7-700-2022
Meanwhile, in Las Vegas, the atmosphere was electric. The 2022 draft was unique; it was the "Year of the Receiver." Within the first 16 picks, six wideouts had flown off the board. Teams were desperate for speed, and they were willing to trade the farm to get it.
The hum of the draft room was a low, rhythmic vibration—the sound of 32 teams trying to predict the future. For general managers, "7-700-2022" wasn't just a code on a folder; it represented seven rounds of grueling scouts' notes, 700+ hours of film study, and the 2022 season hanging in the balance. 7-700-2022
Brock Purdy , the very last pick, eventually became a Pro Bowl starter. Meanwhile, in Las Vegas, the atmosphere was electric
In a small apartment in Athens, Georgia, Nakobe Dean sat with his phone in his lap. He had been the heartbeat of the Bulldogs’ national championship defense. Analysts called him a first-round lock. But as the first round ended on Thursday night, his name hadn't been called. Friday came—the second and third rounds—and still, silence. Concerns about his size and a "nagging" shoulder injury had turned a "sure thing" into a slide. The hum of the draft room was a
Travon Walker (DE) – Jacksonville Jaguars.
By Saturday morning—the "marathon" rounds 4 through 7—the glitz of the Vegas stage had faded into a war of attrition. This was where the real "useful" stories were written. Teams weren't looking for stars anymore; they were looking for "grinders."