Acme Packing Company
Since we’re still waiting for an answer about whether Matt LaFleur is or isn’t going to be the Green Bay Packers’ next head coach, let’s at least do something productive with our time. One of the biggest questions I get every draft cycle is where NFL draft offensive line prospects have lined up in the past. This isn’t necessarily where they will play at the next level, but it will give us a pretty good sense of the role they’re projected to play.
Based on conversations with scouts I’ve had, the expectation is that this class is actually pretty good on the offensive line, but it’s pretty weak at center (not great news for us, as the only projected 2026 starter not locked into a deal right now is Sean Rhyan, with an Elgton Jenkins cap casualty release on the horizon).
With that being said, some players are expected to move to the center position at the next level. We’ll talk about them at the end of this article.
Here is the full position-by-position breakdown and career snap counts of every top-200 offensive lineman currently on Pro Football Focus’ big board (I used PFF because there are few in-depth public boards at the moment. This also isn’t PFF’s data. Do not sue me).