It's Week 13 and we've reached peak football season and the Holiest of Football days: Thanksgiving. So we'll take a break from the action of the usual prospect rankings to go back and discuss a few I didn't get to rank and reevaluate the Dynasty trade market for picks. Oh, and of course I'll give you an updated Dynasty Superflex Big Board after the new additions.
New Prospects to Watch
Jonah Coleman RB, Washington (JR)
Height: 5-9 Weight: 225
Strengths
- Powerful Runner
- Good Agility
Weaknesses
- Questionable Vision
Jonah Coleman has been the engine of Washington's offense since the departure of Kalen Deboer, and their entire passing offense left in the first three rounds. He's a tough downhill runner with enough lateral agility to be a bellcow back in the NFL. But my goodness is his tape frustrating to watch. Coleman has all the tools to be great but routinely wastes them bouncing plays to the outside. He's flashed tremendous ability, but in a draft class this stacked with talent his flaws shine bright.
Jalen Royals WR, Utah State (SR)
Height: 6-0 | Weight: 205
Strengths
- Strong Hands
- Modest Athleticism
- Modest Route Tree
Weaknesses
- Needs to Improve Route Nuance and Speed
Jalen Royals is fine. I understand that's a boring take on a prospect, but you don't always need to say they're the next best or worst. He's perfectly fine.
The Utah State senior has strong hands and enough athleticism to fight through any arm tackles and finish an open YAC opportunity. He won't be a massive deep threat or go-to target but could be a solid possession receiver.
Kalel Mullings RB, Michigan (SR)
Height: 6-2 | Weight: 239
Strengths
- Size and Power
- Excellent Blocker
Weaknesses
- Poor Leverage and Pad Level
- Contact Balance
Kalel Mullings has easily supplanted College Football 25 Cover Athlete Donovan Edwards as Michigan's RB1. To be fair, that's a rather low bar. Mullings does many things well; much of that comes down to his massive size and freight train ability when he gets rolling.
But it's the "when he gets rolling" that's the problem. Mullings runs high and doesn't have the contact balance to get the most out of his size. However, once he reaches the secondary, it's off to the races. His strong third-down abilities in the passing game will likely get him drafted and on the field.
2025 Draft Pick Values
So let's say you're a rebuilding roster, have an excess of positional value, or just straight-up love to hoard draft picks like all the random cables you swear you'll need one day and want to buy picks. What are prices going for in this economy? Well, I scrolled through values on Keep Trade Cut and listed them for you (because I care.)
Early 1sts
- Bo Nix QB, Broncos (Do this)
- Caleb Williams QB, Bears (Now is the time to buy)
- Trey McBride TE, Cardinals (Lol, what are we doing? Buy now)
- Ken Walker III RB, Seahawks
Mid 1sts
- Rome Odunze WR, Bears
- Sam LaPorta TE, Lions (Stop freaking out and buy a talented TE in a good offense)
- Anthony Richardson QB, Colts
- DeVonta Smith WR, Eagles
Late 1sts
- David Montgomery RB, Steelers
- Bucky Irving RB, Buccaneers
- Josh Downs WR, Colts
- Tyreek Hill WR, Dolphins (Sell)
2nd Rounders
- Ricky Pearsall WR, 49ers
- Travis Etienne Jr. RB, Jaguars
- Mark Andrews TE, Ravens (Better Buy Now)
- Romeo Doubs WR, Packers