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- WHERE ARE THEY NOW? The 6 quarterbacks taken in the first round of the legendary 1983 NFL Draft
WHERE ARE THEY NOW? The 6 quarterbacks taken in the first round of the legendary 1983 NFL Draft
John Elway was taken first overall out of Stanford by the Baltimore Colts, then traded to the Denver Broncos.
Elway went on to have a Hall of Fame caliber career with the Broncos, leading the team to 5 Super Bowl appearances and winning back-to-back Super Bowls to end his career.
Todd Blackledge was taken 7th overall out of Penn State by the Kansas City Chiefs.
Blackledge played seven seasons in the NFL.
Jim Kelly was taken 14th overall out of the University of Miami by the Buffalo Bills.
Kelly finally joined the Bills in 1986 after the USFL folded, and went on to have a Hall of Fame career in Buffalo, leading the franchise to four straight Super Bowls — albeit without winning one.
Tony Eason was taken 15th overall out of Illinois by the New England Patriots.
Eason was a former junior college quarterback who had led the Illini to their first bowl game in decades. He even had his own fight song written for him by a retired Illinois professor.
Eason played eight seasons in the NFL, most of them with the Patriots, before ending his career with the Jets.
He has the dubious distinction of being the only starting quarterback in Super Bowl history to fail to complete a single pass in the big game.
Source: ESPN
Ken O'Brien was taken 24th overall out of UC Davis by the New York Jets.
Playing for the then-Division II UC Davis Aggies, O'Brien was fairly unknown heading into the draft, so much so that Jets fans attending the draft booed his selection, having preferred the more well-known Marino.
Source: ESPN
Although O'Brien is now infamous for having been drafted before Dan Marino, he managed to play over 10 seasons in the NFL and throw for over 25,000 yards in his career.
Dan Marino was taken 27th overall out of Pittsburgh by the Miami Dolphins.
Marino's draft stock had fallen after a disappointing senior season at Pitt, as well as rumors of recreational drug use, rumors which even led Marino's hometown team the Pittsburgh Steelers to pass on selecting him.
Sources: SB Nation, Bleacher Report
Marino had a Hall of Fame career with the Dolphins, including setting what were then NFL single-season records for passing yards and touchdowns in his second season.
He has had a notable media career outside of football as well, serving as an NFL analyst for CBS for several years and even starring in the Jim Carrey comedy "Ace Ventura Pet Detective." He has also taken on a large role with the Dolphins front office in recent years.
Source: The Palm Beach Post
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