By RICK GOSSELIN
The Dallas Morning News

1. St. Louis
Sam Bradford
Quarterback
Oklahoma
QB, Pass rush, WR, DT
The Rams have passed on potential franchise quarterbacks Matt Ryan and Mark Sanchez in the last two drafts. Both have started NFL playoff games. St. Louis must stop ignoring the quarterback position.

2. Detroit
Ndamukong Suh
Defensive tackle
Nebraska
RB, CB, DL, OL
The Lions need defensive size to tackle Adrian Peterson, plus an inside pass rush to pressure Aaron Rodgers and Jay Cutler in the division. Suh fills both bills for the NFL's 32nd-ranked defense.

3. Tampa Bay
Gerald McCoy
Defensive tackle
Oklahoma
DE, DT, LB, WR
The Buccaneers were one of the NFL's best teams throughout the 2000 decade on the strength of a dominating defensive front. Tampa Bay is no longer dominant up front. Time to reload.

4. Washington
Russell Okung
Offensive tackle
Oklahoma State
LT, QB, NT, RB
If the Redskins can't protect Donovan McNabb, he will suffer the same fate as Jason Campbell (46 sacks and a loss of confidence). Incumbent Chris Samuels has retired at left tackle, so this pick becomes a walk-in starter.

5. Kansas City
Eric Berry
Safety
Tennessee
DT, LB, S, WR
The Chiefs brought in Mike Vrabel for leadership a year ago. But he's 35 this season. Berry will be running the KC defense inside of a year. He's never not started in his football career and also offers corner cover skills.

6. Seattle
Trent Williams
Offensive tackle
Oklahoma
OT, QB, RB, DE
Like the Redskins, the Seahawks also need to find a blindside pass protector for their veteran quarterback. Seattle QBs were sacked 41 times last season, and Matt Hasselbeck couldn't stay healthy under that assault.

7. Cleveland
Derrick Morgan
Outside linebacker
Georgia Tech
QB, S, CB, DE
The Browns need help across the board on defense. They traded their top pass rusher (OLB Kamerion Wimbley) to Oakland this off-season. Morgan is coming off a 121/2-sack season at Georgia Tech.

8. Oakland
Anthony Davis
Offensive tackle
Rutgers
LT, QB, LB, DE
No quarterback - not JaMarcus Russell, Bruce Gradkowski or Charlie Frye - has a chance until the Raiders start protecting him. Oakland allowed 49 sacks in 2009. Davis is the best athlete of any left tackle on the board.

9. Buffalo
Dan Williams
Defensive tackle
Tennessee
QB, NT, OT, WR
The Bills are switching to a 3-4 defense in 2010, and that scheme starts with a nose tackle who can attract double- and triple-teams. Williams is that guy. At 327, he's a space-eater who makes plays.

10. Jacksonville
Brandon Graham
Defensive end
Michigan
Pass rush, LB, S, DT
Graham is the most polished pass rusher in this draft. He'll have the quickest impact - and a Jacksonville defense that ranked last in the NFL in sacks is in dire need of someone who can have an instant impact.

11. Denver
Rolando McClain
Middle linebacker
Alabama
MLB, DT, WR, Power RB
The Broncos cut starting inside middle linebacker Andra Davis at season's end. McClain is a walk-in starter. He won the Butkus Award as the best linebacker in college football last season.

12. Miami Demaryius
Thomas
Wide receiver
Georgia Tech
NT, RB, S, CB
The Dolphins have a young quarterback in Chad Henne. The way to accelerate his development is to surround him with playmakers. With the arrival of Brandon Marshall and Thomas, Henne could be a Pro Bowler very soon.

13. San Francisco
Joe Haden
Cornerback
Florida
OT, CB, S, WR
The 49ers will look at RB C.J. Spiller - but he'd arrive as a backup to Frank Gore. Haden walks in as a starter and fills a void in an area of need. You can't win the NFC West unless you can cover Larry Fitzgerald.

14. Seattle
Ryan Mathews
Halfback
Fresno State
OT, QB, RB, DE
Mathews is better suited to be an every-down back than C.J. Spiller because he has the bulk at 220 pounds. Spiller is a Reggie Bush clone at 198 pounds. The Seahawks need an every-down back to improve the NFL's 26th-ranked rushing attack.

15. NY Giants
Jason Pierre-Paul
Defensive end
South Florida
MLB, Pass rush, CB, TE
Pierre-Paul played only one season of college football but has the most upside of any pass rusher in this draft at 6-5, 270 with 4.64 speed. Osi Umenyiora (Troy) was supposed to be a project, too, and he became a Pro Bowler.

16. Tennessee
Kyle Wilson
Cornerback
Boise State
DE, CB, S, KR
The Titans need to improve the front and back end of their defense. But the D-line quality has vanished by this point of the draft. So the focus shifts to a very talented first-round cornerback board.

17. San Francisco
Bryan Bulaga
Offensive tackle
Iowa
OT, CB, S, WR
The 49ers need a right tackle to bookend Joe Staley on the left side, and the best right tackle in the draft slides to them at 17. They'd look again at C.J. Spiller, but quality tackles are harder to find than running backs.

18. Pittsburgh
Maurkice Pouncey
Center
Florida
Int. OL, CB, S, QB
With Ben Roethlisberger's future in flux, the Steelers are likely to revert to the power offense that won Super Bowls in the 1970s. But you need blockers, and Pouncey gives them flexibility at center and guard.

19. Atlanta
Mike Iupati
Guard
Idaho
CB, S, Int. OL
Like the Steelers, the Falcons need to get their run game back on track. They fell from first in the NFL in 2008 to 15th in 2009. Better blockers produce better runners. Iupati is the best drive-blocker in the draft.

20. Houston
C.J. Spiller
Halfback
Clemson
RB, CB, Int. OL, S
The Texans can't have another season from Steve Slaton like 2009. Maybe it was a sophomore slump. Spiller gives them insurance against that. He's also a fine complementary piece if Slaton does bounce back.

21. Cincinnati
Jermaine Gresham
Tight end
Oklahoma
TE, DE, Int.OL, S
The Bengals need to give QB Carson Palmer a reliable safety-valve option. Cincinnati got fewer than 50 catches from its tight ends last season. Gresham can be to Palmer what Jason Witten is to Tony Romo.

22. New England
Earl Thomas
Safety
Texas
TE, DL, Pass rush, CB
The Patriots have defensive needs in this draft but also the luxury of taking the best player on the board. It's Thomas, who gives them a combination of a cover safety and ballhawk. He had eight interceptions last fall.

23. Green Bay
Jerry Hughes
Outside linebacker
TCU
Pass rush, OT, CB
Dom Capers would like to give the Packers a version of the Blitzburgh scheme he ran in Pittsburgh in the 1990s. He has one elite pass rusher in Clay Matthews, and Hughes would give Capers pressure from the other side.

24. Philadelphia
Devin McCourty
Cornerback
Rutgers
OL, DL, CB, TE
Not only is McCourty an elite cover cornerback, he may be the best special teams player in this draft. He blocked seven kicks and returned a kickoff for a touchdown in his career. He replaces Sheldon Brown.

25. Baltimore
Kareem Jackson
Cornerback
Alabama
DT, TE, CB, Pass rush
The Ravens have always won with a physical brand of defense, and Jackson is the most physical corner in this draft. He goes from the No. 2-ranked defense in college to the No. 3-ranked defense in the NFL.

26. Arizona
Sean Weatherspoon
Outside linebacker
Missouri
OLB, S, WR, TE
The Cardinals have two huge holes in their defense with the departures this off-season of OLB Karlos Dansby and FS Antrel Rolle. Weatherspoon gives Arizona a linebacker with the same physical and athletic traits as Dansby.

27. Dallas
Dez Bryant
Wide receiver
Oklahoma State
LT, S, WR, Youth on OL
Bryant won't slide to the Cowboys at 27, so look for Jerry Jones to move up if Bryant tumbles deep into the teens. Bryant has immaturity issues that are scaring teams off. Jones still regrets passing on Randy Moss.

28. San Diego
Jared Odrick
Defensive end
Penn State
RB, NT, Blocking TE, CB
The Chargers need help up front, and Odrick falls into the category of best player available. The Big Ten's Defensive Player of the Year brings 304 pounds of run defense excellence to NFL's 20th-ranked run defense.

29. NY Jets
Patrick Robinson
Cornerback
Florida State
C, CB, Pass rush, RB
There's a flat spot on this board from Nos. 29-32 where first-round talent runs out, and teams will be drafting what they consider second-round players. Look for the Jets to try to trade out. Failing there, give them Robinson.

30. Minnesota
Jimmy Clausen
Quarterback
Notre Dame
CB, S, DT, RB
The Vikings were hoping a cornerback would slide to them but instead hit the jackpot with the slide of Clausen. He gives them their QB of the future when Brett Favre finally does retire, probably in 2011.

31. Indianapolis
Rodger Saffold
Offensive tackle
Indiana
OL, DL, 2 CB
The Colts released a starting guard (Ryan Lilja) this off-season, so there's an immediate opening on the AFC champions. Saffold has value in his versatility. Scouts think he can play center, guard or tackle.

32. New Orleans
Brian Price
Defensive tackle
UCLA
OLB, S, DT, Pass rusher
If the Saints want to repeat as NFC South champions, they must bulk up the defensive front to slow down the elite running backs at Atlanta and Carolina. Price was the Pac-10's Defensive Player of the Year.

48. Carolina
Chris Cook
Cornerback/Safety
Virginia
WR, QB, DE, TE
The Panthers don't pick until the second round. Cook is the biggest corner in the draft at 6-2, 212 pounds. Some teams project him as a safety. He can give the Panthers a physical presence at corner or as a cover safety.

75. Chicago
Major Wright
Safety
Florida
CB, S, WR, Int. OL
The Bears don't pick until the third round. The offensive line, running back, quarterback and linebacker boards will be picked clean by then. So the Bears take the best player on the board - a playmaking safety.