After a year without it, the NFL Combine is back, and the players are ready to take to the field inside Lucas Oil Stadium to showcase their athletic talents to NFL GMs, scouts, head coaches, and millions of football fans around the world.
The quarterbacks, tight ends, and wide receivers will kick off the event. Some of the game’s most marquee positions on Thursday in primetime. I think the NFL knows what it’s doing. We’ll get most of the top prospects at those positions running the 40-yard dash and participating in the other combine drills tonight.
Follow along here as a bunch of our NFL Draft analysts chime in with their opinions, takeaways, and observations from the first day of workouts at the 2022 NFL Combine.
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PSU WR Jahan Dotson is the unique “faster than he is quick” prospect
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Did you end up with a draftable grade on Cole Kelley, Traps?
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NDSU WR Christian Watson with an 11’4″ broad jump. Serious bounce. And he’s 6’4″.
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Recently finalized my grade on Cole Kelley… I liked his swagger on the field. Big arm too.
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Sam Howell had a little hitch in his out route. He turned a three step drop into a 1..2..3..pitter patter, throw.
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In the gauntlet, you obviously want to see clean catches but you also want to see them straddle that white line rather than drifting one way or another.
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David Bell is just so smooth. He puts it away quickly and gets upfield.
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The 2019 group included – DK Metcalf, Terry McLaurin, Parris Campbell, Andy Isabella, Mecole Hardman, Darius Slayton and Emanuel Hall all running sub 4.40
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Blazing fast first group of receivers. Like Rich Eisen mentioned, the 2019 group is the speed gold standard. This group will collectively be faster. Amazing.
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Bo Melton running two sub-4.4s. Get him the ball in space and watch him work.
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I’m with Charles Davis. Didn’t see 4.39 from Velus Jones Jr. on film. Good for the Tennessee WR with that time on his first attempt.
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Skyy Moore is my biggest draft crush in this class. I’m swooning over that 4.39.
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I knew Skyy Moore was sudden but it helps seeing him register 4.39 top end speed.
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I love Danny Gray from SMU. I won’t be surprised if we are calling him a draft steal in a few years.
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4.33 for Danny Gray. Crazy explosiveness out of the gate too.
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I know Treylon Burks and his camp were expecting faster than 4.55 seconds but that is in line with what he had tested previously.
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Kevin Austin a gigantic winner today at WR. Awesome broad, vertical, and now the 40.
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Sup, Calvin Austin — 4.32 is moving
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The “this QB is a winner” analysis is cringe-worthy to me
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Literally two QBs running in this group?! Wut.
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Only two quarterbacks running the 40-yard dash: Kent State’s Dustin Crum and Notre Dame’s Jack Coan.
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Surprise performer from the WR group — Notre Dame’s Kevin Austin Jr. Had a 39-inch vertical and a 132-inch broad jump. Gotta get back to the film on him.
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Cole Turner’s film is littered with these high-point grabs at Nevada.
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This is a drill that Isaiah Likely and Chiggy Okonkwo should excel in. Quickness underneath.
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And a 118-inch (9’10”) broad jump along with a vertical for Purdue’s productive WR David Bell. Below-average explosion figures. Definitely concerning, but the lack of explosiveness didn’t hurt him in college.
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Memphis WR Calvin Austin had an 11-foot, 3-inch broad jump. Gigantic number. He’s tiny but that’s going to boost his stock.
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Not a good number for Burks, especially if you’re asking him to translate to more of a boundary role. I thought he looked better working on a vertical plane but that certainly does not help his case.
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