Pre-draft Hudson was graded as the sixth best available offensive guard in the
2011 NFL draft and projected to be a second to third round pick by
Sports Illustrated. He was projected to be moved to center, due to his "limited size".
Kansas City Chiefs 2011 Hudson was selected in the second round, with the 55th overall pick, by the
Kansas City Chiefs. He was the highest selected Seminoles offensive lineman since
Alex Barron went 19th overall to the St. Louis Rams in
2005. On July 29, 2011, the Kansas City Chiefs signed him to a four-year, $3.50 million contract with a signing bonus of $104,892. He entered training camp his rookie year competing with veteran
Casey Wiegmann for the starting center position. He was named the backup center to Wiegmann to begin the regular season. He made his regular season debut in the Kansas City Chiefs' season-opening loss to the
Buffalo Bills. On November 27, 2011, Hudson earned his first career start during a 13–9 loss to the
Pittsburgh Steelers. He finished his rookie season with 16 games and one start as the
Kansas City Chiefs finished 7–9 and fired head coach
Todd Haley.
2012 Hudson entered training camp in 2012, competing with
Rob Bruggeman and Cam Holland to be the Chiefs' starting center. Head coach
Romeo Crennel named Hudson the starting center to begin the regular season. On September 23, 2012, Hudson suffered a broken leg during the Chiefs' 27–24 overtime victory against the
New Orleans Saints. He was placed on injured-reserve for the remainder of the season three days later and finished his second season with three starts in the first three games.
2013 Hudson returned in time for training camp and competed with
Eric Kush and
Tommie Draheim to keep his job as the starting center. The Kansas City Chiefs' new head coach,
Andy Reid, named him the starting center to begin the regular season. Hudson played in all 16 games and started the first 15, helping the Chiefs achieve an 11–5 record.
Oakland / Las Vegas Raiders On March 11, 2015, the
Oakland Raiders signed Hudson to a five-year, $44.5 million contract with $20 million guaranteed. He finished his first season with the Raiders giving up only eight pressures and starting 13 games. Hudson missed Weeks 10, 12, and 13 with a sprained right ankle and had
Tony Bergstrom fill in.
Pro Football Focus ranked him the fifth best center in 2015 and graded him as the best pass blocker at center. Hudson returned as the Raiders' starting center in 2016, started all 16 regular season games, and was the only player on the team to play every offensive snap. He was selected to his first Pro Bowl along with fellow Raider's offensive linemen
Donald Penn and
Kelechi Osemele. On December 19, 2017, Hudson was named to his second Pro Bowl along with fellow Raider offensive linemen Donald Penn and Kelechi Osemele for the second straight year. On August 30, 2019, Hudson signed a three-year, $33.75 million contract extension with the Raiders, making him the highest-paid center in the NFL. Hudson was placed on the reserve/
COVID-19 list by the team on October 22, 2020, and was activated two days later.
Arizona Cardinals Hudson, along with a seventh-round selection in the
2021 NFL draft, was traded to the
Arizona Cardinals on March 17, 2021, in exchange for a third-round selection (
Malcolm Koonce) in the 2021 NFL Draft. He was named the Cardinals starting center for the 2021 season. He was placed on injured reserve on October 16 with rib and shoulder injuries. He was activated on November 6. After contemplating retirement in the offseason, Hudson returned as the Cardinals starting center in 2022. He started the first four games, then missed the next five games before being placed on injured reserve on November 12, 2022. ==Legacy==