NFL Draft Pick Signings: 5/9/24
As a number of teams prepare for rookie minicamps this weekend, Thursday has represented a signing day of sorts for rookie draftees. Here is the latest batch of mid- and late-rounders to sign their four-year rookie deals:
Arizona Cardinals
- LB Xavier Thomas (fifth round, Clemson)
- T Christian Jones (fifth round, Texas)
- WR Tejhaun Palmer (sixth round, UAB)
- CB Jaden Davis (seventh round, Miami)
Buffalo Bills
- T Travis Clayton (seventh round, England)
Denver Broncos
- CB Kris Abrams-Draine (fifth round, Missouri)
Houston Texans
- TE Cade Stover (fourth round, Ohio State)
- LB Jamal Hill (sixth round, Oregon)
- RB Jawhar Jordan (sixth round, Louisville)
- DE Solomon Byrd (sixth round, USC)
- DT Marcus Harris (seventh round, Auburn)
- OL LaDarius Henderson (seventh round, Michigan)
Las Vegas Raiders
- CB Decamerion Richardson (fourth round, Mississippi State)
- LB Tommy Eichenberg (fifth round, Ohio State)
- RB Dylan Laube (sixth round, New Hampshire)
- S Trey Taylor (seventh round, Air Force)
- CB M.J. Devonshire (seventh round, Pittsburgh)
New Orleans Saints
- QB Spencer Rattler (fifth round, South Carolina)
- WR Bub Means (fifth round, Pittsburgh)
- LB Jaylan Ford (fifth round, Texas)
- DT Khristian Boyd (sixth round, Northern Iowa)
- T Josiah Ezirim (seventh round, Eastern Kentucky)
New York Giants
- RB Tyrone Tracy Jr. (fifth round, Purdue)
Tennessee Titans
- CB Jarvis Brownlee (fifth round, Louisville)
- WR Jha’Quan Jackson (sixth round, Tulane)
- S James Williams (seventh round, Miami)
- EDGE Jaylen Harrell (seventh round, Michigan)
Cowboys, Giants Had RB MarShawn Lloyd On Day 2 Radar
Linked to running backs during the pre-draft process, the Cowboys instead passed on drafting one and followed through with what became a much-discussed reunion with Ezekiel Elliott. The Giants waited until the fifth round to add a back to their group.
This RB class did not generate too much hype, with only one player — Texas’ Jonathon Brooks — going off the board in the first two rounds. Closely connected to Brooks, the Cowboys also did plenty of work on one of this class’ second-tier options. MarShawn Lloyd‘s camp viewed Dallas as one of the teams that could take the former USC and South Carolina back, ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler notes, adding the Giants also carried interest in the recent Pac-12 RB.
Lloyd ended up going 88th overall to the Packers, making him an intriguing backup in a contingent housing free agency pickup Josh Jacobs and the recently re-signed AJ Dillon. Both the Giants and Cowboys carry more questions at the position, seeing as each team refrained from high-end investments this offseason.
The Giants were not willing to go near where the Eagles did for Saquon Barkley, failing to make an offer despite having submitted a proposal that included more than $20MM fully guaranteed last summer. They gave Devin Singletary a three-year, $16.5MM deal ($9.5MM guaranteed at signing) to replace Barkley, and the team has 2023 fifth-rounder Eric Gray and rookie fifth-rounder Tyrone Tracy Jr. as Singletary’s top backups. The Giants eyed Lloyd, per Fowler, but he landed between the team’s third- (No. 71) and fourth-round (No. 106) picks. Before the draft, a report indicated the Giants were eyeing veteran RB help. They may, however, be content once again to roll with an experienced starter and unseasoned backups.
Passing on Derrick Henry and other available RBs early in free agency, the Cowboys re-signed Elliott to a one-year, $3MM deal. Dallas has Royce Freeman and 2023 Tony Pollard backups Rico Dowdle and Deuce Vaughn among its backfield options. This plan (as it stands now, that is) has generated some scrutiny. The team showed interest in Lloyd, doing plenty of pre-draft work on him, and Tennessee’s Jaylen Wright, Fowler adds. The Cowboys, however, did not carry a fourth-round pick. Wright went to the Dolphins, who traded up to acquire the SEC product at No. 120.
Lloyd transferred from South Carolina to USC in 2023, totaling a career-high 820 rushing yards (7.1 per carry) last season. Lloyd tallied nine rushing touchdowns with the Gamecocks in 2022. He will be among the rookie RBs attempting to prove teams wrong for their pre-draft outlook on this class.
Giants Claim QB Nathan Rourke
MAY 8: The Falcons joined the Giants in submitting a claim, ESPN.com’s Adam Schefter notes. The Giants finishing with a worse 2023 record (6-11) compared to the Falcons (7-10) gave them the priority here. Atlanta’s QB situation has generated far more attention over the past two weeks, but the team also has a starter (Kirk Cousins) coming off a major injury.
As Cousins rehabs his Achilles tear, the team has Michael Penix Jr. and Taylor Heinicke as healthy options for offseason work. The team also reached an agreement with UDFA John Paddock (Illinois). Rourke would have become a fifth QB on Atlanta’s 90-man offseason roster.
MAY 7: Nathan Rourke has not yet turned his CFL production into regular-season NFL work, but teams continue to show interest in the Canadian quarterback.
Being waived by the Patriots on Monday, Rourke will make his way to New York. The Giants submitted a successful waiver claim to add the QB, NFL.com’s Tom Pelissero tweets. This will be team No. 3 for Rourke, who has spent time with the Jaguars and Pats during his young NFL career.
[RELATED: Drew Lock In Play To Win Giants’ QB1 Gig?]
Rourke, 25, is a British Columbia native who played at Ohio University in the late 2010s. He ventured back north of the border in 2020 and became a successful passer for the BC Lions. The early-2020s production in Canada drew attention from nearly half the NFL. Twelve teams worked out Rourke from December 2022 to January 2023. The Giants were among them; they will now get a closer look at the aspiring NFL backup.
The Giants passed on adding a quarterback in the draft, despite exhaustive research on this year’s class, but did send the Patriots a substantial trade-up proposal for No. 3 overall. The offer, which included Nos. 6 and 47 overall and a 2025 first-rounder, was believed to be so the Giants could select Drake Maye. New England balked and drafted Maye, leading the Giants to take Malik Nabers. This kept Daniel Jones as the team’s QB centerpiece.
Rourke will join Jones, Drew Lock and Tommy DeVito in the Giants’ QB room. Teams regularly carry four QBs into offseason programs and into training camp. The Giants now have three healthy QBs on their roster; Jones remains on the rehab route post-ACL surgery. The five-year starter is expected to be back come training camp. The NFL also increased flexibility regarding the game’s premier position, allowing a non-roster player to serve as the emergency third QB.
Rourke spent most of last year with the Jags, signing a futures deal and spending time on both their active roster and practice squad. The Pats claimed Rourke off waivers in December; they beat the Texans to the punch there. But after making major changes to their QB room this offseason, the Pats moved on.
Giants Add Chris Snee To Scouting Staff
The most decorated 21st-century Giants offensive lineman will make his way back to the organization. Former All-Pro guard Chris Snee will join Joe Schoen‘s staff.
Snee will be part of Schoen’s scouting contingent, the New York Post’s Paul Schwartz notes. This addition comes two years after the parties could not make an agreement work back in 2022. But Schoen and the former 10-year Giants O-line starter circled back to a deal, which will begin a reunion Snee has hoped for since retiring.
Part of a solid offensive line nucleus during the Giants’ two Super Bowl seasons, Snee earned four Pro Bowl invites and two All-Pro nods — including a first-team appearance in 2008 — during a career spent only with the Giants. The team drafted Snee in Tom Coughlin‘s first offseason as HC, bringing in the interior O-lineman after the Boston College alum had already become Coughlin’s son-in-law.
The pick produced a 141-start career, with Snee becoming a right guard anchor for Big Blue. Of the Giants’ long-running O-line quartet that included David Diehl, Sean O’Hara and Kareem McKenzie, Snee led the way in terms of Pro Bowl nods. No pure guard in Giants history matches Snee’s four Pro Bowl invites.
Snee, 42, hung up his cleats just before training camp in 2014. He reunited with Coughlin as an O-line scout for the Jaguars during the latter’s time as the team’s executive vice president. Snee also returned to his alma mater in 2022, working as a football analyst. Talks to bring Snee on two years ago did not produce a deal, but the Giants will move forward with a reunion during Schoen’s third offseason in charge.
2024 NFL General Manager Search Tracker
With the Patriots hiring Eliot Wolf as their de facto GM after having moved on from Bill Belichick, all five teams in need of a GM have filled their post this offseason. If other teams decide to make GM changes, they’ll be added to this list.
Updated 5-11-24 (4:35pm CT)
Carolina Panthers
- Brandon Brown, assistant general manager (Giants): To conduct second interview
- Mike Disner, chief operating officer (Lions): Withdrew from consideration
- Ed Dodds, assistant general manager (Colts): Interviewed 1/14
- Mike Greenberg, assistant general manager (Buccaneers): Interview requested
- Alec Halaby, assistant general manager (Eagles): To conduct second interview
- Khai Harley, assistant general manager (Saints): Interview requested
- Champ Kelly, interim general manager (Raiders): Interviewed 1/11
- Nick Matteo, vice president of football administration (Ravens): Interviewed 1/15
- Will McClay, vice president of player personnel (Cowboys): Withdrew from consideration
- Dan Morgan, assistant general manager (Panthers): Hired
- Samir Suleiman, vice president of football administration (Panthers): To interview
- Brandt Tilis, vice president of football operations (Chiefs): Interviewed 1/15
Las Vegas Raiders
- Trey Brown, senior personnel executive (Bengals): Interview requested
- Ed Dodds, assistant general manager (Colts): Interviewed 1/12; conducted second interview
- Terrance Gray, vice president of player personnel (Bills): Interviewed 1/12
- Champ Kelly, interim general manager (Raiders): Conducted second interview 1/15; in play to stay with team
- Kelly Kleine Van Calligan, executive director of football operations (Broncos): Interviewed 1/10
- Adam Peters, assistant general manager (49ers): Interview requested
- Tom Telesco, former general manger (Chargers): Hired
Los Angeles Chargers
- Dawn Aponte, chief football administrative officer (NFL): Interviewed 1/22
- Brandon Brown, assistant general manager (Giants): Conducted second interview 1/24
- Ian Cunningham, assistant general manager (Bears): Interviewed 1/14
- Ed Dodds, assistant general manager (Colts): Interviewed 1/17
- Terrance Gray, vice president of player personnel (Bills): Interviewed 1/16
- Joe Hortiz, director of player personnel (Ravens): Hired
- Jeff Ireland, assistant general manager (Saints): Interviewed 1/17
- Jeff King, co-director of player personnel (Bears): Interviewed 1/19
- Will McClay, vice president of player personnel (Cowboys): Withdrew from consideration
- Adam Peters, assistant general manager (49ers): Interview requested
- JoJo Wooden, interim general manager (Chargers): Interviewed 1/11
New England Patriots
- Trey Brown, senior personnel executive (Bengals): Declined interview request
- Terrance Gray, director of player personnel (Bills): Declined interview request
- Quentin Harris, former VP of player personnel (Cardinals): Declined interview request
- Brandon Hunt, director of scouting (Eagles): Interviewed 5/7-5/8
- Samir Suleiman, former director of football administration (Panthers): Interviewed 5/8
- Eliot Wolf, de facto general manager (Patriots): Hired
Washington Commanders
- Mike Borgonzi, assistant general manager (Chiefs): Interviewed 1/9
- Glenn Cook, assistant general manager (Browns): Interviewed 1/9
- Ian Cunningham, assistant general manager (Bears): Interviewed 1/10; finalist
- Alec Halaby, assistant general manager (Eagles): Interviewed 1/10
- Will McClay, vice president of player personnel (Cowboys): Withdrew from consideration
- Adam Peters, assistant general manager (49ers): Hired
Giants, WR Darius Slayton Discussing Contract Resolution
Darius Slayton is away from the Giants’ offseason program as he angles for a new contract. He was in attendance at the annual Gridiron Gala in New York, though, and while there he provided an update on where things stand with he and the team. 
“Right now, my agent [Michael Perrett] and [general manager] Joe [Schoen], they’re in negotiations. They’re talking,” Slayton said (via ESPN’s Jordan Raanan). “Hopefully we’ll come to a resolution here soon.”
Slayton re-signed with the Giants last offseason on a two-year, $12MM deal. A $2.6MM roster bonus has already been paid out, and the 27-year-old is due a base salary of $2.5MM for the 2024 campaign. An adjustment to the deal or an extension could increase Slayton’s security beyond the coming season, and the latter move would likely lower his 2024 cap hit ($8.15MM).
Schoen said prior to the draft that no talks with Slayton’s camp were ongoing, so this update marks a notable departure from that stance. The Giants used their top draft pick on a wideout (LSU’s Malik Nabers), a move which has the potential to provide the team with a true No. 1 at the position. Schoen noted, however, that Nabers’ addition will have no impact on New York’s intentions with respect to Slayton.
The latter is “confident” a resolution will arrive before training camp, and it will be interesting to see if negotiations produce an agreement in the coming days or weeks. Slayton recorded a team-leading 770 yards and four touchdowns on 50 receptions in 2023, with his catch total matching his career high. Expectations will be elevated for the Giants’ passing game this season regardless of who is under center, and Nabers’ presence could lower Slayton’s role on offense. Still, he figures to be a key figure for New York moving forward, and a new deal would add clarity to his future.
Drew Lock In Play To Win Giants’ Starting QB Job?
Giants GM Joe Schoen has repeatedly indicated Daniel Jones is on track to return by training camp and reprise his role as the team’s starting quarterback. The team also showed tremendous confidence in the rehabbing QB by using the No. 6 overall pick to draft Malik Nabers, doing so despite extensive work on this year’s passer class.
Jones’ resume doubles as an unusual one for a quarterback on track for a sixth year as a team’s starter, but the party line (and Jones’ contract) centers around that being the Giants’ path. However, more rumblings about a QB competition are coming out. NFL.com’s Daniel Jeremiah said during his Move the Sticks podcast (h/t the New York Post’s Ryan Dunleavy) Drew Lock holds a legitimate chance to win that starting job.
[RELATED: Giants Deny Daniel Jones Buyer’s Remorse]
The Giants thoroughly scouted this year’s QB class, being closely linked to both Drake Maye and J.J. McCarthy and hosting the likes of Bo Nix and Spencer Rattler on “30” visits along with the recent North Carolina and Michigan starters. The value did not align for the Giants at No. 6, with a clear line of demarcation forming between Maye and the next tier at the position. That led to the team offering the Patriots Nos. 6 and 47, along with a 2025 first-rounder for No. 3 overall. As it stands, the Giants remain a Jones-centric operation.
“Yeah, for me, I said it in January after the season. Expectation was Daniel would be our starter and we brought Drew Lock in to be his backup and Tommy [DeVito] has been the backup,” Schoen said, via ESPN.com’s Jordan Raanan. “So that’s where we are and that’s how we’ll move forward this season. Daniel is still under contract for three more years. As it sits today, that is where we are.”
Certainly not a ringing Jones endorsement, Schoen’s comments come after Seahawks GM John Schneider said the Giants dangled the carrot of giving Lock a chance to compete for the starting job. Lock could well vie for playing time when Jones is healthy, the New York Daily News’ Pat Leonard adds.
Schoen’s assessment also points to a second “prove it” year for the 2019 No. 6 overall pick. Jones, 26, responded well to such a challenge in 2022, piloting a moderately talented Giants team to a surprising divisional-round run. But he fared poorly before going down last season, doing so after receiving $81MM guaranteed at signing. That deal guarantees Jones’ $35.5MM base salary this season. After this year, the Giants can move on without too much in the way of dead money.
The Giants’ QB research project pitted this year’s class against Jones and Lock, and Jeremiah adds Maye provided the cutoff point. The team used Lock as a central comparison tool while evaluating this year’s class, per Jeremiah, who said the former second-round pick has a “really good shot” of winning the Giants’ job. Given the team’s 2023 commitment to Jones, it would be borderline shocking if Lock — who signed a one-year, $5MM deal in March — beat him out. On the whole, however, Jones has not given the Giants what they hoped for in an Eli Manning successor. And just about everything went wrong for the five-year starter last season.
A March report indicated the Giants’ QB search largely hinged on a lack of confidence Jones could stay healthy. Jones’ health history also is believed to have partially influenced Lock’s decision to sign with the Giants. Two neck injuries — one of which requiring a 2022 surgery — have hindered the scrutinized starter, and he will not be full-go until at least training camp. That will open the door to Lock offseason starter reps. Those could be important, if this is to become a genuine competition.
Chosen 36 spots after Jones in 2019, Lock lost a competition with Geno Smith in 2022 and did not threaten the latter’s job security last year. The former Broncos draftee has proven erratic when given extended run as a starter. Lock led the NFL in INTs during his last full-season starter run (2020), doing so despite only finishing 12 games. He also played the lead role in sinking the Broncos in 2021, starting the team’s final three games (all losses) after entering a Week 15 contest with the team at 7-6. Lock, 27, did play well in a start against the Eagles last year, leading a game-winning drive. Of course, the Eagles’ defense was on the brink of a full-on collapse at that point.
It would be interesting to see the Giants bail on Jones as their starter just as they have given him a No. 1-caliber wide receiver prospect; the team’s previous hopes at doing so failed miserably. But Jones has just one top-half QBR finish (2022) and one season with more than 15 TD passes (2019). He should be considered on the hot seat. The Giants also would owe an additional $12MM in injury guarantees if Jones is unable to pass a physical by the start of the 2025 league year.
Moving parts exist here, and while it would surprise if Lock received the call based on his past and the Giants’ Jones investment, this could be a storyline to monitor soon.
Giants Sign CB David Long
After four years in a fairly consistent, part-time starting role with the Rams, David Long struggled to find consistency in 2023. He’ll hope for less changes of scenery in 2024 after signing with the Giants today. 
After playing out his rookie contract as a third-round pick out of Michigan, Long signed a deal to join the Raiders at the opening of free agency last year. He started one of eight game appearances for Las Vegas before getting waived by the team in early November. He was claimed by Carolina, where he started one more game in three appearances before getting waived by the Panthers. He was claimed one more time last year by the Packers but was waived just prior to the playoffs. After clearing waivers, the Green Bay signed Long to its practice squad, elevating him for the team’s victory over the Cowboys.
After a delayed start to his rookie year in Los Angeles, Long started 10 games in 52 appearances. After playing minimally in his first two seasons, Long established himself on the Rams defense as a key defender in the rotation of defensive backs. He logged 77 total tackles, an interception, and seven passes defensed for the team that drafted him.
In New York, Long will come in to add some depth to the secondary. With Adoree’ Jackson departing in free agency, the Giants return Deonte Banks and Cor’Dale Flott as starters. The team also brought in Kentucky cornerback Andru Phillips in last week’s draft. Phillips and Long should be two of the team’s top options to step into a third cornerback role.
Latest On Giants, Vikings’ Offers For Patriots’ No. 3 Overall Pick
While Drake Maye generated split opinions as a prospect during the pre-draft process, the Patriots have a rookie quarterback other teams coveted. New England’s reassembled front office has the trade proposals to confirm the interest.
The Patriots did not close off trade avenues, holding talks leading up to going on the clock for their highest draft choice in 31 years. But buzz in the hours leading up to the draft all but locked in Maye to Foxborough. The Giants and Vikings, who each had been viewed as having steady interest in the North Carolina prospect, did make notable offers for the pick.
We heard post-draft the Giants continued to pursue Maye while the Pats were on the clock. Big Blue offered New England its 2025 first-rounder to move from No. 6 to No. 3; New York’s package included that 2025 first and its second-rounder (No. 47) this year, according to ESPN.com’s Jordan Raanan. The Vikings were OK unloading their No. 23 pick (along with No. 11) and their 2025 first to climb to No. 3, per ESPN.com’s Mike Reiss. Ultimately, the Pats balked and will build around Maye.
Considering how the Giants proceeded at No. 6, their pursuit of Maye qualifies as significant. The team has regrouped around Daniel Jones, despite doing steady work on this class’ top QBs. The Giants chose Malik Nabers over J.J. McCarthy, Michael Penix Jr. and Bo Nix. Each passer visited the team during the draft run-up, with Raanan adding the team did not have this QB crop’s second tier graded highly enough for an investment at No. 6.
“We had a lot of conversations with a lot of teams,” Giants GM Joe Schoen said. “I’m not going to get into specifics. We had a really good player at six. That was a position that I think was a need that we needed to upgrade. I’m fired up about the kid.”
The Giants’ Maye interest points to another make-or-break season for Jones, whose $40MM-per-year contract can be shed without too much damage in 2025. Jones performed well enough in his previous “prove it” season (2022), becoming the first QB to see his fifth-year option declined and then re-sign with that team. And Nabers profiles as the top target the 2019 first-rounder has been given while with the Giants. But Jones, who is expected to be finished with ACL rehab by training camp, is clearly on the clock once again.
The Vikings’ proposal also included two Patriots mid-round picks this year going to Minnesota, per Reiss. Going into the draft, the Patriots were not impressed with the offers they had received. As the Giants’ 2025 first-rounder dangled as an important chip — as the Pats would have only stepped back three spots in this draft and picked up a second — the Vikings essentially had to include two future firsts to present a viable offer. It cost the 49ers their 2022 and ’23 first-rounders, along with a third, to vault nine spots (No. 12 to No. 3) for Trey Lance in 2021. After New England passed, Minnesota did not end up needing to trade its No. 23 overall pick — later used to move up for Dallas Turner — to land McCarthy.
Each of this draft’s non-Caleb Williams first-round QBs trekked to Minnesota to meet with the Vikings before the draft. All but Jayden Daniels participated in a workout, with SI.com’s Albert Breer adding Daniels — who did not go through QB drills at the Combine or LSU’s pro day — passed on this part of the Vikings visit. Daniels had long been expected to go No. 2 to Washington, which was far less likely to trade the pick — despite the Raiders’ efforts — compared to the Patriots.
After Mac Jones could not sustain his rookie-year momentum — as the Pats cycled through offensive coordinators post-Josh McDaniels — Maye will be tasked with growing into a franchise-caliber passer. The 6-foot-4 prospect may well begin the season behind Jacoby Brissett, but given how this process usually goes, the two-year North Carolina starter should be expected to begin Pats QB1 work well before this season ends.
2024 NFL Draft Results: Team By Team
Here is every team’s haul from the 2024 NFL Draft:
Arizona Cardinals
- Round 1, No. 4: Marvin Harrison Jr. (WR, Ohio State) (signed)
- Round 1, No. 27 (from Texans): Darius Robinson (DL, Missouri) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 43 (from Falcons): Max Melton (CB, Rutgers) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 66: Trey Benson, RB (Florida State) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 71 (from Titans): Isaiah Adams (G, Illinois) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 82 (from Colts): Tip Reiman (TE, Illinois) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 90 (from Texans): Elijah Jones (CB, Boston College) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 104: Dadrion Taylor-Demerson (S, Texas Tech) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 138: Xavier Thomas (EDGE, Clemson) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 162 (from Texans): Christian Jones (OT, Texas) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 191 (from Colts): Tejhaun Palmer (WR, UAB) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 226 (from Giants): Jaden Davis (CB, Miami) (signed)
Atlanta Falcons
- Round 1, No. 8: Michael Penix Jr. (QB, Washington) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 35 (from Cardinals): Ruke Orhorhoro (DT, Clemson) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 74: Bralen Trice (EDGE, Washington) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 109: Brandon Dorlus (DT, Oregon) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 143: JD Bertrand (LB, Notre Dame) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 186 (from Vikings through Cardinals): Jase McClellan (RB, Alabama) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 187: Casey Washington (WR, Illinois) (signed)
- Round 6, 197 (from Browns): Zion Logue (DT, Georgia) (signed)
Baltimore Ravens
- Round 1, No. 30: Nate Wiggins (CB, Clemson) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 62: Roger Rosengarten (T, Washington) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 93: Adisa Isaac (EDGE, Penn State) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 113 (from Broncos through Jets): Devontez Walker (WR, North Carolina) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 130: T.J. Tampa (CB, Iowa State) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 165: Rasheen Ali (RB, Marshall) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 218 (from Jets): Devin Leary (QB, Kentucky) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 228 (from Jets): Nick Samac (C, Michigan State) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 250: Sanoussi Kane (S, Purdue) (signed)
Buffalo Bills
- Round 2, No. 33 (from Panthers): Keon Coleman (WR, Florida State) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 60: Cole Bishop (S, Utah) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 95 (from Chiefs): DeWayne Carter, DT (Duke) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 128: Ray Davis (RB, Kentucky) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 141 (from Giants through Panthers): Sedrick Van Pran-Granger (C, Georgia) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 160 (from Packers): Edefuan Ulofoshio (LB, Washington) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 168 (from Saints): Javon Solomon (EDGE, Troy) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 204: Tylan Grable (T, Central Florida) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 219 (from Packers): Daequan Hardy (CB, Penn State) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 221 (from Panthers through Titans and Chiefs): Travis Clayton (T, England) (signed)
Carolina Panthers
- Round 1, No. 32 (from Chiefs through Bills): Xavier Legette (WR, South Carolina) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 46 (from Colts): Jonathon Brooks (RB, Texas) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 72 (from Jets): Trevin Wallace (LB, Kentucky) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 101: Ja’Tavion Sanders (TE, Texas) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 157 (from Browns through Vikings): Chau Smith-Wade (CB, Washington State) (signed)
- Round 6: No. 200 (from Cowboys through Texans and Bills): Jaden Crumedy (DT, Mississippi State) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 240 (from Steelers): Michael Barrett (LB, Michigan) (signed)
Chicago Bears
- Round 1: No. 1 (from Panthers): Caleb Williams (QB, USC) (signed)
- Round 1, No. 9: Rome Odunze (WR, Washington) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 75: Kiran Amegadjie (T, Yale) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 122 (from Eagles): Tory Taylor (P, Iowa) (signed)
- Round 5: No. 144 (reacquired from Bills): Austin Booker (EDGE, Kansas) (signed)
Cincinnati Bengals
- Round 1, No. 18: Amarius Mims (T, Georgia) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 49: Kris Jenkins Jr. (DT, Michigan) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 80: Jermaine Burton, WR (Alabama) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 97: McKinnley Jackson (DT, Texas A&M) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 115: Erick All (TE, Iowa) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 149: Josh Newton (CB, TCU) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 194: Tanner McLachlan (TE, Arizona) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 214: Cedric Johnson (DE, Ole Miss) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 224 (from Cardinals through Texans): Daijahn Anthony (DB, Mississippi State) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 237: Matt Lee (C, Miami) (signed)
Cleveland Browns
- Round 2, No. 54: Michael Hall (DT, Ohio State) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 85: Zak Zinter (G, Michigan) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 156 (from Eagles through Cardinals): Jamari Thrash (WR, Louisville) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 206 (from Ravens): Nathaniel Watson (LB, Mississippi State) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 227 (from Titans): Myles Harden (CB, South Dakota) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 243: Jowon Briggs (DT, Cincinnati) (signed)
Dallas Cowboys
- Round 1, No. 29 (from Lions): Tyler Guyton (T, Oklahoma) (signed)
- Round 2, No. 56: Marshawn Kneeland (EDGE, Western Michigan) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 73 (from Vikings through Lions): Cooper Beebe (G, Kansas State) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 87: Marist Liufau (LB, Notre Dame) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 174: Caelen Carson (CB, Wake Forest) (signed)
- Round 6, No. 216: Ryan Flournoy (WR, Southeast Missouri State) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 233 (from Raiders): Nathan Thomas (T, Louisiana-Lafayette) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 244: Justin Rogers (DT, Auburn) (signed)
Denver Broncos
- Round 1, No. 12: Bo Nix (QB, Oregon) (signed)
- Round 3, No. 76: Jonah Elliss (EDGE, Utah) (signed)
- Round 4, No. 102 (from Commanders through Seahawks): Troy Franklin (WR, Oregon) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 145 (from Jets): Kris Abrams-Draine (CB, Missouri) (signed)
- Round 5, No. 147: Audric Estime (RB, Notre Dame) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 235 (from Seahawks): Devaughn Vele (WR, Utah) (signed)
- Round 7, No. 256 (from Jets): Nick Gargiulo (C, South Carolina) (signed)
