Exactly. Before this fiasco, honestly, how many people...even here...really gave a damn about a particular guy's Wonderlic score? I know some of you guys did, and follow that stuff closely, but I doubt very seriously that most of you did before this. I know I never did. Now, so many people are ready to throw a guy under the bus over it.
Never mind that Marino scored a 14 on it. Yeah, I guess he sucked, too....and never mind what Young has done on the field. Maybe all those TDs and the 30-2 record, 20 game streak, #3 pass-efficiency rating, first ever 3000/1000 player, and National Championship didn't really happen, 'cause he has a low Wonderlic. Maybe nobody should draft him at all.
Right?
...and some of you guys are hilarious. Do you really think this is an NFL organization's ONLY test or indicator of a guy's football prowess and aptitude prior to the draft?
If you really do, then you're just laughably and irrevocably beyond help on this topic.
Also, many of you act as if you have some right to know the scores these guys produce. From what do you derive this supposed right? You have no right to that info or the players' athletic performance test numbers. These people are being evaluated, measured, tested, poked, and prodded in order to get a job. Nothing more or less. They just give the info to us, in some cases intentionally. In some cases unintentionally.
To be fair, bench press reps and 40 times are not an acurate prediction of a players NFL success either. People care about Wonderlic scores because there are no sure things, and as great as VY was he still COULD be an NFL flop, as could Leinart or Bush.So right now everyone is trying to gather every bit of info they can to try and figure out who will do what, and Wonderlic is information that plays in.
No one that I know of is saying this score is the only thing that matters, but it is part of the information we have on him, so it does matter.
Of course there are no sure things, but I've always said I thought these guys overanalyse in the days leading up to the draft. Not the reverse. IMHO, this is what leads to the big draft mistakes, not a lack of data or analysis. At any rate, judging from what I've been reading, seeing on tv interviews, and hearing in radio interviews the last couple of days, the Wonderlic is approximately the last and least significant piece of information most GMs are weighing when determining a particular player's draft status. It seems the smarter ones tend to put a lot of stock in trivial things like on-field performance, personality testing and observed traits in interviews and background investigation, etc.Kind of like this...do you take a guy who can run a 4.32 40 w/o pads over a guy with excellent "game" speed and a nose for the ball?
Or more appropriately...do you take a safety who has good speed, is a decent hitter and run supporter and good in pass protection, getting a couple picks and knocking down a few balls, is of sound character but was not the leader of his defense, and scored a 36 on the Wonderlic...
...or do you take the safety who has great speed with an amazing closing burst, hits like a truck and always avoids his blocks, is like an extra LB in run support, is a ballhawk with lots of picks and defenses, is always in position, is of sound character and makes the calls for the defense and is the guy who settles everyone down when things get tough (is even considered a leader for the offense, setting the tone and temperament for the entire team, even the coaching staff), who made multiple huge, critical plays leading to his team's undefeated run, and who scored in the teens on the Wonderlic?