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Here Are The Needs for the Biggest Movers in the NFL Draft

by Mary Sewell

The top of the N.F.L. draft quaked late last month when the Miami Dolphins, the San Francisco 49ers, and the Philadelphia Eagles swung a three-team trade. The bottom of it shuddered on Friday when the Baltimore Ravens acquired another first-round pick. In March, the Dolphins sent the No. 3 pick in the draft to San Francisco for the No. 12 pick this year, first- and third-round picks in 2022, and a first-round pick in 2023. Then they shipped the No. 12 pick, a fourth-rounder this year, and a first-rounder in 2022 to the Eagles, who gave Miami the No. 6 pick and a fifth-round selection. Those teams have not tipped off their draft targets — though 49ers Coach Kyle Shanahan faces questions nearly every day about his team’s quarterback position — but here are their needs ahead of Thursday night’s first round:

No. 3 Pick: San Francisco 49ers (From Miami)

With Jacksonville set to pick Trevor Lawrence at No. 1 and the Jets most likely taking Zach Wilson at No. 2, this is where the draft begins and where all the speculation finally, mercifully, ceases. After trading with the Dolphins to move up nine spots last month, the 49ers are taking a quarterback to sit behind or supplant Jimmy Garoppolo, this year. Their choice will reveal much about Kyle Shanahan’s vision. Does he value an accurate, mechanically sound pocket passer who can execute a scheme to yield completions and yards after receptions? If so, come on down, Mac Jones of Alabama. But Shanahan could be craving a mobile quarterback after watching Patrick Mahomes toast the 49ers in the Super Bowl to cap the 2019 season and seeing Josh Allen shred them in Week 13 last season. He has Justin Fields of Ohio State and Trey Lance of North Dakota State to choose between. That decision will fling the rest of the top 10 into chaos.

NFL Draft

No. 6 Pick: Miami Dolphins (From Philadelphia)

The Dolphins want to put quarterback Tua Tagovailoa in a better position for success in his second N.F.L. season. Their trades with Philadelphia and San Francisco guarantee they can do so with the sixth overall pick. At least one receiver will be available among Ja’Marr Chase of Louisiana State, Jaylen Waddle and DeVonta Smith of Alabama, or the unicorn tight end Kyle Pitts of Florida. Offensive tackle Penei Sewell of Oregon could also be available.

Miami is picking here because a video surfaced minutes before the 2016 draft of the offensive tackle prospect Laremy Tunsil wearing a gas mask and appearing to smoke marijuana through a bong. To explain: Because of the video, Tunsil was selected at No. 13, lower than expected, by Miami. After developing him into one of the league’s best tackles, the Dolphins, as they stripped their roster for a rebuild, were able to trade a package that included him to the Houston Texans in 2019 for a package that included three draft picks, including the third pick in this year’s draft.

No. 12 Pick: Philadelphia Eagles (From Miami, via San Francisco)

By trading back from the sixth pick and obtaining a 2022 first-round pick, the Eagles signaled that they would replenish their aging roster under their new coach, Nick Sirianni. The move collects a raft of choices for 2022, when, hopefully, the college football schedule returns to normal, and teams can better evaluate prospects. Maybe most important to Eagles fans, it confirmed that Philadelphia was not interested in selecting a quarterback high or displacing Jalen Hurts — at least not this year.

As for this year, the Eagles need receivers and upgrades at many other positions. With two first-round picks in 2022 and possibly a third if Carson Wentz reaches playing time benchmarks in Indianapolis, the Eagles are positioned to acquire a quarterback next off-season if Hurts flops. If Jaylen Waddle or DeVonta Smith from Alabama is available, General Manager Howie Roseman may be tempted. If neither is, and he doesn’t like the talent at another needed position (like cornerback), he might traded out again.

No. 31 Pick: Baltimore Ravens (From Kansas City)

The Ravens on Friday traded a player at a premium position, the Pro Bowl left tackle Orlando Brown, to Kansas City for this pick and others. For unloading Brown, he got three others spread across the next two years. Baltimore, which also picks at No. 27, now has options to trade up, bolster its receiving corps or improve a pass rush that lost the free-agent defensive end Matt Judon to New England in the off-season. It might have seemed peculiar, helping the best team in the conference better protect Patrick Mahomes’s blindside, but Ravens General Manager Eric DeCosta values draft choices.

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