What happened last week with the NFL’s supplemental draft was unusual enough on its own, but it also reopened an old scar for Washington fans.
The league announced it would hold its first supplemental draft since 2019, with Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby initially the player at the center of it. Then the situation changed fast.
As more evidence came in against Sorsby, the NFL pulled back and backed out of giving him that supplemental draft opportunity. The move may have been aimed at avoiding a precedent, especially with college players gambling more.
The supplemental draft works a little differently from the annual spring event. It exists for players who are eligible for the NFL but were not part of that year’s regular draft.
They apply, and if they qualify, they are almost always granted entry. From there, the process turns into something close to a silent auction: teams indicate what they would be willing to give up to land the player, and the highest offer gets him.
The catch is steep. If a team wins the player in the supplemental draft, it gives up that same draft slot in the next spring’s NFL draft.
Sorsby, as a quarterback, would have drawn real interest. The bigger question would have been which team was willing to pay the price. A club looking for a developmental passer could have been tempted to spend a second- through fourth-round type of pick and stash him for a year to see what he becomes.
For the Commanders, though, the answer almost certainly would have been no. GM Adam Peters already showed his interest in a younger quarterback who could develop when he used the final round of the annual draft on Rutgers QB Athan Kaliakmanis. That makes it hard to imagine Washington putting together a competitive enough offer for Sorsby in the supplemental draft.
Washington’s track record in this area is not exactly encouraging. Fans still remember the 2009 supplemental draft, when the team took Kentucky pass rusher Jeremy Jarmon in the third round and gave up its 2010 third-round pick to do it. Jarmon started just one game and was out of the NFL after two seasons.
Then came Adonis Alexander in the 2018 supplemental draft. Washington, still the Redskins at the time, used its sixth-round choice to get the Virginia Tech corner after making the highest offer.
That one also went nowhere. Alexander appeared in only 9 NFL games.
Of course, the supplemental draft has produced some success stories too. Bernie Kosar and Cris Carter are the names that come up first. Others who entered that way and carved out productive careers include Brian Bosworth, Bobby Humphrey, Josh Gordon, and Ahmad Brooks.
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