The Day

Long wait for QBs on second night of draft

- By BARRY WILNER AP Pro Football Writer

Arlington, Texas — Maybe NFL teams got exhausted from scrambling to pick quarterbac­ks in the first round of the draft.

It took until the 76th overall slot Friday night, 44 picks after the last one, that Oklahoma State's Mason Rudolph was selected by Pittsburgh. The Steelers get a big, strong-armed, highly competitiv­e QB — yep, sounds a lot like incumbent Ben Roethlisbe­rger, who is 36 and closing in on the end of his championsh­ip career.

“It's not Ben's job to teach me anything. It's my job to learn,” said Rudolph, who added he dreamed of becoming a Steeler.

Pittsburgh has had little success with backups for Big Ben, with another Oklahoma product, Landry Jones, never approachin­g the Roethlisbe­rger level.

When Oklahoma State played at Heinz Field last year and won 59-21, Rudolph threw for five touchdowns in the first half.

Five quarterbac­ks went on Thursday night, from top overall pick Baker Mayfield (coincident­ally, a Sooner) to Lamar Jackson of Louisville at No. 32. Then, nothing.

Until Rudolph, who was not on hand.

Neither was LSU running back Derrius Guice when his name was called 59th overall by Washington. Guice was among the 22 players on hand for the opening round, but he cleared out after not being chosen. The Redskins grabbed him well after the hard-running power back had departed.

Three other players not taken in the first round, Texas tackle Connor Williams, Iowa cornerback Josh Jackson, and UCF linebacker Shaquem Griffin, did stick it out. Williams, who didn't have far to go to be at home — he's from the Dallas area — will be staying in Big D because the Cowboys chose him 50th. He could wind up at guard.

His selection drew the loudest cheers of the night at AT&T Stadium, in contrast to how the locals greeted Dallas' first-rounder, Boise State linebacker Leighton Vander Esch, whose reception was cool at best.

“I was watching my phone and it got down to two minutes and I thought it had passed,” Williams said. “My phone starts with 972 so I knew it was a Dallas area code, and I thought this can't be. I got on the phone and it was Cloud 9.

“It was definitely a roller coaster and it was up and down. But at the end of the day, it was all worth the wait. It was all worth it.”

Jackson went 45th to Green Bay, a place he could immediatel­y be a starter even though he is not a speedster. He led FBS last year with eight intercepti­ons.

“It goes back to his awareness and IQ for the game,” scout Alonzo Dotson said. “The speed never really worried us because he's just so smart and he's always in the right position to play the ball.”

Griffin, who had his left hand amputated when he was a child, has had a spectacula­r offseason since helping UCF to an undefeated year. He's been a star at the combine and personal workouts, but having only one hand is clearly giving NFL teams pause.

Among the schools that had no one chosen in the first two rounds were Clemson, Michigan, Michigan State, Miami and Tennessee. Yet South Carolina State, Sam Houston State and South Dakota State each had a second-rounder.

The most fun came when the Super Bowl champion Eagles got back at the host Cowboys verbally.

When Philadelph­ia selected a South Dakota State tight end named Dallas Goedert — no kidding, Dallas — the choice was announced by sixtime Pro Bowl kicker David Akers. He needled Cowboys fans.

“Hey Dallas, the last time you were in the Super Bowl, these draft picks weren't born,” Akers shouted.

Last year at the draft in Philly, former Cowboys star Drew Pearson gave a rousing and hilarious speech about his team before announcing a pick.

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