The NFL Combine effectively winds down Monday as on-field drills come to a close.

Exiting the most important post-season draft evaluation period, nine different college teams have a chance to send at least two players into the first round of the NFL draft.

ALABAMA: WR AMARI COOPER AND S LANDON COLLINS

Likelihood: Near-lock

West Virginia’s Kevin White may have a higher ceiling at receiver, and could leapfrog Cooper on some draft boards after the Combine (assuming he was behind to begin with). Either way, Cooper ran a 4.42 40-yard dash in Indianapolis and otherwise did nothing to hurt his draft stock. He’s as close to a surefire Top 10 pick as they come.

HaHa Clinton-Dix performed well as an NFL rookie, but former Alabama teammate Landon Collins may be more athletic. Collins is versatile and will be able to help a defense right away, making him a near-certainty to get drafted in the first round. He did nothing to hurt his draft stock during his on-field workout Monday.

FLORIDA: DE/LB DANTE FOWLER AND OT D.J. HUMPHRIES

Likelihood: 25 percent chance

NFL teams must decide if Fowler will play defensive end or 3-4 outside linebacker. Either way, he’s a good pass rusher with a well-developed overall game, one of the most coveted defenders in this year’s draft class. He performed about to expectations at the Combine and did nothing to damage his draft stock.

It’s lying season in the NFL, and teams float all sorts of misinformation and misdirection. But the consensus from insiders is that Humphries was one of the hottest names in NFL circles during the Combine. He’s not projected to go in the first round in any of the most prominent mock drafts, but after receiving a “go back to school” grade from the advisory committee, it’s possible he builds steam ahead of the end of April and joins Fowler in the first round.

LSU: OT LA’EL COLLINS AND CB JALEN COLLINS

Likelihood: Coin flip

Speaking of offensive tackles, La’el Collins may have a sore back early this week from all the praise heaped on him in Indianapolis the last few days. Collins is a brick wall with brutal strength if he can keep from getting unbalanced. Whether he plays left tackle, right tackle or guard in the NFL, there’s a strong chance that a team will snatch him off the board on the first day of the 2015 draft.

On Monday, Jalen Collins (4.48) joined Danielle Hunter (4.57) and Kwon Alexander (4.55) as certifiable speed demons from last year’s LSU defense. Could he make it three different SEC players with a last name of Collins in the first round of this year’s draft? He performed well in Indianapolis, and will continue to compete to be one of the first three or four cornerbacks selected.

MISSOURI: DE/OLB SHANE RAY AND WR DORIAL GREEN-BECKHAM

Likelihood: Coin flip

Ray couldn’t run, jump or participate in positional drills at the Combine due to a toe injury despite the fact that he’d been running for 12 days. He should be ready to perform at Missouri’s pro day in March. Either way, video from his 2014 season speaks for itself. Perhaps the best pure pass-rusher in this draft, he’s got speed, but isn’t a one-trick pony. It’s hard to envision him dropping out of the Top 10.

At taller than 6-foot-5, Dorial Green-Beckham ran a 4.49-second 40-yard dash at the Combine. Forget off-the-field questions, which got him kicked out of Mizzou’s program. Green-Beckham has yet to smooth out some of the nuances required to be a professional receiver. But there’s a decent chance that one NFL team picking in the first round will decide his half-varnished potential is worth the investment.

Others: Oregon (QB Marcus Mariota and DE Arik Armstead), Florida State (QB Jameis Winston and CB P.J. Williams), Washington (DT Danny Shelton, LB Shaq Thompson and CB Marcus Peters), Iowa (OT Brandon Scherff and DT Carl Davis) and Miami (OT Ereck Flowers, LB Denzel Perryman and WR Phillip Dorsett).