2023 NFL Draft: Team-by-Team Needs and Pick Predictions
I’m excited for the draft.
You’re excited for the draft.
The teams at the top of the draft, though, aren’t quite as much, and that’s thanks to the makeup of a class that’ll have GMs in its upper reaches holding their … breath as they turn in their cards. There’s a lot to like, sure. But there’s plenty to worry about, too, and that’s from the top of the first round all the way to the bottom.
“If you have 15 first-round grades, then the class sucks,” said one general manager Saturday. “And I got less than 15 this year.”
On top of that, the landscape of this draft’s blue-chip tier is covered with potential landmines. After dozens and dozens of calls and text exchanges with GMs, coaches and scouts the last few weeks, a few themes emerged.
• Most teams I’ve talked to believe that Alabama’s Bryce Young and Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud are the best, and easiest-to-project, quarterbacks, though each comes with some perceived limitations. Taking Florida’s Anthony Richardson or Kentucky’s Will Levis, conversely, comes with a lot of risk, but also potential reward on the back end. (We’ll have a lot more on the quarterbacks in our annual coaches-on-quarterbacks breakdown on Tuesday). So which QB teams have atop their boards will vary. There’s no completely clean prospect here.
• I’d peg the league consensus as having eight non-quarterbacks in the top group, with three pass-rushers (Georgia DT Jalen Carter, Alabama OLB Will Anderson Jr., Texas Tech DE Tyree Wilson), two corners (Illinois’s Devon Witherspoon, Oregon’s Christian Gonzalez), two offensive linemen (Ohio State’s Paris Johnson Jr., Northwestern’s Peter Skoronski), and Texas tailback Bijan Robinson in that crew.
• Each of those guys have questions. Carter’s are off the field. Anderson’s are on his ceiling as a player. Wilson’s are medical. Witherspoon’s concern his size, and Gonzalez’s are on his physicality as a player. Johnson’s are on his playing strength, and Skoronski’s related to the fact that most teams project him as a guard, rather than a tackle. And Robinson? Well, he’s probably the cleanest prospect in the class, but he’s a running back.
So that sets the stage for what should be a wildly unpredictable first round—which is to say, yes, what all those teams are worried about, you should go ahead and get excited over.
It also sets the stage for our annual analysis of what all 32 teams will actually do.
Welcome to The MMQB for draft week 2023. We’ve got plenty coming this week, and that starts Monday with a whole lot coming in our Takeaways, including ...
- Why the Aaron Rodgers trade will happen this week.
- The Lions gambling issues ... and a warning shot from the league.
- Timeline for the Commanders sale.
- Matt Patricia joining the Eagles.
- The Josh Allen comps are, well, too much!
But we’re starting with a little something for fans of every team.
This column is, annually, one of my favorites. I try to pack it with information. I go to pro scouting directors to ascertain each team’s needs—which are often more nuanced (teams projecting other teams working a year ahead at certain positions) than what you’ll find in the run-of-the-mill needs lists you see every April. And I learn a lot about the players, too.
So, now, we’re passing a whole bunch of that along to you. With teams sorted by the order of their highest picks, let’s dive in …
Carolina Panthers
Houston Texans
Arizona Cardinals
Indianapolis Colts
Seattle Seahawks
Detroit Lions
Las Vegas Raiders
Atlanta Falcons
Chicago Bears
Philadelphia Eagles
Tennessee Titans
New York Jets
New England Patriots
Green Bay Packers
Washington Commanders
Pittsburgh Steelers
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Los Angeles Chargers
Baltimore Ravens
Minnesota Vikings
Jacksonville Jaguars
New York Giants
Dallas Cowboys
Buffalo Bills
Cincinnati Bengals
New Orleans Saints
Kansas City Chiefs
Los Angeles Rams
Miami Dolphins
Denver Broncos
Cleveland Browns
San Francisco 49ers
And so starts draft week here at Sports Illustrated. So you all know, I’ll have my column Monday afternoon with some notes leftover, then my normal What I’m Hearing columns once, and sometimes twice, a day through the week. My annual quarterbacks column comes Tuesday, my mock draft drops on Wednesday, and we’ll try to mix the mailbag in there too.
Keep it locked here, and we’ll have you covered.