Thor Nystrom presents rankings and analysis for the cornerbacks entering the 2025 NFL Draft.

It's time to go to the backend of the defense, as we continue with the rankings for the cornerbacks entering the 2025 NFL Draft. It begins with the player whose skill level is so vast that his comparison is not an NFL player, and continues with analysis of the top 5 players at the position before listing out an additional 10 who are expected to be selected in the draft.

1. Travis Hunter | Colorado | 6003/188 | RAS: N/A | Comp: Shohei Ohtani

If Travis Hunter were only a wide receiver, he’d be WR1 in this class. If he were only a cornerback, he’d be CB1. Hunter is a legitimate game-changer on both sides of the ball. Last season, he led the nation with 1,360 snaps—688 on defense, 672 on offense.

This guy is a touched-by-God athlete. He’s got it all. The speed. The explosive acceleration. The agility. The fluidity. We’ve seen superhero athletes before. What makes Hunter different is the instincts and skills with which he augments that athleticism.

Hunter’s ludicrous ball skills are all over his tape, on both sides of the ball. In 2024, he got his hands on nearly half as many balls (11) as were completed against him (23). Hunter tied for No. 10 in the FBS with 1.2 passes defensed per game in 2024. He added 4 interceptions. 

In 2023, Stanford WR Elic Ayomanor posted an absurd 13-294-3 receiving line in a wild 2OT upset win over Colorado. PFF charted Hunter as responsible for 11 of the catches for 158 yards and 2 TDs. Hunter allowed only 32.0 YPG receiving in the other games that year. 

Hunter’s time with Deion Sanders started to show real dividends in 2024, as he leveled up as a corner. Hunter’s PFF coverage grade spiked from 74.7 to 90.3. His QB rating against was a microscopic 39.9, and he allowed a minuscule 17.1 YPG receiving in coverage.

Hunter has all the athleticism he needs to stay with the feet, propulsion, and route-running of any receiver. He has a knack for triggering at the opportune time to get involved at the catch point—the ball rarely beats him to the spot. Hunter erases the efficiency of the receiver across from him. Beating him short or intermediate is exceedingly difficult.

The area where we saw Hunter get selectively beaten—Ayomanor being the famous example—was down the field in one-on-one coverage. Coaches trust Hunter on an island, as they should. But his quick-trigger aggression can be exploited, and his upright, prowler style is not as advantageous for quick hip-flipping.

Hunter is not a finesse player—he’s actually a pretty good tackler, and his work in run defense has improved year by year. Hunter won the Baylor game on a tackle attempt, forcing a fumble at the goal line in overtime.

Hunter has dizzying speed in and out of cuts. It tricks your eyes. He plays bigger than his 6-foot, 188-pound bill as a receiver. His wingspan is solidly above-average for NFL cornerbacks, and is only one inch south of pterodactyl Arizona WR Tetairoa McMillan. Hunter is an acrobatic contortionist at the moment of truth, turning poorly thrown balls into completions.

These traits, of course, make Hunter a contested-catch virtuoso and a downfield assassin. Last season, he went 11-for-18 in contested situations. On balls thrown 20+ yards downfield, Hunter posted a perfect 99.9 PFF grade with 15.4 YPRR.

Hunter will be a two-way player in the NFL. He intends to become the Shohei Ohtani of football, and your offense cannot afford to keep him off the field. He’ll be a full-time CB, and I ballpark that he’ll additionally play around 40% of his team’s offensive snaps.

We haven’t seen anything quite like Travis Hunter enter the NFL over the past decade. He is the best prospect in this class.

See where some of the rookie wide receivers who Hunter will be defending are ranked going into the NFL Draft.

2. Will Johnson | Michigan | 6016/194 | RAS: N/A | Comp: Jaycee Horn

Scheme-versatile boundary corner with a prototype blend of size and length. As a sophomore on Michigan’s 2023 title team, Johnson almost literally erased one side of the field, allowing a microscopic 30.9 QB rating on targets. 

Johnson’s 2024 campaign was wrecked by turf toe and a shoulder injury, the reason he missed the pre-draft process, and the primary reason his draft stock sits in a somewhat tenuous place at the moment. 

Johnson is a good athlete, but not a great one. He’s coordinated and fluid, with a smooth backpedal. Johnson has oily hips and quick feet, and good-but-not-elite speed. He is rarely beaten over the top, however, because he flips his hips and accelerates so seamlessly. 

Perhaps because of that blink-fast smoothness, Johnson is emboldened to take more risks than your average corner, looking to spring passing lanes. Over the last two years, Johnson picked off six balls while allowing zero TDs in coverage. 

During that span, he finished 97th-percentile or higher in PFF single-coverage grade on passes where the ball was out in three seconds or less and passer rating allowed. Johnson is willing in run defense, but one area of his game he can clean up is tackling technique. He had a career 15.7% missed tackle rate. 

Johnson profiles as an alpha CB1 at the next level.

3. Jahdae Barron | Texas | 5106/194 | RAS: 8.62 | Comp: Devon Witherspoon

Barron is a destructive tone-setter in a zone scheme. According to PFF’s Wins Above Average metric, Barron was the most valuable defender in FBS football last season. The previous two seasons, Barron played the nickel role in the base defense, but would shift all over the place—most commonly to the boundary or into the box as a dime LB. 

In 2024, Texas shifted Barron to the boundary in the base defense. But interestingly, the Longhorns continued to use Barron as a chesspiece, shifting him to the boundary or into the box as needed. Barron won the Jim Thorpe Award as the nation's best defensive back. 

Barron is a die-on-the-sword kamikaze in run defense, dogged in pursuit and a sure form tackler in space. He’s a gnat off the line, getting his hands on the receiver and funneling him. He’s instinctive and active, deciphering offensive intentions immediately and springing into action. 

Barron is a maestro in zone coverage, making sure that everyone who enters his area gets a chaperone. He likes to play forward and read the quarterback’s eyes—Barron gets great jumps on the ball and gets his hands on plenty. 

Over the last two seasons, he was 99th-percentile in PFF coverage grade on the boundary. Overall, in 2024, Barron allowed no touchdowns and 272 yards on 65 targets with five interceptions. Only one opponent (Kentucky) generated 35 receiving yards against him in 2024. 

I had to rank Johnson ahead of Barron because of Johnson’s scheme versatility—Barron needs to be in a zone-heavy coverage scheme. But if I ran one of those, I would lean toward Barron. He reminds me so much of Devon Witherspoon.

4. Maxwell Hairston | Kentucky | 5112/183 | RAS: 9.63 | Comp: L'Jarius Sneed

Ala Will Johnson, Hairston’s national coming-out party in 2023 was a bit dampened by an injury-ravaged 2024. In Hairston’s case, a shoulder injury limited him to seven games. 

Hairston ran the fastest 40-yard dash at this year’s combine with a 4.28. That speed is all over his film. Nobody is faster than Hairston, and he knows it. He never panics, and he’s not grabby, staying sticky through the route break with footwork. 

When he’s playing downhill with the ball in the air, Hairston’s burst vaporizes distance in an instant, earning him extra invitations to the catch point party. Hairston is thin, but he possesses decent height and good length. 

Bigger, stronger receivers can paper-cut Hairston on the short stuff, seizing leverage through muscle. The lack of bulk hurts him in run defense—he’ll never be better than mediocre in this phase. But in Hairston’s defense, he’s better at it than he showed in 2024, when he at times appeared to be protecting the shoulder from big collisions. 

5. Shavon Revel | East Carolina | 6020/194 | RAS: N/A | Comp: Antonio Cromartie 

A former track star, Revel is tall and springy. He has a high-hipped build, and is better playing north/south in a silo than going side-to-side. It’s exceedingly difficult to beat him in that silo, however. 

Revel uses his 94th-percentile wingspan as a weapon in press coverage, jolting receivers off the line. You see Revel’s track background when his assignment goes deep. Revel runs upright, with long strides that chew up large swaths of grass. 

ECU had implicit trust in Revel in one-one-one press coverage. He is active in Cover 3 coverage when playing forward, with his instincts and anticipating having a force multiplier effect on his north/south athleticism. 

Revel gets after it in the run game, flying downhill like a safety. He’s a really good tackler—a wrap-up form-tackler with long arms—who had a stellar 5.6% missed tackle rate in college. 

A complicating factor in this evaluation is the torn ACL that Revel suffered in practice in September, which cost him nine games and also the entire pre-draft process. He is expected to be fully cleared in advance of training camp.

Best of the rest…

6. Trey Amos | Mississippi | 6006/195 | RAS: 8.37 | Comp: A.J. Terrell

7. Benjamin Morrison | Notre Dame | 6002/193 | RAS: N/A | Comp: Paulson Adebo

8. Azareye'h Thomas | Florida State | 6014/197 | RAS: 8.17 | Comp: Martin Emerson

9.  Quincy Riley | Louisville | 5105/194 | RAS: N/A | Comp: Jaire Alexander

10. Darien Porter | Iowa State | 6027/195 | RAS: 9.99 | Comp: Caleb Farley

11. Caleb Ransaw | Tulane | 5113/197 | RAS: 9.74 | Comp: Sean Murphy-Bunting

12. Cobee Bryant | Kansas | 6000/180 | RAS: N/A | Comp: Aaron Colvin 

13. Jacob Parrish | Kansas State | 5096/191 | RAS: 8.82 | Comp: Richard Marshall

14. Nohl Williams | California | 6003/199 | RAS: 7.12 | Comp: Nolan Carroll

15. Jordan Hancock | Ohio State | 6001/195 | RAS: 9.82 | Comp: Caelen Carson