NFL Draft: States with most No. 1 picks

By Zack Poff Apr 25, 2024, 11:00am

Texas, California have combined for over 30 percent of first overall selections.

Later this evening someone will hear their name called with the No. 1 overall selection of the 2024 NFL Draft and join a group of just 88 players. The Philadelphia Eagles selected Jay Berwanger with the first pick of the inaugural draft in 1936, making him one of two No. 1s from Iowa along with Randy in 1959.

Last year, California had its 13th No. 1 selection when the Carolina Panthers selected Bryce Young. That put the Golden State one behind Texas for the most first picks. Some notable selections include O.J. Simpson, Jim Plunkett, John Elway, Keyshawn Johnson, Carson Palmer, Alex Smith and Jared Goff.

Earl Campbell, Matthew Stafford, Andrew Luck, Myles Garrett, Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray headline the 14 picks from the Lone Star State.




Ohio is the only other state with more than five. When the Cincinnati Bengals selected Joe Burrow in 2020, that gave the Buckeye State six No. 1 selections. Burrow was the first overall pick since Orlando Pace in 1997.

Alabama and Louisiana tied for the fourth most with five. Peyton and Eli Manning were selected first overall in 1998 and 2004 making Newman (New Orleans) one of two high schools to have multiple first picks. Jefferson (San Antonio, Texas) is the other. Kyle Rote was selected first in 1951 by the New York Giants and Tommy Nobis was the No. 1 pick in 1966 by the Atlanta Falcons.


Georgia is tied with New York and Oklahoma with four No. 1 selections. The Peach State is also the last to have back-to-back first picks when Jacksonville selected Trevor Lawrence in 2021 and Travon Walker in 2022.

Florida has dominated the NFL Draft but has only had one No. 1 pick. That came all the way back in 1965 when the New York Giants selected Tucker Frederickson.

In total, 27 different states have had a No. 1 pick. If the Chicago Bears select Caleb Williams first overall he would be the first player from the District of Columbia to go No. 1. The 2022 Heisman Trophy winner graduated from Gonzaga in 2021 and was the second-rated quarterback behind Quinn Ewers according to 247Sports. Williams led Gonzaga to its first WCAC title since 2002 as a sophomore accounting for 480 yards of total offense and seven touchdowns in a 46-43 win over DeMatha (Hyattsville, Md.) in the 2018 WCAC championship.



Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Idaho, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Utah, Vermont and Wyoming are still waiting for its first overall selection.
1. Texas — 14
1939: Ki Aldrich, Temple
1951: Kyle Rote, Jefferson (San Antonio)
1958: King Hill, Brazosport (Freeport)
1964: Dave Parks, Abilene
1966: Tommy Nobis, Jefferson (San Antonio)
1967: Bubba Smith, Charlton-Pollard (Beaumont)
1978: Earl Campbell, Tyler
1980: Billy Sims, Hooks
1982: Kenneth Sims, Groesbeck
2009: Matthew Stafford, Highland Park (Dallas)
2012: Andrew Luck, Stratford (Houston)
2017: Myles Garrett, Martin (Arlington)
2018: Baker Mayfield, Lake Travis (Austin)
2019: Kyler Murray, Allen

2. California — 13
1954: Bobby Garrett, South Pasadena
1968: Ron Yary, Bellflower
1969: O.J. Simpson, Galileo (San Francisco)
1971: Jim Plunkett, James Lick (San Jose)
1975: Steve Bartkowski, Buchser (Santa Clara)
1977: Ricky Bell, Fremont (Los Angeles)
1983: John Elway, Granada Hills
1996: Keyshawn Johnson, Dorsey (Los Angeles)
2002: David Carr, Stockdale (Bakersfield)
2003: Carson Palmer, Santa Margarita (Rancho Santa Margarita)
2005: Alex Smith, Helix (La Mesa)
2016: Jared Goff, Marin Catholic (Kentfield)
2023: Bryce Young, Mater Dei (Santa Ana)

3. Ohio — 6
1943: Frank Sinkwich, Chaney (Youngstown)
1979: Tom Cousineau, St. Edward (Lakewood)
1994: Dan Wilkinson, Dunbar (Dayton))
1995: Ki-Jana Carter, Westerville South (Westerville)
1997: Orlando Pace, Sandusky
2020: Joe Burrow, Athens (The Plains)

T4. Alabama — 5
1948: Harry Gilmer, Woodlawn (Birmingham)
1986: Bo Jackson, McAdory (McCalla)
1988: Aundray Bruce, Carver Montgomery (Montgomery)
2007: JaMarcus Russell, Williamson (Mobile)
2015: Jameis Winston, Hueytown

T4. Louisiana — 5
1960: Billy Cannon, Istrouma (Baton Rouge)
1961: Tommy Mason, Lake Charles
1970: Terry Bradshaw, Woodlawn (Shreveport)
1998: Peyton Manning, Newman (New Orleans)
2004: Eli Manning, Newman

T6. Georgia — 4
1981: George Rogers, Duluth
2011: Cam Newton, Westlake (Atlanta)
2021: Trevor Lawrence, Cartersville
2022: Travon Walker, Upson-Lee (Thomaston)

T6. New York — 4
1953: Harry Babcock, Pearl River
1962: Ernie Davis, Elmira Free Academy (Elmira)
1972: Walt Patulski, Christian Brothers Academy (Syracuse)
1987: Vinny Testaverde, Sewanhaka (Floral Park)

T6. Oklahoma — 4
1947: Bob Fenimore, Woodward
1976: Lee Roy Selmon, Eufaula
1989: Troy Aikman, Henryetta
2010: Sam Bradford, Putnam City North (Oklahoma City)

T9. Indiana — 3
1938: Corbett Davis, Lowell
1941: Tom Harmon, Mann (Gary)
1990: Jeff George, Warren Central (Indianapolis)

T9. Pennsylvania — 3
1945: Charley Trippi, Pittston Area (Pittston)
1949: Chuck Bednarik, Liberty (Bethlehem)
1950: Leon Hart, Turtle Creek

T9. Virginia — 3
1942: Bill Dudley, Graham (Bluefield)
1985: Bruce Smith, Booker T. Washington (Norfolk)
2001: Michael Vick, Warwick (Newport News)



T12. Iowa — 2
1936: Jay Berwanger, Dubuque Senior (Dubuque)
1959: Randy Duncan, Roosevelt (Des Moines)

T12. Kentucky — 2
1957: Paul Hornung, Flaget (Louisville)
1999: Tim Couch, Leslie County (Hyden)

T12. Massachusetts — 2
1944: Angelo Bertelli, Cathedral (Springfield)
1946: Frank Dancewicz, Lynn Classical (Lynn)

T12. Michigan — 2
2008: Jake Long, Lapeer East (Lapeer)
2013: Eric Fisher, Stoney Creek (Rochester Hills)

T12. Oregon — 2
1955: George Shaw, Grant (Portland)
1963: Terry Baker, Jefferson (Portland)

T12. South Carolina — 2
2000: Courtney Brown, Macedonia (Alvin)
2014: Jadeveon Clowney, South Pointe (Rock Hill)



T12. Tennessee — 2
1952: Bill Wade, Montgomery Bell Academy (Nashville)
1974: Ed "Too Tall" Jones, Merry (Jackson)

T12. Washington — 2
1992: Steve Emtman, Cheney
1993: Drew Bledsoe, Walla Walla

T20. Colorado — 1
1956: Gary Glick, Cache la Poudre (Fort Collins)

T20. Florida — 1
1965: Tucker Frederickson, South Broward (Hollywood)

T20. Illinois — 1
1991: Russell Maryland, Whitney Young (Chicago)

T20. Kansas — 1
1937: Sam Francis, Decatur Community (Oberlin)

T20. New Jersey — 1
1984: Irving Fryar, Rancocas Valley (Mt. Holly)

T20. North Carolina — 1
2006: Mario Williams, Richlands



T20. West Virginia — 1
1940: George Cafego, Oak Hill

T20. Wisconsin — 1
1973: John Matuszak, Oak Creek