National Football League Draft






The current logo for the NFL Draft


The National Football League Draft, also called the NFL Draft or the Player Selection Meeting, is an annual event which serves as the league's most common source of player recruitment. The basic design of the draft is that each team is given a position in the drafting order in reverse order relative to its record in the previous year, which means that the last place team is positioned first. From this position, the team can either select a player or trade their position to another team for other draft positions, a player or players, or any combination thereof. The round is complete when each team has either selected a player or traded its position in the draft.


Certain aspects of the draft, including team positioning and the number of rounds in the draft, have seen revisions since its first creation in 1936, but the fundamental method has remained the same. Currently the draft consists of seven rounds. The original rationale in creating the draft was to increase the competitive parity between the teams as the worst team would, ideally, have chosen the best player available. In the early years of the draft, players were chosen based on hearsay, print media, or other rudimentary evidence of a player's ability. In the 1940s, some franchises began employing full-time scouts. The ensuing success of their corresponding teams eventually forced the other franchises to also hire scouts.


Colloquially, the name of the draft each year takes on the form of the NFL season in which players picked could begin playing. For example, the 2010 NFL draft was for the 2010 NFL season. However, the NFL-defined name of the process has changed since its inception. The location of the draft has continually changed over the years to accommodate more fans, as the event has gained popularity. The draft's popularity now garners prime-time television coverage. In the league's early years, from the mid-1930s to the mid-1960s, the draft was held in various cities with NFL franchises until the league settled on New York City starting in 1965, where it remained for fifty years until 2015. The 2015 and 2016 NFL drafts were held in Chicago, while the 2017 version was held in Philadelphia and 2018 in Dallas. The 2019 NFL Draft will be held in Nashville. In recent years, the NFL draft has occurred in late April or early May.




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 Precursor and rationale


    • 1.2 The first draft (1936)


    • 1.3 Early drafts (1937–1946)


    • 1.4 Scouting era begins (1946–1959)


    • 1.5 Technology (1960–1979)


    • 1.6 ESPN and the digital age (1980–2017)


    • 1.7 Fox, NFL Network and ESPN (2018–)



  • 2 Current format

    • 2.1 Rules for determining draft order

      • 2.1.1 Timing



    • 2.2 Pick trades


    • 2.3 Compensatory picks


    • 2.4 Salaries


    • 2.5 Forfeiture


    • 2.6 Team policies



  • 3 Events leading up to the draft

    • 3.1 NFL Draft Advisory Board decisions


    • 3.2 NFL Scouting Combine


    • 3.3 Pro Day


    • 3.4 Pre-draft visits



  • 4 Tickets


  • 5 Venue

    • 5.1 American Football League draft



  • 6 Supplemental draft

    • 6.1 List of NFL supplemental draft picks



  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 Further reading


  • 10 External links




History



Precursor and rationale




League commissioner Roger Goodell announcing a pick live at the 2010 NFL Draft


As background, Stan Kostka had a huge college career as a University of Minnesota running back, leading the Minnesota Gophers to an undefeated season in 1934. Every NFL team wanted to sign him. Since there was no draft back then, savvy Stan did the smart thing - he held out for the highest offer. While a free agent, Stan kept busy, even running for Mayor of Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota. Although his political career did not take off, Stan's nine-month NFL holdout succeeded and he became the league's highest-paid player, signing a $5,000 contract with the NFL's team in Brooklyn, New York on August 25, 1935. As a response to the bidding war for Stan Kostka, the NFL instituted the draft in 1936.[1]


In late 1934, Art Rooney, owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers, gave the right of usage of two players to the New York Giants because Rooney's team had no chance to participate in the post-season. After the owner of the Boston Redskins, George Preston Marshall, protested the transaction, the president of the NFL, Joe F. Carr, disallowed the Giants the ability to employ the players.[2] At a league meeting in December 1934, the NFL introduced a waiver rule to prevent such transactions. Any player released by a team during the season would be able to be claimed by other teams. The selection order to claim the player would be in inverse order to the teams' standings at the time.[2][3]


Throughout this time, Bert Bell, co-owner of the Philadelphia Eagles, felt his team's lack of competitiveness on the field made it difficult for the Eagles to sell tickets and to be profitable.[4] Compounding the Eagles' problems were players signed with teams that offered the most money,[5] or if the money being equal, players chose to sign with the most prestigious teams at the time,[6] who had established a winning tradition.[7] As a result, the NFL was dominated by the Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers, Giants, and Redskins.[8][9] Bell's inability to sign a desired prospect, Stan Kostka, in 1935,[5][10][11] eventually led Bell to believe the only way for the NFL to have enduring success was for all teams to have an equal opportunity to sign eligible players.[8][12][13] At a league meeting on May 18, 1935, Bell proposed a draft be instituted to enhance the possibility of competitive parity on the field in order to ensure the financial viability of all franchises. His proposal was adopted unanimously that day,[14][15][16][17] although the first draft would not occur until the next off-season.[12][13]


The rules for the selection of the players in the first draft were, first, that a list of college seniors[18][19] would be assembled by each franchise and submitted into a pool. From this pool, each franchise would select, in inverse order to their team's record in the previous year, a player. With this selection, the franchise had the unilateral right to negotiate a contract with that player,[20][21] or the ability to trade that player to another team for a player, or players.[22] If, for any reason, the franchise was unsuccessful in negotiating a contract with the player and was unable to trade the player, the president of the NFL could attempt to arbitrate a settlement between the player and the franchise. If the president was unable to settle the dispute, then the player would be placed in the reserve list of the franchise and would be unavailable to play for any team in the NFL that year.[20][21] In the 1935 NFL season, the Eagles finished in last place at 2–9, thus securing themselves the first pick in the draft.[23][24][25]



The first draft (1936)


The first NFL draft began at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Philadelphia on February 8, 1936.[12][13] Ninety names were written on a blackboard in the meeting room from which the teams would choose.[26][27] As no team had a scouting department, the list was created from either print media sources, visits to local colleges by team executives, or by recommendations to team executives.[26][27][28] The draft would last for nine rounds,[13][27][29] and it had no media coverage.[13] The first player ever selected in the draft was Jay Berwanger. Bell, prior to the draft, was not successfully able to negotiate a contract with Berwanger so Bell traded him to the Bears.[30][31][32]George Halas, owner of the Bears, was also unsuccessful in signing Berwanger.[33] Berwanger's decision to not play in the NFL was not unusual, as only twenty-four of the eighty-one players selected chose to play in the NFL that year.[34] The draft was recessed on the first day and it was continued and finished on the next day.[35]


This draft saw the emergence of Wellington Mara as a savant, as he had been subscribing to magazines and local and out-of-town papers to build up dossiers of college players across the country, which resulted in the Giants' drafting of Tuffy Leemans.[36] As a result of the institution of the draft, Tim Mara, owner of the Giants, reduced Ken Strong's salary offer to $3,200 from $6,000 a year for 1936 because Mara felt the draft would alter the salary structure of the NFL.[37] Generally, the franchises' exclusivity in negotiating with draft picks produced the immediate effect of, depending on sources, stopping the escalating salaries of new players,[13][18] or reducing their salaries.[38][39] Consequently, contemporary critics charged it was anti-labor.[40]



Early drafts (1937–1946)


Art Rooney, owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers, chose Byron "Whizzer" White in the first round of the 1938 draft despite White's known public declaration that he would not play professional football and would instead begin work on his Rhodes scholarship. White did, however, agree to play for the 1938 season after Rooney publicly gave him a guaranteed contract of $15,000, double what any other player had ever made in the NFL.[41] The size of the dollar amount brought condemnation from other owners because it altered the pay expectations of college draftees.[42] For the 1939 draft Wellington, for the first time, was put in charge of drafting players for the Giants. He submitted the list of players into the pool that the Giants—or other franchises—could choose players from. However, in the first round he selected a player, Walt Nielsen, not on the list of players that the Giants or any other franchise had submitted. With a grin Wellington stated, "'I didn't think I said I put every name on that list.'"[43]


In 1939, Kenny Washington was, to no small extent, viewed as one of the greatest college football players of all time. After information was made available to at least one owner of a franchise, Washington was not drafted by any team for the 1940 NFL Draft.[44]


The draft would be eventually codified into the NFL Constitution,[45] although no information is available on when that originally occurred.


"Bullet Bill" Dudley was the first overall pick in the 1942 draft and he would eventually become the first player picked first overall in the draft to enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[46]



Scouting era begins (1946–1959)


Eddie Kotal became the first player scout in 1946 when he was hired by Dan Reeves of the Los Angeles Rams.[47][48]


The NFL's competition with the AAFC in 1947 resulted in a temporary institution of a bonus pick.


Competitive parity did not, however, quickly arrive in the NFL as perennial losers, such as the Eagles and Chicago Cardinals, standings' did not improve until 1947.[38][49]


In the thirteenth round, George Taliaferro became the first African-American selected when he was chosen in the 1949 NFL draft. He however, chose to sign with an AAFC team. Wally Triplett was chosen in the nineteenth and he would be the first African-American to be selected in the draft and make an NFL team.[50] After the draft and prior to the start of the season, Paul "Tank" Younger was signed by the Los Angeles Rams as a free agent and became the first NFL player from an historically black college.[48][50]Eddie Robinson, Younger's coach at Grambling, promptly and unequivocally, impressed upon him that the future of the recruitment and drafting of his colleagues at other black colleges lay in the balance based on his success with the Rams.[51]



Technology (1960–1979)


The 1960 NFL Draft marked a turning point in the draft's history because of the pending arrival of the American Football League (AFL), as it became a "high-stakes, competitive affair."[52]


In 1976, former NFL wide receiver Paul Salata first coined the moniker "Mr. Irrelevant" to refer to the last overall player selected in the draft.[53]



ESPN and the digital age (1980–2017)


In 1980, Chet Simmons, president of the year-old ESPN, asked Pete Rozelle if the fledgling network could broadcast coverage of the draft live on ESPN. Although Rozelle did not believe it would be entertaining television, he agreed.[54][55] In 1988, the NFL moved the draft from weekdays to the weekend and ESPN's ratings of the coverage improved dramatically.[54][56]


In 2006, ESPN received competition when the NFL Network, which had launched in October 2003, began to produce its own draft coverage. ESPN pays the NFL a rights fee for the non-exclusive rights to draft coverage, a fee that is included in its overall contract to televise games (ESPN Sunday Night NFL from 1987 to 2005, and Monday Night Football from 2006 to the present).[57]


In 2010, the NFL moved to a three-day draft with the first day encompassing the first round beginning at 8:00 pm EDT, the second day encompassing the second and third rounds beginning at 7:00 pm EDT, and third day concluding the process with the final four rounds beginning at 11:00 am EDT Saturday.



Fox, NFL Network and ESPN (2018–)


Starting with the 2018 NFL Draft, the first two evenings will air on broadcast television, with Fox and NFL Network carrying a simulcast featuring personnel from both the NFL Network and Fox Sports.[58] ESPN continues to produce its own coverage of the draft, with ESPN2 simulcasting Days 1 and 2, while ABC simulcasts Day 3.



Current format


Players who have been out of high school for at least three years are eligible for the NFL draft. The rules do not state that a player must attend college, but virtually all of the players selected in the NFL draft have played college football, usually in the United States but occasionally from Canadian universities as well. A few players are occasionally selected from other football leagues like the Arena Football League (AFL), the Canadian Football League (CFL), and the German Football League (GFL). A small handful of players have also been drafted from colleges who played other sports than football.


Rules state only that a player must be three years removed from high school graduation, regardless of what the prospective draftee did during that time. A year as a redshirt player in college counts toward eligibility even though the player was not allowed to participate in games during that year, therefore players who have completed their redshirt sophomore year can enter the NFL draft.



Rules for determining draft order


The selection order is based on each team's win-loss record in the previous season and whether the team reached the playoffs. Teams that did not reach the playoffs the previous season are ranked in reverse order of their records (thus the team with the fewest wins is awarded the first selection). Ties between teams with identical records are determined by the following tiebreakers (in order):[59]



  1. Strength of schedule, which is the combined win-loss record for all 16 of the team's opponents in the previous season (ties count as a half win and half loss). The team with the lower strength of schedule (i.e. their opponents compiled fewer wins) is granted the earlier pick in round one.

  2. Record in common games against division opponents (if the teams are in the same division).

  3. Record in common games against conference opponents (if the teams are in the same conference).

  4. Coin flip(s), which occur(s) at the pre-draft NFL Combine.

Teams that reached the playoffs the previous season are then slotted in the order in which they were eliminated as indicated in the table below. Within each tier, the slotting is determined as above (i.e. worst record picks first and the same tiebreakers apply).[59]
















Status
Draft picks
Non-playoff teams
1–20
Eliminated in Wild Card round
21–24
Eliminated in Divisional round
25–28
Conference runners-up
29–30
Super Bowl runner-up
31
Super Bowl champion
32

Once the order for the first round is determined as described above, the selection order remains the same for subsequent rounds with the exception of teams with identical records within their tier. These tied teams "cycle" picks in each subsequent round. For example, in the 2014 draft, the Jacksonville Jaguars, Cleveland Browns, Oakland Raiders, Atlanta Falcons, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers all finished 4–12, and selected in that order in the first round (based on the tiebreakers described above). In the second round, Jacksonville cycled to the back of the line with the order becoming Cleveland, Oakland, Atlanta, Tampa Bay, and Jacksonville. That cycling continued in each round.[60]


An exception to this ordering strategy occurs when new "expansion teams" are added to the league. An expansion team is automatically granted the first selection. If there are two or more expansion teams added, a coin toss (for two expansion teams) or a drawing of lots (for three expansion teams or more) determines which team is awarded the first selection in the regular draft. The loser of the coin toss (or the winner of the drawing of lots in the event there are three or more expansion teams) is awarded the first selection in the expansion draft.[61]


The 2010 NFL draft was the first draft to take place over three days. Its first round was on Thursday, April 22 at 7:30 p.m. ET, with the second and third rounds on Friday, April 23 at 6 p.m. ET, followed by the remaining rounds on Saturday, April 24 at 10 a.m. ET.[62]


The first overall pick generally gets the richest contract, but other contracts rely on a number of variables. While they generally are based on the previous year's second overall pick, third overall, etc., each player's position also is taken into account. Quarterbacks, for example, usually command more money than defensive linemen, which can skew those dollar figures slightly.[citation needed]



Timing


Each team has its representatives attend the draft. During the draft, one team is always "on the clock." In Round 1, teams have 10 minutes to make their choice (previously 15)[time needed]. The decision time drops to 7 minutes (previously 10) in the second round and 5 minutes in Rounds 3–6. In round 7, and for compensatory picks, teams only have 4 minutes to make their choice. If a team does not make a decision within its allotted time, the team still can submit its selection at any time after its time is up, but the next team can pick before it, thus possibly 'stealing' a player the team with the earlier pick may have been considering. This occurred in the 2003 draft, when the Minnesota Vikings, with the 7th overall pick, were late with their selection. The Jacksonville Jaguars drafted quarterback Byron Leftwich and the Carolina Panthers drafted offensive tackle Jordan Gross before the Vikings were able to submit their selection of defensive tackle Kevin Williams. This also happened in 2011; as the Baltimore Ravens were negotiating a trade with the Chicago Bears, their time expired and allowed the Kansas City Chiefs to pick ahead of Baltimore, who was unable to finalize the trade with Chicago.



Pick trades


Teams may negotiate with one another both before and during the draft for the right to pick an additional player in a given round. For example, a team may include draft picks in future drafts in order to acquire a player during a trading period. Teams may also make negotiations during the draft relinquishing the right to pick in a given round for the right to have an additional pick in a later round. Thus teams may have no picks or multiple picks in a given round.



Compensatory picks


In addition to the 32 selections in each of the seven rounds, a total of 32 compensatory picks are awarded to teams based on the players they lost and gained in free agency. Using a proprietary formula, the league defines a class of unrestricted free agents as "compensatory free agents ("CFA"). Teams that have lost more or better compensatory free agents than they signed in the previous year receive picks somewhere in the third through seventh rounds.[63] Teams that gain and lose the same number of players but lose higher-valued players also can be awarded a pick, but only in the seventh round, after the others. Compensatory picks are awarded each year at the NFL annual meeting which is held at the end of March; typically, about three or four weeks before the draft. Compensatory picks can be traded beginning with the 2017 NFL draft.[64] The placement of the picks is determined by a proprietary formula based on the player's salary, playing time, and postseason honors with his new team, with salary being the primary factor. So, for example, a team that lost a linebacker who signed for $2.5 million per year in free agency might get a sixth-round compensatory pick, while a team that lost a wide receiver who signed for $5 million per year might receive a fourth-round pick. However, the NFL has never revealed the exact formula used to determine allotment of compensatory picks, though observers from outside the NFL have been able to reverse engineer it to some degree of certainty.[65]


All compensatory picks are awarded at the ends of Rounds 3 through 7. If fewer than 32 such picks are awarded, the remaining picks are awarded after the final Round 7 compensatory picks in the order in which teams would pick in a hypothetical eighth round of the draft; these picks are known as "supplemental compensatory selections". More than 32 compensatory picks have been awarded only on one occasion: the 2016 NFL Draft, where 33 picks were awarded; the additional pick was awarded (under an agreement between the NFL Management Council and the NFLPA) to the Buffalo Bills for losing Da'Norris Searcy to free agency and signing Charles Clay as a transition tagged player from the Miami Dolphins, who had not qualified as a CFA.[66][67]


In 2018, the NFL released the compensatory picks on February 23 (nineteen days after the Super Bowl).



Salaries


The NFL allows each team a certain amount of money from its salary cap[68] to sign its drafted rookies for their first season. That amount is based on an undisclosed formula that assigns a certain value to each pick in the draft; thus, having more picks, or earlier picks, will increase the allotment. In 2008 the highest allotment was about $8.22 million for the Kansas City Chiefs, who had 12 picks, including two first-rounders, while the lowest was the $1.79 million for the Cleveland Browns who had only five picks, and none in the first three rounds.[69] The exact mechanism for the rookie salary cap is set out in the NFL's collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA). (Those numbers represent the cap hits that each rookie's salary may contribute, not the total amount of money paid out.)


The drafted players are paid salaries commensurate with the position in which they were drafted. High first-round picks get paid the most, and low-round picks get paid the least. There is a de facto pay scale for drafted rookies. After the draft, non-drafted rookies may sign a contract with any team in the league. These rookie free-agents are not usually paid as well as drafted players, nearly all of them signing for the predetermined rookie minimum and a small signing bonus.


Two other facets of the rookie salary cap affect the makeup of rosters. First, the base salaries of rookie free agents do not count towards the rookie salary cap, though certain bonuses do. Second, if a rookie is traded, his cap allotment remains with the team that originally drafted him, which make trades involving rookie players relatively rare. (This rule does not apply, however, to rookies that are waived by the teams that drafted them.)


Teams can also agree to a contract with a draft-eligible player before the draft itself starts. They can only do this if they have the first overall pick, as by agreeing to terms with a player the team has already "selected" which player they will draft. A recent example of this would be quarterback Matthew Stafford and the Detroit Lions in the 2009 NFL Draft. The Lions, with the first overall selection in the draft, agreed to a 6-year, $78 million deal with $41.7 million guaranteed with Stafford a day before the draft officially started. By agreeing to the deal, Stafford had already been chosen as the first overall pick in the draft.



Forfeiture


The commissioner has the ability to forfeit picks the team is allotted in a draft. For example, in the 2007 NFL season, the New England Patriots were penalized for videotaping the Jets' defensive signals outside of a designated area. As a result, the Patriots forfeited their first-round pick in the 2008 NFL Draft. Similarly, the San Francisco 49ers were forced to forfeit a fifth-round pick in the same draft for tampering with a player under contract to the Chicago Bears, and were also forced to swap third-round selections with the Bears (moving the 49ers down and the Bears up six spots). Also, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell penalized the New Orleans Saints by taking away their 2nd round picks in the 2012 and 2013 NFL drafts in the wake of the New Orleans Saints bounty scandal. Another time this has happened was in the 2016 NFL Draft where the Patriots' 1st round pick was taken away for Deflategate.



Team policies


Teams vary greatly in their selection methodologies. Owners, general managers, coaches, and others may or may not participate. For the 1983 draft, for example, the Pittsburgh Steelers' head coach Chuck Noll had what team executive Art Rooney, Jr. later described as "the final say" over picks, even over his father, team owner Art Rooney. New England Patriots head coach Ron Meyer, by contrast, later stated that the team, led by owner Billy Sullivan, excluded the coaching staff from any personnel-related decisions, even prohibiting him from reading scouting reports. Had he had the decision-making authority, Meyer said, he would not have chosen Tony Eason in the first round of the 1983 draft.[70]



Events leading up to the draft



NFL Draft Advisory Board decisions



College football players who are considering entering the NFL draft but who still have eligibility to play football can request an expert opinion from the NFL-created Draft Advisory Board. The Board, composed of scouting experts and team executives, makes a prediction as to the likely round in which a player would be drafted. This information, which has proven to be fairly accurate, can help college players determine whether to enter the draft or to continue playing and improving at the college level. There are also many famous reporting scouts, such as Mel Kiper Jr.



NFL Scouting Combine



The NFL Scouting Combine is a six-day assessment of skills occurring every year in late February or early March in Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana. College football players perform physical and mental tests in front of NFL coaches, general managers, and scouts. With increasing interest in the NFL draft, the scouting combine has grown in scope and significance, allowing personnel directors to evaluate upcoming prospects in a standardized setting. Its origins have evolved from the National, BLESTO, and Quadra Scouting services in 1977 to the media frenzy it has become today.
Athletes attend by invitation only. Implications of one's performance during the Combine can affect perception, draft status, salary, and ultimately his career. The draft has popularized the term "Workout Warrior" (sometimes known as a "Workout Wonder"), describing an athlete who, based on superior measurables such as size, speed, and strength, has increased his "draft stock" despite having a possibly average or subpar college career.[71][72][73]



Pro Day


Each university has a Pro Day, during which the NCAA allows NFL scouts to visit the school and watch players participate in NFL Combine events together. (Some smaller universities join with nearby schools.) Essentially job fairs for prospective NFL players,[74] Pro Days are held under the belief that players feel more comfortable at their own campus than they do at the Combine, which in turn leads to better performances. College teams which produce a large quantity of NFL prospects generally generate huge interest from scouts and coaches at their Pro Days.



Pre-draft visits


Each NFL team is allowed to transport a maximum of 30 draft-eligible players for the purposes of physical examinations, interviews, and written tests.[75] If a player attends a school or grew up in the same "metropolitan area" as the team that is inviting the player, that visit is not counted towards the 30-player limit.[76]



Tickets


Tickets to the NFL draft are free and made available to fans on a first-come first-served basis. The tickets are distributed at the box office the morning of the draft, one ticket per person.[77]



Venue


From the mid-1930s to the mid-1960s, the draft was held in various Northeastern, Midwestern, Mid-Atlantic, and Western cities with NFL franchises. Starting in 1965, the NFL settled on New York City until moving the event to Chicago in 2015. Since then, the draft has moved to different locations such as Philadelphia, Dallas, and Nashville. The draft is bid on each year by NFL cities and is held in the city of the winning bid in a process that began in 2015.[78] The 2006 draft was held at New York City's Radio City Music Hall, the first time this venue had hosted the gala, and it was held there until 2015, when the draft was held in Chicago's Auditorium Theater. The move marked the first time that the Draft had been in Chicago since 1964. The Theater at Madison Square Garden had hosted the event for a ten-year period, but the NFL moved it to the Javits Convention Center in 2005 following a dispute with the Cablevision-owned arena, who were opposing the West Side Stadium, which would have served as home of the New York Jets and the centerpiece of the New York City bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics, because the new stadium would have competed with the Garden for concerts and other events.[79]




"Selection Square" for the 2016 NFL Draft at Grant Park's Buckingham Fountain in Chicago.


Chicago: 1938, 1942–1943, 1951, 1962–1964, 2015–2016 (9)



  • Auditorium Theatre and Grant Park: 2015, 2016 (2)[80]


  • Blackstone Hotel: 1951, 1962, 1963, 1964 (4)


  • Palmer House Hotel: 1942, 1943 (2)


  • Sherman House Hotel: 1938 (1)

Dallas: 2018 (1)



  • AT&T Stadium: 2018

Los Angeles: 1956 (1)



  • Ambassador Hotel: 1956* (1)

Milwaukee: 1940 (1)



  • Schroeder Hotel: 1940 (1)

Nashville: 2019 (1)




The set for the 2010 NFL Draft at Radio City Music Hall in New York City


New York City: 1937, 1939, 1944–1945, 1947, 1952, 1955, 1965–2014 (57)



  • Americana Hotel: 1973, 1974 (2)


  • Belmont Plaza Hotel: 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971 (4)


  • Essex House: 1972 (1)


  • Gotham Hotel: 1967 (1)


  • Hilton at Rockefeller Center: 1975 (1)


  • Commodore Hotel: 1944, 1945, 1947 (3)


  • Hotel Lincoln: 1937 (1)


  • Hotel Statler: 1952 (1)


  • Javits Convention Center: 2005 (1)


  • New York Marriott Marquis 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 (9)


  • New York Sheraton Hotel/ Omni Park Central Hotel: 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985 (6)


  • New Yorker Hotel: 1939 (1)


  • Radio City Music Hall: 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 (9)


  • Roosevelt Hotel 1976, 1977, 1978 (3)


  • Summit Hotel: 1965, 1966 (2)


  • Theater at Madison Square Garden: 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999. 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 (10)


  • Waldorf-Astoria Hotel: 1979 (1)


  • Warwick Hotel: 1955 (1)



The stage for the 2017 NFL Draft on Eakins Oval in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art


Philadelphia: 1936, 1944, 1949–1961, 2017 (15)



  • Bellevue-Stratford Hotel: 1949*, 1950, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956*, 1957* (8)


  • Eakins Oval: 2017 (1)[81]


  • Racquet Club of Philadelphia: 1950* (1)


  • Ritz-Carlton Hotel: 1936 (1)


  • Warwick Hotel: 1944, 1957*, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961 (6)

Pittsburgh: 1948–1949 (2)



  • Fort Pitt Hotel: 1948 (1)


  • Schenley Hotel: 1949* (1)

Washington, D.C.: 1941 (1)



  • Willard Hotel: 1941 (1)

*: Year with more than one Draft venue


Source: NFL Draft Locations[82]



American Football League draft


Dallas: 1961–1963



  • Dallas Statler Hilton (1961–1963)

Minneapolis: 1960



  • Nicollet Hotel (1960)

New York: 1964–1966



  • Waldorf Astoria (1964–1966*)

No location (by telephone): 1965*


*: Year with more than one draft venue


Source: NFL Draft Locations[82]



Supplemental draft


Since 1977, the NFL has also held a supplemental draft to accommodate players who did not enter the regular draft. Players generally enter the supplementary draft because they missed the filing deadline for the NFL draft or because issues developed which affected their eligibility (such as academic or disciplinary matters). The supplemental draft is scheduled to occur at some point after the regular draft and before the start of the next season. In 1984 the NFL held an additional draft for players who were under contract with either USFL or CFL teams.


Draft order is determined by a weighted system that is divided into three groupings. First come the teams that had six or fewer wins last season, followed by non-playoff teams that had more than six wins, followed by the 12 playoff teams. In the supplemental draft, a team is not required to use any picks. Instead, if a team wants a player in the supplemental draft, they submit a "bid" to the Commissioner with the round they would pick that player. If no other team places a bid on that player at an earlier spot, the team is awarded the player and has to give up an equivalent pick in the following year's draft.[83] (For example, FS Paul Oliver was taken by the San Diego Chargers in the fourth round of the supplemental draft in 2007; thus, in the 2008 NFL draft, the Chargers forfeited a fourth-round pick.)


The 1985 supplemental draft was particularly controversial. Quarterback Bernie Kosar who had led the University of Miami to its first National Championship in 1984 was earning his academic degree as a junior. Rather than finish his eligibility at Miami he wanted to turn pro. At this time college players had to wait for their class unless they themselves graduated early.


A plan was devised by football agent AJ Faigin[84] that was to get him to Kosar's preferred team, the Cleveland Browns. Faigin was representing former University of Miami QB Jim Kelly, then in the USFL, but whose NFL rights were held by the Buffalo Bills. The USFL was in its last days and Kelly would soon be available to the Bills. Faigin's first step was to ask Bill Polian, the GM of Buffalo, if he would be willing to trade the number one supplemental pick (worth next to nothing at that time) to Cleveland. Polian agreed and Faigin told the Cleveland Browns a trade was available. He next notified Kosar's father he should not formally submit his son's application for the standard NFL draft that was weeks away and declare only afterward; which would put him into the supplemental draft.


The result of Kosar's withdrawal resulted in rare, open warfare among NFL teams played out in the newspapers with threats of lawsuits between them, notably the Minnesota Vikings and New York Giants, who had expressed interest in choosing him in that season's regular draft. But as no rules were broken the Giants and eventually Minnesota had to back down. Following that season, the NFL instituted the current semi-random supplemental draft order.


The strategy devised by A.J. Faigin, to not declare for the NFL until after the regular draft, was subsequently used by other top players for various reasons. In some cases, it was because they did not want to play for the team that would have drafted them in the regular draft. For example, Brian Bosworth did not declare because he did not want to play for the Indianapolis Colts or the Buffalo Bills, the teams who drafted second and third that year. The Colts had offered him a 4-year, $2.2 million deal before the draft.[85] The Seattle Seahawks won the right to draft first in the supplemental draft, and later signed him to a 10-year, $11 million contract.[86] At the time that was the largest rookie contract in NFL history.


As of the 1990 season, only players who had graduated or exhausted their college eligibility were made available for the supplemental draft. Since 1993, only players who had planned to attend college but for various reasons could not, have been included in the supplemental draft.



List of NFL supplemental draft picks




See also


  • Draftnik

  • Drafts in sports

  • List of NFL drafts

  • List of professional American football drafts

  • List of NFL draft broadcasters

  • List of final selections of NFL drafts

  • List of NFL Draft first overall picks


References




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  2. ^ ab Coenen, 2005, pp. 92–93.


  3. ^ "Pros Make Five Changes in Rules To Improve Game". Milwaukee Sentinel. December 11, 1934. p. 13. Retrieved October 9, 2011.


  4. ^ Lyons, 2010, p. 54.


  5. ^ ab MacCambridge, 2005, p. 43.


  6. ^ The three most prestigious teams at the time were the Bears, Giants, and the Packers. Maule, 1964, p. 15.


  7. ^ The players had an auxiliary financial incentive to play with the best teams because 60% of the profit for the NFL championship game went to the players on the winning team and 40% went to the players on the losing team. Dunscomb, George (December 12, 1936). "$6,000 for a Touchdown: George Halas of the Chicago Bears Tells of Costs of Running a Pro Team". Saturday Evening Post. pp. 16, 40, 42.


  8. ^ ab Lyons, 2010, p. 56.


  9. ^ Ruck; Patterson and Weber, 2010, p. 108.


  10. ^ Lyons writes Bell tried to sign Kostka in 1933.Lyons, 2010, p. 56.


  11. ^ Willis, 2010, p. 338.


  12. ^ abc Peterson, 1997, p. 119.


  13. ^ abcdef Williams, 2006, pp. 41–42.


  14. ^ Didinger writes the proposal was accepted the next day, on May 19, 1935. Didinger; Lyons, 2005, p. 256.


  15. ^ Lyons, 2010, p. 57–58.


  16. ^ Willis, 2010, p. 341–343.


  17. ^ DeVito, 2006, p. 84.


  18. ^ ab Baldwin, 2000, p. 192.


  19. ^ Barnett, Bob. "1936: The First Draft" (PDF). Retrieved October 4, 2011.


  20. ^ ab Lyons, 2010, pp. 58–59


  21. ^ ab Willis, 2010, p. 342.


  22. ^ "Pro Rules on Signing Up of College Players". Milwaukee Sentinel. February 10, 1936. p. 10. Retrieved October 10, 2011.


  23. ^ MacCambridge, 2005, p. 44.


  24. ^ Didinger; Lyons, 2005, p. 256.


  25. ^ Willis, 2010, p. 337.


  26. ^ ab Lyons, 2010, p. 60.


  27. ^ abc Willis, 2010, p. 350.


  28. ^ Davis, 2005, p. 131.


  29. ^ Lyons and Willis write the draft was originally set up to have only five rounds, but it was changed to nine rounds during the selection meeting. Lyons, 2010, p. 350.


  30. ^ "Chicago Bears Granted Option on Jay Berwanger". Milwaukee Journal. February 10, 1936. p. D4. Retrieved October 2, 2011. The Milwaukee Journal implies the Eagles never attempted to negotiate with Berwanger.


  31. ^ Lyons writes Bell offer of $150 per game was declined by Berwanger. Lyons, 2010, p. 60.


  32. ^ Willis, 2010, p. 351.


  33. ^ Davis writes Berwanger requested a two-year no cut contract for $12,500 per year which George Halas declined to meet. Davis, 2005, pp. 131–132.


  34. ^ Willis writes four players chosen in the draft eventually changed their minds and entered into the NFL in 1937. Willis, 2010, p. 351.


  35. ^ Lyons, 2010, p. 59.


  36. ^ Devito, 2006, p. 85.


  37. ^ Coenen, 2005, pp. 96–97.


  38. ^ ab Coenen, 2005, p. 90.


  39. ^ "The players coming out of college were not happy, as salaries dropped by almost half." Devito, 2006, pp. 84.


  40. ^ Peterson, 1997, pp. 119–120.


  41. ^ Ruck; Patterson and Weber, 2010, pp. 138–140.


  42. ^ Ruck; Patterson and Weber, 2010, pp. 143, 148.


  43. ^ Devito, 2006, pp. 95–96.


  44. ^ Pervin writes that "Some NFL owners, including Tim Mara, were encouraged to draft Washington but none chose to break the racial barrier." Pervin, 2009, p. 16.


  45. ^ "Organized Professional Team Sports, Part 3 (password protected except at participating U.S. Library)", Hearings Before the Antitrust Subcommittee (Subcommittee No. 5) of the Committee on the Judiciary (PDF)|format= requires |url= (help), Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1957, pp. 2580a–2580at, retrieved October 9, 2011


  46. ^ "1936: All Time #1". Retrieved October 10, 2011.


  47. ^ Dougherty, Pete (October 14, 2011). "Rams ushered in modern era of with help from former Packers player, coach Eddie Kotal". Green Bay Press-Gazette. Retrieved October 28, 2011.


  48. ^ ab MacCambridge, 2005, pp. 55–57.


  49. ^ MacCambridge, 2005, p. 41.


  50. ^ ab "African-Americans in Pro Football: Pioneers, Milestones and Firsts". Retrieved October 10, 2011.


  51. ^ Levy incorrectly writes Younger was drafted by the Rams. Levy 2003, p. 102.


  52. ^ Williams, 2006, p. 46.


  53. ^ Jacobs, Melissa (April 30, 2011). "Irrelevant can be a good thing". Retrieved October 11, 2011.


  54. ^ ab Williams, 2006, pp. 52–53.


  55. ^ Sandomir, Richard "Chet Simmons, a Founding Force of ESPN, Dies at 81" The New York Times, Saturday, March 27, 2010


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  57. ^ https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/early-lead/wp/2017/04/27/espns-layoffs-will-not-even-come-close-to-solving-the-networks-issues/


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  59. ^ ab "The Rule of the Draft". NFL.com. Retrieved January 26, 2016.


  60. ^ "Draft 2018 - NFL Draft History: Full Draft Year". NFL.com. Retrieved August 22, 2018.


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  70. ^ "Elway to Marino". 30 for 30. Season 2. April 23, 2013. ESPN.


  71. ^ Isaac Cheifetz, Hiring Secrets of the NFL: How Your Company Can Select Talent Like a Champion (2007), 68, available at Google Books


  72. ^ Rich Eisen, Total Access: A Journey to the Center of the NFL Universe (2007), 128, available at Google Books


  73. ^ David Schoenfield, Page 2: The 100 worst draft picks ever, ESPN.com, April 26, 2006 (see No. 45, Mike Mamula, a "workout wonder")


  74. ^ Earley, Steve (March 22, 2013). "A 'job fair' of sorts at ODU for local football players". The Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved March 27, 2013.


  75. ^ http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/04/05/breaking-down-the-rules-regarding-pre-draft-rookie-visits/


  76. ^ https://www.behindthesteelcurtain.com/nfl-pittsburgh-steelers-news/2017/4/5/15181218/how-the-nfl-permits-some-pre-draft-visits-to-not-count-towards-a-teams-total-steelers-pittsburgh


  77. ^ "NFL Draft Basics: Fan Tickets". Archived from the original on January 3, 2008. Retrieved January 4, 2008.


  78. ^ Wilner, Barry. "Majority of NFL teams interested in hosting the draft". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved February 12, 2018.


  79. ^ Hack, Damon (February 11, 2005). "N.F.L. Is Seeking New Home for Draft". New York Times. Retrieved January 18, 2010.


  80. ^ Fischer, Bryan. "New, fan-friendly events planned for 2015 NFL Draft in Chicago". NFL.com. NFL Productions LLC. Retrieved 4 May 2015.


  81. ^ Trimble, Megan (September 1, 2016). "2017 NFL DRAFT TO BE HELD IN PHILADELPHIA ALONG BEN FRANKLIN PARKWAY". 6.abc.com. WPVI-TV. Retrieved January 31, 2016.


  82. ^ ab "NFL Draft Locations". www.footballgeography.com. October 2, 2014. Retrieved October 23, 2014.


  83. ^ "The Supplemental Draft – How does it work?". How does the supplemental draft work?.


  84. ^ Miami Herald, "Sports Weekend" Feb 8, 1985


  85. ^ "Colts Insist: Not Trade For Rights to No. 1 Pick". Retrieved October 9, 2011.


  86. ^ "Sports Digest". The Telegraph. August 15, 1987. p. 9. Retrieved October 11, 2011. He brings to the Seahawks ... the potential to be a dominating force inside.


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  • Organized Professional Team Sports: Part 3. (password protected except at participating U.S. library) by United States House Committee on the Judiciary III, Subcommittee on Antitrust (1957).

  • Baldwin, Douglas Owen (2000). Football—The NFL in Sports in North America: A Documentary History, Volume 8, Sports in the Depression, 1930–1940. Gulf Breeze, Florida: Academic International Press.
    ISBN 0-87569-224-9 pp. 191–207.

  • Coenen, Craig R. (2005). From Sandlots to the Super Bowl: The National Football League, 1920–1967. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press.
    ISBN 1-57233-447-9

  • Davis, Jeff (2005). Papa Bear, The Life and Legacy of George Halas. New York: McGraw-Hill
    ISBN 0-07-146054-3

  • DeVito, Carlo (2006). Wellington: the Maras, the Giants, and the City of New York. Chicago: Triumph Books.
    ISBN 978-1-57243-872-9

  • Didinger, Ray; with Lyons, Robert S. (2005). The Eagles Encyclopedia. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
    ISBN 1-59213-449-1

  • Levy, Alan H. (2003). Tackling Jim Crow, Racial Segregation in Professional Football. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland and Co., Inc.
    ISBN 0-7864-1597-5

  • Lyons, Robert S. (2010). On Any Given Sunday, A Life of Bert Bell. Philadelphia:Temple University Press.
    ISBN 978-1-59213-731-2

  • MacCambridge, Michael (2004, 2005), America's Game. New York:Anchor Books
    ISBN 978-0-307-48143-6

  • Maule, Tex (1964). The Game; The Official Picture History of the National Football League. New York: Random House

  • Pervin, Lawrence A. (2009). Football's New York Giants. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland and Company, Inc.
    ISBN 978-0-7864-4268-3

  • Ruck, Rob; with Paterson, Maggie Jones and Weber, Michael P. (2010) Rooney:a Sporting Life. Lincoln:University of Nebraska Press.
    ISBN 978-0-8032-2283-0

  • Peterson, Robert W. (1997). Pigskin New York:Oxford University Press.
    ISBN 0-19-507607-9

  • Williams, Pete (2006). The Draft: a year inside the NFL's search for talent. New York:St. Martin's Press.
    ISBN 978-0-312-35438-1

  • Willis, Chris (2010). The Man Who Built the National Football League: Joe F. Carr. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, Inc.
    ISBN 978-0-8108-7669-9

  • Brown, Paul; with Clary, Jack (1979). PB, the Paul Brown Story. New York: Atheneum.

  • Carroll, John M. (1999). Red Grange and the Rise of Modern Football. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press.
    ISBN 0-252-02384-6


  • Durham, Meenakshi G.; Oates, Thomas P. (2004). "The mismeasure of masculinity: the male body, 'race' and power in the enumerative discourses of the NFL Draft". Patterns of Prejudice. 38 (3): 301–320. doi:10.1080/0031322042000250475.

  • Gottehrer, Barry (1963), The Giants of New York. New York:G.P. Putnam's Sons

  • Hession, Joseph (1987). The Rams: Five Decades of Football. San Francisco: Foghorn Press.

  • Knight, Jonathan (2006). "Bernie Comes Home" in Sundays in the Pound: The Heroics and Heartbreak of the 1985–89 Cleveland Browns. Kent, Ohio: The Kent State University Press
    ISBN 978-0-87338-866-5 pp. 15–25.

  • Maule, Tex (1964). The Game; The Official Picture History of the National Football League. New York: Random House

  • Staudohar, Paul D. (1986). The Sports Industry and Collective Bargaining. Ithaca, New York: ILR Press.
    ISBN 0-87546-117-4

  • Yost, Mark (2006). Tailgating, Sacks and Salary Caps. Chicago: Kaplan Publishing.
    ISBN 978-1-4195-2600-8



Further reading




  • N.F.L. Draft Travels Far for a Two-Night Stay

  • What Does Fitzpatrick's Wonderlic Mean?

  • The Year Greasy Neale was Fired

  • 1936–37 NFL Draft by Jim Campbell

  • Draft Productivity: A Study by Gary Keller

  • The Scout Is A Lonely Hunter by George Plimpton

  • Is the supplemental draft important?

  • Oh, for another '58 Packer draft

  • Yazoo Smith v. NFL



External links


  • Official website









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