When it comes to the idea of ”value selections” in the draft of the NFL, it is a difficult concept to specify. After all, those of us in the media space are not deprived for all the information that the teams have available, and when the players “slide” in the draft compared to their points in consensus boards and in simulated drafts, it is a case of water search.
Even so, there are players who still represent a great value, given their placement, situation and scheme potential. To that end are the six selections of greater value of the NFL 2025 draft.
Shedeur Sanders, QB: Cleveland Browns
Ronda 5, No. 144 in general
Shoedereur Sanders Fall of the Cleveland Browns in the fifth round, and the reasons for that fall, has been discussed and discussed extensively.
But I could have fallen into the perfect place.
It was not the first tasks of Mariscal de Campo in the Draft. It was not the first task of the Browns Campo Marshal! But Sanders will enter his rookie season with minimal expectations, and although there are things that absolutely needs to solve in the film, there are also things that do very well, such as launching with precision and anticipation.
Those are critical aspects to play field marshal in the NFL general, and play in an offensive by Kevin Stefanski.
Is it enough for Sanders to win the initial work in Cleveland directly? Time will say on that front, but the fact that it is an open question that involves a fifth round selection speaks of the added value in this place by the Browns.
Shavon Revel Jr., CB: Dallas Cowboys
Ronda 3, No. 76 in general
The only sign that you need to see that Dallas Cowboys may find a robbery in the third round?
This video of Jerry Jones dancing after the selection:
The first round buzz surrounded East Carolina’s corner in the week prior to the draft. Revel appeared as the 35th classification player on the Arif Hasan consensus draft board, with some very knowledgeable evaluators who classify him even Highher. Nate tice of Yahoo Sports He had it at number 24 on his board, while our JP Acosta listed the corner of the ECU in number 28.
With Jourdan Lewis’s departure in free agency, the cowboys had a need in the corner. They added a long and strong corner that can enter their initial alignment and work at a high level in men and area coverage. Yes, there is a group about an ACL break that probably contributed to its sliding tables, but given that Dr. Dan Cooper, the cowboys team doctor, did the surgery, there is probably a high level of comfort with his recovery.
Trey Amos, CB: Washington commanders
Ronda 2, No. 61 in general
Amos was the number 41 on my great final board, a player who thought would be much higher than he did. However, falling to Dan Quinn and commanders at 61 could be the best option for their skills. He wants to overcome people in the Scrimmage line, with the ability to make breaks in the ball in 2 and room lineups. Quinn and the commanders played many more shells of two heights in 2024, and despite changing for CB Marshon Lattimore, they still needed something suddenly in the CB room.
Amos is the perfect image that Quinn’s corner, someone who could start from day 1.
Malaki Starks, S: Ravens de Baltimore
Ronda 1, No. 27 in general
It may seem a bit strange at first glance to list a first -round player as a selection of “value”, but the choice of Malaki Starks at the end of the first round is a classic decline movement.
Similar to the recent selections of Tyler Linderbaum and Kyle Hamilton, who Decosta wrote in the first round in 2022, the advantage of the Ravens Toks of a sliding player perhaps due to the low position value “, adding the value of inge eagic of them, and the stranges of the base of the stationary, and that of the main ones, the main ones.
The Ravens selected him at number 27 and matched him with Hamilton, giving Baltimore a tandem that can probably be the best security duo in the league at some point soon.
Marcus Mbow, Ol: New York Giants
ROUND 5, No. 154 In general
I am really very surprised that Mbow fell so far. It was the number 32 on my great board, and I thought it would be a blockade of day 2. However, the giants led him to incredible value in the fifth round. Mbow is a fantastic athlete for the post, who compensates for his lack of game force with positional versatility and technical skill. It is difficult to really call it a guard or a Tackle at the NFL level, because they could do both, or even play the center. In New York, it gives you the opportunity to get five lines in the field, and Mbow can be part of that on guard or Tackle. His movement skills make him a threat to space, and constantly varies his sets and attack angles.
I would be surprised to see him start immediately.
ELIC AYOMANOR, WR: Tennessee Titans
Ronda 4, No. 136 in general
The receptor’s talent harvest of day 3 had some really interesting names that fell on the board, but the one that surprised me most was Ayomanor. Given his size/speed profile and his ability to block, I thought he would be one of the receptors that left on day 2 of an offensive style Shahanahan or McVay. However, he slid at 136, to the gain of the Titans. Tennessee’s receiving nucleus is Calvin Ridley and an aged and veterinary toy island, which needs a drink of energy abroad. Ayomanor can win in the intermediate areas and do the dirty work for the offensive of the Titans, being the connective tissue that allows Ridley to do true things of WR1.