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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 11:21 a.m., Thursday, April 24, 2008

NFL: Long relaxed, other picks antsy for draft

By BARRY WILNER
Associated Press Football Writer

NEW YORK — The anxiety, uncertainty and lack of control that go with being a top NFL prospect can be maddening. Jake Long sits back and laughingly scoffs at it. And why not: Long already knows where he's going, and when.

The Miami Dolphins made the Michigan tackle a very rich young man by signing him to a five-year contract worth $57.75 million, $30 million of it guaranteed. He will be the first name announced at Saturday's NFL draft.

"It's a relief and it's comforting to know the contract is done,' Long said today. "To know where I will be and where I will play, now I can relax. I can worry only about football and work only on football."

The situation is vastly different for the other 252 players who will be chosen in two rounds on Saturday and another five on Sunday at Radio City Music Hall. From the stud who will go right after Long to the placekicker hoping to be taken somewhere — anywhere — it's a nervous time.

"You have no choice where you go, but of course you get anxious," said LSU defensive tackle Glenn Dorsey, like Long an All-American. "So you go (online) and check out what they got on the team. But you can't get a read on what they'll do."

Virginia defensive end Chris Long and Arkansas running back Darren McFadden also were All-Americans in 2007. They joined Boston College quarterback Matt Ryan and Ohio State DE Vernon Gholston at a luncheon Thursday, where all but Jake Long admitted to being antsy.

"Yeah, I guess they would be," the Dolphins' newest addition said with a chuckle.

It's not unusual for the first team picking in the draft to agree to terms with someone before the proceedings begin. But for it to happen so far before draft day is rare.

Miami's decision not only stripped some drama from the draft, it eliminated any questions of who will go No. 1 on Saturday. So, who's No. 2?

The Rams have shown particular interest in Dorsey, Chris Long and Gholston to bolster a defense that allowed more points than anyone but Detroit last season. Chris Long said he liked the idea of playing on a defense "that really goes after the quarterback," and he felt in his interviews with St. Louis that would be the Rams' approach.

But all of the teams in the top seven — Atlanta, Oakland, Kansas City, the New York Jets, and New England — are looking for defensive help.

Gholston, who played with plenty of Buckeyes who got drafted the last two seasons, hasn't been taking any advice from any former teammates. He wants to be on his own.

"You talk to guys about the draft, but you don't really know what it's like until you experience it," he said. "It was the same with the combine. All draft experiences are different. One guy will say it was terrible because he didn't go where he wanted to. Another guy will say it was great because he went before he expected to.

"I think it comes down pretty much to your own personal experiences."

The one scenario none of the six players on hand at Chelsea Piers wants to imagine is what happened to quarterbacks Aaron Rodgers in 2005 and Brady Quinn last year: a nose-dive to the back end of the first round.

Although there has been some strong debate whether Ryan is a franchise quarterback, it's unlikely he or any of the others who will attend the draft will go into a freefall. The Falcons, Chiefs and Ravens (eighth overall) could use a quarterback.

The three defensive players figure to be gone by the time the Ravens are on the board, and so does McFadden, quite possibly to the Raiders or Jets.

"I'll go anywhere, to any system," McFadden said, "and I'll just play ball. I will fit in."