Risen Star
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Every NFL draft cycle, as Round 1 nears and I begin to lock in my final Big Board rankings, I like to pick my favorite prospects at every position for the class. It has become a tradition, highlighting players I like more than most, regardless of where they get drafted and where I have them ranked at their position. This year, I even threw in a fullback and kicker.
What follows below is not a list of the best overall prospects in the 2023 class, nor is it a list of the guys I consider the best at each position. These are the prospects I've:
- Often rated higher than other evaluators within the draft media or higher than team evaluators with whom I discuss prospects or ...
- Ranked higher in close debates within position groups or ...
- Watched and rewatched on tape, just because I like the way they play.
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Quarterback

Clayton Tune, Houston
What, you expected a first-round pick here? C'mon, that's too easy. Of course I could have taken any of the four likely to go in the top 10, including Will Levis (Kentucky), whom I have ranked just behind Bryce Young (Alabama) but ahead of C.J. Stroud (Ohio State) and Anthony Richardson (Florida). I just really like Tune on Day 3. He's accurate, experienced and can move around the pocket. At 6-foot-2, 220 pounds, he has a solid frame.Tune started 44 career games for the Cougars and he took a step forward in 2022, throwing 40 touchdown passes and 10 picks with 4,074 yards. He ranked fifth in the FBS in Total QBR in the fourth quarter of games, just behind Stetson Bennett (Georgia) and Caleb Williams (USC). That means he was at his best when the game was on the line. Tune, my sixth-ranked quarterback overall, is exactly what I'd look for in a Day 3 quarterback. Don't underrate him.
Projection: Tune likely will be a fifth- or sixth-round pick, but he could be a high-end backup.
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Running back

Sean Tucker, Syracuse
OK, so I'm a little biased here because Tucker went to Calvert Hall, my high school in Maryland. But he can play. He's a home run hitter. Tucker had a better 2021 than 2022 -- his offensive line was worse last season. He averaged 5.7 yards per carry and put up 2,556 rushing yards and 23 scores over the past two seasons. He also had 75 rushes of at least 10 yards during that span. He's not a fluid pass-catcher, but 5-9, 207-pound Tucker did snag 36 receptions last season.Tucker's health is a little bit of a mystery -- he didn't work out at the combine or his pro day -- so we don't have his testing numbers. I wish I had his 40-yard dash time so I could see whether his speed matched what I see on tape. Still, I'm a fan of the player in a change-of-pace role.
Projection: Tucker is likely going to be a Day 3 pick, but it could be in Round 4 or Round 7, based on the medical information NFL teams have. His stock is tough to project. He's just outside my top 10 running back rankings.
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Fullback

Hunter Luepke, North Dakota State
I wrote about Luepke last September after the Bison lost at Arizona by three points. He had 21 touches for 180 yards and three touchdowns. He almost single-handedly won them a game against a Pac-12 opponent. A part of what I wrote then: "Luepke is a battering ram who should remind NFL offensive coordinators of the super-versatile Kyle Juszczyk." I stand by that. 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan has gotten the best out of Juszczyk, putting him in positions to succeed. Luepke, 6-1 and 230 pounds, is the top-ranked fullback in this class.Projection: Not every team uses a traditional fullback these days, so Luepke is going to need to find a team that covets him. I see him going in Round 4 or 5.