3. Clay Webb, IOL, Jacksonville State
Webb was once a five-star recruit who was ranked as one of the top centers in the nation before he committed to Georgia in 2019. Webb was not able to make much progress at Georgia on their stacked depth chart behind Sedrick Van Pran-Granger and other top offensive line recruits at the program.
Webb was able to flip the script entirely for his draft stock after making the transfer to Jacksonville State. While he still lacks consistency, Webb's tape shows an incredibly strong and talented player who has the upside to dominate in the run game and stand strong in the passing game. He looked great at Jacksonville State and managed to stand strong in the Senior Bowl as well against several top prospects.
The Chiefs need depth along the offensive line, and it is very possible Webb will be able to provide that at center and guard. Similar to former Chief Nick Allegretti, Webb could be a stable sixth offensive lineman on the interior of the offensive line for the Chiefs with the potential to start at left guard if he stands out.
4. David Walker, EDGE, Central Arkansas
Walker has been a riser at the end of the season with his plus frame and double digit sacks in two out of his three seasons in college.
When you turn on the film for Walker you can quickly see what made so many draft analysts fall in love with him. His six feet one inch, 260-pound frame is great and he has the ability to win with both speed and power off the edge.
Walker has good bend and a great first step to beat longer tackles early in reps and disrupt the pocket. Walker also posted six pass deflections in 2024, along with 23 TFLs. He showed good measurements and testing and that makes me think he is more than capable of providing depth at defensive end for the Chiefs if he is available late on Day Three.
5. Zah Fraizer, CB, UTSA
I saved the best for last, as Zah Fraizer is my favorite small school draft prospect who I think would be an incredible fit in Kansas City. I recently included him in one of my mock drafts, and here is what I said:
The Chiefs have had boatloads of success drafting day three corners with guys like L'Jarius Sneed, Jaylen Watson, Joshua Williams, and Rashaad Fenton. They also added Charvarius Ward as a UDFA who has gone on to be one of the best corners in the NFL over the last few years.
In the past Chiefs have liked taller, more athletic corner prospects who have length and upside to develop into their scheme. Fraizer fits this mold, standing at a true six foot three and just shy of 33-inch arms. Fraizer also displayed insane athleticism, running a 4.36 40-yard dash, and looked good in just about every other test he did at the combine.
Fraizer will need work, as he is still a raw athlete and likely will not come in as a day-one starter. But despite the Chiefs' success with corners in the later rounds, you can't expect that from a fourth-round pick. The Chiefs have their top three or four corners already set, and they are able to give Fraizer time to develop, and if the team is confident in his skillset, he can take over in case of injury or if Watson/Williams leaves in free agency next offseason.
6. Bilhal Kone, Cornerback, Central Michigan
I have Kone listed at my CB No. 11 and while most people have him with a late Day Three grade, I think he should be slated to go much higher. I projected him to the Chiefs in February and this is exactly what I wrote for him earlier this year:
Kone is an athletically gifted corner out of Western Michigan who fits the mold of what the Chiefs like when adding young outside corners. Standing at six-foot-two and 190 pounds, Kone has elite size and length for the CB position where he showed elite athletic upside throughout his career.
Kone is incredibly physical at the line of scrimmage and generally an impressive athlete that the Chiefs will want to work with if they can land him after the draft. He is still a raw player and he lacks discipline at times in zone, but his raw athletic skill set is certainly appealing.
Now as we are closer to April, Kone is still very high on my draft board. Corner is one of the best positions for the Chiefs to address late in the draft and Kone is one of my favorite players they could land late in this year's class. Kone tested well and would be the ideal pick-up for the Chiefs who could contribute on special teams day one with the potential to start in the future.