"College Football Divisions and Conferences
College football is divided into a series of conferences and divisions to ensure the best possible competition among schools. The top division in NCAA Football is Division I, which features some of the best teams in the nation and some of the biggest universities and colleges around. Division I has several subdivisions, including Division I-A, I-AA, I-AAA, which is meant to put smaller schools with limited football budgets at a great competitive advantage. With the lesser Division I schools, the conferences are often schools within a small region or instate to save on transportation costs. Even further down the list are Division 2 and Division 3 schools, which are typically the smallest colleges and universities in the country."
Forgive me if my math is not perfect, but there are (I think) 119 schools in Division 1a alone, with approximately 125 players on each team (85 scholarship/balance non-scholarship). That works out to 14,875 football players in the top-echelon of college football.
There are 7 rounds in the NFL draft, consisting of 32 picks. 7x32= 224 picks. Add in a maximum of 32 picks in "supplementary compensatory selections" and you get a MAX of 256 picks. As far as the "Supplemental Draft" goes, there have only been 38 selections since it was first instituted in 1977.
Not even bringing into account all the talent that resides in the "lesser" divisions, and taking into account the wealth of information available, it is somewhat amazing to me that we even contemplate the concept of a "huge reach" in the draft. I understand that all is relative, but at least the math shows that even to be considered by an NFL team, a college NFL prospect has to be one amazing individual...
I have decided that I am going to pay attention through all seven rounds, right until the end. The kids deserve it, imo.