The 1986 NFL draft was the procedure by which National Football League teams selected amateur college football players. It is officially known as the NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting. The draft was held April 29–30, 1986, at the Marriott Marquis in New York City, New York.[1][2] The league also held a supplemental draft after the regular draft and before the regular season.
1986 NFL draft | |
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General information | |
Date(s) | April 29–30, 1986 |
Location | New York Marriott Marquis in New York City, NY |
Network(s) | ESPN |
Overview | |
333 total selections in 12 rounds | |
League | NFL |
First selection | Bo Jackson, RB Tampa Bay Buccaneers |
Mr. Irrelevant | Mike Travis, DB San Diego Chargers |
Most selections (17) | Cincinnati Bengals San Diego Chargers |
Fewest selections (8) | Cleveland Browns |
Hall of Famers | 2
|
The first overall selection of the draft, Bo Jackson, had told the Tampa Bay Buccaneers prior to the draft that he would refuse to sign with the team. Disputes with team owner Hugh Culverhouse intensified after Jackson was ruled ineligible to play college baseball due to a trip he took with Culverhouse. This angered Jackson, as Culverhouse had assured him that the visit would not cause any NCAA violations. It was said that Jackson, who was having what he called his best year playing baseball in school, made the Buccaneers nervous and that by getting him somehow ruled ineligible to play baseball, he would be forced to focus on football.[3] Prior to the 1987 NFL draft, the Buccaneers forfeited their rights to Jackson.
Player selections
edit= Pro Bowler[4] | = Hall of Famer |
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Supplemental draft
editRnd. | Pick No. | NFL team | Player | Pos. | College | Conf. | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 | Philadelphia Eagles | Charles Crawford | RB | Oklahoma State | Big Eight |
Hall of Famers
edit- Charles Haley, linebacker from James Madison, taken 4th round 96th overall by San Francisco 49ers
- Inducted: Professional Football Hall of Fame class of 2015.
Notable undrafted players
edit† | = Pro Bowler[4] |
Trades
editIn the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the 1986 Draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.
- Round one
- ^ No. 4: New Orleans → Indianapolis (PD). New Orleans traded its first-round selection (4th) to Indianapolis in exchange for the Colts' first- and third-round selections (6th and 60th).
- ^ No. 6: Indianapolis → New Orleans (PD). see No. 4: New Orleans → Indianapolis.
- ^ No. 8: Minnesota → San Diego (D). Minnesota traded its first- and third-round selections (8th and 66th) to San Diego in exchange for the Chargers' first- and second-round selections (14th and 44th).
- ^ No. 14: multiple trades:
No. 14: Green Bay → San Diego (PD). Green Bay traded its first-round selection (14th) and its fifth-round selection in 1987 to San Diego in exchange for the Chargers' rights to S Mossy Cade.
No. 14: San Diego → Minnesota (D). see No. 8: Minnesota → San Diego. - ^ No. 16: Cleveland → Buffalo (PD). Cleveland traded its first- and third-round selections in 1985 (7th and 63rd) and its first- and sixth-round selections in this draft (16th and 154th) in exchange for QB Bernie Kosar.
- ^ No. 17: Washington → Atlanta (PD). Washington traded its second-round selection in 1985 (51st), its first-round selection in this draft (17th) and RB Joe Washington to Atlanta in exchange for the Falcons' second-round selection in 1985 (33rd) and second- and sixth-round selections in this draft (30th and 141st).
- ^ No. 18: San Francisco → Dallas (D). San Francisco traded its first-round selection (18th) to Dallas in exchange for the Cowboys' first- and fifth-round selections (20th and 131st).
- ^ No. 20: multiple trades:
No. 20: Dallas → San Francisco (D). see No. 18: San Francisco → Dallas.
No. 20: San Francisco → Buffalo (D). San Francisco traded first- and tenth-round selections (20th and 273rd) to Buffalo in exchange for the Bills' second- and third-round selections (29th and 56th). - ^ No. 21: Denver → Cincinnati (PD). Denver traded its first- and third-round selections (21st and 78th) and its fifth-round selection in 1987 to Cincinnati in exchange for the Bengals' rights to LB Ricky Hunley.
- ^ No. 25: Miami → Tampa Bay (PD). Miami traded its first- and second-round selections (25th and 40th) to Tampa Bay in exchange for LB Hugh Green.
- Round two
- ^ No. 29: multiple trades:
No. 29: Buffalo → San Francisco (D). see No. 20: San Francisco → Buffalo.
No. 29: San Francisco → Detroit (D). San Francisco traded this second-round selection (29th) to Detroit in exchange for the Lions' second- and third-round selections (39th and 71st). - ^ No. 30: Atlanta → Washington (PD). see No. 17: Washington → Atlanta.
- ^ No. 33: Indianapolis → Dallas (D). Indianapolis traded its second-round selection (33rd) to Dallas in exchange for QB Gary Hogeboom and the Cowboys' second-round selection (47th).
- ^ No. 39: Detroit → San Francisco (D). see No. 29: San Francisco → Detroit.
- ^ No. 40: multiple trades:
No. 40: Minnesota → Miami (PD). Minnesota traded its second-round selection (40th) and LB Robin Sendlein to Miami in exchange for the Dolphins' rights to WR Anthony Carter.
No. 40: Miami → Tampa Bay (PD). see No. 25: Miami → Tampa Bay. - ^ No. 42: Seattle → New England (PD). Seattle traded its second-round selection (42nd) to New England in exchange for OT Bob Cryder.
- ^ No. 44: multiple trades:
No. 44: San Diego → Minnesota (PD). see No. 8: Minnesota → San Diego.
No. 44: Minnesota → N.Y. Giants (D). Minnesota traded two second-round selections (44th and 53rd) to N.Y. Giants in exchange for the Giants' rights to OT Gary Zimmerman. - ^ No. 45: San Francisco → Washington (D). San Francisco traded its second-round selection (45th) to Washington in exchange for the Redskins' tenth-round selection (270th) and first-round selection in 1987.
- ^ No. 47: Dallas → Indianapolis (D). see No. 33: Indianapolis → Dallas.
- ^ No. 48: multiple trades:
No. 48: Washington → L.A. Raiders (PD). Washington traded its second-round selection (48th) to L.A. Raiders in exchange for WR Malcolm Barnwell.
No. 48: L.A. Raiders → Philadelphia (PD). L.A. Raiders traded this second-round selection (48th) to Philadelphia in exchange for LB Jerry Robinson. - ^ No. 51: Denver → N.Y. Giants (D). Denver traded second- and sixth-round selections (51st and 139th) and second-round selection in 1987 to N.Y. Giants in exchange for CB Mark Haynes.
- ^ No. 53: multiple trades:
No. 53: L.A. Raiders → Minnesota (PD). L.A. Raiders traded its sixth-round selection in 1985 (164th) and this second-round selection (53rd) to Minnesota in exchange for LB Brad Van Pelt.
No. 53: Minnesota → N.Y. Giants (D). see No. 44: Minnesota → N.Y. Giants.
- Round three
- ^ No. 56: Buffalo → San Francisco (D). see No. 20: San Francisco → Buffalo.
- ^ No. 57: Tampa Bay → New Orleans (PD). Tampa Bay traded its third-round selection (57th) to New Orleans in exchange for S Dave Greenwood.
- ^ No. 58: Atlanta → Cincinnati (PD). Cincinnati traded its third-round selection (58th) to Atlanta in exchange for QB Turk Schonert.
- ^ No. 60: Indianapolis → New Orleans (D). see No. 4: New Orleans → Indianapolis.
- ^ No. 64: Philadelphia → San Francisco (PD). Philadelphia traded its third-round selection (64th) and second-round selection in 1987 to San Francisco in exchange for QB Matt Cavanaugh.
- ^ No. 66: Minnesota → San Diego (D). see No. 8: Minnesota → San Diego.
- ^ No. 69: Cleveland → Detroit (PD). Cleveland traded its third-round selection (69th) to Detroit in exchange for QB Gary Danielson.
- ^ No. 71: multiple trades:
No. 71: Detroit → San Francisco (D). see No. 29: San Francisco → Detroit.
No. 71: San Francisco → L.A. Rams (D). San Francisco traded this third-round selection (71st) to L.A. Rams in exchange for the Rams' two fourth-round selections (96th and 101st) and QB Jeff Kemp. - ^ No. 77: L.A. Rams → Buffalo (PD). L.A. Rams traded its third-round selection (77th) and QB Vince Ferragamo to Buffalo in exchange for TE Tony Hunter.
- ^ No. 78: Denver → Cincinnati (PD). see No. 21: Denver → Cincinnati.
- Round four
- ^ No. 84: Buffalo → Green Bay (PD). Buffalo traded its first-round selection in 1985 (7th) and its fourth-round selection in this draft (84th) to Green Bay in exchange for the Packers' first- and second-round selections in 1985 (14th and 42nd).
- ^ No. 85: Atlanta → L.A. Raiders (D). Atlanta its fourth-round selection (85th) to L.A. Raiders in exchange for S Bret Clark.
- ^ No. 87: Houston → Kansas City (PD). Houston traded its fourth-round selection (87th) and DE Bob Hamm to Kansas City in exchange for the Chiefs' fifth- and sixth-round selections in 1985 (133rd and 153rd).
- ^ No. 95: Philadelphia → San Diego (PD).Philadelphia traded its fourth-round selection (95th) and eighth-round selection in 1987 to San Diego in exchange for RB Earnest Jackson.
- ^ No. 96: multiple trades:
No. 96: Cleveland → L.A. Rams (PD). Cleveland traded its fourth-round selection (96th) to L.A. Rams in exchange for the Rams' rights to WR Terry Greer.
No. 96: L.A. Rams → San Francisco (D). see No. 71: San Francisco → L.A. Rams. - ^ No. 99: Seattle → Cincinnati (PD).Seattle traded its fourth-round selection (99th) to Cincinnati in exchange for TE Dan Ross.
- ^ No. 101: multiple trades:
No. 101: Washington → L.A. Rams (PD). Washington traded its fourth-round selection (101st) to L.A. Rams in exchange for OT Dan McQuaid.
No. 101: L.A. Rams → San Francisco (D). see No. 71: San Francisco → L.A. Rams. - ^ No. 103: N.Y. Giants → L.A. Raiders (PD).N.Y. Giants traded its fourth-round selection (103rd) to L.A. Raiders in exchange for CB Ted Watts.
- ^ No. 106: L.A. Rams → Philadelphia (PD).L.A. Rams traded its fourth-round selection (95th) and seventh-round selection in 1987 to Philadelphia in exchange for DE Dennis Harrison.
- Round five
- Round six
- Round seven
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References
edit- ^ "NFL Draft Locations". FootballGeography.com. October 2, 2014. Archived from the original on September 5, 2015. Retrieved October 23, 2014.
- ^ Salomone, Dan (October 2, 2014). "NFL Draft headed to Chicago in 2015". Giants.com. New York Giants. Archived from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
- ^ Auman, Greg (April 25, 2015). "When Bucs blew it by drafting Bo Jackson". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
- ^ a b c Players are identified as a Pro Bowler if they were selected for the Pro Bowl at any time in their career.
- ^ Players are identified as a Hall of Famer if they have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
- ^ "1985 Heisman Trophy winner". Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved April 1, 2011.