The Mercury News

Ranking the top prospects for the next NFL draft

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A year from now, the West Coast will dominate the NFL draft. The Pac-12 will not. Remember the infamous 201920 recruiting cycle, when a slew of five-star prospects from California and Arizona shunned the Pac-12 and signed with schools elsewhere?

Those players will be draft-eligible next spring, and the NFL is salivating.

Quarterbac­ks CJ Stroud (Ohio State) and Bryce Young (Alabama), cornerback­s Eli Ricks (Alabama) and Kelee Ringo (Georgia), tailback Bijan Robinson (Texas) — all five grew up in the Pac-12 footprint and are projected firstround selections in the 2023 draft.

This year, the Pac-12 performed modestly in the draft, with four firstround picks but just 25 overall selections -- its lowest total since expanding to 12 teams a decade ago.

Next year could be more of the same.

Welcome to one of the Hotline's most popular exercises: Our projection­s of the top NFL talent in the Pac-12 for the upcoming season.

Notes on the following:

• Projection­s include underclass­men who will be draft-eligible next spring and are, in our view, likely to declare.

• Not every player listed will declare for the draft, while some prospects who aren't listed will assuredly leave school.

10. ARIZONA STATE DL JERMAYNE LOLE >> This categoriza­tion comes with a significan­t caveat: Lole is currently in the transfer portal but has indicated a willingnes­s to return to ASU given the right offer for name, image and likeness opportunit­ies. At 300-plus pounds, and assuming good health, he would be one of the top linemen in the league.

9. STANFORD CB KYU BLUE KELLY >> The second-team all-conference pick has the size (6-foot-1), length and ball skills to be an early-round selection similar to former teammate Paulson Adebo, a thirdround pick last spring who started for the Saints.

8. USC DT TULI TUIPULOTU >> We envision `22 as a breakout season for the third-year playmaker, who was one of the few bright spots for the Trojans' overwhelme­d defense last year. Not sure Tuipulotu has the initial burst needed to become a pure edge rusher in the NFL, but his size (290 pounds) and mobility make him a valuable option along the line.

7. OREGON DE BRANDON DORLUS >> Like Tuipulotu, the 280-pound Dorlus could land anywhere from the first round to the middle rounds, depending on performanc­e in-season and in draft workouts. He won't get as much attention as Oregon's stellar linebacker­s, but the disruptive Dorlus will play a central role in their success by occupying multiple blockers.

6. UTAH DB CLARK PHILLIPS III >> Our pick as the No. 1 cornerback in the conference — the other option is Stanford's Kelly — Phillips has been as good as advertised since arriving in Salt Lake City as one of the top recruits in program history. He's not quite 6-foot, but the speed, footwork and ball skills are readily apparent. 5. WSU QB CAMERON WARD >> Don't be fooled by his background (two years at Incarnate Word). Ward has the arm and the legs required to become a high-round selection. As one scout noted after watching film: “He made me say `Wow' five times in about 20 minutes. He can work in an NFL system.”

4. WASHINGTON OL JAXSON KIRKLAND >> The mammoth (6-foot-7) left tackle passed on the `22 draft and returns for his final season in Seattle as one of the top offensive line prospects in the country. A two-time, first-team all-conference selection, Kirkland will receive firstround considerat­ion if he avoids performanc­e regression and serious injury.

3. STANFORD QB TANNER MCKEE >> The best pure passer in the conference since Stanford's Davis Mills in 2020, the 6-foot-6 McKee has the pocket skills necessary to become a Day One pick. He's not as mobile as Mills, which could limit his NFL value and seemingly increases the chances of injury given Stanford's likely reliance upon the passing game.

2. OREGON LB NOAH SEWELL >> We project Sewell as the best player in the conference next season (on either side of the ball), but that doesn't mean he's the top draft prospect. Inside linebacker­s simply don't carry as much value as their perimeter peers. But Sewell is elite — as good in the middle of a defense as anyone in the country — and that makes him a first-round candidate.

1. WASHINGTON DE ZION TUPUOLA-FETUI >> Admittedly, this selection requires two leaps of faith: 1) That Tupuola-Fetui's rehabilita­ted Achilles tendon remains structural­ly sound, and 2) That his performanc­e returns to pre-injury form. After all, `ZTF' led the nation in sacks per game (1.75) in the shortened 2020 season, and perhaps no skill is more coveted in the draft than the ability to rush the passer.

 ?? TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Washington linebacker Zion Tupuola-Fetui will be a top NFL prospect if his rehabilita­ted Achilles tendon is healed.
TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington linebacker Zion Tupuola-Fetui will be a top NFL prospect if his rehabilita­ted Achilles tendon is healed.
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