2019 NFL draft
84th annual meeting of National Football League franchises to select newly eligible players From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2019 NFL draft was the 84th annual meeting of National Football League (NFL) franchises to select newly eligible players for the 2019 NFL season. The draft was held on April 25–27 in Nashville. The first round was held on April 25, followed by the second and third rounds on April 26, and the draft concluded with rounds 4–7 on April 27. The draft featured a record-high 40 trades,[1] surpassing the 37 which were made in 2017.[2]
2019 NFL draft | |
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General information | |
Date(s) | April 25–27, 2019 |
Time | 8:00 PM ET |
Location | Lower Broadway Nashville, Tennessee |
Network(s) | ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, NFL Network |
Overview | |
254 total selections in 7 rounds | |
League | NFL |
First selection | Kyler Murray, QB, Arizona Cardinals |
Mr. Irrelevant | Caleb Wilson, TE, Arizona Cardinals |
Most selections (12) | Minnesota Vikings |
Fewest selections (5) | Chicago Bears New Orleans Saints Philadelphia Eagles |
Early entrants
A record-high 111 eligible applicants announced their intention to enter the 2019 NFL draft as underclassmen, which primarily included juniors and redshirt sophomores who forwent future years of college eligibility.[3] In order to be eligible to enter the draft, players must be at least three years removed from high school. The deadline for underclassmen to declare for the draft was January 14, 2019.
Host city bid process
The host city for the 2019 (as well as the 2020) draft was chosen from among finalists Denver, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Nashville, and Cleveland/Canton in May 2018 at the NFL Spring League Meeting.[4] On May 23, 2018, the league announced Nashville as the host city of the 2019 draft.[5]
Player selections
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The following is the breakdown of the 254 players selected by position:
- 32 Cornerbacks
- 31 Linebackers
- 28 Wide receivers
- 26 Defensive ends
- 25 Running backs
- 23 Offensive tackles
- 21 Defensive tackles
- 19 Safeties
- 16 Tight ends
- 12 Offensive guards
- 11 Quarterbacks
- 5 Centers
- 2 Placekickers
- 2 Punters
- 1 Long snapper
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Second round selections Deebo Samuel (36th overall), A. J. Brown (51st overall), Mecole Hardman (56th overall), and DK Metcalf (64th overall) have all been selected to the Pro Bowl at least once.
Notable undrafted players
Supplemental draft
A supplemental draft was held on July 10, 2019. For each player selected in the supplemental draft, the team forfeited its pick in that round in the draft of the following season.
Rnd. | Pick No. | NFL team | Player | Pos. | College | Conf. | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | – | Arizona Cardinals | Jalen Thompson | S | Washington State | Pac-12 |
Trades
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(PD) indicates trades completed prior to the start of the draft (i.e. Pre-Draft), while (D) denotes trades which took place during the 2019 draft.
Round one
- No. 17: Cleveland → NY Giants (PD). Cleveland traded a first-round selection (17th), a third-round selection previously acquired from New England (95th), guard Kevin Zeitler and safety Jabrill Peppers to New York in exchange for wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. and defensive end Olivier Vernon.[Trade 2]
- No. 20: Pittsburgh → Denver (D). See No. 10: Denver → Pittsburgh.[Trade 1]
- No. 24: Chicago → Oakland (PD). Chicago traded first- and sixth-round selections (24th and 196th) as well as 2020 first- and third-round selections to Oakland in exchange for outside linebacker Khalil Mack and 2020 second- and conditional fifth-round (which eventually converted to a seventh-round) selections.[Trade 3]
- No. 25: Philadelphia → Baltimore (D). See No. 22: Baltimore → Philadelphia.[Trade 1]
- No. 27: Dallas → Oakland (PD). Dallas traded a first-round selection (27th) to Oakland in exchange for wide receiver Amari Cooper.[Trade 4]
- No. 29: Kansas City → Seattle (PD). Kansas City traded 2019 first- and third-round selections (29th and 92nd), as well as a conditional 2020 second-round selection to Seattle in exchange for defensive end Frank Clark and a third-round selection (84th).[Trade 5]
- No. 30: multiple trades.
New Orleans → Green Bay (PD). New Orleans traded a first-round selection (30th), as well as 2018 first- and fifth-round selections (27th and 147th) to Green Bay in exchange for Green Bay's 2018 first round selection (14th).[Trade 6]
Green Bay → Seattle (D). See No. 21: Seattle → Green Bay.[Trade 1]
Seattle → NY Giants (D). Seattle traded this first-round selection (30th) to New York Giants in exchange for New York's second-, fourth- and fifth-round selections (37th, 132nd and 142nd).[Trade 1]
Round two
- No. 40: Buffalo → Oakland (D). See No. 38: Oakland → Buffalo.[Trade 1]
- No. 47: Carolina → Seattle (D). See No. 37: Seattle → Carolina.[Trade 1]
- No. 49: Cleveland → Indianapolis (D). See No. 46: Indianapolis → Cleveland.[Trade 1]
- No. 52: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
Pittsburgh → Denver (D). See No. 10: Denver → Pittsburgh.
Denver → Cincinnati (D). See No. 42: Cincinnati → Denver. - No. 54: Seattle → Houston (PD). Seattle traded a second-round selection (54th) as well as a 2018 third-round selection (80th) to Houston in exchange for Houston's 2018 fifth-round selection (141st) and offensive tackle Duane Brown. This trade originally included cornerback Jeremy Lane but was revised after Lane failed his physical.[Trade 8]
- No. 56: multiple trades.
Chicago → New England (PD). Chicago traded a second-round selection (56th) as well as a 2018 fourth-round selection (105th) to New England in exchange for New England's 2018 second-round selection previously acquired from Detroit (51st).[Trade 6]
New England → LA Rams (D). See No. 45: LA Rams → New England.[Trade 1]
LA Rams → Kansas City (D). Los Angeles traded this second-round selection (56th) to Kansas City in exchange for Kansas City's second- and fifth-round selections (61st and 167th).[Trade 1] - No. 61: Kansas City → LA Rams (D). See No. 56: LA Rams → Kansas City.[Trade 1]
- No. 62: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
New Orleans → Miami (D). See No. 48: Miami → New Orleans.
Miami → Arizona (D). Miami traded this second-round selection (62nd) as well as a 2020 fifth-round selection to Arizona in exchange for quarterback Josh Rosen.
Round three
- No. 66: Oakland → Pittsburgh (PD). Oakland traded third- and fifth-round selections (66th and 141st) to Pittsburgh in exchange for wide receiver Antonio Brown.[Trade 10]
- No. 73: multiple trades.[Trade 6]
Detroit → New England (PD). Detroit traded a third-round selection (73rd) to New England for New England's 2018 fourth-round selection (114th).
New England → Chicago (D). New England traded this third-round selection and a sixth-round selection (73rd and 205th) to Chicago in exchange for Chicago's third- and fifth-round selections (87th and 162nd) as well as a 2020 fourth-round selection.[Trade 1] - No. 77: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
Carolina → Seattle (D). See No. 37: Seattle → Carolina.
Seattle → New England (D). See No. 64: New England → Seattle. - No. 79: Atlanta → LA Rams (D). See No. 31: LA Rams → Atlanta.[Trade 1]
- No. 84: Seattle → Kansas City (PD). See No. 29: Kansas City → Seattle.[Trade 5]
- No. 87: Chicago → New England (D). See No. 73: New England → Chicago.[Trade 1]
- No. 88: multiple trades.
Philadelphia → Detroit (PD). Philadelphia traded a third-round selection (88th) to Detroit in exchange for wide receiver Golden Tate.[Trade 11]
Detroit → Minnesota (D). See No. 81: Minnesota → Detroit.[Trade 1]
Minnesota → Seattle (D). Minnesota traded this third-round selection and a sixth-round selection (88th and 209th) to Seattle in exchange for Seattle's third- and fifth-round selections (92nd and 159th).[Trade 1] - No. 92: multiple trades.
Kansas City → Seattle (PD). See No. 29: Kansas City → Seattle.[Trade 5]
Seattle → Minnesota (D). See No. 88: Minnesota → Seattle.[Trade 1]
Minnesota → NY Jets (D). Minnesota traded this third-round selection (92nd) to New York in exchange for third- and seventh-round selections (93rd and 217th).[Trade 1] - No. 93: multiple trades.
New Orleans → NY Jets (PD). New Orleans traded a third-round selection (93rd) to New York for a sixth-round selection and quarterback Teddy Bridgewater.[Trade 12]
NY Jets → Minnesota (D). See No. 92: Minnesota → NY Jets.[Trade 1]
Minnesota → Baltimore (D). Minnesota traded this third-round selection (93rd) to Baltimore in exchange for Baltimore's third- and two sixth-round selections (102nd, 191st and 193rd).[Trade 1] - No. 94: LA Rams → Tampa Bay (D). See No. 70: Tampa Bay → LA Rams.[Trade 1]
- No. 95: multiple trades.
New England → Cleveland (PD). New England traded a third-round selection (95th) to Cleveland in exchange for Cleveland's 2018 fifth-round selection (159th) and defensive tackle Danny Shelton.[Trade 13]
Cleveland → NY Giants (PD). See No. 17: Cleveland → NY Giants.[Trade 2] - No. 98: LA Rams → Jacksonville (PD). Los Angeles traded their third-round selection (98th) as well as their 2020 fifth-round selection to Jacksonville in exchange for defensive end Dante Fowler.[Trade 14]
- No. 99: LA Rams → Tampa Bay (D). See No. 70: Tampa Bay → LA Rams.[Trade 1]
- No. 101: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
New England → LA Rams (D). See No. 45: LA Rams → New England.
LA Rams → New England (D). See No. 97: New England → LA Rams. - No. 102: Baltimore → Minnesota (D). See No. 93: Minnesota → Baltimore.[Trade 1]
Round four
- No. 109: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
No. 109: Jacksonville → Oakland (D). See No. 35: Oakland → Jacksonville.
Oakland → Indianapolis (D). Oakland traded this fourth-round selection (109th) to Indianapolis in exchange for Indianapolis' two fourth-round selections (129th and 135th). - No. 110: Cincinnati → San Francisco (D). See No. 104: San Francisco → Cincinnati.[Trade 1]
- No. 112: Buffalo → Washington (D). See No. 96: Washington → Buffalo.
- No. 113: Denver → Baltimore (PD). Denver traded a fourth-round selection (113th) to Baltimore in exchange for quarterback Joe Flacco; the trade became official on March 13.[Trade 15]
- No. 116: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
Miami → New Orleans (D). See No. 48: Miami → New Orleans.
New Orleans → NY Jets (D). See No. 105: NY Jets → New Orleans.
NY Jets → Tennessee (D). New York traded this fourth-round selection and their fifth-round selection (116th and 168th) to Tennessee in exchange for Tennessee's fourth- and fifth-round selections (121st and 157th). - No. 117: Atlanta → Detroit (D). See No. 111: Detroit → Atlanta.[Trade 1]
- No. 118: multiple trades.
Washington → Green Bay (PD). Washington traded a fourth-round selection to Green Bay in exchange for free safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix.[Trade 16]
Green Bay → Seattle (D). See No. 21: Seattle → Green Bay.[Trade 1]
Seattle → New England (D). See No. 64: New England → Seattle.[Trade 1] - No. 120: Minnesota → Seattle (D). See No. 114: Seattle → Minnesota.[Trade 1]
- No. 121: Tennessee → NY Jets (D). See No. 116: NY Jets → Tennessee.[Trade 1]
- No. 125: multiple trades.
Houston → Denver (PD). Houston traded a fourth-round selection to Denver in exchange for wide receiver Demaryius Thomas. The two teams also swapped seventh-round selections.[Trade 17]
Denver → Cincinnati (D). See No. 42: Cincinnati → Denver.[Trade 1] - No. 127: Philadelphia → Baltimore (D). See No. 22: Baltimore → Philadelphia.[Trade 1]
- No. 129: Indianapolis → Oakland (D). See No. 109: Oakland → Indianapolis.[Trade 1]
- No. 131: multiple trades.
Kansas City → Buffalo (PD). Kansas City traded a conditional fourth-round selection to Buffalo in exchange for linebacker Reggie Ragland.[Trade 18]
Buffalo → Washington (D). See No. 96: Washington → Buffalo.[Trade 1] - No. 132: multiple trades.
New Orleans → NY Giants (PD). New Orleans traded a fourth-round selection (132nd) as well as a 2020 seventh-round selection to the Giants in exchange for cornerback Eli Apple.[Trade 19]
NY Giants → Seattle (D). See No. 30: Seattle → NY Giants.[Trade 1] - No. 133: LA Rams → New England (D). See No. 97: New England → LA Rams.[Trade 1]
- No. 137: Atlanta → Oakland (D). See No. 135: Oakland → Atlanta.[Trade 1]
Round five
- No. 140: multiple trades.
NY Jets → Oakland (PD). New York traded a fifth-round selection (140th) to Oakland in exchange for guard/tackle Kelechi Osemele and a sixth-round selection (196th) originally acquired from Chicago.[Trade 20]
Oakland → Jacksonville (D). See No. 35: Oakland → Jacksonville.[Trade 1] - No. 141: Oakland → Pittsburgh (PD). See No. 66: Oakland → Pittsburgh.[Trade 10]
- No. 142: multiple trades.
San Francisco → Detroit (PD). San Francisco traded a fifth-round selection (142nd) to Detroit in exchange for guard Laken Tomlinson.[Trade 21]
Detroit → NY Giants (PD). Detroit traded a fifth-round selection to New York in exchange for defensive tackle Damon Harrison. New York received the earlier of Detroit original selection or the one Detroit received from San Francisco's.[Trade 22]
NY Giants → Seattle (D). See No. 30: Seattle → NY Giants.[Trade 1] - No. 144: multiple trades.
Jacksonville → Cleveland (PD). Jacksonville traded a fifth-round selection (144th) to Cleveland in exchange for running back Carlos Hyde.[Trade 23]
Cleveland → Indianapolis (D). See No. 46: Indianapolis → Cleveland.[Trade 1] - No. 148: Denver → San Francisco (D). Denver traded a fifth-round selection (148th) to San Francisco in exchange for linebacker Dekoda Watson and a sixth-round selection (212th).[Trade 1]
- No. 156: Minnesota → Denver (PD). Minnesota traded a fifth-round selection (156th) to Denver in exchange for Denver's 2018 seventh-round selection (225th) and quarterback Trevor Siemian.[Trade 24]
- No. 157: Tennessee → NY Jets (D). See No. 116: NY Jets → Tennessee.
- No. 158: multiple trades.
Pittsburgh → Oakland (PD). Pittsburgh traded a fifth-round selection (158th) to Oakland in exchange for wide receiver Ryan Switzer and Oakland's sixth-round selection (175th).[Trade 25]
Oakland → Buffalo (PD). Oakland traded this fifth-round selection (158th) to Buffalo in exchange for quarterback A. J. McCarron.[Trade 26]
Buffalo → Oakland (D). See No. 38: Oakland → Buffalo.[Trade 1]
Oakland → Dallas (D). See No. 149: Dallas → Oakland.[Trade 1] - No. 162: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
Chicago → New England (D). See No. 73: New England → Chicago.
New England → LA Rams (D). See No. 97: New England → LA Rams.
LA Rams → New England (D). See No. 134: New England → LA Rams.
New England → Minnesota (D). See No. 159: Minnesota → New England. - No. 167: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
Kansas City → LA Rams (D). See No. 56: LA Rams → Kansas City.
LA Rams → New England (D). See No. 134: New England → LA Rams.
New England → Philadelphia (D). See No. 163: Philadelphia → New England. - No. 168: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
New Orleans → NY Jets (D). See No. 105: NY Jets → New Orleans.
NY Jets → Tennessee (D). See No. 116: Tennessee → NY Jets. - No. 170: New England → Cleveland (PD). New England traded a fifth-round selection (170th) to Cleveland in exchange for receiver Josh Gordon and a seventh-round selection (243rd).[Trade 27]
Round six
- No. 175: Oakland → Pittsburgh (PD). See No. 158: Pittsburgh → Oakland.[Trade 25]
- No. 177: NY Jets → New Orleans (PD). See No. 93: New Orleans → NY Jets.[Trade 12]
- No. 179: Tampa Bay → Arizona (PD). Tampa Bay sent a sixth-round selection (179th) as compensation to Arizona in exchange for a seventh-round selection (215th) and the rights to head coach Bruce Arians.[Trade 28]
- No. 182: Denver → Cincinnati (D). See No. 42: Cincinnati → Denver.[Trade 1]
- No. 183: Cincinnati → San Francisco (D). See No. 104: San Francisco → Cincinnati.[Trade 1]
- No. 186: Atlanta → Detroit (D). See No. 111: Detroit → Atlanta.[Trade 1]
- No. 188: Miami → Tennessee (PD). Miami traded a sixth-round selection (188th) and quarterback Ryan Tannehill to Tennessee in exchange for a seventh-round selection (233rd) as well as a 2020 fourth-round selection.[Trade 29]
- No. 191: multiple trades.
Tennessee → Baltimore (PD). Tennessee traded a sixth-round selection (191st) to Baltimore in exchange for linebacker Kamalei Correa.[Trade 30]
Baltimore → Minnesota (D). See No. 93: Minnesota → Baltimore.[Trade 1] - No. 193: Baltimore → Minnesota (D). See No. 93: Minnesota → Baltimore.[Trade 1]
- No. 194: Seattle → Green Bay (PD). Seattle traded a sixth-round selection (194th) to Green Bay in exchange for quarterback Brett Hundley.[Trade 31]
- No. 196: multiple trades.
Chicago → Oakland (PD). See No. 24: Chicago → Oakland.[Trade 3]
Oakland → NY Jets (PD). See No. 140: Oakland → NY Jets.[Trade 20] - No. 197: Philadelphia → Baltimore (D). See No. 22: Baltimore → Philadelphia.[Trade 1]
- No. 198: multiple trades.
Dallas → Cincinnati (PD). Dallas traded a conditional sixth-round selection to Cincinnati in exchange for cornerback Bene Benwikere.[Trade 32]
Cincinnati → San Francisco (D). See No. 104: San Francisco → Cincinnati.[Trade 1] - No. 202: New Orleans → Miami (D). See No. 48: Miami → New Orleans.[Trade 1]
- No. 203: LA Rams → Atlanta (D). See No. 31: LA Rams → Atlanta.[Trade 1]
- No. 204: multiple trades.
New England → Detroit (PD). New England traded a sixth-round selection to Detroit in exchange for cornerback Johnson Bademosi.[Trade 33]
Detroit → Minnesota (D). See No. 81: Minnesota → Detroit.[Trade 1]
Minnesota → Seattle (D). See No. 114: Seattle → Minnesota.[Trade 1] - No. 205: New England → Chicago (D). See No. 73: Chicago → New England.[Trade 1]
- No. 207: Arizona → Pittsburgh (PD). Arizona traded a compensatory sixth-round selection (207th) to Pittsburgh in exchange for tackle Marcus Gilbert.[Trade 34]
- No. 208: Philadelphia → Tampa Bay (PD). Philadelphia traded a sixth-round selection (208th) to Tampa Bay in exchange for wide receiver DeSean Jackson and a 2020 seventh-round selection.[Trade 35]
- No. 209: Minnesota → Seattle (D). See No. 88: Minnesota → Seattle.[Trade 1]
- No. 212: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
San Francisco → Denver (D). See No. 148: Denver → San Francisco.
Denver → Carolina (D). See No. 187: Carolina → Denver. - No. 213: Cincinnati → Dallas (D). See No. 136: Dallas → Cincinnati.[Trade 1]
Round seven
- No. 215: Arizona → Tampa Bay (PD). See No. 179: Tampa Bay → Arizona.[Trade 28]
- No. 216: San Francisco → Kansas City (PD). San Francisco traded a conditional seventh-round selection to Kansas City in exchange for wide receiver Rod Streater and a conditional seventh-round selection.[Trade 36]
- No. 217: NY Jets → Minnesota (D). See No. 92: Minnesota → NY Jets.[Trade 1]
- No. 218: Oakland → Dallas (D). See No. 149: Dallas → Oakland.[Trade 1]
- No. 219: Tampa Bay → Pittsburgh (PD). Tampa Bay traded a seventh-round selection (219th) and free safety J. J. Wilcox to Pittsburgh in exchange for their 2018 sixth-round selection (202nd).[Trade 37]
- No. 220: multiple trades.
NY Giants → Denver (PD). New York traded a conditional seventh-round selection to Denver in exchange for punter Riley Dixon.[Trade 38]
Denver → Houston (PD). See No. 125: Houston → Denver.[Trade 17] - No. 221: Jacksonville → Cleveland (PD). Jacksonville traded a conditional seventh-round selection to Cleveland in exchange for quarterback Cody Kessler.[Trade 39]
- No. 222: multiple trades.
Denver → Philadelphia (PD). Denver traded a seventh-round selection to Philadelphia in exchange for guard Allen Barbre.[Trade 40]
Philadelphia → Chicago (PD). Philadelphia traded this conditional seventh-round selection to Chicago in exchange for safety Deiondre' Hall.[Trade 41] - No. 228: Carolina → Buffalo (PD). Carolina traded a seventh-round selection (228th) and wide receiver Kaelin Clay to Buffalo in exchange for cornerback Kevon Seymour.[Trade 42]
- No. 229: Miami → Detroit (PD). Miami traded a conditional seventh-round selection to Detroit in exchange for defensive tackle Akeem Spence.[Trade 43]
- No. 230: Atlanta → Oakland (D). See No. 135: Oakland → Atlanta.[Trade 1]
- No. 231: Cleveland → New Orleans (PD). Cleveland traded a conditional seventh-round selection to New Orleans in exchange for defensive tackle Devaroe Lawrence.[Trade 44]
- No. 232: Minnesota → NY Giants (PD). Minnesota traded a seventh-round selection (232nd) to New York in exchange for center Brett Jones.[Trade 45]
- No. 233: Tennessee → Miami (PD). See No. 188: Miami → Tennessee.[Trade 29]
- No. 234: multiple trades.
Pittsburgh → Cleveland (PD). Pittsburgh traded a seventh-round selection (234th) and wide receiver Sammie Coates to Cleveland in exchange for their 2018 sixth-round selection (202nd).[Trade 46]
Cleveland → Miami (PD). Cleveland traded this seventh-round selection (234th) as well as a 2018 fourth-round selection previously acquired from Carolina (123rd) to Miami in exchange for wide receiver Jarvis Landry.[Trade 47] - No. 235: multiple trades.
Seattle → Oakland (PD). Seattle traded a seventh-round selection (235th) to Oakland in exchange for safety Shalom Luani.[Trade 48]
Oakland → Jacksonville (D). See No. 35: Oakland → Jacksonville.[Trade 1] - No. 236: multiple trades.
Baltimore → Jacksonville (PD). Baltimore traded a seventh-round selection (236th) to Jacksonville in exchange for center Luke Bowanko.[Trade 49]
Jacksonville → Seattle (D). Jacksonville traded this seventh-round selection (236th) to Seattle in exchange for a 2020 sixth-round selection.[Trade 1] - No. 237: multiple trades.
Houston → Denver (PD). See No. 125: Houston → Denver.[Trade 17]
Denver → Carolina (D). See No. 187: Carolina → Denver.[Trade 1] - No. 239: multiple trades.
Philadelphia → New England (PD). Philadelphia traded a seventh-round selection (239th) as well as a 2018 seventh-round selection (250th) to New England in exchange for New England's 2018 seventh-round selection (233rd).[Trade 6]
New England → Minnesota (D). See No. 159: Minnesota → New England.[Trade 1] - No. 243: multiple trades.
Kansas City → San Francisco (PD). See No. 216: San Francisco → Kansas City.[Trade 36]
San Francisco → Cleveland (PD). San Francisco traded this conditional seventh-round selection to Cleveland in exchange for offensive tackle Shon Coleman.[Trade 50]
Cleveland → New England (PD). See No. 170: New England → Cleveland.[Trade 27]
New England → LA Rams (D). See No. 134: LA Rams → New England.[Trade 1] - No. 245: LA Rams → NY Giants (PD). Los Angeles traded their seventh-round selection (245th) and linebacker Alec Ogletree to New York in exchange for 2018 fourth- and sixth-round selections (135th and 176th).[Trade 51]
- No. 246: multiple trades.[Trade 1]
New England → Philadelphia (D). See No. 163: Philadelphia → New England.
Philadelphia → Indianapolis (D). Philadelphia traded this seventh-round selection (246th) to Indianapolis in exchange for defensive tackle Hassan Ridgeway.
Forfeited picks
- The New York Giants forfeited their 2019 third round pick after selecting Sam Beal in the 2018 supplemental draft.[6]
- The Washington Redskins forfeited their 2019 sixth round pick after selecting Adonis Alexander in the 2018 supplemental draft.[6]
Media coverage
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Perspective
In November 2018, after having aired the final rounds of the draft on the network, ESPN announced that it would air coverage of all three days of the 2019 draft on ABC, using an entertainment-oriented format and hosted by the panel of College GameDay (which hosted an alternate ESPN2 broadcast of the previous draft), including Lee Corso, Rece Davis, Kirk Herbstreit and Desmond Howard. It marked the first time that broadcast television coverage of all three days of the NFL Draft had been carried by a single network; in 2018, the first two nights aired on Fox in association and simulcast with NFL Network. ESPN and NFL Network continued to broadcast more traditionally-formatted coverage.[7] In addition, NFL Network's morning show Good Morning Football was simulcast on ESPN2 on both April 25 and 26, while ESPN and NFL Network personalities made appearances across the networks' studio programs.[8]
The NFL reported an average viewership of 6.1 million across all ESPN and NFL outlets carrying coverage, up from the composite average of 5.5 million in 2018, and estimated that at least 47.5 million viewers watched coverage at some point during the draft.[9] The NFL also reported that at least 600,000 people attended events associated with the draft, overtaking 2017 as the most-attended NFL Draft.[10]
Summary
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Perspective
Selections by NCAA conference
Conference | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Round 5 | Round 6 | Round 7 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NCAA Division I FBS football conferences | ||||||||
AAC | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 11 |
ACC | 7 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 2 | 28 |
Big 12 | 3 | 3 | 5 | 6 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 26 |
Big Ten | 7 | 2 | 7 | 7 | 8 | 5 | 4 | 40 |
C-USA | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
Ind. (FBS) | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 8 |
MAC | 0 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 9 |
MW | 0 | 1 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 10 |
Pac-12 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 6 | 7 | 3 | 6 | 33 |
SEC | 9 | 13 | 6 | 7 | 10 | 10 | 9 | 64 |
Sun Belt | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
NCAA Division I FCS football conferences | ||||||||
Big Sky | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
CAA | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
MEAC | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
MVFC | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
OVC | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
SWAC | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
NCAA Division II football conferences | ||||||||
GSC | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
LSC | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
MEC | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
MIAA | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
NSIC | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
A then-record 64 players were drafted from one conference,[11] the second-most in NFL history, breaking the previous high of 63 selections in 2013. Both numbers were set by the Southeastern Conference. The record was broken in 2021, when 65 players were selected also from the SEC.
Schools with multiple draft selections
Selections | Schools |
---|---|
10 | Alabama |
9 | Ohio State |
8 | Oklahoma, Washington |
7 | Georgia, Texas A&M |
6 | Auburn, Clemson, Notre Dame, Ole Miss, Penn State |
5 | Florida, Kentucky, Miami, Michigan, Mississippi State, Stanford, Utah, West Virginia |
4 | Boston College, Iowa, Maryland, NC State, Oregon, USC, Wisconsin |
3 | Arkansas, Houston, LSU, South Carolina, TCU, Temple |
2 | Arizona State, Central Michigan, Florida Atlantic, Florida State, Hawaii, Iowa State, Kansas State, Memphis, Michigan State, Missouri, Northern Illinois, Oklahoma State, Old Dominion, Rutgers, Texas, Toledo, Vanderbilt, Virginia, Washington State |
Of note, Allen High School boasted three selections in the 2019 NFL draft, by drafting Kyler Murray, Greg Little, and Bobby Evans.[12]
Selections by position
Position | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Round 5 | Round 6 | Round 7 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Center | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
Cornerback | 1 | 7 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 8 | 6 | 32 |
Defensive end | 6 | 0 | 4 | 5 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 25 |
Defensive tackle | 6 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 21 |
Guard | 1 | 0 | 3 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 12 |
Kicker | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Linebacker | 3 | 2 | 6 | 2 | 12 | 4 | 3 | 31 |
Long snapper | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Offensive tackle | 4 | 5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 5 | 4 | 23 |
Punter | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Quarterback | 3 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 11 |
Running back | 1 | 1 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 6 | 5 | 25 |
Safety | 2 | 4 | 2 | 5 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 19 |
Tight end | 2 | 2 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 16 |
Wide receiver | 2 | 7 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 6 | 4 | 28 |
Position | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Round 5 | Round 6 | Round 7 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Offense | 14 | 18 | 21 | 17 | 10 | 21 | 19 | 120 |
Defense | 18 | 14 | 17 | 18 | 22 | 20 | 20 | 129 |
Special teams | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 5 |
Notes
- Players are identified as Pro Bowlers if they were selected for the Pro Bowl at any time in their career.
References
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