The NFL Combine is going on as I speak, and I hear mixed results as to whether it's important or not in determining what players will be selected.
On one hand, it can separate the haves from the have-nots (Maurice Clarett did not do so well, while Chris Johnson and Calvin Johnson did, and look what happened to their careers).
On the other hand, some of these exercises can drop or increase a player's stock- in other words, a guy's draft stock can be about some of these goofy exercises, not on-the-field dominance. Jerry Rice had a very slow 40 time and everyone made a big deal about that despite his impressive college numbers; ditto for Lendale White, who didn't even attend the combine because of an injury, while Mike Mamula (remember him, BillD?) had a great workouts and was picked absurdly high- 7th, ahead of Warren Sapp and Derek Brooks.
Rice went on to become the greatest wide reciever ever, maybe the greatest NFL Player ever, LenDale White is developing nicely in Tennessee, and Mamula was a flat-out bust.
Some good players don't do well and are picked too high, while players that turn out well are picked lower than so-so players.
What do you think?
Is the combine that necessary to determine how good a player will be.
If you ask me, I say no; the idea that Michael Crabtree will hold off on surgery until after he runs his 40 is absurd; why jeopardize your career just to do something so stupid and so meaningless?
On one hand, it can separate the haves from the have-nots (Maurice Clarett did not do so well, while Chris Johnson and Calvin Johnson did, and look what happened to their careers).
On the other hand, some of these exercises can drop or increase a player's stock- in other words, a guy's draft stock can be about some of these goofy exercises, not on-the-field dominance. Jerry Rice had a very slow 40 time and everyone made a big deal about that despite his impressive college numbers; ditto for Lendale White, who didn't even attend the combine because of an injury, while Mike Mamula (remember him, BillD?) had a great workouts and was picked absurdly high- 7th, ahead of Warren Sapp and Derek Brooks.
Rice went on to become the greatest wide reciever ever, maybe the greatest NFL Player ever, LenDale White is developing nicely in Tennessee, and Mamula was a flat-out bust.
Some good players don't do well and are picked too high, while players that turn out well are picked lower than so-so players.
What do you think?
Is the combine that necessary to determine how good a player will be.
If you ask me, I say no; the idea that Michael Crabtree will hold off on surgery until after he runs his 40 is absurd; why jeopardize your career just to do something so stupid and so meaningless?