1947 NFL draft
National Football League draft From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1947 NFL draft was held on December 16, 1946, at the Commodore Hotel in New York City, New York.[1][2]
1947 NFL draft | |
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![]() Commodore Hotel (location of the draft) | |
General information | |
Date(s) | December 16, 1946 |
Location | Commodore Hotel in New York City, NY |
Overview | |
300 total selections in 32 rounds | |
League | NFL |
First selection | Bob Fenimore, HB Chicago Bears |
Most selections (32) | Chicago Bears |
Fewest selections (29) | Chicago Cardinals Philadelphia Eagles |
Hall of Famers | 3
|
The National Football League in this draft made the first overall pick, a bonus pick determined by lottery. The Chicago Bears won the first lottery, and used the pick to select halfback Bob Fenimore. This lottery process ended in 1958.[3]
This draft was the last time the Bears had the first overall pick in a draft until 2024.
Player selections
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Hall of Famers
- Dante Lavelli, end from Ohio State University taken 12th round 103rd overall by the Los Angeles Rams.
- Inducted: Professional Football Hall of Fame class of 1975.[4]
- Tom Landry, defensive back from Texas taken 20th round 184th overall by the New York Giants.
- Inducted: For his Coaching achievements Professional Football Hall of Fame Class of 1990
- Art Donovan, defensive tackle from Boston College taken 22nd round 204th overall by the New York Giants
- Inducted: Professional Football Hall of Fame class of 1968.
Notable undrafted players
† | = Pro Bowler[N 1] |
Original NFL team | Player | Pos. | College | Conf. | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chicago Bears | Enrique Ecker | OT | John Carroll | OAC | |
Chicago Bears | George Gulyanics | HB/P | Alabama | SEC | |
Detroit Lions | George Hekkers | OT | Wisconsin | Big Ten | |
Washington Redskins | Hugh Taylor † | WR | Oklahoma City | Ind. |
Summary
Schools with multiple draft selections
Selections | Schools |
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10 | Texas |
9 | UCLA |
8 | Michigan, Northwestern |
7 | LSU, Oklahoma |
6 | Army, Illinois |
5 | Georgia, Indiana, North Carolina, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn, South Carolina, Tulsa, Wake Forest |
4 | California, Cincinnati, Detroit, Holy Cross, Iowa, Oklahoma A&M, Penn State, Stanford, TCU, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, USC, Vanderbilt, Washington, Washington State, Wisconsin |
3 | Arkansas, BYU, Duke, East Texas State, Miami (FL), Navy, NC State, Oklahoma City, Oregon, Rice, SMU, Yale |
2 | Boston College, Colgate, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Denver, Georgia Tech, Hardin–Simmons, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan State, Minnesota, Missouri, Muhlenberg, Nevada, Oregon State, Purdue, Richmond, Southeastern Louisiana, St. Bonaventure, Wesleyan, William & Mary, Wyoming |
Notes
References
External links
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