Kentucky Wildcats in the NFL Draft: The highs, lows, and top picks in draft history

It’s Draft Day in the NFL. The first round of the 2025 NFL Draft begins tonight, live from Lambeau Field in Green Bay. There are some former Kentucky Wildcats on this year’s draft boards, including Maxwell Hairston, who will be in the draft’s green room for the first-round festivities.
Before it all begins, let’s look at Kentucky Football‘s highlights since the NFL’s 1970 merger.
1977: Two first-round picks from Kentucky
In the 1977 NFL Draft, three-time All-SEC tackle Warren Bryant became Kentucky’s first first-round pick of the modern draft era when he was selected sixth overall by the Atlanta Falcons. Later in the round, the Baltimore Colts selected Kentucky wide receiver Randy Burke at No. 26 overall, the only time Kentucky had two first-rounders in one draft.
1978: Art Still picked second overall
With the second pick in the 1978 NFL Draft, the Kansas City Chiefs drafted Kentucky’s Art Still, one of the all-time greats to wear the blue and white. Still was a First Team All-American end and the SEC’s Defensive Player of the Year as a senior in 1977. He gave Kansas City a decade of dominance on the defensive line, where he was a record-setter and four-time Pro Bowl selection, until finishing his career with the Buffalo Bills.
1985: George Adams first running back off the board
Three future Pro Football Hall of Famers were already off the board when the New York Football Giants took the first running back of the 1985 NFL Draft, the University of Kentucky’s George Adams. Adams rushed for over 1,000 yards in his All-SEC senior season at Kentucky before he became only the fourth first-rounder out of UK since 1970.
32 years later, Adams’ son, Jamal Adams, was selected sixth overall out of LSU in the 2017 NFL Draft.
1988: Pittsburgh gambled on Dermontti Dawson, now a Pro Football Hall of Famer
Though he was the top-rated center prospect in his draft class, Kentucky offensive guard Dermontti Dawson admits he was surprised to get the call from Pittsburgh in the second round in 1988, a draft with little interest or need for the center position. The Steelers jumped on Dawson, a mid-round projection, at No. 44 overall.
Then in the third round, the Steelers took the second-rated center in the class, in hopes one of Dawson or Notre Dame’s Chuck Lanza could one day take over for Mike Webster, a Pittsburgh legend. Dawson quickly won the job and changed the way centers play football in his seven-time Pro Bowl career from 1988 to 2000, all in Pittsburgh.
Fun fact: Pittsburgh used its first 1988 pick on Eastern Kentucky University’s Aaron Jones.
1999: Tim Couch selected first overall
History was made in 1999 when Kentucky quarterback Tim Couch became the school’s first and only No. 1 overall pick. The 1998 SEC Player of the Year and Heisman Trophy finalist was selected by the Cleveland Browns ahead of fellow quarterback prospects Donovan McNabb and Akili Smith, the second and third overall selections.
(Ezra O. Shaw/Allsport via Getty Images)
As for his career in Cleveland, Couch was not a bust, and we can step outside if you have the audacity to say he was.
2003: Dewayne Robertson first defensive player picked, first from the SEC
Four years after Couch was the star of the draft, another Kentucky underclassman was picked very early in the first round when Dewayne Robertson was selected fourth overall by the New York Jets. The first SEC prospect off the board in ’03, Kentucky’s Robertson followed Carson Palmer, Charles Rogers, and Andre Johnson to the stage where he was the first defensive player selected in the draft. To this day, Robertson is second to Art Still in the highest-picked defensive players from Kentucky.
2011: Randall Cobb fell to the Super Bowl champs
Randall Cobb was sitting in the NFL Draft green room when he was selected with the final pick of the 2011 second round by the defending Super Bowl champions, the Green Bay Packers.
(Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)
Kentucky’s do-everything superstar fell further down the draft than many expected, but things worked out pretty well in Green Bay and beyond. After all, he tallied 7,624 yards and 54 career touchdowns before his retirement after the 2023 season.
2015: Mark Stoops’ first first-round pick
Mark Stoops’ new brand of Kentucky Football put two defensive standouts in the NFL in 2015 when Bud Dupree and Za’Darius Smith began their NFL careers in the same draft class. Dupree was Kentucky’s first first-round pick since Dewayne Robertson, while Big Z followed later in the draft’s fourth round. Dupree went No. 22 overall to the Steelers and Smith No. 122 overall to Baltimore, the Steelers’ divisional rival.
Also of note that year, Dupree’s draft suit was the wrong color.
2019: Mark Stoops in the NFL Draft green room with Josh Allen
Mark Stoops’ brand of Kentucky Football reached new heights in 2019 when Kentucky’s head coach was all over the Thursday night draft coverage as a special guest of Josh Allen. Traditionally a John Calipari move, Stoops found the cameras during primetime TV as he watched the first of five Kentucky players get drafted from the 2019 Citrus Bowl season, headlined by Josh Allen at No. 7 the first night.
Overall, the 2019 NFL Draft was a huge weekend for Kentucky. “The best moment in school history,” Calipari might say.
KSR was there:
2021: Another first-rounder in Jamin Davis, a record six picks in total
After a breakout redshirt junior year in Lexington, Jamin Davis became Stoops’ third first-rounder when he used his one year as a starter to skyrocket up draft boards. Davis was picked 19th overall by the Washington Football Team.
Joining Davis in the 2021 draft, five other Wildcats were picked for a modern-day record of six NFL draft picks from the University of Kentucky. They were Davis (1st), Kelvin Joseph (2nd), Quinton Bohanna (6th), Brandin Echols (6th), Landon Young (6th), and Phil Hoskins (7th).
2022: Robinson and Pashcal in the second
A year after six Wildcats were selected, Kentucky put two in the second round, with school record-holder Wan’Dale Robinson at No. 11 in the second and school legend Josh Paschal three spots behind him at 14th in the second (43rd and 46th overall).
Then, center Luke Fortner went off the board in the third, followed by his Big Blue Wall teammate, Darian Kinnard, in the fifth to the Super Bowl champ Kansas City Chiefs.
2023: Will Levis’ worst night
Will Levis attended the first night of the 2023 NFL Draft, hoping to be one of the three quarterbacks drafted within the first five picks. However, the night ended up being one of the worst of his career instead as he went undrafted in the first round. Adding to his fall, the green room cameras stayed on Levis and his family throughout the entire evening until all of the picks were in, making for one of the most embarrassing nights in draft history.
Levis even said beforehand, “I don’t want to go if I could be a second-round pick, you know. You don’t want to have the camera just on you all day.”
Levis could make news again in 2025 as a player on trade watch with the Tennessee Titans, the team that eventually selected him on the second day in 2025.
2024: Four Wildcats selected
Andru Phillips, Trevin Wallace, Ray Davis, and Devin Leary were Kentucky’s four draftees in 2024, headlined by Phillips and Wallace in the third round. Davis may have been the steal of the bunch, though. The former UK running back was picked up by the Bills in the fourth round, and went on to rush for nearly 500 yards with three touchdowns in his rookie season for the AFC’s runner-up.
2025: Eyes on Max Hairston
Max Hairston is expected to be the first Wildcat selected in 2025, hopefully, in the first round. Hairston is the first former Kentucky star to attend the draft since Levis, and he has already received a ton of draft day publicity, including a segment on The Today Show on the morning of Round 1.
Deone Walker, Eli Cox, and Jamon Dumas-Johnson are three more former Cats to watch on the draft’s second and third days.
For more on this year’s draft, check out Luckett’s Draft Guide on KSR+.
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