There were 32 teams at Junior Mertile's Florida International Pro Day, but none to see him.
Everyone wanted a look at his best friend, safety Jonathan Cyprien, who eventually went in the second round to the Jacksonville Jaguars.
Sensing the audience, Mertile, a receiver-turned-corner, ripped off a sub-4.4 40-yard dash. He fielded some calls and got invited to some tryouts. He let his hopes get up. He started working out at a nearby training facility in Boca, Fla. that partnered with former Giant Sam Madison, now an intern on the coaching staff, who helped Mertile round out his technique as a cornerback.
But then, those same 32 teams all passed on him again in the NFL Draft.
"I got down on myself," Mertile said. "I told myself I failed my goal."
Two days after the draft, Mertile said he went to church to pray and consider his situation -- what he was going to do and how he was going to make it to the NFL.
By the time he got home, he had a tryout scheduled with the Giants.
"I got the call to come out for a tryout and they said if I do good, I can get a contract and stay with the team," he said. "I said 'alright, I'm going to come here and outshine everybody.'"
NY Giants head coach Tom Coughlin on the last play on the pass caught by tight end Brandon Myers, 'I hope so. Nice adjustment. When (Eli) threw it, he threw it obviously where the defender wasn’t, which made him really make a very...I thought it was a radical adjustment because of the wind and he made the catch there. It was good. Better yet though, he reacted the way he should react as he read the coverage'. The objective is to get the ball to a certain point for a field goal. They got it there, so now what am I going to do? Change the objective? Change the game? Change the rules? I don’t usually do that.'
The book on Mertile has always been that if he can focus on one position, really learn the mechanics, there is a high ceiling. He played receiver at Florida International, but switched to cornerback to help fill some team needs and emerge from the shadow of T.Y. Hilton, his friend and former teammate who now plays receiver for the Colts.