NFL Draft Combine - Feb 24 - March 1

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Feb 7, 2010
40,401
36,229
AFL Club
Collingwood
Other Teams
Green Bay Packers, Stanford
Combine Schedule:

Thursday Feb 25:

Media interviews for Running Backs, Offensive Linemen, Special Teamers

Friday Feb 26:

Media Interviews for Quaterbacks, Wide Receivers, Tight Ends

Saturday Feb 27:

Media Interviews for Defensive Linemen and Linebackers.
On Field Workouts for Running Backs, Offensive Linemen and Special Teamers

Sunday Feb 28:

Media Interviews for Defensive Backs
On Field Workouts for Quaterbacks, Wide Receivers and Tight Ends

Monday Feb 29:

On Field Workouts for Defensive Linemen and Linebackers

Tuesday March 1:

On Field Workouts for Defensive Backs

Workouts
40-yard dash

The 40-yard dash is the marquee event at the combine. It's kind of like the 100-meters at the Olympics: It's all about speed, explosion and watching skilled athletes run great times. These athletes are timed at 10, 20 and 40-yard intervals. What the scouts are looking for is an explosion from a static start.

Bench press
The bench press is a test of strength -- 225 pounds, as many reps as the athlete can get. What the NFL scouts are also looking for is endurance. Anybody can do a max one time, but what the bench press tells the pro scouts is how often the athlete frequented his college weight room for the last 3-5 years.

Vertical jump
The vertical jump is all about lower-body explosion and power. The athlete stands flat-footed and they measure his reach. It is important to accurately measure the reach, because the differential between the reach and the flag the athlete touches is his vertical jump measurement.

Broad jump
The broad jump is like being in gym class back in junior high school. Basically, it is testing an athlete's lower-body explosion and lower-body strength. The athlete starts out with a stance balanced and then he explodes out as far as he can. It tests explosion and balance, because he has to land without moving.

3 cone drill
The 3 cone drill tests an athlete's ability to change directions at a high speed. Three cones in an L-shape. He starts from the starting line, goes 5 yards to the first cone and back. Then, he turns, runs around the second cone, runs a weave around the third cone, which is the high point of the L, changes directions, comes back around that second cone and finishes.

Shuttle run
The short shuttle is the first of the cone drills. It is known as the 5-10-5. What it tests is the athlete's lateral quickness and explosion in short areas. The athlete starts in the three-point stance, explodse out 5 yards to his right, touches the line, goes back 10 yards to his left, left hand touches the line, pivot, and he turns 5 more yards and finishes.

 
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Quarterbacks
Vernon Adams, Oregon
Brandon Allen, Arkansas
Trae Boykin, Texas Christian
Jacoby Brissett, NC State
Connor Cook, Michigan State
Brandon Doughty, Western Kentucky
Jeff Driskel, Louisiana Tech
Jared Goff, California
Christian Hackenberg, Penn State
Kevin Hogan, Stanford
Cardale Jones, Ohio State
Cody Kessler, Southern California
Paxton Lynch, Memphis
Dak Prescott, Mississippi State
Joel Stave, Wisconsin
Nate Sudfeld, Indiana
Carson Wentz, North Dakota State
Josh Woodrum, Liberty

Running backs
Peyton Barber, Auburn
Devontae Booker, Utah
Tra Carson, Texas A&M
Alex Collins, Arkansas
Marshaun Coprich, Illinois State
Kenneth Dixon, Louisiana Tech
Kenyan Drake, Alabama
Ezekiel Elliott, Ohio State
Tyler Ervin, San Jose State
Josh Ferguson, Illinois
Derrick Henry, Alabama
Jordan Howard, Indiana
Devon Johnson, Marshall
Daniel Lasco, California
Tre Madden, Southern California
Keith Marshall, Georgia
Paul Perkins, UCLA
C.J. Prosise, Notre Dame
Wendell Smallwood, West Virginia
Kelvin Taylor, Florida
Shad Thornton, NC State
Deandre Washington, Texas Tech
Brandon Wilds, South Carolina
Jonathan Williams, Arkansas

Fullbacks
Glenn Gronkowski, Kansas State
Quayvon Hicks, Georgia
Andy Janovich, Nebraska
Soma Vainuku, Southern California
Dan Vitale, Northwestern

Wide receivers
Bralon Addison, Oregon
Geronimo Allison, Illinois
Demarcus Ayers, Houston
Tyler Boyd, Pittsburgh
Chris Brown, Notre Dame
Aaron Burbridge, Michigan State
Devon Cajuste, Stanford
Leonte Carroo, Rutgers
Corey Coleman, Baylor
Pharoh Cooper, South Carolina
Cody Core, Mississippi
Trevor Davis, California
Josh Doctson, Texas Christian
D J Foster, Arizona State
Will Fuller, Notre Dame
Keyarris Garrett, Tulsa
Rashard Higgins, Colorado State
Johnny Holton, Cincinnati
Cayleb Jones, Arizona
Kenny Lawler, California
Roger Lewis, Bowling Green
Kolby Listenbee, Texas Christian
Ricardo Louis, Auburn
Byron Marshall, Oregon
Jalin Marshall, Ohio State
Mekale Mckay, Cincinnati
Braxton Miller, Ohio State
Malcolm Mitchell, Georgia
Chris Moore, Cincinnati
Marquez North, Tennessee
Jordan Payton, UCLA
Charone Peake, Clemson
Demarcus Robinson, Florida
Alonzo Russell, Toledo
Rashawn Scott, Miami-Fl
Hunter Sharp, Utah State
Tajae Sharpe, Massachusetts-Amherst
Sterling Shepard, Oklahoma
Nelson Spruce, Colorado
Michael Thomas, Ohio State
Laquon Treadwell, Mississippi
Duke Williams, Auburn
De'Runnya Wilson, Mississippi State

Tight ends
Jerell Adams, South Carolina
Stephen Anderson, California
Ben Braunecker, Harvard
Thomas Duarte, UCLA
David Grinnage, NC State
Temarrick Hemingway, South Carolina State
Hunter Henry, Arkansas
Tyler Higbee, Western Kentucky
Austin Hooper, Stanford
Ryan Malleck, Virginia Tech
Jake Mcgee, Florida
David Morgan, UTSA
Beau Sandland, Montana State
Nick Vannett, Ohio State
Bryce Williams, East Carolina

Offensive tackles
Vadal Alexander, Louisiana State
Willie Beavers, Western Michigan
Caleb Benenoch, UCLA
Le'Raven Clark, Texas Tech
Shon Coleman, Auburn
Jack Conklin, Michigan State
Fahn Cooper, Mississippi
Joe Dahl, Washington State
Taylor Decker, Ohio State
Spencer Drango, Baylor
Parker Ehinger, Cincinnati
Joe Haeg, North Dakota State
Jerald Hawkins, Louisiana State
Germain Ifedi, Texas A&M
Dominick Jackson, Alabama
Tyler Johnstone, Oregon
Denver Kirkland, Arkansas
Alex Lewis, Nebraska
Tyler Marz, Wisconsin
Kyle Murphy, Stanford
Stephane Nembot, Colorado
Rees Odhiambo, Boise State
Dominique Robertson, West Georgia
Brandon Shell, South Carolina
Pearce Slater, San Diego State
Jason Spriggs, Indiana
Ronnie Stanley, Notre Dame
John Theus, Georgia
Joe Thuney, NC State
Cole Toner, Harvard
Laremy Tunsil, Mississippi
Halapoulivaati Vaitai, Texas Christian
Cody Whitehair, Kansas State
Avery Young, Auburn

Guards
Joe Cheek, Texas A&M
Joshua Garnett, Stanford
Darrell Greene, San Diego State
Nila Kasitati, Oklahoma
Connor Mcgovern, Missouri
Alex Redmond, UCLA
Isaac Seumalo, Oregon State
Sebastian Tretola, Arkansas
Landon Turner, North Carolina
Christian Westerman, Arizona State

Centers
Jack Allen, Michigan State
Austin Blythe, Iowa
Evan Boehm, Missouri
Jake Brendel, UCLA
Graham Glasgow, Michigan
Ryan Kelly, Alabama
Nick Martin, Notre Dame
Matt Skura, Duke
Max Tuerk, Southern California
 
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Defensive ends
Mehdi Abdesmad, Boston College
Sterling Bailey, Georgia
Jimmy Bean, Oklahoma State
Ronald Blair, Appalachian State
Joey Bosa, Ohio State
DeForest Buckner, Oregon
Jonathan Bullard, Florida
Shilique Calhoun, Michigan State
Kamalei Correa, Boise State
James Cowser, Southern Utah
Kevin Dodd, Clemson
Jason Fanaika, Utah
Branden Jackson, Texas Tech
Matt Judon, Grand Valley State
Ufomba Kamalu, Miami-Fl
Bronson Kaufusi, Brigham Young
Shaq Lawson, Clemson
Dean Lowry, Northwestern
Alex Mccalister, Florida
Carl Nassib, Penn State
Giorgio Newberry, Florida State
Yannick Ngakoue, Maryland
Dadi Lhomme Nicolas, Virginia Tech
Shawn Oakman, Baylor
Victor Ochi, Stony Brook
Emmanuel Ogbah, Oklahoma State
Romeo Okwara, Notre Dame
Drew Ott, Iowa
D.J. Pettway, Alabama
Noah Spence, Eastern Kentucky
Charles Tapper, Oklahoma
Ron Thompson, Syracuse

Defensive tackles
Andrew Billings, Baylor
Vernon Butler, Louisiana Tech
Kenny Clark, UCLA
Maliek Collins, Nebraska
Sheldon Day, Notre Dame
Adam Gotsis, Georgia Tech
Javon Hargrave, South Carolina State
Joel Heath, Michigan State
Willie Henry, Michigan
Matt Ioannidis, Temple
Quinton Jefferson, Maryland
Austin Johnson, Penn State
Chris Jones, Mississippi State
Darius Latham, Indiana
Nile Lawrence-Stample, Florida State
Luther Maddy, Virginia Tech
Chris Mayes, Georgia
Robert Nkemdiche, Mississippi
Sheldon Rankins, Louisville
D.J. Reader, Clemson
Jarran Reed, Alabama
Hassan Ridgeway, Texas
A'Shawn Robinson, Alabama
Devaunte Sigler, Jacksonville St-Al
Lawrence Thomas, Michigan State
Vincent Valentine, Nebraska
Jihad Ward, Illinois
Adolphus Washington, Ohio State
Antwaun Woods, Southern California
Connor Wujciak, Boston College
Anthony Zettel, Penn State

Outside linebackers
Devante Bond, Oklahoma
Kentrell Brothers, Missouri
Beniquez Brown, Mississippi State
De'Vondre Campbell, Minnesota
Su'a Cravens, Southern California
Kyler Fackrell, Utah State
Travis Feeney, Washington
Leonard Floyd, Georgia
Kris Frost, Auburn
B.J. Goodson, Clemson
Myles Jack, UCLA
Jordan Jenkins, Georgia
Deion Jones, Louisiana State
Darron Lee, Ohio State
Cory Littleton, Washington
Curt Maggitt, Tennessee
Tyler Matakevich, Temple
Montese Overton, East Carolina
Joe Schobert, Wisconsin
Jaylon Smith, Notre Dame
Eric Striker, Oklahoma
Stephen Weatherly, Vanderbilt

Inside linebackers
Dominique Alexander, Oklahoma
Steven Daniels, Boston College
Josh Forrest, Kentucky
C J Johnson, Mississippi
Raphael Kirby, Miami-Fl
Nick Kwiatkoski, West Virginia
Steve Longa, Rutgers
Blake Martinez, Stanford
Cassanova Mckinzy, Auburn
Antonio Morrison, Florida
Jared Norris, Utah
Gionni Paul, Utah
Joshua Perry, Ohio State
Reggie Ragland, Alabama
Terrance Smith, Florida State
Nick Vigil, Utah State
Scooby Wright, Arizona

Cornerback
Mackensie Alexander, Clemson
Eli Apple, Ohio State
Briean Boddy-Calhoun, Minnesota
James Bradberry, Samford
Anthony Brown, Purdue
Artie Burns, Miami-Fl
Juston Burris, NC State
Taveze Calhoun, Mississippi State
Maurice Canady, Virginia
Ken Crawley, Colorado
Sean Davis, Maryland
Deandre Elliott, Colorado State
Kendall Fuller, Virginia Tech
Deiondre' Hall, Northern Iowa
Vernon Hargreaves, Florida
De'Vante Harris, Texas A&M
Xavien Howard, Baylor
William Jackson III, Houston
Cyrus Jones, Alabama
Jonathan Jones, Auburn
Harlan Miller, Southeastern Louisiana
Eric Murray, Minnesota
Kevin Peterson, Oklahoma State
Jimmy Pruitt, San Jose State
Jalen Ramsey, Florida State
Will Redmond, Mississippi State
Rashard Robinson, Louisiana State
Keivarae Russell, Notre Dame
Zack Sanchez, Oklahoma
Kevon Seymour, Southern California
Leshaun Sims, Southern Utah
Ryan Smith, North Carolina Central
Cleveland Wallace, San Jose State
D.J. White, Georgia Tech
Brandon Williams, Texas A&M
Daryl Worley, West Virginia
Tavon Young, Temple

Strong safeties
Tevin Carter, Utah
Jeremy Cash, Duke
K J Dillon, West Virginia
Karl Joseph, West Virginia
Jayron Kearse, Clemson
Miles Killebrew, Southern Utah
Jordan Lucas, Penn State
Jalen Mills, Louisiana State
Keanu Neal, Florida
Tyvis Powell, Ohio State
Elijah Shumate, Notre Dame

Free safeties
Deon Bush, Miami-Fl
Kavon Frazier, Central Michigan
T J Green, Clemson
Deandre Houston-Carson, William & Mary
Derrick Kindred, Texas Christian
Jordan Lomax, Iowa
Justin Simmons, Boston College
A J Stamps, Kentucky
Darian Thompson, Boise State

Kickers
Roberto Aguayo, Florida State
Brad Craddock, Maryland
Ka'Imi Fairbairn, UCLA
Marshall Koehn, Iowa
John Lunsford, Liberty
Jaden Oberkrom, Texas Christian

Punters
Riley Dixon, Syracuse
Loc Edwards, Sam Houston State
Tom Hackett, Utah
Drew Kaser, Texas A&M
Will Monday, Duke
Nick O'Toole, West Virginia

Long snapper
Jimmy Landes, Baylor


Snubs but still projected 4th/5th round picks
R.J. Williamson, S, Michigan State
Trae Elston, S, Mississippi
Caleb Smith, TE, Oregon State
Aziz Shittu, DE, Stanford
Michael Pierce, DT, Samford
Kevin Byard, S, Middle Tennessee State
Nick Vanhoose, CB, Northwestern
Darion Griswold, TE, Arkansas State
 

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Cal QB Jared Goff measured 6-foot-4, 215 pounds with nine-inch hands at the NFL Scouting Combine.

HandGate 2016 is now officially over. Goff's hands are smaller than average for an NFL quarterback, but CBS Sports' Dane Brugler says they are not "a deal-breaker." Per Brugler, Derek Carr (9 1/8), Colin Kaepernick (9 1/8), and Ryan Tannehill (9) all have similar-sized hands. Goff is battling North Dakota State's Carson Wentz to be the first quarterback selected in this year's draft.


Source: Louis Riddick on Twitter
 
Ole Miss WR Laquon Treadwell measured 6-foot-2, 221 with 33 3/8-inch arms at the NFL Combine.

He has 9 1/2-inch hands. Treadwell is often compared to Dez Bryant, who measured 6-foot-2, 225 at the 2010 NFL Combine. Bryant checked in with 34-inch arms and 9 3/4-inch hands, so he's slightly bigger than Treadwell in every measurement. Treadwell will run the forty at Ole Miss' March 28 Pro Day. Bryant also skipped the Combine forty and ran 4.52 at Oklahoma State's Pro Day.
 
North Dakota State QB Carson Wentz measured 6-foot-5 1/4 and 237 pounds at the NFL Scouting Combine.

Wentz also measured in with 10-inch hands, dwarfing the carnie-sized 9-inch mitts of Jared Goff and Christian Hackenberg. (We kid, sorta.) Speaking at the Combine on Wednesday, new Browns coach Hue Jackson didn't hide his affinity for big-bodied quarterbacks with big hands. More so than Goff, Wentz fits Jackson's description. Both should be in play for Cleveland at No. 2 overall.
Related: Browns
 
I got 15 right in 6 minutes. Perfect dumb jock territory. :thumbsu:

But I CRUSHED the first question. :p
Aren't you a lawyer?

Remind me never to hire you!
 

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Aren't you a lawyer?

Remind me never to hire you!

I never claimed to be a smart one mate! :p

But you want me trying your case to a jury--I guarantee that. ;)
 
I'm not getting the knock on Treadwell for his speed. Marshall and Boldin both aren't quick but they just catch everything the QB throws at them, I'll take that over someone like DHB who has all the speed in the world.
Just the usual pre-draft efforts to talk down someone so he falls down the board, or talking up someone so better players fall down the board.
 
Ohio State DE Joey Bosa measured 6-foot-5 1/4 and 269 pounds at the NFL Scouting Combine.

He's nine pounds lighter than his college listing, although players often drop weight pre-Combine in an effort to run faster. A consensus top-three prospect in this year's draft, Bosa's game has begun to catch some flak in the media. Former NFL defensive end Stephen White does an excellent job breaking down players for SB Nation and penned an in-depth piece on Bosa you can read below.

Source: SB Nation
 
Ohio State RB Ezekiel Elliott ran an official forty time of 4.47 at the NFL Scouting Combine.

Although gargantuan-sized Derrick Henry generated more Twitter buzz with his athletic prowess on Friday, Elliott certainly made his presence felt. Consistent speed in the 4.4s is tremendous for a 6-foot, 225-pound running back. Elliott is far superior to Henry in the passing game and projects as a true every-down back, whereas Henry may only be an early-down clock-killing type. Elliott remains a likely first-round pick, while Henry is on the top-40 fringe.
 
Alabama RB Derrick Henry clocked an official forty time of 4.54 at the NFL Scouting Combine.

An absolute freak of nature athlete, Henry also posted a 10-foot-10 broad jump and 37-inch vertical at 6-foot-3, 247 pounds. As noted by Rotoworld's Josh Norris, Ameer Abdullah earned the highest SPARQ score among running backs at the 2015 Combine. Abdullah had the same broad jump measurement as Henry, but did it at 205 pounds. That's 42 pounds less than Henry, whose forty-yard dash time was superior to Abdullah's (4.60).
 
Alabama RB Derrick Henry clocked an official forty time of 4.54 at the NFL Scouting Combine.

An absolute freak of nature athlete, Henry also posted a 10-foot-10 broad jump and 37-inch vertical at 6-foot-3, 247 pounds. As noted by Rotoworld's Josh Norris, Ameer Abdullah earned the highest SPARQ score among running backs at the 2015 Combine. Abdullah had the same broad jump measurement as Henry, but did it at 205 pounds. That's 42 pounds less than Henry, whose forty-yard dash time was superior to Abdullah's (4.60).
Going the analytics route now GG?

Tod Gurley ranked 11th on the rankings.....
 

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