No QBs drafted in Round 2; Desmond Ridder, Malik Willis go in Round 3
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[April 30, 2022] On
a night when many anticipated a second-round run on quarterbacks,
NFL teams instead waited until the third round of the draft on
Friday to turn their attention to signal-callers.
Teams that seemingly needed a young quarterback such as the Seattle
Seahawks and Atlanta Falcons both passed twice on drafting a QB in
Round 2.
That left QBs such as Liberty's Malik Willis, Cincinnati's Desmond
Ridder, Ole Miss' Matt Corral and North Carolina's Sam Howell all
waiting to hear their name called as the Las Vegas event moved into
Round 3.
Friday's development came after only one quarterback was chosen in
the first round -- Pitt's Kenny Pickett, by the Pittsburgh Steelers
at No. 20.
Ridder finally went off the board to the Falcons 10 picks into the
third round, No. 74 overall.
"They're going to get everything out of me -- a Super Bowl out of
me," Ridder said on ABC's draft broadcast. "I'm not leaving until I
get a Super Bowl."
Willis, once considered a potential top-10 pick, was chosen by the
Tennessee Titans a dozen picks later.
"He was the best player on our board," Titans general manager Jon
Robinson told reporters, adding that Willis "has a lot of work to
do, obviously, like all the young kids do, but we're excited to add
him to the team and let him compete."
Corral went to the Carolina Panthers with the 30th pick in the third
round (94th overall). Howell, among other prospects, will have to
wait until the draft concludes with Rounds 4-7 on Saturday.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers began Round 2 by choosing Houston defensive
end Logan Hall. The pick originally belonged to the Jacksonville
Jaguars before they moved up six slots in a trade with Tampa Bay on
Thursday evening, allowing the Buccaneers to kick off Thursday
night's action.
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The Green Bay Packers then traded up to select
Aaron Rodgers' newest weapon, North Dakota State wideout Christian
Watson. The Packers sent two second-round picks (Nos. 53 and 59) to
the Minnesota Vikings to move up for Watson.
"If you love a player, you just find a way to get him," Packers
director of football operations Milt Hendrickson said.
Two picks later, the New York Jets traded up with their crosstown
rival Giants to choose Iowa State's Breece Hall, the first running
back off the board in the 2022 draft. Thursday marked the first time
since 2014 that no running back was selected in the opening round.
Many expected Seattle to choose a quarterback with
either the 40th or 41st pick with Russell Wilson now in Denver.
However, the Seahawks opted to go with a pair of Big Ten standouts
-- Minnesota linebacker Boye Mafe and Michigan State running back
Kenneth Walker III.
Meanwhile, Atlanta had a pair of second-round picks and chose two
defensive players -- Penn State defensive end Arnold Ebiketie at No.
38 and Montana State linebacker Troy Andersen 20 picks later.
One of the most popular positions Friday once again was wide
receiver, as seven were picked in the second round after six
wideouts were chosen Thursday.
The New England Patriots (Baylor's Tyquan Thornton at No. 50),
Steelers (Georgia's George Pickens at No. 52) and Kansas City Chiefs
(Western Michigan's Skyy Moore at No. 54) chose wide receivers in
Round 2.
Moore will be part of a wide receiver committee that attempts to
replace the production of Tyreek Hill, who was dealt to the Miami
Dolphins earlier this offseason.
"The one thing that stood out with this kid is he is smart," Kansas
City director of football operations Mike Borgonzi said of Moore.
"If you watch this kid on film, he's not the biggest guy, but he is
fearless across the middle. Dependable. For a smaller guy, he really
goes up and gets the ball. We feel really good about fitting him
into this offense."
--Field Level Media
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