Several SEC draft streaks ended Thursday night. The league didn’t place any players in the top 5 for the first time since 2006 and produced fewer than three top 10 picks for the first time since 2006.

But the SEC’s streak of producing the most first-round draft picks started anew.

The conference edged out the Big Ten and Ohio State’s five picks (and Michigan State’s one) by claiming two of the three final selections on Thursday.

The Southeastern Conference also enters Friday on track to produce the most overall draft picks for a 10th consecutive season.

Ole Miss produced a trio of first-round picks and Florida claimed two. In one of the night’s many surprises, Alabama’s only first-round selection was center Ryan Kelly, as A’Shawn Robinson, Reggie Ragland and Jarrad Reed all remained in the green room at night’s end.

Outside of Ohio State, Ole Miss and Florida, Notre Dame was the only other team with multiple first-round selections. The round lasted only 31 picks, as the New England Patriots forfeited theirs due to DeflateGate.

Dating back to the 2010 draft, the SEC now has produced 65 first-round picks, compared to just 34 for the ACC and 32 for the Big 12, the two closest conferences.

2016 FIRST-ROUND PICKS BY CONFERENCE

SEC: 8
Big Ten: 6
ACC: 4
Pac-12: 4
Big 12: 3
AAC: 2
Independent: 2
C-USA: 1
FCS: 1

SEC FIRST-ROUND SELECTIONS BY YEAR

2016: 8
2015:
7
2014:
11
2013: 12
2012: 9
2011: 11
2010: 7

FIRST-ROUND SELECTIONS SINCE 2010

SEC: 65
ACC: 34
Big 12: 32
Pac-12: 30
Big Ten: 27
AAC: 8
Independents: 7
Big East: 6
MAC: 4
MWC: 3
WAC: 3
C-USA: 3
FCS: 1

The SEC produced a total of 295 picks in the last six drafts, or 49.1 selections per draft. That works out to about seven draft picks per round, so the conference is ahead of pace for its usual total.