Trades Could Save NFL Draft, Which Lacks Multiple Franchise QBs And Polarizing Players, From Being A Yawner
Five teams hold two first-round picks, giving them flexibility to move, and OT demand could trigger a massive run to middle of first round.
The 2026 NFL draft needs some juice because it simply doesn't have the stirring traits that typically turn drafts into memorable moments we recall decades later.
- A lot of big-name quarterbacks on the board? Not this draft outside of presumptive No. 1 pick Fernando Mendoza – and even he's skipping the party in Pittsburgh next Thursday. We aren't having a 2024 redo when a record-tying six quarterbacks were selected in the first round.
- So much talent the exercise offers a future Pro Football Hall of Fame induction roster? Well, nobody is predicting this will rival the 1983 draft when seven future Hall of Famers were selected in the first round and eight players from the draft ended up in Canton.
- A compelling story that captures the imagination? There is no polarizing Shedeur Sanders in this draft. No enigmatic Randy Moss. And no Laremy Tunsil once he donned his gasmask.

(Photo: Ethan Morrison / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)
Draft Without Sizzle Needs Trades
This draft has none of that sizzle and maybe that's one reason up to 40 percent of the hotel rooms in Pittsburgh remain unbooked for the three-day event.
So what can save the 2026 NFL draft? Trades.
Trades, trades, trades.
And as luck might have it, there are teams more than willing to move down in the draft. And there are teams that seemingly covet some players or positions they might be tempted to trade up for. So this draft might be saved after all.
"I think it should be an entertaining night and there will probably be a lot of trades and that’s what I think with a draft like this, when you don’t have two or three franchise quarterbacks and a [Texans DE] Will Anderson or a [Browns DE] Myles Garrett," Kansas City Chiefs general manager Brett Veach said Thursday. "
"It does lend itself to open up to a lot of fun and a lot of excitement. From a fans' perspective, they should have a lot of fun next Thursday."

Cleveland Browns general manager Andrew Berry responds to questions during Watson's introductory press conference at the Cleveland Browns Training Facility on March 25, 2022. Photo: USA Today/Akron Beacon Journal
NFL GMs Expect Movement
The expectation for multiple trades is so high that even general managers acknowledge it.
"I love how everybody last year thought we weren’t trading down and everybody this year assumes we are," Cleveland Browns general manager Andrew Berry said Thursday.
Teams always put out feelers to see what may be available, and this year is no different.
"We've gotten a couple calls of teams sniffing around about potentially coming up," said Giants general manager Joe Schoen, whose team has the No. 5 overall selection. "And again, we'll just have to wait and see who's there when we pick. I don't really foresee us moving back before next Thursday night."
The truth is this draft includes factors that might lead to trades.
There are five teams – the Jets, Browns, Chiefs, Dolphins and Cowboys – with two first round picks. And, outside the Dolphins, who are likely not going to give up their picks in a trade-up scenario, the other teams might be tempted to use their extra resources to swing trades.
Why would teams move up? Offensive linemen, specifically tackles, is one reason because there are a handful that are viable first-rounders and then the talent pool at the position becomes quite shallow.

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes. Photo: Getty Images
Chiefs And Others Covet OTs
So teams needing tackles might move up to get them.
"I think in some of those a couple of linemen creep in, but I do think that if they don’t creep into that first eight, nine, 10 slots, I think you’re going to get a massive run of offensive linemen from 10 to 20, 25," said Veach, who coincidentally might be in the market for a right tackle.
There's also the possibility teams will trade talented veterans during the draft.
And it seems the most likely player to be moved would be Giants nose tackle Dexter Lawrence because he wants to be traded and the situation has grown uncomfortable in the last week, with Lawrence insisting he doesn't want to be on the team anymore.

New York Giants defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence. Photo: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images
Dexter Lawrence Could Be Moved
But the Giants love Lawrence as a player. And he's got two years remaining on his contract. So they are not gifting him to anyone. It would require at least a first-round pick plus another pick or player to get Lawrence, per a source.
"I'm always going to pick up the phone," Schoen said.
Having said all that, we should not get carried away.
There is so far no intelligence that suggests the Browns are working to trade Myles Garrett.
The Eagles probably will trade A.J. Brown at some point this offseason. But salary cap considerations suggest they won't be doing that until after June 1.
And the Chargers shut down rumors receiver Quentin Johnston is about to be dealt.
"There’s a lot of rumors out there on Twitter," Chargers GM Joe Hortiz told reporters on Thursday, "but I can tell you this: I have made zero calls about Quentin, and I’ve had zero calls regarding Quentin."