Full 7-round Ravens mock draft as we kick off the 2026 NFL offseason
The Super Bowl is behind us, and the NFL offseason is officially here. All eyes will turn toward the 2026 NFL draft. The first day will feature only the first round, the second day will feature the second and third rounds, and the draft will conclude with the final four rounds on the third day.
This year, the NFL Draft Main Theater and Main Stage will be located just outside Acrisure Stadium on Pittsburgh's North Shore, placing the Draft at the heart of one of the country's most recognizable sports districts.
With the new league year fast approaching, we're releasing our first seven-round mock draft for the Ravens Wire via the PFF draft simulator and sending reinforcements to Baltimore at several key positions on both sides of the football.
Pick 14 Olaivavega Ioane, G, Penn State
Ioane plays with intense power and quickness, using 330 pounds of elite force, earning second-team All-America honors from the Walter Camp Football Foundation as an offensive guard. Ioane is the 158th Nittany Lion (192nd selection) to be named an All-American by an NCAA-recognized outlet (AFCA, Associated Press, FWAA, The Sporting News, Walter Camp Football Foundation). Ioane was selected to the All-Big Ten Second Team in 2024 and to the Honorable Mention Team in 2023. He'll exit State College having played in 44 games and made 32 starts at Penn State. According to PFF, he allowed zero sacks and three pressures in 310 pass blocking snaps in 2025.
Pick 45 Lee Hunter, DI, Texas Tech
A huge interior defender and run game destroyer at Texas Tech, Hunter earned first-team All-American and first-team All-Big 12 in his redshirt senior season. The 6-4, 330-pound defensive tackle posted 8.5 tackles for loss in addition to 2.5 sacks and a forced fumble. He finished his career with 168 total tackles and 7.5 sacks.
#RedRaiders NT Lee Hunter is so powerful. He has a real chance of being an impact starting nose at the next level. When you are 6060u, 330u with brute power, heavy hands, and block recognition, it translates.
One of my favorite players in this draft class. pic.twitter.com/fm0F41kmD8— Jared Feinberg (@Jared_NFLDraft) February 6, 2026
Pick 80 Jake Slaughter, C, Florida
Slaughter is a 6'4", 303-pound center prospect who started 33 career games at center for the Gators, earning AP All-SEC First Team honors in 2024 and 2025. Slaughter turned 23 years old in December.
Pick 115 Marlin Klein, TE, Michigan
During his final year at Michigan, Klein appeared in 11 games, with six starts at tight end, catching 24 passes for 248 yards and one touchdown.
Pick 152 Davison Igbinosun, CB, Ohio State
Another player for Roseman to watch: Igbinosun's allowed catch rate is among the nation's best. According to PFF, he's forced 11 incompletions on the season and has allowed only 15 receptions, including zero touchdowns. A former freshman All-American at Ole Miss who has since earned honorable mention All-Big Ten accolades each of the past two years at Ohio State.
Pick 160 from LAC Quintayvious Hutchins, ED, Boston College
An undersized edge rusher, Hutchins developed into a disruptive presence up front with 3.5 sacks, 8 QB hits, and a forced fumble in his final season.
Pick 172 (Compensatory) Zavion Thomas, WR, LSU
Thomas had his best season in 2025, logging 41 receptions for 488 yards with four touchdowns. He also had 99 rushing yards and a score on the ground.
Pick 173 (Compensatory) Jager Burton, OG/C, Kentucky
With experience at both guard spots and center, Burton is big and athletic.
Pick 249 (Compensatory) Miller Moss, QB, Louisville
Moss had a solid 2024 season at USC and posted nearly identical numbers in 2025 with Louisville, completing 64.2 percent of his passes for a career-high 2,679 yards while posting a 16:7 touchdown to interception ratio.
Pick 252 (Compensatory) Eli Heidenreich, RB, Navy
Heidenreich is a versatile running back who became only the second player in FBS history since 1956 to achieve both 475 or more rushing yards and 925 or more receiving yards in the same season. The only other player to accomplish this feat is Tavon Austin from West Virginia, who did so in 2012, recording 643 rushing yards and 1,289 receiving yards. Heidenreich holds the school record for the most career receiving touchdowns, with a total of 16. Additionally, his six touchdown catches in each of the last two seasons tied the school's single-season record.
Heidenreich holds the school record for the most career receiving yards with 1,994 yards. In 2025, he also set a school record with 941 receiving yards. Additionally, his 51 receptions in a single season are tied for the fifth-most in school history, and his total of 109 career catches ranks as the second most in the school's history.
This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire: 2026 NFL Draft: Baltimore reload in a post-Super Bowl mock
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