2019 NFL Draft: Top 150 draft prospects big board, surprise in top three

NORMAN, OK - OCTOBER 27: Wide receiver Marquise Brown #5 of the Oklahoma Sooners lines up against the Kansas State Wildcats at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium on October 27, 2018 in Norman, Oklahoma. Oklahoma defeated Kansas State 51-14. (Photo by Brett Deering/Getty Images)
NORMAN, OK - OCTOBER 27: Wide receiver Marquise Brown #5 of the Oklahoma Sooners lines up against the Kansas State Wildcats at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium on October 27, 2018 in Norman, Oklahoma. Oklahoma defeated Kansas State 51-14. (Photo by Brett Deering/Getty Images) /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
8 of 33
Next
OXFORD, MS – SEPTEMBER 8: Jordan Ta’amu #10 of the Mississippi Rebels throws a pass against the Southern Illinois Salukis during the first half at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium on September 8, 2018 in Oxford, Mississippi. (Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images)
OXFORD, MS – SEPTEMBER 8: Jordan Ta’amu #10 of the Mississippi Rebels throws a pass against the Southern Illinois Salukis during the first half at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium on September 8, 2018 in Oxford, Mississippi. (Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images) /

No. 116-120

120. James Madison CB Jimmy Moreland (CB13)

NFL Draft prospect Jimmy Moreland produced at an absolutely crazy rate with the James Madison Dukes, compiling 18 interceptions and 63 pass deflections over the span of four seasons. An easy mover who excels in man coverage, Moreland may get overlooked because of his size. But he has a nose for the football, and good upside at the next level.

119. Houston LB Emeke Egbule (LB8)

Players with good athletic traits and mental quickness on the field are generally good players to bet on in the NFL Draft, and Houston’s Emeke Egbule fits that kind of mold. He’s still developing, but he offers enticing upside as a sure tackler with all the requisite traits for positive development.

118. Wake Forest iOL Phil Haynes (iOL11)

Wake Forest’s Phil Haynes isn’t the best athlete on the interior, but what he offers in other categories warrants a look in the middle rounds. Haynes is a smart blocker who packs a punch with his hands, and if he can refine his movement technique, he could be a bargain bin starter in the NFL Draft.

117. Boston College S Will Harris (S11)

Standing at 6-foot-2, Will Harris offers very good fluidity for his size as a safety, and that fluidity gives him some versatility as a prospect in the professional arena. Harris doesn’t offer much as a playmaker, with just one play on the ball to his name in 2018, but he has the upside to be an Adrian Amos-type player who simply doesn’t give up the big play. Amos had perhaps a higher ceiling as a prospect, but Harris has good potential in the NFL Draft as well.

116. Ole Miss QB Jordan Ta’amu (QB7)

Jordan Ta’amu never produced on the level of some of the top quarterbacks in the 2019 NFL Draft, but he offers some degree of upside, if the Redskins choose to wait on selecting a quarterback. Ta’amu is not advanced mentally at the quarterback position, but he showed flashes of solid accuracy, athleticism, and arm strength in his time at Ole Miss. In the modern NFL, developing quarterbacks with modest traits isn’t a popular methodology, but if Ta’amu falls into the right situation, he could be a solid backup with some starting potential.