Top 25 Most All-Time NFL Draft Picks by College

Who will climb and who might fall this week?

The 2023 NFL draft gets started on Thursday night with the first round before rounds two and three take place Friday evening.  Saturday then sees the final four rounds happen in downtown Kansas City which happens to be home to the most recent Super Bowl champions.

You’ll certainly see more players drafted from the biggest college football programs.  Alabama and Ohio State could very easily have the first three picks all be products of their programs.

Here at Fighting Irish Wire we’re excited to see where [autotag]Michael Mayer[/autotag], [autotag]Isaiah Foskey[/autotag], [autotag]Brandon Joseph[/autotag], [autotag]Jarrett Patterson[/autotag], and perhaps another player or two from Notre Dame end up.

So which programs have the most draft picks of all-time though as we get set for the latest edition of the draft?  Here are the colleges with the 25-most all-time draft picks ahead of the 2023 NFL draft.

Super Bowl points scored by each college all time

Congrats to Alabama and Missouri who after SB 57, have finally scored on Super Bowl Sunday!

Over the Super Bowl’s first 56 editions there have been a total of 2,593 points scored.

Some of those points were scored by superstars; some were scored by incredibly unlikely heroes.

For every Tom Brady or Emmitt Smith there seems to be a Max McGee or Dwight Smith who had a huge moment or score to redirect the final outcome of a Super Bowl.

Have you ever wondered where all the Super Bowl heroes played their college football?

Super Bowl LVII had two new college programs finally get on the scoreboard. Jalen Hurts scoring three touchdowns and a two-point conversion were the first 20 points ever scored in Super Bowl play by a former Alabama player. The same goes for Missouri, which finally got on the Super Bowl scoreboard after Nick Bolton’s touchdown.

Two players also officially scored in the big game but didn’t play college ball.

So where did they all go?

Remember, touchdown passes don’t count in the record books as a touchdown scored for a quarterback – please don’t kill the messenger!