
Each week, Yardbarker monitors the 2026 NFL Draft, scheduled April 23-25 in Pittsburgh.
We're answering the biggest questions about the draft. With that in mind, here are five.
Moore (6-foot-3, 206 pounds) was reportedly planning to stay in school after the 2025 season, but he may change his plans.
"For much of the season, the feedback from NFL scouts was that Moore was headed back to school," wrote The Athletic's Dane Brugler in a story published Sunday. "But that started to shift over the second half of the year, and the impending departure of offensive coordinator Will Stein (who's staying on the Ducks' sideline for the playoff before exiting for the Kentucky head-coaching job) was considered a needle-mover."
Through 13 games, Moore ranks 11th in the FBS in QBR (80.3) and is tied for seventh in touchdown passes (28). While talented, he has made 18 starts in three seasons at UCLA and Oregon, below the preferred number for NFL teams. Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Bill Parcells required his prospects to have started at least 30 games.
Moore's play in the College Football Playoff quarterfinal at the Orange Bowl on New Year's Day against Texas Tech at noon ET (ESPN) bears watching. The Red Raiders rank third in the FBS in points allowed (10.9). Shredding the unit would signal the 20-year-old QB is ready to turn pro.
Tankathon's latest mock draft has the Tennessee Titans taking Bain (6-foot-3, 275 pounds) with pick No. 5, but not everyone is a fan of the pass-rusher.
"Last week, I finished my regular-season eval on Miami edge-rusher Rueben Bain Jr., and it was underwhelming ... compared to expectations," wrote Brugler before Miami's first-round CFP matchup against Texas A&M. "After checking with a few scouts around the league, I realized I wasn't the only one conflicted over the Miami pass-rusher — several teams currently have Day 2 grades on him."
Perhaps those teams changed their grades after watching Bain dismantle Texas A&M's offensive line in the first round of the CFP. In the 10-3 Hurricanes win, the DE logged a season-high three sacks. Aggies offensive tackle Trey Zuhn III shouldn't have given Bain bulletin-board material. Before the game, Zuhn said the DE wouldn't be a "threat," which proved incorrect.
Another strong performance against Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl on New Year's Eve at 7:30 p.m. ET (ESPN) would show that Bain isn't overhyped.
Bain has gotten the most attention from scouts, but defensive back Keionte Scott (6-foot, 192 pounds) is a name worth remembering. After missing three games with a right foot injury, the DB returned against Texas A&M, logging 10 tackles, two sacks and a forced fumble.
"Watching it in real time, the Miami defense was impressive against Texas A&M, but even more so on tape," wrote ESPN's Jordan Reid on X. "Getting Keionte Scott back was so big. His energy, hustle and physicality are infectious throughout that unit. Excellent nickel corner."
Scott lacks the ideal size for an NFL corner, which may prevent him from going in the first round. Denver Broncos star cornerback Patrick Surtain II, the ninth pick of the 2021 draft, is listed at 6-foot-2, 202 pounds.
The team that selects Scott could have him play nickelback, a role that suits him. A nickelback is a third cornerback who replaces a linebacker in certain formations because they're better in pass coverage.
In Alabama's 34-24 win over Oklahoma in the first round of the CFP, Bernard made a ridiculous contested catch in the fourth quarter. Despite that, Pro Football Focus/Bleacher Report contributor Trevor Sikkema gave Bernard a stock down on his weekly livestream.
All the angles of the INSANE catch from Alabama WR Germie Bernard.
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) December 20, 2025
It set up a Crimson Tide TD and 10-point lead over Oklahoma in the fourth quarter.
Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit have the call for ESPN. ️ #CFP pic.twitter.com/756dXecNCW
"Even with that contested catch we saw in this game, I think it's a little bit of a stock down from him," Sikkema said Monday. "There are a lot of people who look at Bernard as a top-50 pick. ... Maybe I'm not looking at it through the right lens. I just don't see him as that caliber of a prospect."
Bernard (6-foot-1, 204 pounds) has cooled over his past five games, logging just one TD catch after recording six in his first eight games. Against Oklahoma, he had three receptions for 40 yards.
The recent slide should raise some concerns, but Bernard could show why he should be a top-50 pick if he excels in the Rose Bowl against Indiana on New Year's Day at 4 p.m. ET (ESPN). The Hoosiers feature a solid secondary, which ranks fifth in the Big Ten in passing yards allowed (179.5).
On Monday, Concepcion (5-foot-11, 190 pounds) declared for the draft, where he'll likely be a late first-rounder. Tankathon's latest mock draft has the Cleveland Browns selecting him with pick No. 27.
Teams covet Concepcion's ability to generate explosive plays with the ball in his hands. PFF credits him with 440 yards after the catch this season, the 17th-best mark in the FBS.
He can also stretch the field. The WR averaged a career-high 15.1 yards per reception, well above average in the SEC. Those traits make him a solid option for WR-needy teams in the draft.
"KC Concepcion changed the narrative from being a gadget-specific receiver into one of college football's most explosive run-after-catch weapons," wrote Bleacher Report's Damian Parson in his scouting report. "He's developing into a well-rounded, high-impact receiver with a high ceiling as an NFL option."
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