
- The Colts’ climb reaches its peak: After moving up three spots to No. 2 last week, Indianapolis’ offensive line is now in the driver’s seat in these offensive line rankings ahead of Week 7.
- The Ravens plunge once more: A five-spot drop last week and a seven-spot fall this week has Baltimore’s unit searching for answers.
Estimated Reading Time: 20 minutes

Few things are more important to an NFL team’s success than the quality of its offensive line. Disastrous lines, or even singular weak-link mismatches, can determine the outcomes of games, while strong units provide an incredible advantage.
We will monitor NFL offensive line play all season and highlight each team’s biggest weak-link players. With Week 6 of the 2025 NFL regular season in the books, here are the weekly rankings and each unit’s best player.
Key:
Red text = weakest links
1. Indianapolis Colts (Up 1)
Projected Week 7 starters:
LT Bernhard Raimann
LG Quenton Nelson
C Tanor Bortolini
RG Matt Goncalves
RT Braden Smith
The Colts’ offensive line dominated the Cardinals in the team’s Week 6 win. The unit provided the week’s highest-graded offensive tackle, highest-graded guard and highest-graded center. Bernhard Raimann’s 86.9 PFF overall grade, Quenton Nelson’s 90.1 PFF overall grade and Tanor Bortolini’s 85.3 PFF overall grade all led their positions.
However, after a solid performance in Week 5, right guard Matt Goncalves struggled in pass protection against Arizona. He gave up five pressures, including four quarterback hits, and his 12.1% pressure rate was the worst mark among guards this week.
Best player: Quenton Nelson
Nelson’s 90.5 PFF run-blocking grade leads all guards this season.
2. Denver Broncos (Down 1)
Projected Week 7 starters:
LT Garett Bolles
LG Matt Peart
C Luke Wattenberg
RG Quinn Meinerz
RT Mike McGlinchey
The Broncos placed left guard Ben Powers on injured reserve last week with a bicep injury. Matt Peart took his place, but the team may keep looking at other options after his Week 6 showing. The UConn alumnus committed multiple penalties, and his 35.1 PFF overall grade ranked 157th among 159 offensive linemen this week.
Despite Peart’s rough season debut, Denver’s offensive line held up well in the team’s win over the New York Jets. The line conceded six pressures — all non-sacks — on 33 pass plays and finished with a 90.9 PFF pass-blocking efficiency rating, which ranked sixth in the league.
Best player: Garett Bolles
Bolles leads all offensive tackles in PFF pass-blocking grade (90.7) this season.
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