Has anyone ever been to the NFL Draft before?

CtCardinals78

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I'm considering going this year, easy enough to get to, but I guess you have to go the night before to get your tickets which are first come, first serve. If anyone has gone, how was your experience?
 

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I'm considering going this year, easy enough to get to, but I guess you have to go the night before to get your tickets which are first come, first serve. If anyone has gone, how was your experience?

I think Ed used to go. If you search back in some of the archives in here, I recall him writing up a piece on how he got in.
 

JeffGollin

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I used to attend regularly, starting back in the 1960's. The draft was held during the week at a hotel in midtown Manhattan. I used to take a long lunch hour and go back for a couple of hours after work. The draft gurus of that era were Palmer Hughes, The Jerry Jones Drugstore List, Joel Buchsbaum and Mel Kiper.

The League attitude toward fans attending was that we were trying to sneak in, but that gradually changed and the NFL became more lenient, reserving limited space in the balcony for draftniks on a first come/first served basis. The draft was not televised except for a minute or two on a highlight show.

They then moved the draft to Saturdays and Sundays (& at 7 am, there would be a long line of early attendees). By then, there was a group of us regulars who'd network throughout the year and sit together at the draft. At the time, Phil Hepler and Bill Werndl of Ourlads joined Kiper along with David Te Thomas who used to subcontract for the NFL to provide college player stats for the 32 teams.

By mid-1980's, I had left my corporate job in NYC and hooked up as Promo Mgr for a NJ daily. With that gig came press credentials (along with desk space and buffet food).

Right about then, the draft was becoming a big deal, with the League marketing it like a spectator sport. ESPN was now covering the first day of the draft around the clock. I got lazy - finding it easier to follow the draft on cable tv or my computer rather than schlep my way into NYC.

Of course, now the draft is a very big deal - with more coverage than Beyonce's cleavage. It's a 3 day extravaganza which will move to different cities like the Super Bowl. It's worth attending once, but the crowds may now be ferocious, and you really can follow it better from home nowadays.

But those were the days. My favorite memory was going off for a run up the east river drive in 1981 knowing that we had just drafted EJ Junior and returning to the Vanderbilt "Y" (on 41st St) to discover that we drafted Neal Lomax in the second round. (Note - We also grabbed Stump Mitchell in the 9th round).

Another memory had to do with the year QB Dan Pasterini was drafted by Houston. The Runyonesque corporate head of marketing at the corporation where I worked called me into his office in mid-afternoon: "How's the draft going?" ("Fine"). "Where did Pastrami get drafted?"...

If there was no such thing as the NFL Draft, we'd have to make it up.
 
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CtCardinals78

CtCardinals78

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I used to attend regularly, starting back in the 1960's. The draft was held during the week at a hotel in midtown Manhattan. I used to take a long lunch hour and go back for a couple of hours after work. The draft gurus of that era were Palmer Hughes, The Jerry Jones Drugstore List, Joel Buchsbaum and Mel Kiper.

The League attitude toward fans attending was that we were trying to sneak in, but that gradually changed and the NFL became more lenient, reserving limited space in the balcony for draftniks on a first come/first served basis. The draft was not televised except for a minute or two on a highlight show.

They then moved the draft to Saturdays and Sundays (& at 7 am, there would be a long line of early attendees). By then, there was a group of us regulars who'd network throughout the year and sit together at the draft. At the time, Tom Hessler and Bill Werndl of Ourlads joined Kiper along with David Te Thomas who used to subcontract for the NFL to provide college player stats for the 32 teams.

By mid-1980's, I had left my corporate job in NYC and hooked up as Promo Mgr for a NJ daily. With that gig came press credentials (along with desk space and buffet food).

Right about then, the draft was becoming a big deal, with the League marketing it like a spectator sport. ESPN was now covering the first day of the draft around the clock. I got lazy - finding it easier to follow the draft on cable tv or my computer rather than schlep my way into NYC.

Of course, now the draft is a very big deal - with more coverage than Beyonce's cleavage. It's a 3 day extravaganza which will move to different cities like the Super Bowl. It's worth attending once, but the crowds may now be ferocious, and you really can follow it better from home nowadays.

But those were the days. My favorite memory was going off for a run up the east river drive knowing that we had just drafted EJ Junior and returning to the Vanderbilt "Y" (on 41st St) to discover that we drafted Neal Lomax in the second round (or was it vice versa? I get the 2 picks mixed up).

Wow, Jeff that is an awesome story! It must have been something to attend those in the early days. You are one lucky guy!
 

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I went the year we drafted Beanie...had an awesome time!!! Waiting in line basically all day for a ticket is a hassle but worth it at least once in your lifetime. IMO today's version of the draft isn't as much fun for the fan because you either only get 1 rd, the middle 2 rounds or the last day when most peeps don't want to go.
 

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I'm in Connecticut right now on business. One of the VPs I'm working with - who's a Jets fan - has tickets. Not just any tickets, but some sort of box/suite kind of thing.

Not sure what that's all about (as far as attending a Draft goes), but I'll be sure to get an update after the fact.
 

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I'm considering going this year, easy enough to get to, but I guess you have to go the night before to get your tickets which are first come, first serve. If anyone has gone, how was your experience?

I was there in 2011.

Great experience, but probably not as great as I expected. Fun to see the whole "circus" from the other side of things with all the fans going crazy over picks, Jets fans boo'ing when Pats pick and seeing some scenes where draftpicks bring the entire family on stage (Nick Fairley had around 40 family members on stage).

But I was also surprised how quiet it was during commercials.

Trying to evaluate now. Glad I went and had the experience, but probably not something I'm going to attend again (unless I'm in NYC for other purposes)
 

JeffGollin

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I was there in 2011.

Great experience, but probably not as great as I expected. Fun to see the whole "circus" from the other side of things with all the fans going crazy over picks, Jets fans boo'ing when Pats pick and seeing some scenes where draftpicks bring the entire family on stage (Nick Fairley had around 40 family members on stage).

But I was also surprised how quiet it was during commercials.

Trying to evaluate now. Glad I went and had the experience, but probably not something I'm going to attend again (unless I'm in NYC for other purposes)
The best way to describe the draft - when you strip away all the media bells and whistles (& the draft itself) - is that it's like any typical corporate sales conference or industry trade show.

Behind the scenes, there are exhibit tables, a snack room, a press room and lots of agents, pr people, & management suits networking like crazy. TV monitors are everywhere. It essentially is a giant national marketing event

Back in the day, each of us draft freaks would lug a giant briefcase full of draft guides and handwritten charts and notes (& plenty of erasers). The trusty laptop, I-Pad and Smart Phones have streamlined this quite a bit.
 

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One thing I've noticed about NFLN and ESPN draft coverage. When its the Cardinals turn to draft, both networks will go to commercial. When they come back they'll give cursory coverage to the Cardinals pick, then move on to the next team. We're the Rodney Dangerfield of franchises to the national media. ESPN is worse than NFLN which tries to give coverage to all teams while ESPN seems to focus on the Patriots, Jets, Giants, Eagles, Steelers and Cowboys.
 

JeffGollin

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One thing I've noticed about NFLN and ESPN draft coverage. When its the Cardinals turn to draft, both networks will go to commercial. When they come back they'll give cursory coverage to the Cardinals pick, then move on to the next team. We're the Rodney Dangerfield of franchises to the national media. ESPN is worse than NFLN which tries to give coverage to all teams while ESPN seems to focus on the Patriots, Jets, Giants, Eagles, Steelers and Cowboys.
A great deal of love (overhype?) is now also being given by both ESPN and NFLN to our friends in SF and Seattle. Check the interview lists and state of the franchise and war room programming devoted to both teams. While some of it is a perk of winning, the two teams seem to receive more attention than we did after the Super Bowl.
 

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One thing I've noticed about NFLN and ESPN draft coverage. When its the Cardinals turn to draft, both networks will go to commercial. When they come back they'll give cursory coverage to the Cardinals pick, then move on to the next team. We're the Rodney Dangerfield of franchises to the national media. ESPN is worse than NFLN which tries to give coverage to all teams while ESPN seems to focus on the Patriots, Jets, Giants, Eagles, Steelers and Cowboys.
Yup we either get a commercial durring our pick or just after, either way we get much less coverage and details.

Until we had a defense we were always the team getting burned on the highlights.
 

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Jeff, that was really cool! Thank you for sharing that!
 
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CtCardinals78

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