WASHINGTON REDSKINS 2020 NFL DRAFT NOTES REDSKINS … · 2020-04-21 · QB Robert Griffin III...

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1 2020 NFL DRAFT 2020 NFL DRAFT WASHINGTON REDSKINS 2020 NFL DRAFT NOTES 21300 Redskin Park Drive | Ashburn, VA 20147 | 703.726.7000 @Redskins | www.Redskins.com | https://redskins.1rmg.com/ The Washington Redskins currently hold seven selections in the 85th National Football League Draft, which opens on the evening of Thursday, April 23. The first round begins at 8 p.m. ET and will be tele- vised by NFL Network, FOX, ABC, ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPN Deportes. The draft will continue at 7 p.m. ET on Friday with the second and third rounds, and will conclude with rounds 4-7 on Saturday, starting at noon ET. The team will host media virtually during all three days of the draft. Head Coach Ron Rivera and Vice President of Player Personnel Kyle Smith will speak to members of the media at the end of proceedings on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The team’s selections on Thursday and Friday are scheduled to be introduced to select members of the media via a Zoom press conference on Monday, April 27th. Last year, Washington made 10 selections in the 2019 NFL Draft in Nashville. Eight of the 10 members of Washington's 2019 draft class (Dwayne Haskins Jr., Montez Sweat, Terry McLaurin, Wes Martin, Ross Pierschbacher, Cole Holcomb, Kelvin Harmon and Jimmy Moreland) appeared in game action as rookies. Washington produced two Pro Bowlers in 2019, including tackle Brandon Scherff and punter Tress Way. Scherff was a first-round pick of the Redskins in 2015 (No. 5 overall). In the last seven seasons, the Redskins have had eight players earn a total of 18 Pro Bowl selections, seven of which were by homegrown talents. Seven of the eight Redskins Pro Bowler's since 2013 (Williams, 7; Kerrigan, 4, Scherff, 3; Alfred Morris, 2; Kirk Cousins, 1; Brian Orakpo, 1; Jordan Reed, 1) entered the NFL as Redskins draft picks. Barring a trade, the Redskins’ first selection of the 2020 NFL Draft will come with the No. 2 overall pick. Through the draft and in free agency the Redskins have compiled 11 players who were selected in the first round of the NFL Draft. Seven of those players were drafted by Washington and four were acquired via free agency The table below outlines all 11 of the current Redskins selected in the first round of the NFL Draft. REDSKINS ENTER 2020 NFL DRAFT WITH SEVEN PICKS FIRST ROUND PICKS IN THE NFL DRAFT CURRENTLY ON THE REDSKINS ROSTER: Player Position Draft Selection Alex Smith QB 2005 1st Thomas Davis Sr. LB 2005 14th Adrian Peterson RB 2007 7th Trent Williams T 2010 4th Ryan Kerrigan LB 2011 16th Brandon Scherff OL 2015 5th Jonathan Allen DL 2017 17th Reuben Foster LB 2017 31st Daron Payne DL 2018 13th Dwayne Haskins Jr. QB 2019 15th Montez Sweat DE 2019 26th Players in burgundy were originally drafted by the Washington Redskins Of the Redskins' seven current selections in the 2020 draft, one was awarded by the NFL as a compensatory pick. Along with the Tam- pa Bay Buccaneers, Chicago Bears, Miami Dolphins, Baltimore Ravens, Seattle Seahawks, and Philadelphia Eagles, the Redskins were award- ed a fourth-round compensatory pick. Thursday’s first round will allow 10 minutes before each pick. The second round, which resumes the draft on Friday evening, allows seven minutes between picks. The third round allows five minutes between selections. The final four rounds will take place on Saturday. Rounds four through six allow five minutes between picks, and all seventh round and compensatory picks allow four minutes each. The 2020 draft will mark the fourth year in which teams will be able to trade compensatory selections. REDSKINS SELECTIONS IN THE 2020 NFL DRAFT The Redskins enter the 2020 NFL Draft with a total of seven scheduled selections. The Redskins were the only team to finish the season 3-13. See Page 5 for more details on how the NFL determines the draft order in each round. The Redskins retain four of their original selections, including picks in the first, third, fourth and seventh rounds. The Redskins also hold two fourth and seventh-round picks, respectively. Washington originally held a pick in the second round and an additional pick in the fifth round. The Redskins traded their second-round pick (No. 34) to the Indianapolis Colts for the 26th overall pick in the 2019 Draft in which they selected DE Montez Sweat. They traded their original fifth-round pick to the Carolina Panthers for QB Kyle Allen. The club traded CB Quinton Dunbar to the Seattle Sehawks in exchange for the 162nd overall pick. The club also acquired QB Case Keenum and the No. 229 pick from Denver in ex- change for No. 181 overall pick. The Redskins were awarded a fourth-round compensatory pick. REDSKINS 2020 NFL DRAFT SELECTIONS Rd. Pick Overall How Acquired 1 2 2 Original Selection 3 2 66 Original Selection 4 2 108 Original Selection 4 36 142 Compensatory Pick 5 2 162 Trade via Seattle 7 2 216 Original Selection 7 15 229 Trade via Broncos

Transcript of WASHINGTON REDSKINS 2020 NFL DRAFT NOTES REDSKINS … · 2020-04-21 · QB Robert Griffin III...

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2020 NFL DRAFT

WASHINGTON REDSKINS2020 NFL DRAFT NOTES

21300 Redskin Park Drive | Ashburn, VA 20147 | 703.726.7000@Redskins | www.Redskins.com | https://redskins.1rmg.com/

The Washington Redskins currently hold seven selections in the 85th National Football League Draft, which opens on the evening of Thursday, April 23. The first round begins at 8 p.m. ET and will be tele-vised by NFL Network, FOX, ABC, ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPN Deportes.

The draft will continue at 7 p.m. ET on Friday with the second and third rounds, and will conclude with rounds 4-7 on Saturday, starting at noon ET.

The team will host media virtually during all three days of the draft. Head Coach Ron Rivera and Vice President of Player Personnel Kyle Smith will speak to members of the media at the end of proceedings on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The team’s selections on Thursday and Friday are scheduled to be introduced to select members of the media via a Zoom press conference on Monday, April 27th.

Last year, Washington made 10 selections in the 2019 NFL Draft in Nashville. Eight of the 10 members of Washington's 2019 draft class (Dwayne Haskins Jr., Montez Sweat, Terry McLaurin, Wes Martin, Ross Pierschbacher, Cole Holcomb, Kelvin Harmon and Jimmy Moreland) appeared in game action as rookies.

Washington produced two Pro Bowlers in 2019, including tackle Brandon Scherff and punter Tress Way. Scherff was a first-round pick of the Redskins in 2015 (No. 5 overall).

In the last seven seasons, the Redskins have had eight players earn a total of 18 Pro Bowl selections, seven of which were by homegrown talents. Seven of the eight Redskins Pro Bowler's since 2013 (Williams, 7; Kerrigan, 4, Scherff, 3; Alfred Morris, 2; Kirk Cousins, 1; Brian Orakpo, 1; Jordan Reed, 1) entered the NFL as Redskins draft picks.

Barring a trade, the Redskins’ first selection of the 2020 NFL Draft will come with the No. 2 overall pick. Through the draft and in free agency the Redskins have compiled 11 players who were selected in the first round of the NFL Draft. Seven of those players were drafted by Washington and four were acquired via free agency The table below outlines all 11 of the current Redskins selected in the first round of the NFL Draft.

REDSKINS ENTER 2020 NFL DRAFT WITH SEVEN PICKS

FIRST ROUND PICKS IN THE NFL DRAFT CURRENTLY ON THE REDSKINS ROSTER:

Player Position Draft SelectionAlex Smith QB 2005 1stThomas Davis Sr. LB 2005 14thAdrian Peterson RB 2007 7th Trent Williams T 2010 4thRyan Kerrigan LB 2011 16thBrandon Scherff OL 2015 5thJonathan Allen DL 2017 17thReuben Foster LB 2017 31stDaron Payne DL 2018 13thDwayne Haskins Jr. QB 2019 15thMontez Sweat DE 2019 26th

Players in burgundy were originally drafted by the Washington Redskins

Of the Redskins' seven current selections in the 2020 draft, one was awarded by the NFL as a compensatory pick. Along with the Tam-pa Bay Buccaneers, Chicago Bears, Miami Dolphins, Baltimore Ravens, Seattle Seahawks, and Philadelphia Eagles, the Redskins were award-ed a fourth-round compensatory pick. Thursday’s first round will allow 10 minutes before each pick. The second round, which resumes the draft on Friday evening, allows seven minutes between picks. The third round allows five minutes between selections. The final four rounds will take place on Saturday. Rounds four through six allow five minutes between picks, and all seventh round and compensatory picks allow four minutes each. The 2020 draft will mark the fourth year in which teams will be able to trade compensatory selections.

REDSKINS SELECTIONS IN THE 2020 NFL DRAFT

The Redskins enter the 2020 NFL Draft with a total of seven scheduled selections. The Redskins were the only team to finish the season 3-13. See Page 5 for more details on how the NFL determines the draft order in each round.

The Redskins retain four of their original selections, including picks in the first, third, fourth and seventh rounds. The Redskins also hold two fourth and seventh-round picks, respectively.

Washington originally held a pick in the second round and an additional pick in the fifth round. The Redskins traded their second-round pick (No. 34) to the Indianapolis Colts for the 26th overall pick in the 2019 Draft in which they selected DE Montez Sweat. They traded their original fifth-round pick to the Carolina Panthers for QB Kyle Allen. The club traded CB Quinton Dunbar to the Seattle Sehawks in exchange for the 162nd overall pick. The club also acquired QB Case Keenum and the No. 229 pick from Denver in ex-change for No. 181 overall pick. The Redskins were awarded a fourth-round compensatory pick.

REDSKINS 2020 NFL DRAFT SELECTIONS

Rd. Pick Overall How Acquired 1 2 2 Original Selection 3 2 66 Original Selection 4 2 108 Original Selection 4 36 142 Compensatory Pick 5 2 162 Trade via Seattle 7 2 216 Original Selection 7 15 229 Trade via Broncos

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2020 NFL DRAFT

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2020 NFL DRAFT

WHAT: 85th Annual National Football League Player Selection Meeting

WHEN: Round 1: Thursday, April 23 (8 p.m. ET) Rounds 2-3: Friday, April 24 (7 p.m. ET) Rounds 4-7: Saturday, April 25 (12 p.m. ET)

TIME LIMITS: 10 minutes for each pick in Round 1 7 minutes for each pick in Round 2 5 minutes for each pick in Rounds 3-6 4 minutes for each pick in Round 7 BROADCAST: NFL Network ESPN/ABC

REDSKINS PR: Sean DeBarbieri [email protected] Jessie Johnson [email protected] Charlie Mule [email protected]

VIRTUAL DRAFT PARTY

Washington Redskins fans are invited to attend the Redskins’ Vir-tual Draft Party presented by 7-Eleven on Saturday, April 25 at 6:00 p.m. Live coverage each day of the NFL Draft will be available on the Redskins’ social media channels and include interviews with Redskins coaches, players and celebrity fans as well as giveaways.

Voice of the Redskins Larry Michael will host the coverage along with a number of special guests joining throughout the program, in-cluding Redskins Head Coach Ron Rivera, Defensive Coordinator Jack Del Rio, Offensive Coordinator Scott Turner, Vice President of Player Personnel Kyle Smith and alumni Fred Smoot and Brian Mitchell.

Grammy nominated rapper Wale will also guest host the Redskins Virtual Draft Party. He’ll also produce exclusive Redskins content dur-ing Draft Week, including producing and directing three Redskins music highlight videos featuring tracks from his latest album Wow… That’s Crazy.

Current players scheduled to attend include Jonathan Allen, Land-on Collins, Kendall Fuller, Dwayne Haskins Jr. and Adrian Peterson.

All coverage will be streamed live on the Redskins’ Facebook, Ins-tagram, Twitter and YouTube pages.

Registration for the Virtual Draft Party is free for all fans at Red-skins.com/VirtualDraft.

REDSKINS 2020 DRAFT GUIDE

MEDIA INFORMATION

MEDIA INFORMATION:Due to the Covid-19 Pandemic, the media room at Inova Sports

Performance Center at Redskins Park will be closed.

MEDIA AVAILABILITY: Head Coach Ron Rivera and Vice President of Player Personnel

Kyle Smith are tentatively scheduled to speak with the media each day of the draft. The press conferences will be held virtually on Zoom.

As soon as possible, Redskins Public Relations will digitally pro-vide notes and other materials on each selection. Redskins Public Re-lations staffers will coordinate a conference call with each of the Red-skins’ draft picks shortly after their selections. These calls will take place on our conference call line. Media will need to RSVP in order to get the call-in information. Digital transcripts will be provided.

The Redskins will formally introduce their picks from the first two days of the draft during Zoom press conferences on Monday, April 27, 2020. Exact timing has not yet been determined.

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The Redskins have made 10 picks all-time with the current overall selections held by the team in the 2020 NFL Draft. The team has made two at No. 2, three at No. 66, one at No. 142, one at No. 148, two at No. 216, an one at No. 229. The Redskins organization has never selected at No. 108.

NO. 2 OVERALLYear Rd. Overall Pos. Player School2000 1 2 LB LaVar Arrington Penn State2012 1 2 QB Robert Griffin III Baylor

NO. 66 OVERALLYear Rd. Overall Pos. Player School1988 3 66 RB Mike Oliphant Puget Sound1989 3 66 DT Tracy Rocker Auburn2014 2 66 OL Morgan Moses Virginia

NO. 108 OVERALL

Year Rd. Overall Pos. Player SchoolNone

NO. 142 OVERALL

Year Rd. Overall Pos. Player School2014 5 142 WR Ryan Grant Tulane

NO. 162 OVERALL

Year Rd. Overall Pos. Player School2013 5 162 DE Brandon Jenkins Florida State1997 5 162 G Brad Badger Stanford1963 12 162 C Bob Caldwell Georgia Tech1958 14 162 E Jack Farls Penn State1950 13 162 C Clay Davis Oklahoma State

NO. 216 OVERALL

Year Rd. Overall Pos. Player School2000 7 216 DT Delbert Cowsette Maryland2007 7 216 TE Tyler Ecker Michigan

NO. 229 OVERALL

Year Rd. Overall Pos. Player School2010 7 229 C Erik Cook New Mexico

REDSKINS DRAFT HISTORY

PRO BOWL DRAFT PICKS

Since the turn of the century, Washington has had 16 of its draft picks make the Pro Bowl as members of the Redskins. Eleven of those 16 have made the Pro Bowl multiple times. Five of the Redskins’ last 10 first-round picks have earned Pro Bowl honors with Washington.

PLAYER (DRAFT YEAR, PICK) PRO BOWL YEARS* W/ REDSKINSG Tre Johnson (1994, No. 31) 2000 RB Stephen Davis (1996, No. 102) 2000, 2001 TE Stephen Alexander (1998, No. 48) 2001 CB Champ Bailey (1999, No. 7) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 LB LaVar Arrington (2000, No. 2) 2002, 2003, 2004 T Chris Samuels (2000, No. 3) 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 S Sean Taylor (2004, No. 5) 2007, 2008TE Chris Cooley (2004, No. 81) 2008, 2009 LB Brian Orakpo (2009, No. 13) 2010, 2011, 2014T Trent Williams (2010, No. 4) 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019LB Ryan Kerrigan (2011, No. 16) 2013, 2017, 2018, 2019QB Robert Griffin III (2012, No. 2) 2013QB Kirk Cousins (2012, No. 102) 2017RB Alfred Morris (2012, No. 173) 2014, 2015TE Jordan Reed (2013, No. 85) 2017G Brandon Scherff (2015, No. 5) 2017, 2018, 2020

*Year of Pro Bowl, so the 2020 Pro Bowl corresponds to the 2019 NFL season.

2019 KICKOFF WEEKEND

NFL DRAFT HISTORY

Since the institution of the National Football League Draft in 1936, teams have made a total of 598 combined selections with the No. 2, 46, 66, 108, 142, 162, 216 and 229 picks — the overall selections currently held by the Redskins for the 2020 NFL Draft. These slots have produced 11 members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.YEAR RD PICK TEAM PLAYER SCHOOL1939 1 2 CHI QB Sid Luckman Columbia1940 1 2 PHI HB George McAfee Duke1952 1 2 DTX LB Les Richter California1962 1 2 DEN DT Merlin Olsen Utah St.1964 1 2 PHI T Bob Brown Nebraska1966 1 2 LAR G Tom Mack Michigan1975 1 2 DAL DT Randy White Maryland1977 1 2 DAL RB Tony Dorsett Pittsburgh1981 1 2 NYG LB Lawrence Taylor North Carolina1983 1 2 LAR RB Eric Dickerson SMU1994 1 2 IND RB Marshall Faulk San Diego St. No. 2 Pick Multiple Pro Bowl selections: OLB Von Miller (2011-12, 14-19), DT

Ndamukong Suh (2010, 12-14, 16), WR Calvin Johnson (2010-15), DE Julius Peppers (2004-06, 08-12, 15), OL Leonard Davis (2007-09), LB LaVar Arrington (2001-03), Donovan McNabb (2000-04, 09), DE Darrell Russell (1998-99), T Tony Boselli (1996-2000), RB Marshall Faulk (1994-95, 1998-02), DB Eric Turner (1994, 96), DE Neil Smith (1991-95, 97), LB Cornelius Bennett (1988, 90-93), OL Bill Fralic (1986-89), RB Eric Dickerson (1983-84, 86-87, 88-89), LB Lawrence Taylor (1981-90), DE Art Still (1980-82, 84), RB Tony Dorsett (1978, 81-83), DL Randy White (1977-85), QB Archie Manning (1978-79), T George Kunz (1969, 71-77), G Tom Mack (1967-75, 77-78), RB Ken Willard (1965-66, 68-69), T Bob Brown (1965-66, 68-71), DB/P Jerry Stovall (1966-67, 69), Walt Sweeney (1964-72), QB Roman Gabriel (1967-69, 73), DT Merlin Olsen (1962-75), QB Norm Snead (1962-63, 65, 72), FB/HB Dick Bass (1962-63, 66), HB/TE/FB John David Crow (1959-60, 62, 65), HB/E John Arnett (1957-61), QB Earl Morral (1957, 68), LB-MG Les Richter (1954-61), QB Adrian Burk (1954-55), HB/DB/WB/TB Dub Jones (1951-52), FB/LB Pat Harder (1950, 52), HB/DE George McAfee (1941), HB Glenn Davis (1947), QB/HB/DE Sid Luckman (1940-43)No. 2 Pick Single Pro Bowl selection: DE Nick Bosa (2019), RB Saquon Barkley (2018), QB Mitchell Trubisky (2019), QB Carson Wentz (2017), QB Robert Griffen III (2012), RB Ronnie Brown (2008), LB Kevin Hardy (1999), QB Bert Jones (1976), C Bob Johnson (1968), B Ed Goddard (1938)

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When the Redskins opened the 2019 season at the Philadelphia Eagles, Washington’s starting lineups featured 19 players who entered the league via the draft and three who entered as undrafted free agents. The following outlines how the Redskins 2019 Week 1 starters entered the league:

6 first-round selections (2 offense, 4 defense)4 second-round selections (2 offense, 2 defense)2 third-round selections (2 offense)1 fourth-round selections (1 defense)4 fifth-round selection (1 offense, 3 defense)1 sixth-round selection (1 offense)1 seventh-round selection (1 defense)3 undrafted free agents (2 offense, 1 defense)

POSITIONAL BREAKDOWN

The Redskins have drafted 484 players since the institution of the Common Draft in 1967, consisting of:

Defensive Backs ..............................................................................90Offensive Linemen .........................................................................85Defensive Linemen ........................................................................65Linebackers ......................................................................................63Halfbacks/Fullbacks ......................................................................61Wide Receivers ................................................................................54Quarterbacks ....................................................................................27Tight Ends ..........................................................................................25Specialists (K/P/KR/LS) ...............................................................14

NFL DRAFT SKINFORMATION

ROUND BREAKDOWN

Broken down by round, the following is a list of the 30 players on the Redskins’ current roster who were originally drafted by Washing-ton:

1st Round (7): T Trent Williams (2010), LB Ryan Kerrigan (2011), G Brandon Scherff (2015), DL Jonathan Allen (2017), DL Daron Payne (2018), Dwayne Haskins Jr. (2019), Montez Sweat (2019)

2nd Round (2): LB Ryan Anderson (2017), RB Derrius Guice (2018)

3rd Round (5): T Morgan Moses (2014), Kendall Fuller (2016), CB Fabian Moreau (2017), T Geron Christian Sr. (2018), WR Terry McLaurin (2019)

4th Round (3): S Troy Apke (2018), Bryce Love (2019), Wes Martin (2019)

5th Round (5): DL Matt Ioannidis (2016), TE Jeremy Sprinkle (2017), DL Tim Settle (2018), Cole Holcomb (2019), Ross Pierschbacher (2019)

6th Round (3): C Chase Roullier (2017), LB Shaun Dion Hamilton (2018), Kelvin Harmon (2019)

7th Round (5): LB Josh Harvey-Clemons (2017), CB Greg Stroman (2018), WR Trey Quinn (2018), CB Jimmy Moreland (2019), DE Jordan Brailford (2019)

The following is the breakdown of the 18 players on the Redskins’ cur-rent roster who were drafted by other organizations:

1st Round (4): QB Alex Smith (SF, 2005), LB Thomas Davis Sr. (CAR 2005), RB Adrian Peterson (MIN, 2007), LB Reuben Foster (SF, 2017)

2nd Round (6): LB Jon Bostic (CHI, 2014), WR Cody Latimer (DEN, 2014), S Landon Collins (NYG, 2015), DE Nate Orchard (CLE, 2015), CB Ronald Darby (BUF, 2015), S Sean Davis (PIT, 2016)

3rd Round (1): Richard Rodgers (GB, 2014)

4th Round (1): LB Kevin Pierre-Lewis (SEA, 2014)

5th Round (0): None

6th Round (5): K Dustin Hopkins (BUF, 2013), Logan Thomas (ARI, 2014), Wes Schweitzer (ATL, 2016), DL Caleb Brantley (CLE, 2017), CB Simeon Thomas (CLE, 2018)

7th Round (1): TE Caleb Wilson (ARI, 2019)

The following 25 players on the Redskins’ current roster were undrafted:

T Paul AdamsQB Kyle AllenRB Peyton BarberTE Marcus BaughDE Ryan BeeCB Deshazor EverettRB Josh FergusonWR Emanuel HallTE Hale HentagesCB Danny JohnsonWR Darvin KidsyT Cornelius Lucas

DE Cameron MalveauxRB J.D. McKissicLB Jared NorrisT Timon ParrisS Jeremy Reaves WR Cam SimsWR Steven Sims Jr.S Maurice SmithLS Nick SundbergWR Jordan VeasyG Jeremy VujnovichP Tress WayWR Jester Weah

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2020 NFL DRAFT ORDER

The Draft order is determined by the following procedures:(A) The winner of the Super Bowl game shall select last and the loser of such game shall select next-to-last in all rounds,

regardless of the record of such participating clubs in the regular season.(B) The losers of the Conference championship games shall select 29th and 30th in all rounds, according to the reverse

order of their standing.(C) The losers of the Divisional playoff games shall select in the 25th through 28th positions in all rounds, according to

the reverse order of their standing.(D) The losers of the Wild Card games shall select in the 21st through 24th positions in all rounds, according to the reverse

order of their standing.(E) Clubs not participating in the playoffs shall select in the first through 20th positions in all rounds, according to the

reverse order of their standing.If, after all the foregoing procedures have been applied, ties still exist in any grouping except (A) above, such ties shall be broken by figur-

ing the aggregate won-lost-tied percentage of each involved club’s regular season opponents and awarding preferential selection order to the club which faced the schedule of teams with the lowest aggregate won-lost-tied percentage.

If ties still exist, the divisional or conference tie-breaking method, if applicable, shall be applied. If neither the divisional nor the conference tie-breaking methods are applicable, ties shall be broken by a coin flip conducted by the Commissioner.

Clubs involved in two-club ties will alternate positions from round-to-round. In ties that involve three or more clubs, the club at the top of a tied segment in a given round will move to the bottom of the segment for the next round, while all other clubs in the segment move up one position. This rotation continues throughout the Draft.

2020 NFL FIRST ROUND DRAFT ORDER TEAM OPPONENTS PICK TEAM WIN LOSS TIE PCT. STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE1 Cincinnati Bengals 2 14 0 0.125 0.5532 Washington Redskins 3 13 0 0.188 0.5023 Detroit Lions 3 12 1 0.219 0.5064 New York Giants 4 12 0 0.250 0.4735 Miami Dolphins 5 11 0 0.313 0.4846 Los Angeles Chargers 5 11 0 0.313 0.5147 Carolina Panthers 5 11 0 0.313 0.5498 Arizona Cardinals 5 10 1 0.344 0.5299 Jacksonville Jaguars 6 10 0 0.375 0.48410 Cleveland Browns 6 10 0 0.375 0.53311 New York Jets 7 9 0 0.438 0.47312 Las Vegas Raiders 7 9 0 0.438 0.48213 Indianapolis Colts 7 9 0 0.438 0.49214 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 7 9 0 0.438 0.50015 Denver Broncos 7 9 0 0.438 0.51016 Atlanta Falcons 7 9 0 0.438 0.54517 Dallas Cowboys 8 8 0 0.500 0.47918 Miami Dolphins (via PIT) 8 8 0 0.500 0.50219 Las Vegas Raiders (via CHI) 8 8 0 0.500 0.50820 Jacksonville Jaguars (via LAR) 9 7 0 0.563 0.53521 Philadelphia Eagles 9 7 0 0.563 0.45522 Buffalo Bills 10 6 0 0.625 0.46123 New England Patriots 12 4 0 0.750 0.46924 New Orleans Saints 13 3 0 0.813 0.48625 Minnesota Vikings 10 6 0 0.625 0.47726 Miami Dolphins (via HOU) 10 6 0 0.625 0.52027 Seattle Seahawks 11 5 0 0.688 0.53128 Baltimore Ravens 14 2 0 0.875 0.49429 Tennessee Titans 9 7 0 0.563 0.48830 Green Bay Packers 13 3 0 0.813 0.45331 San Francisco 49ers 13 3 0 0.813 0.50432 Kansas City Chiefs 12 4 0 0.750 0.510

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TEAM DRAFT NOTES

» Dating back to 2011, the Redskins have now selected at least seven players in nine consecutive drafts for the first time since the league adopted the seven-round format in 1994.

» The Redskins completed the 2019 NFL Draft without making a selection in the second round. It is the ninth time since the seventh-round draft format was established the Redskins did not make a selection in the second round.

» Including their eight selections in the 2018 NFL Draft, the Red-skins have now selected eight or more players in three consecu-tive drafts for the first time since the NFL adopted the seven-round format in 1994.

» With the 10 selections, the Redskins have now drafted at least 10 players in three of the last five NFL drafts.

» The Redskins made two trades during the draft. On Day 1, the Redskins sent the No. 46 pick [2019] and a future second-round selection in the 2020 NFL Draft to the Indianapolis Colts for the No. 26 overall selection. On Day 2, the team traded the No. 96 overall pick to the Buffalo Bills for the Nos. 112 and 131 selections.

» Of the Redskins 10 selections, three were made with picks ac-quired by trade, including draft-day trades with Indianapolis [LB Montez Sweat] and the Buffalo Bills [RB Bryce Love and G Wes Martin].

» The Redskins selected three players using compensatory picks [LB Cole Holcomb, WR Kelvin Harmon and LB Jordan Brailford]. The selections using compensatory picks were the most by the Red-skins and the first selections using a compensatory pick since the organization drafted NT Chris Neild with a compensatory pick in the 2011 NFL Draft.

» The Redskins have selected at least three players with picks acquired via trade in each of the last six drafts. It is the team’s lon-gest such stretch since a five-draft span from 1985-89.

» The Redskins selected a pair of college teammates in three consecutive drafts to include: DL Jonathan Allen and Ryan Ander-son [Alabama, 2017], DL Daron Payne and LB Shaun Dion Hamilton [Alabama, 2018], DL Tim Settle and CB Greg Stroman [Virginia Tech, 2018] and QB Dwayne Haskins and WR Terry McLaurin [Ohio State, 2019]. This marks the second occurrence the Redskins have select-ed teammates in three consecutive drafts. The organization drafted teammates in three straight drafts from 2011-2013 including RB Roy Helu, S DeJon Gomes and WR Niles Paul [Nebraska, 2011], G Adam Gettis and CB Jordan Bernstine [Iowa, 2012], and RB Chris Thompson and LB Brandon Jenkins [Florida State, 2013].

» The Redskins have now selected at least one pair of college teammates in seven of the last nine drafts [Nebraska’s Roy Helu Jr., DeJon Gomes and Niles Paul in 2011; SMU’s Josh LeRibeus and Richard Crawford and Iowa’s Adam Gettis and Jordan Bernstine in 2012; Florida State’s Chris Thompson and Brandon Jenkins in 2013; Arkansas’ Martrell Spaight and Tevin Mitchel in 2015; Alabama’s Jonathan Allen and Ryan Anderson in 2017; Alabama’s Daron Payne and Shaun Dion Hamilton; Virginia Tech’s Tim Settle and Greg Stro-man in 2018; Ohio State’s Dwayne Haskins and Terry McLaurin in 2019].

» The 2019 NFL Draft marks the fourth time the Redskins have selected a pair of teammates out of Ohio State [1952, 1961 and 1963].

» The Redskins made multiple picks in the seventh round for the fourth consecutive year, marking the team’s first four-year stretch with multiple seventh-round picks since selecting at least two play-ers in that round in each of the 2010-12 NFL Drafts.

» The Redskins selected four defensive players and have now picked at least four defensive players in five consecutive drafts for the first time since 1989-93, when the draft consisted of 12 rounds.

» Nine of the Redskins draft picks played their collegiate careers in the Football Bowl Subdivision, ending a six-year streak of the team’s entire draft class playing at the FBS level. James Madison’s Jimmy Moreland played in the Football Championship Subdivision.

2019 DRAFT RECAP

The last Redskins draft pick to play in the Football Championship Subdivision was South Dakota’s Tom Compton [2012].

» Nine of the 10 members of the Redskins’ draft class played at schools in “Power Five” conferences.

» The Redskins selected three players from the Big Ten, two players from the Southeastern Conference, two players from the Atlantic Coast Conference and one player each from the Pac-12 Conference, Big 12 Conference and Colonial Athletic Association. The SEC leads all conferences with 16 of the Redskins 53 selections since 2014, followed by the ACC with 12 selections.

QB DWAYNE HASKINS JR. (RD. 1, NO. 15)

» Haskins is the 475th selection made by the Redskins in the Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 30th first-round selection in that time frame. He is the 61st first-round selection by the Red-skins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» The selection of Haskins marks the third time in the last five years that the Redskins have selected an offensive player in the first round, joining the selections of G Brandon Scherff [2015] and WR Josh Doctson [2016]. It marks the team’s first time making three offensive first-round selections in that length of time since the 2000-02 drafts, when the team selected T Chris Samuels [2000], WR Rod Gardner [2001] and QB Patrick Ramsey [2002].

» Haskins becomes the first quarterback selected by the Red-skins in the first round since the team drafted Baylor’s Robert Grif-fin III in 2012.

» Haskins is the 48th quarterback selected by the Redskins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936 and the 27th selec-tion at the position made by the Redskins in the Common Draft era [since 1967].

» Haskins’ selection marks the fifth time in the Common Draft era that the Redskins have selected a quarterback in the first round, joining Robert Griffin III [2012], Jason Campbell [2005], Patrick Ramsey [2002] and Heath Shuler [1994].

» Haskins is the 17th player from Ohio State University select-ed by the Redskins all time, joining C Steve Andrako [1940], E Cy Sounders [1945], B Vic Janowicz [1952], T Julius Wittman [1952], G George Rosso [1954], T Fran Machinsky [1956], T George Tolfold [1961], G Mike Ingram [1961], FB Tom Barrington [1966], E Ron Sepic [1967], RB Rich Galbos [1973], T Henry Brown [1988], G Tim Moxley [1990] and WR Evan Spencer [2015].

» With the selection of Haskins, Ohio State tied Michigan State [17] for the seventh-most draft selections in Redskins history.

» Haskins becomes the first Ohio State product to be selected by the Redskins in the first round in franchise history and the highest pick from the institution since drafting FB Tom Barrington in the third-round [No. 38 overall] of the 1966 NFL Draft.

» Haskins is the first Big Ten Conference product selected by the Redskins in the first round since G Brandon Scherff in 2015. He is the seventh Big Ten product selected by the Redskins in the

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7 2020 NFL DRAFT

first round in the Common Draft era, joining DT Bobby Wilson [1991], WR Desmond Howard [1992], T Andre Johnson [1996], LB LaVar Arrington [2000], LB Ryan Kerrigan [2011] and Brandon Scherff [2015].

» With the selection, Haskins becomes the fourth player se-lected all-time with the No.15 overall pick, joining B Eddie Salem [1951], B Joe Hernandez [1962] and WR Rod Gardner [2001].

DE MONTEZ SWEAT (RD. 1, NO. 26)

» Sweat is the 476th selection made by the Redskins in the Com-mon Draft era [since 1967] and the 31st first-round selection in that time frame. He is the 62nd first-round selection by the Redskins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» Sweat’s selection marks the third straight year in which the Redskins have selected a defensive player with a first-round pick in the draft, joining Jonathan Allen [No. 17 overall in 2017] and Daron Payne [No. 13 overall in 2018]. This is the first time in team history the Redskins selected defensive players with a first-round pick se-lection in three consecutive drafts.

» Sweat is the 11th defensive player selected by the Redskins in the first round since 1999, joining CB Champ Bailey [1999], LB LaVar Arrington [2000], S Sean Taylor [2004], CB Carlos Rogers [2005], S LaRon Landry [2007], DE/LB Brian Orakpo [2009], LB Ryan Ker-rigan [2011], DL Jonathan Allen [2017], and DT Daron Payne [2018]. Seven of the 10 defensive players selected by the Redskins in the first round in that time frame have earned at least one Pro Bowl selection during their career.

» Sweat’s selection marks the seventh time in the Common Draft era that the Redskins have selected a pass rusher in the first round, joining Daron Payne [2018], Jonathan Allen [2017], Ryan Kerrigan [2011], Brian Orakpo [2009, transitioned to linebacker in 2010], Kenard Lang [1997] and Bobby Wilson [1991]. The Redskins also selected Tracy Rocker [1989, third round], Markus Koch [1986, second round], Bob Slater [1984, second round], Duncan McColl [1977, fourth round] and Bill Brundige [1970, second round] with the team’s first selections of each of the drafts listed.

» With the selections of Sweat, Payne and Allen, the Redskins have now used first-round selections on defensive linemen in three consecutive drafts for the first time in the Common Draft era.

» Sweat is the sixth player from Mississippi State selected by the Redskins all-time, joining C Dave Price [1938], B Charlie Yancey [1943], C Charley Cadenhead [1946], CB Fred Smoot [2001] and LB Preston Smith [2015].

» Sweat’s selection marks the first time the franchise has draft-ed a player with the No. 26 overall pick in the Common Draft Era and the second time the Redskins used the No. 26 overall pick when the team selected B Maurice Elder in the third round of the 1937 NFL Draft.

» Sweat is the ninth Southeastern Conference product selected

2019 DRAFT RECAP (CONT.)

by the Redskins in the first round in the Common Draft era. The Redskins have now selected an SEC product in the first round of three consecutive drafts for the first time in team history.

» Sweat was selected with a pick acquired by the Redskins in a draft day trade in which the Redskins sent the No. 46 [2019] and a future second-round pick [2020] to Indianapolis in exchange for the No. 26 overall pick in the first round. It marked the Redskins first selection using an acquired pick in the 2019 NFL Draft.

WR TERRY McLAURIN (RD. 3, NO. 76)

» McLaurin is the 477th selection made by the Redskins in the Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 36th third-round selection in that time frame. He is the 66th third-round selection by the Redskins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» McLaurin becomes the second offensive player to be selected by the Redskins in the 2019 NFL Draft joining college teammate QB Dwayne Haskins.

»With the selection of Terry McLaurin and Dwayne Haskins, the Redskins have now drafted teammates from Ohio State in four drafts. The Redskins drafted Buckeye teammates B Vic Janowicz and T Julius Wittman [1952], G Mike Ingram and T George Tolford [1961] and B Dave Francis and G Rod Foster [1963].

» Dating back to 2014, the Redskins have now selected a wide re-ceiver in seven consecutive drafts, the team’s longest stretch since taking a receiver in 10 consecutive drafts from 1994-2003.

» With the selection of McLaurin and Haskins, the Redskins have now drafted teammates in three consecutive drafts to include: DL Jonathan Allen and LB Ryan Anderson [Alabama, 2017], DL Daron Payne and LB Shaun Dion Hamilton [Alabama, 2018] and DL Tim Settle and CB Greg Stroman [Virginia Tech, 2018]. This marks the second occurrence the Redskins have selected teammates in three consecutive drafts. The organization drafted teammates in three straight drafts from 2011-2013 including RB Roy Helu, S De-Jon Gomes and WR Niles Paul [Nebraska, 2011], G Adam Gettis and CB Jordan Bernstine [Iowa 2012], and RB Chris Thompson and LB Brandon Jenkins [Florida State, 2013].

» McLaurin is the second Ohio State product selected by the Redskins in the third round in franchise history joining FB Tom Bar-rington [1966].

» McLaurin is the 18th Ohio State product selected by the Red-skins all-time, joining C Steve Andrako [1940], E Cy Souders [1945], B Vic Janowicz [1952], T Julius Wittman [1952], G George Rosso [1954], T Fran Machinsky [1956], T George Tolford [1961], G Mike Ingram [1961], B Dave Francis [1963], G Rod Foster [1963], FB Tom Barrington [1966], E Ron Sepic [1967], RB Rich Galbos [1973], T Henry Brown [1988], G Tim Moxley [1990], Evan Spencer [2015] and Dwayne Haskins [2019].

» With the selection of McLaurin, Ohio State tied Tennessee and Maryland [18] for the sixth-most draft selections in Redskins his-tory.

» McLaurin becomes the second wide receiver produced by Ohio

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State selected by the Redskins in franchise history, joining Evan Spencer [2015].

» The selection of McLaurin at No. 76 overall marks the fourth-highest draft pick from Ohio State, trailing only Dwayne Haskins [No. 15 in 2019], Tom Barrington [No. 38 in 1966] and Fran Machin-sky [No. 41 in 1956].

» McLaurin becomes the eighth player selected by the Redskins all-time with the No. 76 overall pick, joining E Joel Eaves [1937], B Frank Swiger [1942], B Johnny Papit [1951], E Erick Christensen [1955], T Don Lawerence [1959], G Moe Elewonibi [1990] and RB Ricky Ervins [1991].

» » McLaurin rounded out his rookie season with 919 receiving

yards and seven touchdowns in 14 games, the second-most receiv-ing yards and touchdowns by an Ohio State receiver in his rookie season since 2015, trailing only New Orelans Saints' receiver Mi-chael Thomas who tallied 1,137 yards and nine touchdowns in his rookie campaign.

» McLaurin climbed the ranks in the Redskins rookie record books, finishing in the top three in nearly every offensive category. See the chart below to see his final rookie ranks:

2019 DRAFT RECAP (CONT.)

RB BRYCE LOVE (RD. 4, NO. 112)

» Love is the 478th selection made by the Redskins in the Com-mon Draft era [since 1967] and the 35th fourth-round selection in that time frame. He is the 50th fourth-round selection by the Red-skins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» Love becomes the 26th offensive player selected by the Red-skins in the fourth round in franchise history.

» Love becomes the first running back selected by the Redskins in the fourth round since the team drafted Oklahoma’s Samaje Perine with the No. 114 overall pick in 2017.

» Dating back to 2011, the Redskins have now selected a running back in nine consecutive drafts, tying the team’s longest stretch since taking a running back in nine consecutive years across the 1983-91 drafts, which each consisted of 12 rounds.

» Love is the fourth Pac-12 player to be drafted by the Red-skins since the conferences realignment in 2010 joining CB Fabian Moreau (2017), OLB Su'a Cravens (2016) and LB Trent Murphy (2014). Love is also the only offensive player the Redskins have selected from the current Pac-12 Conference.

G WES MARTIN [RD. 4, NO. 131]

» Martin is the 479th selection made by the Redskins in the Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 36th fourth-round selec-tion in that time frame. He is the 51st fourth-round selection by the Redskins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» Martin becomes the third offensive lineman selected by the Redskins in the first four rounds since 2015 joining Brandon Scherff [1st round 2015], and Geron Christian Sr. [3rd round, 2018].

» Martin becomes the first offensive lineman selected by the Redskins in the fourth round since the team drafted Troy’s Michael

Player [Year] Yards

1. Gary Clark [1985] 9262. Terry McLaurin [2019] 9193. Anthony Armstrong [2010] 871

REDSKINS ROOKIE RECEIVINGRECORD BOOK

Player [Year] TDs1. Charlie Brown [1982] 82. Terry McLaurin [2019] 73t. Chris Cooley [2004] 63t. Hugh Taylor [1947] 6

Player [Year] Rec.1. Gary Clark [1985] 722. Jamison Crowder [2015] 593t. Terry McLaurin [2019] 58 3t. Art Monk [1980] 58Player [Year] 100 Yd.

Games1t. Terry McLaurin [2019] 31t. Gary Clark [1985] 33t. Charlie Brown [1982] 2Player [Year] 25+ YD

Recep.1t. Terry McLaurin [2019] 91t. Anthony Armstrong [2010] 93. Rod Gardner [2001] 7

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2020 NFL DRAFT2019 DRAFT RECAP (CONT.)

Moore with the No. 129 overall pick in the 2000 NFL Draft. » Martin is the ninth player from Indiana University selected

by the Redskins all-time, joining E Brad Bomba [1957], G-LB Don Croftcheck [1965], LB Stu O’Deall [1974], DB Quinn Buckner [1976],

» QB Babe Laufenburg [1983], QB Gibran Hamdan [2003], TE Rob Bolser [2014], and QB Nate Sudfeld [2016].

» Martin’s selection at No. 131 overall represents the highest the Redskins have selected an Indiana product since selecting G-LB Don Croftcheck during the 1965 NFL Draft [105th overall]

» Martin becomes the third player selected by the Redskins all-time with the No. 131 overall pick, joining G Tom Powell [1956] and LB Jack Shinholser [1966].

G ROSS PIERSCHBACHER (RD. 5, 153)

» Pierschbacher is the 480th selection made by the Redskin in the Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 50th fifth-round selec-tion in that time frame. He is the 75th fifth-round selection by the Redskins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» Pierschbacher becomes the fifth center selected by the Red-skins in the fifth round joining Dave Price [1938], George Bujan [1945], Greg Huntington [1993] and Mark Fischer [1998].

» Pierschbacher is the first center selected by the Redskins in the first five rounds since the selection of Mark Fischer in 1998.

» Pierschbacher is the 26th player from the University of Ala-bama selected by the Redskins all-time, joining B Riley Smith [1936], B Charley Holm [1939], E Sandy Sanford [1940], T Fred Davis [1941], G Ed Hickerson [1941], G Tony Leon [1943], B Bobby Jenkins [1945], T Fay Mills [1946], B Harry Gilmer [1948], B Lowell Tew [1948], T Dick Flowers [1949], E Ed White [1950], B Eddie Salem [1951], C El-liot Speed [1951], B Billy Hicks [1956], T Billy Neighbors [1962], E Tommy Brooker [1962], DB Steve Higginbotham [1972], DT Thomas Rayam [1990], T Chris Samuels [2000], G Arie Kouandjio [2015], DL Jonathan Allen [2017], LB Ryan Anderson [2017], DL Daron Payne [2018] and LB Shaun Dion Hamilton [2018]. Alabama’s 26 all-time selections by the Redskins are third-most from any school in fran-chise history, trailing only Notre Dame [34] and USC [30].

» This selection marks the third consecutive year and the second longest streak the Redskins have selected a player from Alabama in the draft following, B Harry Gilmer [1948], B Lowell Tew [1948], T Dick Flowers [1949], E Ed White [1950], B Eddie Salem [1951], C Elliot Speed [1951], LB Shaun Dion Hamilton [2018], LB Ryan Ander-son [2017] and DL Johnathan Allen [2017].

» Pierschbacher becomes the fourth player selected by the Red-skins all-time with the No. 153 overall pick, joining B Claude Aus-tin [1957], LB Lamont Jeffers [1982] and DT Anthony Montgomery [2006].

LB COLE HOLCOMB (RD. 5 NO. 173)

» Holcomb is the 481st selection made by the Redskins in the Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 51st fifth-round selection in that time frame. He is the 76th fifth-round selection by the Red-skins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» The Redskins have now used a fifth-round selection on a de-fensive player in four of the last five drafts spanning from 2015-2019 [Martrell Spaight-2015, Matt Ioannidis-2016, Tim Settle-2018, Cole Holcomb-2019].

» Holcomb is the 16th North Carolina product selected by the Redskins all-time, joining G Henry Bartos [1938], B Charley Slagle [1940], T Ernie Williamson [1947], T Len Szafaryn [1949], B Bob Ken-nedy [1949], B Charlie Justice [1950], E Ken Yarborough [1954], B Lenny Parker [1955], B Eddie Sutton [1957], E Buddy Payne [1958], T Don Stallings [1960], LB Chris Hanburger [1965], WR Walker Lee [1978], RB Kelvin Bryant [1983], and WR Mark Smith [1984].

» Holcomb becomes the fifth player selected by the Redskins all-time with the No. 173 overall pick, joining WR Roland Merritt [1970], DB Reed Doughty [2006], and RB Alfred Morris [2012].

» Holcomb combined for 105 tackles in 2019, the second-most amongst rookie linebackers trailing just Pittsburgh's Devin Bush (109). His 74 solo tackles were the most amongst rookie lineback-ers in 2019.

WR KELVIN HARMON (RD. 6, NO. 206)

»Harmon is the 482th selection made by the Redskins in the Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 57th sixth-round selection in that time frame. He is the 84th sixth-round selection by the Red-skins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» Harmon is the eighth player from North Carolina State se-lected by the Redskins all-time, joining E Dom Mac Cara [1937], B

2019 DRAFT RECAP (CONT.)

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2020 NFL DRAFT2019 DRAFT RECAP (CONT.)

DE JORDAN BRAILFORD (RD. 7, NO. 253)

» Brailford is the 484the selection made by the Redskins in the Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 65th seventh- round selec-tion in the time frame. He is the 96th seventh-round selection by the Redskins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» Brailford is the seventh player from Oklahoma State selected by the Redskins all-time joining, C Clay Davis [1950], E Alex Loyd [1950], B Dorsey Gibson [1954], E Jim Wood [1959], DE Dexter Man-ley [1981], KR Jamie Harris [1985] and WR Ethan Howell [2000].

» With this selection Brailford becomes the third player drafted with the designation of edge rusher produced from Oklahoma State selected by the Redskins all-time, joining Alex Loyd [1950] and Jim Woods [1959].

» Brailford is the fourth player drafted with the designation of edge rusher to be selected in the seventh round of the draft by the Redskins all-time, joining Al Krueger [1941], Bob Fitch [1942], Erick Christensen [1955] and Jim Kernney [1959].

» Brailford becomes the fourth player selected by the Redskins all-time with the No. 253 overall pick, joining T George Bayer [1950], B Claude Crabb [1962] and NT Chris Neild [2011].

2019 DRAFT RECAP (CONT.)Jim O’Rourke [1952], B Alex Webster [1953], T Darrell Dess [1958], G John Lawrence [1960], DB Lloyd Harrison [2000] and CB David Amerson [2013].

» Harmon is the first wide receiver produced by N.C. State select-ed by the Redskins in franchise history.

» With Harmon’s selection, it marks, the first time the Redskins have drafted two wide receivers in the same draft since 2015 with the selections of Evan Spencer [Ohio State] and Jamison Crowder [Duke].

» Harmon becomes the second player selected by the Redskins all-time with the No. 206 overall pick, joining LB Antwaune Ponds [1998].

CB JIMMY MORELAND (RD. 7, 227) » Moreland is the 483rd selection made by the Redskins in the

Common Draft era [since 1967] and the 64th seventh- round selec-tion in that time frame. He is the 95th seventh- round selection by the Redskins all-time since the institution of the draft in 1936.

» Moreland is the first player from James Madison selected by the Redskins all-time in the NFL Draft.

» With his selection it marks the ninth consecutive year the Redskins have selected a cornerback in the draft, joining Brandyn Thompson [2011], Richard Crawford [2012], Jordan Bernstine [2012], David Amerson [2013], Bashaud Breeland [2014] Tevin Mitchel [2015], Kendall Fuller [2016], Fabian Moreau [2017] Joshua Holsey [2017] and Greg Stroman [2018].

» With the selection of Moreland, this becomes the third consec-utive year the Redskins have drafted a cornerback in the seventh round, joining Joshua Holsey [2017] and Greg Stroman [2018].

» Since 2014, Moreland is the second player to be selected from a school in which the Redskins have never drafted a player. The Red-skins drafted WR Robert Davis [Georgia State] in the 2017 NFL Draft. It was the first time the organization drafted a player out of Georgia State.

» With the selection of Moreland, the Redskins have drafted only one player from 92 institutions.

» Moreland becomes the fifth player selected by the Redskins all-time with the No. 227 overall pick, joining B Alvin Duke [1950], G Ray Lemek [1956], B Joe Bellino [1961] and B Ozzie Clay [1964].

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REDSKINS SELECTIONS BY SCHOOL (ALL-TIME)

Notre Dame .................................34USC ................................................30Alabama .......................................26Penn State ...................................22Nebraska ......................................20Maryland .......................................18Ohio State .....................................18Tennessee ....................................18Michigan State ............................17Duke ................................................16Georgia ..........................................16Georgia Tech ................................16Michigan ........................................16North Carolina .............................16Purdue ...........................................16Stanford ........................................16Texas A&M ....................................16California .......................................15Iowa ................................................15Mississippi ....................................15Texas ..............................................15UCLA ...............................................15Arkansas .......................................14Auburn ...........................................14Minnesota .....................................14Colorado ........................................13Florida ............................................13Illinois .............................................13Indiana ...........................................13Oklahoma ......................................13Pittsburgh .....................................13Indiana ...........................................13Missouri .........................................12LSU ..................................................12Miami (Fla.) ...................................11Northwestern ...............................11Oregon ............................................11Oregon State .................................11Tulane ..............................................11Washington St. .............................11Arizona .......................................... 10Arizona State .............................. 10Baylor ............................................ 10Syracuse ...................................... 10TCU................................................. 10Vanderbilt .................................... 10Villanova ....................................... 10Washington ................................. 10Holy Cross ..................................... 9Virginia ............................................ 9Boston College ............................. 8Florida State ................................. 8Kentucky ........................................ 8NC State ......................................... 8Oklahoma State ........................... 8Utah ................................................. 8SMU ................................................. 8Virginia Tech ................................. 8West Virginia ................................. 8Clemson ......................................... 7Colgate ............................................ 7Iowa State ...................................... 7Rice .................................................. 7Richmond ....................................... 7San Diego St. ................................ 7South Carolina .............................. 7Tulsa ................................................ 7

UTEP ................................................ 7Wisconsin ...................................... 7George Washington .................... 6Idaho ................................................ 6Kansas ............................................ 6Kansas State ................................. 6Mississippi St. .............................. 6Texas Tech ..................................... 6Wake Forest .................................. 6BYU .................................................. 5Cincinnati ....................................... 5Colorado State.............................. 5Georgetown ................................... 5N. Texas St. .................................... 5San Jose State ............................. 5Santa Clara .................................... 5UNLV ................................................ 5William & Mary ............................. 5Cornell ............................................. 4Detroit ............................................. 4Hawaii ............................................. 4Louisville ........................................ 5Memphis St. .................................. 4Princeton........................................ 4Utah State ...................................... 4Arkansas St. .................................. 3Boise State .................................... 3Connecticut ................................... 3Dayton ............................................. 3Delaware ........................................ 3Delaware St. .................................. 3Elon .................................................. 3Florida A&M ................................... 3Fresno State.................................. 3Hardin-Simmons ......................... 3Houston .......................................... 3Loyola (CA) .................................... 3Nevada ............................................ 3Nicholls State ............................... 3Ohio University ............................. 3Pacific ............................................. 3Rutgers ........................................... 3Scranton ......................................... 3Temple ............................................ 3Wash. & Lee ................................... 3Wyoming ........................................ 3Alabama A&M ............................... 2Arkansas-Pine Bluff ................... 2Army ................................................ 2Boston University ........................ 2Bowling Green .............................. 2Cal-Santa Barbara ...................... 2Cameron ......................................... 2Central Florida .............................. 2Centre ............................................. 2Duquesne ....................................... 2East Carolina ................................. 2Jackson St. .................................... 2Lamar .............................................. 2Lehigh ............................................. 2Louisiana Tech ............................. 2Marquette ...................................... 2Maryland Eastern Shore ........... 2N. Alabama .................................... 2NE Louisiana ................................. 2Northwestern St. ......................... 2NYU .................................................. 2

Rochester ...................................... 2S. Dakota ........................................ 2Sam Houston St. .......................... 2SE Oklahoma ................................. 2Southern ........................................ 2Southern Miss .............................. 2Springfield ..................................... 2St. Mary's (CA) ............................. 2St. Norbert ..................................... 2SW Louisiana ................................ 2SW Texas St. ................................. 2Tennessee St. ............................... 2Troy State ....................................... 2VMI ................................................... 2Waynesburg .................................. 2West Texas State ......................... 2Western Michigan ....................... 2Wheaton ......................................... 2Willamette ..................................... 2Xavier .............................................. 2Adams State .................................. 1Alberta ............................................. 1Alcorn State ................................... 1Appalachian St. ............................. 1Arkansas A&M .............................. 1Azusa Pacific ................................. 1Bluefield St. .................................... 1Bowdoin ........................................... 1Bucknell ........................................... 1C. Washington................................ 1Cal State-Humboldt ..................... 1Cal State-San Fran. ...................... 1Case Western Reserve ............... 1Catawba .......................................... 1Cent. Michigan............................... 1Cent. Missouri................................ 1Central State (OK) ........................ 1Colby ................................................. 1Colorado School of Mines .......... 1Columbia ......................................... 1Dakota St......................................... 1Denver .............................................. 1Drake ................................................ 1E. Illinois .......................................... 1E. Michigan ..................................... 1E. Washington ................................ 1Emporia St. ..................................... 1Florida Atlantic .............................. 1Franklin & Marshall ...................... 1Furman ............................................ 1Gardner Webb ............................... 1Gustavus Adolphus ...................... 1Hampton.......................................... 1Henderson St. ................................ 1Howard ............................................ 1Howard Payne .............................. 1Idaho State ..................................... 1Jacksonville St. ............................. 1James Madison ............................ 1John Carroll .................................... 1Kentucky St. ................................... 1Knoxville .......................................... 1Lawrence ........................................ 1Long Beach State ......................... 1Mars Hill .......................................... 1Marshall ........................................... 1McNeese St .................................... 1

Mesa Co. .......................................... 1Miami (Ohio) ................................... 1Montana .......................................... 1Morgan St. ...................................... 1Murray State .................................. 1N. Arizona ........................................ 1N. Carolina A&T ............................. 1N. Illinois .......................................... 1N. Michigan..................................... 1Navy .................................................. 1NE Oklahoma ................................. 1New Haven ..................................... 1New Mexico .................................... 1New Mexico State ........................ 1Northern Colorado ....................... 1Northern Iowa ............................... 1NW Louisiana ................................. 1Panhandle St. ................................ 1Pennsylvania.................................. 1Portland St. .................................... 1Puget Sound .................................. 1Ripon ................................................ 1S. Carolina St. ................................ 1S. Colorado ..................................... 1SE Louisiana .................................. 1Shippensburg ................................ 1St. Benedict's ................................. 1St. Lawrence .................................. 1Stetson ............................................ 1Sul Ross ........................................... 1Tenn-Chattanooga ....................... 1Tennessee A&I ............................... 1Texas A&I ........................................ 1Texas-Arlington............................. 1Texas Southern ............................. 1The Citadel ...................................... 1Virginia St. ...................................... 1W. New Mexico .............................. 1W. Washington .............................. 1Weber State ................................... 1Wichita St........................................ 1Wisconsin-La Crosse .................. 1Wofford ............................................ 1Yale ................................................... 1Youngstown St. ............................. 1

The team's full draft history can be found on Page 224 of the 2019 Washington Redskins Me-dia Guide.

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2020 NFL DRAFTREDSKINS SELECTIONS BY SCHOOL (COMMON DRAFT ERA)

Since 1967

Nebraska ........................................................... 12Penn State ........................................................ 12Alabama ..............................................................9Colorado ..............................................................9Tennessee...........................................................9Miami (Fla.).........................................................8Texas ....................................................................8UCLA .....................................................................8USC .......................................................................8Baylor ...................................................................7Indiana .................................................................7Michigan ..............................................................7Notre Dame ........................................................7Ohio State ...........................................................7San Diego St. ......................................................7Stanford ..............................................................7Arkansas .............................................................6Florida ..................................................................6Maryland .............................................................6UTEP .....................................................................6Virginia .................................................................6Virginia Tech ......................................................6Arizona State .....................................................5Auburn .................................................................5Clemson...............................................................5Iowa ......................................................................5LSU ........................................................................5Minnesota ...........................................................5Oklahoma ............................................................5Texas A&M ..........................................................5UNLV .....................................................................5BYU .......................................................................4Cincinnati ............................................................4Florida State.......................................................4Georgia ................................................................4Hawaii ..................................................................4Idaho .....................................................................4Louisville .............................................................4Michigan State ..................................................4North Carolina ...................................................4Oklahoma State.................................................4Oregon .................................................................4Pittsburgh ...........................................................4SMU ......................................................................4Tulsa .....................................................................4Utah ......................................................................4Arizona .................................................................3Arkansas St. .......................................................3Boise State .........................................................3Boston College ..................................................3California .............................................................3Delaware St. .......................................................3Illinois ...................................................................3Kansas State ......................................................3Memphis St. .......................................................3Mississippi St. ...................................................3Missouri ...............................................................3NC State ..............................................................3N. Texas St. .........................................................3Nicholls State ....................................................3Oregon State ......................................................3Purdue .................................................................3Rice .......................................................................3

TCU ........................................................................3Washington ........................................................3Washington St. ..................................................3Alabama A&M ....................................................2Cameron ..............................................................2Central Florida ...................................................2Colorado State ...................................................2Delaware .............................................................2East Carolina ......................................................2Fresno State .......................................................2Georgia Tech ......................................................2Houston ...............................................................2Jackson St. .........................................................2Kansas .................................................................2Lamar ...................................................................2Maryland Eastern Shore ................................2Mississippi ..........................................................2N. Alabama .........................................................2

Nevada .................................................................2Northwestern ....................................................2Richmond ............................................................2Rutgers ................................................................2S. Dakota .............................................................2Sam Houston St. ...............................................2Southern .............................................................2SW Texas St........................................................2Syracuse .............................................................2Temple .................................................................2Tennessee St. ....................................................2Troy State ............................................................2Tulane ...................................................................2Utah State ...........................................................2West Virginia ......................................................2Wisconsin ...........................................................2Alberta ..................................................................1Alcorn State ........................................................1Arkansas A&M ...................................................1Arkansas-Pine Bluff .........................................1Azusa Pacific ......................................................1Bluefield St. .........................................................1Bowdoin ................................................................1Bowling Green ....................................................1Cal State-San Fran. ...........................................1Cal-Santa Barbara ............................................1Cent. Missouri .....................................................1Colorado School of Mines ...............................1Columbia ..............................................................1Cornell ...................................................................1Dakota St. .............................................................1Dayton ...................................................................1Drake .....................................................................1Duke .......................................................................1E. Illinois ...............................................................1E. Michigan ..........................................................1E. Washington .....................................................1Elon ........................................................................1Emporia St. ..........................................................1Florida A&M .........................................................1Florida Atlantic ...................................................1Gardner Webb ....................................................1Georgia State ......................................................1Hampton ...............................................................1Henderson St. .....................................................1Holy Cross............................................................1

Howard .................................................................1Howard Payne ...................................................1Idaho State ..........................................................1Iowa State ............................................................1Jacksonville St. ..................................................1James Madison ..................................................1Kentucky ..............................................................1Kentucky St. ........................................................1Knoxville ...............................................................1Lawrence .............................................................1Lehigh ...................................................................1Long Beach State ..............................................1Louisiana Tech....................................................1Mars Hill ...............................................................1Marshall ................................................................1McNeese St .........................................................1Mesa Co. ...............................................................1Miami (Ohio) ........................................................1Montana ...............................................................1Morgan St. ...........................................................1N. Arizona .............................................................1N. Carolina A&T ..................................................1N. Illinois ...............................................................1N. Michigan ..........................................................1NE Louisiana .......................................................1New Mexico .........................................................1Northern Colorado ............................................1Northern Iowa.....................................................1Northwestern St. ...............................................1NW Louisiana ......................................................1Portland St...........................................................1Princeton ..............................................................1Puget Sound .......................................................1S. Carolina St. .....................................................1S. Colorado ..........................................................1Santa Clara ..........................................................1South Carolina ....................................................1South Florida ......................................................1Southern Miss ....................................................1Springfield ...........................................................1St. Norbert ...........................................................1Sul Ross ................................................................1SW Louisiana ......................................................1Texas A&I .............................................................1Texas-Arlington ..................................................1Texas Southern ..................................................1Texas Tech ...........................................................1The Citadel ...........................................................1Vanderbilt ............................................................1Villanova ...............................................................1Virginia St. ...........................................................1W. New Mexico ...................................................1W. Washington ...................................................1Wake Forest ........................................................1Weber State ........................................................1Wichita St. ............................................................1William & Mary ...................................................1Wisconsin-La Crosse .......................................1Wyoming ..............................................................1

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2020 NFL DRAFT

13 2020 NFL DRAFT

DRAFT PICK TRADE HISTORY (SINCE 2010)

Note: grouped by affected draft selection, not by transaction date.

2010 » Traded second-round pick (No. 37 overall) to Philadelphia as part of

package for QB Donovan McNabb. » Traded fifth-round pick (No. 135 overall) and a seventh-round pick

(No. 211) to St. Louis for DE Adam Carriker, a fifth-round pick (No. 163) and a seventh-round pick (No. 208). » Traded fifth-round pick (No. 163 overall) to Miami for a sixth-round

pick (No. 174) and a seventh-round pick (No. 219).Prior to 2010, traded a sixth-round pick (No. 174 overall) to Miami as part of package for DE Jason Taylor. The team received the pick back in the trade mentioned above. » Traded seventh-round pick received from St. Louis (No. 208 over-

all) to New England for two seventh-round picks (Nos. 229 and 231).Players selected with original picks: T Trent Williams (Round 1, No. 4 overall), LB Perry Riley (Round 4, No. 103), FB Dennis Morris (Round 6, No. 174)Players selected with acquired picks: WR Terrence Austin (Round 7, No. 219), C Erik Cook (Round 7, No. 229), T Selvish Capers (Round 7, No. 231)Original picks used by other teams via trade: S Nate Allen (PHI, No. 37), CB Dominique Franks (ATL, No. 135), CB Marquis Johnson (STL, No. 211)

2011

» Traded first-round pick (No. 10 overall) to Jacksonville for first-round pick (No. 16) and second-round pick (No. 49). » Traded second-round pick (No. 49 overall) to Indianapolis for sec-

ond-round pick (No. 53) and fifth-round pick (No. 152). » Traded second-round pick (no. 53 overall) to Chicago for second-

round pick (No. 62) and fourth-round pick (No. 127). » Traded second-round pick (No. 62 overall) to Miami for third-round

pick (No. 79), fifth-round pick (No. 146) and seventh-round pick (No. 217). » Traded third-round pick (No. 72 overall) to New Orleans as part of

package for T Jammal Brown and a fifth-round pick (No. 155). » Traded fourth-round pick (No. 104 overall) to Philadelphia as part of

package for QB Donovan McNabb. » Traded fourth-round pick (No. 127 overall) and two fifth-round picks

(Nos. 144 and 152) to Houston for fourth-round pick (No. 105) and a sixth-round pick (No. 178). » Traded CB Justin Tryon to Indianapolis for seventh-round pick (No.

224 overall).Players selected with original picks: DE Jarvis Jenkins (Round 2, No. 41 overall), RB Evan Royster (Round 6, No. 177), CB Brandyn Thomp-son (Round 7, No. 213), NT Chris Neild (Round 7, No. 253)

Players selected with acquired picks: LB Ryan Kerrigan (Round 1, No. 16), WR Leonard Hankerson (Round 3, No. 79), RB Roy Helu, Jr. (Round 4, No. 105), S DeJon Gomes (Round 5, No. 146), TE Niles Paul (Round 5, No. 155), WR Aldrick Robinson (Round 6, No. 178), T Maurice Hurt (Round 7, No. 217), LB Markus White (Round 7, No. 224)Original picks used by other teams via trade: QB Blaine Gabbert (JAX, No. 10), LB Martez Wilson (NO, No. 72), TE Luke Stocker (TB, No. 104), S Shiloh Keo (HOU, No. 144).

2012 » Traded first-round pick (No. 6 overall) and a second-round pick (No.

39) to St. Louis as part of a package for first-round pick (No. 2). » Traded third-round pick (No. 69 overall) to Buffalo for a third-round

pick (No. 71) and a seventh-round pick (No. 217). » Traded QB Jason Campbell to Oakland for a fourth-round pick (No.

109 overall). » Traded fourth-round pick (No. 109 overall) to Pittsburgh for a

fourth-round pick (No. 119) and a sixth-round pick (No. 193). » Traded QB Donovan McNabb to Minnesota for a sixth-round pick

(No. 173 overall). » Traded fifth-round pick (No. 177 overall) and DE Vonnie Holliday to

Arizona for RB Tim Hightower.Players selected with original picks: QB Kirk Cousins (Round 4, No. 102 overall), G Adam Gettis (Round 5, No. 141), CB Richard Crawford (Round 7, No. 213)Players selected with acquired picks: QB Robert Griffin III (Round 1, No. 2), G Josh LeRibeus (Round 3, No. 71), LB Keenan Robinson (Round 4, No. 119), RB Alfred Morris (Round 6, No. 173), T Tom Comp-ton (Round 6, No. 193), S Jordan Bernstine (Round 7, No. 217)Original picks used by other teams via trade: CB Morris Claiborne (DAL, No. 6), CB Janoris Jenkins (STL, No. 39), WR T.J. Graham (BUF, No. 69), S Justin Bethel (ARI, No. 177)

2013 » Traded first-round pick (No. 22 overall) to St. Louis as part of pack-

age for the No. 2 overall pick in 2012 (listed above). » Traded DL Albert Haynesworth to New England for a fifth-round

pick (No. 162 overall).Players selected with original picks: CB David Amerson (Round 2, No. 51 overall), TE Jordan Reed (Round 3, No. 85), S Phillip Thomas (Round 4, No. 119), RB Chris Thompson (Round 5, No. 154), S Bacarri Rambo (Round 6, No. 191), RB Jawan Jamison (Round 7, 228)Players selected with acquired picks: LB Brandon Jenkins (Round 5, No. 162)Original picks used by other teams via trade: CB Desmond Trufant (ATL, No. 22)

2014 » Traded first-round pick (No. 2 overall) to St. Louis as part of pack-

age for the No. 2 overall pick in 2012 (listed above). » Traded second-round pick (No. 34 overall) to Dallas for a second-

round pick (No. 47) and third-round pick (No. 78). » Traded sixth-round pick (No. 178 overall) to Tennessee for a sixth-

round pick (No. 186) and seventh-round pick (No. 228).Players selected with original picks: T Morgan Moses (Round 3, No. 66 overall), CB Bashaud Breeland (Round 4, No. 102), WR Ryan Grant (Round 5, No. 142), TE Ted Bolser (Round 7, No. 217)Players selected with acquired picks: LB Trent Murphy (Round 2, No. 47), G Spencer Long (Round 3, No. 78), RB Lache Seastrunk (Round 6, No. 186), K Zach Hocker (Round 7, No. 228)Original picks used by other teams via trade: DE DeMarcus Lawrence (DAL, No. 34), QB Zach Mettenberger (TEN, No. 178)

Page 14: WASHINGTON REDSKINS 2020 NFL DRAFT NOTES REDSKINS … · 2020-04-21 · QB Robert Griffin III (2012, No. 2) 2013 QB Kirk Cousins (2012, No. 102) 2017 RB Alfred Morris (2012, No. 173)

142020 NFL DRAFT

2020 NFL DRAFTDRAFT PICK TRADE HISTORY (SINCE 2010)

2015 » Traded third-round pick (No. 69 overall) to Seattle for a third-round

pick (No. 95), fourth-round pick (No. 112), fifth-round pick (No. 167) and sixth-round pick (No. 181). » Traded fifth-round pick from Seattle (No. 167 overall) to New Or-

leans for 2015 sixth-round pick (No. 187) and a 2016 sixth-round pick (No. 187).Players selected with original picks: G Brandon Scherff (Round 1, No. 5 overall), LB Preston Smith (Round 2, No. 38), WR Jamison Crowder (Round 4, No. 105), LB Martrell Spaight (Round 5, No. 141), CB Tevin Mitchel (Round 6, No. 182), C Austin Reiter (Round 7, No. 222)

Players selected with acquired picks: RB Matt Jones (Round 3, No. 95), G Arie Kouandjio (Round 4, No. 112), S Kyshoen Jarrett (Round 6, No. 181), WR Evan Spencer (Round 6, No. 187)Original picks used by other teams via trade: WR Tyler Lockett (SEA, No. 69)

2016 » Traded first-round pick (No. 21 overall) to Houston for a first-round

pick (No. 22) and a 2017 sixth-round pick (No. 209). » Traded fourth-round pick (No. 120 overall) to New Orleans for a

fifth-round pick (No. 152) and a 2017 fifth-round pick (No. 154). » Traded fifth-round pick (No. 158 overall) to the New York Jets for a

2017 fourth-round pick (No. 114). » Traded sixth-round pick (No. 197 overall) to Tampa Bay in exchange

for S Dashon Goldson and a seventh-round pick (No. 232).Players selected with original picks: S Su'a Cravens (Round 2, No. 53), CB Kendall Fuller (Round 3, No. 84), RB Keith Marshall (Round 7, No. 242).Players selected with acquired picks: WR Josh Doctson (Round 1, No. 22), DL Matt Ioannidis (Round 5, No. 152), QB Nate Sudfeld (Round 6, No. 187), LB Steven Daniels (Round 7, No. 232).Original picks used by other teams via trade: WR Will Fuller (HOU, No. 21), DL David Onyemata (NO, No. 120), T Brandon Shell (NYJ, No. 158), FB Danny Vitale (TB, No. 197).

2017 » Traded fifth-round pick (No. 161 overall) to San Francisco for TE

Derek Carrier and a seventh-round pick (No. 220). » Traded sixth-round pick (No. 201 overall) and a seventh-round pick

(No. 220) to the Minnesota Vikings for a sixth-round pick (No. 199) and a seventh-round pick (No. 230).Players selected with original picks: DL Jonathan Allen (Round 1, No. 17), LB Ryan Anderson (Round 2, No. 49), CB Fabian Moreau (Round 3, No. 81), S Montae Nicholson (Round 4, No. 123), CB Joshua Holsey (Round 7, No. 235).

Players selected with acquired picks: RB Samaje Perine (Round 4, No. 114), TE Jeremy Sprinkle (Round 5, No. 154), C Chase Roullier (Round 6, No. 199), WR Robert Davis (Round 6, No. 209), LB Josh Har-vey-Clemons (Round 7, No. 230).Original picks used by other teams via trade: LB Anthony Walker Jr. (IND, No. 161), TE Bucky Hodges (MIN, No. 201).

2018 » Traded third-round pick (No. 78 overall) to Kansas City as part of

compensation for QB Alex Smith. » Traded fourth-round pick (No. 113) and fifth-round pick (No. 149) to

Denver as part of compensation for a fourth-round pick (No. 109) and two fifth-round picks (Nos. 142 and 163). » Traded sixth-round pick (No. 188) to Cleveland for QB Kevin Hogan

and a sixth-round pick (No. 205). » Traded TE Derek Carrier to the Los Angeles Rams for a seventh-

round pick (No. 241).Players selected with original picks: DL Daron Payne (Round 1, No. 13 overall).Players selected with acquired picks: RB Derrius Guice (Round 2, No. 59, NO through DEN), T Geron Christian Sr. (Round 3, No. 74, SF), DB Troy Apke (Round 4, No. 109, SF through DEN), DL Tim Settle (Round 5, No. 163, ATL through DEN), LB Shaun Dion Hamilton (Round 5, No. 241, CAR through LAR), CB Greg Stroman (Round 7, No. 241, LAR), WR Trey Quinn (Round 7, No. 256, ATL through LAR).Original picks used by other teams via trade: LB Malik Jefferson (CIN, No. 78), WR DaeSean Hamilton (DEN, No. 113), P Michael Dickson (SEA, No. 149), CB Simeon Thomas (CLE, No. 188).

2019 » Traded fourth-round pick (No. 118 overall) to Green Bay for S Ha Ha

Clinton-Dix. » Exercised sixth-round pick by selecting CB Adonis Alexander in the

sixth round of 2018 NFL Supplemental Draft. » Players selected with original picks: QB Dwayne Haskins Jr. (Round

1 No. 15 overall), Third-round pick WR Terry McLaurin (Round 3, No. 76 overall), G Ross Pierschbacher (Round 5, No. 153), DB Jimmy More-land Round 7, No. 227) » Acquired picks: Montez Sweat (IND, No. 26), RB Bryce Love BUF,

No. 112), G Wes Martin (BUF No. 131), Cole Holcomb (compensatory, No. 173), WR Kelvin Harmon (compensatory pick, No. 206) Linebacker Jordan Brailford (compensatory, No. 253) » Original picks currently held by other teams: Third-round (TE Daw-

son Knox, No. 96 overall), Second-round pick 2020 NFL Draft (No. 34 overall).

» Traded fifth-round pick (No. 148 overall) to Carolina for QB Kyle Al-len » Acquired fifth-round pick (162 overall) from Seattle for CB Quinton

Dunbar » Traded sixth-round pick (181 overall) to Denver for QB Case Kee-

num. » Acquired seventh-round pick (229 overall) from Denver in the trade

for QB Case Keenum.

2020