The Bengals are one week from the 2026 NFL Draft, and the latest wave of mock projections keeps pushing Cincinnati toward defense with the 10th pick in the first round. Depending on which board is being read, that could mean a front-seven presence like Rueben Bain Jr. if the top defensive backs are gone, or a corner who can walk in and help right away.
One of the louder themes is South Carolina safety Nick Emmanwori, who has drawn praise as one of the draft’s best football players and the kind of defender the Bengals should not overthink. The projection that linked him to Cincinnati said he could line up at safety or nickel and roam for a defense still trying to settle on an identity. That fits a draft season in which the Bengals have already been linked to offensive and defensive options, including a separate mock that sent Francis Mauigoa to Cincinnati at No. 10. The club’s broader roster questions have also kept it in the conversation well beyond the draft board, as seen in coverage of Orlando Brown dismissing Joe Burrow trade rumors while the Bengals try to steady themselves for another turnaround.
Another projection turned to Jermod McCoy, calling him the steal of the draft and saying he could start on Day 1. McCoy missed the 2025 season with a torn ACL, but his 2024 tape gave evaluators plenty to work with: first-team All-SEC honors, four interceptions and nine passes defensed. He also turned heads at Tennessee Pro Day with a 4.38 40-yard dash, a 38-inch vertical jump and a 10-foot-7-inch broad jump. Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz of wrote that McCoy looks and plays the part of a top cover man, and said his evaluation is clouded by the lost 2025 season even though the 2024 film and that reported 4.38 time still stand out.
The most statistically decorated corner in the group is Mansoor Delane, who is widely viewed as the top-ranked player at the position. Over four college seasons, including three at Virginia Tech, Delane had 27 pass breakups and eight interceptions. Last season he allowed a 31.3 passer rating when targeted, and in Power 4 play no cornerback posted a higher PFF pass coverage grade than his 90.9. In 357 coverage snaps, Delane gave up 13 catches for 147 yards and no touchdowns, with opposing quarterbacks managing a 26.7 passer rating when throwing his way. One projection called him technically sound and said he can make plays that get a defense off the field, while another argued he and DJ Turner II would form a strong tandem for Cincinnati. For a team holding the draft’s key asset at No. 10, that kind of defensive fit is why the Bengals keep surfacing in mock after mock.
The tension in the projections is simple. Some mocks want Cincinnati to chase a disruptive front-seven player, others want a safety who can erase mistakes, and others still point to a corner who may be ready to start immediately. With a week left before the draft, the Bengals are not being linked to one answer so much as to a theme: use the 10th pick to change the defense, and do it with a player good enough to matter from the start.