The Oakland Raiders selected QB Terrelle Pryor with the 18th pick in the third round of the NFL supplemental draft Monday. APSelecting Pryo...
The Oakland Raiders selected QB Terrelle Pryor with the 18th pick in the third round of the NFL supplemental draft Monday.
APSelecting Pryor means the Raiders have forfeited their third-round pick in the 2012 draft. ESPN's John Clayton reports that Pryor can expect a four-year, $2.36 million deal with a $591,000 signing bonus. Clayton adds that the Raiders are more interested in employing Pryor as a receiver than a quarterback.
Pryor worked out for 17 teams Saturday and said he wouldn't appeal his five-game suspension, levied as a result of his admission to receiving impermissible benefits as a student at Ohio State.
He ran the 40-yard dash in 4.36 seconds and threw an array of passes during the workout.
The Dallas Cowboys had the first pick and the PittsburghSteelers have the last pick.
The remaining eligible players:
Former Georgia running back Caleb King, former Northern Illinois safety Tracy Wilson, former Western Carolina CBTorez Jones, former Lindenwood University DE Keenan Mace, and former North Carolina DE Michael McAdoo.
APSelecting Pryor means the Raiders have forfeited their third-round pick in the 2012 draft. ESPN's John Clayton reports that Pryor can expect a four-year, $2.36 million deal with a $591,000 signing bonus. Clayton adds that the Raiders are more interested in employing Pryor as a receiver than a quarterback.
Pryor worked out for 17 teams Saturday and said he wouldn't appeal his five-game suspension, levied as a result of his admission to receiving impermissible benefits as a student at Ohio State.
He ran the 40-yard dash in 4.36 seconds and threw an array of passes during the workout.
The Dallas Cowboys had the first pick and the PittsburghSteelers have the last pick.
The remaining eligible players:
Former Georgia running back Caleb King, former Northern Illinois safety Tracy Wilson, former Western Carolina CBTorez Jones, former Lindenwood University DE Keenan Mace, and former North Carolina DE Michael McAdoo.