There are many questions about who's going where in this year's NFL draft, but one might appeal to more than just sports fans.
Michael Sam, former Missouri defensive lineman and recipient of the Arthur Ashe Courage Award Wednesday, could become the first openly gay NFL player Thursday. (Via ABC)
During Sam's senior season at Missouri, he tallied 48 total tackles, 19 for a loss; led the SEC with 11.5 sacks; forced two fumbles; and earned the SEC's co-defensive player of the year award. That's a monster season. (Via The New York Times)
After the season, Sam came out to a number of media outlets, including ESPN.
And, months ago, the high-motor DE was projected to go in the middle third or fifth rounds. (Via NBC, PennLive)
Directly after Sam's announcement, CBS caught flak for dropping the DE 70 spots in its overall draft rankings — in part due to his coming out. A draft analyst said teams might consider it a distraction. (Via Yahoo)
And after a less-than-stellar NFL Combine, Sam might have fallen farther on some draft boards. (Via Sporting News)
FiveThirtyEight writes, "Sam's chances of being drafted are only about 50-50."
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel surveyed 21 NFL scouts and wrote: "Three said fifth round. Three said sixth round. Three said seventh round. Five said they would sign him as a free agent. Seven said they wouldn't sign him as a free agent."
But a writer for The Washington Post says the NFL is kind of hoping Sam gets drafted this weekend too."The NFL would avoid a major public-relations headache if, at any point this weekend, a team uses a draft pick … on Sam. … If he goes undrafted or isn't even signed as a free agent, the NFL's message of progress and preparedness for a gay player becomes a more difficult sell."
About the Author