Miami Dolphins Final 2026 NFL Draft Grades: Did Miami walk the walk after talking the talk this winter?

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Miami Dolphins Final 2026 NFL Draft Grades: Did Miami walk the walk after talking the talk this winter?

The Miami Dolphins' first draft class under Jon-Eric Sullivan and Jeff Hafley is complete. Did they live up to their word from when they got the job?

Miami Dolphins Final 2026 NFL Draft Grades: Did Miami walk the walk after talking the talk this winter?

The Miami Dolphins' first draft class under Jon-Eric Sullivan and Jeff Hafley is complete. Did they live up to their word from when they got the job?

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The Miami Dolphins’ first draft class under Jon-Eric Sullivan and Jeff Hafley is complete. Did they live up to their word from when they got the job?

The Miami Dolphins have a whopping 13 new rookies in-house courtesy of the 2026 NFL Draft. This year’s class is going to get a lot of opportunities to play - that much is certain. But did the player pool that Miami’s leadership collected live up to the words and aspirations of Miami’s new leadership group? Jon-Eric Sullivan and Jeff Hafley have spent several interviews this offseason sharing their vision for the team. Here’s how each one of those players contributes (or doesn’t) to those goals.

Round 1, No. 12: OT Kadyn Proctor, Alabama Crimson Tide“There are certain core beliefs that I really do believe in like running the ball and being really physical up front, so when they know we’re going to run the ball, we’re still going to run it well.” – Head coach Jeff Hafley, 1/22/26Yeah. Proctor helps here, to say the least. He’s one of the most powerful players in the class with a major in blowing people off the ball. The mentality matches the quote.

Round 1, No. 27: CB Chris Johnson, San Diego State AztecsJohnson, per Hafley, fulfills a talent objective that was discussed at the NFL league meetings: finding a corner who can thrive at the line of scrimmage, vertically down the field, and in the intermediate phases of coverage. Hafley said those guys are rare. So finding one that the head coach things can do it all is a big deal.

🎥 Jeff Hafley on Chris Johnson: "I think he can win on all three [levels], and he can take the ball away, and he tackles, and he's aggressive… this was one of my favorite guys in the draft." (@MiamiDolphins) #PhinsUp pic.twitter.com/gltr022e0k

Round 2, No. 43: LB Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech Red Raiders“The toughness and the kind of attitude and competitive atmosphere that (Jeff Hafley) will bring to this football team will speak for itself as we move down the road.” – Jon-Eric Sullivan, 1/22/26Rodriguez is an exceptional competitor. He’s tough, has played through injury, and offers a relentless and tireless motor as a player. What’s more, his addition with a top-50 pick embodies the competitive atmosphere that Sullivan was referring. The Dolphins have Jordyn Brooks and Tyrel Dodson back from 2025 as incumbent starters amid plenty of needs. The Dolphins didn’t care.

Round 3, No. 75: WR Caleb Douglas, Texas Tech Red Raiders“To say we're going to have a (wide receiver) room of 5’9″ guys would be a lie.” - Jon-Eric Sullivan, the NFL CombineDouglas was likely the most polarizing of Miami’s selections, in part because the wide receiver board fell favorably with several popular projected options for the Dolphins still on the board at this pick. Miami went against public opinion. But Douglas is 6-foot-3 and a half, 206 pounds, runs a sub-4.4s 40-yard dash. His most direct comparable athletic profile? Former Packers draft selection Marquez Valdes-Scantling; so one can see why Sullivan had the vision.

Round 3, No. 87: TE Will Kacmarek, Ohio State Buckeyes“We’re going to run the shit out of the ball!” - Kadyn Proctor, 4/23/26Am I taking liberties here to pull the Proctor quote? Yes. Do I care? No. And neither should you. This team wants to win the line of scrimmage and they want to run the ball. Kacmarek is a bulldozer as a ‘Y’ blocker. His presence as a blocker on the edge is going to give the Dolphins an impactful presence they haven’t had there in years. Probably since Anthony Fasano.

Round 3, No. 94: WR Chris Bell, Louisville Cardinals“We need to build it around the quarterback, and you have to surround that quarterback with weapons – the o-line, the wideouts, the backs so it’s not all him. Because do I like being under center and do I like running the football because the play (action) pass off that, you create separation between the second and third level and from a defensive standpoint, that’s really hard. The screen game, the keepers, everything looking the same, hunting explosives.” – Jeff Hafley, 1/22/26Chris Bell is a “long-term investment” in Miami as he rehabs a knee injury. But he’s the kind of receiver that Louisville would scheme targets to and let him go to work. He’s a skill player to build around QB Malik Willis. He’s someone who can create explosive plays with and attack that middle of the field on play action passes.

Round 4, No. 130: EDGE Trey Moore, Texas Longhorns“I like them all. I think having variation is so important. You might say we’re going to be a 4-3 defense, which we’ll base out of 4-3, but I like to get in the 4-3 structures and 3-4 structures all out of the same personnel groupings so I’m not subbing and you’re saying, ‘No, now he’s in 3-4. Subbing back, now they’re in 4-3.' I think front variation is huge and having the ability to be multiple.” - Jeff Hafley, NFL CombineMoore is going to give the Dolphins some of that flexibility to toggle between odd and even spacing. He dabbled with off-ball assignments at Texas but has 30 career sacks in college as a hybrid/rush player. Moore could line up and rush from off-ball alignments, as well. Hafley gets a toy that could allow for some of that variation.

Round 4, No. 138: LB Kyle Louis, Pittsburgh Panthers“When you look at an off-the-ball backer, how does he play in space? How does he react to the run? But then is he a guy that you can match up one on one with the backs…” - Jeff Hafley, NFL CombineLouis is a unique talent. His skill set was pretty much outlined by Hafley at the Combine, too. He’s a space defender and hybrid player who thrives in coverage and is aggressive to trigger against the run. He’s a little lean for a traditional off-ball backer, but he’s a passing down space weapon for Hafley’s back seven.

Round 5, No. 158: SAF Michael Taaffe, Texas Longhorns“With regards to like the dynamic kickoff and those types of things, obviously you’re seeing a lot of returns which is fun, you’re seeing a lot of covered kicks. I think last year where I was at, we ended up covering over 100 kickoffs. That’s a lot of opportunities for guys to play and a lot of opportunities for the opponent to get big plays. I do think it’s growing and gaining more attention." - Special teams coordinator Chris Tabor, 2/4/26Nearly 850 career special teams snaps for Taaffe, a former walk-on, tells you all you need to know. He’s willing to do whatever it takes to get on the field. The recent rule changes on kickoff are putting more of an emphasis on those who can block and cover/tackle kicks.

Round 5, No. 177: WR Kevin Coleman Jr., Missouri Tigers“The toughness and the kind of attitude and competitive atmosphere that (Jeff Hafley) will bring to this football team will speak for itself as we move down the road.” – Jon-Eric Sullivan, 1/22/26Bump…this is the only time I’ll use the same quote twice. The most promising young player in the Dolphins’ wide receiver room entering this offseason was third-year pass catcher Malik Washington - and Miami promptly drafted another primary slot with return ability. Game on.

Round 5, No. 180: TE Seydou Traore, Mississippi State Bulldogs“I think it obviously starts with the quarterback. I think that’s universal, then I would say probably the ability to affect the quarterback and the ability to protect the quarterback, specifically to offensive tackle. Then I would think it probably is your playmakers and the guys that can take the playmakers out of the game.” - Jon-Eric Sullivan, 4/15/26Traore is an athletic receiving tight end with the ability to be a playmaker if the team successfully develops him. Despite drafting an in-line tight end in Kacmarek earlier, the Dolphins double-dipped. Only this was with a potential boom at the position in the fifth-round.

Round 6, No. 200: OG DJ Campbell, Texas Longhorns“Believe in running the ball, believe strongly in running the ball. I think most of the successful teams in the NFL these days run the ball really well at a high clip and really build it from there. You got to win in the trenches. I like keeping the defense off balance, it's probably my No. 1 thing as far as what I look for as a play caller.” - OC Bobby Slowik, 2/4/26The power of Campbell helps give Miami some more youth and depth on the offensive interior. The guard spot has been a nuclear-level issue the last two seasons for the Dolphins. Both Proctor and Campbell are phone booth maulers who can help Slowik (and Hafley) realize their vision for the trench play.

Round 7, No. 238: EDGE Max Llewellyn, Iowa Hawkeyes“The edge rusher position right now, we need to fill that room up. There’s not many left on the roster right now, so not many to evaluate so we have to obviously add some depth there.” – Jeff Hafley, NFL CombineNow, this was obviously before free agency. And Miami signed David Ojabo, Robert Beal, and Joshua Uche to the edge rusher room. Still, getting a late double-dip with a heavier defensive end is a nice final bullet point to the draft. Llewellyn will have a chance to make this team as the base end.

So as I grade this NFL Draft class, I don’t ask “how good are these players going to be?”. In reality, they’ll all prove themselves on either end of the spectrum on that front in due time. Instead, I ask myself how much their selections align with their words from the past three months. And the answer there is “a lot”!If we are nitpicking, I would say that the missing element this year was a swing on a quarterback. Sullivan mentioned several times that the team wants to invest at that position often. It just wasn’t in the cards for this weekend, it seems.FINAL GRADE: B+

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