Keep Texans Talk Google Ad Free!
Venmo Tip Jar | Paypal Tip Jar
Thanks for your support! 🍺😎👍

2015 NFL Combine

Status
Not open for further replies.
WR Chris Conley, Georgia, winning Underwear Olympics today...

Height/weight: 6017/213
Arm: 33 3/4
Hand: 9 7/8
Unofficial 40s: 4.41/1.60 ; 4.35/1.53
Bench: 18
Vertical jump: 45"
Broad: 11'7"
 
You can see on TV/computer the difference in how the ball comes out of Winston's hand. #kineticchain #makesitlookeasy

Petty much better using his body. Less so throwing left.


Daniel Jeremiah ‏@MoveTheSticks
Snaps under center this year
Winston 272
Mariota 5
Mannion 536
Petty 48
 
I'm curious how much nerves are taken into account here, in the drills especially. It's mildly incredible to watch on a national broadcast 20-year olds go through the biggest job audition of their lives.

Certainly it's not lost on any evaluator that these kids are completely amped up to put on a good show here. But is it more understood, as in accepted, that they'll be pressing and make some mistakes accordingly or is it considered an occupational obligation to be more apt to press through the nerves and perform?

I suppose of course different coaches & GMs will have different expectations, just haven't heard much talk about how that's factored into a final tally of performance.
 
WR forty times @ combine:


Player School Height Weight 40 time
Nelson Agholor
USC 6'0 198 4.44
Mario Alford West Virginia 5'8 180 4.43
Dres Anderson Utah 6'1 187
Kenny Bell Nebraska 6'1 197 4.40
Da'Ron Brown Northern Illinois 6'0 205 4.54
Kaelin Clay Utah 5'10 195 4.51
Sammie Coates Auburn 6'1 212 4.43
Chris Conley Georgia 6'2 213 4.35
Amari Cooper Alabama 6'1 211 4.42
Jamison Crowder Duke 5'8 185 4.56
Davaris Daniels Notre Dame 6'1 201 4.62
Devante Davis UNLV 6'3 220 4.57
Geremy Davis
Connecticut 6'2 216
Titus Davis Central Michigan 6'1 196 4.51
Stefon Diggs Maryland 6'0 195 4.46
Phillip Dorsett Miami (Fla.) 5'10 185 4.33
Devin Funchess Michigan 6'4 232 4.70
Antwan Goodley Baylor 5'10 209 4.46
Dorial Green-Beckham Missouri 6'5 237 4.49
Rashad Greene Florida State 5'11 182 4.46
Rannell Hall Central Florida 6'0 198 4.60
Justin Hardy East Carolina 5'10 192 4.56
Josh Harper Fresno State 6'1 191 4.64
Chris Jones Alabama 5'10 182 4.63
Dezmin Lewis Central Arkansas 6'4 214 4.58
Tony Lippett Michigan State 6'2 192 4.62
Tyler Lockett Kansas State 5'10 182 4.40
Deon Long Maryland 6'0 192 4.51
Tello Luckett Harding 6'0 211 4.65
Vince Mayle Washington State 6'2 224 4.67
Tre McBride William & Mary 6'0 210 4.41
Ty Montgomery Stanford 6'0 221 4.55
Keith Mumphery Michigan State 6'0 215 4.54
J.J Nelson Alabama-Birmingham 5'10 156 4.29
DeVante Parker Louisville 6'3 209 4.45
Breshad Perriman Central Florida 6'2 212

Devin Smith Ohio State 6'0 196 4.42
Jaelen Strong Arizona State 6'2 217 4.44
Darren Waller Georgia Tech 6'6 238 4.46
DeAndrew White Alabama 5'11 193 4.44
Kevin White West Virginia 6'3 215 4.35
 
I'm curious how much nerves are taken into account here, in the drills especially. It's mildly incredible to watch on a national broadcast 20-year olds go through the biggest job audition of their lives...

I'd guess not at all. Compared to football games, with up to 100,000 in the stands... this is just pitch & catch. Player can talk about it in interviews if they think the pressure hurt them.


RBs up next. Will be interesting.
 
I'd guess not at all. Compared to football games, with up to 100,000 in the stands... this is just pitch & catch. Player can talk about it in interviews if they think the pressure hurt them.

I'd imagine for these kids there right now, who've played in front of huge crowds for years, that the 100 or so in the stands today watching pitch & catch weigh relatively more than past fans at games ever have.

No doubt you're right though about it being something that can come up later in conversation. I just find the pressure aspect of each guys unique situation very interesting and wish I could hear the decision makers give more of their takes on it.
 
...and wish I could hear the decision makers give more of their takes on it.

The biggest impact on the players is the cumulative loss of sleep over their time there. I think max is ~4 hours/night. And sleep deprivation can be a very high stressor on the less sound of mind.

Last year pretty sure a prospect just disappeared from the Combine for weeks.
 
I'd guess not at all. Compared to football games, with up to 100,000 in the stands... this is just pitch & catch.

I'd imagine it varies. Maybe for most it is nothing, but for some it may occur to them that this ball coming at them is a potential million dollar drop.
 
I'd imagine for these kids there right now, who've played in front of huge crowds for years, that the 100 or so in the stands today watching pitch & catch weigh relatively more than past fans at games ever have.

No doubt you're right though about it being something that can come up later in conversation. I just find the pressure aspect of each guys unique situation very interesting and wish I could hear the decision makers give more of their takes on it.

The only thing I think I can equate it to in my life experience is playing guitar.

I'm fine, no nerves, playing a gig in front of thousands of people. That's just a faceless crowd, some people to have fun with, no biggie. I've been fine playing in front of small groups of people.

The worst gig, in terms of turn-out, was when I took a short notice gig at a local club and played for 4 people. When I introduced the band, I had the audience stand up and introduce themselves to us. It was a fun gig, more like a rehearsal, really.

But I played a gig once where I knew some well-respected guitar players were in the audience and I re-discovered stage-fright. It had been years since I'd worried about getting up and playing in front of ANYONE but getting in front of those guys (Steve Morse, Steve Bailey, Ron Eschete) scared the living snot out of me.

I assume it's the same for these kids. They know they're in front of the guys who really count.

OTOH, you want guys who step up under pressure and that's what this is.
 
The only thing I think I can equate it to in my life experience is playing guitar.

I'm fine, no nerves, playing a gig in front of thousands of people ...

Very good comparison. That must have been terrifying. Hope you played more like Chris Johnson and less like Maurice Clarett.
 
The biggest impact on the players is the cumulative loss of sleep over their time there. I think max is ~4 hours/night. And sleep deprivation can be a very high stressor on the less sound of mind.

Last year pretty sure a prospect just disappeared from the Combine for weeks.
Adam Muema RB San Diego St. pretty good stats http://espn.go.com/college-football/player/stats/_/id/502951/adam-muema

ADAM MUEMA had said he would attend his pro day on March 20. He would do what everyone wanted: dazzle NFL scouts, wow the crowd. Just as he had the last time the public had seen him -- the day he rushed for 229 yards and three touchdowns in a 49-24 Aztecs win over the University at Buffalo in the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl. He wasn't one of college football's biggest stars. Scouts didn't view him as a first- or even second-round pick in the NFL draft. But when healthy, Muema had shown he was one of the best players in the Mountain West Conference. His stats, he was fond of pointing out, were similar to those that Doug Martin put up at Boise State, and Martin became a star with the Buccaneers. San Diego State's coach, Rocky Long, once said he believed Muema was the best tailback in the country.

But in recent weeks, Muema had essentially gone underground. He'd cut off contact with most of his friends and family. He'd parted with his agent and left the NFL combine on Feb. 23 after participating in just one day. He then claimed God had told him that if he left the combine, he'd be drafted by the Seahawks -- a move that sparked a number of news stories questioning his behavior. Then, according to a friend, Muema slept somewhere in the airport in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., for three days. In reality, his chance to play in the NFL was slipping away.

"No one saw this coming," says a former confidant of Muema's. "From the moment things went wrong, I didn't sleep for five days. Even now, I'm still not settled about it. It just breaks my heart. People are trying to get him help, I promise you that."

The people who loved him couldn't reach him. Texts went unanswered, phone calls went unreturned. No one knew where he was staying. Each day, it seemed, he'd leave clues sprinkled across the Internet. On Instagram and Twitter, Muema had aligned himself with a self-proclaimed returned Christ named Lord RayEl, a man with a YouTube channel and a large Facebook following. For Muema, Lord RayEl was the light. Everything else, it seemed, was darkness.

You guys are right I am crazy, crazy

in love with Jesus it is the sweetest name I know. -- Feb. 24.

It felt to those who knew him best as though Muema had become a different person. Now we waited, ready with cameras and notebooks, to see if they were right.

I was among those who showed up to Muema's pro day. I had been a college football player once, years ago. I too walked away from the game prematurely, spurred by my fear and doubt. Maybe we could relate. Maybe he could explain to me why someone with so much promise would pursue a dream, then abandon it on the cusp of it finally coming true.

His online life was still active, if somewhat capricious, in the days leading up to his pro day. One day he'd post YouTube clips on Twitter or Facebook suggesting the world was ending, or that President Obama was the Antichrist. The next he'd post pictures of the cleats and shorts he planned to wear for the pro day workouts. He'd be up half the night bragging about the legions of new followers he'd acquired since he declared his allegiance to Lord RayEl. But even some of his closest friends were baffled as to his whereabouts. After his stint in the Fort Lauderdale airport, I heard he'd been staying with a friend in San Diego. On the night before his pro day, he slipped out and disappeared again.
much more here if interested

http://espn.go.com/espn/feature/sto...e-star-adam-muema-ditches-pro-day-nfl-combine
 
CollegeFootball 24/7 ‏@NFL_CFB
Top official 40 times for DLs.

1. Vic Beasley, 4.53
2. Danielle Hunter, 4.57
3t. Dante Fowler, 4.60
3t. Eli Harold, 4.60
Odighizuwa, Owa, 4.62
Gregory, Randy, 4.64
Hodges, Zach, 4.68
Smith, Preston, 4.74

Odighizuwa[Oh-DIGGY-zoo-wah] 33 lbs heavier than Gregory, better 40.
 
I'm drooling over Danny Shelton this morning. Unfortunately I can only dream of him ever being a Texan. Has anyone ever traded up for a NT?
 
Kentucky OLB Alvin "Bud" Dupree at 6040/269 lbs.

11'6" broad jump

42" vertical

Zach Whitman ‏@zjwhitman
Bud Dupree just became the first EDGE player to Calvin (40" vert, 11' broad) at the Combine, and he did it with room to spare.

Mike Loyko ‏@NEPD_Loyko
Bud Dupree's Broad Jump is the 3rd Best ALL POSITIONS since 2006
 
I think 1.88

Good enough for a huge man.

If you like Shelton, then you should also want the Texans to draft Malcolm Brown. They are comparable talents. In fact I think Brown is smother in his movements. Jordan Phillips is another guy with the talent to be as good as Shelton. His injury history would make him not 1st rd worthy if I were drafting.
 
LBs

Stephone Anthony 4.57, 10 yd of 1.57 <-- love this guy

Paul Dawson 1st forty: 4.95, 10 yd of 1.69 <-- huh? Did you prep?

Alvin "Bud" Dupree 1st forty: 4.57, 10 yd of 1.60

Eric Kendricks 4.66, 1.64

Benardrick McKinney 1st forty: 4.78, 10 yd of 1.74

Denzel Perryman: 40 yd - 4.81, 10 yd - 1.69

Shaq Thompson: 40 yd - 4.72, 10 yd - 1.78 <-- a bit disappointing

Max Valles 1st forty: 4.99, 10 yd of 1.77
 
Last edited:
LBs

Stephone Anthony 4.57, 10 yd of 1.57 <-- love this guy

Paul Dawson 1st forty: 4.95, 10 yd of 1.69 <-- huh? Did you prep?

Alvin "Bud" Dupree 1st forty: 4.57, 10 yd of 1.60

Dawson slowed right before the end like he had felt a twinge. Not a good run for him
 
Good enough for a huge man.

If you like Shelton, then you should also want the Texans to draft Malcolm Brown. They are comparable talents. In fact I think Brown is smother in his movements. Jordan Phillips is another guy with the talent to be as good as Shelton. His injury history would make him not 1st rd worthy if I were drafting.

I would love either Shelton or Brown in the first. Lots of guys to love in the first this year
 
LBs

Stephone Anthony 4.57, 10 yd of 1.57 <-- love this guy ME TOO!

Paul Dawson 1st forty: 4.95, 10 yd of 1.69 <-- huh? Did you prep?

Watched a couple of his games and I don't see the hype. He's not physical enough to play inside in the NFL. I see him dropping.

Alvin "Bud" Dupree 1st forty: 4.57, 10 yd of 1.60

Eric Kendricks 4.66, 1.64

pretty much as expected.


Benardrick McKinney 1st forty: 4.78, 10 yd of 1.74

Denzel Perryman: 40 yd - 4.81, 10 yd - 1.69

Surprised at his forty but with his split and quick reaction time not worried.

Shaq Thompson: 40 yd - 4.72, 10 yd - 1.78 <-- a bit disappointing

A little to slow for a safety. How can Mayock rank him as the second best safety when he didn't even play safety last year??????

Max Valles 1st forty: 4.99, 10 yd of 1.77

Give me Perryman, Anthony or Kendricks in this draft and I'm a happy camper.
 
I'm drooling over Danny Shelton this morning. Unfortunately I can only dream of him ever being a Texan. Has anyone ever traded up for a NT?

Yeah I was impressed with the clips they showed of Shelton. I'd love to add him to our DL. Most mocks I peeped at have him going to the Bears (#7) but a couple have him dropping to between 12 (drafttek) and 17 (Bleacher Rpt). I'm not sure I'd spend the picks to move up to 7 but moving up to 12 is doable.
 
Yeah I was impressed with the clips they showed of Shelton. I'd love to add him to our DL. Most mocks I peeped at have him going to the Bears (#7) but a couple have him dropping to between 12 (drafttek) and 17 (Bleacher Rpt). I'm not sure I'd spend the picks to move up to 7 but moving up to 12 is doable.

I like Shelton a lot too, and if he was the one missing piece I'd say do whatever it takes to move to #6 or 7. But I think either Brown or Goldman will be there at 16 and it's not worth moving up
 
I like Shelton a lot too, and if he was the one missing piece I'd say do whatever it takes to move to #6 or 7. But I think either Brown or Goldman will be there at 16 and it's not worth moving up

this is where I'm at right now. I love Shelton but how much better is he than Brown, Goldman? It would most likely cost us our first and 3rd to move up to 12. That might be too steep for a team with so many needs.
 
this is where I'm at right now. I love Shelton but how much better is he than Brown, Goldman? It would most likely cost us our first and 3rd to move up to 12. That might be too steep for a team with so many needs.

It would really only cost our 3rd, right? We'd be swapping firsts.
 
Of course but a third is pretty valuable to a team with this little depth. I'm not sure Shelton is actually that much better than Brown.

We'd do better picking off other team's practice squads the way things have been going lately.
 
this is where I'm at right now. I love Shelton but how much better is he than Brown, Goldman? It would most likely cost us our first and 3rd to move up to 12. That might be too steep for a team with so many needs.

It would really only cost our 3rd, right? We'd be swapping firsts.

I think it would cost us at least a 3rd and 4th, not counting swapping firsts. Or a second next year and a 4th or better this year. It's not worth it imo
 
Shelton's very intriguing, indeed. His lower body strength is ridiculous. He seems to be relentless when rested. I've been watching a bit more on him this morning. The only thing I found that he'll need to work on is his rushing. He basically has a bull rush and that's it. But, realistically, how much will he be rushing the QB in the NFL.

In the end, I would not be disappointed if we took him at 16. That said, the problem with taking a NT in the 1st round is the return on investment. The NT will come off the field on 3rd downs a majority of the time. Is drafting a 2 down player in the 1st worth it? Or will his pass rushing improve enough to keep him on the field?

Dunno, but I wouldn't mind finding out
 
Of course but a third is pretty valuable to a team with this little depth. I'm not sure Shelton is actually that much better than Brown.

I'm sure (about Shelton) if your targeting nose tackle. I think Brown will be a very good five tech 3-4 end.
 
Byron Jones obliterates the Combine broad jump record

Watch the guy's reaction in the middle of the frame.
laugh-1.gif

KindDownrightAfricanjacana.gif


Vertical: https://vine.co/v/OQIhr1QhXTX

Never in the history of the Scouting Combine had anyone broad-jumped 12 feet. Until today.

Byron Jones, a cornerback from UConn, had a 12-foot, 3-inch broad jump this morning, shattering the old record of 11 feet, 7 inches.

That’s an insanely good broad jump — so good that it might be the best broad jump in human history. The standing long jump is rarely performed in competitive settings and hasn’t been an Olympic event in 100 years, so it’s hard to find reliable records for it. But Wikipedia lists the world record as 3.71 meters, which would be 12 feet, 2 inches.

Bills receiver Marquise Goodwin was an Olympic long jumper, and he broad jumped 11 feet, 0 inches at the 2013 Combine. Beating an Olympic long jumper by more than a foot in the broad jump is just insane.

The 6-foot-1, 199-pound Jones also put up a 44.5-inch vertical jump, which is just half an inch away from the best vertical at this year’s Combine. Although Jones wasn’t viewed as a great prospect heading into today, he is causing eyebrows to raise and jaws to drop this morning. NFL teams are surely taking notice that they’ve got a freakish athlete on their hands.
 
Last edited:
I'm starting to question my eyes when it comes to Dawson/Hackett. They both appeared to be athletic playmakers with a nose for the ball. What do y'all think of their draft status after the combine?

BTW, I'm not usually a the type that will move a guy more than a rd based on combine performances. I had Dawson in the 2nd and Hackett in the 4th.

Guys like Jones I liked in the 4-5th rd range and would keep him there due to injury concerns. I really don't know much about Conley and watched quite a bit of Georgia games so his combine results were a shocker. Where do you think he goes and what are the consensus opinions on him?
 
Traes Wayne runs unofficial 4.32

Probably locks himself as #1 corner
 
I'm starting to question my eyes when it comes to Dawson/Hackett. They both appeared to be athletic playmakers with a nose for the ball. What do y'all think of their draft status after the combine?

BTW, I'm not usually a the type that will move a guy more than a rd based on combine performances. I had Dawson in the 2nd and Hackett in the 4th.
Guys like Jones I liked in the 4-5th rd range and would keep him there due to injury concerns. I really don't know much about Conley and watched quite a bit of Georgia games so his combine results were a shocker. Where do you think he goes and what are the consensus opinions on him?

Never saw what others saw in Dawson. He does play faster than his forty time. I'm not worried about his speed. I don't think he's physical enough when taking on blocks. Not as bad as Beasley but still not what I want in an OLB.
 
Looks like he just made himself some money, and moved up and out of our range at #16.

Yep,

I didn't like what I saw of Waynes against Baylor. Maybe he just had a bad game. The talent appears to be there. Probably ran himself into the top 10.

I am sure disappointed in the times PJ Williams put up. He certainly plays much faster than he timed.
 
Never saw what others saw in Dawson. He does play faster than his forty time. I'm not worried about his speed. I don't think he's physical enough when taking on blocks. Not as bad as Beasley but still not what I want in an OLB.

I read somewhere that his best fit will be as a 3-4 ILB
 
Dawson is a 43 SAM or WILL.

Waynes answered some questions for me. The only thing holding me back on him was that I questioned whether he has elite athleticism or not. He didn't really get a chance to show that in the Big Ten.

Uhhhh that question has been answered.
 
The broad jump is the truest test of explosive power. You can't simulate it with any other movement. Well, unless you are going to have these guys do a one rep max in the power clean, which will never happen in this environment.

Anybody who uncorks a ridiculous broad jump is going to be the subject of much study. Byron Jones, Chris Conley, and Alvin Dupree shattered the field in that test.

I have already solidified my opinion on Dupree. I already liked Jones but there isn't much tape of him out there. He and Conley are guys I will be digging into.
 
Weight-Adjusted 40 Yard Dash Times At 2015 Combine

Last year, I looked at various data from the NFL combine and tried to put the results from some of the drills in perspective. Let’s do that again with the 40-yard dash, with data courtesy of courtesy of NFLSavant.com.

The best-fit formula to project a 40-yard dash time, given a prospect’s weight, is:

Expected 40 Time = 3.433 + 0.00554 * Weight
Code:
Rk	First Last	P	College	        Weight	Exp 40	Act 40	Diff	 

1	Bud Dupree	OLB	Kentucky	269	4.92	4.56	0.36	
2	Owamagbe OdighizuwaDE	UCLA	        267	4.91	4.62	0.29	
3	Darren Waller	WR	Georgia Tech	238	4.75	4.46	0.29	
4	Dante FowlerJr.	OLB	Florida	        261	4.88	4.6	0.28	
5	Kevin White	WR	West Virginia	215	4.62	4.35	0.27	
6	Vic Beasley	OLB	Clemson	        246	4.8	4.53	0.27	
7	Chris Conley	WR	Georgia	        213	4.61	4.35	0.26	
8	Danielle Hunter	DE	LSU	        252	4.83	4.57	0.26	
9	Dorial Green-BeckhamWR	Missouri	237	4.75	4.49	0.26	
10	MyCole Pruitt	TE	So Illinois	251	4.82	4.58	0.24
 
Weight-Adjusted 40 Yard Dash Times At 2015 Combine


Code:
Rk	First Last	P	College	        Weight	Exp 40	Act 40	Diff	 

1	Bud Dupree	OLB	Kentucky	269	4.92	4.56	0.36	
2	Owamagbe OdighizuwaDE	UCLA	        267	4.91	4.62	0.29	
3	Darren Waller	WR	Georgia Tech	238	4.75	4.46	0.29	
4	Dante FowlerJr.	OLB	Florida	        261	4.88	4.6	0.28	
5	Kevin White	WR	West Virginia	215	4.62	4.35	0.27	
6	Vic Beasley	OLB	Clemson	        246	4.8	4.53	0.27	
7	Chris Conley	WR	Georgia	        213	4.61	4.35	0.26	
8	Danielle Hunter	DE	LSU	        252	4.83	4.57	0.26	
9	Dorial Green-BeckhamWR	Missouri	237	4.75	4.49	0.26	
10	MyCole Pruitt	TE	So Illinois	251	4.82	4.58	0.24

Best fit formula to what data? Looks like a totally made up stat. If you're prediction is for 215 lb NFL WR prospects to be running 4.6+ then it's time to revisit the formula. Also a weight to height ratio looks more predictive.
 
Historical data. They use historical numbers to find norms so they can identify outliers across positions. It's analytics... some find useful, other think it's gobbledygook.

I understand it's historical (that's kind of definitional with data). The point was historical from what group. I don't believe the average 215 lb WR taken in the NFL draft has run a 4.62 anytime recently.

And I'm not claiming all analytics are gobbledygook. Just this specific metric. It's pretty obvious 5'10" and 6' 4" 250 lbers are entirely different critters. If you're going to do it, make a better stab at it.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top