WAHIAWA, Oahu — Eli Manning was the second pick Wednesday in the Pro Bowl Draft — and he’s got his No. 1 guy on his side in wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.
WAHIAWA, Oahu — Eli Manning was the second pick Wednesday in the Pro Bowl Draft — and he’s got his No. 1 guy on his side in wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr.
The New York Giants’ duo will represent Team Rice in the NFL’s all-star game Sunday at Aloha Stadium.
“Hopefully, we can be on the same page and hook up and get a couple touchdowns,” Manning said.
Beckham and Los Angeles Rams defensive lineman Aaron Donald are serving as active-player captains for Team Rice, while Atlanta Falcons running back Devonta Freeman and Cincinnati Bengals defensive lineman Geno Atkins are captains for Team Irvin.
Manning and Beckham hooked up for 13 touchdowns this season and hope to do it again Sunday. The quarterback was asked if they have any special plays in the works.
“We’ll have to talk about it,” Manning said. “We’ve got a few plays that we’ve run over the years that we might have to throw into the offense and hopefully we can get together on a couple big plays.”
Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson was selected with the first pick in the draft. He was chosen by Michael Irvin, who is serving as a Pro Bowl legend captain opposite fellow Hall of Famer Jerry Rice.
Rice grabbed Manning with his first pick, second overall.
Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Julio Jones went with the third choice to Team Irvin, and Oakland Raiders defensive end Khalil Mack was drafted by Team Rice with the fourth pick.
Irvin took defensive players with his next three picks — Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman, Lions defensive end Ezekiel Ansah and Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett — before drafting wide receivers A.J. Green of the Bengals and DeAndre Hopkins of the Texans in the sixth and seventh rounds, respectively.
Rice selected Dolphins wide receiver Jarvis Landry with his third pick and went with the Raiders’ duo of quarterback Derek Carr and wide receiver Amari Cooper with his next two selections before taking the first running back, Minnesota Vikings star Adrian Peterson, with his seventh-round pick.
Thirty-four players — mostly linemen and special teams players — were pre-drafted on Tuesday. Forty-eight players were drafted or assigned Wednesday.
It is the third consecutive year the annual all-star game will be played in an “unconferenced” format.
A record 33 original Pro Bowl selections won’t appear in the game. Fourteen of them are in the Super Bowl, while the remaining 22 have opted out due to injuries and/or personal reasons.
Two of the stars honoring their commitments to play are Raiders teammates Mack and safety Charles Woodson.
“I feel it’s important to be here just because of the love of the game, especially with this being my first time being able to be here and I wanted to take advantage of it,” said Mack, who had 15 sacks and 77 tackles this season.
Woodson will be playing in his final game. The 39-year-old defensive back is retiring after 18 seasons in the league and nine Pro Bowl selections.
“It was about being my last time, but it was about my family and us being able to take this trip together,” Woodson said. “This will be my last time ever suiting up in an NFL uniform to actually go out there and run around as a player, so this is it. After this game, there’s no more — my NFL career is over — so we wanted to come out, enjoy Hawaii and then hopefully ride off into the sunset.”
After being played in Glendale, Arizona, last year, the Pro Bowl is returning to Aloha Stadium, where it was played every year from 1980-2009 and again from 2011-13 and most recently in 2015. The game was played in Miami in 2010.
Rice was the winning alumni captain in the first Pro Bowl to use the current format in 2013. Irvin was the captain of the winning team in last year’s game.
The draft was held in an airplane hangar at Wheeler Army Airfield, located in the town of Wahiawa in the central plain of Oahu.