The 2026 NFL Draft may be over, but we’re not yet done with 2026 mock drafts. It is time to score them.
The scoring system is simple. For every number of picks a selection is off, the mock drafter gets a point. If someone mocked TJ Parker to the Chargers at 22, which was a fairly popular pick, they got 13 points because Parker went 35th overall.
If they were bold enough to mock a trade and were wrong–and mock trades are almost always wrong–they were penalized double the points. This does mean that they penalized twice if they were wrong on both ends of the trade, but nobody made them mock a trade, they brought this on themselves.
No credit was given for correctly predicting the player and team but not the position. For example, 19 mocks had the Jets take Omar Cooper at 16, he went to them at 30. They missed by half a round. This is the whole point of the exercise.
This year, 50 mock drafts: staples of the draft community, previous high scorers, mocks that claim to have been high scorers, plus two other staples as a sort of control: the excellent Arif Hasan Big Board, and the BGN Community Mock Draft.
Emmanuel McNeil-Warren to DAL via trade with PHI at 23
McShay returned from the wilderness after his stint at ESPN to go to The Ringer to nail this draft. He was the only person to mock Ty Simpson to the Rams at 13. 12 of his incorrect picks were off by just 5 spots or less, and he had the 5th best score in the final ten picks, where most people trip up.
Best mock that had a Ty Simpson trade, not counting a Simpson trade: Evan Silva. 23% of Silva’s points were from a projected trade to 32. Up until then he had a score of 124.
Best mock that had Jermod McCoy, not counting McCoy: Matthew Freedman. 38% of his points were from McCoy, he had 133 points in his 31 other picks.
Most common correct picks that were not Fernando Mendoza: 34 mocks correctly predicted that the Jets would draft David Bailey 2nd overall. 31 correctly predicted the Ravens would take Olaivavega Ioane at 14.
No surprise here, Simms is a generationally bad mock drafter. He had Monroe Freeling 6th overall, Colton Hood 12th, Denzel Boston 14th, Kayden McDonald 18th, Omar Cooper 21st via trade, TJ Parker 22nd via trade, Spencer Fano 24th via trade, and Jermod McCoy 31st. Making this more impressive is that he didn’t have a Ty Simpson trade, and he was one of only two people to predict Caleb Banks as a 1st rounder.
Whoops: The Yahoo duo of Nate Tice and Charles McDonald, along with Eric Edholm and Danny Kelly, got just one non-Fernando Mendoza pick correct.
Close, but no cigar: 19 mock drafters correctly predicted that the Jets would draft Omar Cooper. They just thought the Jets would take him at 16.
Do’h: 24 mocks had the Cardinals trading up for Ty Simpson.
Reach? The only person who had Carnell Tate 4th overall to the Titans was Titans GM Mike Borgonzi.
Albert Breer and Chris Simms were the only mock drafters to have Caleb Banks, who went 18th overall to the Vikings, in the 1st round at all. Breer had him at 22, Simms at 29.
Four mocks had Tate Rutledge as a 1st rounder: Josh Norris, Pete Prisco, Rob Rang, and Mike Renner. None of them had him going as early as 26, which is where he went.
Chris Simms was the only to not have Dillon Thieneman.
Chris Simms and Connor Orr did not have Keldric Faulk.
Tony Pauline, Pete Prisco, Ethan Woodie, and the Athletic beat writers did not have Blake Miller.
