![]() ![]() ![]() Rashad Weaver, EDGE, Pittsburgh (7.9) (EDGE3)Ĥ2. Terrace Marshall Jr., WR, LSU (7.9) (WR8)Ĥ0. Wyatt Davis, IOL, Ohio State (7.9) (IOL5)ģ8. Quinn Meinerz, IOL, Wisconsin-Whitewater (7.9) (IOL4)ģ7. Alex Leatherwood, OT, Alabama (7.9) (OT7)ģ6. Dyami Brown, WR, North Carolina (7.91) (WR6)ģ5. ![]() Christian Barmore, DL, Alabama (7.91) (DL2)ģ3. Elijah Moore, WR, Mississippi (7.92) (WR5)ģ2. Stone Forsythe, OT, Florida (8.0) (OT6)ģ0. Liam Eichenberg, OT, Notre Dame (8.0) (OT5)Ģ9. Creed Humphrey, IOL, Oklahoma (8.1) (IO元)Ģ8. Jaelan Phillips, EDGE, Miami (FL) (8.1) (EDGE2)Ģ7. Caleb Farley, CB, Virginia Tech (8.1) (CB4)Ģ6. Greg Newsome II, CB, Northwestern (8.2) (CB3)Ģ4. Kwity Paye, EDGE, Michigan (8.2) (EDGE1)Ģ3. Jaycee Horn, CB, South Carolina (8.2) (CB2)Ģ2. Micah Parsons, LB, Penn State (8.3) (LB2)Ģ1. Christian Darrisaw, OT, Virginia Tech (8.3) (OT4)ġ9. Jaylen Waddle, WR, Alabama (8.4) (WR4)ġ8. Patrick Surtain II, CB, Alabama (8.4) (CB1)ġ7. Rashawn Slater, OT, Northwestern (8.4) (OT3)ġ6. Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah, LB, Notre Dame (8.5) (LB1)ġ5. Alijah Vera-Tucker, IOL, USC (8.5) (IOL2)ġ4. Teven Jenkins, OT, Oklahoma State (8.5) (OT2)ġ3. Rashod Bateman, WR, Minnesota (8.65) (WR2)ġ2. Landon Dickerson, IOL, Alabama (8.7) (IOL1)ĩ. Justin Fields, QB, Ohio State (9.3) (QB2)ĥ. Trevor Lawrence, QB, Clemson (9.6) (QB1)ģ. Top 300 Prospects: Ties in grades were broken through roundtable discussion among the four scouts.ġ. Nate Tice: QBs, RBs, WRs and receiving TEsīrandon Thorn: Blocking TEs, OTs, OGs and Cs Grades for each player were assigned by the following scouts: 1 Overall)ĩ.5-9.9: Hall of Fame Talent ( Top 3 Overall)ĩ.0-9.4: Potential All-Pro ( Top 10 Overall)Ĩ.5-8.9: Immediate-Impact NFL Starter ( 1st Round)Ĩ.0-8.4: Immediate NFL Starter ( 1st-2nd Round)ħ.5-7.9: Potential NFL Starter ( 2nd-3rd Round)ħ.0-7.4: Future Role Player/Spot Starter ( 4th round)Ħ.5-6.9: Career Backup/Rotational Player ( 5th-6th round)Ħ.0-6.4: Fringe Backup Potential (7 th round)ĥ.5-5.9: UDFA Who Should Make Roster (UDFA)ĥ.0-5.4: UDFA Long Shot to Make Roster (UDFA This final big board will focus exclusively on the top 300 prospects in the 2021 NFL draft, which begins Thursday.ġ0: Once-in-a-Generation Prospect at Their Position ( No. In recent years, he has worked with the New York Giants and collegiate teams within the Big Ten. ![]() He is also the director of analytics for Optimum Scouting.Ĭory Giddings: Cory has experience working on multiple levels of football, both in coaching and player evaluation. Justis Mosqueda: Justis has written for Bleacher Report as an NFL featured columnist and was a scout for NFL1000. He previously contributed to Bleacher Report as a scout for NFL1000. He also produces video content for the scouting academy and is an analyst for Establish the Run. Nate Tice: Nate is a former college quarterback, NFL coach and scout who provides football breakdowns on his Twitter account and can also be heard weekly on The Athletic Football Show podcast.īrandon Thorn: Brandon is the author of the Trench Warfare Newsletter, which focuses exclusively on offensive and defensive line evaluation. Our group features a variety of backgrounds in the scouting world. Washington’s John Ross recorded the fastest 40-yard-dash time among former Pac-12 players and owns the all-time NFL Combine mark.The final big board from the new B/R NFL Scouting Department is here. Since the Combine wasn’t held in 2021 due to the pandemic, we’ve included the team pr0-day drill results for that year instead. Mountain West and BYU results will be added in the coming days. Theoretically, then, if a player can run 40 yards in 4.5 seconds, he will be able to leave the line of scrimmage when a punt is kicked, and reach the point where the ball comes down as it arrives.īelow we’ve compiled the 40-yard-dash time for every Pac-12 player that has run it at the NFL Combine since 2000, along with their position, school, and the year they participated, in a searchable, sortable table. Punts average around 40 yards in distance from the line of scrimmage, and the hangtime (or time of flight) averages approximately 4.5 seconds. So why that distance and not a 50 or 100?Īccording to Michael MacCambridge in America’s Game: The Epic Story of How Pro Football Captured a Nation, the origin of timing football players for 40 yards comes from the average distance of a punt and the time it takes to reach that distance, as determined by Paul Brown in the mid-1940s. Of course, the 40 is not an official race in track and field athletics. Traditionally, a player’s recorded time would only impact his prospects at the “skill” positions, but these days a fast time is telling for almost every position on the field. The NFL Combine’s 40-yard dash is a sprint designed to evaluate the speed and acceleration of football players by scouts for the Draft. ![]()
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