
NFL Draft Order 2015: Entire List of Picks at This Year's Draft
You just never know where the next superstar will come from in the NFL. Maybe he'll be a top-five pick, sure, but maybe he'll be a player who isn't being hyped much and is selected in the third round. Or maybe he'll be a major sleeper that somebody takes a flier on in Round 6.
The point is, every pick matters. That's why, along with passing along every single pick teams will hold in this year's draft, we also broke down a few teams to keep a close eye on in each round.
Day 1
Obviously, everyone wants to know whom the Tampa Bay Buccaneers will select No. 1 overall and what the Tennessee Titans will do with the No. 2 selection. It seems likely that the Bucs will select Jameis Winston with the first pick, but the possibility exists that they could either select Marcus Mariota or consider trading it. But Winston is the favorite to end up with the Bucs.
Tennessee at No. 2 has a slew of options, especially because Mariota doesn't seem to fit the system it runs, and the team still has young quarterback Zach Mettenberger. But it seems so likely the Titans will trade the pick if they don't take Mariota that it's hard to imagine the Heisman Trophy winner dropping any lower than No. 2.
If the Titans keep the pick and don't select a quarterback, defensive lineman Leonard Williams has to be the favorite to end up in Tennessee.
The Cleveland Browns and New Orleans Saints remain intriguing teams to watch because they each have two first-round picks and could potentially be players trading up. Cleveland, in particular, could inject itself into the conversation to move up for Winston or Mariota, as the team hardly seems sold on Johnny Manziel.
Day 2

The Saints have five of the first 78 selections in this draft, and in a year with a lot of talent on the board, they could really bolster the roster. Keep an eye on them in the third round, when they have pick Nos. 75 and 78.
The New England Patriots, Kansas City Chiefs and Cincinnati Bengals are the other three teams with three selections on the second day of the draft (pending any future trades, of course). New England is worth paying close attention to, as the team has a history of trading away picks earlier in the draft and stockpiling picks in the middle rounds.
The second day of the draft is where head coach Bill Belichick and the Patriots tend to flex their personnel muscles.
Day 3

The Baltimore Ravens will have an astonishing seven picks on the last day of the draft, with three picks in the fourth, fifth and sixth rounds. The Ravens are savants at stockpiling compensation picks and also have the Detroit Lions' selections in the fourth and fifth rounds after the Haloti Ngata trade.
They could always package some of those picks to move up earlier in the draft, of course. Regardless, the Ravens have a lot of flexibility because of their bevy of Day 3 selections.
Then, there's the Seattle Seahawks. The two-time defending NFC champions have nine picks on the final day, including three fourth-rounders, two fifth-rounders and three sixth-rounders. They tend to make those picks count, too.
- 2013: Luke Willson was a fifth-round pick.
- 2012: Robert Turbin was a fourth-round pick, Jeremy Lane a sixth-round pick.
- 2011: K.J. Wright was a fourth-round pick, Richard Sherman a fifth-round pick, Byron Maxwell a sixth-round pick and Malcolm Smith a seventh-round pick.
- 2010: Walter Thurmond was a fourth-round pick, Kam Chancellor a fifth-round pick.
You could make a strong argument that the Seahawks have built the foundation of their defense in the fourth through sixth rounds in the past five drafts. They'll be hoping to do the same this year.
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