Dolphins Hire Jaguars’ Josh Scobey For Front Office Role

Josh Scobey relocated to Jacksonville after 12 years in Arizona’s front office, but the running back-turned-exec is on the move again.

The Jaguars and Scobey parted ways recently, according to KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson, and CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz notes the Dolphins are hiring the veteran staffer. Scobey, 46, had been working as a senior personnel executive with the Jags.

The Dolphins are hiring Scobey as their assistant director of player personnel, according to InsidetheLeague.com’s Neil Stratton. Scobey, who played running back for the Cardinals in the 2000s, climbed the ladder to director of college scouting by 2022. But the Cardinals’ Steve Keim firing led to a separation from some of his top lieutenants, something that is commonplace around the league as new regimes take over.

This Jags departure comes at a similar point compared to Scobey’s Cards exit, as the AFC South team — like Arizona in 2023 — hired a new GM. The Cardinals moved on from Scobey in 2024, a year after their Monti Ossenfort hire. The Jags, who had hired Scobey in Trent Baalke‘s final year in charge, will bid farewell a year after hiring James Gladstone as GM.

Scouting changes mostly occur after the draft, with contracts for these positions generally expiring then. A host of turnover will take place around the league’s scouting staffs. Scobey will join Jon-Eric Sullivan‘s staff in Miami. Gladstone’s regime is parting with another scouting-side staffer, with Wilson adding the team is moving on from pro scout Rory Segrest. The latter had been an assistant D-line coach in Jacksonville prior to a move to the scouting ranks. Like Scobey, Segrest was hired under Baalke.

49ers Fielded Calls For No. 33; WR De’Zhaun Stribling Made Late Rise On Team’s Board

After trading down twice in Round 1, the 49ers made a surprising pick to start the draft’s second night. San Francisco chose Ole Miss wide receiver De’Zhaun Stribling at No. 33. Stribling had not been viewed as a prospect worthy of that draft slot by most, but he made quite the impression on the top two 49ers decisionmakers late in the pre-draft process.

Even by early April, the 49ers viewed Stribling as a player who would be more of a late second-round pick or an early third-rounder, according to Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer, who notes Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch going through evaluations together last month led to a Stribling rise. He became the sixth wide receiver chosen in this year’s draft, rising past higher-profile options like Denzel Boston and Germie Bernard.

Daniel Jeremiah’s NFL.com big board ranked Stribling 62nd, while ESPN’s Scouts Inc. was even less bullish, slotting him 76th. The 49ers have run into issues identifying receivers in the middle rounds; Day 2 draftees Dante Pettis, Jalen Hurd and Danny Gray did not pan out. But the team also received a quality run from second-rounder Deebo Samuel and identified Jauan Jennings in Round 7. First-rounder Brandon Aiyuk was also a hit for San Francisco, before a strange 2025 divided the parties ahead of an expected 2026 separation.

The 49ers are still waiting on 2024 first-rounder Ricky Pearsall to establish himself as a reliable presence, and his injury issues — along with Aiyuk and Jennings statuses — influenced an aggressive offseason at receiver. The team added Mike Evans and Christian Kirk in free agency. Stribling will join Pearsall as rookie-deal cogs vying for time alongside the vets. Demarcus Robinson also remains rostered. The 49ers are not expected to re-sign Jennings, whose asking price has not aligned with teams’ valuations.

San Francisco was not set on adding Stribling at No. 27, with Breer noting the team viewed him as a player who would not go in the first round. The 49ers had a group of players they would feel comfortable taking at 27, but in the event all were off the board, Breer adds the team had trade parameters worked out with the Dolphins days before the draft. The sides turned those talks into a swap, with Miami moving up for San Diego State cornerback Chris Johnson. The 49ers moved down once again, allowing the Jets to draft Omar Cooper Jr. at No. 30.

Cooper and Stribling figure to be compared to each other moving forward, at least in the Bay Area, given how much higher the draft community had the Indiana product compared to Stribling (Jeremiah ranked Cooper 17th; Scouts Inc. had him 24th). Stribling impressed at the Combine, running a 4.36-second 40-yard dash at 207 pounds. This came after he produced at multiple schools during a college career that finished with back-to-back 800-plus-yard receiving seasons (at Oklahoma State and Ole Miss). In 2022, Stribling was a key Cam Ward target at Washington State.

The 49ers did not make the pick without fielding more calls, as Day 2 reports about interest coming in for No. 33 turned out to be accurate. Trade offers did not appeal to the 49ers, and Breer adds the team worried other clubs viewed Stribling as a sleeper like they did; that led to Shanahan and Co. standing down and selecting the well-traveled WR at 33. The 49ers will attempt to prove draft experts wrong, and if Stribling proves a quick learner, the team will have a deep receiver cadre in 2026.

Minor NFL Transactions: 5/5/26

Here are Tuesday’s NFL minor moves:

Baltimore Ravens

Dallas Cowboys

Miami Dolphins

Philadelphia Eagles

Pittsburgh Steelers

The Ravens and Cowboys opted to cut two linemen from their recently signed undrafted free agent classes, while the Steelers and Eagles both made moves to waive their safeties with an injury designation then revert them to injured reserve. For as long as they are on IR during the offseason, they will not count against the team’s 90-man roster limit.

Traore will also not count against Miami’s 90-man limit; the team’s fifth-round pick out of Mississippi State was born in France but raised in London before moving to Florida in an attempt to play college ball. He earned a scholarship offer from Arkansas State, where he played for two years before transferring to the Bulldogs.

Replacing the UDFA they reverted to IR, the Eagles have added King, a versatile linebacker, after he went undrafted out of Idaho. A two-year starter for the Vandals, King split his time fairly evenly last year between the box, the slot, and the edge.

Dolphins Release LS Taybor Pepper, Waive P Seth Vernon

An eight-year veteran long snapper, Taybor Pepper signed with the Dolphins in March. But his tenure with the team will be short-lived. The Dolphins released Pepper on Monday.

Miami also waived punter Seth Vernon, cornerback Isaiah Johnson, tight end Zack Kuntz, cornerback Jason Maitre, edge rusher Derrick McLendon and linebacker K.C. Ossai. The Pepper and Vernon moves provide some early clarity among Miami’s special teams units. Johnson, who played in four Dolphins games last season, was waived with a failed physical designation, KPRC2’s Aaron Wilson tweets.

The team gave Pepper a $1.3MM deal with no guarantees in mid-March. Pepper, 31, had not played in a regular-season game since the 2024 season. The longtime 49ers long snapper lost his Bay Area job to former Texans mainstay Jon Weeks in March 2025. Miami’s move clears the way for Tucker Addington, who snapped for the team in three 2024 games, to hold the job. Though, we are four months away from the season.

Addington, 28, has only snapped in 10 career games. Pepper is at 100, serving as the 49ers’ LS from 2020-24. Pepper also snapped in every Dolphins game in 2019.

It is unusual for a team to nix a competition so early in offseason workouts, but it is possible the Dolphins bring in another snapper to compete with Addington. Miami used Joe Cardona as its long snapper in 2025, but he committed to the Rams on Day 1 of free agency. The Steelers waived Addington last August; he did not snap in 2025. Cardona, an 11-year veteran, signed a two-year Rams deal that included $2.1MM guaranteed.

The Dolphins signed veteran Bradley Pinion to be their punter in mid-March, giving him a one-year deal that included $1.26MM fully guaranteed. Vernon entered the league as a Falcons UDFA in 2022 but did not unseat Pinion for the Falcons job that offseason. His pro game action has come in the UFL; the Michigan Panthers used Vernon as their punter in 2025.

Dolphins LB Jordyn Brooks Seeking Raise

Jordyn Brooks has been a highly productive starter during his two years with the Dolphins. The veteran linebacker remains under contract for one more year, and he is among the players Miami is interested in extending.

If Brooks is to work out a new Dolphins agreement, a bump in pay could be in store. Omar Kelly of the Miami Herald writes the 28-year-old is seeking a raise in the event an extension is signed. Brooks is currently set to collect $8.38MM in 2026, the final year of his 2024 free agent pact.

While playing out his rookie contract with the Seahawks, Brooks was a regular presence on defense and filled the statsheet. The former first-rounder was among many in his position to have his fifth-year option declined, however, leading to a departure on the open market. Brooks joined the Dolphins and has served as an every-down player since. He earned first-team All-Pro honors in 2025 after leading the NFL in tackles (183) while adding 3.5 sacks.

Brooks drew trade interest from the Dolphins this offseason, but no swap was worked out. Miami has not been shy with respect to moving on from veterans under new general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan. A short list of players remain in the team’s plans, though, and Brooks is on it. Sullivan indicated last month extension talks have taken place with Brooks, but nothing is imminent at this time.

22 inside linebackers are currently attached to an average annual value higher than Brooks. That includes 19 earning an average of $10MM or more per year, a figure the Texas Tech product could aim to surpass on his third career contract. Finances are of course tight right now for the Dolphins with the team carrying a dead money figure of $179MM, but any extension would lower his immediate cap charge and accommodating a Brooks raise in 2027 could be feasible.

Miami’s 14-man draft class includes linebackers Jacob Rodriguez and Kyle Louis. Those two are in position to compete for a defensive role, although veteran Tyrel Dodson joins Brooks as a holdover from 2025. It will be interesting to see if the latter has a new deal in place by Week 1 or if he enters 2026 as a pending free agent.

AFC Draft Rumors: Ravens, Dolphins, Patriots, Colts, Jets, Bengals

When the Ravens were on the clock at No. 14 overall in the 2026 NFL Draft, the number of options available to the team had general manager Eric DeCosta seeking an opportunity to move back. Baltimore thought it had a deal in place, but it “fell apart,” according to Jeff Zrebiec of The Athletic.

The top option for the Ravens was always offensive guard Vega Ioane, but surprisingly, when the team was on the clock, Miami defensive end Rueben Bain Jr. was still on the board. Not to mention, DeCosta had interest in grabbing a weapon for his star quarterback, if they were able to move back and still secure USC receiver Makai Lemon or Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq. DeCosta felt comfortable the team could trade back and still land one of those four players without leaving the teens.

Per Michael Silver, also with The Athletic, DeCosta thought he had a deal in place to do so while also returning “extra fourth-round picks in each of the next two drafts” to Baltimore. Similar to how DeCosta and the Ravens backed out of their trade agreement at the turn of the new league year, though, the team he thought would make the deal “changed their mind,” changing their half of the deal in the process and leading to the Ravens moving on without a trade and with Ioane instead.

Here are a few other recent draft rumors from across the AFC:

  • The Dolphins also got hurt by the trade game during the draft. According to Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald, Miami had its eye set on Notre Dame wide receiver Malachi Fields in the third round before the Giants sent three picks to Cleveland for the right to move just ahead of the Dolphins at No. 74. With Fields off the board, Miami pivoted to the next wide receiver on their board, Caleb Douglas out of Texas Tech, a pick that was generally criticized as a bit of a reach by analysts.
  • Miami almost got targeted again in the fourth round, per Tony Pauline of EssentiallySports. Pauline claims the Patriots were interested in trading up on Day 3 for Texas defensive end Trey Moore, whom the Dolphins took at No. 130. New England had given up their 125th overall pick to move up three spots in the first round and would’ve had to trade up from the fifth round to land Moore. They didn’t end up selecting a pass rusher until the seventh round, when they took Boston College’s Quintayvious Hutchins just before the final compensatory picks.
  • The Colts were able to land Georgia linebacker CJ Allen after trading back six spots. It was a gutsy move to delay the selection right when a run at the position had begun. General manager Chris Ballard had been eager to add more picks heading into Day 3, and the move back was a perfect opportunity to do just that. According to Joel A. Erickson of the Indianapolis Star, Ballard desired the picks enough to consider moving back again, but after playing with fire once already, he opted not to risk losing the services of the linebacker they coveted.
  • One of the biggest debates leading into the 2026 NFL Draft was who the Jets were going to select at No. 2 overall. They ended up choosing Texas Tech defensive end David Bailey over Ohio State hybrid linebacker Arvell Reese. According to Jets senior reporter Eric Allen, while New York liked both prospects, Bailey’s established pass-rushing prowess and demonstrated production made him a better fit for what the team is trying to do. Per head coach Aaron Glenn, they still believe Reese will go on “to have a really good career” but felt more secure with Bailey as their pick.
  • The Bengals made a bold move trading away a top 10 draft pick for former Giants defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence. A pick that high is usually considered a guarantee to land a franchise with a blue chip prospect, but this year’s draft crop was seen as thinner than usual. NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero appeared on the Rich Eisen Show before the draft and claimed that the lack of blue chip prospects convinced Cincinnati to make the move for Lawrence. Per Pelissero, the Bengals only had seven players graded as blue chip prospects and didn’t foresee any of them falling to them at No. 10, so they traded for a player they knew was a blue chip prospect. It would be interesting to know if Bain had been one of those seven, and whether or not they would’ve preferred to have Bain fresh out of college, but ultimately, Lawrence is a decent consolation prize.

Dolphins Part Ways With Champ Kelly

With the draft now in the books, the Dolphins are among the teams undergoing changes in their front office. The most notable departure has come in the form of new general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan‘s predecessor.

Miami has parted ways with Champ Kelly, CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones reports. Kelly held the title of senior personnel executive but also served as the Dolphins’ interim GM after Chris Grier‘s in-season dismissal. Miami was one of the teams in need of a new general manager during the 2026 hiring cycle, something which ultimately resulted in Sullivan’s hire and consultant Troy Aikman securing a semi-permanent role in the organization.

When the Dolphins narrowed their GM candidates list to four, Kelly was still in the running. He had just joined the team near the start of the prior league year after three-year tenure in Las Vegas that started with his first opportunity in an assistant general manager role before moving him into an interim role in place of fired Raiders general manager Dave Ziegler. The former Broncos and Bears staffer’s knowledge of both college and pro scouting helped him quickly climb up to even be in position for multiple interim GM opportunities.

Joining Kelly in departure are pro scouts J.P. Correia and Andy Howell. Correia came out of the UMass front office in 2017, serving a short pro personnel internship with the Giants before joining the Dolphins as a scouting assistant. Corriea worked as a player personnel scout for the next three years before spent the past four seasons in his most recent role.

Howell started as a scouting assistant with the Browns in 2012, spent two years going from pro personnel intern to assistant with the Jets, and spent a season as the director of player personnel/recruiting coordinator at Western Michigan before joining the Dolphins in 2016. He only spent one season as a player personnel scout before moving in a the pro scout position for the past eight seasons.

Ely Allen contributed to this post.

Kadyn Proctor’s Dolphins Career To Begin At Guard

In 2016, the Dolphins benefited from Laremy Tunsil‘s slide to No. 13 overall. Although Miami eventually stationed the high-level prospect at his natural left tackle position, Year 1 featured Tunsil at guard while Branden Albert remained on Ryan Tannehill‘s blind side. Kadyn Proctor‘s NFL journey may begin similarly.

The Dolphins intend to use the Alabama left tackle — this year’s No. 12 overall pick — at guard to open his career, GM Jon-Eric Sullivan said during an appearance on the Joe Rose Show (h/t ESPN.com’s Marcel Louis-Jacques). Specifically, the new Miami GM said left guard will be where Proctor begins his NFL run.

While the Dolphins intend to cross-train the college left tackle at both guard and tackle, the team will have him learn LG while 2025 LG Jonah Savaiinaea moves to RG. All 982 of Savaiinaea’s rookie-year snaps came at left guard. Rather than ensure continuity there and have Proctor try right guard to begin his career, a new Dolphins regime will relocate Chris Grier‘s final second-round pick.

Proctor’s draft stock was partially boosted by his left tackle ability, per ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler, as the two tackles drafted before him — Spencer Fano and Francis Mauigoa — were primarily RTs in college. Ditto Lions first-rounder Blake Miller. Proctor played left tackle for three seasons at Alabama, earning first-team All-SEC and second-team All-America honors last season. Our Ely Allen noted in PFR’s mock draft that many teams would be interested in seeing how Proctor looks at guard, and the Dolphins will kick the tires here.

Proctor checked in at 6-foot-6 and 352 pounds at the Combine. He will become one of the NFL’s biggest guards. Sullivan said (via Louis-Jacques) following the Proctor pick — which came after a one-spot trade-down move via Dallas — he could potentially play four positions along the O-line (all but center). Featuring needs at many positions entering the draft, the Dolphins made Proctor their first pick — over the likes of Rueben Bain Jr. and Makai Lemon — of the Sullivan era. The team also traded out of No. 11, giving the Cowboys Caleb Downs access. Passing on Bain and Downs certainly provide expectations for Proctor, whose path to a left tackle job may not materialize as Tunsil’s did nearly 10 years ago.

The Dolphins moved Tunsil to LT in 2017 upon trading Albert to the Jaguars. The Sullivan-Jeff Hafley regime, however, has Patrick Paul going into his second season as the left tackle starter. Austin Jackson is in place at RT, though injuries have regularly impacted the O-line nomad in Miami. Jackson has settled at RT, receiving a three-year extension worth $36MM in late 2023, but he did play guard previously with the Dolphins.

Paul replaced a retired Terron Armstead at LT last year, doing so as Jackson missed 11 games (after missing nine in 2024). Jackson missed 15 games in 2022, with his healthy 2023 leading to the extension. Miami gave Jackson a pay cut this offseason, potentially opening the door for Proctor at RT (the team also lost swing tackle Larry Borom in free agency). Jackson’s deal expires at season’s end. More clarity will come on Proctor’s positional future by then, but for now, a Tunsil-like path at LG to open his career is in the cards.

Miami drafted another guard — Texas’ D.J. Campbellin Round 6. The team is planning to try the former Longhorns blocker at center in addition to guard, the Miami Herald’s Barry Jackson notes. The team also added ex-Charger swingman Jamaree Salyer in free agency, providing another potential answer at tackle or guard.

2026 NFL Draft Results: Team By Team

Here is every team’s haul from the 2026 NFL Draft:

Arizona Cardinals

  • Round 1, No. 3: Jeremiyah Love (RB, Notre Dame)
  • Round 2, No. 34: Chase Bisontis (G, Texas A&M)
  • Round 3, No. 65: Carson Beck (QB, Miami)
  • Round 4, No. 104: Kaleb Proctor (DT, Southeastern Louisiana)
  • Round 5, No. 143: Reggie Virgil (WR, Texas Tech)
  • Round 6, No. 183: Karson Sharar (LB, Iowa)
  • Round 7, No. 217: Jayden Williams (T, Ole Miss)

Atlanta Falcons

Baltimore Ravens

Buffalo Bills

  • Round 2, No. 35 (from Titans): T.J. Parker (EDGE, Clemson)
  • Round 2, No. 62: Davison Igbinosun (CB, Ohio State)
  • Round 4, No. 102 (from Raiders): Jude Bowry (T, Boston College)
  • Round 4, No. 125 (from Bears via Chiefs and Patriots): Skylar Bell (WR, UConn)
  • Round 4, No. 126: Kaleb Elarms-Orr (LB, TCU)
  • Round 5, No. 167 (from Texans): Jalon Kilgore (S, South Carolina)
  • Round 5, No. 181 (from Lions)*: Zane Durant (DT, Penn State)
  • Round 7, No. 220 (from Jets): Toriano Pride Jr. (CB, Missouri)
  • Round 7, No. 239 (from Eagles via Jaguars, Browns and Bears): Tommy Doman (P, Florida)
  • Round 7, No. 241 (from Bears): Ar’maj Reed-Adams (G, Texas A&M)

Carolina Panthers

Chicago Bears

Cincinnati Bengals

Cleveland Browns

Dallas Cowboys

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2026 NFL Draft Results By Round

From the No. 1 overall pick to Mr. Irrelevant (No. 257), here are the results from the 2026 NFL Draft:

Round 1

1) Las Vegas Raiders: Fernando Mendoza (QB, Indiana)
2) New York Jets: David Bailey (EDGE, Texas Tech)
3) Arizona Cardinals: Jeremiyah Love (RB, Notre Dame)
4) Tennessee Titans: Carnell Tate (WR, Ohio State)
5) New York Giants: Arvell Reese (LB/EDGE, Ohio State)
6) Kansas City Chiefs (from Browns): Mansoor Delane (CB, LSU)
7) Washington Commanders: Sonny Styles (LB, Ohio State)
8) New Orleans Saints: Jordyn Tyson (WR, Arizona State)
9) Cleveland Browns (from Chiefs): Spencer Fano (T, Utah)
10) New York Giants (from Bengals): Francis Mauigoa (T, Miami)
11) Dallas Cowboys (from Dolphins): Caleb Downs, (S, Ohio State)
12) Miami Dolphins (from Cowboys): Kadyn Proctor (T, Alabama)
13) Los Angeles Rams (from Falcons): Ty Simpson (QB, Alabama)
14) Baltimore Ravens: Vega Ioane (G, Penn State)
15) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Rueben Bain Jr. (EDGE, Miami)
16) New York Jets (from Colts): Kenyon Sadiq (TE, Oregon)
17) Detroit Lions: Blake Miller (T, Clemson)
18) Minnesota Vikings: Caleb Banks (DT, Florida)
19) Carolina Panthers: Monroe Freeling (T, Georgia)
20) Philadelphia Eagles (from Packers via Cowboys): Makai Lemon (WR, USC)
21) Pittsburgh Steelers: Max Iheanachor (T, Arizona State)
22) Los Angeles Chargers: Akheem Mesidor (EDGE, Miami)
23) Dallas Cowboys (from Eagles): Malachi Lawrence (EDGE, Central Florida)
24) Cleveland Browns (from Jaguars): KC Concepcion (WR, Texas A&M)
25) Chicago Bears: Dillon Thieneman (S, Oregon)
26) Houston Texans (from Bills): Keylan Rutledge (G, Georgia Tech)
27) Miami Dolphins (from 49ers): Chris Johnson (CB, San Diego State)
28) New England Patriots (from Texans via Bills): Caleb Lomu (T, Utah)
29) Kansas City Chiefs (from Rams): Peter Woods (DT, Clemson)
30) New York Jets (from Broncos via Dolphins and 49ers): Omar Cooper Jr. (WR, Indiana)
31) Tennessee Titans (from Patriots via Bills): Keldric Faulk (DE, Auburn)
32) Seattle Seahawks: Jadarian Price (RB, Notre Dame)

Round 2

33) San Francisco 49ers (from Jets): De’Zhaun Stribling (WR, Ole Miss)
34) Arizona Cardinals: Chase Bisontis (G, Texas A&M)
35) Buffalo Bills (from Titans): T.J. Parker (EDGE, Clemson)
36) Houston Texans (from Raiders): Kayden McDonald (DT, Ohio State)
37) New York Giants: Colton Hood (CB, Tennessee)
38) Las Vegas Raiders (from Commanders via Texans): Treydan Stukes (S, Arizona)
39) Cleveland Browns: Denzel Boston (WR, Washington)
40) Kansas City Chiefs: R Mason Thomas (EDGE, Oklahoma)
41) Cincinnati Bengals: Cashius Howell (EDGE, Texas A&M)
42) New Orleans Saints: Christen Miller (DT, Georgia)
43) Miami Dolphins: Jacob Rodriguez (LB, Texas Tech)
44) Detroit Lions (from Cowboys via Jets): Derrick Moore (EDGE, Michigan)
45) Baltimore Ravens: Zion Young (EDGE, Missouri)
46) Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Josiah Trotter (LB, Missouri)
47) Pittsburgh Steelers (from Colts): Germie Bernard (WR, Alabama)
48) Atlanta Falcons: Avieon Terrell (CB, Clemson)
49) Carolina Panthers (from Vikings): Lee Hunter (DT, Texas Tech)
50) New York Jets (from Lions): D’Angelo Ponds (CB, Indiana)
51) Minnesota Vikings (from Panthers): Jake Golday (LB, Cincinnati)
52) Green Bay Packers: Brandon Cisse (CB, South Carolina)
53) Indianapolis Colts (from Steelers): C.J. Allen (LB, Georgia)
54) Philadelphia Eagles: Eli Stowers (TE, Vanderbilt)
55) New England Patriots (from Chargers): Gabe Jacas (EDGE, Illinois)
56) Jacksonville Jaguars: Nate Boerkircher (TE, Texas A&M)
57) Chicago Bears: Logan Jones (C, Iowa)
58) Cleveland Browns (from 49ers): Emmanuel McNeil-Warren (S, Toledo)
59) Houston Texans: Marlin Klein (TE, Michigan)
60) Tennessee Titans (from Bills via Bears): Anthony Hill Jr. (LB, Texas)
61) Los Angeles Rams: Max Klare (TE, Ohio State)
62) Buffalo Bills (from Broncos): Davison Igbinosun (CB, Ohio State)
63) Los Angeles Chargers (from Patriots): Jake Slaughter, C (Florida)
64) Seattle Seahawks: Bud Clark (S, TCU)

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