2006 NFL Draft

NFL Draft Coverage featuring mock drafts, player profiles, and custom rankings

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2006 NFL Draft

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 2006 NFL Draft - DQI Index Mock Draft
Big changes as free agency and the pro days really start to address the boards across the internet.  Look for more changes in the coming weeks as free agency moves continue to be felt as well as more pro day results.

Our Computerized Mock 2006 NFL Draft Version 5.0 -  This computerized mock draft is compiled using our own experts along with the grades from over 50 NFL draft sites, as well as over 20 other criteria to give the best overall consensus mock on the web.  Here are our latest rankings on who will go where, along with their DQI rankings.  For more on DQI rankings click here.
April 05th, 2005

Team

Player

DQI

 1. Houston

Reggie Bush, Tailback, Southern California: The consensus best overall prospect in the draft, Reggie Bush has unbelievable abilities and is a once every 20 years type athlete. He has now posted the lowest DQI rating of all time for the 3rd straight mock as a matter of fact, Reggie has broken the DQI rankings altogether as there used to be no rating under 1.000.  He now boasts a DQI of 0.800 the first sub 1.000 ranking in our 4 year history. The most consensus number one in years. The only question will be durability in the NFL. The closer the Texans get to the draft, the more they look married to Bush. However, it's worth noting the Texans still haven't upgraded the tackle spot in free agency making  D'Brickashaw Ferguson a perfect fit for the Texans, but would their fans accept passing on Bush here?  The only way they go with Ferguson is with a trade down.

0.800

 2. New Orleans

D'Brickashaw Ferguson, OL, Virginia:  This is a quarterback spot, and if the Saints aren't taking Matt Leinart or trading down for additional picks, they're missing the full draft potential of this slot. Ferguson could anchor the left side of any line for years to come, plus he has a really cool name for an Offensive lineman. It's not very often that an offensive tackle as dominating as Ferguson comes along. It would certainly be intriguing to see Reggie Bush in Louisiana with Drew Brees and Joe Horn that could be a monster offense.

1.543

 3. Tennessee

Matt Leinart, QB, Southern California: He would have been the first player picked in last year's draft. He's still a top 5 pick. Now he gets to reunite with Norm Chow. Chow's familiarity with Leinart trumps Youngs athletic ability, plus Chow knows Leinart can succeed in his offense. The guy just wins football games. Matt is a very refined QB due to his admirable decision to come back his senior season even though he probably would've been the #1 overall pick over Alex Smith last year

1.771

 4. NY Jets

Mario Williams, DE, NC State (Jr.): Outstanding speed off the edge. The best pass rushing end coming out, he has been a starter since he stepped on campus as a freshman. At 6'7 and 280 pounds Williams can play on the end or on the inside as a tackle. Although with his quickness he most likely will be an end in the NFL.

2.171

 5. Green Bay

A.J. Hawk, LB, Ohio State: LB, Ohio State: He has the size and speed teams like. Possibly the years best defensive playmaker. One of those players who seems to be everywhere when you watch him play. Helped himself a ton at the combine.  All the appearances of a future superstar.  Hawk becomes the latest plug in a defense that is looking better by the week.

2.971

 6. San Francisco

Vernon Davis, TE, Maryland (Jr.): Good size and soft hands. Davis rewrote every record book in the weight room at Maryland and has a great work ethic. He has all the talent that cannot be taught with tons of potential. Davis ran a 4.38 in the 40 yard dash and displayed an impressive 42 inch vertical leap while at the combines. At 6'4, 228, Davis has the athleticism of a WR.

3.971

 7. Oakland

Michael Huff, FS, Texas: Huff is a big hitter, but he's also good in coverage. The 2005 Thorpe Award winner as the nation's top defensive back. Huff is one of the more versatile defensive backs in the draft. He has experience at both safety and corner. Huff has the size and speed to eventually be a perennial pro bowler in the NFL. Amazing 4.32 40 at the combine.

4.343

 8. Buffalo

Winston Justice, OT, USC (Jr.): Winston Justice is the quickest OT in a draft full of talented offensive linemen.  Justice has started since he was a freshman on the Trojans offensive line to tell you how good he is.

5.714

 9. Detroit

Jimmy Williams, CB, Virginia Tech:  Played safety early in his career at Tech, but he is a highly athletic corner. Williams is a 6'3 corner. Williams is a very physical player who knows how to use his body to his advantage. Williams is as ferocious of a hitter as they come and will match up well against today's taller receivers.

6.143

10. Arizona

Vince Young, QB, Texas (Jr):   Vince is dropping as fast as he rose after the Rose Bowl. The questions about his Wonderlic continue and the accusations of special treatment aren't helping matters any.   It's hard to imagine Young falling this far, but Young is going to be a guy who needs to sit a year (or maybe two or three) before taking over a starting job and this is the perfect fit for that. Some things to consider about Arizona and Vince Young: Dennis Green has worked with guys who have similar styles to Young in Randall Cunningham and Daunte Culpepper, and Cardinals quarterback coach (Mike Kruczek) was the guy who helped develop Culpepper when he was the head coach at Central Florida.

6.257

11. St. Louis

Haloti Ngata, DT, Oregon (Jr.): Ngata has a powerful build and can be a run stuffer on the next level. He also has some quickness to collapse the pocket. Coaches at Oregon have said Ngata was the best defensive player to ever come through the program.

6.314

12. Cleveland

Brodrick Bunkley, DT, Florida State: Brodrick Bunkley has the great size you look for, but he can play soft at times.  Not much of an attacker, but Bunkley impressed coaches with his strength at the combine by doing 44 consecutive reps of 225 pounds on the bench press. Coaches said that Bunkley was in incredible shape for the combine.

6.657

13. Baltimore

Jay Cutler, QB, Vanderbuilt: 2005 SEC Offensive Player of the Year as well as 2005 SEC Player of the Year.  Super smart with a big body as well as being very mobile and has great field awareness.  Boller has not developed the way the Ravens had hoped and they are still looking for their quarterback of the future.

7.429

14. Philadelphia

Ernie Sims, LB, Florida State (Jr.): Ernie Sims started all 13 games for the Seminoles in 2005. He finished the season with 72 tackles, 2.5 sacks, and 10 TFL. Ernie has a knack for being a disruption in the backfield. Sims said he plans on returning to Tallahassee to take classes in order to complete graduation.  A big jump after an impressive pro day.

8.086

15. Denver

Chad Jackson, WR, Florida: physical receiver with tons of upside. Chad Jackson finished the 2005 regular season leading the SEC with 81 total receptions. He also finished third with 824 receiving yards.  Moving to this spot in the draft allows the Broncos to leap over at least a few teams that will have interest in wideouts between this pick and the Broncos' 22nd selection. That will give Denver a shot at the draft's best wideout, which is considered a tossup between Jackson and Ohio State's Santonio Holmes

9.743

16. Miami

Marcus McNeil, T, Auburn: A massive left tackle at 6-9, 335 pounds, McNeil has all the tools to be a Pro Bowl player. McNeil is enormous at 6'9. His wingspan makes up for his very average lateral movement. McNeil showed flashes of brilliance during the 2005 season for the Tigers.

9.800

17. Minnesota

DeAngelo Williams, RB, Memphis:  An explosive runner with good size and the ability to make people miss. Williams is in the Ronnie Brown-Carnell Williams class. Williams led the nation in rushing yards in 2005 with 1959 yards. He also had 18 rushing TD's to go along with 22 rushing TD's in 2004. He can have a big year in Baltimore as a rookie. DeAngelo had a great Senior Bowl week that solidified him as the second back off the board.

9.800

18. Dallas

Jason Allen, FS, Tennessee: Sources have indicated that Allen's hip is causing some strength differential between his two legs. The leg on the injured side is reportedly about 85-percent the strength of the healthy leg. That could develop into a long-term problem, or it might never be an issue at all. The good news is he ran a 4.38 in the 40 at the combine and is still moving up the boards.

10.171

19. San Diego

Santonio Holmes, WR, Ohio State (JR): Possesses excellent deep speed with very good hands. He can also be a major player in the return game at the next level.   At 5'11 he is a little undersized, but unlike most rookies his crisp route running and cuts will allow him to succeed at the NFL level.

10.257

20. Kansas City

Tye Hill, CB, Clemson: His incredible potential has been verified over the past two years with back-to-back most improved player awards in his only two years playing defensive back. Tye Hill also had a very impressive Senior Bowl week. Hill is an incredible drop to them and they will be very lucky to have him. An impact receiver might be a bigger preference, but it's more likely that Hill will be there. He gives the Chiefs a player they can immediately plug into their nickel spot and eventually push for starting time opposite Patrick Surtain. Defensive end Tamba Hali could be a candidate for this pick, too.

10.286

21. New England

Manny Lawson, DE/LB, North Carolina State: The Patriots are losing players left and right, and it's a certainty they are going to do something at this pick that nobody expects. Barring some kind of unforeseen find in free agency, they need to find a young outside linebacker to replenish the depth. So Lawson – who has looked like he could be polished into a big playmaker at outside linebacker in a 3-4 defense – looks like the best fit.

13.657

22. Denver fromWas.

LenDale White, RB, USC  (Jr.): He has a great combination of size and speed, and pass catching ability. His great vision, speed, and size will take him far in the league. The best pro style back in the draft, who could thrive in the zone-blocking scheme of Denver.

13.686

23. Tampa Bay

Antonio Cromartie, CB, Florida State: The Bucs are in pretty good shape after an overachieving year last year.  They need offensive line help but the best are all gone.  They could trade down and go after someone like Jonathon Scott in late round 1 or early round two or take the best athlete here which after his series of outstanding workouts, and the fact that he likely would have been one of the top two or three cornerbacks in the country next season, Cromartie is worth a gamble, even with his recent knee injury, and the Bucs corners are aging.

13.886

24. Cincinnati

Leonard Pope, TE, UCLA (Jr.): A huge target with great hands. Pope ran a respectable 4.62 in the 40 yard dash at the combine. Most GM's and scouts feel that Pope is a lock to be the second TE off the board.

14.543

25. NY Giants

Chad Greenway, OLB, Iowa: This former high school quarterback has developed into one of the best defensive players in the country while at Iowa. At 6-4, 239 pounds, he is relentless in his pursuit of the ball.  Very fast, with playmaking ability his downside is strength is an issue after the combine. Greenway could only do 16 reps on the bench at the combine. His 40 time of 4.74 wasn't very impressive either. Before the combine many felt Greenway was a top 15 talent.

14.600

26. Chicago

Jonathon Joseph, CB, Miami,FL (Jr.):  The Bears top priority in this draft is to get a cornerback to play opposite Nathan Vasher. With Charles Tillman expected to move to safety and Jerry Azumah’s retirement, Joseph can fill a big need. Joseph has average size and tremendous speed and should be capable of being an instant starter in Chicago

14.886

27. Carolina

Laurence Maroney, RB, Minnesota: Maroney has a very good combination of speed and power, running with good pad level, making his way through the line, then exploding down field with breakaway speed.

15.229

28. Jacksonville

DeMeco Ryans, LB, Alabama: His strengths are dropping back into coverage, running well with running backs and tight ends although he can play the run as well.  Very well rounded player.

15.600

29. NY Jets

Mathias Kiwanuka, DE, Boston College: Maybe the best pure pass rusher in the draft. Physical freak who runs a 4.6 40. Kiwanuka's strength is his ability to get to the quarterback. Kiwi finished the 2005 season with 49 tackles while leading BC with 9.5 quarterback sacks and 15.5 TFL. He set a BC school record with 37.5 career sacks.

15.914

30. Indianapolis

Joseph Addai, RB, LSU: The Colts are going to reach here simply because they must replace Edgerrin James.  The best backs are all gone.  Addai is a serviceable back who has shown continuous improvement in college.  He's a legitimate Day One prospect after his showing at the combine. He busted out a sub 4.4 timing on his 40 and he is very versatile out of the backfield and will probably be a better pro than he was a college player, but he is no Edge.

16.171

31. Seattle

Tamba Hali, DE, Penn State: Hali has a very impressive repertoire of moves he uses on the line. Hali has started since his freshman year, so he could be the most polished DE in the entire draft with his experience. Hali finished the 2005 season with 11 sacks and 17 TFL. He is a natural athlete with good size and speed to match up at the next level. This is a great pickup at this spot will be a starter for years.

16.657

32. Pittsburgh

Sinorice Moss, WR, Miami (FL): Santana's younger brother Sinorice is a big play threat who can take it the distance from anywhere and at any time.  He is slightly built though which could hold him back. Moss adds that big-play dimension. He adds speed and has shown that he can factor into the return game as well.

16.943

Mock Draft 1.0  Mock Draft 2.0  Mock Draft 3.0   Mock Draft 4.0

About the SN DQI rankings

The Draft Quality Index rankings or DQI is a proprietary scientific formula taking into account the draft rankings from over 50 different respected NFL sources.  The sources are not made public and you cannot ask to be included in these sources in order to maintain the integrity of the system.  These rankings are then compared and placed into the database along with over 20 other factors rating each player based on things like 40 time and Wonderlic score, all weighted against past performances of similar NFL players for comparison to come up with a final DQI score.  The DQI score can be viewed most simply with the following breakdown:

1.000-7.500      -  Star NFL player or a cant miss prospect
7.501-15.000    -  Very good NFL career with possibility of developing into a star.  Very small chance of a bust
15.001-22.500  -  Could develop but player has at least one deficiency holding them back.  Good enough to stay in the NFL long term.
22.501-30.000  -  Developmental or specialty player.  May even be a starter but is most likely a specialist such as a pass rusher.  Most draft busts come in this range as teams reach.
30.001-50.000  -  Pure Project Player almost always taken in the second round or later.  When one slips into the first round they are almost always considered a bust.

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