LSU’s Burrow can join exclusive company as No. 1 pick

Published 11:39 am Thursday, April 23, 2020

NEW YORK (AP) — Joe Burrow has a chance to join some very exclusive company if the LSU quarterback winds up going No. 1 overall to Cincinnati when the NFL draft begins Thursday night.

Not only could he become the ninth quarterback to win the Heisman Trophy and then be the first overall selection in the NFL draft since 1967, that also would mark the first time in the common draft era a Heisman Trophy winner has been the No. 1 pick in three straight drafts, following Kyler Murray last year and Baker Mayfield in 2018.

Better yet, Burrow would join Cam Newton (2011) as the only quarterbacks since 1967 to become the NFL’s first overall draft pick right after winning both the Heisman Trophy and the national championship.

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Burrow also is among five quarterbacks who have a strong shot to be drafted in the first round, which would be the seventh straight year with multiple quarterbacks taken in the first round. That would be the second-longest streak since 1967, behind only the string between 2002 and 2012.

With Tua Tagovailoa and Justin Herbert also potential top 10 picks, this could be the sixth straight year with multiple quarterbacks selected among the first 10 selections. That would be the longest such streak in the common draft era.

FAMILY CONNECTIONS
The NFL is very much a family business, and a pair of sons have a chance to join their fathers in making some more league history.

LSU tight end Thaddeus Moss and Minnesota defensive back Antoine Winfield Jr. could join the 11 previous fathers and sons to become first-round draft picks since 1967 if their names are called in the opening 32. Pro Football Hall of Famer Randy Moss was the 21st pick overall by Minnesota in 1998, while Antoine Winfield was the No. 23 pick by Buffalo in 1999.

Defensive end Nick Bosa was the No. 2 overall pick last year, following his brother Joey, the No. 3 overall selection in 2016, and joining father John, who went No. 16 overall in 1987. Linebacker Devin Bush Jr. was Pittsburgh’s 10th pick overall, joining his father Devin Bush, the No. 26 pick in 1995.

That’s only the start of the family ties ready to deepen around the NFL.

Auburn defensive back Javaris Davis is a cousin of former pro CB Vontae Davis, who played 10 seasons, and tight end Vernon Davis (14). Buffalo wide receiver Stefon Diggs’ little brother Trevon is a defensive back from Alabama, and a possible first-round pick himself. Texas receiver Devin Duvernay’s cousin is Arizona quarterback Kyler Murray, last year’s No. 1 overall selection.

Florida wide receiver Van Jefferson’s father, Shawn, played 13 years as a receiver himself and now is assistant head coach with the Jets. Purdue tight end Brycen Hopkins’ father, Brad, played left tackle for 13 seasons with the Oilers/Titans opposite Jon Runyan, who’s now the NFL’s vice president of policy and rules administration — and whose son, also Jon, is a guard prospect out of Michigan.

ALABAMA CONNECTION
The Crimson Tide’s pipeline to the NFL always has been strong. Now Alabama has a chance at something in the draft the Southeastern Conference power has never done if quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, receivers Jerry Jeudy and Henry Riggs III, and offensive tackle Jedrick Wills all get selected in the first round.

That would be the first time Alabama has had four offensive players picked in the first round. Only Southern California has managed that feat in the common draft era with Ron Yary, Mike Taylor, Mike Hull and Earl McCullouch, all taken within the first 24 picks back in 1968. Yary wound up a Pro Football Hall of Famer.

Jeudy and Riggs also could become the fifth pair of wide receiver teammates taken in the first round of the same draft since 1967; it hasn’t happened since 2007. That year LSU had Dwayne Bowe and Craig Davis taken in the first 30 selections, while Ohio State had Ted Ginn Jr. and Anthony Gonzalez picked in the same first round.

No school has had a pair of receivers selected within the first 15 picks.

NFL DRAFT ON TV
Round 1: Thursday, 7 p.m., ESPN/ABC/NFL Network
Rounds 2-3: Friday, 6 p.m., ESPN/ABC/NFL Network
Rounds 4-7: Saturday, 11 a.m., ESPN/ABC/NFL Network

2020 NFL Draft Order
First round

1. Cincinnati
2. Washington
3. Detroit
4. New York Giants
5. Miami
6. Los Angeles Chargers
7. Carolina
8. Arizona
9. Jacksonville
10. Cleveland
11. New York Jets
12. Las Vegas
13. San Francisco (from Indianapolis)
14. Tampa Bay
15. Denver
16. Atlanta
17. Dallas
18. Miami (from Pittsburgh)
19. Las Vegas (from Chicago)
20. Jacksonville (from Los Angeles Rams)
21. Philadelphia
22. Minnesota (from Buffalo)
23. New England
24. New Orleans
25. Seattle
26. Miami (from Houston)
27. Seattle
28. Baltimore
29. Tennessee
30. Green Bay
31. San Francisco
32. Kansas City

About Ernest Bowker

Ernest Bowker is The Vicksburg Post's sports editor. He has been a member of The Vicksburg Post's sports staff since 1998, making him one of the longest-tenured reporters in the paper's 140-year history. The New Jersey native is a graduate of LSU. In his career, he has won more than 50 awards from the Mississippi Press Association and Associated Press for his coverage of local sports in Vicksburg.

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