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NFL draft: How an afterthought became a cultural phenomenon

From afterthought to phenomenon
How technology and TV took the NFL draft to new heights
Clemson defensive tackle Christian Wilkins leaps into NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after the Miami Dolphins selected Wilkins in the first round of the 2019 NFL Draft in Nashville, Tenn. (The Associated Press)
Clemson defensive tackle Christian Wilkins moves into NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after the ...

NEW YORK

This all happened because of Stan Kostka.

He was a star running back when leading the University of Minnesota to a perfect season in 1934. His nickname was King Kong, and all 11 NFL teams wanted to sign him.

He wanted to get paid, so he held out for the highest bidder. Nine months later, even after he lost a bid to become mayor of Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota, he received $5,000 to become a member of the league’s team in Brooklyn.

King Kong lasted just one season, but the NFL wasn’t going to allow such a storyline to repeat itself. The solution: an amateur draft.

Las Vegas, now home to the Raiders and Allegiant Stadium, was scheduled to host its first draft Thursday through Saturday. But those plans were interrupted by the coronavirus pandemic, as the draft and all its expected splendor were canceled in Southern Nevada.

Early on, players located on higher floors would learn which team selected them by waiting for the dial up to ring. It was as if room service was confirming a dinner order.

Much later, things got real fancy. Radio City Music Hall is nicknamed the Showplace of the Nation, sitting on the 1200 block of Avenue of the Americas and within Rockefeller Center. The draft was first held there in 2006, gaining in spectacle each passing year.

But one of the showpieces of Midtown Manhattan is also home to the famed Rockettes, and a scheduling conflict in 2014 between the NFL and the dance company meant the draft was moved from April to May. Which meant the league felt it best to consider other potential locations. Even ones outside.

“The lines were around the corner and it was a red-carpet, star-studded affair at Radio City,” said Stephen Nichols, Sports/Newsroom director for SiriusXM Radio in Manhattan. “It was great for the excitement part of it, but eventually the league wanted to get a little taste of what other (cities) could do.

“The NFL has fans all over the country, all over the world. Obviously, we’ve seen the kind of buzz a draft can create in different places. It has become bragging rights for those who can now get it. There’s nothing like it, the hope it creates.”

Titans Fans Celebrate second round draft pick, A J Brown, at the NFL Draft on Friday, April 26, 2019, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Al Wagner)

Chicago (2015 and 2016) as draft host was followed by Philadelphia, which was followed by Dallas, which was followed by Nashville, which was supposed to be followed by Las Vegas.

Dallas was the first city to host the draft inside an NFL stadium. The others were a bit more creative.

O’Reilly and Bears chairman George McCaskey did a polar plunge into Lake Michigan when 150,000 folks showed up for draft festivities at Grant Park in 2015; Philadelphia used its Museum of Art, with the “Rocky” statue, as a backdrop to the league’s first outdoors draft; Nashville had its honky-tonks alive and rocking.

“I’d be lying if I said we believed staging the (draft outdoors) had this much potential,” O’Reilly said. “When we moved it from New York, there was significant interest. But even then, it was still in our minds and those of different cities that it would be a theater event. But doing what we have (outside) has certainly outdone our expectations.”

They also believed the next city in line would surpass all others for pomp and circumstance and levels of celebration.

Alas, a pandemic put such plans on hold.

Leaving Las Vegas

You can rank the NFL’s most important annual dates as following:

Super Bowl.

Opening weekend.

Draft.

Las Vegas was to be the first NFL draft held in the Pacific Time Zone, set for that enviable prime-time television spot on Thursday that features only the first round. It’s a tradition that began in 2010.

Instead, there will be no boat rides for prospects to the red carpet on the Fountains of Bellagio. No selection stage at Caesars Forum and next to The Linq Hotel. No daily live concerts. No draft experience for fans.

The benefits of hosting a draft, of drawing thousands and thousands of tourists and integrating them into the community, can’t be overstated. But the town that does everything big is now dark, meaning Las Vegas must wait for another time to welcome those football fanatics hoping to hit the jackpot. Be at a casino or with their favorite team’s selections. Or both.

The next batch of NFL stars will be showcased on the Fountains of Bellagio before being whisked away to the Caesars Forum convention center to hear their names called in the 2020 NFL draft. (NFL rendering)

The draft site for 2022 and 2024 has not been determined, and there is every reason to believe the NFL will make up for this year’s cancellation by awarding Las Vegas one of those years. Goodell said as much in March, while also mentioning in a statement the city as a site for a future Super Bowl.

This was O’Neil in November, long before the coronavirus was a reality, busy planning to direct yet another outdoor draft: “We need to do right by Las Vegas. The biggest response we got from fans watching on TV last year was that as they flipped through channels, Nashville looked like it was New Year’s Eve. So even those who weren’t draft fans stopped and watched.

“How do we have that in Vegas? The bones are there for doing something very special.”

All of that now will have to wait.

History, for the moment, has changed course. Come Thursday, a different type of draft war room takes the lead.

Wonder what Bert Bell would have thought about Zoom.

Contact columnist Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4618. He can be heard on “The Press Box,” ESPN Radio 100.9 FM and 1100 AM, from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday through Friday. Follow @edgraney on Twitter.

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