It’s baaaaaack. The draft, that is. It resumed Friday night with round 2, and whatever the SEC may have lacked in the first round it made up for in the second.

Let’s recap what happened with the last 32 picks off the board, Nos. 33-64 overall:

SEC dominates Friday night: The SEC’s streak of consecutive years with the most first-round picks was snapped Thursday night, so the conference went ahead and produced seven of the first 17 picks in the second round. The SEC closed the round with nine picks.

  • SEC (9)
  • Big Ten (8)
  • Pac 12 (6)
  • ACC (4)
  • Big 12 (1)
  • Mountain West (1)
  • MAC (1)
  • FCS Southern Conference (1)
  • Division III (1)

In the first round, the ACC and Pac 12 each led the way with nine picks apiece. The Big 12 was tied for the fewest first-round picks by a conference with only two on Thursday night, and it had even fewer in the second round.

Here’s a look at the SEC’s second-round picks:

  • No. 33 Landon Collins, SS, Alabama Crimson Tide (New York Giants)
  • No. 36 T.J. Yeldon, RB, Alabama Crimson Tide (Jacksonville Jaguars)
  • No. 38 Preston Smith, OLB, Mississippi State Bulldogs (Washington Redskins)
  • No. 40 Dorial Green-Beckham, WR, Missouri Tigers (Tennessee Titans)
  • No. 42 Jalen Collins, CB, LSU (Atlanta Falcons)
  • No. 43 Benardrick McKinney, ILB, Mississippi State (Houston Texans)
  • No. 49 Mitch Morse, C, Missouri Tigers (Kansas City Chiefs)
  • No. 56 Senquez Golson, CB, Ole Miss Rebels (Pittsburgh Steelers)
  • No. 58 Markus Golden, OLB, Missouri Tigers (Arizona Cardinals)

SEC regains total picks lead: After trailing the ACC and Pac 12 through Night 1, the SEC has retained its title as the conference with the most players drafted through two rounds.

  • SEC (16)
  • Pac 12 (15)
  • ACC (13)
  • Big Ten (11)
  • Big 12 (3)
  • AAC (2)
  • Mountain West (1)
  • MAC (1)
  • FCS Southern Conference (1)
  • Divison III (1)

Missouri carries SEC: Of the nine SEC players taken in the second round, three hailed from Missouri. Once again, the two-time defending SEC East champs came out of nowhere to lead the SEC in total draftees through two rounds. Some prominent schools, like Auburn, haven’t had a player drafted yet. In fact, Division III has had more players drafted so far than Auburn, and Kentucky has had as many players drafted as LSU. Let that sink in…

Here are the SEC picks broken down by school:

  • Missouri (4)
  • Alabama (3)
  • Florida (2)
  • Mississippi State (2)
  • Georgia (1)
  • Kentucky (1)
  • LSU (1)
  • Ole Miss (1)
  • Texas A&M (1)
  • Arkansas (0)
  • Auburn (0)
  • South Carolina (0)
  • Tennessee (0)
  • Vanderbilt (0)

Only one school in the nation had more picks in the first two rounds than Missouri, and that was Florida State with five draftees. Washington of the Pac 12 also amassed four picks of the first 64 to equal Mizzou.

Love the reputation: Shane Ray was pulled over for speeding and cited for marijuana possession only days before the draft. He still went in the first round, and to a state where marijuana is legal, no less. Markus Golden was seen by some as a third, perhaps even a fourth-round pick, but went late in the second round to a team with a menacing defense. Why did this happen? Likely because of Missouri’s defensive line reputation. Aldon Smith, Sheldon Richardson and Kony Ealy all helped raise Ray and Golden’s draft stock, and if Ray and Golden succeed in the NFL they’ll help future Tigers draft prospects.

Where are the quarterbacks?: There was not a single quarterback drafted in the second round, and after a pair of Heisman winners went 1-2 to open the draft Thursday night (Jameis Winston and Marcus Mariota), there wasn’t a quarterback taken for 62 straight picks (and counting).

LSU late to the party: Jalen Collins, LSU’s first player drafted this year, wasn’t taken until the 42nd pick, the 10th pick of the second night of the draft. The last time LSU had to wait at least 40 picks for its first selection in a draft was 2008, when it had to wait 78 picks for wideout Brandon LaFell to be drafted.

The second-round snubs?: Electrifying, field-stretching wide receiver Sammie Coates has still gone unclaimed through two rounds, as had touted South Carolina guard A.J. Cann. Both were pegged as potential second-round talents, and should be among the most coveted players early in the third round. Coates is raw and unpolished as a wideout but he has blazing straight-line speed and incredible leaping ability on the outside. Cann is a solid prospect, but the market for guards has not been fruitful thus far with a number of larger tackles going with the intention of being moved inside. Look for Ole Miss safety Cody Prewitt to potentially come off the board in the third round.