What are we looking at here? The Draftpoints top 25.

Draftpoints assign a points value for each spot in the NFL Draft, with the first pick being worth 250 points, the second 249, the third 248, and on down. Most drafts are about 250 picks and change, so it's a tidy number. We'll count picks beyond 250 as one point each, since that's simple.

There's a lot you could do with Draftpoints. One thing is collecting the total Draftpoints for each college in a given draft class, then ranking them all. That's the chart above.

(There are many other things you could do. We plan on doing them. Stay tuned!)

Florida State ranks No. 1, which is no surprise. The Noles had the top overall pick in Jameis Winston to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, plus first-round lineman Cam Erving and three others in the top 50. So while FSU led the country with 11 picks, plenty of them also ranked up high.

Louisville was No. 2 in terms of raw picks, with 10. But that means giving 256th pick Gerald Christian the same value as Winston. If you go by Draftpoints, the Miami Hurricanes' seven picks top U of L's 10, and it's pretty easy to explain why. Five of Louisville's were in the bottom 100, while five of Miami's were in the top 100.

All those tweets you saw about FSU-Louisville being the most talented game of 2014? It might've actually been FSU-Miami. Either way, it was an FSU game. (And yes, yes, Louisville had the better team and all that.)

Another good example is Washington, which had only four picks but saw them all go in the top 44. That's way more impressive than Oregon State having five picks, but none until No. 89, right?

Here's the full ranking for everybody with a pick: