Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Final selection far from irrelevant

Mississipp­i QB was 253rd pick

- By Barry Wilner

PHILADELPH­IA — The final day of the NFL draft began with an impromptu rendition of “Fly Eagles Fly” by former Philadelph­ia star safety Brian Dawkins and ended with a player who was far from irrelevant in college being picked last.

Mississipp­i quarterbac­k Chad Kelly, a talented player with a history of offthe-field issues and injuries, was the 253rd and final selection Saturday by the Denver Broncos.

The final pick gets honored as Mr. Irrelevant, but Kelly was a player who could have been selected in the first three rounds if not for all his problems.

Oh yeah, there were some selections in between Dawkins and other former Eagles stars opening the final day of a draft in Philadelph­ia that drew more than 100,000 fans over three days.

Actually, dozens of them, starting with a Cheesehead going to the Packers at the top of the fourth round. Green Bay stayed in-state, taking Wisconsin linebacker Vince Biegel, who comes off a season shortened by a broken foot, but was a standout for the Badgers before getting hurt.

Most notable was a concentrat­ion on running backs, including Oklahoma’s highly productive Samaje Perine to Washington, Utah’s Joe Williams to San Francisco, NCAA record-setter Donnel Pumphrey of San Diego State to Philadelph­ia, Wayne Gallman of national champion Clemson to the Giants and South Florida’s Marlon Mack to Indianapol­is.

Perine set the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n rushing mark with 427 yards in a game against Kansas — yes, even against the awful Jayhawks it counts.

Williams quit football before the 2016 season. When Utah was ravaged by injuries to its runners, the coaching staff persuaded him to come back. He made the All-Pac-12 Conference team.

Pumphrey seems like a terrific fit for the Eagles because he has similar skills to versatile Darren Sproles, soon to turn 34. Pumphrey (5 feet 9) led FBS in rushing with 2,133 yards and also scored 17 TDs, and he can catch, too. He left college as the FBS career leader in rushing yards.

“I look forward to building a relationsh­ip and looking up to him and getting different pointers on how I can get better each day,” Pumphrey said of Sproles. “So, I’m excited.”

Oklahoma’s All-America wide receiver Dede Westbrook, who finished fourth in Heisman Trophy balloting, went to Jacksonvil­le. Westbrook was twice accused of domestic violence before he came to Oklahoma as a junior college transfer.

“Obviously he’s had some issues earlier in his career we feel that’s behind him, and it has to be behind him,” GM Dave Caldwell said. “… With coach [Doug] Marrone and … [Tom] Coughlin here there’s no margin for error for him off the field.”

Denver began Round 5 by taking Michigan tight end Jake Butt, a potential first-rounder until he tore up his knee in the Orange Bowl. Butt could miss much of 2017.

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