‘Most overlooked player in the draft’ hopes to make name with Cowboys as UDFA

From @ToddBrock24f7: David Durden might have been a Top-100 pick out of a bigger school; the Cowboys hope The Athletic’s “Prospect X” will play like one anyway.

David Durden’s agent believes that if he’d played at an SEC school, he would have been a Top-100 draft pick.

But he didn’t. So he wasn’t.

The 24-year-old receiver from the University of West Florida had to wait until after Mr. Irrelevant got his moment of glory to become a Dallas Cowboy, when the team invited him to sign as an undrafted free agent.

Head coach Mike McCarthy himself made the sales pitch, a job normally handled by staffers.

“We’ve had a lot of love for this guy,” Cowboys director of college scouting Mitch LaPoint said, per The Athletic. “We’ve been on David for a long time.”

That the Cowboys knew who Durden was at all could be considered a mild surprise; just a few days before selections began in Kansas City, The Athletic named him “the most overlooked player in the draft.”

In an Apr. 25 piece, Kalyn Kahler painted a vivid 2,500-word picture of Durden without ever identifying him by name. It’s an annual exercise she undertakes- polling pro scouts, tracking pro day workouts, and crunching the tape of NFL hopefuls across the country- to find what she calls “the draft’s best-kept secret.”

Referred to only by a shadowy nickname in that earlier piece, Kahler revealed in a Tuesday follow-up that “Prospect X” was, in fact, Durden.

The mysterious 6-foot-1-inch 204-pounder had an appropriately circuitous route to the Cowboys. The native of a Georgia town of fewer than 400 people played his college ball at tiny Mercer College before a coaching change led him to transfer down to the even lesser-known University of West Florida.

And all of that came after he spent 2017 in the Gulf Coast League, playing baseball for the Boston Red Sox farm team.

“Every time he hit a ball, he ran it out,” his manager said of Durden. “It doesn’t sound like it’s a big thing. But in the Gulf Coast rookie league where it’s 105 heat index every day, it’s like, pace yourself a little bit more.”

But he was bored by baseball. Football offered Durden a much faster-paced game. He was good enough- as a receiver, returner, and even a gunner on special teams- that his UWF coordinator was “scared to death” he would transfer for his senior year after getting calls from SEC schools.

Durden stayed put because he liked his small-school campus near the ocean. The first line written in his character report was: Likes to sit on the beach and drink beer.

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But despite noteworthy speed and size and three school football records set in two seasons of play, Durden was not invited to the scouting combine. He was on the Senior Bowl watchlist but didn’t get selected. He worked out on his own, believing he was good enough to go pro and trusting someone would notice.

NFL scouts agreed, with most seeming eager to keep their interest in Durden a secret. He had 22 teams at his pro day. He took meetings, had lunches and dinners, underwent physical exams, and visited three NFL cities. Several teams kept in touch. He got a pre-draft recruiting gift package from one club. The Titans called on Day 3 of the draft, hinting at using a late-round pick on him.

When McCarthy called Durden late on Saturday, he wasn’t the only head coach working the phones. Sean Payton called Durden, too. It was down to Dallas or Denver.

For the Cowboys, their seventh-round pick had come down to Durden or South Carolina’s Jalen Brooks. They felt Brooks had a higher likelihood of being drafted elsewhere; they hoped they could woo Durden after the fact with a priority free agent contract.

Dallas won Durden over; he thinks he has more of a chance to see the field.

“We gave David some good money,” LaPoint says. “But I think the pitch really was this guy’s ability to play inside and outside and then the return value and special teams value. You’re gonna have a chance to compete there.”

Dallas “came out of nowhere” to get him. There hadn’t been much pre-draft communication with Durden, though Cowboys assistant tight ends coach Chase Haslett had been a position coach at Mercer.

The Cowboys know a little about what they’re getting in the most overlooked player in the 2023 draft. Durden similarly knows little about the Cowboys. He doesn’t fancy himself an NFL fan, and he’d never even heard about the team’s massive complex at The Star in Frisco until after he’d agreed to sign.

And now it’s where he goes to work.

“I’ve never really needed a lot of motivation to want to play the game of football. But this just will make it that much more fun to go out there and prove it: ‘Hey, you didn’t pick me,'” Durden said. “I’m ready to run into somebody.”

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Broncos missed out on 2 undrafted free agents

Jack Colletto signed with the 49ers as an undrafted free agent. David Durden picked the Cowboys over the Broncos.

The Denver Broncos seem to be done (or nearly done) with their undrafted free agent signings, and there are two notable omissions.

The first is West Florida (Division II) wide receiver David Durden, who had a top-30 visit with the Broncos ahead of the draft. Denver attempted to sign Durden after he went undrafted, but the receiver chose to sign with the Dallas Cowboys instead.

The second UDFA that some Broncos fans might be disappointed to miss out on is Oregon State do-everything prospect Jack Colletto. The QB/FB/TE/LB also had a top-30 visit to Denver’s facility before the draft and he’s drawn comparisons to Taysom Hill, which led many to believe he would draw interest from coach Sean Payton.

Colletto ultimately decided to sign with the San Francisco 49ers.

Perhaps also of note — running backs Sean Tucker and Keaton Mitchell, who both met with the Broncos before the draft, signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Baltimore Ravens, respectively.

With those running backs off the UDFA board, Denver signed Fort Valley State’s Emmanuel Wilson. He becomes the sixth RB on the depth chart, joining Javonte Williams, Samaje Perine, Tony Jones, Damarea Crockett and Tyler Badie.

We are tracking all of the team’s UDFA signings on Broncos Wire.

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10 potential UDFAs Broncos could target after the NFL draft

Here’s a quick list of 10 potential undrafted free agents the Broncos could consider after the NFL draft.

The Denver Broncos only have five picks to use in the NFL draft this year, so barring any trades that add more picks, Denver will have room to sign 13 undrafted free agents following the draft next weekend.

The Broncos have a great history of landing UDFA gems, including wide receiver Rod Smith and cornerback Chris Harris. Last year, Denver signed 13 UDFAs, including wide receivers Jalen Virgil and Brandon Johnson.

It’s impossible to know for sure which prospects will go undrafted this year, but we have put together a list of 10 potential UDFAs that the Broncos could consider late in the draft or potentially immediately after the draft.

Here’s a quick list of 10 names to watch for as potential UDFA targets.

Broncos host UWF WR David Durden on pre-draft visit

The Broncos are scouting UWF (Division II) WR David Durden. Denver previously drafted an FCS player in 2022 and a DIII player in 2021.

The Denver Broncos hosted West Florida (Division II) wide receiver David Durden on a top-30 visit last month, according to KUSA-TV’s Mike Klis. NFL teams are allowed to host up to 30 non-local prospects at their facility leading up to the draft each offseason.

Durden (6-2, 200 pounds) played two seasons at Mercer before transferring to UWF in 2020. After not playing in the 2020 COVID-19 season, Durden led the Argonauts with 34 receptions for 787 yards and 10 touchdowns in 2021. He followed that up with a 54-catch, 1,128-yard, 13-score season in 2022.

As a DII prospect, Durden is likely a late-round or undrafted free agent candidate for the Broncos. Right now, Denver’s latest pick in the draft is No. 195 overall in the sixth round (that could change if the team trades down). Regardless of where the team’s final pick falls in the draft, Durden is probably more likely to be considered as a potential undrafted target.

The 2023 NFL draft will be held in Kansas City from April 27-29.

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