As the 2024 NFL Draft process begins, the New England Patriots sit in an interesting place. Needing help at all three premium offensive positions – quarterback, wide receiver, and left tackle – they have the third overall pick with elite talent at all three spots sitting on the board.
That draft positioning has some wondering, could the Patriots trade down from the third pick in order to add assets, and potentially address two of those needs in the first round? It’s a fair question, but for those penciling in taking a first-round quarterback as a part of those plans, history tells us that would be a very unique ask.
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Simply put, NFL teams don’t trade down for quarterback. To say such a move is rare is an understatement. Such a move in the top 10? Unheard of.
The NFL changed the way rookie contracts are negotiated (or, not negotiated) with the rookie wage scale in 2011. We can use that window as an example of the most modern draft era.
In that time, there have been 39 quarterbacks taken in the first round. 23 were drafted with the team’s originally assigned draft slot (or a pick acquired prior to that year’s draft cycle). 15 quarterbacks were drafted via trade up, while only one was taken after a team traded down. Just in the top 10 alone, 17 were taken with the team’s original pick, 11 were acquired after a trade up, and none via trade down.
Note: This does not include the Eli Manning-Philip Rivers trade as a team trading down for a quarterback, as the Chargers technically drafted Manning then traded him to the Giants, who had already ‘drafted’ Philip Rivers.
In the last 20 years, there’s only one instance of a team trading down in the first round only to take a quarterback. For the last time it happened in the top 10, we need to go back another decade beyond that.