The Indianapolis Colts forfeited their 2026 first-round selection to acquire cornerback Sauce Gardner from the Jets last October. That $21M-per-year cap allocation meant director of college scouting Morocco Brown entered Day 3 with a mandate: find immediate contributors after pick 101.
The league identified ten players selected between rounds four and seven with viable paths to Week 1 starting roles. The cohort includes Colorado edge rusher BJ Green (Colts, round four), Syracuse safety Alijah Clark (Cardinals, round five), and Kansas linebacker Taiwan Berryhill (Dolphins, round six). All three enter depth charts with acknowledged starter-level vacancies and minimal veteran guarantees blocking their ascent.
This represents the highest Day-3-to-starter conversion projection since the 2023 class, when twelve late selections opened seasons as starters—a cohort that included Packers guard Sean Rhyan (round three, disputed classification) and Commanders safety Percy Butler (round four, 16 starts). The 2024 and 2025 classes produced seven and eight Day-3 starters respectively, reflecting tighter veteran retention and heavier reliance on UDFA signings.
The Indianapolis approach carries particular weight. Without access to premium talent between picks 33 and 101, general manager Chris Ballard directed $4.2M in Day-3 capital toward positions with thin veteran depth: interior offensive line, linebacker, and developmental edge. Green, the Colorado rusher, enters a rotation that lost Samson Ebukam to free agency ($11M per year, Jaguars) and saw Kwity Paye register just 4.5 sacks in 2025. The Colts project Green as a 250-snap contributor in year one, a target rarely assigned to fourth-round edges but necessitated by cap structure.
Seven of the ten identified prospects enter organizations that traded away 2026 first-round capital. Beyond Indianapolis, the Rams (no first, traded for Matthew Stafford extension offset), Panthers (no first, traded in Sam Darnold resurrection package), and Texans (no first, moved up for tackle Connor Galvin) all selected Day-3 players now projected as September starters. This creates a secondary market signal: teams spending first-round picks in-season face structural pressure to extract starter-level talent from rounds four through seven, or accept roster thinness that compounds the original capital outlay.
The Cardinals' selection of Clark at pick 167 merits specific attention. Arizona carried $22M in dead cap from the Budda Baker release and entered the draft with the league's fourth-oldest safety room by snap-weighted age. Clark logged 312 coverage snaps at Syracuse with a 67.4 PFF grade, modest but functional. The Cardinals project him as their base nickel safety by August, replacing veteran Jalen Thompson ($7M cap hit, potential June cut). That's a $5M+ net savings if Clark performs within 10% of Thompson's 2025 output, a spread Arizona's front office considers defensible given the depth-chart reset.
League personnel directors privately circulated a list of six Day-3 selections they believe will outperform their round-one counterparts within three seasons. The list includes two offensive linemen, three linebackers, and one edge rusher. None of the six names leaked, but the existence of such a list signals front-office hedging: if premium capital continues moving to in-season trades for proven veterans, late-round evaluation becomes the primary skill differentiating competent front offices from excellent ones.
The Colts' Day-3 class totaled five selections. Beyond Green, they added Penn State guard Nick Dawkins (round five, 171 overall), who started 38 games at left guard and projects as immediate depth behind Quenton Nelson. The remaining three picks—a developmental corner, a special-teams linebacker, and a long snapper—carry lower starter probability but reflect Ballard's structural philosophy: pay premium capital for proven players, extract roster fillers from the late rounds, sign UDFAs for competition.
Two Day-3 picks—Berryhill (Dolphins) and Clark (Cardinals)—have already appeared in their teams' OTA promotional content, an informal but reliable signal that coaching staffs view them as more than camp bodies. Berryhill, the Kansas linebacker, registered 142 tackles in 2025 and entered a Miami linebacker room that lost three veterans to free agency. The Dolphins' defensive coordinator publicly mentioned Berryhill by name during a May conference call, referencing his "sideline-to-sideline range" and "immediate special-teams value." That combination—specific coordinator praise and early promotional usage—has historically correlated with 60%+ odds of a Week 1 roster spot.
The structural question: whether Day-3 starter extraction becomes the dominant team-building strategy, or whether it reflects a temporary imbalance caused by aggressive 2025-2026 in-season trading. If first-round picks continue moving mid-season for proven veterans, late-round scouting becomes the fulcrum. If the market corrects and first-rounders stay put, this cohort represents an anomaly.
Five of the ten identified prospects have agents who previously negotiated contracts for Day-3 picks that earned second-contract extensions exceeding $10M per year. That's not predictive, but it suggests informed bet-hedging: agents with track records in late-round development are steering clients toward organizations with recent Day-3 starter history. The Colts, Dolphins, and Cardinals all placed Day-3 picks into starting roles in two of the past three seasons.
Rookie minicamp begins June 12. By June 16, depth charts will show which of the ten prospects are listed as second-string versus third-string. That's the first hard signal. The second arrives in August, when preseason snap counts reveal who's getting first-team reps with the twos. The third—and final—confirmation comes September 7, when Week 1 inactive lists publish.