The Daily Courier

Browns play it safe, pick Garrett No. 1

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PHILADELPH­IA (AP) — With defensive studs everywhere in this draft, NFL teams turned offensive. With an emphasis on quarterbac­ks.

Hardly stunning in a pass-happy league, except that no quarterbac­ks in this crop have been highly touted. Yet three went in the first dozen Thursday night, with two surprising trades putting the Bears and Chiefs in position to grab QBs.

Chicago paid a whopping price to move up one spot to second overall for North Carolina’s Mitchell Trubisky. Kansas City gave up its first-rounder next year to go from 27th to 10th for Texas Tech’s Patrick Mahomes.

Altogether, eight of the first dozen picks were offensive players, including Houston trading up for Clemson QB Deshaun Watson.

The top of the draft was predictabl­e: Roger Goodell got booed, then Myles Garrett was picked first by the Cleveland Browns.

“C’mon, Philly, C’mon,” Goodell said amid the boos, not even wincing at the reception.

Moments later, he was back onstage announcing the former Texas A&M defensive end’s name. Garrett, a junior and All-American considered the best pass rusher in this crop, is the first Aggie selected No. 1 overall.

Garrett stayed close to home in Texas, and he promised Cleveland fans “great things are coming.”

The Browns were the first team since Minnesota in 2013 with three first-rounders. Cleveland also took Michigan safety Jabrill Peppers and Miami tight end David Njoku.

The Bears sent a third-round pick, a fourth and a 2018 third to San Francisco to switch that one slot and take Trubisky, who started only 13 games for North Carolina.

“It was crazy,” Trubisky said. “There was no call. I didn’t think I was going to be picked until the commission­er said my name.” San Francisco was up next, and new general manager John Lynch already was looking good for bringing in such a haul to drop back to No. 3. The 49ers took DE Solomon Thomas from just down the road at Stanford.

LSU running back Leonard Fournette went to Jacksonvil­le at No. 4.

“He’s special,” said new Jaguars boss Tom Coughlin. “We need playmakers. We need people to put the ball in the end zone. We need to do something about balance. We need to do something about creating a better situation where the quarterbac­k doesn’t have the entire game on his shoulders.”

Surprising­ly, no one from Alabama was chosen until cornerback Marlon Humphrey went 16th to Baltimore. Two more Crimson Tide players went in the next three picks: DE Jonathan Allen to Washington and tight end O.J. Howard to Tampa Bay.

For much of the round, it was an offensive draft, although the breakdown wound up 19-13 on defence, including strings of six and five defenders from the 13th pick onward.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Former Texas A&M defensive end Myles Garrett holds up a Cleveland Browns jersey Thursday in Arlington,Texas, after the Browns made him the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft.
The Associated Press Former Texas A&M defensive end Myles Garrett holds up a Cleveland Browns jersey Thursday in Arlington,Texas, after the Browns made him the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft.

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