Second-day draft theme: good players with baggage

? The second day of the NFL draft provided the usual assortment of highly regarded players who had just enough questions about them to cause their status to fall.

One early pick Sunday was wounded in a drive-by shooting, and another is the undersized son of a former NFL star. A third player is a quarterback who runs as well as he throws, and a fourth is a running back coming off a serious knee injury.

There also was a baseball player, Drew Henson, who was chosen in the sixth round by the Houston Texans, adding to the team’s collection of young quarterbacks that also includes David Carr, the No. 1 overall pick last year, and Dave Ragone, chosen Saturday in the third round.

And finally, there is Ken Dorsey, who lost only two games in his career as Miami’s quarterback but wasn’t chosen until San Francisco drafted him 21 picks from the end. He did better than Heisman runner-up Brad Banks of Iowa and Jason Gesser of Washington State, two standout QBs who weren’t taken at all.

It started when Dennis Weathersby (the wounded player), Dan Klecko (son of the NFL star), Seneca Wallace (the versatile QB) and Lee Suggs (knee) went quickly in the fourth round in the second day of the NFL draft instead of on the first.

So did other well-known college players like running backs Quentin Griffin of Oklahoma (undersized) and Onterrio Smith of Oregon (questionable durability), offensive tackle Brett Williams of Florida State (mobility), and Outland Trophy-winning defensive tackle Rien Long of Washington State (injuries and attitude).

The Tennessee Titans' No. 1 draft pick, Oklahoma's Andre Woolfolk, center, and No. 2 pick Tyrone Calico, of Middle Tennessee, right, answer questions during a news conference with Titans general manager Floyd Reese. The Titans introduced the players to the media Sunday in Nashville, Tenn.

All can take heart in the fact that players chosen lower have turned into stars: Zach Thomas was a fifth-rounder, and Terrell Davis and Tom Brady went in the sixth. And Troy Brown and Jessie Armstead, both were chosen in 1993 in the eighth round, which no longer exists.

Weathersby was the first to go, taken by Cincinnati a week after a bullet went through his torso and lodged in his arm. The cornerback from Oregon State wasn’t hurt badly enough to affect his career, but the shooting raised questions among some teams about his character, and he dropped from the early rounds.

“To get a guy of his caliber at this round of the draft is a coup for us,” said Leslie Frazier, Cincinnati’s defensive coordinator.

“You’ve got to think that without that incident, he wouldn’t have been on the board this morning.”