A day after being passed over in the first round of the NFL draft, Clausen was one excited quarterback: The Carolina Panthers used their first pick in the draft to select him in the second round Friday night, No. 48 overall.
It could be a perfect fit. Coach John Fox told Clausen that the Panthers' offense is similar to the one he excelled in during his three years under coach Charlie Weis at Notre Dame.
And there's this little nugget, too. Jake Delhomme is no longer with the Panthers and the current starting quarterback is unproven Matt Moore.
"I think it's going to help me tremendously, being in Coach Weis' system," Clausen said.
There was relief in the Carolina war room, too.
General manager Marty Hurney spent Friday trying to move up to the first pick in the second round to take Clausen, who was just 16-18 at Notre Dame. He was unable to swing a deal and then held his breath, fearing Arizona was about to grab Clausen after trading up for the No. 47 pick.
"You always say anything can happen," Hurney said as the Cardinals went for a linebacker. "Wow, it happened. We feel extremely fortunate to get a quarterback of his ability with the 48th pick."
Texas quarterback Colt McCoy joined in the fun, too, but not until the third round when his college coach, Mack Brown, announced that he had been taken by Cleveland at No. 85.
"My heart skipped a beat," McCoy said of getting the phone call from Browns president Mike Holmgren. "I am where I'm supposed to be, and that's Cleveland. It's a blue-collar town, and that's how I am.
"To have Coach Brown introduce me and announce my name is really special."
Day 2 of the draft at Radio City Music Hall got off to a slow start, with former stars such as Jim Brown, Floyd Little, Ray Lewis and Dan Marino announcing the early second-round choices. The opening pick Friday was by St. Louis, who took Rodger Saffold, an offensive tackle from Indiana who will get a chance to protect the Rams' No. 1 pick Sam Bradford. Minnesota followed with its first pick of the draft, cornerback Chris Cook of Virginia. Tampa Bay went for UCLA defensive tackle Brian Price.
"Oh man, it was a long night," Saffold said. "Your heart's racing the entire time and I'm just glad St. Louis called. I didn't know how much longer I could have taken it."
After Clausen, a flurry of All-Americans followed. Safety Taylor Mays of USC went to San Francisco at No. 49, cornerback/punt returner Javier Arenas went to Kansas City at No. 50, followed by Heisman Trophy runner-up Toby Gerhart going to Minnesota, where he could find himself sharing carries with Pro-Bowler and fellow Heisman-runner-up Adrian Peterson.
"I'm there to complement the best running back in the league, Adrian Peterson," Gerhart said. "It's amazing. I remember when I first started college, Adrian Peterson was the man in college. I remember saying I want to emulate my game after him."