It was a memorable draft for Scott Frost's old program and quite the forgettable one for his new program — the latter of which he had no control about.

Nebraska's 56-year streak of having a player drafted remains, thanks to quarterback Tanner Lee becoming a Jacksonville Jaguar in the sixth round. But it was another scary silent weekend when it comes to the Husker draft presence.

Here are seven points about it all after a night's sleep.

1. No spinning it, please. This was Nebraska's worst draft since it was blanked in 1962. It's only the second time since then Nebraska has failed to have multiple picks, and the last occasion was last year when only Nate Gerry was picked. Gerry didn't have to wait quite as long as Tanner Lee did on Saturday, either. Gerry was selected No. 184 overall in the fifth round. Lee was picked 203rd overall.

While it is true Nebraska didn't have a player picked in the 1970 draft until the seventh round, the rounds were shorter then. So when North Platte native Jim McFarland was drafted that year by the St. Louis Cardinals, he was the 164th pick overall.

The previous longest wait for the first Husker to be picked in the NFL Draft was when Rex Burkhead was selected at No. 190 in 2013.

The numbers don't lie. Nebraska hasn't had a draft this bad in 56 years, and the one guy who was picked played here for one season, and actually spent more time at Tulane.

2. I know there are a good number of doubters about Tanner Lee, because I hear from them often. Skepticism about how he'll do is more than fair given the high interception totals. However, I'll write here a similar sentiment to one I shared during the middle of last season. You'd think Husker fans would hope for the naysayers to be wrong and for Lee to give something this program, even in it heyday, has rarely had attached to it — an NFL QB connected to their college team.

Scott Frost, Eric Crouch and Jammal Lord all got drafted, but then moved to different positions in the league. (Obviously the late Brook Berringer might have given the Huskers that guy in the NFL if not for tragedy.)

So Lee is the first QB from Nebraska with a chance to really win a spot on an NFL roster in almost three decades.

While Lee was here just one year of on-field play, and the connection wasn't built between the QB and fan base the way it would be had he spent his full career here, the way he handled a rough year for the team (and sometimes himself) is to be commended. Even after the worst weeks, he was almost always there answering questions on Saturdays after the game and then again at the Monday press conference.

Maybe the hype about him a year ago was too much. But always remember: he also wasn't the one responsible for that.

3. Fun Husker QB draft pick facts: Gerry Gdowski was picked in the 8th round by New Orleans in 1990, Steve Taylor in the 10th round by Indianapolis in 1989, Turner Gill in the 3rd round of the 1984 supplemental draft by the New York Jets, Bruce Mathison in the 10th round by San Diego in 1983.

In the 70s, Vince Ferragamo was picked in the 4th round by the Los Angeles Rams in 1977, with David Humm going in the 5th round to the Oakland Raiders in 1975.

While Steve Taylor had some good years in the CFL, Mathison is the last Husker quarterback to start games in the NFL. Mathison was on rosters with the Chargers, Bills and Seahawks from 1983-87.

Yes, it's true, Bruce Mathison was the last quarterback to throw a touchdown in the NFL. He also started for the Bills before Jim Kelly arrived on the scene. So Nebraska hasn't had a QB doing something in the NFL since the mid-80s basically.

4. Scary trend for Nebraska: Only four times since 1962 have there not been at least three Huskers drafted. Three of those times are in the last six drafts.

The years in which the Huskers have had less than three selected are 1969, 2013, 2017, 2018.

5. Nebraska needs to get back to being a presence on opening night when everyone is really watching the draft, right?

Here's scary trend stat No. 2: After the 1970 draft, Nebraska has had only six times it didn't have a play picked in the first three rounds. But all six times are in the last 15 drafts: 2004, 2008, 2009, 2013, 2017, 2018.

I don't get caught up too much on one school having an off year in the draft. Where it becomes worrisome is when the data starts to pile up from multiple years.

6. The SEC won again, thanks to Bama.

The SEC had 53 players picked from their schools, and 12 of those were from the Crimson Tide. It's the 12th straight year the SEC won this fight. The ACC was next (46), then the Big Ten (33), then the Pac-12 (30), then the Big 12 (20).

Here's the breakdown of picks within the Big Ten: Ohio State (7), Penn State (6), Wisconsin (5), Iowa (3), Indiana (2), Maryland (2), Michigan (2), Rutgers (2), Michigan State (1), Nebraska (1), Northwestern (1), Purdue (1). Minnesota and Illinois got blanked.

Frost's old Central Florida team had four players picked. I talked with Jovan Dewitt about the draft on Friday. He was more excited about the individual triumphs of those players than anything, but there's no question he said it will give Husker coaches easy examples to point to while recruiting for Nebraska.

Basically, 'You want to get to the league? Well, we just coached this guy and this guy and this guy and look where they are now.'

7. Not to be all sour here, Nebraska has some guys who signed free-agent deals that can make some noise.

If I were to list one mild surprise, it's that Joshua Kalu wasn't drafted in the final couple rounds. Kalu and Chris Jones both have the potential to make teams.

Also, if recent history has taught us anything, don't count out former Husker O-linemen who go the free agent route — like Nick Gates is about to do. Jeremiah Sirles, Brent Qvale and Zach Sterup are all examples of guys who didn't get drafted but are still collecting a paycheck playing football.

Kicker Drew Brown will get his shot somewhere too, and his strong leg on kickoffs will be just as important as what he can do accuracy-wise on field goals.

I'll throw out one other name I think is worth watching: Luke McNitt. The fullback is headed to Atlanta. He has some of the same traits that Andy Janovich possessed and I could totally see him being of great value as a special teams guy. He had a very good Pro Day in Lincoln.

So while the draft itself wasn't good for the Huskers, the process of figuring out who from that team can make it on Sundays is only beginning.