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Karl Singer, the ultimate WHO? draft pick. 3rd overall in 1966. WTF? I don't even think Street and Smith's had him listed.At least Easley got on the field with the Pats for a couple of years.
1968 the Patriots drafted another DE, Dennis Byrd - but in this case sixth overall (Easley was #29).
Byrd also had a serious knee injury his senior year, which was common knowledge to anyone paying the least bit of attention to college football. Apparently the Pats were drafting based on nothing more than a Street and Smith's annual draft preview magazine though - and with surgery being what it was back then, a single torn ACL was commonly a career ending accident for an athlete. Sure enough - thanks to the Pats lack of due diligence - Byrd lasted just one season before having to retire.
Dishonorable mention to OT Karl Singer, third overall in the 1966 AFL Draft.
The NFL thought so little of him that he wasn't selected until the 19th round. Singer started one - ONE! - game before being released after three forgettable bench-warmong seasons. This despite being on the roster of some very bad teams. At least Byrd had an injury to blame - with Singer it was strictly a case of him never being any good.
At least Byrd was a known player. I was going to mention Byrd, who the Pats called to tell him they drafted him and they found out he was in the hospital recovering from knee surgery. Good scouting there.
If I remember right in the '60's the Pats drafted a player who had been killed in a car accident earlier in the year. The draft was much longer then and info wasn't like it is today but that is pretty incompetent.












