Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Run on Huskies DBs highlights second round

- By Barry Wilner

PHILADELPH­IA — The most popular group in the second round of the NFL draft was nearly 3,000 miles away from Philadelph­ia: the Washington Huskies secondary.

Three members — cornerback­s Kevin King and Sidney Jones, safety Budda Baker — were taken in the first 11 picks Friday night.

None of those choices drew the attention that Cincinnati’s pick at No. 48 overall did: Oklahoma running back Joe Mixon, who was uninvited to the scouting combine because of a domestic assault incident from 2014.

He punched Amelia Molitor and broke bones in her face during the altercatio­n, and was suspended from the team for a year. He came back and had two strong seasons. In 2016, he was an All-Big 12 performer who set the school record for all-purpose yardage in a season.

Fans in the draft theater booed lustily when Bengals Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz announced the choice. Cincinnati has a history of bringing players with off-field problems to the roster.

Earlier, Kevin King’s extra-long stay at the draft turned out to be a short stint.

The Washington cornerback was taken by Green Bay as the first selection in the second round. One of five players who were on hand and were not taken in the opening round, the 6-foot-3 former safety isn’t particular­ly speedy, but has the size and aggressive­ness pro teams seek.

Plus, the Packers were ravaged by injuries in the secondary last season.

“I am a playmaker, somebody who will go get the ball,” King said. “I think everyone wants somebody like that in the secondary.

King was joined by secondary mate Baker on Friday night when Arizona took the Washington safety.

Then the Eagles added yet another Huskies defensive back, selecting Jones. Jones tore his Achilles tendon at his pro day and might not be healthy for the 2017 season.

Cleveland was expected to add a quarterbac­k at some point and did so at No. 52 with Notre Dame’s DeShone Kizer.

Accompanie­d by former Eagles quarterbac­k Ron Jaworski, an icon in Philadelph­ia, Commission­er Roger Goodell thanked the city and the fans — folks in the theater still booed him, but not when “Jaws” repeated the tribute.

The Packers acquired the first selection of the second round from Cleveland in a deal Thursday night through which the Browns got Miami tight end David Njoku.

Seattle, which also traded out of the first round, was at it again. On Friday, the Seahawks sent the No. 26 overall to Atlanta, then also dealt the No. 31 slot it received from the Falcons to San Francisco in what was a wild opening night of the draft.

Instead of using the 34th spot, Seattle traded it to Jacksonvil­le, which grabbed Alabama tackle Cam Robinson, projected by many as a first-rounder. With their picks of running back Leonard Fournette and Robinson, the Jaguars are trying to build a ground game around inconsiste­nt quarterbac­k Blake Bortles.

Seattle finally made a pick, taking Michigan State defensive tackle Malik McDowell with the third selection of the night.

Oddly, the first five spots in the second round were traded.

So was the ninth, where Minnesota went for Florida State All-America running back Dalvin Cook, who slipped from the first round because of off-field issues and some injury concerns. Cook is a big-play guy and the Vikings, of course, let go of Adrian Peterson this year.

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