Bryce Young drafted No. 1, then Texans pull 2-3 punch
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[April 28, 2023]
It took a few ticks under four hours for the NFL to run from
No. 1 to No. 31, wrapping the first round of the 2023 NFL Draft in
Kansas City on Thursday night.
Quarterbacks and Texans were prevalent with Alabama quarterback
Bryce Young going first overall to the Carolina Panthers and the
Chiefs closing up shop in front of a raucous crowd, snagging a
hometown product, Kansas State defensive end Felix Anudike-Uzomah
31st.
Three of the top four picks were quarterbacks, and the Houston
Texans shook up the first round by acquiring the No. 3 pick from the
Arizona Cardinals. The move ushered in a new foundation for the
rebuild in Houston under coach DeMeco Ryans. Arizona traded back up
to No. 6 in a swap with the Detroit Lions.
Young is the first Alabama player selected No. 1 since 1948 (Harry
Gilmer) and the only Nick Saban-coached player to go first in the
draft.
"It's a dream come true," Young said. "I can't be more excited. I'm
blessed to be a Panther.
"Being the number 1 pick is amazing, but I don't want to be known as
a number 1 pick."
Houston followed suit. The Texans went with Ohio State quarterback
C.J. Stroud with the second pick and used No. 3 on Alabama defensive
end Will Anderson Jr.
"We've identified players with traits we want on the field and in
our building," Texans GM Nick Caserio said Thursday. He said Houston
finally completed the deal with Arizona for the third pick with 90
seconds left on the clock.
Illinois cornerback Devon Witherspoon went fifth to the Seattle
Seahawks, using the pick acquired from the Denver Broncos in the
Russell Wilson trade. Seattle later selected Ohio State wide
receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba at No. 20.
"I think it's an awesome fit. Awesome opportunity," Smith-Njigba
said. "I'm so excited they called my name, and I know they won't
regret it."
TCU's Quentin Johnston (Los Angeles Chargers) and Boston College
slot receiver Zay Flowers (Baltimore Ravens) went next during a run
of four consecutive wideouts, and Southern California receiver
Jordan Addison (23rd) landed with the Minnesota Vikings as a
sidekick to Justin Jefferson.
The Cardinals took another Buckeye -- Ohio State's Paris Johnson Jr.
-- sixth to play left tackle and go from protecting Stroud to
safeguarding Kyler Murray.
"I'm just here to work," Johnson said. "When I heard Cardinals, it
sent chills through my body. I wanted the Cardinals."
Texas college products stepped onto the stage and out of the Texans'
Thursday shadow. Texas Tech defensive end Tyree Wilson went No. 7 to
the Las Vegas Raiders, who were considered a prime landing spot for
Kentucky quarterback Will Levis, before Texas running back Bijan
Robinson was drafted by the Atlanta Falcons.
The Super Bowl runner-up Eagles traded a fourth-round pick to move
up one spot to No. 9 and drafted Georgia defensive tackle Jalen
Carter, who will be paired with college teammate Jordan Davis (13th
overall, 2022) on the dominant defensive front. Edge rusher Nolan
Smith, a defensive end who ran 4.38 in the 40-yard dash at the
scouting combine, also joins "UGA North" in Philadelphia as the No.
30 pick.
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Some scouts felt Carter was the No. 1 player in the
draft, but his no-contest plea to drag-racing charges related to the
death of a former teammate and a university staffer amplified
questions about his maturity and character.
"It's a lot," Carter said on stage of his emotions.
"It's time to work. The Eagles got the best player in the draft. Day
1 when I get there, it's time to work."
Philadelphia's trade dropped the Bears, who entered February with
the No. 1 pick in the draft, down one more spot before they selected
Tennessee offensive tackle Darnell Wright with the 10th pick. Wright
could play right tackle or guard, helping bolster a Chicago
offensive line that allowed Justin Fields to be sacked a league-high
55 times last season.
The well-traveled No. 12 pick that began with the Cleveland Browns,
went to the Texans for Deshaun Watson and was traded to Arizona and
then Detroit on Thursday night was a surprise second running back in
the top 12, Alabama's Jahmyr Gibbs.
At No. 18, the Lions picked Iowa middle linebacker Jack Campbell,
passing on every wide receiver in the draft despite recent
suspensions thinning the depth chart at the position.
Pitt pass-rushing defensive tackle Calijah Kancey joined the Tampa
Bay Buccaneers with the 19th pick and was introduced in Tampa by GM
Jason Licht, who made comparisons to Pro Football Hall of Famer
Warren Sapp.
The Pittsburgh Steelers traded up with the New England Patriots to
get Georgia left tackle Broderick Jones with the 14th overall pick
in a run on blockers that included the Tennessee Titans adding
Northwestern offensive tackle Peter Skoronski 11th.
Iowa edge rusher Lukas Van Ness went No. 13 and will play outside
linebacker for the Green Bay Packers, and Iowa State's Will McDonald
IV joined the rush on pass rushers when he got the call from the New
York Jets at 15th overall.
Cover men went back-to-back with Mississippi State's Emmanuel Forbes
(Washington Commanders) and Oregon's Christian Gonzalez (Patriots)
picked Nos. 16 and 17, respectively. The New York Giants joined to
crush for cover men, trading up a spot with Jacksonville for
Maryland's Deonte Banks (24th).
Buffalo traded with the Jaguars, too, and followed the
skill-position movement with Utah tight end Dalton Kincaid at No.
25. Jacksonville chose Arkansas left tackle Anton Harrison 27th on
the day word leaked that left tackle Cam Robinson could be suspended
to start the 2023 season.
The Dallas Cowboys went with a Michigan defensive lineman --
powerful and agile defensive tackle Mazi Smith -- in the first round
(26th) for the second time in seven years (Taco Charlton, 2017). Two
picks later, Clemson defensive end Myles Murphy went from the Tigers
to the Cincinnati Bengals, one spot before Clemson defensive tackle
Bryan Bresee (New Orleans Saints).
--Field Level Media
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