2012 NFL 초안 - 2012 NFL Draft
2012 NFL 초안 | |
---|---|
![]() | |
일반 정보 | |
날짜 | 2012 년 4 월 26 ~ 28 일 |
시각 |
오후 8시 EDT (4 월 26 일) 오후 7시 EDT (4 월 27 일) 정오 EDT (4 월 28 일) |
위치 | 라디오 시티 뮤직 홀 에서 뉴욕시 , 뉴욕 |
네트워크 | ESPN , NFL 네트워크 |
개요 | |
7 라운드 총 253 개 선택 | |
리그 | NFL |
첫 번째 선택 | Andrew Luck , QB Indianapolis Colts |
Mr. Irrelevant | Chandler Harnish , QB 인디애나 폴리스 콜츠 |
대부분의 선택 (11) | 클리블랜드 브라운 |
최소 선택 (5) | 뉴 올리언스 성도 |
2012 NFL 초안 의 77 연례 회의이었다 미국 축구 리그 새로 자격 축구 선수를 선택 (NFL) 프랜차이즈. 공식적으로 "NFL 선수 선택 회의"라고 초안, [1] 에서 열렸다 라디오 시티 뮤직 홀 4월 26일에서 28일까지에서 뉴욕시에서. [2] [3] [4] [5] 인디애나 폴리스 콜츠 에 리그 최악의 기록을 컴파일, 2011 2-14 기록과 함께 시즌, 첫 번째 선택에 대한 권리를 가지고 있었다. [6]
4 월 17 일, 인디애나 폴리스의 총감독 Ryan Grigson 은 팀이 Andrew Luck 을 첫 번째 픽으로 삼겠다고 발표 했습니다. "미디어 건틀릿"Luck이 직면하게 될 "미디어 문제"를 예상하여 "올바른 일"이라고 말했습니다. 초안. [7] 행운, 높은 최악의 기록으로 끝낼 것이 자신의 팀을 바라고 팬으로 "행운을 위해 빨아"캠페인의 대상이었다, 몇 년 동안 최고의 쿼터백 전망의 하나로 간주되고 2011 년 시즌 그들이 가지고있는 것, 그래서 행운을 뽑을 기회. 드래프트의 첫 번째와 마지막 픽이 모두 쿼터백 이고 같은 팀이 차지했을 때 드문 일이 발생했습니다 . 챈들러하니 쉬, 콜츠가 드래프트의 최종 선택으로 그를 2012 년에 Mr. Irrelevant 로 만들었습니다 . [8]
상대적으로 초기 단계에서도 2012 년 쿼터백의 강점은 주목 받았습니다. 1970 년 합병 이후 처음으로 5 명의 신인 쿼터백이 오프닝 주에 시작되었습니다. 1 라운드 드래프트 픽인 Luck, Robert Griffin III , Ryan Tannehill , Brandon Weeden , 3 라운드 러셀 윌슨 . [9] [10] 시즌이 끝날 무렵, 3 라운드의 드래프트 픽 Nick Foles , 4 라운드의 Kirk Cousins , 6 라운드의 Ryan Lindley 등 세 명의 신인 쿼터백이 첫 경기를 시작합니다 . [11] [12] [13] 드래프트되지 않은 쿼터백2 라운드 드래프트 픽 브록 오스 와일러 뿐만 아니라 드래프트 이후 팀에 각각 계약 한 Austin Davis , Case Keenum , Kellen Moore 는 결국 후반 시즌에 하나 이상의 NFL 경기에서 쿼터백에서 시작하게됩니다. Luck, Griffin, Wilson은 정규 시즌이 끝나면 Pro Bowl에 이름을 올릴 것이며 Foles, Cousins 및 Tannehill은 나중에 경력에서 프로 볼러로 인정받을 것입니다. Wilson, Osweiler 및 Foles는 각각 Super Bowl 우승 팀의 일원이었으며 Nick Foles는 결국 Super Bowl LII 의 MVP가되었습니다 .
드래프트에서는 캐나다 출신 인 Tyrone Crawford ( Dallas Cowboys가 전체 81 위 )와 Philip Blake ( Denver Broncos가 전체 108 위 ), Angolan Christo Bilukidi (전체 189 위 ) 가 미국 출신 이 아닌 기록적인 5 명의 선수 가 드래프트 되었습니다. Oakland Raiders ), 영국인 Jack Crawford (오클랜드가 전체 158 위), 독일인 Markus Kuhn ( 뉴욕 자이언츠가 전체 239 위 ). [14]
다음은 포지션 별로 선정 된 253 명의 선수를 분석 한 것입니다 .
초기 참가자
기록적인 65 명의 저학년 학생들 은 남아있는 NCAA 자격 을 포기하고 초안에서 선발 될 자격이 있다고 선언했습니다. [15] 65 자격 후배 중, 44 (67.7 %)의 초안 하였다. [16]
주니어 인 Luck의 선발은 첫 번째 전체 선발이 저학년 인 4 연패를 기록했다. 비 시니어가 1990 년 에 처음 드래프트 될 자격이 되었기 때문에 15 개의 첫 번째 종합 픽 (마지막 8 개 중 7 개 포함)이 드래프트에 일찍 들어간 선수였습니다. [17] 이 드래프트에서 선발 된 10 명의 선수 중 8 명은 이전 드래프트 의 기록과 일치하는 비 시니어 였습니다. Mark Barron 과 Ryan Tannehill 은 처음 10 명의 드래프트 참가자 중 유일한 두 명의 선배였습니다.
초안 주문 결정
드래프트 순서는 일반적으로 이전 시즌 의 각 팀 기록을 기반으로 하며, 포스트 시즌에 진출한 팀 은 플레이 오프에 실패한 팀을 선택합니다. [18]
선수 선택
|
|
Supplemental draft
A supplemental draft was held on July 12, 2012. For each player selected in the supplemental draft, the team forfeits its pick in that round in the draft of the following season. 8 players were available, but only 1 was selected.[24]
Rnd. | Pick # | NFL team | Player | Pos. | College | Conf. | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | - | Cleveland Browns | Josh Gordon † | WR | Baylor | Big 12 |
Notable undrafted players
† | = Pro Bowler[N 1] |
Trades
In the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.
- Round one
- ^ No. 2: St. Louis → Washington (PD). St. Louis traded this selection to Washington for first-round selections in 2012 (6th), 2013 (22nd), and 2014 (2nd), and a 2012 second-round selection (39th).[source 1] After a number of subsequent trades over the next two drafts, St. Louis ended up turning this pick (and its 2013 sixth-round selection) into the following players: OT Greg Robinson, LB Alec Ogletree, WR Stedman Bailey, RBs Zac Stacy and Isaiah Pead, DT Michael Brockers, CB Janoris Jenkins and G Rokevious Watkins.[source 2]
- ^ No. 3: Minnesota → Cleveland (PD). Minnesota traded this selection to Cleveland for their first (4th), fourth (118th), fifth (139th), and seventh round (211th) selections this year.[source 3]
- ^ No. 4: Cleveland → Minnesota (PD). see No. 3: Minnesota → Browns.[source 3]
- ^ No. 5: Tampa Bay → Jacksonville (D). Tampa Bay traded this selection to Jacksonville for their first (7th) and fourth round (101st) selections this year.[source 4]
- ^ No. 6: multiple trades:
- No. 6: Washington → St. Louis (PD). see No. 2: St. Louis → Washington.[source 1]
- No. 6: St. Louis → Dallas (D). St. Louis traded this selection to Dallas for their first (14th) and second round (45th) selections this year.[source 5]
- ^ No. 7: Jacksonville → Tampa Bay (D). see No. 5: Tampa Bay → Jacksonville.[source 4]
- ^ No. 12: Seattle → Philadelphia (D). Seattle traded this selection to Philadelphia for their first (15th), fourth (114th), and sixth round (172nd) selections this year.[source 6]
- ^ No. 14: Dallas → St. Louis (D). see No. 6: St. Louis → Dallas.[source 5]
- ^ No. 15: Philadelphia → Seattle (D). see No. 12: Seattle → Philadelphia.[source 6]
- ^ No. 17: Oakland → Cincinnati (PD). Oakland traded this selection and their 2013 second-round selection (37th) to Cincinnati for quarterback Carson Palmer. The 2013 selection would have become Oakland's first-rounder if Oakland had made it to the 2012–13 AFC Championship game.[source 7][source 8]
- ^ No. 21: Cincinnati → New England (D). Cincinnati traded this selection to New England for their first (27th) and third round (93rd) selections this year.[source 9]
- ^ No. 22: Atlanta → Cleveland (PD). Atlanta traded this selection, a fourth-round (118th) selection, and their first-, second-, and fourth-round selections in the 2011 NFL Draft (No. 27, after all trades and the clock expiring on their original pick, Baltimore selected Jimmy Smith; No. 59, Cleveland selected Greg Little; and No. 124, Cleveland selected Owen Marecic) to Cleveland for Cleveland's 2011 first-round selection (No. 6, used to select Julio Jones).[source 10]
- ^ No. 25: Denver → New England (D). Denver traded this selection to New England for their first (31st) and fourth round (126th) selections this year.[source 9]
- ^ No. 27: multiple trades:
- No. 27: New Orleans → New England (PD). New Orleans traded this selection and their 2011 second-round selection (No. 56, New England selected Shane Vereen) to New England for New England's first-round selection in the 2011 Draft (No. 28, New Orleans selected Mark Ingram).[source 11]
- No. 27: New England → Cincinnati (D). see No. 21: Cincinnati → New England.[source 9]
- ^ No. 29: Baltimore → Minnesota (D). Baltimore traded this selection to Minnesota for their second (35th) and fourth round (98th) selections this year.[source 12]
- ^ No. 31: multiple trades:
- No. 31: New England → Denver (D). see No. 25: Denver → New England.[source 9]
- No. 31: Denver → Tampa Bay (D). Denver traded this selection and their fourth round (126th) selection to Tampa for their second (36th) and fourth round (101st) selections this year.[source 13]
- Round two
- ^ No. 35: Minnesota → Baltimore (D). see No. 29: Baltimore → Minnesota.[source 12]
- ^ No. 36: Tampa Bay → Denver (D). see No. 31: Denver → Tampa Bay.[source 13]
- ^ No. 39: Washington → St. Louis (PD). see No. 2: St. Louis → Washington.[source 1]
- ^ No. 43: Seattle → New York Jets (D). Seattle traded this selection to the New York Jets for New York's second (47th), fifth (154th), and seventh round (232nd) selections.[source 14]
- ^ No. 45: multiple trades:
- No. 45: Dallas → St. Louis (D). see No. 6: St. Louis → Dallas.[source 5]
- No. 45: St. Louis → Chicago (D). St. Louis traded this selection to Chicago for their second (50th) and fifth round (150th) selections this year.[source 15]
- ^ No. 47: New York Jets → Seattle (D). see No. 43: Seattle → New York Jets.[source 14]
- ^ No. 48: Oakland → New England (PD). Oakland traded this selection and a 2011 seventh-round selection (No. 219, New England selected Malcolm Williams) to New England for New England's third- and fourth-round selections in 2011 (Nos. 92 and 125, Oakland selected Joseph Barksdale and Taiwan Jones, respectively).[source 16]
- ^ No. 50: Chicago → St. Louis (D). see No. 45: St. Louis → Chicago.[source 15]
- ^ No. 51: multiple trades:
- No. 51: Arizona → Philadelphia (PD). Arizona traded this selection and CB Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie to Philadelphia for QB Kevin Kolb.[source 17]
- ^ No. 58: Houson → Tampa Bay (D). Houston traded this selection and their seventh round (233rd) selection to Tampa Bay for their third (68th) and fourth round (126th) selections.[source 19]
- ^ No. 59: Green Bay → Philadelphia (D). see No. 51: Philadelphia → Green Bay.[source 18]
- ^ No. 62: New England → Green Bay (D). New England traded this selection to Green Bay for their third (90th) and fifth round (163rd) selections.[source 20]
- Round three
- ^ No. 67: Cleveland → Denver (D). Cleveland traded this selection to Denver for their third (87th) and fourth round (120th) selections.[source 21]
- ^ No. 68: Tampa Bay → Houston (D). see No. 58: Houston → Tampa Bay.[source 19]
- ^ No. 69: Washington → Buffalo (D). Washington traded this selection to Buffalo for their third (71st) and seventh round (217th) selections.[source 22]
- ^ No. 71: Buffalo → Washington (D). see No. 69: Washington → Buffalo.[source 22]
- ^ No. 73: multiple trades:
- No. 73: Carolina → Chicago (PD). Carolina traded this selection to Chicago for tight end Greg Olsen.[source 23]
- No. 73: Chicago → Miami (PD). Chicago traded this selection and a 2013 third-round selection (82nd) to Miami for wide receiver Brandon Marshall.[source 24]
- No. 73: Miami → San Diego (D). Miami traded this selection to San Diego for their third (78th) and sixth round (183rd) selections.[source 25]
- ^ No. 76: Philadelphia → Houston (PD). Philadelphia traded this selection and their fourth-round (99th) selection to Houston for linebacker DeMeco Ryans and a third-round selection (88th).[source 26]
- ^ No. 78: San Diego → Miami (D). see No. 73: Miami → San Diego.[source 25]
- ^ No. 84: Atlanta → Baltimore (D). Atlanta traded this selection to Baltimore for their third (91st) and fifth round (164th) selections.[source 27]
- ^ No. 87: Denver → Cleveland (D). see No. 67: Cleveland → Denver.[source 21]
- ^ No. 88: Houston → Philadelphia (PD). see No. 76: Philadelphia → Houston.[source 26]
- ^ No. 90: Green Bay → New England (D). see No. 62: New England → Green Bay.[source 20]
- ^ No. 91: Baltimore → Atlanta (D). see No. 84: Atlanta → Baltimore.[source 27]
- ^ No. 92: San Francisco → Indianapolis (D). San Francisco traded this selection to Indianapolis for their fourth round (97th) selection and a fifth round selection in 2013 (157th).[source 28]
- ^ No. 93: New England → Cincinnati (D). see No. 21: Cincinnati → New England.[source 9]
- Round four
- ^ No. 97: multiple trades:
- No. 97: Indianapolis → San Francisco (D). see No. 92: San Francisco → Indianapolis.[source 28]
- ^ No. 98: Minnesota → Baltimore (D). see No. 29: Baltimore → Minnesota.[source 12]
- ^ No. 99: multiple trades:
- No. 99: Tampa Bay → Philadelphia (PD). Tampa Bay traded this selection to Philadelphia with a fourth-round pick in 2011 (No. 116, Philadelphia selected Casey Matthews) for a fourth-round pick in 2011 (No. 104, Tampa Bay selected Luke Stocker).[source 30]
- No. 99: Philadelphia → Houston (PD). see No. 76: Philadelphia → Houston.[source 26]
- ^ No. 101: multiple trades:
- No. 101: Jacksonville → Tampa Bay (D). see No. 5: Tampa Bay → Jacksonville.[source 4]
- No. 101: Tampa Bay → Denver (D). see No. 31: Denver → Tampa Bay.[source 13]
- ^ No. 103: multiple trades:
- No. 103: Miami → San Francisco (D). see No. 97: San Francisco → Miami.[source 29]
- No. 103: San Francisco → Carolina (D). San Francisco traded this selection to Carolina for their sixth round selection (180th) and a third round selection in 2013 (74th).[source 31]
- ^ No. 108: New York Jets → Denver (PD). The Jets traded this selection and a sixth-round selection (188th) to Denver for quarterback Tim Tebow and a seventh-round selection (232nd).[source 32]
- ^ No. 109: multiple trades:
- No. 109: Oakland → Washington (PD). Oakland traded this selection to Washington for quarterback Jason Campbell.[source 33]
- No. 109: Washington → Pittsburgh (D). Washington traded this selection to Pittsburgh for their fourth (119th) and sixth round selections (193rd).[source 34]
- ^ No. 114: Philadelphia → Seattle (D). see No. 12: Seattle → Philadelphia.[source 6]
- ^ No. 117: Detroit → San Francisco (D). Detroit traded this selection to San Francisco for their fourth (125th) and sixth round selections (196th).[source 35]
- ^ No. 118: multiple trades:
- No. 118: Atlanta → Cleveland (PD). see No. 22: Atlanta → Cleveland.[source 10]
- No. 118: Cleveland → Minnesota (PD). see No. 3: Minnesota → Cleveland.[source 3]
- ^ No. 119: Pittsburgh → Washington (D). see No. 109: Washington → Pittsburgh.[source 34]
- ^ No. 120: Denver → Cleveland (D). see No. 67: Cleveland → Denver.[source 21]
- ^ No. 123: Green Bay → Philadelphia (D). see No. 51: Philadelphia → Green Bay.[source 18]
- ^ No. 124: Baltimore → Buffalo (PD). Baltimore traded this selection to Buffalo for wide receiver Lee Evans.[source 36]
- ^ No. 125: San Francisco → Detroit(D). see No. 117: Detroit → San Francisco.[source 35]
- ^ No. 126: multiple trades:
- No. 126: New England → Denver (D). see No. 25: Denver → New England.[source 9]
- No. 126: Denver → Tampa Bay (D). see No. 31: Denver → Tampa Bay.[source 13]
- No. 126: Tampa Bay → Houston (D). see No. 58: Houston → Tampa Bay.[source 19]
- Round five
- ^ No. 137: St. Louis → Denver (PD). St. Louis traded a conditional sixth-round selection to Denver in exchange for wide receiver Brandon Lloyd; the selection was later upgraded to a fifth-rounder after a condition was met in which Lloyd made a minimum of 30 receptions with St. Louis during the 2011 season.[source 37]
- ^ No. 138: Minnesota → Detroit (D). Minnesota traded this selection and their seventh round selection (223rd) to Detroit for their seventh round selection (219th) and a fourth round selection in 2013 (102nd).[source 38]
- ^ No. 139: Cleveland → Minnesota (PD). see No. 3: Minnesota → Cleveland.[source 3]
- ^ No. 145: Miami → Tennessee (D). Miami traded this selection to Tennessee for their fifth (155th) and seventh round (227th) selections.[source 39]
- ^ No. 147: Seattle → Buffalo (PD). Seattle traded this selection and a 2011 fourth-round selection (No. 122, Buffalo selected Chris Hairston) to Buffalo for running back Marshawn Lynch.[source 40]
- ^ No. 148: Oakland → Detroit (D). Oakland traded this selection to Detroit for their fifth (158th) and seventh-round selections (230th) this year.[source 41]
- ^ No. 150: Chicago → St. Louis (D). see No. 45: St. Louis → Chicago.[source 15]
- ^ No. 154: New York Jets → Seattle (D). see No. 43: Seattle → New York Jets.[source 14]
- ^ No. 155: Tennessee → Miami (D). see No. 145: Miami → Tennessee.[source 39]
- ^ No. 158: Detroit → Oakland (D). see No. 148: Oakland → Detroit.[source 41]
- ^ No. 160: Denver → Cleveland (PD). Denver traded this selection and a 2011 sixth-round selection to Cleveland for quarterback Brady Quinn.[source 42]
- ^ No. 163: multiple trades:
- No. 163: Green Bay → New England (D). see No. 62: New England → Green Bay.[source 20]
- No. 163: New England → Green Bay (D). New England traded this selection to Green Bay for their sixth round selection (197th) and two seventh round selections (224th and 235th).[source 43]
- ^ No. 164: Baltimore → Atlanta (D). see No. 84: Atlanta → Baltimore.[source 27]
- ^ No. 166: New England → Cincinnati (PD). New England traded this selection and a 2013 sixth-round selection (197th) to Cincinnati for wide receiver Chad Ochocinco.[source 44]
- ^ No. 167: New York Giants → Cincinnati (PD). The Giants traded this selection to Cincinnati for linebacker Keith Rivers.[source 45]
- Round six
- ^ No. 172: multiple trades:
- No. 172: Indianapolis → Philadelphia (PD). Indianapolis traded this selection to Philadelphia for offensive tackle Winston Justice and a sixth-round selection (187th) .[source 46]
- No. 172: Philadelphia → Seattle (D). see No. 12: Seattle → Philadelphia.[source 6]
- ^ No. 173: Minnesota → Washington (PD). Minnesota traded this selection to Washington for quarterback Donovan McNabb.[source 47] The trade also included a condition for the Vikings to add a sixth-round pick in the 2013 draft, but McNabb did not reach the playing time benchmarks that would have triggered the additional compensation.[22]
- ^ No. 175: Cleveland → Minnesota (PD). Cleveland traded this selection to Minnesota for defensive end Jayme Mitchell.[source 48]
- ^ No. 177: Washington → Arizona (PD). Washington traded defensive end Vonnie Holliday and this selection to Arizona in exchange for running back Tim Hightower.[source 49]
- ^ No. 179: Miami → New Orleans (PD). Miami traded this selection to New Orleans for running back Reggie Bush and a sixth-round selection (196th) .[source 50]
- ^ No. 180: Carolina → San Francisco (D). see No. 103: San Francisco → Carolina.[source 31]
- ^ No. 183: San Diego → Miami (D). see No. 73: Miami → San Diego.[source 25]
- ^ No. 187: multiple trades:
- No. 187: Philadelphia → Indianapolis (PD). see No. 172: Indianapolis → Philadelphia.[source 46]
- No. 187: Indianapolis → New York Jets (PD). Indianapolis traded this selection to New York Jets for quarterback Drew Stanton and a seventh-round selection (214th).[source 51]
- ^ No. 188: New York Jets → Denver (PD). see No. 108: New York Jets → Denver.[source 32]
- ^ No. 193: Pittsburgh → Washington (D). see No. 109: Washington → Pittsburgh.[source 34]
- ^ No. 194: Denver → Philadelphia (PD). Denver traded this selection to Philadelphia for linebacker Joe Mays. Denver originally sent running back J. J. Arrington to Philadelphia, with the condition that if Arrington did not make Philadelphia's 53-man roster, Denver would instead send the sixth-round selection.[source 52]
- ^ No. 196: multiple trades:
- No. 196: New Orleans → Miami (PD). see No. 179: Miami → New Orleans.[source 50]
- No. 196: Miami → San Francisco (D). see No. 97: San Francisco → Miami.[source 29]
- No. 196: San Francisco → Detroit(D). see No. 117: Detroit → San Francisco.[source 35]
- ^ No. 197: Green Bay → New England (D). see No. 163: Green Bay → New England.[source 43]
- ^ No. 200: New England → Philadelphia (PD). New England traded this selection to Philadelphia for linebacker Tracy White and a seventh-round selection (223rd).[source 53]
- Round seven
- ^ No. 211: multiple trades:
- No. 211: Cleveland → Minnesota (PD). see No. 3: Minnesota → Cleveland.[source 3]
- No. 211: Minnesota → Tennessee (D). Minnesota traded this selection to Tennessee for a sixth round selection in 2013 (176th).[source 54]
- ^ No. 214: multiple trades:
- No. 214: Jacksonville → New York Jets (PD). Jacksonville traded this selection to the New York Jets for defensive back Dwight Lowery.[source 55]
- No. 214: New York Jets → Indianapolis (PD). see No. 187: Indianapolis → New York Jets.[source 51]
- ^ No. 217: Buffalo → Washington (D). see No. 69: Washington → Buffalo.[source 22]
- ^ No. 219: multiple trades:
- No. 219: Seattle → Detroit (PD). Seattle traded this selection to Detroit for offensive tackle Tyler Polumbus.[source 56]
- No. 219: Detroit → Minnesota (D). see No. 138: Minnesota → Detroit.[source 38]
- ^ No. 223: multiple trades:
- No. 223: Philadelphia → New England (PD). see No. 200: New England → Philadelphia.[source 53]
- No. 223: New England → Minnesota (PD). New England traded this selection and wide receiver Randy Moss to Minnesota for a 2011 third-round selection (No. 74, New England selected Ryan Mallett).[source 57]
- No. 223: Minnesota → Detroit (D). see No. 138: Minnesota → Detroit.[source 38]
- ^ No. 224: multiple trades:
- No. 224: New York Jets → Green Bay (PD). The Jets traded this selection to Green Bay in exchange for guard Caleb Schlauderaff.[source 58]
- No. 224: Green Bay → New England (D). see No. 163: New England → Green Bay.[source 43]
- ^ No. 225: Oakland → Seattle (PD). Oakland traded this selection and a conditional mid-round selection in the 2013 NFL Draft to Seattle for linebacker Aaron Curry.[source 59] The 2013 selection became the Raiders fifth-rounder (138th) after Curry lasted barely more than a year before getting cut by the Raiders.[source 60]
- ^ No. 227: Tennessee → Miami (D). see No. 145: Miami → Tennessee.[source 39]
- ^ No. 228: Cincinnati → Jacksonville (PD). Cincinnati traded this selection and cornerback David Jones to Jacksonville for safety Reggie Nelson.[source 61]
- ^ No. 229: Atlanta → Philadelphia (PD). Atlanta traded this selection to Philadelphia for cornerback Asante Samuel.[source 62]
- ^ No. 230: Detroit → Oakland (D). see No. 148: Oakland → Detroit.[source 41]
- ^ No. 232: multiple trades:
- No. 232: Denver → New York Jets (PD). see No. 108: New York Jets → Denver.[source 32]
- No. 232: New York Jets → Seattle (D). see No. 43: Seattle → New York Jets.[source 14]
- ^ No. 233: Houston → Tampa Bay (D). see No. 58: Houston → Tampa Bay.[source 19]
- ^ No. 235: Green Bay → New England (D). see No. 163: Green Bay → New England.[source 43]
- ^ No. 238: New England → Kansas City (PD). New England traded this conditional selection to Kansas City for safety Jarrad Page.[source 63]
Forfeited picks
Three picks in the 2012 draft were forfeited:
- ^ New Orleans forfeited its second-round selection as well as a 2013 second-round selection as part of the punishment for the team's bounty scandal.[20]
- ^ Oakland forfeited its third-round selection after selecting quarterback Terrelle Pryor in the 2011 Supplemental Draft.[21]
- ^ Detroit forfeited its sixth-round selection due to findings of tampering consisting of comments made by defensive coordinator Gunther Cunningham about certain Kansas City Chiefs' players.[23]
Selections by conference
Selection totals by college conference (including supplemental draft)[25]
# | Conference | Players selected | Division |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Southeastern Conference | 42 | I FBS |
2 | Big Ten Conference | 41 | I FBS |
3 | Atlantic Coast Conference | 31 | I FBS |
4 | Pac-12 Conference | 28 | I FBS |
5 | Big 12 Conference | 26 | I FBS |
6 | Big East Conference | 12 | I FBS |
6 | Mountain West Conference | 12 | I FBS |
8 | Western Athletic Conference | 11 | I FBS |
9 | Conference USA | 10 | I FBS |
10 | Mid-American Conference | 8 | I FBS |
11 | Sun Belt Conference | 6 | I FBS |
12 | Independent | 5 | I FBS |
13 | Big Sky Conference | 3 | I FCS |
13 | Southern Conference | 3 | I FCS |
15 | Big South Conference | 2 | I FCS |
15 | Colonial Athletic Association | 2 | I FCS |
15 | Great West Conference | 2 | I FCS |
15 | Lone Star Conference | 2 | II |
19 | Canada West Universities Athletic Association | 1 | CIS |
19 | Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference | 1 | II |
19 | Great Northwest Athletic Conference | 1 | II |
19 | Gulf South Conference | 1 | II |
19 | Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association | 1 | III |
19 | Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association | 1 | II |
19 | Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference | 1 | I FCS |
19 | Southland Conference | 1 | I FCS |
References
- ^ Hiro, Brian (April 21, 2010). "NFL: Draft's popularity shows no signs of abating". North County Times. Archived from the original on January 20, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2012.
- ^ "NFL Draft 2012". ESPN. Archived from the original on January 20, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2012.
- ^ "Record 26 Players to Attend NFL Draft" (PDF). NFL. April 12, 2012. Retrieved April 12, 2012.
- ^ "NFL Draft Locations". FootballGeography.com. October 2, 2014. Archived from the original on September 5, 2015. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
- ^ Salomone, Dan (October 2, 2014). "NFL Draft headed to Chicago in 2015". Giants.com. New York Giants. Archived from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
- ^ "2012 NFL draft order". ESPN. February 24, 2012. Archived from the original on February 24, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
- ^ Brinson, Will (April 24, 2012). "Colts GM Ryan Grigson confirms Indianapolis will select Andrew Luck No. 1". Eye on Football. CBS Sports.
- ^ Politi, Steve (October 21, 2011). ""Suck for Luck" could be best hope for NFL's worst". CNN.com.
- ^ Baldwin, Michael (September 8, 2012). "Debate's Over, 2012 QB Draft Class Is Greatest in NFL History". Bleacher Report.
- ^ "Five rookie quarterbacks to start NFL openers". NewsOK. December 3, 2012.
- ^ "Nick Foles takes first-team reps". ESPN.com. November 15, 2012.
- ^ Jeremiah, Daniel (December 17, 2012). "Kirk Cousins, Washington Redskins just fine without RG3". NFL.com.
- ^ Sessler, Marc (December 12, 2012). "Ryan Lindley, not John Skelton, starting for Cardinals". NFL.com.
- ^ "Five international players selected in NFL Draft". USA Football. April 30, 2012. Retrieved October 13, 2012.
- ^ Kirk, Jason (January 19, 2012). "NFL Draft 2012: Full Early Entrants List Released, Featuring 65 Players". SB Nation. Archived from the original on January 20, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2012.
- ^ Brugler, Dane (April 27, 2013). "2013 NFL Draft: Top 10 undrafted underclassmen". NFLDraftScout.com. Archived from the original on May 2, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
- ^ Gosselin, Rick (April 29, 2011). "Commissioner Roger Goodell booed; Cam Newton goes No. 1 to Carolina". The Dallas Morning News. Archived from the original on November 4, 2011. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ "NFL Draft 2014". NFL.com – The Official Website of the National Football League. Retrieved January 20, 2014.
- ^ "2011 – 77th Award Robert Griffin III Baylor University". Heisman Trust. Archived from the original on May 8, 2013. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
- ^ "NFL suspends Saints coach Payton for one year without pay". National Football League. March 21, 2012. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
- ^ "Raiders draft Terrelle Pryor". ESPN. August 22, 2011. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
- ^ Pelissero, Tom (February 25, 2012). "Source: Vikings won't have to give up extra pick from McNabb deal". 1500 ESPN Twin Cities. Archived from the original on February 3, 2014. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
- ^ Biggs, Brad (April 1, 2011). "Lions win appeal in tampering case, sort of". National Football Post. Archived from the original on January 29, 2013. Retrieved May 4, 2011.
- ^ "Josh Gordon, WR for the Cleveland Browns". NFL. Retrieved January 20, 2014.
- ^ "NFL Draft 2012". NFL. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
- Notes
- ^ a b Players are identified as a Pro Bowler if they were selected for the Pro Bowl at any time in their career.
- ^ Robert Griffin III was the 2011 winner of the Heisman Trophy which is awarded annually to the player deemed the most outstanding player in collegiate football.[19]
- Trade references
- ^ a b c Schefter, Adam (March 12, 2012). "Redskins get No. 2 pick from Rams". ESPN. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
- ^ Smith, Michael David (May 12, 2014). "Greg Robinson is the final piece of the Robert Griffin III trade". Pro Football Talk. NBC Sports. Archived from the original on May 13, 2014. Retrieved May 13, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e "Source: Browns move up to No. 3". ESPN. April 26, 2012. Retrieved April 26, 2012.
- ^ a b c Kuharsky, Paul (April 26, 2012). "Jaguars bold, smart to go get Blackmon". ESPN. Retrieved April 26, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Dallas Cowboys make trade with Rams to draft Morris Claiborne". NFL.com. April 26, 2012.
- ^ a b c d "Philadelphia Eagles trade for No. 12 pick, take Fletcher Cox". NFL.com. April 26, 2012.
- ^ Florio, Mike (October 18, 2011). "Palmer is a Raider". Pro Football Talk. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
- ^ Corkran, Steve (June 6, 2012). "Raiders get to keep 2013 first-round draft pick". Inside the Oakland Raiders (blog). Contra Costa Times. Archived from the original on May 12, 2014. Retrieved May 12, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f "Chandler Jones To Patriots With 21st Pick After Trade During 2012 NFL Draft". Huffington Post. April 26, 2012.
- ^ a b Florjancic, Matt (April 28, 2011). "Browns trade pick to Falcons". ClevelandBrowns.com. Archived from the original on May 2, 2011. Retrieved April 28, 2011.
- ^ Reiss, Mike (April 28, 2011). "Patriots trade 28th pick to Saints". ESPN. Retrieved April 28, 2011.
- ^ a b c "Vikings Move Up, Select Notre Dame S Harrison Smith". Vikings.com. April 26, 2012. Archived from the original on May 1, 2012. Retrieved April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b c d "Bucs Land RB Martin After Bold Trade Up". Buccaneers.com. April 26, 2012. Archived from the original on April 30, 2012. Retrieved April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b c d "Jets trade up to take Georgia Tech WR Hill". The Wall Street Journal. April 27, 2011.
- ^ a b c "Bears take S Carolina WR Alshon Jeffery". Sports Illustrated. April 27, 2012.
- ^ PFW Staff (April 29, 2011). "Patriots make third trade; get Raiders' '12 second-round pick". Pro Football Weekly. Archived from the original on May 15, 2014. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
- ^ McLane, Jeff (July 28, 2011). "Kolb-for-Rodgers-Cromartie trade done". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved July 28, 2011.
- ^ a b c "Packers go defense again with Worthy pick". Packers.com. April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b c d "Bucs select LB Lavonte David in second round". Sports Illustrated. April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Packers trade up again, draft Vanderbilt's Casey Hayward". Green Bay Press Gazette. April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Broncos trade up to take SDSU RB Hillman". The Denver Post. April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Bills trade up 2 spots to draft WR Graham". Sports Illustrated. April 27, 2012.
- ^ Wright, Michael (July 29, 2011). "Bears trade Greg Olsen for pick". ESPN. Retrieved July 29, 2011.
- ^ ESPN.com news services (March 14, 2012). "Bears trade for Brandon Marshall". ESPN. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Keeping emphasis on defense, Chargers trade up to take LSU SS Taylor in 3rd round". Washington Post. April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b c McLane, Jeff (March 20, 2012). "Eagles trade for middle linebacker DeMeco Ryans". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved March 20, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Ravens take Temple RB Pierce in 3rd round of draft". Sports Illustrated. April 27, 2012.
- ^ a b "There's been a trade: 49ers ship third-round pick to Indy". The Sacramento Bee. April 27, 2012. Archived from the original on April 30, 2012. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Dolphins Select RB Miller In Fourth Round". MiamiDolphins.com. April 28, 2012. Archived from the original on May 1, 2012. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
- ^ "Bucs trade up in 4th round with Eagles for Tennessee TE Luke Stocker". Tampa Bay Times. April 30, 2011. Archived from the original on May 3, 2011. Retrieved April 30, 2011.
- ^ a b "Carolina Panthers trade up to take Oklahoma DE Frank Alexander in 4th round of 2012 NFL draft". The Charlotte Observer. April 28, 2012. Archived from the original on May 7, 2012. Retrieved April 30, 2012.
- ^ a b c Rosenthal, Gregg (March 21, 2012). "Sanchez headache unleashed: Jets acquire Tebow". NFL. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
- ^ Maese, Rick and Jason Reid (April 25, 2010). "Redskins trade Jason Campbell to Raiders". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 5, 2010.
- ^ a b c "Steelers move up in fourth round to take Washington defensive tackle Alameda Ta'amu". The Washington Post. April 28, 2012.
- ^ a b c "Fourth round: 49ers trade up for Wake Forest G Looney". SFGate.com. April 28, 2012.
- ^ "Baltimore Ravens land Lee Evans in deal with Buffalo Bills". ESPN. August 12, 2011. Retrieved August 12, 2011.
- ^ Jones, Lindsay (November 27, 2011). "Lloyd's 30th catch upgrades Broncos draft pick". The Denver Post. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
- ^ a b c "Lions trade up to get LB Tahir Whitehead out of Temple". DetroitLions.com. April 28, 2012. Archived from the original on January 21, 2013. Retrieved April 30, 2012.