Santa Fe New Mexican

Levis chosen quickly; Hooker waits longer

- By Rob Maaddi

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Will Levis quickly got the call he waited on for 24 hours. Hendon Hooker had to sit around a few more hours to hear his name announced.

After Bryce Young, C.J. Stroud and Anthony Richardson were selected in the first four picks, it took two more rounds for the top five quarterbac­ks to be off the board in the NFL Draft.

The selections of Levis by Tennessee and Hooker by Detroit highlighte­d a Friday night filled with plenty of trades and some surprises.

Day 2 of the draft at Union Station in downtown Kansas City kicked off with family ties. The Pittsburgh Steelers selected Penn State cornerback Joey Porter Jr. with the first pick of the second round. His dad, Joey Porter, was a threetime Pro Bowl linebacker in eight seasons with Pittsburgh.

Then the Titans traded up and took Levis with the 33rd overall pick. The former Kentucky quarterbac­k didn’t stick around in the green room after a grueling night Thursday waiting with his girlfriend and family.

They went back to Connecticu­t for a family gathering Saturday.

“I was a crying mess but it was so funny,” Levis said. “We’re all in our airport clothes, a very different atmosphere compared to getting dressed up with the nice suits and dresses last night. But this is what was meant to be and I was ecstatic to get the call.”

Levis was expected to go in the top 15, with some draft analysts projecting him in the top five. A few days before the draft, oddsmakers even made Levis the favorite to be the second QB selected behind Young.

Young went first to Carolina, Stroud was picked second by Houston and Richardson was selected at No. 4 by Indianapol­is.

The Titans didn’t take Levis at No. 11 but they weren’t going to pass him up again. They were aggressive, making a deal with the Arizona Cardinals to get their guy.

“Last night was tough, but I stayed positive,” Levis. “When I saw that they traded up for me, that alone was telling that they wanted me, they wanted this to happen.”

The 6-foot-4, 230-pound Levis has prototypic­al size and athleticis­m. He’s got a strong arm and muscular build. But his accuracy and decision-making were inconsiste­nt, especially last season when he played through injuries.

Levis, who played two seasons at Kentucky after transferri­ng from Penn State, won’t have to play right away in Tennessee. The Titans have veteran Ryan Tannehill. They also drafted Malik Willis in the third round last year.

Hooker sat until the third round before the Lions took him with the 68th overall pick. Hooker is coming off surgery for a torn ACL and the Lions have Jared Goff, who made his third Pro Bowl last season.

Hooker, like Levis, was projected to go higher in the draft. But he’s 25 years old and is returning from a knee injury. Hooker is considered the best deep-ball passer in the draft, can create plays scrambling and is a leader. He threw just five intercepti­ons at Tennessee, though he fumbled 22 times.

“He was in considerat­ion earlier but we wanted to get more capital to do more things,” Lions general manager Brad Holmes said of waiting to take Hooker. “We were holding our breath and it worked out.”

With Steelers fans waving their yellow “Terrible Towels” among a crowd of more than 100,000 mostly red-clad Chiefs fans, Hall of Fame offensive lineman Alan Faneca started the night by announcing Porter was the first pick of the second round. Then, teams continued playing let’s make a deal with the Titans moving up eight spots for Levis.

The aggressive Lions snagged Iowa tight end Sam LaPorta (34th) and Alabama safety Brian Branch (45th) in the second round after choosing Alabama running back Jahmyr Gibbs (12th) and Iowa linebacker Jack Campbell (18th) in the first round.

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