The first round of the 2026 NFL Draft is behind us, but the Green Bay Packers’ picks are all still to come. Green Bay heads into day two of the draft with picks 52 and 84 overall in rounds two and three, respectively, and there are still plenty of exciting players available after 32 names have come off the board.
Instead of a traditional list of the best players still available on the board, we’re previewing these top names in a bit of a different way today. Below are the names of the remaining players ranked up through #75 overall on the Consensus Big Board, but they are sorted into tiers based on how this writer (with some consultation from other APC contributors) would feel if the Packers were to land them with the 52nd pick.
Of course, the Consensus Board is limited, so there may be players under consideration at 52 who don’t show up here. I’m looking at you, Davison Igbinosun, Gracen Halton, Bryce Lance, and De’Zhaun Stribling — you’re all between 79 and 85. And if any of you end up as the Packers’ pick at 84, I’ll be pretty happy with that as well.
At 52, though? Here’s how we will feel about the players currently ranked in the top 75.
This category of players are ones who we believe to be first-round talents at positions of need. They are so unlikely to fall to the Packers that if they do get one of them, we’re going to lose our minds. In fact, if they continue to fall into the 40s, they’re the players whom we could see (and accept) the Packers trying to trade up for.
Most of these players are our favorite targets who still seem like they could realistically be available at 52. If you are new here, well, suffice it to say that we think that Orange and DDS are significantly underrated. Any of these players would make us extremely happy. Boston is an odd one here though in that he should be one of the first players off the board on Friday; he’d be in the above tier if he was at a bit more of a critical position.
These are simply good prospects — they’re either really good players at positions of lesser need or those who we think should turn out to be good pros but don’t have the ceiling of the names in the tiers above.
This is a one-man category and it’s all about health. This was Will Johnson last year, the Michigan cornerback who fell from being a likely top-10 pick into the second round due to health concerns. The phrase “bone plugs” associated with McCoy’s injury just sounds awful.
Here we have players who would leave us puzzled for one reason or another. Drafting these players at 52 would be either a weird use of resources from a positional standpoint, players who don’t fit the Packers’ typical approach or testing thresholds, or some combination thereof. It doesn’t necessarily mean that we think the player will not be a good pro, but it’s more a question about their fit or the use of resources.
Note that a couple of the cornerbacks who show up on this tier are here because they are likely to be slot-only options.
These players are ones who we don’t see as complete players (Thomas, Hill) or who we feel are overvalued by the consensus board (Brazzell).
These are our biggest bust fears or players who we think simply are a poor fit and/or a poor use of resources for the Packers. There are those who like Hunter for the Packers, but his testing numbers were extremely underwhelming and we have concerns about his ability to actually hold up on the nose.
