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Vince Young's Wonderlic (1 Viewer)

What's your take on the Vince Young Wonderlic?

  • Young really did score a 6 and the "scoring mistake" is a damage control coverup

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • The scorers really did make a mistake and the story is legit

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • The scoring mistake was an intentional sabotage by some anti Young faction and designed to hurt Youn

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0
There are potentially millions of dollars at stake between posting a 16 and a 26.

J
How so?
Hi Bri,By falling in the draft slot. If Young posted a 26, he's probably a sure fire top 3 pick. Now, huge doubts have driven that liklihood down which will likely cost him a lot.

We'll see.

J
The test is bad, but I don't think it means that much. It does raise warning flags and I want to know two things:1) Can he read? I'm not being facetious, I really want to know if he read well enough to study the playbook (although they are mostly pictures).

2) Does he have the street smarts to stay out of trouble (ala Henry). If he just did poorly because of the type of test it was I'm less concerned than if he's completely ignorant about things in general.

 
Sorry if this is a honda-

My guess is that Vince Young has a learning disability that is covered under the Americans with Disabilities act. In my experience at universities, students protected by ADA get to take tests under different conditions, based upon their disability. I believe that Vince Young was initially given the test in the standard format. After the test, he or his agent probably said, "Hey, what about me taking the test under my ADA protected status." The NFL, not wanting to look insensitive to people with disabilities, gave him the test again.

Vince Young may be dumb, but having dyselia does not mean you are dumb. It does mean you will usually look dumb taking a test that you must read in a timed condition.
Irony. :lmao:
 
Sorry if this is a honda-

My guess is that Vince Young has a learning disability that is covered under the Americans with Disabilities act. In my experience at universities, students protected by ADA get to take tests under different conditions, based upon their disability. I believe that Vince Young was initially given the test in the standard format. After the test, he or his agent probably said, "Hey, what about me taking the test under my ADA protected status." The NFL, not wanting to look insensitive to people with disabilities, gave him the test again.

Vince Young may be dumb, but having dyselia does not mean you are dumb. It does mean you will usually look dumb taking a test that you must read in a timed condition.
Irony. :lmao:
Noted.
 
Obviously he had an opportunity to study before taking it the first time, and materials are readily available, but he chose not to. It's one thing to give him a second bite at the apple due to a procedural error. It's an entirely different thing to allow him to make up for being unprepared. He should have been forced to retake it in his then existing state of preparedness to make this fair for all who took the test.
Hi bigjim, do you have more information on this about him blowing the test off?For all I know, Young and his famly attorney was shocked they had to take a Wonderlic test.

I know they have his pro day set for late March and they just now hired a guy to help him get ready. That's something that should have been in place months ago. That's the kind of thing I mean.

J
All I have is what Clayton mentioned on Mike & Mike, and a Profootballtalk.com report that they are attributing to Peter King:KING SAYS VINCE WASN'T READY FOR TEST

On Monday, Peter King of Sports Illustrated told Dan Patrick of ESPN Radio that Texas quarterback Vince Young was completely unprepared for the Wonderlic test at the scouting combine.

King said (and we're paraphrasing) that Young had no idea that he'd be given the 50-question exam.

If so, then shame on agent Major Adams. And shame on Young for not affiliating with an experienced agent who knows that one of the things that happens at Indy is that the kids take the Wonderlic.
Hi bigjim,Thanks. That's exactly what I was guessing.

From a character standpoint, being surprised by the test because your agents are weak is much better than just choosing not to prepare.

I understand the desire to stick with folks you trust but he really does appear to be making some poor decisions there.

J

 
I understand the desire to stick with folks you trust but he really does appear to be making some poor decisions there
Understatement. Young has expert legal backing but it is apparent Adams is WAY out of his league as an agent. Thus far Adams has fat fingered his dealings with Young worse than a thumbless virgin attempting to get into a bra. This is bad and only getting worse. Folks love the conspiracy theories especially in regards to sports. For prime examples check out the NBA and matters concerning Ewing going to the Knicks; officiating pertaining to Jordan and allegations against fixing games for ratings. The NFL has always done a great job of keeping their image high above such matters but this issue of Young's test score is interesting. I am shocked spin and collateral damage control has been so passive thus far.
 
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This has been a PR nightmare for the NFL and now even U-T is taking heat from this.

The NFL had to say this was some sort of mistake. There have been many other low scores but Young is or was going to be a very high pick. So this got dicey real fast.

 
I think its pretty sorry to claim that a guy can't read when we know nothing more than what the media is telling us, and who knows if they even have the correct answer considering most of them jumped on the score of 6 as soon as they heard it.

Usually people want to believe in conspiracies when they truly hate something....like George Bush and such or the fact that their superbowl team lost on some very bad calls....so I am going to assume that most people in here claiming conspiracy either:

A.Dislike the Uni. of Texas

B.Dislike Vince Young

C.Dislike the NFL

 
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I think its pretty sorry to claim that a guy can't read when we know nothing more than what the media is telling us, and who knows if they even have the correct answer considering most of them jumped on the score of 6 as soon as they heard it.

Usually people want to believe in conspiracies when they truly hate something....like George Bush and such or the fact that their superbowl team lost on some very bad calls....so I am going to assume that most people in here claiming conspiracy either:

A.Dislike the Uni. of Texas

B.Dislike Vince Young

C.Dislike the NFL
Hey Clint,I can't speak for others but I think you're making as broad a generalization as you're accusing others of. I personally think Vince Young's performance against USC was one of the most amazing sporting performances in memory. I also think he's got the intangibles of owning the huddle and calm under pressure that many prospective NFL QBs can only dream of. I've also heard/read good things about Young as a person. And have been open to the concept of Young as a top 3 overall pick.

But I still very strongly believe something is amiss with the Wonderlic situation. So much so that my opinion of his projected NFL draft position AND outlook have been tarnished, likely for good.

 
I'm generally anti-conspiracy, as people say stuff when they have no idea what they're talking about, so I also think this is much ado about nothing. No conspiracy.

Regardless, I heard he has not come off well at all in interviews.

 
if young didnt know he had to take the test, which i guess he figured he would take during his pro day.

why didnt he just refuse?

the truth here is that intelligence is not a direct correlation to football success.

 
This has been a PR nightmare for the NFL and now even U-T is taking heat from this.

The NFL had to say this was some sort of mistake. There have been many other low scores but Young is or was going to be a very high pick. So this got dicey real fast.
This doesn't make sense from the NFL's point of view. They have no interest in seeing a player drafted any higher than their talent would dictate. The only explanation coming from the conspiracy theorists is that the low score damages the NFL's ability to market Young. I don't see why they would want to inflate his draft slot and then have him bust on the field. That would be more damaging to the NFL. In fact, one could make the argument that it would be better for the NFL's marketing efforts for Young to fall in the draft. Then he would presumably go to a better team and make a bigger impact (e.g. Rothlisberger).

Plus you have potential legal liability if you fraudulently mis-state test results.

 
Sorry if this is a honda-

My guess is that Vince Young has a learning disability that is covered under the Americans with Disabilities act. In my experience at universities, students protected by ADA get to take tests under different conditions, based upon their disability. I believe that Vince Young was initially given the test in the standard format.
This certainly fits the facts available -- probably the only valid reason to allow Vince Young to take a retest.
 
FWIW, ESPN radio had the president of Wonderlic consulting on (something Collins) and he said of all the thousands of people the test is adminstered to nationwide, a 6 would put him at the 2 percentile rank :eek:

J

 
if young didnt know he had to take the test, which i guess he figured he would take during his pro day.

why didnt he just refuse?

the truth here is that intelligence is not a direct correlation to football success.
Hi Red,I'd guess becuase the Wonderlic seems to be something that most of the players, even the ones that don't participate in the combine drills, go ahead and take.

It would throw a big red flag if he were to pass. Although in retrospect, it would have been better to pass and come back with a 26 than to take it and post a 6 or a 16.

J

 
I can't fathom a good debate on this. If there was a "scoring error" as the NFL suggests, you rescore the same test and that's that. End of story. You don't get a do-over. I think it's pretty clear this was not a scoring error issue. My guess is one of two things:

(1) Vince Young skipped a question and filled in responses in the wrong slots (which should in no way be considered a scoring error), or

(2) Vince Young wasn't trained to skip over the hard questions and having spent way too long on one or two questions did not complete the test or filled in all C's when he realized he had 1 minute left to answer 20 questions.

These are the only rational explainations for going from a 6 to a 16, and neither are "scoring errors." I don't really care what the spin doctors say, this has been a news story in Minneapolis on KFAN all day so I doubt this story gets swept under a rug as the NFL needs it to. Eventually, someone is going to need to explain how/why VY gets preferred treatment.
:goodposting: The NFL appears to be comfortable sticking to the "scoring error, 16 on the retest" story...but BigRed hits the nail on the head. If it was REALLY a scoring error, why doesn't the league a) explain the exact nature of the scoring error [and why it didn't impact any other test] and b) simply rescore the first test versus giving him a new exam.
When my daughter took the ACT as a high school sophmore, her proctor misread the time and had everyone turn in their test. I was upset with her that she did not just fill in answers and she said she didn't know the time was up. Anyway ACT sent us a certified letter with an offer to retest or get money back. I made her retest and she got to take it solo with only the proctor the next weekend, so one possibility was a timing error which would negate the score and force a retake, not saying that's what happened but it is a possibility.
 
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If it is a retest because they did not factor in a legally protected disability, they cannot announce that because that would violate his right to privacy regarding that disability. They could not simply come clean. I am telling you, this is fairly common; in my 6 years of teaching at universities, I have had a number of student be allowed to take tests under different conditions that the rest of the class due to medically declared disabilities protected under ADA. Their privacy is always protected.

 
If it is a retest because they did not factor in a legally protected disability, they cannot announce that because that would violate his right to privacy regarding that disability. They could not simply come clean. I am telling you, this is fairly common; in my 6 years of teaching at universities, I have had a number of student be allowed to take tests under different conditions that the rest of the class due to medically declared disabilities protected under ADA. Their privacy is always protected.
If this was true (Young having dyslexia) do NFL teams have access to past medical records when conducting their evaluations of players?And if was actually found out that Young has dyslexia how far would he drop?

 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score. 6 is too low to even be credible. Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."

 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score. 6 is too low to even be credible. Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."
Hey Hawk,I'm rooting for Vince Young, but again, until the NFL explains the situation with clarity and complete openness [which they probably aren't going to do], I'm going to add his intellectual capacity to his risk profile. There's so much information floating around with little confirmation. About the only things that seem clear are he re-took the test and got a 16, and that his first test was scored in error. Yet, no one has addressed why/how the first test was in error and why they simply didn't rescore that test.

And as much as I like Young and think he's a good kid, LOL at Mack Brown saying he's "very bright." A score of 16 [the 2nd time around] is hardly indicative of someone "very bright." He may be more than intelligent enough to run an NFL offense, but "very bright?" :no:

 
16/50 = 32% :yucky:

And the questions are like "what is the ninth month of the year?".

This story would have been almost as bad for VY even without the "6" fiasco.

The way for him to fix this in time for the draft is 1) hire professional representation, 2) study for and re-take another Wonderlic test (even if it's not independently administered), and 3) release the score.

Even then people will still have questions, but he has major damage control to do and at this point I wouldn't be surprised to see him drop a few spots in the draft over this.

And to think right after the USC game, people were talking VY as possibly number 1 overall. It just goes to show you have to constantly be managing your career, and in this regard he needs to involve professional representaion ASAP.

 
And if was actually found out that Young has dyslexia how far would he drop?
If they find out he has some other learning disability, he'll drop. If he's dyslexic, he'll rise. ;)
 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score.  6 is too low to even be credible.  Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."
Hey Hawk,I'm rooting for Vince Young, but again, until the NFL explains the situation with clarity and complete openness [which they probably aren't going to do], I'm going to add his intellectual capacity to his risk profile. There's so much information floating around with little confirmation. About the only things that seem clear are he re-took the test and got a 16, and that his first test was scored in error. Yet, no one has addressed why/how the first test was in error and why they simply didn't rescore that test.

And as much as I like Young and think he's a good kid, LOL at Mack Brown saying he's "very bright." A score of 16 [the 2nd time around] is hardly indicative of someone "very bright." He may be more than intelligent enough to run an NFL offense, but "very bright?" :no:
LOL@ anyone who would judge how bright someone is, based on a wonderlic score. Not everyone is a great test taker..
 
I'm just saying that there is too much conflicting information to know what's up. And you don't get within 3 hours of graduating and lead a championship team, while scoring a 6 without something wacky going on. I've seen wonderlich tests, and you seriously can't score a six and do those things he's done.

 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score.  6 is too low to even be credible.  Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."
Hey Hawk,I'm rooting for Vince Young, but again, until the NFL explains the situation with clarity and complete openness [which they probably aren't going to do], I'm going to add his intellectual capacity to his risk profile. There's so much information floating around with little confirmation. About the only things that seem clear are he re-took the test and got a 16, and that his first test was scored in error. Yet, no one has addressed why/how the first test was in error and why they simply didn't rescore that test.

And as much as I like Young and think he's a good kid, LOL at Mack Brown saying he's "very bright." A score of 16 [the 2nd time around] is hardly indicative of someone "very bright." He may be more than intelligent enough to run an NFL offense, but "very bright?" :no:
LOL@ anyone who would judge how bright someone is, based on a wonderlic score. Not everyone is a great test taker..
:confused: It's an intelligence test, designed explicitly to determine how "bright" someone is...In fact, employers all across the nation rely on the test...from the Wonderlic site itself:

The WPT is a short form intelligence test that measures players' ability to think on their feet, follow directions, and make effective decisions under the pressure of a time clock. It was originally developed in 1937 as a tool to quantify the mental abilities of potential job candidates and today more than 2.5 million job applicants in companies across the nation are given the Wonderlic test as part of the hiring process. The test is especially popular with larger organizations because it's quick and easy to administer and delivers accurate information about candidates' intelligence. "In just twelve minutes, they have quantifiable data about whether candidates can learn new skills, think effectively, and make important decisions under pressure," says Michael Callans, president of Wonderlic Consulting, the Libertyville, IL based publisher of the test.
www.wonderlic.comLike any standardized test it's hardly a complete assessment of someone's overall intellect, but let's not pretend like it's not designed to measure EXACTLY whether or not Vince Young is "very bright" or not.

 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score.  6 is too low to even be credible.  Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."
Hey Hawk,I'm rooting for Vince Young, but again, until the NFL explains the situation with clarity and complete openness [which they probably aren't going to do], I'm going to add his intellectual capacity to his risk profile. There's so much information floating around with little confirmation. About the only things that seem clear are he re-took the test and got a 16, and that his first test was scored in error. Yet, no one has addressed why/how the first test was in error and why they simply didn't rescore that test.

And as much as I like Young and think he's a good kid, LOL at Mack Brown saying he's "very bright." A score of 16 [the 2nd time around] is hardly indicative of someone "very bright." He may be more than intelligent enough to run an NFL offense, but "very bright?" :no:
LOL@ anyone who would judge how bright someone is, based on a wonderlic score. Not everyone is a great test taker..
I don't know how bright he is, but if he was only 3 hrs from graduating he should have been used to taking test. Texas is not an easy school, which is why I believe something is wrong.
 
Texas is not an easy school, which is why I believe something is wrong.
Hi BT,With all due respect to Texas, an athlete of his stature gets through if he can show up for class.

This isn't Notre Dame or Harvard or Stanford. This is a proud school that had suffered through a drought and most importantly, it's in a state where Football is the absolute King.

J

 
Texas is not an easy school, which is why I believe something is wrong.
Hi BT,With all due respect to Texas, an athlete of his stature gets through if he can show up for class.

This isn't Notre Dame or Harvard or Stanford. This is a proud school that had suffered through a drought and most importantly, it's in a state where Football is the absolute King.

J
:goodposting: Let's not pretend that athletes aren't allowed to skate by, but I won't condemn UT for this when everyone is guilty. While I was at Penn, our best hoops player was Jerome Brown and Cornell broke a story that he scored an 880 on his SATs; yet he was attending Wharton where the mean SAT score in his entry class was 450 points higher.
 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score.  6 is too low to even be credible.  Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."
Hey Hawk,I'm rooting for Vince Young, but again, until the NFL explains the situation with clarity and complete openness [which they probably aren't going to do], I'm going to add his intellectual capacity to his risk profile. There's so much information floating around with little confirmation. About the only things that seem clear are he re-took the test and got a 16, and that his first test was scored in error. Yet, no one has addressed why/how the first test was in error and why they simply didn't rescore that test.

And as much as I like Young and think he's a good kid, LOL at Mack Brown saying he's "very bright." A score of 16 [the 2nd time around] is hardly indicative of someone "very bright." He may be more than intelligent enough to run an NFL offense, but "very bright?" :no:
LOL@ anyone who would judge how bright someone is, based on a wonderlic score. Not everyone is a great test taker..
I don't know how bright he is, but if he was only 3 hrs from graduating he should have been used to taking test. Texas is not an easy school, which is why I believe something is wrong.
I think perhaps more amusing to me than VY's wonderlic drama is all these people using the fact that he went to Texas as evidence of his intelligence.Brace yourself for this next revelation: exceptions are made and rules are broken for athletes in most if not all schools, and I would venture to guess the higher the stakes (national championship) - the more it happens.

Was everyone here blind, deaf, and dumb enough at their own schools to not catch this?

:wall:

 
The bottom line(s):

1. A score below 20 can be a warning sign that a player at a skill position, particularly QB, may have difficulty in both learning and reading/recognizing quickly.

2. Most QBs who have had success in the NFL have had scores well above 16, although exceptions do exist (McNabb was a 12 I believe, Marino in the teens).

3. Even if the score is indicative of a learning deficiency / dyslexia type disorder, that is also a problem for a quarterback. "Controlled quarterbacking environments" aren't available in the NFL.

Also - you heard it here first - the first televised PPV Wonderlic test is coming to a cable / satellite provider near you soon.

 
The bottom line(s):

1. A score below 20 can be a warning sign that a player at a skill position, particularly QB, may have difficulty in both learning and reading/recognizing quickly.

2. Most QBs who have had success in the NFL have had scores well above 16, although exceptions do exist (McNabb was a 12 I believe, Marino in the teens).

3. Even if the score is indicative of a learning deficiency / dyslexia type disorder, that is also a problem for a quarterback. "Controlled quarterbacking environments" aren't available in the NFL.

Also - you heard it here first - the first televised PPV Wonderlic test is coming to a cable / satellite provider near you soon.
He could have a play sheet on one wrist and a mirror on the other... :unsure:

 
If it is a retest because they did not factor in a legally protected disability, they cannot announce that because that would violate his right to privacy regarding that disability. They could not simply come clean. I am telling you, this is fairly common; in my 6 years of teaching at universities, I have had a number of student be allowed to take tests under different conditions that the rest of the class due to medically declared disabilities protected under ADA. Their privacy is always protected.
If this was true (Young having dyslexia) do NFL teams have access to past medical records when conducting their evaluations of players?And if was actually found out that Young has dyslexia how far would he drop?
Only if the player provides them. Even in my graduate classes there are students who get "special" testing procedures. (Although I am certainly not claiming this is the case here, one of the smartest kids I ever taught may well have been the worst standardized test taker ever because of dyslexia.)
 
I have no way of knowing if Texas bent academic rules for Vince, but Texas' recent history would indicate that athletes aren't coddled that much.

Texas lost a chance for a NCAA basketball run last year when its BEST player, PJ Tucker, was declared academically ineligible. Going into the last baseball season, Texas lost its BEST pitcher, Sam Lecure, to academics (not to mention one or two other baseball players). Texas also lost its best pass rushing DE to academics last year from the football team. And that's just a few examples.

So I don't think VY was coddled enough to get by at Texas if he is really as "dumb" as some of you are making him out to be. I still don't buy the 6 as a legitimate score. It just doesn't fit with his accomplishments.

 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score.  6 is too low to even be credible.  Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."
Hey Hawk,I'm rooting for Vince Young, but again, until the NFL explains the situation with clarity and complete openness [which they probably aren't going to do], I'm going to add his intellectual capacity to his risk profile. There's so much information floating around with little confirmation. About the only things that seem clear are he re-took the test and got a 16, and that his first test was scored in error. Yet, no one has addressed why/how the first test was in error and why they simply didn't rescore that test.

And as much as I like Young and think he's a good kid, LOL at Mack Brown saying he's "very bright." A score of 16 [the 2nd time around] is hardly indicative of someone "very bright." He may be more than intelligent enough to run an NFL offense, but "very bright?" :no:
LOL@ anyone who would judge how bright someone is, based on a wonderlic score. Not everyone is a great test taker..
:confused: It's an intelligence test, designed explicitly to determine how "bright" someone is...In fact, employers all across the nation rely on the test...from the Wonderlic site itself:

The WPT is a short form intelligence test that measures players' ability to think on their feet, follow directions, and make effective decisions under the pressure of a time clock. It was originally developed in 1937 as a tool to quantify the mental abilities of potential job candidates and today more than 2.5 million job applicants in companies across the nation are given the Wonderlic test as part of the hiring process. The test is especially popular with larger organizations because it's quick and easy to administer and delivers accurate information about candidates' intelligence. "In just twelve minutes, they have quantifiable data about whether candidates can learn new skills, think effectively, and make important decisions under pressure," says Michael Callans, president of Wonderlic Consulting, the Libertyville, IL based publisher of the test.
www.wonderlic.comLike any standardized test it's hardly a complete assessment of someone's overall intellect, but let's not pretend like it's not designed to measure EXACTLY whether or not Vince Young is "very bright" or not.
Again- and I am stubbed by how many people don't get this: you cannot do well on the wonderlic if you can't read quickly. The test does not measure how people "think on their feet, follow directions, and make effective decisions under the pressure of a time clock. It was originally developed in 1937 as a tool to quantify the mental abilities of potential job candidates." First and foremost, it measures how fast you read. You can be anywhere from stupid to genius and not be able to read quickly. So any test that you must read in a timed format that measures intelligence has the ability to skew this information. I am not saying Young is smart. I just think that the group of people here who get self esteem from reading comments and writing pithy replies are ignorant about the multiplicities and layers of intelligence.
 
Wood, I respect what you're saying, but it is possible that there might just have been a mistake about his score.  6 is too low to even be credible.  Mack Brown was asked about it at his press conference today (the press conference was about spring practice that opened today), his response was interesting:

"Q: Can you talk about Vince Young's situation this weekend at the combine with all of the rumors that were floating around?

A: Number one, let me say that every high profile guy that we've ever had, from the end of the season and the draft, get beaten to death. There's so much scrutiny and it's just the story right now. That's to be anticipated. I told Vince before he left that he needs to understand that he'll be treated more poorly in the next month or two than you've ever been treated because you're so high profile. Secondly, I know for a fact that he didn't make a six on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told that the test was graded wrong when he took it the first time. Anyone that is reporting that he did that poorly is wrong. Point blank. I called, I asked and I was told that was the truth, so it's unprofessional and it's really, really poor for somebody to be reporting a number that they don't know is factual and I know is not factual when a young guy has so much riding on it in the future.

The other thing I would say about Vince Young is that he just had the highest efficiency rating of any quarterback in the country, we are very complicated with what we do offensively and he's won 30 games and lost two. He also would have graduated last fall with only three hours to take at Texas, where you can't hide an athlete. Vince is very bright. I hate that people had to take a shot like that that's unfair and untrue."
Hey Hawk,I'm rooting for Vince Young, but again, until the NFL explains the situation with clarity and complete openness [which they probably aren't going to do], I'm going to add his intellectual capacity to his risk profile. There's so much information floating around with little confirmation. About the only things that seem clear are he re-took the test and got a 16, and that his first test was scored in error. Yet, no one has addressed why/how the first test was in error and why they simply didn't rescore that test.

And as much as I like Young and think he's a good kid, LOL at Mack Brown saying he's "very bright." A score of 16 [the 2nd time around] is hardly indicative of someone "very bright." He may be more than intelligent enough to run an NFL offense, but "very bright?" :no:
LOL@ anyone who would judge how bright someone is, based on a wonderlic score. Not everyone is a great test taker..
:confused: It's an intelligence test, designed explicitly to determine how "bright" someone is...In fact, employers all across the nation rely on the test...from the Wonderlic site itself:

The WPT is a short form intelligence test that measures players' ability to think on their feet, follow directions, and make effective decisions under the pressure of a time clock. It was originally developed in 1937 as a tool to quantify the mental abilities of potential job candidates and today more than 2.5 million job applicants in companies across the nation are given the Wonderlic test as part of the hiring process. The test is especially popular with larger organizations because it's quick and easy to administer and delivers accurate information about candidates' intelligence. "In just twelve minutes, they have quantifiable data about whether candidates can learn new skills, think effectively, and make important decisions under pressure," says Michael Callans, president of Wonderlic Consulting, the Libertyville, IL based publisher of the test.
www.wonderlic.comLike any standardized test it's hardly a complete assessment of someone's overall intellect, but let's not pretend like it's not designed to measure EXACTLY whether or not Vince Young is "very bright" or not.
Again- and I am stubbed by how many people don't get this: you cannot do well on the wonderlic if you can't read quickly. The test does not measure how people "think on their feet, follow directions, and make effective decisions under the pressure of a time clock. It was originally developed in 1937 as a tool to quantify the mental abilities of potential job candidates." First and foremost, it measures how fast you read. You can be anywhere from stupid to genius and not be able to read quickly. So any test that you must read in a timed format that measures intelligence has the ability to skew this information. I am not saying Young is smart. I just think that the group of people here who get self esteem from reading comments and writing pithy replies are ignorant about the multiplicities and layers of intelligence.
Hey weasel,According to the creators AND the thousands of companies and organizations that use the test...it does EXACTLY what you contend it doesn't. There's absolutely no debating that the Wonderlic was designed to test the aforementioned. You are more than entitled to believe it fails in its design, but clearly Wonderlic, the NFL and tens upon thousands of other entities disagree.

 
I've never given or seen the Reliability or Validity scores for the Wonderlic. But I'll jump in as I do testing for a living. I give short-form IQ tests as well as comprehensive IQ tests. Short form 15-20 minutes. Comprehensive 1hr to 1hr 15 minutes.

Short form tests are usually fairly accurate. Otherwise they are not published. Only research article I found says that Wonderlic may not correlate highly with WAIS--R (older version of adult IQ test).

Edit: http://content.apa.org/journals/ccp/53/6/937

I'll see what else I can find.

 
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I've never given or seen the Reliability or Validity scores for the Wonderlic. But I'll jump in as I do testing for a living. I give short-form IQ tests as well as comprehensive IQ tests. Short form 15-20 minutes. Comprehensive 1hr to 1hr 15 minutes.

Short form tests are usually fairly accurate. Otherwise they are not published. Only research article I found says that Wonderlic may not correlate highly with WAIS--R (older version of adult IQ test).

Edit: http://content.apa.org/journals/ccp/53/6/937

I'll see what else I can find.
:goodposting:
 
The Wonderlic Personnel Test (WPT), is a 50-item, 12-minute omnibus test of intelligence. The items and the order in which they are presented provide a broad range of problem types (e.g., analogies, analysis of geometric figures, disarranged sentences, definitions) intermingled and arranged to become increasingly difficult. The WPT exists in 16 forms, and was designed for testing adult job applicants in business and industrial situations.

*****Validity and Reliabilty*** What I found. Not useful without looking at manual.

Reliability: The manual reports reports test-retest reliabilities of .82 to .94, and interform reliabilities of .73 to .95.

Validity: Correlations with educational level and/or academic achievement are between .30 and .80

Anyone having online access to journals? Found these articles cited but could not read them as don’t have access.

Bell, N. L., Matthews, T., Darin, L., Kerry, S., & Leverett, J. P. (2002). Validity of the Wonderlic Personnel Test as a measure of fluid or crystallized intelligence: Implications for career assessment. North American Journal of Psychology, 4, 113-120.

Saltzman, J., Strauss, E., Hunter, M., & Spellacy, F. (1998) Validity of the Wonderlic Personnel Test. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 13, 611-616.

 
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Charlie Casserly

"I have been told that's inaccurate from a source good enough for me to stand up here and quote it," Casserly said on Sunday. "Otherwise, I wouldn't just get up here and say it."

Mack Brown

"Second, I know for a fact he did not make 6 on the test because I was told specifically, and I was also told the test was graded wrong the first time. So anyone that's reporting he did that poorly is wrong.

What a couple henchmen. Somehow the NFL can't come public about the "error" itself, but it whispers sweet nothings into the ears of the two most biased individuals it can find to spread the word through the media?

Yeah... riiiiiiiiiight.

:fishy:

 
This is the sort of question that doesn't possibly have a right answer. Further, when people don't have a clue as to which answer is correct I think they tend to answer in the way that they want it to be regardless of what the truth really is.

Bummer. Looks like people are voting in favor of their stereotypes.

 
This is the sort of question that doesn't possibly have a right answer. Further, when people don't have a clue as to which answer is correct I think they tend to answer in the way that they want it to be regardless of what the truth really is.

Bummer. Looks like people are voting in favor of their stereotypes.
I don't think it has anything to do with stereotyping. In fact, please elaborate because I'm not quite clear even what that means. Most people I've discussed this situation with don't believe the cloak and dagger "too top secret to explain on the record" decision to retest, after allowing further preparation, rather than properly rescore a test already taken. And to allow Mack Brown and Charley Casserly to act as NFL spokepersons on the dispersal of information they probably shouldn't be aware of in the first place? To me this is a clear case of "where there's smoke, there's fire" deduction. The numbers here don't surprise me in the least.
 
There were already questions regarding Vince Young that had been there for the past year. The National Championship performance silenced those concerns for a brief period.

1. Was the offense simplified for him?

2. Are his passing mechanics going to create turnover problems at the next level, where tiny errors wait to be magnified by other superb players?

3. How many changes will need to be made to existing players and offensive strategy to accomodate his abilities?

4. Can he become a reasonable drop-back passer?

5. Is he another Michael Vick, where his promise doesn't become reality?

I believe the test scoring issue is merely a good excuse to latch onto where doubts already existed.

If this were two years ago, I think teams would be scrambling to make him a top 4 pick. But, the bloom is off the rose with regard to Vick.

Some team in the top 10 will recall other players that had blemishes, but should have never slipped. He will go at 7, if he slips that far. Character issue players are a bigger concern for me than the guy that led his team to a National Championship last year.

 
This is the sort of question that doesn't possibly have a right answer. Further, when people don't have a clue as to which answer is correct I think they tend to answer in the way that they want it to be regardless of what the truth really is.

Bummer. Looks like people are voting in favor of their stereotypes.
Hey Shick...not sure where you're going with that. But I'm openly disappointed with Young's score [whether it be a 6, a 16 or both] and fail to see how I'm succumbing to stereotypes. I think he's a talented and, by most accounts, good kid and hope he does succeed in the league. But wanting him to succeed and objectively looking at the risks inherent in that success are two very different things.We know Young is a phenomenal athlete, improved by leaps and bounds in his passing efficiency, and has unbelievable poise under intense game pressure. We also know that he's got an unorthodox delivery, is a raw passer not used to running a pro-style offense, and we can now add to that at worst...a serious issue with intellectual capacity [or a learning disability] and at best [if he got a 16], someone that's on the low end of historical QB ranges and will have to be someone that bucks the odds [much like McNair and McNabb have done in recent years].

 
This is the sort of question that doesn't possibly have a right answer. Further, when people don't have a clue as to which answer is correct I think they tend to answer in the way that they want it to be regardless of what the truth really is.

Bummer. Looks like people are voting in favor of their stereotypes.
Hey Shick...not sure where you're going with that. But I'm openly disappointed with Young's score [whether it be a 6, a 16 or both] and fail to see how I'm succumbing to stereotypes. I think he's a talented and, by most accounts, good kid and hope he does succeed in the league. But wanting him to succeed and objectively looking at the risks inherent in that success are two very different things.We know Young is a phenomenal athlete, improved by leaps and bounds in his passing efficiency, and has unbelievable poise under intense game pressure. We also know that he's got an unorthodox delivery, is a raw passer not used to running a pro-style offense, and we can now add to that at worst...a serious issue with intellectual capacity [or a learning disability] and at best [if he got a 16], someone that's on the low end of historical QB ranges and will have to be someone that bucks the odds [much like McNair and McNabb have done in recent years].
I don't disagree with any of your assessment.The question was Conspiracy or Legit? How on earth can anyone give an honest opinion? We're all in the dark there. All opinions given on that are uneducated, mine also. When we don't know, we fall back on what we want to know.

 
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Has any other current prospective rookie's wonderlic score been made public yet? I thought these things were A) not ever officially released, and B) are not "official" until the reports are given to the teams at combine's end. What did Cutler and Lienart get?

 

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