NFL Draft 2024 final big board, ranking top-100 prospects available

The time has finally come for the final big board to be posted. This NFL Draft 2024 class, while lacking in certain spots such as LB, there are a lot of fun prospects at crucial positions in NFL evaluation.

This feels like the year where people have begun to understand the major differences in the college game to the NFL game in terms of evaluation. For example, parsing through guys who played a lot in the tite front which helps defend the spread at the college level, in order to see how they play on the edge in the NFL could be a major sticking point for front offices. Offensively, there are a lot of linemen who could move inside to guard, players like Jordan Morgan or Graham Barton being the predominant two. How teams stack them at tackle vs. guard is going to be very interesting.

Well, without further ado, here are my top 100 players in the 2024 NFL Draft.

2024 NFL Draft Big Board

Rank Name Position College Year
Rank Name Position College Year
1 Marvin Harrison Jr. WR Ohio State Junior
2 Brock Bowers TE Georgia Junior
3 Rome Odunze WR Washington Junior
4 Drake Maye QB North Carolina Sophomore (RS)
5 Caleb Williams QB USC Junior
6 Malik Nabers WR LSU Junior
7 Olu Fashanu OT Penn State Junior
8 Johnny Newton DT Illinois Senior
9 Joe Alt OT Notre Dame Junior
10 Terrion Arnold CB Alabama Sophomore (RS)
11 Jared Verse EDGE Florida State Junior (RS)
12 Laiatu Latu EDGE UCLA Senior (RS)
13 Quinyon Mitchell CB Toledo Junior
14 Dallas Turner EDGE Alabama Junior
15 Troy Fautanu OL Washington Junior
16 Brian Thomas Jr. WR LSU Junior
17 Nate Wiggins CB Clemson Junior
18 JC Latham OT Alabama Junior
19 Byron Murphy II DT Texas Senior
20 Cooper DeJean CB Iowa Junior
21 AD Mitchell WR Texas Junior
22 Jayden Daniels QB LSU Senior
23 Keon Coleman WR Florida State Junior
24 Amarius Mims OT Georgia Junior
25 Kool-Aid McKinstry CB Alabama Junior
26 Taliese Fuaga OL Oregon State Senior
27 Chop Robinson EDGE Penn State Junior
28 Jackson Powers-Johnson OC Oregon Junior
29 Ladd McConkey WR Georgia Senior
30 Graham Barton OL Duke Senior
31 Tyler Guyton OT Oklahoma Junior (RS)
32 Austin Booker EDGE Kansas Sophomore (RS)
33 Xavier Legette WR South Carolina Senior
34 Kamari Lassiter CB Georgia Junior
35 Ja’Lynn Polk WR Washington Junior
36 Darius Robinson DL Missouri Senior
37 Chris Braswell EDGE Alabama Senior
38 Ennis Rakestraw Jr CB Missouri Senior
39 Cooper Beebe OG Kansas State Senior
40 JJ McCarthy QB Michigan Junior
41 Dadrion Taylor-Demerson S Texas Tech Senior
42 Kingsley Suamataia OT BYU Junior (RS)
43 Zach Frazier OC West Virginia Senior
44 Ricky Pearsall WR Florida Senior
45 Javon Baker WR UCF Senior
46 Ruke Orhorhoro DT Clemson Senior
47 Junior Colson LB Michigan Junior
48 Jordan Morgan OL Arizona Senior
49 Marshawn Kneeland EDGE Western Michigan Senior
50 Roman Wilson WR Michigan Senior
51 Tyler Nubin S Minnesota Senior
52 Roger Rosengarten OT Washington Junior (RS)
53 Trey Benson RB Florida State Junior
54 Jonathon Brooks RB Texas Junior
55 Michael Penix Jr. QB Washington Senior
56 Mekhi Wingo DT LSU Junior
57 Xavier Worthy WR Texas Junior
58 Michael Hall Jr. DT Ohio State Junior
59 Christian Haynes OG UConn Senior
60 Malachi Corley WR Western Kentucky Senior
61 Payton Wilson LB NC State Senior
62 Renardo Green CB Florida State Senior
63 Cam Hart CB Notre Dame Senior
64 Mike Sainristil CB Michigan Junior
65 Jalen McMillian WR Washington Junior
66 Spencer Rattler QB South Carolina Senior
67 Kiran Amegadjie OL Yale Junior
68 Christian Mahogany OG Boston College Senior
69 Andru Phillips CB Kentucky Senior
70 Edgerrin Cooper LB Texas A&M Junior
71 Troy Franklin WR Oregon Junior
72 Bo Nix QB Oregon Senior
73 TJ Tampa CB Iowa State Junior
74 Michael Pratt QB Tulane Senior
75 Dominick Puni OL Kansas Senior
76 Mohamed Kamara EDGE Colorado State Senior
77 Braden Fiske DT Florida State Senior
78 Max Melton CB Rutgers Senior
79 Patrick Paul OT Houston Senior
80 Jermaine Burton WR Alabama Junior
81 Audric Estime RB Notre Dame Junior
82 Brandon Coleman OG TCU Senior
83 Jaylen Wright RB Tennessee Junior
84 Khyree Jackson CB Oregon Senior
85 Theo Johnson TE Penn State Senior
86 Brandon Dorlus DL Oregon Senior
87 Cole Bishop S Utah Junior
88 Cedric Gray LB North Carolina Senior
89 Javon Bullard S Georgia Junior
90 Xavier Thomas EDGE Clemson Senior
91 Braelon Allen RB Wisconsin Junior
92 DeWayne Carter DT Duke Senior
93 Jacob Cowing WR Arizona Senior
94 Adisa Isaac EDGE Penn State Senior
95 Blake Fisher OT Notre Dame Sophomore (RS)
96 Tez Walker WR North Carolina Junior
97 Justin Eboigbe DT Alabama Senior
98 Malik Washington WR Virginia Senior
99 Kris Jenkins Jr. DT Michigan Junior
100 T’Vondre Sweat DT Texas Senior

Marvin Harrison Jr. goes wire to wire as the top player in the class

Immediately after the 2023 NFL Draft, I released a big board with Ohio State WR Marvin Harrison Jr. at the top of it. Fast forward to the day before the first round…and Harrison Jr. is still at the top. We really don’t need to overthink this that much. Harrison is your prototypical X receiver, with the ball skills in the air, the savvy route running and speed (if he looks fast running past Big Ten and SEC DBs, I’m gonna guess that guy is pretty fast) to be an instant impact player. Top guys stay top guys, and Harrison Jr. is a top guy.

Drake Maye is QB 1(A)

QBs Drake Maye and Caleb Williams are SUPER close in my opinion. So close, that instead of truly making them QB1 and QB2, I see them more as QB1A and QB1B. However, Maye is the 1A, and for good reason. I think a lot of people have overthought Maye, who had to deal with subpar coaching and skill position talent around him in a disappointing 2023. However, his athletic tools combined with nuanced pocket movement and aggression downfield make him a high quality NFL QB. Yes, the footwork needs to be addressed a bit, but that shouldn’t sway teams away from him as a top guy in this class.

Now, even though Maye is QB1A, that doesn’t mean Williams is bad at all. In fact, if Williams is going to be the number one pick come Thursday night, I’ll give it an A+. Williams’ natural feel for the game and impressive play from the pocket (while inconsistent) make him a high level QB prospect. I can see both guys being at least above average NFL starters.

Buyer beware on QBs outside the top four

While Maye, Williams, LSU QB Jayden Daniels and Michigan QB JJ McCarthy make up my top four, I’d be a little wary of going for QBs outside that range. After McCarthy at 40, the next QB up is Washington signal caller Michael Penix Jr. at 55. I love his aggression downfield and ability to play from a clean pocket. Yet, I wonder about his ability under pressure. The Texas game in the semifinal was the best of Penix under pressure, and the Michigan game in the championship might have been the worst. He’ll have to answer questions about his ability to create under pressure, as well as his extensive injury history.

The next QB after that is South Carolina’s Spencer Rattler, who could be very good if he would stop getting in his own way. He’s grown a lot since his days at Oklahoma, and while with the Gamecocks showed a lot of toughness in his ability to pass under pressure. However, he invites this pressure onto himself despite being a smaller QB and not a phenomenal athlete, and the accuracy leaves a bit of meat on the bone offensively. He’s the QB I would want to throw a dart at to develop.

Then comes Bo Nix from Oregon. While I love the short-area accuracy and enough functional mobility to play outside the pocket, I worry about his responses under pressure and how little the Oregon offense actually tested teams vertically. He’s a fine QB if you want someone who can sit behind the wheel to the car on autopilot, but I’m not sure if you want him driving it.

My eighth QB is Michael Pratt from Tulane, someone who I think can be a serviceable NFL starter. He’s tough under pressure, accurate to the intermediate levels of the field and can move just enough to make things work. However, is being a “just good enough” NFL athlete good enough to be a long term starter?

Either way, buyer beware with these QBs outside the top 4.

Top defensive prospects are all fun, but also have big question marks

My top defensive prospect in this class is Illinois DT Johnny Newton. He’s disruptive from multiple alignments, has violent hands and can instantly produce as a pass rusher in the NFL. However, there are injury concerns, with a Jones fracture in his foot that kept him out of most athletic testing this draft process. Injury concerns is a common theme among the top defensive players, some more serious than others.

UCLA EDGE Laiatu Latu is the best pass rusher in the class, but a myriad of neck injuries forced him to medically retire when he was at Washington. If he gets a clean bill of health, then that’ll do wonders for him and his stock, which goes as high as 8 but all the way down to the end of the first round. Alabama CB Kool-Aid McKinstry is one of the best in the class in press alignment, but a Jones fracture in his foot kept him out of everything this draft process. How teams evaluate these prospects without being fully healthy is going to be a major theme this cycle.