2025 Nfl Draft Top 50 Big Board

Bonisiwe Shabane
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2025 nfl draft top 50 big board

I’ve been an NFL Draft junkie for about 25 or 26 years now. I do remember snippets from times before that, but I would say the 1999 NFL Draft is the first one I truly remember. So many great players and so many not-so-great players. Here is my 2025 NFL Draft Big Board, including rookie rankings for my top 50 prospects. There’s the debate on whether Tim Couch would be the quarterback of the future for the Browns. We had the Ricky Williams trade from the Saints with Washington.

That deal included the Saints giving up eight draft picks, including two picks in the first round. I remember thinking the Bears drafting quarterback Cade McNown could terrorize the Lions for the next decade. Fortunately, I was wrong on that last part. The second round featured the Patriots selecting running back Kevin Faulk from LSU. I had an unbelievable amount of Kevin Faulk football cards as a kid. The Bills selected wide receiver Peerless Price, and he became one of my favorite players in the league.

I played far too much PlayStation 2 with the Bills on Madden 2002 and countless other players from the 1999 NFL Draft. The list of great moments is a long one since that draft. Adding to that, this year will be the 2025 NFL Draft. This is one draft that is giving us a generational prospect in Colorado cornerback/wide receiver Travis Hunter. We’ve got a lackluster but yet a pretty good wide receiver class at the top of the draft — this could also include Hunter. For my liking, he’s a defensive player.

The 2025 NFL Draft class is rounding into shape, and we’re getting a clearer picture of some of the top prospects and the position groups with the most depth. The top prospect on the board is Colorado’s Travis Hunter, a rare talent with the potential to start at the NFL level as either a wide receiver or cornerback. After Hunter, Penn State stud Abdul Carter, Michigan standout Mason Graham, Arizona’s Tetairoa McMillan and Boise State’s Ashton Jeanty are some of the premier players in this draft class. The running back, tight end and offensive tackle positions seem to be the deepest and strongest on the offensive side of the ball. On defense, the edge defender group is as deep as we’ve seen in several years, dominating the projected top 50. There are also more impact defensive backs this year than a year ago, with plenty of options on all three days of the draft, specifically on Days 2 and 3.

Here are PFF's top 350 draft prospects in the 2025 NFL Draft, along with some scouting notes courtesy of lead draft analyst Trevor Sikkema. For the full ranking of draft prospects, along with their three-year player grades and position rankings, click here. Hunter is one of the most talented players I have ever scouted. As a cornerback, he brings good mirror-matching movements and truly elite ball skills. He can be a bit out of control and lacks some density, which gets exposed the most in press-man coverage. As a primary zone defender with press-man flexibility, he can be an immediate starting cornerback with an All-Pro ceiling.

With less than a month to go before the 2025 NFL Draft, the all-star circuit and NFL Combine are officially behind us, and Pro Days are nearly complete. Now comes the stretch where draft boards start to lock in — and ours is no different. In this updated Top 50 Big Board, we’re going beyond rankings. We’ve tiered each prospect based on our proprietary Football Scout 365 Grade Scale, which evaluates positional value, play style, ceiling, and NFL projection. These tiers provide clearer insight into where a player is likely to be drafted — and why. Each tier gives teams a way to prioritize traits over rankings, especially when deciding between a high-upside prospect versus a plug-and-play contributor.

It’s not just about who ranks higher — it’s about projected impact based on tier and role fit. These are rare, instant-impact prospects — high-level athletes with elite physical tools, advanced processing, and dominant tape. They’re foundational players, often viewed as future All-Pros. These are high-ceiling players who may not check every box today but project as Year 1 or Year 2 starters with Pro Bowl potential. They often dominate one or more key traits and just need polish or scheme fit. It is almost time for the 2025 NFL Draft, and ClutchPoints has you covered leading up to the start of the draft on April 24th.

The following NFL prospect Big Board includes the top 50 players in this year’s NFL Draft, giving a brief look at which players will likely be drafted across the first two rounds. Physicality, technique, athleticism, hand usage, you name it – Abdul Carter is the best edge rusher in the NFL Draft. His utter dominance in college (23.5 tackles for loss in 2024) will seamlessly transition to the NFL as he is a generational defensive talent that teams should not pass up on. It remains to be seen which position Travis Hunter will play in the NFL, but whichever team selects him in the 2025 NFL Draft will be getting a superstar. His coverage skills at cornerback should very well make him the highest CB ever drafted in NFL history, while he excels at ball-tracking and route-running as a wide receiver and would immediately become one... Mason Graham was the heart and soul of the Michigan Wolverines defense last year, and is clearly the best defensive tackle in this year’s NFL Draft.

Graham earns his keep stopping the run, as he succeeds at setting a solid base and stacking his blocker at the point of attack, something that defines his case for being a top 5... The clear-cut RB1 in this year’s NFL Draft is Ashton Jeanty, who has had the top spot locked up since last draft class. The Boise State product is the real deal at running back, as his combination of strength, agility, and athleticism make him a mess to bring down. He even has a solid route-running tree under his belt too, and will be a top-10 pick in April. The 2025 NFL Draft is just days away, so we’re taking this opportunity to get some takes off regarding the prospect pool teams will be picking from — the New England Patriots included. Colorado’s Travis Hunter, Penn State’s Abdul Carter and Boise State’s Ashton Jeanty are the names you know, but what about those with comparable talent?

Who could end up being the steal of the draft? If there’s a trade, which players might come under consideration? How strong is this class at certain positions? NESN is allowing me to help answer those questions, but we will also provide each player’s ranking from draft mavens like NFL Media’s Daniel Jeremiah, The Athletic’s Dane Brugler and ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr. Hunter is the obvious choice to top our list, but that’s because he’s the right one. We have honestly been surprised at the amount of overthinking regarding the class’ top cornerback prospect and one of its two best receiver prospects.

It’s a no-brainer if you believe he can play both ways at the next level, which we very much do. Carter epitomizes “value” more than any player on this list, other than our previous entry, as he’s the most versatile pass-rusher in the class. You can put him pretty much anywhere and expect production, which is more than can be said for some other guys at his position. In my latest 2025 NFL Mock Draft, I reference my "big board" or "board" on several occasions. It's a must if you're going to make a mock draft. The Super Bowl ended nine days ago, so the NFL Draft process has just begun.

Many say it officially started with the Senior Bowl in Mobile, but either way, there physically haven't been enough hours to fully scout every prospect in the draft. That's why this board is constantly changing. My takes on a player a week from now might not be the same Friday depending on whose reel came across at what position between now and then. I'll be very frank about my role as a wannabe scout. I've been invested in the NFL Draft for a long time, but I'm no film expert. I'm a college football junkie with a love for player props, meeting many of these guys before they declare with a spreadsheet and what I see every Saturday.

You don't care, though. It's draft season, and here's a fresh list to justifying calling me a hero or an idiot -- depending on where I rank your favorite players. Contributors of Behind The Steel Curtain rank the top 2025 NFL Draft prospects The 2025 NFL Draft is right around the corner, with pre-draft visits and college pro days in full swing as NFL teams look toward their futures. With the NFL Scouting Combine in the rearview mirror and player evaluations making their way in, our team put together NFL draft big board rankings to help land on a consensus average ahead of... Here’s a look at the first iteration of Behind The Steel Curtain’s Top-50 2025 NFL Draft Board, Including consensus player rankings, as well as the highest and lowest rankings inside the top-50 of BTSC’s...

Note: BTSC’s top-50 big board is a cumulative rankings were compiled by contributors Ryland Bickley, Mike Nicastro, Ryan Parish and Kate Magdziuk. Any players that did not receive a single ranking inside the top-50 will be denoted with a “-” as their lowest ranking. For a better view, check out the draft board here on Google Sheets. Ryland Bickley: Azareye’h Thomas’ tape in coverage is some of the best you’ll see this year, and if it wasn’t for his leaky run support I think he’d be a first-round lock. He’s always available mid- to late-Day 2 in simulators, but I think he could go as early as the late first. If not, he has the potential to be one of the most underrated players in this class, assuming he cleans up his tackling.

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