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The 2026 NFL Draft is officially less than three weeks away. So, instead of the usual questions submitted and answered in our #PostPulpit mailbag, we will be going through a batch of your own mock drafts — where we hopefully will comment on a vast majority of prospects, trades, and all sorts of scenarios.

So with that, let’s get into this week’s #PostPulpit Mailbag.

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Sportzballer: No trades since that is complicated. A trade back or even a trade up at #31 is plausible depending on the board, and same for trades with the 4ths, but I’m just gonna stick with what we got.

#31 Max Iheanachor (OT)
#63 Malachi Lawrence (EDGE)
#95 Sam Roush (TE)
#125 Domani Jackson (CB)
#131 Jeff Caldwell (WR)
#171 Kaleb Elarms-Orr (LB)
#191 Caden Curry (EDGE) 
#198 Eli Heidenreich (WR)
#202 Albert Regis (DT)
#212 Logan Taylor (IOL)
#247 Brett Thorson (P)

Iheanachor was the runaway pick at No. 31 overall in these submitted mock drafts; not a surprise after Mike Vrabel’s hands-on workout with the tackle at his Pro Day last week. Iheanachor started playing football late which leads to some refinement in his technique needed, but he has the size, athletic profile, and plenty of impressive film at Arizona State to where you can easily see upside at the position. A year behind Morgan Moses definitely wouldn’t hurt.

One of the reasons I’ve gravitated more towards a first-round pick like Iheanachor in recent weeks is because of the depth along the edge and at tight end on day two. You hit both here with Lawrence, who is one of my favorite pass rushers in this class but feels like more of an option at No. 31, and a big blocking tight end who tested through the roof in Roush. Some length limitations and lack of production as a receiver will see him come off the board in the mid-rounds.

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Some favorites on day three include Elarms-Orr (tons of coverage ability) and Heidenreich (a total Swiss-army knife), while Boston College’s own Logan Taylor and reigning Ray-Guy winner Brett Thorson make sense as camp competition. Regis is also an explosive, run-stopping defensive tackle who could help replace Tonga.

For Pats Sake:
#31 RT Max Iheanachor
#63 EDGE Gabe Jacas
#95 WR Ted Hurst
#125 EDGE Keyron Crawford
#131 Safety Michael Taaffe
#171 TE Marlin Klein
#191 Guard Jaeden Roberts
#198 CB Jadon Canady
#202 WR Barion Brown
#212 LB Red Murdock
#247 QB Diego Pavia

Again going Iheanachor followed by day two edge rusher, Jacas is a violent edge rusher with plenty of power and some explosiveness. Pairing him with a more twitched-up athlete in Keyron Crawford would be a fun double-dip along the edge.

I’m also a fan of Ted Hurst as he would give New England’s wide receiver room a big-bodied X receiver with some vertical speed. Hurst can play into his size a bit more but was nearly automatic on goal-line fades and has some serious build-up speed in the open field, while also being able to decelerate and sink his hips at 6-foot-3.



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