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Mock Draft

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Seven-round 2021 ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íømock draft, Round 7: Bucs select WR with final pick

EDITOR'S NOTE: This mock draft was updated following the Kansas City Chiefs' acquisition of Orlando Brown in a trade with the Baltimore Ravens.

If the great Charles Dickens were still with us today, he would probably write a novel about the ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íødraft. (OK, maybe not, but please roll with me here.)

His story would probably revolve around a grumpy old man who reads ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íømock drafts and complains about them.

"Every idiot that goes about writing mock drafts should be boiled in his own pudding," the character might say.

But then one night, three spirits would appear to show the curmudgeon the light. One would be the "Ghost of Things that SHOULD Be", a second the "Ghost of Things that WOULD Be" and finally the "Ghost of Things that COULD Be."

The first spirit would explain that mock drafts are usually not a vision of what the writer believes each team should do. The apparition would explain that these projections are not meant to indicate there is but only one player at each pick that is the correct one for the team to select.

The second specter appears to explain that any prediction, whether attempting to forecast football game results, economic activity or the weather, is modelled on past events. Therefore, mock drafts are attempting to show what would be -- if teams followed patterns from previous years. The kindly presence will then explain that there are always variations between past and future events -- so no mock draft will be 100 percent accurate.

The third ghost will then come to the aged football fan, explaining that mock drafts represent only one of many different scenarios that could unfold on draft weekend given each franchise's player evaluations and short- and long-term needs.

After hearing the guidance of the ghosts, our ill-tempered protagonist sings a new tune, exclaiming that he will "honor mock drafts in my heart, and try to keep them there all offseason! I will know that mock drafts are not what SHOULD or WOULD be, but only what COULD be!"

Please enjoy the following seven-round mock in that vein. Keep in mind that this projection does not benefit from the 11th-hour information that will trickle out leading up to Round 1. It does offer some scenarios as food for thought, and gives a general road map on where players might fall.

Want to create your own mock for the 2021 ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøDraft? Check out to play out countless scenarios for every team spanning all seven rounds.

Pick
229
Rashad Weaver
Pittsburgh · Edge


Pick
231
Larnel Coleman
UMass Amherst · OT
Pick
232
Roy Lopez
Arizona · DT



Pick
233
Jaelon Darden
North Texas · WR


Pick
234
Garret Wallow
TCU · LB


Pick
235
Brendon White
Rutgers · S


Pick
236
Amen Ogbongbemiga
Oklahoma State · LB


Pick
237
Dax Milne
BYU · WR



Pick
238
Chandon Herring
BYU · OG



Pick
239
Alani Pututau
Adams State College · Edge



Pick
240
Matt Farniok
Nebraska · OG
Pick
241
Miller Forristall
Alabama · TE
Pick
242
Israel Mukuamu
South Carolina · CB



Pick
243
Larry Borom
Missouri · OG



Pick
244
Devon Key
Western Kentucky · S
Pick
246
Thomas Fletcher
Alabama · LS



Pick
247
Nate McCrary
Saginaw Valley State · RB
Pick
248
Antonio Phillips
Ball State · CB


Pick
249
Tre Brown
Oklahoma · CB
Pick
250
Jaylon Moore
Western Michigan · OT



Pick
251
Jason Pinnock
Pittsburgh · CB
Pick
252
Marquez Stevenson
Houston · WR



Pick
253
Lawrence Woods
Truman State University · CB
Pick
254
Brady Breeze
Oregon · S


Pick
255
Shawn Davis
Florida · S


Pick
256
Dez Fitzpatrick
Louisville · WR
Pick
257
Mac McCain III
North Carolina A&T · CB
Pick
258
Nick McCloud
Notre Dame · CB
Pick
259
Rico Bussey
Hawaii · WR


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