The 2025 NFL Draft is down to Day 3 after an exciting and unpredictable two days, which began with the first round on Thursday night in Green Bay. Shockingly, Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders is still on the board after not being selected in the first three rounds.
Along with Sanders, there’s still some good prospects available on Day 3.
Want to know what I thought of every pick made in the fourth round of the 2025 NFL Draft? You can read below as I graded all the Round 4 picks from Saturday.
The fortunes of teams can change thanks to the draft and so can the betting market and Super Bowl odds. What happens the next few days could contribute to that.
Be sure to refresh this page throughout the weekend to get all the latest grades. If you want to do all that plus track the best available prospects and get access to every pick in the draft on one page, you can in our draft tracker. And follow along with each pick in our live blog and all the trades in our trade tracker.
Grades: Round 1 • Round 2 • Round 3 • Round 4 • Round 5 • Round 6 • Round 7
103. Titans: Chimere Dike, WR, Florida
Grade: C+
Decently sized speedster on the outside. Minimal YAC ability relative to his speed. Older prospect. Body control and flexibility are pluses to his profile. Struggles against physicality at any point of the route but has solid ball-tracking skill. Easy drops appeared too frequently and he’s not a sharp, rigid route runner. I do like more weaponry for Cam Ward, but there were better options.
104. Jaguars: Bhayshul Tuten, RB Virginia Tech
Grade: A
My RB2. Burst, long-speed, serious elusiveness in a compact frame. Ran a 4.32-second 40-yard dash at the combine and it shows on film. Fumbles were a clear issue in college, but it was a challenge to find another flaw to his game. Vision and contact balance are good, not great. Big-play waiting to happen between the tackles and on outside runs. Love this.
105. Giants: Cameron Skattebo, RB, Arizona State
Grade: A
Think David Montgomery 2.0. Squatty, tremendous lateral elusiveness. Contact balance galore. Runs with spectacular vision between the tackles. Clearly lacks speed. Emerged as a quality pass-catcher, too. Gritty yet athletic runner who will get more than what’s blocked for him on a routine basis. Ideal pairing with the explosive Tyrone Tracy Jr.
106. Patriots: Craig Woodson, S, Cal
Grade: A-
Defensive back who was ubiquitous on the Cal defense because of his athleticism and instincts, both which jump off the film. Rare to see him miss tackles in space, which is vital for a versatile safety/cornerback type. Not going to match sudden slot WRs yet can carry out any other duty asked of him.
107. Jaguars: Jack Kiser, LB, Notre Dame
Grade: B+
One of the older prospects in the class, which caps his upside. Does everything fundamentally sound at the linebacker position. Stays square to line of scrimmage, stacks and sheds like a veteran, and is one of the most reliable tacklers at the position in the class. Not a premier athlete yet holds his own in coverage when sinking in zone. Ball skills could improve.
108. Raiders: Dont’e Thornton Jr., WR, Tennessee
Grade: A-
Nearly 6-foot-5, 205-pound burner with 4.30 speed. And it shows on film. Averaged nearly 22 yards per catch in college. Did play in wide open, vertical-based offense, which helped his numbers, yet he can absolutely rip downfield. Niche type with overall rawness to his game yet adds a seriously dangerous weapon for Geno Smith. Nice complement to Jakobi Meyers and Jack Bech.