It is getting close. The time of year for many football fans that is equivalent to the likes of Christmas and the Fourth of July. It is a time to awaken the barbeque from a long winter’s nap, dust off that old jersey, and ice down the kegerater. Celebrations will be in order as well as the occasional grumbling from those who did not get what they wanted. Yes, it is about time for the annual National Football League’s entry draft.
It is the football world’s version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire? – Reality TV at its finest. The young stars of the college gridiron will meet their professional destinies face to face and the rest of the world, including myself, will tune in to watch them.
The yearly event that takes place this April, 22nd through the 24th in New York’s Radio City Music Hall has blossomed into one of the most interesting and most followed aspects of football. It not only provides an organized format for NFL teams to take turns selecting the top college talent but it also offers another chance for fans to brag or whine about their team. Discovering who will be gracing plasma screens across the nation for possibly the next decade can be equivocal to getting a new car. You want to show it off to your friends while at the same time crossing your fingers and hoping it performs at the highest level, at least until you are finished making the payments on it. Occasionally you score the dream car which more than fulfills your expectations and other times, unfortunately, you get a lemon.
The whole story of the NFL Draft starts in 1936 with the Philadelphia Eagles as the first team ever on the clock. They then selected Jay Berwanger from the University of Chicago and he went on to be flop. In fact, he never even played a down of professional football. Since then, the NFL draft has gradually blossomed into a multi-media phenomenon that has uniquely become just as much of a spectacle as the Super Bowl itself. In fact, viewer ratings of the draft have gone up 62% in the last six years and the league is banking on increasing that number, at least for the first round. This year, for the first time ever, it will be broadcast live on a Thursday night. This will be the first time it has been in a prime time slot and with a livelier format it could probably draw the same type of following as Survivor and American Idol.
Growing up on ‘80’s television I was subjected to a lot of game shows such as Wheel of Fortune and The Price is Right. Sure, it was fun to play along and try to solve the puzzles or guess the correct answers before the contestant could figure it out, but there was more to it than that. It was fun to see how much money somebody could walk away with and the more money somebody was playing for the more interesting it became. The NFL Draft has no shortage of young, instant wealth which has also become part of the draw. Where else will you see a guy anxiously waiting to be called to a podium where he will realize his dreams of becoming a famous, multi-million dollar earning pro athlete?
For a lot of interested parties, die-hard fans and sports writers the NFL draft also presents an opportunity to flex their prognosticating muscles. Mock drafts are a dime a dozen these days and if you have never seen one you can go to the NFL Draft Dog (nfldraftdog.com) and view several differing opinions on how it will turn out.
In a relatively young country still forming its cultures and traditions, American football is one thing that has started as and remained an American institution. We as fans hold all its rituals and folklore, no matter how trivial they may seem to the unacquainted, in high regard. From the singing of the national anthem to the Gatorade showers it is all something we cherish with the solemnity of a religious radical. Not to make light of those with devout beliefs but sports in general have an innate ability to draw the best and worst out of those that love it the most.
The draft is no exception to this absolute love. To some fans it may actually be the high point of their sports year. It has become a rite of passage for the players entering a new phase of their life while ceremoniously signaling the end to hard times for a struggling franchise – at least for one more off-season. This year the Rams are the first team on the clock. Whether they take quarterback Sam Bradford or defensive tackle Ndamokung Suh, a high percentage of the hopes and dreams belonging to St. Louis fans will be pinned on the young player they select. After that it will only be a matter of time before we can figure out if they were worth the hype and 50 million dollars that the organization will dish out to them.
While it could be anybody’s guess as to who will go where, there are a few certainties when it comes to the draft. For one thing, you can bet there will be a gaggle of raucous Jets fans filling the hall with cheers and jeers, depending on who their team picks. You can also bet on the Raiders making a selection that leaves the room silent, as it did when it took kicker Sebastian Janikowski in the first round in 2000 with quarterback Chad Pennington and running back Shaun Alexander still on the board. Honestly, the draft would not be nearly as fun to watch without Raiders owner Al Davis in his Evil Kneivel jump-suit making a decision that causes draft guru Mel Kiper to choke on his diet soda.
The draft has also seemingly become the highlight of the NFL Commissioner’s yearly duties as well. Nobody would even know what he looked like if he did not make the traditional walk to the podium every year, acting like a Michael Buffer-ish ring announcer at a heavyweight fight. Former commish Paul Tagliabue could hardly wipe the smile off his face while announcing that the first team “is on the clock”. When he vacated his position and Roger Goodell came on, it was like Leno taking over for Carson.
So if you are new to the ins and outs of the NFL Draft, this year is a good one to get yourself up to date. It is the 75th anniversary of the event so the league will be pulling out all the stops. It just so happens that this year’s crop of prospects is one of the deepest and most talented overall classes that we have seen in a while. One reason being is that more college underclassmen, being juniors and sophomores, have entered the draft more than any other previous year. With the state of the economy today that is not such a bad idea for a young man, considering that there are a lot of people out there with college degrees washing dishes and waiting tables. I suspect that next year we will see more of the same.
By Scot Acocks (scot.acocks@gmail.com)
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