Redskins draft Orakpo to boost pass rush

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ASHBURN -- The Mark Sanchez Sweepstakes was won by someone else, leaving the Washington Redskins to take the conventional approach -- filling one of their most pressing needs with their first pick in the NFL draft.

Surprised to find him still available, the Redskins chose defensive end Brian Orakpo of Texas with the No. 13 overall selection yesterday, bolstering a pass rush that had the fewest sacks in the NFC in 2008.

"Sometimes you've got to be lucky in the draft," Executive Vice President of Football Operations Vinny Cerrato said, "that the guy that you really covet falls to you. You know, I tried for an hour to move up to get the guy. Nobody would do it."

Cerrato said he called "about five teams" in an attempt to trade up for the chance to choose the 6-3, 263-pound speed rusher. When the Denver Broncos -- selecting at No. 12 -- didn't take Orakpo, there was fist-pounding excitement in the war room, according to coach Jim Zorn.

The Redskins used only 2½ minutes of their 10-minute time allotment to make the selection.

"I was shocked that he fell," Cerrato said.

Orakpo, who had 11½ sacks last year for the Longhorns, joins a defensive line that had no player with more than four sacks in last year's 8-8 season. The Redskins had only 24 total sacks, even though the defense ranked No. 4 overall in the NFL, and a vacancy at left defensive end was created when Jason Taylor was cut last month.

The Redskins first addressed the line by signing defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth to a $100 million contract during free agency. Now they've added Orakpo.

"I'm ecstatic," said Orakpo, the son of Nigerian immigrants. "Having one of the best defensive tackles in the league, in the game right now, will make my job a lot easier, I'll tell you that much. Because that's what you need -- that force and that beast up the middle."

Orakpo wouldn't have been the choice, however, had the Redskins found the right price for Sanchez. The Southern California quarterback was essentially auctioned off to the New York Jets, who sent its selections in the first and second rounds along with three players to the Cleveland Browns to move up to the No. 5 overall pick.

Asked if the Redskins tried to trade up for Sanchez, Cerrato said: "We made a couple of calls, but it was too expensive."

The Redskins have spent a significant chunk of the offseason looking for an upgrade to Jason Campbell, who threw for 13 touchdown passes and six interceptions last year in his first full season as a starter. Owner Dan Snyder failed to get Jay Cutler from the Denver Broncos, then welcomed Sanchez for a two-day visit in the build-up to the draft.

The swirling QB scenarios have rattled Campbell, leaving him to wonder about his future with the team, but he has apparently survived the offseason and can now be assured once and for all by Zorn that he will enter the final year of his contract as the starter.

"Things were a little bit of a roller-coaster with the whole situation, through the media, through real or unreal situations with Cutler and the stuff about Mark Sanchez as well," Zorn said. "I just feel like we stayed true to what we were planning and didn't try to ride it with everybody else."

Ironically, it was the selection of Sanchez at No. 5 that helped Orakpo fall to No. 13. With Cleveland out of the top 10, that left one fewer team targeting defense ahead of the Redskins. Washington entered the draft looking at a possible rotation of Phillip Daniels, 36, and Renaldo Wynn, 34, at left defensive end.

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