By Pro Sports Outlook, The Front Office for Fans
Apr 28, 2022

April 28th, 2022 was highlighted by the 1st Round of the NFL Draft, where historic records were set for a variety of reasons (detailed below). The Suns closed out the Pelicans behind CP3’s unprecedented perfect shooting night (14-14 FG), Dallas moved on to the second round after a comeback win in Utah, and Harden/Embiid led Philly to blowout series win in Toronto. Jordan Romano and Michael Kopech both broke franchise records, Adalberto Mondesi will miss the rest of 2022 with a torn ACL, while Ronald Acuna Jr. finally returned from the same injury. 

See what happened in sports on April 28th last year, headlined by a dunk fest in DC as the Wizards threw down a trifecta of hammers all over AD and the Lakers while Jacob DeGrom tied Nolan Ryans MLB record with his 59th strikeout through his first five starts, as well as what happened in sports on April 28th, 2020 ft. the Chiefs releasing 16-year NFL veteran P Dustin Colquitt and Orioles OF Trey Manchini tragically getting diagnosed with colon cancer that set the stage for a major comeback in 2021. 

WHAT HAPPENED IN SPORTS OVERVIEW: This daily sports post includes real headlines only (no clickbait rumors), all of the best highlights, interesting facts & records from around the NFL, NBA, & MLB, the main games to watch, notable birthdays, and a quick recap of significant events on this day in sports history. 

[SEE MORE]

TRAVON TO THE JAGS AT #1

 

HERB SHOWING FLASHES

 

CP3 COULDN’T MISS IN G6

 

BOJAN MISSED OPEN GW

 

GOBERT PUT IN A BLENDER

 

BEARD LEADS TOP 10 PLAYS

 

SUPERSTAR ACUNA IS BACK

 

BEST DRAFT PICK PLAYS

 

HUTCH CAN BE ELITE IN NFL

 

[SEE MORE]

See More Facts

[SEE MORE]

2022 NFL Draft Round 1

NBA Playoffs Round 1

7:00 PM: #4 Philadelphia 76ers vs. #5 Toronto Raptors [PHI leads 3-2]

7:30 PM: #1 Phoenix Suns vs. #8 New Orleans Pelicans [PHX leads 3-2]

10:00 PM: #4 Dallas Mavericks vs. #5 Utah Jazz [DAL leads 3-2]

*All game times listed are in Eastern Standard Time (EST)*

NFL: CB Denzel Ward, Cleveland Browns (turns 25)

MLB: SP Shane McClanahan, Tampa Bay Rays (25)

MLB: RP Brett Martin, Texas Rangers (27)

NFL: DL Grady Jarrett, Atlanta Falcons (29)

MLB: 3B Matt Chapman, Toronto Blue Jays (29)

NFL: EDGE DeMarcus Lawrence, Dallas Cowboys (30)

NFL: QB Blake Bortles, Free Agent (30)

MLB: 3B David Freese, Retired after 2019 (39)

MLB: SS Barry Larkin, Hall of Fame (58)

2018: In the 5th round of the NFL Draft, the Seattle Seahawks made UCF LB Shaquem Griffin the very 1st 1-handed player to be drafted

2016: Rams and Eagles both traded up for the top 2 picks to draft Cal QB Jared Goff and NDSU QB Carson Wentz. Other notable picks: DE Joey Bosa (3rd), RB Ezekiel Elliott (4th), CB Jalen Ramsey (5th), OT Ronnie Stanley (6th), DL DeForest Buckner (7th), OT Jack Conklin (8th), and OT Laremy Tunsil who fell to MIA at 13th after a controversial gas mask video was released on draft day

2011: Legendary 2011 NFL Draft class featured QB Cam Newton (1st-CAR), EDGE Von Miller (2nd-DEN), WR AJ Green (4th-CIN), CB Patrick Peterson (5th-ARZ), WR Julio Jones (6th-ATL), OT Tyron Smith (9th-DAL), EDGE Cameron Jordan (24th-NO), and DL Cameron Heyward (31st-PIT) all selected in the 1st round

2007: 2007 NFL Draft featured future Hall of Famers such as WR Calvin Johnson (2nd-DET), OT Joe Thomas (3rd-CLE), RB Adrian Peterson (7th-MIN), LB Patrick Willis (11th-SF) RB Marshawn Lynch (12th-BUF), and CB Darrelle Revis (14th-NYJ), among others

1990: Boston Celtics set an NBA Playoff scoring record with 157 PTS in their victory over the New York Knicks that still stands as the record today 

1987: NBA announced expansion franchises for Charlotte, NC and Miami, FL (1988) along with Minneapolis, MN and Orlando, FL the following year 

1985: Los Angeles Dodgers SP Fernando Valenzuela set an MLB record by starting the season with 41 consecutive scoreless innings that still stands today

1981: 3 future HOFers were selected in the 1st round of the NFL Draft — LB Lawrence Taylor (2nd – NYG), S Kenny Easley (4th-SEA), and DB Ronnie Lott (8th-SF) 

1966: Boston Celtics won their 8th consecutive NBA Championship with an all-time classic Game 7 victory, 95-93 over the Los Angeles Lakers, after which legendary HC Red Auerbach announced his retirement

1949: Boston Red Sox OF Ted Williams surpassed Jimmie Foxx for the most career HR (222) in franchise history. Williams recorded his career-high 43 HR that season, and ended his Red Sox career with a total of 521 HR, which still stands as the franchsie record today

 

Help Pro Sports Outlook continue to grow:

– Share this with friends

– Click FOLLOW for high-quality sports content delivered to your email or your platform of choice

– Follow @PSO_Sports on Twitter & Instagram | Pro Sports Outlook on YouTubeFacebook, & LinkedIn 

– Get 10% off all exclusive PSO designed sports t-shirts & jerseys on FanGearNation.com: Code PSO10 at check out