incompletion rate the last three seasons). He is susceptible to giving up chunk plays, however, a consistency issue that must be addressed if he is to hang long-term.

Louisville WR Ja’Corey Brooks has a shot to stick. He’s a former four-star Alabama signee who broke out with a 61-1,013-9 line last season. He’s thin and lacks athleticism, though, so his game isn’t likely to be flattered in translation.

Washington’s highest-priced UDFA signing was NC State OL Timothy McKay, who got an eye-opening $275,000 in guarantees. That indicates he’s an odds-on favorite to win a spot on the Week 1 roster. McKay split 2,784 collegiate snaps mostly between RG and RT—he’s a projected guard at the next level.

11. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Jake Majors227OC660333047.88Nick Easton
JJ Roberts355S2351101929.67Jonathan Nelson
Will Sheppard403WR5360262038.72Brenden Rice
Josh Williams444RB4250831968.11Darwin Thompson
Desmond Watson462DL4660604641.48T.J. Barnes
Shilo Sanders466S3151171964.53Ronnie Hickman
Garrett GreeneQB2751061957.75Zac Thomas
Roman ParodieCB6860131927.92Justin Layne
Connor BazelakQB2460242126.2Jake Browning
Ben ScottOC1860453068.72
Winston Wright Jr.WR9950921826.11
CJ James Jr.OC2160202868.14
Mason NarcisseDL6260173033.02

Tampa Bay didn’t have a backup to C Graham Barton on the roster, and it didn’t take any offensive linemen in the draft. So the Bucs got aggressive in the UDFA process, shelling out a combined $525,000 guaranteed to Cs Jake Majors and Ben Scott

Each received contracts typically indicating that a team will carry an undrafted rookie into the regular season. What makes this two-step interesting, then, is that neither Majors nor Scott—despite both playing heavy career snaps—have ever played guard. 

Scott played a season-and-a-half at RT at Nebraska, and is the better bet to be able to handle guard duties. That’s of importance, here, because Tampa Bay’s depth at guard is also thin.

Speaking of the offensive line, the Bucs won a spirited post-draft bidding war for Georgia State OT Ben Chukwuma, giving him $300,000—the most guaranteed money any UDFA received this cycle. Chukwuma isn’t listed in the table above because I only ranked out 58 offensive tackles in the pre-draft process—and, looking back into my larger 2025 draft database, Chukwuma ultimately finished as my OT60.

Clearly the NFL was higher on Chukwuma than me. I can tell you why: He’s a really interesting ball-of-clay lottery ticket who scouts can dream on. On the one hand, Chukwuma struggled in the Sun Belt last year in his only season as a starter—his only season starting on a football field ever. Chukwuma tested poorly during the pre-draft process—at 6-foot-6/303 pounds with a 3.43 RAS, he's more smooth than explosive—and he’s as raw as it gets on the field.

But this is where it gets interesting from a projection standpoint: Chukwuma never even played high school football … he barely even knew about the sport in high school. Chukwuma moved to the U.S. from Nigeria at 17. He found himself on the GSU football team after showing up for a walk-on tryout his freshman year. The coaches decided to take a chance on developing him because of his physical dimensions.

12. Los Angeles Rams

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Shaun Dolac252LB2160022218.84Baylon Spector
Willie Lampkin275OC851062793.05Aaron Brewer
Trey Wedig288OT2360653137.62Devery Hamilton
Anthony TorresTE2960672517.5Travis Vokolek
Mario WilliamsWR7850901706.28Kalil Pimpleton
Brennan PresleyWR6850811767.36Brittain Covey
Jordan WatersRB5060002218.63BJ Emmons
Tru EdwardsWR9660171987.36
Mark RedmanTE3960602636.79
Wyatt BowlesOG4060503068.86
Bill NortonDL6660503251.37

The Rams signed two of this draft class’ most-popular undersized warriors, iOL Willie Lampkin and LB Shaun Dolac. Both were outstanding collegiate players whose measurables were questioned by the NFL during the pre-draft process.

Lampkin is a former wrestler with an understanding of grappling and leverage that are suited for his sawed-off frame. Lampkin was a five-year starter in college who made the all-conference team each year. That culminated last year in First-team Associated Press All-American honors at UNC. He’s got a shot to stick as a backup center.

Dolac is a tweener with the build of a safety. But he’s a strong athlete with good instincts who was ultra-active in the MAC. Last year, he posted 168 tackles, 19 TFL, 6.5 sacks, and 5 interceptions en route to consensus All-American honors.

13. Dallas Cowboys

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Alijah Clark325S2160061888.14Andrew Booth Jr.
Traeshon Holden379WR4960212055.42Rueben Randle
Justin Barron390LB3960362257.16E.J. Speed
Bruce Harmon409CB5551062029.31Curtis Marsh
Josh Kelly417WR5460061863.98Theo Howard
Mike Smith Jr.425S2760112097.69Gerod Holliman
Zion Childress477S335112199Jordan Howden
Rivaldo FairweatherTE2760332425.4Greg Dulcich
Tyler NevilleTE3160302397.54Colt Lyerla

The headliner of the Cowboys’ class in both my rankings and contract guarantees was UCF S Alijah Clark, who got $259,000. The winner of the camp battle between Clark and fellow UDFA S Mike Smith Jr. is making this roster.

14. Arizona Cardinals

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Josh Fryar366OT2960473189.18Caedan Wallace
Bryson Green446WR6060132119.37Tarik Black
Elijah Simmons449DL4460103343.47Siaki Ika
Jeremiah ByersOT5560423147.95
Valentin SennOT4460663059.14

Arizona mostly stayed out of the UDFA free-for-all. The biggest signing was Ohio State OT Josh Fryar. This feels like a good marriage. 

Arizona had an offensive line need but ended up spending only an R7 pick on it during the draft, taking Texas OG Hayden Conner. The Cardinals’ new offensive line coach is Justin Frye, who coached Fryar at Ohio State the past three seasons. I expect Fryar to make the team out of camp.

15. Chicago Bears

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Power Echols324LB3051132342.18K.J. Britt
Tysheem Johnson498S3650951953.09Trae Elston
Deion HankinsRB5651052227.16Kregg Lumpkin
Major BurnsS3860202078.23Darrell Stuckey
JP RichardsonWR7251141927.14Braylon Sanders
Xavier CarltonEDGE5860562735.64
Jonathan KimK66001226

Lackluster effort from the Bears, here—Chicago was apparently content with its eight-man draft class.

LB Power Echols is an aggressive downhill linebacker with cement feet. He had nearly 300 tackles over the last three seasons as a starter at UNC. If Echols is to win the last linebacker spot on Chicago’s roster, it’ll be because he won a role on special teams. Echols logged 464 special teams snaps during his career at UNC. 

16. Detroit Lions

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Jackson Meeks388WR5060172136.66Jauan Jennings
Gavin Holmes450CB6251121787.82DJ James
Caden Prieskorn465TE2360572465.46Payne Durham
Anthony Tyus IIIRB5960072207.72
Jakobie Keeney-JamesWR9151141909.58
Leif FautanuOC1960112983.4
Ian KennellyS5660202099.06

Low-impact class by the Lions here, but they did sign a pair of skill guys to monitor in camp.

WR Jackson Meeks has two national championship rings from his three years riding the bench at Georgia. Meeks followed assistant coach Fran Brown to Syracuse and popped off for a 78-1,021-7 receiving line in 2024 as one of Kyle McCord’s favorite targets. Meeks doesn’t create separation, but he’s extremely competitive at the catch point, as his 21 contested catches last year attest (No. 2 in FBS).

TE Caden Prieskorn will be competing with offseason signing TE Kenny Yeboah—another former UDFA—for a roster spot. Prieskorn, 26 as a rookie, is a mediocre athlete, and a mediocre blocker. But he’s got strong hands and enough receiving skill to give Yeboah a run for his money.

Top Unsigned UDFA

NameRkPositionHTWTRASComp
Isaiah Bond152WR1951051854.23D'Wayne Eskridge
Bru McCoy260WR356024209J.J. Arcega-Whiteside
Steve Linton295EDGE3560362487.21Chris Rumph
Gareth Warren301OT2460543287.1Le'Raven Clark
Sean Martin303DL3660542936.52Perrion Winfrey
Brian Ugwu309EDGE386025249Noah Spence
J.J. Weaver342EDGE4260452515.61Victor Abiamiri
Antario Brown344RB345101214Tank Bigsby
Greg Penn III346LB3460062263.73Quayshawn Nealy
Easton Mascarenas-Arnold353LB3551112276.92Elandon Roberts
Deshawn Pace362LB3660072126.05Cory Gilliard
Chico Bennett Jr.370EDGE4560302497.73KJ Henry
Johnathan Edwards371CB5060062018.57Chris Wilcox
Payton Page375DL3960343008.18Amobi Okoye
Quinn Carroll383OT3260643125.37AJ Arcuri
Alex Mastromanno398P26016243Shane Lechler
Sean Fresch406CB5450831737.97Dexter Wynn
Jacob Mangum-Farrar418EDGE4860402368.65Javontae Jean-Baptiste
Aydan White420CB5751171825.35James Pierre
Marcus Tate421OG246052321Prince Pines
Mario Anderson Jr.424RB4050802025.8Zac Stacey
Davin Vann429EDGE4960112698.52Junior Aho
Shamari Simmons445S2951161954.28Tre Norwood
Bryce Benhart448OT3860933073.95Dalton Wagner
Will Rogers451QB1960202075.7Anthony Gordon
Brant Kuithe453TE226020236Dallin Holker
Cooper Mays455OC1460233052.68Sam Mustipher
Ty Son Lawton463RB4450872084.69Ronnie Hillman
De’Rickey Wright467LB4360362085.97Marcus Cotton
Jordan Mahoney469CB6451121805.56Kris Abrams-Draine
Austin McKinney475CB6560002006.37Chris Steele
Payton Collins478OT4060612993.71Shon Coleman
Kevin Davis490RB4650741647.6Garrett Wolfe
Holden Willis491TE2660322208Joshua Perkins
Darrian Baker499DL5060402766.37Mike Piel
Nay'quan WrightRB4750861937.27Tyler Goodson
K.C. OssaiLB4960112378.23Ty Summers
Kydran JenkinsEDGE5651162565.73Tarron Jackson
Melquan StovallWR7550831898.81Speedy Noil
Trey Jones IIIS416010219 Saquan Hampton
Michael MooreLB4860432285.35Rocky Calmus
Hudson CardQB2860232007.58Righty Brennan Armstrong
Wyett EkelerS4051041998.5Phalen Sanford
Andrew HenryRB5150961987.51Nico Evans
Reggie Love IIIRB4851002092.9Mark Walton
CJ TaylorS4851171904.48Keaton Ellis
Akili ArnoldS4251111963.21John Battle
Jaden DolphinLB5260222286.07Dylan Moses
Aubrey BurksS445104205Dravon Askew-Henry
Shitta SillahEDGE5560462499.05DominiQue Robinson
Marcus CarrollRB4950862131.54DomaNick Williams
Trey WashingtonS4750962056.58Darrell Stuckey
Jordan PetaiaRB5760312268.87Christopher Brooks
Anton JuncajEDGE5760362586.58Brenton Cox Jr.
Jacob GardnerOC1660372934.13Ben Lynch
DonoVan SmithQB2660412199.74Barrick Nealy
Xzavier HendersonWR7360342046.86Austin Watkins Jr.
Luke FlorieaWR7751001844.62Austin Proehl

Players Mentioned in this Article

  1. Max Brosmer
    MaxBrosmer
    QBMINMIN
    PPG
    1.20
  2. Marcus Yarns
    MarcusYarns
    RBNONO
  3. Nick Nash
    NickNash
    WRWASWAS
  4. Logan Brown
    LoganBrown
    TSEASEA