Evander "Ziggy" Hood, from Mizzou, was drafted in the 1st round, 32nd overall, by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 2009 NFL draft.
2nd round draft, for The Saints (New Orleans)
The Redskins traded a 2nd round choice in the 2005 draft for the New Orleans Saints 3rd round choice in 2004, which they used to draft Cooley.
A snake draft refers to a draft, normally fantasy football, in which the order the teams draft players in "snakes" or goes from team 1 to team 10, then team 10 to team 1 and so on. For example say there are 10 teams in a fantasy fooball league. On draft day the first team picks up through the tenth team. After this first round is complete, the draft order is flipped meaning that team 10 will then draft again and the order will go back from team 10 to team 1.
The Miami Dolphins selected Pat White in the second round of the NFL draft.
vikings all ready did in round on pick 22
The Browns got him in the second round.
He was taken in the 1st round by the Cleveland Browns.
They wanted it.
First round is #22 Three Second round picks The Patriots preliminary 2010 Draft picks are: Round 1: #22 Round 2: #44 (from Jacksonville) Round 2: #47 (from Tennessee) Round 2: #53 Round 4: #117* Round 6: #181* Round 7: #214* Picks from the fourth round and down are subject to change because the compensatory draft picks for the 2010 draft have not been awarded as of 1/22/2010. The compensatory picks can increase the number of draft picks a team has. The compensatory picks cannot be traded.
Tennessee Titans in the 4th round of the 2009 NFL draft.
The Patriots traded Bledsoe to the Buffalo Bills for the Bills first round draft choice in the 2003 NFL Draft.
A typical snake draft, in which the team that drafts first in round one drafts last in round two is felt to give an advantage to the team that holds the first overall pick due to the drop off in talent for the team drafting last in the first round and due to the team with the first overall pick getting 3 of the top 21 players (in a ten man league.) In the afore mentioned ten team league, the first team gets draft picks 1, 20 and 21 (average 14) while the last team to draft gets picks 10,11 and 30 (average 17) which works out to an average of three draft spots per round (as well as getting the best player in the league with the first pick.) The Single-slant Snake draft is an attempt to alleviate this discrepancy. In the single slant draft, the first two rounds remain as in the standard snake (i.e. 1&20 or 10&11.) However, instead of reverting back to the team with the first pick getting the 21str pick in round three, the draft order repeats from round 2, giving the team that drafted last in round one the FIRST pick in round 2 AND 3 while the team that had the first overall pick gets the LAST pick in round 2 AND 3. In this case, the team with the first overall pick gets picks 1, 20 and 30 (average 17) and the team that drafts last gets picks 10, 11 and 21 (average 14.) This method is intended to provide entire roster equity because of the huge value difference between the first and last pick of the first round. Testing shows that even with the single slant method, the team with the overall number one pick still maintains an advantage, just not as large as in a standard snake draft. Testing also shows that if the slant draft is repeated (double slant draft) for an extra round (team with last pick in first round gets first pick in rounds 2, 3 AND 4, the team with the last overall pick in the first round has an advantage. In summary, the single slant snake draft is closest to balanced of the three methods and the first pick overall still has an advantage, albeit a smaller one.