No, once a College Football player declares for the NFL draft, they forfeit their remaining college eligibility and cannot return to play college football.
Chat with our AI personalities
Never because the college football player is WEAK
you draft them
After 3 years
Yes. You must be at least a junior or a redshirt sophomore to declare for the draft.
By entering the draft and a team choosing them. Usually all football players go to college and play football there. You declare eligibility for the NFL draft and train, visit teams, and train some more. It's really hard work, but when you are drafted you feel very accomplished.
they can walk on
Kentucky
Approximately 7% of all college football players get drafted into the NFL.
There are no class requirements to play for the NFL. The NFL drafts from college football and don't have a farm system like baseball or hockey. You can declare yourself eligible for the draft without graduating college. Some go in the third year, but most complete 4 years of college football.
They're not selected, they declare if they want to go or not after at least two years of college.
Sidney Rice played college football for the University of South Carolina. He was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings in the second round of the 2007 National Football League Draft.
You can enter the NFL Draft with three years of college education. Many football players will redshirt as a freshman which is the NCAA legal way of giving a student five eligible years of football at college. You may see people enter the draft as a sophomore, however the redshirted so it is actually their 3rd year in college.