So College Signing Day passed a couple of weeks ago. I can’t even feign an interest in high school football and I never pay much attention to how Michigan, JMU or Maryland did in recruiting. The only thing making this period interesting for me was the kid in Nevada who faked being recruited to Oregon and California and was caught.
Listening to one-dimensional college sports fans is a Lake Wobegon experience: everybody has one of the top college recruiting classes. This is inevitably brought up when fans bitch about their coach “we had one of the top recruiting classes in the country, but now they all suck!” I have a friend who is a JMU sports cultist (even in I-AA football and mid-major men’s basketball this exists) who regularly proclaims this about our alma mater.
In a similar vein, the NFL Combine is now upon us. I do watch this. The spectacle is amusing enough and it’s always fun to file away spectacular performances to impress your friends later. As much time as they spend covering it, even the NFL Network guys admit that this is just running and jumping in spandex and that real game play is more important.
Another thing I like is the official height and weight measurements are published. You can go back and see how much college sports information staffs lie about their players during the regular college season. At the height of his junior year Heisman push, Heath Shuler grew to 6′4″ before showing up in Washington at 6′2″. Despite the linking of combine and draft information is on various internet sites this still happens some, except for running backs. It’s less likely these days to see RB sizes make the “consensus drift” from whatever they were in college to 6′, 225 lbs. I was very surprised not to see Adrian Peterson’s height and weight drift to that last year and so far neither Darren McFadden nor Jonathon Stewart’s measurables has either.
So far Chris, son of Howie, Long has performed well enough to consider being stood up as a 3-4 end-backer. So had Ohio State end-backer Vernon Gholston. Dexter Jackson, WR from Evil Appalachian State, camein with a very nice 4.37 in the 40. The Redskins already have two guys like him, but there should be room in the gawdawful Buccaneer receiver corps of Joey Galloway and some dudes. Outside of his rookie year, Michael Clayton has been so injured and unproductive, letting George Clooney play in a leather helmet might be as good. Everybody likes what Arkansas RB Darren McFadden and Michigan OT Jake (no known relation to Howie) Long did.
So far, top 40 yard dash time is East Carolina RB Chris Johnson with 4.24 seconds, top 225lbs. bench press is a tie between Gholston and Jake Long with 37 reps, top vertical leap is 39″ for Auburn RB Carl Stewart, at a position where it probably doesn’t matter. Among WRs and DBs it’s a tie between Tennessee State DB Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie and Kentucky WR Keenan Burton at 38.5″ with Purdue’s Dustin Keller top TE at 38″.
Posted by Stilwell
Posted by Stilwell
Posted by Stilwell