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Scouting Combine....Don't Believe Everything That You See

JT Tothabout 2 months agoNFL Draft
Scouting Combine....Don't Believe Everything That You See

The Combine’s Role in Draft Evaluation

Each February, the NFL Scouting Combine puts prospects under a microscope: speed, explosiveness, agility, and arm talent are measured in a controlled setting while evaluators, coaches, and executives compare objective benchmarks across classes. The Combine doesn’t replace game tape, but it often acts as a catalyst, either confirming a team’s view or forcing a re-examination of long-held evaluations.

When the Combine Elevates a Prospect

  • Elite testing unlocks upside, top-tier numbers in the 40-yard dash, vertical, or broad jump give teams easy-to-compare data that can reshape a player’s projected ceiling.

  • Quarterback narratives matter- Strong throwing sessions and demonstrable arm strength can push a passer up draft boards by highlighting traits that are difficult to teach.

  • Discovery tool for scheme fits- Exceptional athletic testing can reveal players who were misused in college or who possess untapped physical tools that coaching and development could unlock.

When the Combine Misleads

  • Workouts can overvalue traits- Straight-line speed or eye-catching testing can create hype that outpaces a player’s on-field production.

  • Notable cautionary examples- Players who dominate drills but lack polish, durability, or nuanced technique on film illustrate the risk of drafting “track stars in pads.”

  • Testing can confirm concerns- Poor agility, limited explosiveness, or stiff movement often reinforce issues already visible on tape, especially for linemen and linebackers.

How Teams Should Use the Combine

  • Synthesize, don’t substitute- The most successful evaluations combine film, analytics, medicals, interviews, and workouts. Game tape remains the best indicator of instincts, decision-making, and competitiveness.

  • Contextualize testing numbers- Treat elite metrics as evidence of potential, not proof of NFL readiness; pair them with scheme fit, coaching plans, and medical context.

  • Balance upside and production- Use the Combine to identify developmental candidates while keeping a clear line between measurable traits and football performance.

Final Takeaway

  • The Combine is a powerful piece of the evaluation puzzle: it sharpens scouting when used correctly and distorts it when overvalued. Remember that football is played in pads-combine numbers should inform projections, not replace the film-driven judgment that predicts consistent NFL performance. See John Ross and Anthony Richardson for two great examples of how teams were burnt.

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