A key issue in bringing about the merger of the American and National Football Leagues was the cost involved in competing for talent coming out of college each year. Thus, a major step in the process that would culminate with full merger in 1970 was the first combined AFL/NFL draft that commenced on Tuesday, March 14, 1967. The draft was conducted in New York under the direction of NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle and a total of 445 players were chosen, with the first seven rounds held on the opening day.
The New Orleans Saints, as a NFL expansion team for 1967,
had the first and last selections at the end of each round plus one additional
at the end of the second, third, and fourth rounds. However, they had already
traded away the first overall pick, which went to the Baltimore Colts in
exchange for backup QB Gary Cuozzo. The Colts used the selection to take
Michigan State All-American DE Bubba Smith (pictured above).
The first round took four hours and 16 minutes to
complete and several trades were part of it, in addition to deals that had
already been struck. With a choice obtained from the New York Giants a week
earlier in the trade of QB Fran Tarkenton, the Minnesota Vikings, who ended up
with three picks in the first round, had the second overall selection and took
HB Clint Jones, also an All-American from Michigan State.
Atlanta held the third pick but, disappointed that Bubba
Smith was no longer available, dealt it to the San Francisco 49ers for flanker
Bernie Casey, G Jim Wilson, and DE Jim Norton. The 49ers chose QB Steve
Spurrier, the Heisman Trophy winner from Florida, with an eye toward grooming a
successor to 31-year-old QB John Brodie.
Future Hall of Fame QB Bob Griese of Purdue (pictured at left) was chosen by
Miami, which was also the first AFL team to select, with the fourth overall
pick. Other eventual Hall of Famers chosen in the first round were HB Floyd
Little of Syracuse by the Denver Broncos (sixth overall), Notre Dame DE Alan
Page by the Vikings (15th), and guard Gene Upshaw from Texas A &
I by the Raiders (17th). Those
selected in the second round were Jackson State CB Lem Barney by the Detroit
Lions (34th overall) and LB Willie Lanier of Morgan State by the
Kansas City Chiefs (50th). OT Rayfield Wright of Ft. Valley State
was taken by the Dallas Cowboys in the seventh round (182nd overall)
and DB Ken Houston from Prairie View was a ninth-round selection of the Houston
Oilers (214th).
Among the NFL trades that occurred, the Steelers sent
flanker Gary Ballman to Philadelphia for FB Earl Gros, G Bruce Van Dyke, and a
third-round draft choice that was used to take C Rockne Freitas of Oregon State.
The Los Angeles Rams dealt TE Marlin McKeever and their first draft choice to
Minnesota for HB Tom Mason, TE Hal Bedsole, and a second-round draft pick (the
Vikings used their draft choice to take Page and the Rams chose HB Willie
Ellison from Texas Southern). The Giants traded LB Jerry Hillebrand to St.
Louis for HB Bill Triplett. In a significant AFL transaction, Buffalo dealt QB
Daryle Lamonica, split end Glenn Bass, and its third and fifth draft picks to
Oakland for split end Art Powell and QB Tom Flores.
Another Michigan State player, LB George Webster, was
taken by Houston with the fifth overall selection, one of four Spartans to go
in the first round. Among other noteworthy selections, the Chiefs helped revamp
their corps of linebackers by not only selecting Willie Lanier in the second
round, but Jim Lynch of Notre Dame three spots earlier with the 47th
pick . In addition to Bubba Smith, who spent five seasons in
Baltimore and was twice named to the Pro Bowl, the Colts selected another
player who would star on defense in DB Rick Volk from Michigan, also in the
second round, who was chosen to his first of three Pro Bowls as a rookie. Baltimore
also took a chance on DB Preston Pearson, a basketball player from Illinois who
did not play college football, in the 12th round. Used on offense as
a halfback, he went on to a 14-season career with the Colts, Steelers, and
Cowboys.
Later in the second round, the Saints took WR John
Gilliam from South Carolina State, who became the first player in franchise
history to score a regular season touchdown on the opening kickoff of the first
game. He went on to have his best seasons with the Cardinals and Vikings.
HB Travis Williams of Arizona State was chosen by the NFL
Champion Packers in the fourth round and made a significant impact as a kickoff
returner during his rookie season, averaging a record 41.1 yards and scoring
four touchdowns. Another halfback, the undersized (5’9”, 190) Dickie Post of
Houston, was picked by the Chargers right after Williams and led the club in
rushing in his first year with 663 yards. He led the entire AFL in 1969.
The Lions did well with UCLA HB Mel Farr in the first
round, Lem Barney in the second, and LB Paul Naumoff of Tennessee in the third
round, who started six games as a rookie and kept on going for 12 seasons in
Detroit.
In addition to Clint Jones and Alan Page, who was shifted
inside to defensive tackle, the Vikings picked WR Gene Washington, the fourth Michigan
State player chosen in the first round (eighth overall) who was selected to two
Pro Bowls in an injury-shortened career (and not to be mistaken for the wide
receiver of the same name who was drafted two years later and played with
distinction for the 49ers). DB Bobby Bryant of South Carolina was taken in the
seventh round and became a stalwart in the defensive backfield.
John Elliott was chosen as a guard out of Texas by the
New York Jets in the seventh round and went on to distinguish himself at
defensive tackle. Another player who paid dividends for the Jets was G Randy
Rasmussen from Kearney State (now Univ. of Nebraska at Kearney), an unheralded
pick in the 12th round who remained with the team until 1981.
Kicker Don Cockroft of Adams State, picked by the Browns
in the third round, filled a need both for a successor to the great but fading
PK Lou Groza and as a punter. After a year on the taxi squad due to injury, he
handled the punting and placekicking as one of the last of the straight-ahead
kickers through 1980. Cleveland also made a good pickup in the 17th
(and last) round (439th overall) with Ben Davis from Defiance
College, who proved valuable as a kick returner and cornerback.
Another notable player chosen in the 17th
round was WR Dan Abramowicz from Xavier of Ohio (pictured at right) by the Saints (420th
overall). He not only made the fledgling club but started at split end and led
the team with 50 catches for 721 yards as a rookie. A fine possession receiver,
he topped the NFL with 73 receptions in 1969 and put together a 105-consecutive
game pass receiving streak that was the league record at the time.
Oddly enough, the last player chosen was Jimmy Walker of
Providence, picked as a wide receiver by the Saints, who also ended up being
the first overall selection in the NBA draft in May. Not surprisingly, he chose
to play pro basketball, and did so for ten years. Another draftee who chose basketball over pro
football was Pat Riley, a flanker out of Kentucky taken in the 11th
round by the Dallas Cowboys who signed with the San Diego Rockets of the NBA
and, following his playing career, became a successful coach and team
executive.
Also as a footnote, tackle Richard Sligh from North
Carolina College was picked by the Raiders in the tenth round. He failed as a
defensive tackle and lasted just a year, but at 7’0” was the tallest player in
AFL or NFL history.
The combined draft had the intended effect of ending
competition between AFL and NFL teams for top talent coming out of college. It
also helped the AFL clubs to improve their rosters as full merger with the NFL
neared. Both the Jets and Chiefs, who won Super Bowls in addition to league
titles following the 1968 and ’69 seasons, respectively, added players who
would be in the starting lineup for those contests. The Dolphins, who went to
three Super Bowls from 1971 to ’73 and won the last two not only started the
process of assembling the necessary talent by drafting Bob Griese in 1967 but
made good use of the 1968 and ‘69 combined drafts as well.
The draft was in March that year? Interesting. They should have left it there for good, not move it to January and then to early May-late April.
ReplyDeleteThat draft seemed to be defining for the Vikings and Saints. Minnesota got a few players that would help them in their future success, and the Saints would begin their draft day ineptitude that year.
In the years prior to 1967, when the AFL and NFL were competing for talent, both leagues actually held their drafts in late November/early December, before the regular season was even over, which is unimaginable today. Prior to that, in 1956 to '59 the NFL held the first three to four rounds in November and then completed the draft in late January, which had been when the full draft was typically held in the early 50s. In the early 70s, post-merger, it was held in late January/early February before being moved to April later in the decade.
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