
Fernandes the highest-rated player as EA SPORTS FC 26 reveal PL TOTS
Bruno Fernandes is the highest-rated player in EA SPORTS FC 26 Premier League TOTS!
The 2026 NFL Draft first round saw unexpected picks, leaving five first-round talents still available. These players, despite their high grades, faced various concerns that kept them from being selected.
The first round of the 2026 NFL Draft delivered its share of surprises Thursday night in Pittsburgh. Some players flew off the board earlier than expected. Others waited by the phone all night and never got the call. This happens every year.
This list focuses on the latter group. Five prospects who entered draft week with legitimate first-round grades, backed by real production and in some cases years of tape that made the argument plain as day. Medical red flags, measurement concerns, off-field questions, and the sheer volume of talent at certain positions all played a role in keeping them off the board.
Each of these players will be selected on Friday in Rounds 2 or 3. Each of them will immediately become one of the better values in this entire draft class for the team that takes them.
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6β1β³, 230 lbs | 2025 stats: 88 tackles, 8 TFL, 3.5 sacks
CJ Allen did not slip out of the first round because of anything he did wrong on a football field. He slipped because he skipped the combine drills while rehabbing an undisclosed injury, and in a draft process where measurables carry enormous weight, that absence created doubt where there should be none.
The tape is clean across three seasons at Georgia: 88 tackles, 8 tackles for loss and 0 missed tackles per PFF in 2025. A team captain and green dot linebacker trusted to run one of the most disciplined defenses in college football. His instincts against the run are genuinely elite, and his zone coverage is reliable enough to stay on the field on third down.
The one legitimate knock is man coverage against athletic tight ends and running backs, where his hip stiffness shows up. That is a real limitation worth monitoring. But it is one correctable area in a profile that is otherwise ready for Sunday. The team that gets Allen early in Day 2 is getting a first-round player at a significant discount.
The article highlights five prospects, including CJ Allen from Georgia, who were expected to be first-round picks but are still available.
Concerns such as medical red flags, measurement issues, off-field questions, and the depth of talent at certain positions played a role.
The remaining players will be selected on Friday during Rounds 2 and 3 of the draft.
The players are expected to provide significant value to the teams that draft them, given their first-round talent.

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6β0β, 188 lbs | 2024 stats: 44 tackles, 4 INTs, 9 PBUs (missed all of 2025)
Jermod McCoy entered the pre-draft process as arguably the most talented cornerback in this class. He left Thursday night still on the board, and the reason has nothing to do with football.
McCoy tore his ACL in January 2025 during an offseason training session. He never played a snap for Tennessee last season. His pro day in March appeared to quiet the concerns. He ran a 4.37 forty, posted a 38-inch vertical and worked through drills without any visible limitation. Then, the NFL Networkβs Tom Pelissero reported that teams had red-flagged a bone plug used to repair a cartilage defect in his knee during medical rechecks. That was the moment the first round door closed.
In 2024, there was little doubt given his four interceptions, nine pass breakups and top grades among all cornerbacks by PFF. Without the injury, McCoy was a certain top 15 pick. The team willing to trust its medical staff and bet on a full recovery is getting a potential lockdown corner at a fraction of that price.
6β4β³, 212 lbs | 2025 stats: 62 receptions, 881 yards, 11 TDs
Denzel Boston did not fall out of the first round because of anything that showed up on film. He fell because the draft went wide receiver heavy early, and the position ran dry before teams got back around to him.
Five receivers went in the first round. Boston was not among them despite posting back-to-back seasons of 60-plus catches and double-digit touchdowns for Washington. His career contested catch rate is among the best in this class. He caught 20 touchdowns over his final two college seasons. Multiple evaluators have him ranked as the top available receiver heading into Day 2.
The legitimate knock on Boston is speed and separation. He is not going to consistently beat press coverage with athleticism alone and will need schemed releases at the next level. His forty time did not help his cause in that regard.
What he does bring is the kind of physicality, hands and red zone dominance that translates immediately. The 49ers hold the first pick of Day 2 and have a receiver need. Boston slipping to them would qualify as one of the better value picks of this entire draft.
6β2β³, 253 lbs | 2025 stats: 31 tackles, 14 TFL, 11.5 sacks, 41 pressures
Cashius Howell led the SEC in sacks in 2025. He was a unanimous All-American. He posted a 19.9 percent pass rush win rate in each of his final two college seasons against top competition. Then he walked into the combine measurement room, and his arms came in at 30 1/4 inches, the shortest recorded for a pure edge rusher since 1999, and the first round conversation was effectively over.
His response when asked about the criticism? βI ball out.β He is not wrong. The production across five college seasons at two programs has been remarkably consistent. He won at Bowling Green, won playing behind two eventual first-rounders at Texas A&M, and then won as the featured pass rusher in the SEC. That is not a fluke resume.
The arm length concern is legitimate and worth monitoring at the next level, particularly against longer tackles who can get into his chest and neutralize his burst. But for a team picking early in Day 2, the gap between what Howell has proven on tape and where he is now available represents one of the more compelling value opportunities in this entire class.
6β5β³, 262 lbs | 2025 stats: 42 tackles, 16.5 TFL, 6.5 sacks, 55 pressures (13 games)
Zion Young is the kind of player defensive line coaches draw up on a whiteboard. Six foot five, 262 pounds, 33-inch arms, a 96 percent run defense grade from PFF in 2025, and enough pass rush technique to generate 55 pressures against SEC competition. He was a team captain at Missouri, a first-team All-SEC selection, and one of the more complete edge prospects in this class.
Two things pushed him out of the first round. The first is athleticism. Young does not have an elite burst off the line and lacks the second gear speed to consistently win the corner against longer, more athletic NFL tackles. His pass-rush repertoire is effective but fairly limited once his initial move is absorbed. Teams drafting premium edge rushers in Round 1 want the full package, and Young does not quite fit that profile.
The second is off-field. Young was arrested on a DWI charge in December 2025 that remains pending. Some teams will have removed him from their boards entirely because of it.
For teams comfortable with the legal situation and willing to prioritize run-stopping over pass rush explosiveness, Young represents legitimate Day 2 value.