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The Senior Bowl was a positive event for a variety of 2022 prospects, and as usual, draft stocks are on the rise in the aftermath. This year's Senior Bowl class was more about its depth than a small collection of marquee talents, and that led to a litany of mid-round players improve their standing with NFL scouts in Mobile, Alabama. 

Let's debrief from Senior Bowl week with a stock report of those who made waves -- good and bad -- at the all-star event. 

Perrion Winfrey, DT, Oklahoma

Stock Up

Winfrey was the week's overall winner. From his repeated dominance in practice to a strong showing in the game, no one helped their stock more than the Oklahoma defensive tackle. Winfrey's film isn't tremendous. There are certainly some flashes, but it features many invisible stretches, and he rushes high. But the nearly 6-foot-4, 303-pound rusher with vines for arms was borderline unblockable in Mobile. 

Malik Willis, QB, Liberty 

Stock Up

Willis wasn't dazzling at the Senior Bowl, but his arm was clearly the strongest of the group, and he treated everyone to demonstrations of his electric running ability in the game. Because pocket presence is a weakness for Willis, the Senior Bowl setup actually favors him, and he did not disappoint. In a class in which no one is quite sure who the top quarterback is, Willis stated his case. 

Boye Mafe, EDGE, Minnesota 

Stock Up

Mafe is a thick but springy rusher who had a solid week in one-on-ones, then erupted during the Senior Bowl. At nearly 6-4 and 255 pounds with long arms, the Minnesota product looks like an NFL defensive end already. He demonstrated more pass-rushing moves in Mobile than what he routinely exhibited in college. An ascending player who was more productive each season for the Gophers, Mafe's burst and bend combination are the catalysts for his rising stock. 

Dontario Drummond, WR, Ole Miss 

Stock Down

Drummond had problems getting open during the week of practices, which shouldn't have been too surprising. But because the bar was set low in that regard, he had an opportunity to be a pleasant surprise and wasn't. Drummond's strengths are his ability to work underneath, bounce off tacklers, and maximize yards after the catch. The Senior Bowl wasn't ideally suited for him, and it showed. 

Jermaine Johnson, EDGE, Florida State 

Stock Up

Johnson was so damn good in Tuesday's practice, he (smartly) decided to sit out the rest of the week. First off, this is a long and mean outside rusher. Nearly 6-5 and 260 pounds with arms about 35 inches long is how NFL defensive coordinators create their defensive ends in Madden. The speed-to-power conversion the Seminoles star put on display on film carried over to his one practice in Mobile . He wasn't a slam-dunk first round pick before the Senior Bowl. He probably is now. Yes, draft stocks can be influenced that quickly. 

Christian Watson, WR, North Dakota State

Stock Up

The North Dakota State wideout is a fascinating specimen at 6-4 with the flexibility of a wideout much smaller. Of course, coming from the powerhouse of the FCS level, there was early concern about how he'd fare against competition from bigger programs. Watson easily passed the level-up test. He made a case as the most consistent receiver in Mobile during the week of practices in one-on-ones and team drills. He now feels like a Day 2 pick. 

Daniel Faalele, OT, Minnesota

Stock Down

Faalele is genuinely massive even by NFL offensive tackle standards. He measured in at 6-8 and 387 pounds with nearly 36-inch arms. In practice and the game, he wasn't downright atrocious, but the Minnesota star's lack of lateral quickness was exploited by the advanced rushers at the Senior Bowl who recognized he was susceptible to an inside move. There were also a few occasions in which edge defenders got up and underneath him and drove him backward. 

Chad Muma, LB, Wyoming 

Stock Up

Muma cruised under the radar all week. He wasn't sensational but was rarely out of position and just made play after play after play. He's a linebacker prospect exceptionally comfortable sinking/turning to cover, and his play-recognition skills and athleticism allow him to range to the football on run plays. After an impressive showing during the week of practices, he was ubiquitous during the game on Saturday.

Travis Jones, NT, UConn

Stock Up

The value for nose tackles is not what it once was, but the really good ones today not only devour doubles but can be pocket pushers in clear passing situations. Jones demonstrated the latter in one-on-ones, routinely driving whoever dared stand in front of him with sheer, unadulterated force, and the nearly 6-5, 326-pounder flashed that brute strength in the game too. This nose tackle class is more than just Jordan Davis from Georgia. Jones could be a top 75 pick. 

Zion Johnson, OG/C, Boston College

Stock Up

Johnson's first day of practice drew the most rave reviews, and taking extra snaps at center after practice in the rain was a savvy move. Johnson was able to withstand bull rushes and move laterally with counter moves at nearly 6-3 and 315 pounds with long arms almost 34-inches long. Johnson has built-in-a-lab guard size but has enough athleticism to be a mobile center too and showed his entire skill set in Mobile.

Darian Kinnard, OT, Kentucky

Stock Down

Kinnard is a rather mammoth individual at nearly 6-5 and 325 pounds with arms over 34 inches. Despite a rock-solid Kentucky career -- mostly in a run-heavy offense -- the Wildcat standout was exploited in pass protection during Senior Bowl week and in the game. And that aligns with what he showed on film. When he wasn't able to immediately win a rep by getting into his opponent's pads, Kinnard was usually a liability. His lack of balance and over-aggressive nature get him into trouble in pass pro. The poor showing might necessitate a move inside to guard or simply see his stock at tackle drop well into the second day of the draft. 

Trevor Penning, OT, Northern Iowa 

Stock Up

Penning first won the weigh-in at nearly 6-7 and 330 pounds. That's NFL tackle size. No concerns about him "having to gain weight," a typical phrase written in offensive linemen scouting reports. Then the punishing style he played with at Northern Iowa was on full display during practices. Penning routinely finished reps with authority. Some defensive linemen weren't pleased with the extra shoves. Offensive line coaches ate it up. As they should. Penning is on the first-round radar.

Calvin Austin, WR, Memphis

Stock Up

At just shy of 5-8 and 173 pounds, Austin had to be dynamic in one-on-one drills to make waves, and he was. Suddenness, crisp routes and crazy speed left cornerbacks in the dust throughout the week. Austin wasn't able to make as much of an impact during the game -- outside of a late-game grab on an underthrown deep ball -- but the stock had already been elevated. 

Kenny Pickett, QB, Pittsburgh

Stock Down

Pickett didn't have the best week, and to me, it had nothing to do with his hand size. Throwing with the likes of Willis, Desmond Ridder, Carson Strong, and Sam Howell made Pickett's arm look relatively weak. He wasn't as sharp in the rainy practice either. While he didn't have an incompletion in the game, anyone worried that Pickett doesn't have high-end arm-talent traits got more fuel for the fire in Mobile.

Trey McBride, TE, Colorado State 

Stock Up

McBride was the best tight end at the Senior Bowl. He got open with ease and caught everything, even in congested red-zone drills. Is he the most athletically gifted tight end? No. But there's no a clear flaw to his game, and it showed during Senior Bowl practices. 

Romeo Doubs, WR, Nevada 

Stock Down

Doubs is a fun vertical threat. But he's going to have problems getting into those downfield routes if he can't beat press at the line, a major problem during the week of practices in Mobile. At 6-2 and 204 pounds, Doubs surprisingly got bodied trying to release into his routes. 

Dameon Pierce, RB, Florida

Stock Up

Pierce was a rockstar in pass protection drills, which will always go over well with coaches. At 5-9 and 220 pounds, he's built to crush blitzers. Pierce also showcased deceptive bounce on cutbacks in team drills. Pierce's unique frame and effortlessly punishing style opened a lot of eyes at the Senior Bowl.