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chicinsilk · 3 years
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💕Bride's Magazine editorial shot by Roger Prigent 1958
The Chantilly lace and taffeta wedding dress is designed by Miss Sonia of Bridal Creations.
The bridesmaid wears a green taffeta pleated dress by Emma Domb. Headband in Edward Berger's hair, Capezio pumps. Bouquets of flowers from Wadley & Smythe.
Color-blended stockings by Van Raalte; Richelieu "pearls"
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junker-town · 6 years
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2018 Senior Bowl roster: Baker Mayfield, Josh Allen lead big list of NFL prospects
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NFL scouts will be well represented at college football’s biggest All-Star Game.
For an NFL team at the top of the 2018 NFL draft, there is only one game left to pay attention to this winter — and it’s not the Super Bowl. Scouts and executives alike will be focused on the 2018 Senior Bowl thanks to a lineup of star prospects like Baker Mayfield, Josh Allen, and Da’Shawn Hand.
This year’s crop of quarterbacks is Saturday’s headliner in Mobile, Ala. Mayfield, the Heisman winner, was watched closely throughout the week of practice as teams try to judge whether his prodigious playmaking will translate from the Big 12 to the NFL. Despite speculation that he wouldn’t play Saturday, Mayfield is expected to be out there on the field.
Allen has even more questions to answer — while his 6’5 frame and big arm have made him a favorite among draft prognosticators, his 16-11 record at Wyoming and inability to perform against Power 5 competition raise doubt about his ability to lead a franchise.
Washington State’s Luke Falk was at practice all week, but he withdrew from the Senior Bowl to attend the funeral of teammate Tyler Hilinski.
Other familiar passers Nebraska’s Tanner Lee and Virginia’s Kurt Benkert used this week to try to state their cases as potential draftees as well.
Saturday’s game will also provide an opportunity for some smaller-school standouts to prove they belong. UTSA pass rusher Marcus Davenport has been projected as a mid-first-round pick, but a strong performance against the nation’s top blockers could be his ticket into the top 10. Cornerbacks like Dubuque’s Michael Joseph and Weber State’s Taron Johnson will look to prove they have the strength and athleticism to hang with a higher level of competition.
And then there are the proven stars who have to show they’re more than just top-tier NCAA athletes. San Diego State tailback Rashaad Penny led the FBS in rushing yards this season and will try to show scouts he’s just as dangerous as Saquon Barkley or Derrius Guice. Other standouts like Troy Fumagalli, Harrison Phillips, James Washington, and Dewey Jarvis will look to have a similarly productive day.
North Team
Coaching staff: Denver Broncos
Quarterbacks
Josh Allen, Wyoming
Luke Falk, Washington State (withdrew)
Tanner Lee, Nebraska
Baker Mayfield, Oklahoma
Running backs
Kalen Ballage, Arizona State
Dimitri Flowers (FB), Oklahoma
Jaylen Samuels, NC State
Akrum Wadley, Iowa
Wide receivers
Braxton Berrios, Miami
Michael Gallup, Colorado State
DaeSean Hamilton, Penn State
Allen Lazard, Iowa State
Jaleel Scott, New Mexico State
Justin Watson, Penn
Cedrick Wilson, Boise State
Tight ends
Tyler Conklin, Central Michigan
Troy Fumagalli, Wisconsin
Mike Gesicki, Penn State
Durham Smythe, Notre Dame
Offensive linemen
Mason Cole (C), Michigan
Tyrell Crosby (OT), Oregon
Jamil Demby (OT), Maine
Will Hernandez (OG), UTEP
Cole Madison (OT), Washington State
Brian O’Neill (OT), Pittsburgh
Scott Quessenberry (C), UCLA
Wyatt Teller (OG), Virginia Tech
Brett Toth (OT), Army
Sean Welsh (OG), Iowa
Defensive linemen
B.J. Hill (DT), NC State
Jalyn Holmes (DE), Ohio State
Justin Jones (DT), NC State
Tyquan Lewis (DE), Ohio State
Bilal Nichols (DT), Delaware
Ogbonnia Okoronkwo (DE), Oklahoma
Harrison Phillips (DT), Stanford
Linebackers
Ja’Whaun Bentley (OLB), Purdue
Nick DeLuca (ILB), North Dakota State
Garrett Dooley (OLB), Wisconsin
Dewey Jarvis (OLB), Brown
Mike McCray (ILB), Michigan
Myles Pierce (ILB), The Citadel
Kemoko Turay (OLB), Rutgers
Fred Warner (OLB), BYU
Defensive backs
Marcus Allen (S), Penn State
Christian Campbell (CB), Penn State
Secdrick Cooper (S), Louisiana Tech
Duke Dawson (CB), Florida
Trayvon Henderson (S), Hawaii
JaMarcus King (CB), South Carolina
Taron Johnson (CB), Weber State
Michael Joseph (CB), Dubuque
Armani Watts (S), Texas A&M
Kyzir White (S), West Virginia
Isaac Yiadom (CB), Boston College
Specialists
Michael Badgley (K), Miami
Tanner Carew (LS), Oregon
Johnny Townsend (P), Florida
South
Coaching staff: Houston Texans
Quarterbacks
Kurt Benkert, Virginia
Kyle Lauletta, Richmond
Brandon Silvers, Troy
Mike White, Western Kentucky
Running backs
Nick Bawden (FB), San Diego State
Rashaad Penny, San Diego State
Ito Smith, Southern Mississippi
Darrel Williams, LSU
Wide receivers
Marcell Ateman, Oklahoma State
D.J. Chark, LSU
J’Mon Moore, Missouri
Byron Pringle, Kansas State
Tre’Quan Smith, UCF
James Washington, Oklahoma State
Tight ends
Jordan Akins, UCF
Ian Thomas, Indiana
Deon Yelder, Western Kentucky
Offensive linemen
Bradley Bozeman (C), Alabama
Alex Cappa (OT), Humboldt State
Austin Corbett (C), Nevada
Austin Golson (C), Auburn
Colby Gossett (OG), Appalachian State
Taylor Hearn (OG), Clemson
Joseph Noteboom (OT), TCU
Brandon Parker (OT), North Carolina A&T
Skyler Phillips (OG), Idaho State
Isaiah Wynn (OG), Georgia
Defensive linemen
Andrew Brown (DT), Virginia
Kylie Fitts (DE), Utah
Poona Ford (DT), Texas
Marcus Davenport (DE), UTSA
Greg Gilmore (DT), LSU
Da’Shawn Hand (DE), Alabama
Christian LaCouture (DT), LSU
Linebackers
Oren Burks, Vanderbilt
Shaquem Griffin (OLB), UCF
Marquis Haynes (OLB), Ole Miss
Darius Leonard (ILB), South Carolina State
Uchenna Nwosu (OLB), USC
Dorian O’Daniel (ILB), Clemson
Tre’ Williams (ILB), Auburn
Defensive backs
Nate Andrews (S), Florida State
Quin Blanding (S), Virginia
Danny Johnson (CB), Southern
Kameron Kelly (CB), San Diego State
Tray Matthews (S), Auburn
Siran Neal (CB), Jacksonville State
Jeremy Reaves (S), South Alabama
M.J. Stewart (CB), North Carolina
Chandon Sullivan (CB), Georgia State
D’Montre Wade (CB), Murray State
Levi Wallace (CB), Alabama
Specialists
Daniel Carlson (K), Auburn
Ike Powell (LS), Auburn
JK Scott (P), Alabama
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Working in Clark County: Jane BonVillain, floral designer at Ridgefield Floral & Gifts
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A bouquet of cut roses lasts about one week before they shrivel and die.
And yet the business of sending a dozen to a loved one on Valentine’s Day is a lifeline for local flower shops; deliveries at Ridgefield Floral & Gifts increase about 2,000 percent for Valentine’s Day.
“We normally have, I would say, anywhere from three to 10 deliveries a day,” said business owner Teri Paterson. “For Valentine’s Day (including on Feb. 13), we’ll have 125 or more. That doesn’t include walk-ins.”
“The day-of is just insane,” said former owner and now part-time designer Tammy Claflin. She started Ridgefield Floral in 1997 in her garage “like five blocks up the road” from its current rented location at 328 Pioneer St., she said. They’ve been in the Mochrum Building for 12 years.
For Valentine’s Day, their designers and delivery drivers, plus willing-to-volunteer family members, will all be on deck helping out. On a recent Wednesday about a week prior, Claflin and fellow designer Jane BonVillain were fielding phone calls and working on a few early arrangements. BonVillain, 55, was working on a bouquet of roses for her daughter’s 12th birthday.
BonVillain started at the shop three years ago during the Valentine’s Day rush. She said designing a good flower arrangement is all about color, structure and balance.
“Start with the container and decide if you want to use foam to hold it or a vase,” she said, carefully placing some baby’s breath among the roses for her daughter’s surprise arrangement.
Returning home
BonVillain knows a little bit about flower design. She grew up in Ridgefield. And when she was done with high school, she left.
“I thought if I stayed here, I wouldn’t go anywhere. I needed to get out and grow up,” she said. After a three-year stint in the Army, she landed in New York City, where she lived in Manhattan for eight years. She worked for Irene Hayes Wadley & Smythe LeMoult, a now-shuttered florist that was located in Rockefeller Center.
“During Valentine’s Day, we’d have 75 people there. It was really fast,” she said. “People had a weird sense of entitlement there. The Rockefellers were our clients.”
Another client the florist had was the “Today Show” — an impressive addition to a floral designer’s resume. It certainly wowed then-owner Claflin, when BonVillain returned home after 9/11.
“I go ‘Well, do you have any experience?’ She starts telling me about her experience. I say ‘Oh, OK, yeah, just go to work.’ We didn’t even discuss what she was going to get paid, or hours or anything,” Claflin laughed.
“You could be a Medal of Honor winner and you say the ‘Today Show’ flowers and people love it. That was, you know, exciting,” BonVillain said.
But she’s happy to be back in Ridgefield with her family and especially with her mother, who developed Alzheimer’s.
“After 9/11, I came home. I wanted to be near my mom. We didn’t have a close relationship or anything but (9/11) was hard for everybody. Being out there it was difficult. So I came home and little did I know within eight years she would get Alzheimer’s and I ended up taking care of her,” BonVillain said. “It was kind of a miracle.”
She’s also excited about helping her hometown shop as it grows.
Adapting the business
Ridgefield is a growing town, and it’s reflected in their sales, according to Paterson, who said the shop experienced a 20 percent increase in sales from 2017 to 2018. And that’s despite the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ forecast of decline in floral shops and designers due to big-box stores selling their own cut-flower bouquets and the internet allowing shops to reach wider audiences.
Ridgefield Floral & Gifts has attempted to adapt. They added the “& Gifts” to the name when Paterson took ownership and now sell items like jewelry, candles and soaps in addition to florist services. They also started using a website service called Lovingly, reflected in their own website design. Lovingly helps local shops with their online presence and in return take a percentage of sales that come through the website. (Lovingly is also used for Awesome Flowers, a shop in Vancouver.)
Ridgefield Floral & Gifts also uses flower “wire” services to boost sales, such as FTD and Teleflora.
“A lot of those are customers who may live on the East Coast and maybe want to send something to a family member who lives here,” Paterson said.
The store has some regular local clients, including ilani, Paterson said. They make the arrangements for the casino’s VIP lounge and Michael Jordan’s Steak House.
Learning the craft
BonVillain said that it took her a while to really “get” flower design. Back in New York, she worked with top designers who taught her the ropes, she said. She developed a deep respect for the business after working with “old-time people in New York and really bringing that tradition” to Ridgefield.
“I take it seriously. Everybody thinks it’s easy. It was hard for me, it was hard for me to become good. It was a discipline like anything else,” she said. “For whatever reason, with floral design, (people) don’t equate it to being any type of discipline or anything. Especially with women, we just think we’re inherently supposed to be good at it.”
She notes that it’s every florist’s nightmare when someone walks in with a lofty idea pulled from Pinterest or a Martha Stewart book.
“People used to come in when I was in New York. Martha Stewart had just come out with her books. They’d say ‘I want this.’ It was before Pinterest. (They asked) ‘How much would it cost to do this?’ I’d say $600,” BonVillain laughed. “It’s not reasonable.”
The most expensive Valentine’s Day arrangement advertised on Ridgefield Floral’s website is the Infinite Love Roses bouquet for $325.95.
“If you’re looking to make a statement that will never be forgotten, this stunning display of five dozen sweetly hued roses is an absolute winner,” the website reads. “Roses will always be a symbol of love and admiration, and there’s no better way to express your true adoration.”
And so what if they die in a week? To BonVillain, the designers are a “conduit to help people send their sentiments.”
“Even if they have to sacrifice, like money is tight, they still want someone to know that you matter,” she said. “Part of the beauty of sending flowers is that they do die. It’s there to represent that particular occasion.”
Roses precious, pricey commodity for holiday
Many of roses delivered by Ridgefield Floral & Gifts for Valentine’s Day are supplied by flower wholesalers like Frank Adams Wholesale Florist in North Portland, which supplies 13 flower shops in Clark County.
Before they end up at the wholesaler, though, many roses start on a farm in South America. They’re cut, immediately refrigerated, put on a plane to Miami and then flown to Portland.
Prices of roses increase substantially for Valentine’s Day for the flower shops that buy them from wholesalers, which is passed on to consumers.
“Flower distributors increase the price substantially; they almost double the price of roses for us. Often I have to prebook my flowers or I won’t get them. I had to order my Valentine’s flowers in December,” said Teri Paterson, owner of Ridgefield Floral & Gifts. Angie Lopez, a buyer at Frank Adams, said the increase is because farms “pinch” roses to double their Valentine’s Day production. A pinch is when the farmer cut off the top of a flower stem before it has the chance to bloom, which helps it to send more stems for multiple flowers. Losing out on sales during the pinch causes the rise in cost to wholesalers — along with freight costs, which Lopez said can double for a holiday. “Those airlines make more money on produce than flowers so it becomes a big challenge to have enough flights going from Quito, Ecuador, to Miami,” Lopez said. She said they expect to sell out of 75,300 stemmed roses this season.
Ridgefield Floral & Gifts
328 Pioneer St., Ridgefield
Employees: 7
Online: www.ridgefieldfloral.net
Revenue: Owner Teri Paterson said that sales have increased “year after year” in the three years she has owned it and that from 2017-2018, “probably increased 20 percent.” 
Bureau of Labor Statistics job outlook: Nonmetropolitan Southwest Washington is one of the top-paying areas for floral designers, with an annual mean wage of $31,890. The Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, Ore., metropolitan area has one of the highest employment levels of floral designers, with 600 in the region, but has a lower annual mean wage of $25,870. Employment of floral designers is projected to decline 6 percent through 2026 due to online flower outlets and big-box grocery stores having their own cut flowers for sale. This will cause floral designer employment to decrease 18 percent in florist shops but grow 6 percent in grocery stores, according to the BLS.
WORKING IN CLARK COUNTY Working in Clark County, a brief profile of interesting Clark County business owners or a worker in the public, private, or nonprofit sector. Send ideas to Lyndsey Hewitt: [email protected]; fax 360-735-4598; phone 360-735-4550.
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usatrendingsports · 6 years
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2018 Senior Bowl invite tracker: OSU’s Mason Rudolph heading to Cell
Mason Rudolph has accepted an invitation to the 2018 Reese’s Senior Bowl, immediately turning into the headliner on the signal-caller spot for the exhibition recreation in a little bit over a month. 
The Oklahoma State star sat atop my rankings many of the 2017 season till a late-season lull sank him to No. 2 amongst quarterbacks and simply out of the highest 10 general. 
His mixture of dimension (6-foot-Four), pocket presence, consolation studying via progressions, good downfield accuracy, timing on anticipation throws, and constant, high-level manufacturing led to me holding Rudolph in such excessive regard. 
Nonetheless, it appears as if the consensus on the redshirt senior just isn’t as favorable, as many have him clearly exterior the highest three quarterback prospects — Josh Rosen, Sam Darnold, and Baker Mayfield — and more likely to be decide in Spherical 2. 
Clearly, Rudolph’s week in Cell on the Senior Bowl will impression on how he is considered in NFL circles. With out his fellow classmates on the quarterback spot taking part, he’ll have a main alternative to enhance his draft inventory.
As at all times, the Senior Bowl will happen at Laad-Peebles stadium in Cell, Alabama. The sport is on January 28 at 12:30 pm EST. 
The week of apply earlier than the sport is when a big portion of the NFL scouting group — each crew staff and media members — ascend on Cell to do most of their analysis. 
Solely a small fraction of the media contingent stays for the sport, because it’ll air on NFL Community. 
Here is a listing of those that’ve accepted invites, by place: 
Quarterback 
Mason Rudolph, Oklahoma State
Kurt Benkert, Virginia
Mike White, Western Kentucky 
Luke Falk, Washington State
Kyle Lauletta, Richmond
Operating Again 
Kalen Ballage, Arizona State
Akrum Wadley, Iowa
Royce Freeman, Oregon
Rashaad Penny, San Diego State
Large Receiver
Marcell Ateman, Oklahoma State
Jaleel Scott, New Mexico State
Michael Gallup, Colorado State
Anthony Miller, Memphis
Allen Lazard, Iowa State
J’Mon Moore, Missouri
James Washington, Oklahoma State
Tight Finish
Adam Breneman, UMass
Tyler Conklin, Central Michigan
Troy Fumagalli, Wisconsin
Dallas Goedert, South Dakota State
Chris Herndon, Miami (FL.)
Durham Smythe, Notre Dame
Ian Thomas, Indiana
Offensive Sort out
Tyrell Crosby, Oregon 
Alex Cappa, Humboldt State
Cole Madison, Washington State
Chukwuma Okorafor, Western Michigan
Martinas Rankin, Mississippi State
Desmond Harrison, West Georgia
Brandon Parker, North Carolina A&T
Timon Parris, Stony Brook
Offensive Guard
Wyatt Teller, Virginia Tech 
Sean Welsh, Iowa
Isaiah Wynn, Georgia
Skyler Phillips, Idaho State
Will Hernandez, UTEP 
Heart
Frank Ragnow, Arkansas
Austin Corbett, Nevada 
Fullback 
Jaylen Samuels, North Carolina State
Dimitri Flowers, Oklahoma
Defensive Finish
Andrew Brown, Virginia
Marcus Davenport, UTSA
Duke Ejiofor, Wake Forest
Kylie Fitts, Utah
Jalyn Holmes, Ohio State
Kemoko Turay, Rutgers
Defensive Sort out
Maurice Hurst, Michigan
B.J. Hill, NC State
Justin Jones, NC State
Derrick Nnadi, Florida State
Outdoors Linebacker
Harold Landry, Boston Faculty
Garret Dooley, Wisconsin
Uchenna Nwosu, USC
Fred Warner, BYU
Inside Linebacker
Skai Moore, South Carolina
Micah Kiser, Virginia 
Nick DeLuca, North Dakota State
Darius Leonard, South Carolina State 
Mike McCray, Michigan
Tre’ Williams, Auburn
Cornerback
Christian Campbell, Penn State
Danny Johnson, Southern
Duke Dawson, Florida
Kamrin Moore, Boston Faculty
Siran Neal, Jacksonville State
Taron Johnson, Weber State
Darius Phillips, Western Michigan
M.J. Stewart, North Carolina
Chandon Sullivan, Georgia State
D’Montre Wade, Murray State
Security
Quin Blanding, Virginia
Trayvon Henderson, Hawaii
Tray Matthews, Auburn 
Armani Watts, Texas A&M
Punter
Johnny Townsend, Florida
Kicker
Daniel Carlson, Auburn 
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junker-town · 6 years
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NFL Draft 2018: Best players available after Round 3
All eyes will be on Shaquem Griffin and where he’ll get picked.
On the third and final day of the 2018 NFL draft, all eyes will be on Central Florida’s Shaquem Griffin. The best story of the draft this year, Griffin remains available after 100 picks.
Griffin isn’t the only intriguing name still on the board. The third day of the draft also features a lot of good wide receiver prospects, starting with Equanimeous St. Brown of Notre Dame. He, Marcell Ateman of Oklahoma State and Auden Tate of Florida State are all big targets who can make plays on the outside.
Then there’s Michigan defensive tackle Maurice Hurst. Flagged for a heart condition at the NFL Scouting Combine, and since being cleared, Hurst has been free falling. But don’t forget the Atlanta Falcons stole Grady Jarrett in the fifth round. If Hurst truly doesn’t have a health issue, he can be the 2018 version of Jarrett.
There are also some good offensive linemen still out there, paced by Tyrell Crosby of Oregon. He’s a physical blocker who played left tackle but projects to the right side.
17. Maurice Hurst, DL, Michigan
47. Tim Settle, DL, Virginia Tech
56. Tyrell Crosby, OT, Oregon
63. Jaylen Samuels, TE/WR/RB/FB, North Carolina State
73. Equanimeous St. Brown, WR, Notre Dame
74. Jamarco Jones, OT, Ohio State
75. Ogbonnia Okoronkwo, Edge, Oklahoma
78. Da’Shawn Hand, DL, Alabama
79. Duke Ejiofor, Edge, Wake Forest
82. DeShon Elliott, S, Texas
83. Josey Jewell, LB, Iowa
84. Tarvarus McFadden, CB, Florida State
85. Marcus Allen, S, Penn State
86. Nick Nelson, CB, Wisconsin
87. Ian Thomas, TE, Indiana
89. Hercules Mata’afa, Edge, Washington State
90. Nick DeLuca, LB, North Dakota State
91. Shaquem Griffin, LB, Central Florida
95. Josh Sweat, Edge, Florida State
96. Deon Cain, WR, Clemson
99. Troy Fumagalli, TE, Wisconsin
101. John Kelly, RB, Tennessee
103. Holton Hill, CB, Texas
104. Marcell Ateman, WR, Oklahoma State
105. Nyheim Hines, RB, North Carolina State
106. Kevin Toliver, CB, LSU
107. Jeff Holland, Edge, Auburn
108. Poona Ford, DL, Texas
109. Genard Avery, LB, Memphis
110. Quenton Meeks, CB, Stanford
111. Quin Blanding, S, Virginia
112. Kentavius Street, Edge, North Carolina State
113. Auden Tate, WR, Florida State
114. Christopher Herndon, TE, Miami
115. Andrew Brown, DT/DE, Virginia
117. DaeSean Hamilton, WR, Penn State
118. Taylor Hearn, G, Clemson
120. Durham Smythe, TE, Notre Dame
121. Jordan Lasley, WR, UCLA
122. Mark Walton, RB, Miami
123. J’Mon Moore, WR, Missouri
125. Armani Watts, S, Texas A&M
126. Wyatt Teller, G, Virginia Tech
128. Dorance Armstrong, Edge, Kansas
129. Kyzir White, S, West Virginia
130. Mike McCray, LB, Michigan
133. Simmie Cobbs Jr., WR, Indiana
134. Anthony Averett, CB, Alabama
135. Christian Sam, LB, Arizona State
136. Michael Dickson, P, Texas
137. Allen Lazard, WR, Iowa State
138. Tony Brown, CB, Alabama
139. Trey Quinn, WR, SMU
140. Trey Flowers, S, Oklahoma State
143. David Bright, G, Stanford
144. Trenton Thompson, DL, Georgia
145. Dane Cruikshank, CB, Arizona
146. Korey Robertson, WR, Southern Miss
147. Jack Cichy, LB, Wisconsin
148. RJ McIntosh, DL, Miami
149. Jalyn Holmes, Edge, Ohio State
150. Parry Nickerson, CB, Tulane
153. Sean Welsh, G, Iowa
154. Josh Adams, RB, Notre Dame
155. Tegray Scales, LB, Indiana
156. Toby Weathersby, OT, LSU
157. Dalton Schultz, TE, Stanford
158. Foley Fatukasi, DL, Connecticut
159. Ade Aruna, Edge, Tulane
160. Cole Madison, G, Washington State
162. Braxton Berrios, WR, Miami
163. Kalen Ballage, RB, Arizona State
164. Brett Toth, OT, Army
165. Akrum Wadley, RB, Iowa
166. Jordan Whitehead, S, Pittsburgh
167. Caleb Wilson, TE, UCLA
168. Mike White, QB, Western Kentucky
169. D.J. Reed, CB, Kansas State
170. Antonio Callaway, WR, Florida
171. Damon Webb, S, Ohio State
172. Dimitri Flowers, FB/TE, Oklahoma
174. Marcus Baugh, TE, Ohio State
175. Marquis Haynes, Edge, Ole Miss
176. Bo Scarbrough, RB, Alabama
177. Joel Iyiegbuniwe, LB, Western Kentucky
178. Eddy Pineiro, K, Florida
179. Darius Phillips, CB, Western Michigan
180. Desmond Harrison, OT, West Georgia
181. John Atkins, DL, Georgia
182. Andre Smith, LB, North Carolina
183. Davin Bellamy, Edge, Georgia
185. Riley Ferguson, QB, Memphis
186. Cedrick Wilson, WR, Boise State
187. Kendrick Norton, DL, Miami
188. Ray-Ray McCloud, WR, Clemson
189. Leon Jacobs, LB, Wisconsin
190. Joe Ostman, Edge, Central Michigan
191. Will Clapp, C, LSU
192. Deontay Burnett, WR, Southern California
193. Roc Thomas, RB, Jacksonville State
194. Luke Falk, QB, Washington State
195. Ito Smith, RB, Southern Miss
197. Kyle Lauletta, QB, Richmond
198. JK Scott, P, Alabama
199. Shaun Dion Hamilton, LB, Alabama
200. Keke Coutee, WR, Texas Tech
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