2005 NFL draft
| 2005 NFL draft | |
|---|---|
| General information | |
| Date | April 23–24, 2005 |
| Time | 12:00 p.m. EDT (April 23) 11:00 a.m. EDT (April 24) |
| Location | Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York City |
| Networks | ESPN, ESPN2 |
| Overview | |
| 255 total selections in 7 rounds | |
| League | NFL |
| First selection | Alex Smith, QB San Francisco 49ers |
| Mr. Irrelevant | Andy Stokes, TE New England Patriots |
| Most selections (12) | Tampa Bay Buccaneers |
| Fewest selections (4) | New York Giants |
| Hall of Famers | 1 |
The 2005 NFL draft, the 70th in league history, took place on April 23 and 24, 2005. The draft was held at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York City[1][2] and was televised for the 26th consecutive year, with coverage on ESPN and ESPN2. It was the first to be held at the Javits Center, as Madison Square Garden had been utilized for drafts since 1995.[3]
The draft is best known for quarterback Aaron Rodgers falling to the 24th selection after being projected as one of the top picks.[4] Rodgers believed he would be taken first overall by the San Francisco 49ers, but after the 49ers selected quarterback Alex Smith, Rodgers was passed on by teams with other positional needs until he was drafted by the Green Bay Packers.[5][6][7] The fall drew retrospective scrutiny due to Rodgers developing a reputation as one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time.[8][9][10][11]
Compensatory selections were distributed among 14 teams, with the Philadelphia Eagles and St. Louis Rams garnering the most with four picks each.[12] Three of the first five picks were running backs, an NFL draft first.[13]
The league also held a supplemental draft in 2005 after the regular draft but before the regular season.
The 255 players chosen in the draft were composed of:
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Player selections
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Supplemental draft selections
For each player selected in the supplemental draft, the drafting team forfeited its pick in that round in the regular draft of the following season.
| Rnd. | Pick No. | NFL team | Player | Pos. | College | Conf. | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | — | Miami Dolphins | Manuel Wright | DT | USC | Pac-10 |
Notable undrafted players
| † | = Pro Bowler[15] |
Hall of Famers
- DeMarcus Ware, linebacker from Troy taken 11th overall by the Dallas Cowboys, was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2023.
Trades
In the explanations below, (PD) indicates trades completed prior to the start of the draft while (D) denotes trades that took place during the draft.
Round 1
- ^ No. 7: Oakland → Minnesota (PD). Oakland traded first- and seventh-round selections (7th and 219th overall) to Minnesota in exchange for WR Randy Moss.
- ^ No. 12: NY Giants → San Diego (PD). The NY Giants traded first- and fifth-round selections (12th and 144th overall) and a 2004 third-round selection to San Diego in exchange for QB Eli Manning.
- ^ No. 13: Houston → New Orleans (D). Houston traded a first-round selection (13th overall) to New Orleans in exchange for first- and third-round selections (16th and 66th overall).
- ^ No. 16: New Orleans → Houston (D). See No. 13: Houston → New Orleans.
- ^ No. 20: Buffalo → Dallas (PD). Buffalo traded a first-round selection (20th overall), and 2004 second- and fifth-round selections to Dallas in exchange for a 2004 first-round selection.
- ^ No. 23: Seattle → Oakland (D). Seattle traded a first-round selection (23rd overall) to Oakland in exchange for first- and fifth-round selections (26th and 105th overall).
- ^ No. 25: Denver → Washington (PD). Denver traded a first-round selection (25th overall) to Washington in exchange for a third-round selection (76th overall), and 2006 first- and fourth-round selections.
- ^ No. 26: multiple trades:
No. 26: NY Jets → Oakland (PD). The NY Jets traded first- and seventh-round selections (23rd and 230th overall) to Oakland in exchange for a second-round selection and two sixth-round selections (47th, 182nd and 185th overall) and TE Doug Jolley.
No. 26: Oakland → Seattle (D). See No. 23: Seattle → Oakland.
Round 2
- ^ No. 35: Miami → Philadelphia (PD). Miami traded a second-round selection (35th overall) to Philadelphia in exchange for QB A. J. Feeley.
- ^ No. 37: Tennessee → Detroit (D). Tennessee traded a second-round selection (37th overall) to Detroit in exchange for second- and fourth-round selections (41st and 113rd overall).
- ^ No. 40: Washington → New Orleans (PD). Washington traded a second-round selection (40th overall) and a 2004 fifth-round selection to New Orleans in exchange for 2004 third- and fifth-round selections.
- ^ No. 41: Detroit → Tennessee (D). See No. 37: Tennessee → Detroit.
- ^ No. 45: Carolina → Seattle (D). Carolina traded a second-round selection (45th overall) to Seattle in exchange for a second-round selection and two fourth-round selections (54th, 121st and 126th overall).
- ^ No. 46: Kansas City → Miami (PD). Kansas City traded second- and fifth-round selections (46th and 162nd overall) to Miami in exchange for a fifth-round selection (138th overall) and CB Patrick Surtain.
- ^ No. 47: multiple trades:
No. 47: Houston → Oakland (PD). Houston traded second- and third-round selections (47th and 78th overall) to Oakland in exchange for CB Phillip Buchanon.
No. 47: Oakland → NY Jets (PD). See No. 26: Oakland → NY Jets. - ^ No. 51: New Orleans → Green Bay (PD). New Orleans traded a second-round selection (51st overall) and QB J. T. O'Sullivan to Green Bay in exchange for a sixth-round selection (174th overall) and CB Mike McKenzie.
- ^ No. 54: Seattle → Carolina (D). See No. 45: Carolina → Seattle.
- ^ No. 64: New England → Baltimore (D). New England traded a second-round selection (64th overall) to Baltimore in exchange for third- and sixth-round selections (84th and 195th overall), and a 2006 third-round selection.
Round 3
- ^ No. 66: Miami → St. Louis (PD). Miami traded a third-round selection (66th overall) to St. Louis in exchange for RB Lamar Gordon.
- ^ No. 70: Chicago → Miami (PD). Chicago traded a third-round selection (70th overall) to Miami in exchange for DE Adewale Ogunleye.
- ^ No. 73: Dallas → Houston (PD). Dallas traded a third-round selection (73rd overall) to Houston in exchange for rights to QB Drew Henson.
- ^ No. 76: Washington → Denver (PD). See No. 25: Denver → Washington.
- ^ No. 77: Kansas City → Philadelphia (PD). Kansas City traded a third-round selection (77th overall) and a 2004 fifth-round selection to Philadelphia in exchange for OT John Welbourn.
- ^ No. 78: Houston → Oakland (PD). See No. 47: Houston → Oakland.
- ^ No. 84: Baltimore → New England (D). See No. 64: New England → Baltimore.
- ^ No. 89: Green Bay → Carolina (D). Green Bay traded a third-round selection (89th overall) to Carolina in exchange for two fourth-round selections (115th and 126th overall).
- ^ No. 91: San Diego → Tampa Bay (PD). San Diego traded third- and sixth-round selections (91st and 203rd overall) to Tampa Bay in exchange for WR Keenan McCardell.
- ^ No. 94: Philadelphia → San Francisco (D). Philadelphia traded a third-round selection (94th overall) to San Francisco in exchange for fourth- and sixth-round selections (102nd and 175th overall).
- ^ No. 95: New England → Arizona (PD). New England traded third- and fifth-round selections (95th and 168th overall) to Arizona in exchange for a fifth-round selection (145th overall) and CB Duane Starks.
Round 4
- ^ No. 102: San Francisco → Philadelphia (D). See No. 94: Philadelphia → San Francisco.
- ^ No. 105: Oakland → Seattle (D). See No. 23: Seattle → Oakland.
- ^ No. 112: Washington → Minnesota (D). Washington traded a fourth-round selection (112nd overall) to Minnesota in exchange for fourth- and fifth-round selections (120th and 154th overall).
- ^ No. 113: Detroit → Tennessee (D). See No. 37: Tennessee → Detroit.
- ^ No. 115: Carolina → Green Bay (D). See No. 89: Green Bay → Carolina.
- ^ No. 120: Minnesota → Washington (D). See No. 112: Washington → Minnesota.
- ^ No. 121: Seattle → Carolina (D). See No. 45: Carolina → Seattle.
- ^ No. 123: Jacksonville → NY Jets (D). Jacksonville traded a fourth-round selection (123rd overall) to the NY Jets in exchange for fourth- and sixth-round selections (127th and 185th overall).
- ^ No. 126: multiple trades:
No. 126: Denver → Cleveland. Denver traded a fourth-round selection (126th overall) to Cleveland in exchange for DT Gerard Warren.
No. 126: Cleveland → Seattle. Cleveland traded a fourth-round selection (126th overall) to Seattle in exchange for QB Trent Dilfer.
No. 126: Seattle → Carolina. See No. 45: Carolina → Seattle.
No. 126: Carolina → Green Bay. See No. 89: Green Bay → Carolina.
No. 126: Green Bay → Philadelphia. Green Bay traded a fourth-round selection (126th overall) to Philadelphia in exchange for fifth-, sixth- and seventh-round selections (167th, 175th and 245th overall). - ^ No. 127: NY Jets → Jacksonville (D). See No. 123: Jacksonville → NY Jets.
- ^ No. 132: Philadelphia → Dallas. Philadelphia traded a fourth-round selection (132nd overall) and a 2006 sixth-round selection to Dallas in exchange for a fifth-round selection (148th overall) and a 2006 fourth-round selection.
Round 5
- ^ No. 138: Miami → Kansas City (PD). See No. 46: Kansas City → Miami.
- ^ No. 143: Oakland → Green Bay Oakland traded fifth- and sixth-round selections (143rd and 180th overall) to Green Bay in exchange for S Marques Anderson.
- ^ No. 144: multiple trades:
No. 144: NY Giants → San Diego (PD). See No. 12: NY Giants → San Diego.
No. 144: San Diego → Tampa Bay (PD). San Diego traded a fifth-round selection (144th overall) to Tampa Bay in exchange for OT Roman Oben.
No. 144: Tampa Bay → St. Louis (D). Tampa Bay traded a fifth-round selection (144th overall) to St. Louis in exchange for fifth- and seventh-round selections (155th and 231rd overall). - ^ No. 145: multiple trades:
No. 145: Arizona → New England (PD). See No. 95: New England → Arizona.
No. 145: New England → Detroit (D). New England traded fifth- and sixth-round selections (145th and 206th overall) to Detroit in exchange for a 2006 fourth-round selection. - ^ No. 146: Washington → Philadelphia Washington traded a fifth-round selection (146th overall) to Philadelphia in exchange for WR James Thrash.
- ^ No. 147: Detroit → Kansas City Detroit traded a fifth-round selection (147th overall) and 2004 second- and fourth-round selections to Kansas City in exchange for a 2004 first-round selection.
- ^ No. 148: multiple trades:
No. 148: Dallas → Philadelphia. See No. 132: Philadelphia → Dallas.
No. 148: Philadelphia → Indianapolis. Philadelphia traded a fifth-round selection (148th overall) to Indianapolis in exchange for a 2006 fourth-round selection. - ^ No. 150: Kansas City → Tennessee Kansas City traded a fifth-round selection (150th overall) to Tennessee in exchange for DE Carlos Hall.
- ^ No. 154: Minnesota → Washington (D). See No. 112: Washington → Minnesota.
- ^ No. 155: St. Louis → Tampa Bay (D). See No. 144: Tampa Bay → St. Louis.
- ^ No. 160: Denver → Atlanta Denver traded a fifth-round selection (160th overall) to Atlanta in exchange for DT Ellis Johnson.
- ^ No. 162: multiple trades:
No. 162: Green Bay → Kansas City. Green Bay traded fifth- and sixth-round selections (162nd and 199th overall) to Kansas City in exchange for DE R-Kal Truluck.
No. 162: Kansas City → Miami. See No. 46: Kansas City → Miami. - ^ No. 167: Philadelphia → Green Bay. See No. 126: Green Bay → Philadelphia.
- ^ No. 168: New England → Arizona. See No. 95: New England → Arizona.
Round 6
- ^ No. 175: multiple trades:
No. 175: San Francisco → Philadelphia. See No. 94: Philadelphia → San Francisco.
No. 175: Philadelphia → Green Bay. See No. 126: Green Bay → Philadelphia.
No. 175: Green Bay → New England. Green Bay traded a sixth-round selection (175th overall) to New England in exchange for sixth- and seventh-round selections (195th and 246th overall).
No. 175: New England → Oakland. New England traded a sixth-round selection (175th overall) to Oakland in exchange for a seventh-round selection (230th overall) and a 2006 fifth-round selection. - ^ No. 177: Miami → San Diego Miami traded a sixth-round selection (177th overall) to San Diego in exchange for WR David Boston.
- ^ No. 180: Oakland → Green Bay. See No. 143: Oakland → Green Bay.
- ^ No. 182: multiple trades:
No. 182: Arizona → Oakland (PD). Arizona traded a sixth-round selection (182nd overall) to Oakland in exchange for RB Troy Hambrick and DE Peppi Zellner.
No. 182: Oakland → NY Jets (PD). See No. 26: NY Jets → Oakland. - ^ No. 185: multiple trades:
No. 185: Dallas → Oakland (PD). Dallas traded a sixth-round selection (185th overall) and a 2004 seventh-round selection to Oakland in exchange for DE Kenyon Coleman.
No. 185: Oakland → NY Jets (PD). See No. 26: NY Jets → Oakland.
No. 185: NY Jets → Jacksonville (D). See No. 123: Jacksonville → NY Jets. - ^ No. 195: multiple trades:
No. 195: Baltimore → New England. See No. 64: New England → Baltimore.
No. 195: New England → Green Bay. See No. 175: New England → Green Bay. - ^ No. 199: Green Bay → Kansas City. See No. 162: Green Bay → Kansas City.
- ^ No. 203: multiple trades:
No. 203: San Diego → Tampa Bay (PD). See No. 91: San Diego → Tampa Bay.
No. 203: Tampa Bay → Cleveland (D). Tampa Bay traded a sixth-round selection (203rd overall) to Cleveland in exchange for QB Luke McCown. - ^ No. 205: Philadelphia → San Francisco Philadelphia traded a sixth-round selection (205th overall) and DE Brandon Whiting to San Francisco in exchange for WR Terrell Owens, and traded a 2004 fifth-round selection to Baltimore in exchange for Baltimore surrendering its rights to Owens.
- ^ No. 206: New England → Detroit (D). See No. 145: New England → Detroit.
Round 7
- ^ No. 219: Oakland → Minnesota (PD). See No. 7: Oakland → Minnesota.
- ^ No. 223: Detroit → San Francisco San Francisco received Detroit's seventh-round selection (223rd) as compensation for restricted free agent guard Kyle Kosier.
- ^ No. 225: NY Giants → Tampa Bay The NY Giants traded a seventh-round selection (225th overall) and G Jason Whittle to Tampa Bay in exchange for a 2006 sixth-round selection.
- ^ No. 228: Carolina → Pittsburgh Carolina traded a seventh-round selection (228th overall) to Pittsburgh in exchange for OT Todd Fordham.
- ^ No. 230: multiple trades:
No. 230: Minnesota → NY Jets (PD). Minnesota traded a seventh-round selection (230th overall) to the NY Jets in exchange for LB Sam Cowart.
No. 230: NY Jets → Oakland (PD). See No. 26: NY Jets → Oakland.
No. 230: Oakland → New England (D). See No. 175: New England → Oakland. - ^ No. 231: St. Louis → Tampa Bay (D). See No. 144: Tampa Bay → St. Louis.
- ^ No. 238: Green Bay → Kansas City Green Bay traded a seventh-round selection (238th overall) to Kansas City in exchange for OT Jeremy Parquet.
- ^ No. 245: Philadelphia → Green Bay. See No. 126: Green Bay → Philadelphia.
- ^ No. 246: New England → Green Bay. See No. 175: Green Bay → New England.
References
General
- "NFL 2005 draft results (Round One)". National Football League (NFL). Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
- "NFL 2005 draft results (Second Round)". National Football League (NFL). Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
- "NFL 2005 draft results (Third Round)". National Football League (NFL). Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
- "NFL 2005 draft results (Fourth Round)". National Football League (NFL). Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
- "NFL 2005 draft results (Fifth Round)". National Football League (NFL). Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
- "NFL 2005 draft results (Sixth Round)". National Football League (NFL). Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
- "2005 2005 NFL draft results (Seventh Round)". National Football League (NFL). Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.
Specific
- ^ "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.
- ^ "NFL Draft moving to the Javits Center". The New York Times. March 5, 2005. Archived from the original on January 5, 2008. Retrieved January 20, 2008.Banks, Don (February 9, 2005). "NFL to move Draft:League will not hold event at MSG because of Jets tiff". SportsIllustrated.com. Retrieved November 15, 2008.
- ^ Currie, David (April 27, 2017). "NFL Draft: Top 10 Moments – Aaron Rodgers falling to Tim Tebow trade". Sky Sports. Retrieved September 13, 2019.
- ^ Bensinger, Graham (December 21, 2016) [2010]. In Depth with Graham Bensinger: Aaron Rodgers: Thought I'd be a 49er (Television production, YouTube video). Archived from the original on November 9, 2021. Retrieved December 26, 2016.
- ^ Clayton, John (April 24, 2005). "Rodgers puts positive spin on humbling day". ESPN. Archived from the original on July 2, 2016. Retrieved May 13, 2012.
- ^ "2005 NFL Draft Listing". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
- ^ Mickle, Shane (November 8, 2021). "The story of how Aaron Rodgers became the no. 24 pick in the 2005 NFL Draft". ClutchPoints. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
- ^ Sullivan, Tyler (April 23, 2022). "NFL Draft biggest blunders: Fabian Washington over Aaron Rodgers and other terrible misses in recent history". CBS Sports. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
- ^ Curtis, Jake (April 30, 2021). "Remembering Aaron Rodgers' Classic Quote from 2005 NFL Draft". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
- ^ Bowman, Eric (January 31, 2011). "Super Bowl 2011: Aaron Rodgers and the Top 25 Draft Day Steals in NFL History". Bleacher Report. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
- ^ "NFL ANNOUNCES 32 COMPENSATORY DRAFT CHOICES TO 14 CLUBS". The Red Zone. Archived from the original on December 3, 2005. Retrieved December 16, 2008.
- ^ Jet (May 16, 2005). "Nine Blacks chosen in top 10 in 2005 NFL Draft". Find Articles. Retrieved December 16, 2008.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ "NFL Draft Tracker: Denver Broncos, 1995 to 2008". FFToday.com. Retrieved November 14, 2008.
- ^ Players are identified as a Pro Bowler if they were selected for the Pro Bowl at any time in their career.
External links
- "2005 NFL Draft". Official NFL website. Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved December 5, 2008.
- "2005 NFL Draft Compensatory Pick list". redzone.org. Archived from the original on December 3, 2005. Retrieved December 5, 2008.