Lance Zierlein 2024 NFL mock draft 2.0: Broncos move up for J.J. McCarthy; Chiefs add Xavier Worthy

  • Davis 1.0
  • Zierlein 2.0
  • Brooks 2.0
  • Filice 1.0
  • Jeremiah 2.0
  • Parr 1.0
  • Reuter 3-Round Mock
  • Frelund 1.0
  • Edholm 1.0

The 2024 NFL Scouting Combine moved us closer to the 2024 NFL Draft — and it gave me a chance to learn more about the rising crop of prospects. Below is my second mock draft of the year, which features a shake-up at the receiver position compared to my first go-around, along with a handful of projected trades.

Pick
1

Chicago Bears
(via CAR)

Caleb Williams
USC · QB · Junior

At this point, any outcome other than the Bears taking Williams with this selection would be a shock.

Pick
2

Washington Commanders

Jayden Daniels
LSU · QB · Senior

Offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury had success with Johnny Manziel in college and then handpicked Kyler Murray at Arizona. I see the Commanders giving the coach another dual-threat quarterback in Daniels.

Pick
3

New England Patriots

Drake Maye
North Carolina · QB · Sophomore (RS)

While Maye didn’t work out at the combine, the feedback from team sources was 100 percent positive regarding his interviews and work on the whiteboard. Let’s plug the QB into a QB-needy spot.

Pick
4

Arizona Cardinals

Malik Nabers
LSU · WR · Junior

The selection should be an easy one in terms of position choice, but stacking the top receivers will be more complicated. There’s a lack of consensus on the WR pecking order, if my discussions with team sources tell me anything. Nabers is ultra-explosive and can work all three levels.

Pick
5

Los Angeles Chargers

Marvin Harrison Jr.
Ohio State · WR · Junior

The Chargers need a tackle, and this could be a valuable pick if they decide to trade back. But Harrison Jr. put up 118 and 120 yards against Jim Harbaugh while he coached Michigan, so why not bring the ballyhooed wideout aboard?

Pick
6

New York Giants

JC Latham
Alabama · OT · Junior

I understand that many Giants fans are clamoring for a change at quarterback, but it’s tough to pass up on a chance to grab your first choice at a position of major need. Latham is my top tackle in this draft.

Pick
7

Tennessee Titans

Joe Alt
Notre Dame · OT · Junior

Tennessee might have to choose between Rome Odunze and a tackle here. While there will still be excellent receivers available outside of the first round, Alt is one of the safer OTs in the draft.

Pick
8

Atlanta Falcons

Jared Verse
Florida State · Edge · Senior

Let’s go out on a limb and predict the Falcons make a trade with the Bears for QB Justin Fields or sign Kirk Cousins. If that happens, Atlanta could turn its attention to the pass rush and land a game-ready powerhouse ready to attack the pocket and play the run.

Pick
9

Denver Broncos

J.J. McCarthy
Michigan · QB · Junior

PROJECTED TRADE WITH CHICAGO BEARS

With Russell Wilson on his way out, the Broncos dive head-first back into the quarterback market by moving up a few spots and grabbing a young signal-caller with plenty of upside for Sean Payton to mold.

Pick
10

New York Jets

Taliese Fuaga
Oregon State · OT · Senior

The Jets need a tackle (or tackles), and this choice will come down to whoever they believe can step in and help protect Aaron Rodgers right away. That might be Fuaga.

Pick
11

Minnesota Vikings

Dallas Turner
Alabama · Edge · Junior

General manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah recently rejected the idea of dealing Justin Jefferson, but if he changes his mind, then this pick could easily become Rome Odunze. For now, we add a pass rusher who tested off the charts at the combine and comes with a winning pedigree.

Pick
12

Chicago Bears

Rome Odunze
Washington · WR · Senior

PROJECTED TRADE WITH DENVER BRONCOS

GM Ryan Poles slides back from No. 9 overall, adds draft capital and falls into his choice of pass rusher or pass catcher. Ultimately, the opportunity to boost the supporting cast for Caleb Williams is too hard to pass up.

Pick
13

Las Vegas Raiders

Byron Murphy II
Texas · DT · Junior

Murphy is heavily muscled with very little body fat. He’s explosive, quick out of his stance and extremely powerful for his size. He feels like an easy selection in this spot.

Pick
14

New Orleans Saints

Troy Fautanu
Washington · OT · Senior

Fautanu was considered a potential guard by many heading into the combine, but he possesses the length and tape that says he can play tackle. And his outstanding showing in Indianapolis will shoot him up draft boards.

Pick
15

Indianapolis Colts

Brock Bowers
Georgia · TE · Junior

Bowers didn’t work out at the combine, so there won’t be much new buzz about him, but he’s highly regarded in team circles. In fact, there is a belief within those circles that he’ll be gone before this spot. In my mock, though, he’s still available — so, you’re welcome, Anthony Richardson and Shane Steichen.

Pick
16

Seattle Seahawks

Olumuyiwa Fashanu
Penn State · OT · Junior (RS)

The Seahawks could use a pass rusher here — and Laiatu Latu‘s still available — but they are in trouble on the offensive line. Seattle might need to draft a talented young tackle and kick a starter inside to guard to help shore up some of its issues.

Pick
17

Jacksonville Jaguars

Terrion Arnold
Alabama · CB · Sophomore (RS)

C.J. Stroud and the Texans seemed to put AFC South defenses on notice last season. Arnold is an in-your-face coverage talent with high football character and the kind of competitive fire Jaguars coaches will love.

Pick
18

Cincinnati Bengals

Brian Thomas Jr.
LSU · WR · Junior

While the Bengals could use tackle help on the right side immediately, Thomas gives them a highly athletic inside/outside option with electric speed who can step in and play right away. He can also become the WR2, should the team ultimately need a successor to the franchise-tagged Tee Higgins.

Pick
19

Houston Texans
(via CLE)

Quinyon Mitchell
Toledo · CB · Senior

PROJECTED TRADE WITH RAMS

GM Nick Caserio follows up his aggressive (and successful) 2023 draft with a move up the board for a big, fast cornerback to pair with Derek Stingley Jr., as the Texans seek to take a step forward in competing with the top offenses in the league.

Pick
20

Pittsburgh Steelers

Nate Wiggins
Clemson · CB · Junior

Pittsburgh has a variety of decisions to make in free agency, but there will still be needs across the board by the time the draft comes. Wiggins addresses the cornerback spot with elite top-end speed and the fluidity to stay connected to NFL route-runners.

Pick
21

Miami Dolphins

Chop Robinson
Penn State · Edge · Junior

In the wake of serious season-ending injuries to both Jaelan Phillips and Bradley Chubb, it won’t surprise me if the Dolphins grab a veteran pass rusher in free agency, then draft the raw (but ridiculously explosive) Robinson, who has immense upside to develop with more tutelage.

Pick
22

Buffalo Bills

Laiatu Latu
UCLA · Edge · Senior

PROJECTED TRADE WITH EAGLES

The Bills’ recent Super Bowl bids have been short-circuited by opposing quarterbacks who prove to be just too much for their defense to handle. Brandon Beane pulls the trigger and moves up to snag the most polished pass rusher in the draft to go quarterback hunting for Buffalo.

Pick
23

Los Angeles Rams

Tyler Guyton
Oklahoma · OT · Junior (RS)

PROJECTED TRADE WITH TEXANS

While the Rams have a variety of spots to fill, they also have the projected cap space to attack free agency. The chance to upgrade the left tackle spot in the draft is too good to pass up.

Pick
24

Dallas Cowboys

Amarius Mims
Georgia · OT · Junior

Mims is a mountain of a man with elite traits and an enormous ceiling of potential. He never played left tackle at Georgia, so he’d likely plug in at RT in Dallas, with Tyler Smith bouncing out to the blind side.

Pick
25

Green Bay Packers

Graham Barton
Duke · IOL · Senior

Green Bay has a potential hole at the guard spot, and Barton would be a great addition, as he can play multiple positions along the offensive line and is the most talented interior lineman in this year’s draft.

Pick
26

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Kool-Aid McKinstry
Alabama · CB · Junior

With Mike Evans agreeing to re-up, there is no longer a pressing need at wideout, so the Bucs can focus their attention on cornerback, selecting the technician from Alabama in this simulation.

Pick
27

Arizona Cardinals
(via HOU)

Jackson Powers-Johnson
Oregon · C · Junior

Powers-Johnson is burly, tough and smart. After watching GM Monti Ossenfort operate in last year’s draft, I can see that he has a vision and philosophy for building his team, and my guess is the trenches continue to get the attention they deserve.

Pick
28

Philadelphia Eagles

Adonai Mitchell
Texas · WR · Junior

PROJECTED TRADE WITH BILLS

Mitchell didn’t play a ton of college football, and he’s still very raw as a route-runner, but his blazing 40-yard-dash time at the combine (4.34 seconds), along with his game tape from the Longhorns’ win over Alabama, will move him into this spot — or earlier in the draft.

Pick
29

Detroit Lions

Darius Robinson
Missouri · DL · Senior

The former defensive tackle switched to defensive end this past season and provided impressive returns. He can play power end and bump inside to rush, or he can just add more weight and play inside full time. Either way, he’s a fit with (and fills a need for) the Lions.

Pick
30

Washington Commanders

Cooper DeJean
Iowa · CB · Junior

PROJECTED TRADE WITH RAVENS

The Commanders have plenty of draft capital this year, and they use some of it to jump back into the first round for a cornerback who is big, fast and physical, with the toughness to move to safety if the scheme calls for it.

Pick
31

San Francisco 49ers

Jer'Zhan Newton
Illinois · DT · Senior

With defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw potentially headed out of town via free agency, I’ll give the 49ers a talented pass rusher with good size who could come in and compete for rush-down reps early on.

Pick
32

Kansas City Chiefs

Xavier Worthy
Texas · WR · Junior

Travis Kelce won’t play forever, so the Chiefs need to find another pass catcher to go with Rashee Rice (who might be an emerging star in his own right). The separation speed of Worthy — who set a new combine record with a 4.21 40 — is unique, giving him the ability to rip the top off of defenses, and he’s much less linear than recently released veteran Marquez Valdes-Scantling.

  • LANCE'S MOCKS: 4.0
  • 3.0
  • 2.0
  • 1.0

Similar Posts