A Mid-first-run defensive surge is poised to upend the entire first round

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A Mid-first-run defensive surge is poised to upend the entire first round

The draft’s most pivotal section isn’t shaping up at the very top. It’s taking shape between picks 12 and 25, where a cluster of high-end defensive prospects — Arvell Reese, David Bailey, Sonny Styles, and Caleb Downs among them — are sitting inside the same general tier on team boards.

A Mid-first-run defensive surge is poised to upend the entire first round

The draft’s most pivotal section isn’t shaping up at the very top. It’s taking shape between picks 12 and 25, where a cluster of high-end defensive prospects — Arvell Reese, David Bailey, Sonny Styles, and Caleb Downs among them — are sitting inside the same general tier on team boards.

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The draft’s most pivotal section isn’t shaping up at the very top. It’s taking shape between picks 12 and 25, where a cluster of high-end defensive prospects — Arvell Reese, David Bailey, Sonny Styles, and Caleb Downs among them — are sitting inside the same general tier on team boards.

There’s a sharp drop-off behind that group. Once those first few names start coming off the board, teams further back have to decide if they’re going to take whoever’s left or risk missing out on that tier entirely.

That dynamic is what turns the middle of the first round into the part of the draft that reshapes everything.

This draft doesn’t have just one or two standout defenders sitting at the top, and then a big gap. There are plenty of immediate-impact edge rushers, versatile linebackers, and defensive backs with high grades all packed into the same stretch.

But that depth brings its own issues. Not everyone will still be on the board when each team is ready to pick. The numbers don’t add up—more teams are looking for defensive help between picks 12 and 25 than there are top-tier prospects available.

Once the supply dries up within a tier, teams often shift away from their original draft strategy and start making picks based on who’s left rather than their initial plan.

The first defensive player off the board in that range will not cause a run by itself. The second one will not either. But once three or four go in quick succession, the teams still waiting realise the tier is about to close.

That is when the behaviour changes. The next team does not want to miss. The team, after that, sees the board thinning. Within a few picks, what looked like a balanced board turns into six defensive players going in eight selections.

That pattern has played out in previous drafts at other positions. It is not randomness. It is a predictable reaction to scarcity inside a tier, and this class has the exact structure that produces it.

Teams are usually most eager to move up when a specific positional tier is about to thin out, especially if several clubs are eyeing the same group. That’s exactly what seems set to happen in the middle of this year’s first round.

If defensive players start coming off earlier than expected, teams in the 20s will try to move up before the tier closes. Teams in the teens will start getting calls. The middle of the round turns into a negotiation window where every defensive pick makes moving up more expensive.

The stretch between picks 12 and 25 could end up being more important than the very top of this year’s draft. The early picks are fairly predictable. It’s that middle section where value changes quickly, runs get started, and teams have to rethink their plans.

If a run on defensive players kicks off between picks 14 and 20, offensive prospects like tackles or receivers could slip down the board into the early 20s. That shift gives teams late in the first round access to talent they didn’t expect to see available.

On the other side, teams at the back end of the first round that were hoping to land one of those top-tier defenders might find themselves out of options by pick 27 or 28. That scenario forces them to either reach for what’s left or pivot entirely away from their original plan.

This draft doesn’t need an unexpected pick to create chaos in that range. Once Arvell Reese, David Bailey, Sonny Styles, or Caleb Downs start coming off the board, teams know there’s no time left to wait. It’s not about panic — it’s about timing and making sure they don’t miss out on a position group that was already thin.

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