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2010 NBA Draft

The Washington Wizards selected point guard John Wall with the top overall pick in the 2010 NBA Draft. Wall joined the Wizards after spending one season at the University of Kentucky. Wall, who was named SEC Player of the Year in 2010, finished second in Rookie of the Year voting for the 2010-11 NBA season.

Wall was one of a record five players selected from Kentucky in the first round of the 2010 NBA Draft.

Top Ten Picks in the 2010 NBA Draft

With the second overall pick in the 2010 NBA Draft, the Philadelphia 76ers selected Ohio State guard Evan Turner. At number three, the New Jersey Nets chose Georgia Tech forward Derrick Favors. Syracuse forward Wes Johnson went to the Minnesota Timberwolves at number four, while the Sacramento Kings took Kentucky center DeMarcus Cousins to round out the top five.

The top 10 picks in the 2010 NBA Draft included:

  1. Golden State Warriors – Ekpe Udoh (PF, Baylor)
  2. Detroit Pistons – Greg Monroe (C, Georgetown)
  3. Los Angeles Clippers – Al-Farouq Aminu (SF, Wake Forest)
  4. Utah Jazz – Gordon Hayward (SF, Butler)
  5. Indiana Pacers – Paul George (SF, Fresno State)

The other players selected from Kentucky in the first round were Patrick Patterson, Eric Bledsoe and Daniel Orton.

2010 NBA Draft Notes

No players selected in the 2010 NBA Draft were named to an All-Star team during their rookie season. The Rookie of the Year Award went to Blake Griffin, who was taken with the top overall pick in the 2009 NBA Draft but missed all what would have been his rookie season due to injury. Griffin, Wall, Landry Fields, Demarcus Cousins and Gary Neal were all named to the NBA All-Rookie Team.

The most notable player not to be selected during the 2010 NBA Draft was point guard Jeremy Lin. Ben Uzoh, Sherron Collins and Marqus Blakely also weren’t selected.

Download: 2010 NBA Draft

2011 NBA Draft

The Cleveland Cavaliers selected Duke point guard Kyrie Irving with the top overall pick in the 2011 NBA Draft. Irving joined the Cavs after spending just one season with the Blue Devils. Cleveland, which had acquired the pick in a trade with the Los Angeles Clippers earlier in the season, was looking to rebuild after the departure of star LeBron James following the 2010 season. Irving would go on to win Rookie of the Year honors for the 2011-12 NBA season.

Irving was one selected with one of the two top-five picks the Cavs held in the 2011 NBA Draft.

Top Ten Picks in the 2011 NBA Draft

With the second overall pick in the 2011 NBA Draft, the Minnesota Timberwolves selected Arizona forward Derrick Williams. At number three, the Utah Jazz picked Kentucky center Enes Kanter. The Cavs were on the board again at number four and selected Texas forward Tristan Thompson. The Toronto Raptors rounded out the top five by selecting Lithuanian center Jonas Valanciunas.

The top 10 picks in the 2011 NBA Draft included:

  1. Washington Wizards – Jan Vesely (PF, Czech Republic)
  2. Sacramento Kings – Bismack Biyombo (PF, DR Congo)
  3. Detroit Pistons – Brandon Knight (PG, Kentucky)
  4. Charlotte Bobcats – Kemba Walker (PG, UConn)
  5. Milwaukee Bucks – Jimmer Fredette (PG, BYU)

Meanwhile, twins Markieff and Marcus Morris were selected with back-to-back picks in the first round. Markieff was selected 13th overall by the Phoenix Suns, while Marcus went 14th to the Houston Rockets. The Chicago Bulls wrapped up the first round by picking Marquette forward Jimmy Butler.

2011 NBA Draft Notes

No one from the 2011 NBA Draft class was named to the All-Star Game during their rookie season. Irving, Knight, Klay Thompson, Kenneth Faried, Ricky Rubio, Iman Shumpert and Kawhi Leonard were named to the NBA All-Rookie First Team.

The final pick of the 2011 NBA Draft was guard Isaiah Thomas, who was selected 60th overall by the Sacramento Kings.

Download: 2011 NBA Draft

2012 NBA Draft

The New Orleans Hornets selected Kentucky big man Anthony Davis with the top overall pick in the 2012 NBA Draft. Davis was taken with the top pick after helping lead Kentucky to the 2012 national championship. Davis was named the Most Outstanding Player of the 2012 Final Four for his efforts.

Davis was one of four players from Kentucky selected in the first round of the 2012 NBA Draft.

Top Ten Picks of the 2012 NBA Draft

The Charlotte Bobcats took Kentucky forward Michael Kidd-Gilchrist with the second overall selection in the 2012 NBA Draft. At number three, the Washington Wizards took Florida guard Bradley Beal. The Cleveland Cavaliers selected Syracuse guard Dion Waiters with the fourth overall pick, while the Sacramento Kings rounded out the top five with the selection of Kansas forward Thomas Robinson.

The top 10 picks in the 2012 NBA Draft included:

  1. Portland Trail Blazers – Damian Lillard (PG, Weber State)
  2. Golden State Warriors – Harrison Barnes (SF, North Carolina)
  3. Toronto Raptors – Terrence Ross (SG, Washington)
  4. Detroit Pistons – Andre Drummond (C, UConn)
  5. New Orleans Hornets – Austin Rivers (SG, Duke)

Lillard was named the unanimous Rookie of the Year after averaging 19 points and six assists per game during the 2012-13 NBA season. Lillard also was named Western Conference Rookie of the Month all six times during the campaign. Lillard, along with Davis, Beal, Barnes and Waiters were named to the NBA All-Rookie First Team.

2012 NBA Draft Notes

No one selected in the 2012 NBA Draft was named an All-Star during their rookie season. Three freshmen were selected with the top three picks, but a freshman wasn’t selected again until Drummond at number nine. Notable players who went unselected in the 2012 NBA Draft include guard Kent Bazemore, guard Toure’ Murry and swingman Hollis Thompson.

The final player selected in the 2012 NBA Draft was center Robert Sacre, who was taken by the Los Angeles Lakers.

Download: 2012 NBA Draft

2013 NBA Draft

The Cleveland Cavaliers shocked many in the basketball world by selecting UNLV forward Anthony Bennett with the first overall pick in the 2013 NBA Draft. Bennett bolted for the NBA after spending one year with the Rebels. Bennett became the first-ever Canadian-born player to be selected with the first overall pick.

Bennett was one of only two players born in Canada taken in the 2013 NBA Draft.

Top Ten Picks of the 2013 NBA Draft

The Orlando Magic selected Indiana guard Victor Oladipo with the second overall pick in the in the 2013 NBA Draft. The Washington Wizards selected Georgetown swingman Otto Porter at number three, while the Charlotte Bobcats took Indiana big man Cody Zeller fourth overall. The Phoenix Suns rounded out the top five with the selection of Maryland center Alex Len.

The top 10 in the 2013 NBA Draft included:

  1. New Orleans Pelicans – Nerlens Noel (C, Kentucky)
  2. Sacramento Kings – Ben McLemore (SG, Kansas)
  3. Detroit Pistons – Kentavious Caldwell-Pope (SG, Georgia)
  4. Minnesota Timberwolves – Trey Burke (PG, Michigan)
  5. Portland Trail Blazers – C.J. McCollum (PG, Lehigh)

The Rookie of the Year for the draft class was selected just outside the top 10 of the 2013 NBA Draft. RoY honors went to Syracuse guard Michael Carter-Williams, who was taken by the Philadelphia 76ers with the 11th overall pick. “MCW” also earned Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month honors four times during the 2013-14 NBA season.

2013 NBA Draft Notes

The 2013 NBA Draft was the final selection meeting under the watch of NBA commissioner David Stern, who retired during the 2013-14 season. No members of the 2013 NBA Draft class were named to the All-Star team during their rookie campaign.  Notable players who were not selected in the 2013 NBA Draft include Matthew Dellavedova, Seth Curry, James Southerland and Robert Covington.

Download: 2013 NBA Draft

2000 NFL Draft

The Cleveland Browns selected Penn State defensive end Courtney Brown with the top overall pick in the 2000 NFL Draft. Brown would go on to spend his first five NFL seasons with the Browns, but only appeared in only 47 games during that span. Brown finished his NFL career with 156 tackles, six forced fumbles and 19 sacks.

Brown became only the 11th defensive lineman to ever be taken with the top pick in the draft.

Top Ten Picks of the 2000 NFL Draft

Brown’s Penn State teammate and linebacker LaVar Arrington was taken by the Washington Redskins with the second overall pick in the 2000 NFL Draft. The Redskins also had the third pick and used it on offensive tackle Chris Samuels. At number four, the Cincinnati Bengals selected Florida State wide receiver Peter Warrick. The Baltimore Ravens rounded out the top five by selecting Tennessee running back Jamal Lewis.

The top 10 was rounded out by:

  1. Philadelphia Eagles – Corey Simon (DT, Florida State)
  2. Arizona Cardinals – Thomas Jones (RB, Virginia)
  3. Pittsburgh Steelers – Plaxico Burress (WR, Michigan State)
  4. Chicago Bears – Brian Urlacher (LB, New Mexico)
  5. Baltimore Ravens – Travis Taylor (WR, Florida)

Eight future Pro Bowlers were taken with picks 12-19 in the first round of the 2000 NFL Draft. Defensive end Shaun Ellis, fellow defensive end John Abraham, tight end Bubba Franks, cornerback Deltha O’Neal, linebacker Julian Peterson, kicker Sebastian Janikowski, quarterback Chad Pennington and running back Shaun Alexander were all taken consecutively in round one.

The 2000 NFL Draft is perhaps best remembered for the selection of Tom Brady. The New England Patriots selected the Michigan quarterback with the 199th overall pick in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL Draft. There were six quarterbacks drafted ahead of Brady: Pennington, Giovanni Carmazzi, Chris Redman, Tee Martin, Marc Bulger and Spergon Wynn.

Notes from the 2000 NFL Draft

“Mr. Irrelevant” of the 2000 NFL Draft was Northwestern State safety Mike Green, who was taken by the Chicago Bears with the 254th overall pick. Green went on to play for the Bears, Seahawks and Redskins over nine NFL seasons.

Notable players who weren’t selected in the 2000 NFL Draft include center Shaun O’Hara, wide receiver Michael Lewis, kicker Shayne Graham and defensive end Adewale Ogunleye.

Download: 2000 NFL Draft

2001 NFL Draft

The Atlanta Falcons selected Virginia Tech quarterback Michael Vick with the top overall pick in the first round of the 2001 NFL Draft. Vick would appear in eight games in his rookie season before starting in 15 in 2002. Vick guided the Falcons to three division titles before serving prison time for his role in a dogfighting ring after the 2006 season. Upon his release, Vick joined the Philadelphia Eagles.

Vick was one of 11 quarterbacks selected in the 2001 NFL Draft.

Top Ten Picks of the 2001 NFL Draft

With the second overall pick in the 2001 NFL Draft, the Arizona Cardinals selected Texas guard Leonard Davis, who was the first of many future Pro Bowlers selected in round one. At number three, the Cleveland Browns selected Florida defensive tackle Gerard Warren. Defensive end Justin Smith went number four to the Cincinnati Bengals, while the San Diego Chargers selected future Hall of Fame running back LaDainian Tomlinson fifth.

The top 10 was rounded out by:

  1. New England Patriots – Richard Seymour (DT, Georgia)
  2. San Francisco 49ers – Andre Carter (DE, California)
  3. Chicago Bears – David Terrell (WR, Michigan)
  4. Seattle Seahawks – Koren Robinson (WR, NC State)
  5. Green Bay Packers – Jamal Reynolds (DE, Florida State)

Several future Pro Bowlers were selected after the top 10 in the first round of the 2001 NFL Draft, including defensive tackle Marcus Stroud, wide receiver Santana Moss, guard Steve Hutchinson, defensive tackle Casey Hampton, cornerback Nate Clements, running back Deuce McAllister, running back Michael Bennett, wide receiver Reggie Wayne, and tight end Todd Heap.

With the first pick of the second round, the San Diego Chargers selected quarterback Drew Brees. Kyle Vanden Bosch, Alge Crumpler, Chad Johnson, Kendrell Bell, Kris Jenkins, Aaron Schobel, Matt Light, Chris Chambers, Travis Henry and Shaun Rogers also went in the second round. Wide receiver T. J. Houshmandzadeh lasted all the way until the seventh round.

Notes from the 2001 NFL Draft

A total of 246 players were taken in the 2001 NFL Draft. “Mr. Irrelevant” was BYU tight end Tevita Ofahengaue, who was taken by the Cardinals with pick number 246. Notable players who weren’t selected in the 2001 NFL Draft include kicker Jay Feely, fellow kicker Rob Bironas and linebacker Antonio Pierce.

Download: 2001 NFL Draft

2002 NFL Draft

The Houston Texans were on the clock for the first time as a franchise during the 2002 NFL Draft. With the number-one overall pick, the Texans selected Fresno State quarterback David Carr. As an expansion team, the Texans were awarded the top choice in the 2002 NFL Draft. Despite helping the Texans win their first-ever regular season game (19-10 over the Dallas Cowboys), Houston collected only four victories in Carr’s rookie season. Carr was also sacked a single-season record 76 times.

Carr was one of 15 quarterbacks selected in the 2002 NFL Draft.

Top Ten Picks of the 2002 NFL Draft

The only future Pro Bowler selected in the top five was North Carolina defensive end Julius Peppers, who was taken by the Carolina Panthers second overall. At number three, the Detroit Lions selected Oregon quarterback Joey Harrington. The Buffalo Bills took offensive tackle Mike Williams fourth, while the San Diego Chargers selected cornerback Quentin Jammer fifth.

The top 10 was rounded out by:

  1. Kansas City Chiefs – Ryan Sims (DT, North Carolina)
  2. Minnesota Vikings – Bryant McKinnie (OT, Miami)
  3. Dallas Cowboys – Roy Williams (SS, Oklahoma)
  4. Jacksonville Jaguars – John Henderson (DT, Tennessee)
  5. Cincinnati Bengals – Levi Jones (OT, Arizona State)

Several Pro Bowlers were taken after the top 10 in the first round of the 2012 NFL Draft, including tight end Jeremy Shockey, defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth, wide receiver Javon Walker, cornerback Lito Sheppard and safety Ed Reed. Notable players selected in the second round include Andre Gurode, LeCharles Bentley and Clinton Portis.

Notes from the 2002 NFL Draft

A total of 261 players were selected in the 2002 NFL Draft, an astounding 53 of which were defensive backs. Another 34 wide receivers, 27 linebackers, 24 defensive ends and 23 tight ends were also selected. “Mr. Irrelevant” of the 2002 NFL Draft was UNLV defensive tackle Ahmad Miller, who was taken by the Texans with the 261st overall pick.

A number of notable players went on to make the Pro Bowl after going undrafted in 2002. Linebacker Bart Scott, safety Ryan Clark and linebacker James Harrison all went unselected in the 2002 NFL Draft.

Download: 2002 NFL Draft

Super Bowl Squares

A Super Bowl squares pool or contest can add even more excitement to the big game. The winners in a squares pool or contest are determined by the score at the end of each quarter or the game. Continue reading to understand how a Super Bowl squares contest works and how you can run your own in February. The information published below is for entertainment purposes only.

Running a Super Bowl Squares Contest

There are a few different types of football squares pools. The most popular is with a blank 10-by-10 grid that contains 100 empty squares. The participants in the contest will put their names in the individual boxes until all 100 of them have been filled.

Participants are usually free to choose any square they wish because it’s a completely random draw. While the teams can be placed on the sheet while players are picking their boxes, the numbers won’t be revealed until later so no one will have an unfair advantage in the contest. One team will go across the horizontal line and the other will go across the vertical line

Lastly, you will have to generate the number coordinates. You can generate the numbers automatically online or you can place the numbers 0-9 in a hat and draw them at random. Once generated, place the numbers in the corresponding box.

That’s it! Your Super Bowl squares contest is set and all you need is kickoff.

Super Bowl Squares Prizes

Once the field is set and kickoff is on the horizon, you have to determine how prizes will be handed out. Some enjoy handing out prizes to winners at the end of each quarter. Some like a winner-take-all approach at the end of the game. With a Super Bowl squares contest, every single play in the biggest game of the year has meaning!

Download: Super Bowl Squares

2020 Super Bowl Party Games

Super Bowl Sunday is a time where millions of people gather for parties across America. More than 100-millon people watched the Super Bowl in 2012, but not everyone in attendance is there for the biggest football game of the season. If you’re in search of ways to keep the party going for non-football fans or if the game turns out to be a dud, Super Bowl party games can help get everyone involved.

2020 Super Bowl Party Games: Squares

The most popular of all the Super Bowl party games is the squares contest. This pool doesn’t require 100 different people to participate, but the most popular form of the game utilizes a 100-square grid. Participants will write their name in each one of the boxes until the grid is full. The scores at the end of quarters and at the end of the games will determine the winners.

For example, the final score at the end of Super Bowl XLVI was New York Giants 21, New England Patriots 17. The winner would be the person in the box that has Giants 1, Patriots 7. Typical prizes for winners include Super Bowl shirts, hats, and of course, cash.

Super Bowl Party Games: Prop Pool

A much more involved party game is a Super Bowl prop bets contest. In this contest, participants will fill out a questionnaire. Some of the questions include picking the winner of the game and who will be the game’s Most Valuable Player. Other questions include who will win the coin toss, how many total points will be score, and how much the winning team will win by.

The participant with the most correct answers at the end of the game will be the winner. In the event of a tie, the final score can be used to determine the winner.

Download: Super Bowl Party Games

2020 Super Bowl Squares Rules

A Super Bowl squares pool is one of the most popular contests during the day of the big game. However, some people have never heard of the pool, let alone know the Super Bowl squares rules. It is important to note that the following information published on this page is for entertainment purposes only.

2020 Super Bowl Squares Rules

There are a few different variations of a squares pool, but the most common involves a 10-by-10 grid that includes 100 blank boxers. The Super Bowl squares rules for this pool are very simple. The numbers 0-9 will eventually go across the vertical line and horizontal line of the squares sheet. These numbers will be determined later so that no one will have a perceived unfair advantage.

The person in charge of the pool will encourage co-workers, friends and family to join the pool until all the squares are filled up. Once the squares are filled, the participants in the Super Bowl will be added to the two lines of the grid. Determining which team goes where is not an important part of the Super Bowl squares rules.

Next, it’s time to generate the number coordinates. This can be done a number of ways, including by picking numbers out of a hat, using a deck of cards or by randomly selecting them online. The numbers are placed in the corresponding box to complete the grid.

2020 Super Bowl Squares Rules: Winners

Winners are determined using the score at the end of each quarter, half or the full game. Let’s say the NFC team has 14 points and the AFC team has 13 points. If you have the box that has 4 and 3, you win. Who is winning and losing is irrelevant for this pool, only the actual numbers in the score matter.

Typically, smaller prizes are awarded to the winners of quarters and the first half. The biggest prize is usually given to winner at the end of the game.

Download: 2013 Super Bowl Squares

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