Micah Morris was among the Georgia players who had not been drafted yet as the 2026 NFL Draft headed into Saturday’s rounds four through seven. Georgia had already put six players into the first 100 picks, but Morris and several other Bulldogs were still waiting for their names to be called.
That left Georgia with one more day to add to a class that had already produced five Bulldogs on Friday night. The draft will conclude Saturday, and the final rounds are where late swings can still shape how the Bulldogs’ class is remembered.
Georgia had a chance to lead SEC teams in draft picks again, and the numbers already gave it a strong case. The Bulldogs had one player selected in the first round when Monroe Freeling went to the Carolina Panthers with the No. 19 pick, then added five more on Friday to reach six selections through the first 100 picks.
The program’s NFL pipeline has become a selling point that scouts keep coming back to. Ian Cunningham said Georgia keeps producing players teams trust, adding that what they have done and continue to do there means they are always going to have really good football players. He also said it is especially notable because the program is close by and teams can keep building and fostering those relationships with Georgia prospects.
Saturday also carried a broader measuring-stick feel for the Bulldogs. Georgia had 13 picks in last year’s draft, and the program still owns the SEC-era benchmark that matters most, the all-time record for players taken in a single draft with 15 in 2022. Texas A&M entered the day with seven draft picks, six of them coming on Friday, which kept Georgia from separating itself outright before the final rounds began.
For Morris, the wait itself was the story. For Georgia, the bigger picture was already in place: another draft with blue-chip volume, another class feeding the league, and another chance to see whether the Bulldogs could finish the weekend with a total that keeps their pipeline among the sport’s most reliable.






