Chaka said:
The bigger reason for the combine is the 32 teams successfully monetized it into a multi-day fan and media event that prints them money during the off-season. It wouldn't go away entirely if it wasn't monetized but it would hold significantly less importance.
I struggle with this narrative.
yes, the NFL has monetized the combine, as the NFL has monetized everything. They have a network, and that network needs content. so they show the combine, sell commercials, etc.
But it’s a false conclusion (and an incredibly cynical one at that) to assert that the combine exists primarily for that monetization, and not as a tool that NFL teams have used productively since 1982. It wasn’t even televised until 2011.
Measuring an athlete’s abilities at drills can be hugely beneficial to team. It puts all players testing on a level playing field, as opposed to college stats / film where they’re matched against huge variance in competition.
Of course there will be some missed talent at the combine, players that either test well & go on to mediocrity, or players who slip through the testing cracks & end up being better players on the field than in the underwear Olympics, but the majority of results provide invaluable data for teams to comb over in preparation for selecting players. And ok, maybe 1 in 1000 players suffers a catastrophic injury doing it. Same goes for other fluke things like car accidents, plane crashes, paper cuts, etc.
And of course, like all data, it is only as valuable as the front office folks on the team who are evaluating that data. But just because a team sucks at evaluating data doesn’t mean the data is bad, or not useful.
I reject the premise that the combine is an anachronism. The Wonderlick was retired because it was deemed less than neutral, IIRC. The controversy was with regard to assumptions built in to the test that applied to certain demographics, and perhaps not others. For example, racial & class bias that might cause a test-taker to score poorly. And hey, if a coach wants to know what a player’s football IQ or EIQ is, then that’s what player interviews are for.
This is all well past the London topic, but back on topic, IMO the absence of data about London only serves to confirm the worst fears about him. The logic goes, if he could jump high, or run fast, why wouldn’t he prove that with the universal measurements he knows teams want to see?
Baffling.
Whether this causes London to fall a few picks or a round is something we’ll find out in the not-too-distant future, it’ll be interesting to follow how he does in the NFL.
I’m not Hatey McHaterson. It’s just an interesting situation.