Any NFL draft without a quarterback at the top of the board is different from most editions of the annual affair, and that's the case this year.
Without a consensus quarterback you'll hear more divergent opinions about how the top 20 picks will go when talking to scouts, coaches and general managers around the league. It's an invitation for differences of opinions among decision-makers, normally pretty hearty in any draft, to get a little bigger.
After all, only four times in the past 15 drafts has a quarterback not been the No. 1 pick -- Myles Garrett to the Cleveland Browns in 2017, Jadeveon Clowney to the Houston Texans in 2014, Eric Fisher to the Kansas City Chiefs in 2013 and Jake Long to the Miami Dolphins in 2008.