šŸˆ 2014 NFL Combine Thread

Interesting observation. Wondering how this compares to the previous 5 years and wondering how this will change in the upcoming 5 years.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p>In summation, essentially 50% of the college WRs entering the draft run sub-4.50, while only 33% of the DBs run that fast. <a href="https://twitter.com/search?q=%23UnfairFight&amp;src=hash">#UnfairFight</a></p>&mdash; Phil Savage (@SeniorBowlPhil) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeniorBowlPhil/statuses/438390585821372417">February 25, 2014</a></blockquote>
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2014 NFL Combine Recap: DB

Coming in to the 2014 NFL Scouting Combine, this was the position group that I was most looking forward to seeing. I think that of all the position groups the Bears’ are sure to address this offseason the defensive backfield will go through the largest overhaul. There was plenty of talent on display this morning and, like most of the positions in this year’s draft, I was really impressed by the overall depth of the group. There were remarkably few disappointing times and nearly all of the prospects had bright spots in the drills. I’ll be using official 40 times again today, so let’s get down to business:

Cornerbacks
Darqueze Dennard, Michigan State: Some analysts have him as their top rated corner in this class, but I was a little disappointed with Dennard’s performance today. Not that he stood out as a poor performer, but he didn’t distance himself from the competition as much as I expected. He ran a solid 4.51 in the 40 yard dash and looked a little tight in the drills. He looks like a scheme-specific sort of player to me and needs to play for a team that uses a lot of press coverage. The main problem I see there is that he’s a little short (5′ 11″, 30 inch arms) for that type of scheme.

Brandon Dixon, Northwest Missouri State: A small school prospect that showed me something today. He’s well-built and moved very well. Dixon turned in a very good 40 time of 4.41 and really stood out to me in all the drills. Coming from such a low-level of competition he’s likely to be a bit of a project, but I think he’s a player the Bears should seriously consider drafting come the third day of the draft.

Antone Exum, Virginia Tech: Big and really well put together, Exum had a nice showing today. He posted a 4.59 in the 40, which is actually pretty impressive for a guy of his size (6′ 0″, 213 lbs.), and had a decent showing in the field drills. Feels like a safety to me.

Kyle Fuller, Virginia Tech: One of the most impressive specimens of the day. He had a time of 4.49 in the 40 and was one of the day’s best performers in the field drills. His 38.5 inch vertical jump was impressive as well. Unfortunately for the Bears, corners with his combination of length (6′ 0″, 33 inch arms) and athleticism are the ā€œin thingā€ right now in the NFL so it wouldn’t surprise me to see him sneak into the bottom of the first round. If he does make it to the Bears’ second round pick, I think they should sprint to the podium.

Phillip Gaines, Rice: Gaines had the second fastest 40 time of any DB at the combine with a blistering 4.38. He also ran smoothly in the drills, but his ball skills leave something to be desired.

Justin Gilbert, Oklahoma State: Gilbert distanced himself from the competition today. He has the length (6′ 0″, 33 inch arms), athleticism (4.37 in the 40), and ball skills NFL teams covet. He was also phenomenal in the drills. At this point, I would be absolutely shocked if he fell out of the top 10 (I’m looking at you, Lions).

Keith McGill, Utah: Another lesser known prospect that I came away impressed with. McGill has exceptional length (6′ 3″, 33 inch arms), respectable athleticism (4.51 in the 40, 39 inch vertical), and looked extremely fluid in the field drills. He’s bound to rise up draft boards very soon.

Loucheiz Purifoy, Florida: One of the more disappointing performances of the day. I had heard so much about his athleticism, that his 4.61 in the 40 really surprised me. He also had some concentration lapses in the drills that required him to catch the football.

Marcus Roberson, Florida: Another disappointment from a former Gator. He could only muster a 4.61 in the 40 and ran far too upright in the drills. There had been some talk of Roberson sneaking into the first round, but I expect that chatter to die down now. If he falls too far, however, he could wind up being a steal for somebody because he’s still a very good football player.

Bradley Roby, Ohio State: After a lackluster final season of college ball, today’s eye-popping performance was exactly what Roby’s draft stock needed. He blazed a 4.39 in the 40 and might have had the best performance in the field drills of any player out there today. He reminded people why he was projected to go in the top 20 in last year’s draft.

Jason Verrett, TCU: Another stand-out of the day. He’s small (5′ 9″, 189 lbs.), but what Verrett lack in size he makes up with his special movement skills. He jumped 39 inches in the vertical, posted a 4.38 in the 40 and looked good in all the field drills.
Other Notes- Aaron Colvin did not participate today.


Safeties
Mo Alexander, Utah State: Alexander had one of the better days among the safeties. He had a solid day of field work, ran a 4.54 in the 40 and jumped 38 inches in the vertical. He looked exceptionally smooth for a 220 lb. man with a reputation as an in-the-box type hard hitter.

Dion Bailey, USC: A highly touted prospect at the beginning of the year, the converted linebacker has seen his draft stock plummet in recent months and his combine performance did little to change that. He managed only a pedestrian 4.66 in the 40 yard dash, but looked surprisingly smooth in the field drills. I think he will be drafted on the third day by a team looking for him to gain weight and move to linebacker. If it works, he could wind up being a steal, but he is likely to end up as just a special teams player.

Terrence Brooks, Florida State: So athletic he blended in with the corners today. His 4.42 was the best time among any of the safeties and close to the best among the corners. He also had an impressive 38 inch vertical jump and looked really good in the field drills. Brooks is small for the position (5′ 11″, 198), but not absurdly tiny.

Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Alabama: Though Clinton-Dix has been touted as the best safety in this class, I came away from the combine unimpressed. His 4.58 in the 40 was solid but unspectacular, as were his 33 inch vertical jump and 119 inch broad jump. He was a bit tight in the field work and just didn’t shine as much as I would like a first round safety prospect to.

Calvin Pryor, Louisville: Pryor is the ā€œotherā€ first round safety in this class, I came away from the combine equally unimpressed with both he and Clinton-Dix. He also ran the 40 in 4.58 seconds, had a slightly better vertical at 34.5 inches, but had a worse broad jump of 116 inches. His style of play reminds me a lot of Lois Delmas and, like Delmas, I think there could be injury concerns in his future.

Deone Bucannon, Washington State: This guy might be my favorite safety in this class. He’s extremely well put together, remarkably athletic and has the tape to back it up. Coming from a bad program like Washington State, he’s flown a little under the radar so far, but I’d be surprised if he makes it out of the second round. He ran the 40 in 4.49 seconds, bench pressed 225 lbs. 19 times, had a vertical jump of 36.5 inches, and a broad jump of 125 inches; all among the best for his position. Throw in that he’s 6′ 1″, weighs 211 lbs., and has arms over 32 inches and you can see why I’m falling in love with this kid.

Ed Reynolds, Stanford: Reynolds is another guy who came into last season with a ton of momentum, but has seen his stock fall as of late. He timed out at 4.57 in the 40 and looked stiff in the field work. He seems like an in-the-box strong safety type to me.
Brock Vereen, Minnesota: Vereen had a solid day. He wasn’t the biggest guy out there and his arms are kind of short (30 inches), but he moved well. He tallied 4.47 in the 40 and was solid in the field drills, though nobody will mistake him for a cornerback.

Notes- Vinnie Sunseri and Jimmie Ward did not participate today

http://beargoggleson.com/2014/02/25/2014-nfl-combine-recap-db/2/
 
I would love Clowney to fall to the Falcons. The Falcons have also said they have thought about trading up, but this was before the draft, so now that numbers are out on these players I would think Clowney will be there at #6. I think with the Julio Jones pick, the Falcons showed what a real game breaking talent can do. As a Falcons fan, I don't see many opportunties in the future to get these great picks, unless we trade up, so I think you have to take Clowney and simply sign an offensive lineman as a free agent. Maybe even take Cryus late in the draft if he's available and take a "chance" on him. He'll be fine in the NFL once he matures. His intangibles and size are there, just needs to mature in my eyes.

That was pretty crazy seeing Clowney run With Thomas on that simulation by ESPN. Obviously Thomas would blow him away in the 100, but for a guy that's over seven inches taller and atleast 70 pounds heavier, I think that is freakish.

Norwood's numbers were excellent, and I only hope for the best for him. He exemplifies everything you want in a University of Alabama athlete and everything you want your kids to grow up watching. With his work ethic and attitude he'll be on a roster somewhere and getting some playing time. He ran a lot faster than I thought he would. Good for him.

I also wish the Falcons could draft Mosley, but I doubt that's even possible with where they sit at the moment.
 
I would love Clowney to fall to the Falcons. The Falcons have also said they have thought about trading up, but this was before the draft, so now that numbers are out on these players I would think Clowney will be there at #6. I think with the Julio Jones pick, the Falcons showed what a real game breaking talent can do. As a Falcons fan, I don't see many opportunties in the future to get these great picks, unless we trade up, so I think you have to take Clowney and simply sign an offensive lineman as a free agent. Maybe even take Cryus late in the draft if he's available and take a "chance" on him. He'll be fine in the NFL once he matures. His intangibles and size are there, just needs to mature in my eyes.

That was pretty crazy seeing Clowney run With Thomas on that simulation by ESPN. Obviously Thomas would blow him away in the 100, but for a guy that's over seven inches taller and atleast 70 pounds heavier, I think that is freakish.

Norwood's numbers were excellent, and I only hope for the best for him. He exemplifies everything you want in a University of Alabama athlete and everything you want your kids to grow up watching. With his work ethic and attitude he'll be on a roster somewhere and getting some playing time. He ran a lot faster than I thought he would. Good for him.

I also wish the Falcons could draft Mosley, but I doubt that's even possible with where they sit at the moment.

It's looking like the Texans may take Clowney .. reports out of their camp are saying they are leaning towards him at the moment.
 
We're not trading up for Clowney just for the simple fact that we need alot of help at alot of positions. Maybe trading back for multiple picks would be the best bet.

That would be a good choice, but Thomas Dimitroff seems like the guy to me that would choose to stay there and take a chance on a possible franchise type player (not to say there aren't any franchise players outside the top 10..). Atlanta needs better offensive line play and a defense.
 
That would be a good choice, but Thomas Dimitroff seems like the guy to me that would choose to stay there and take a chance on a possible franchise type player (not to say there aren't any franchise players outside the top 10..). Atlanta needs better offensive line play and a defense.

Not to say that they don't need more help on the OL, but I think when Mike Johnson comes back, he should be able to sure it up some. They definitely need some defense, though. They need to quit going after all of the old players that are washed up and beyond their prime as impact players. Sure there's value in most of those older guys (I'm older than anybody on the team, probably), but they keep forking out big bucks on them and expecting them to be as productive as they were in their heydays. Just like Stephen Jackson. He was really good a few years ago, but I just don't think he's going to be an every down back that rushes for 1200 yards every year, he may have one more of those.

They need to draft a lot of good talent, and trading down to get maybe a couple high picks in the 2nd round may serve them better than banking on one high 1st rounder and filling in with old guys.
 
^^ I agree with the replacing old players with old players thing, I wanted to kick a puppy when they decided to replace John Abraham with Osi... made no sense. S-Jax is different tho, he has a lot of tread left on the tires, that o-line was just pathetic last year.
 
Not to say that they don't need more help on the OL, but I think when Mike Johnson comes back, he should be able to sure it up some. They definitely need some defense, though. They need to quit going after all of the old players that are washed up and beyond their prime as impact players. Sure there's value in most of those older guys (I'm older than anybody on the team, probably), but they keep forking out big bucks on them and expecting them to be as productive as they were in their heydays. Just like Stephen Jackson. He was really good a few years ago, but I just don't think he's going to be an every down back that rushes for 1200 yards every year, he may have one more of those.

They need to draft a lot of good talent, and trading down to get maybe a couple high picks in the 2nd round may serve them better than banking on one high 1st rounder and filling in with old guys.

I had hopes in Mike Johnson last year, then he got injured. I think last year was his contract year, they may resign him for a 1 year "prove it" deal and give him a shot, but he hasn't really done much with them other than being converted to a blocking TE in the red zone. I do hope he does get resigned because Johnson was a beast at UA and he was also expected to start last year, just the Falcons may look to the draft to get some help up front.
 
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