NFL Combine: Which Saints players performed the best in past events?

The 2020 NFL Scouting Combine is set to begin, where New Orleans Saints stars like Alvin Kamara and Demario Davis have impressed in the past

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Athletic testing at the NFL Scouting Combine will kick off tonight, so we took a deep dive into the current New Orleans Saints roster to find how they performed in years past. For this exercise we will only use data from combine history, but will give a few honorable mentions to those players who only participated in pro day workouts.

We collected all of our data from Pro Football Reference and NFL.com. The events we’re focusing on include the 40-yard dash, bench press, vertical jump, broad jump and the three-cone drill.

Here’s a quick refresher; thankfully, the 40-yard dash is self-explanatory. For bench pressing, each athlete must see how many times they can lift 225 pounds. The vertical jump tests their highest leap, while the broad jump measures how far they can leap horizontally, both from a standing position. Finally, the three-cone drill test agility and quickness in a short area.

40-Yard Dash

  1. CB Marshon Lattimore – 4.36 seconds
  2. TE Jared Cook – 4.37 seconds
  3. CB Janoris Jenkins – 4.46 seconds
  4. C.J. Gardner-Johnson – 4.48 seconds
  5. FS Saquan Hampton – 4.48 seconds

Honorable mentions: Keith Kirkwood (4.45) and Deonte Harris (4.48), who would ranked inside the top five with the results from their pro days. Because testing conditions are not standardized at pro day workouts throughout the country, we’re only considering combine results for the top spots.

Bench Press

  1. LB Demario Davis – 32 reps
  2. DE Mario Edwards – 32 reps
  3. DE Cameron Jordan – 31 reps
  4. T Terron Armstead – 31 reps
  5. C Erik McCoy – 29 reps

Honorable mentions: Defensive tackle Sheldon Rankins and right guard Larry Warford, who each recorded 28 bench press reps at the combine.

Vertical Jump

  1. FS Marcus Williams – 43.5 inches
  2. TE Jared Cook – 41 inches
  3. RB Alvin Kamara – 39.5 inches
  4. CB Patrick Robinson – 39 inches
  5. LB Demario Davis – 38.5 inches

Honorable mentions: Cornerback Marshon Lattimore (38.5) and wide receiver Tre’Quan Smith (37.5). Tight end Josh Hill also recorded a 36.5-inch vertical jump at his pro day.

Broad Jump

  1. CB Marshon Lattimore – 132 inches
  2. RB Alvin Kamara – 131 inches
  3. WR Tre’Quan Smith – 130 inches
  4. FS Marcus Williams – 129 inches
  5. WR Michael Thomas – 126 inches

Honorable mention: Tight end Josh Hill and wide receiver Keith Kirkwood, who each leaped 127 inches at their pro days and would have ranked inside the top five among active Saints players.

Three-Cone Drill

  1. WR Krishawn Hogan – 6.74 seconds
  2. WR Michael Thomas – 6.80 seconds
  3. FS Marcus Williams – 6.85 seconds
  4. LB Alex Anzalone – 6.88 seconds
  5. CB Janoris Jenkins – 6.95 seconds

Honorable mention: Linebacker Kaden Ellis, who timed this drill in just 6.63 seconds during his pro day, which would have ranked best among every Saints player on the current roster. Wide receiver Deonte Harris (6.82) also would have ranked inside the top five based on his pro day results.

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At the combine, the search for the next Mahomes is in earnest — and in vain

Those teams looking for the next Patrick Mahomes at the scouting combine may do well to realize that there isn’t a next Patrick Mahomes.

INDIANAPOLIS — In the book, Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction by Philip E. Tetlock and Dan Gardner, there’s a story about what the physicist Richard Feynman termed “cargo cult science.” Feynman was talking about what happened after airbases were removed from remote islands in the South Pacific following World War II. The airbases had brought heretofore unknown contact with the outside world, and goods the islanders had never seen before. So, in an effort to bring the wondrous planes back, the islanders “arranged to make things like runways, to put fires along the sides of the runways, to make a wooden hut for a man to sit in, with two wooden pieces on his head like headphones and bars of bamboo sticking out like antennas — he’s the controller — and they wait for the planes to land.”

Of course, the planes never landed again. As Tetlock and Gardner wrote, cargo cult science had the outward form of science, but lacked what made it truly scientific.

When you hear about Quarterback X in the 2020 draft class being the next Patrick Mahomes or Lamar Jackson, keep cargo cult science in mind. And watch out for bamboo antennae, because when it comes to finding the next Mahomes, they’re everywhere.

Not that this will stop the quarterback prospects from espousing their own Mahomes-esque attributes, or the coaches and personnel men who analyze those quarterbacks from trying to pluck the next guy who can play in the way that the modern NFL requires at the highest possible level. Because one thing’s for sure — whether it’s Mahomes, the 2018 NFL MVP and Super Bowl LIV MVP, or Lamar Jackson, the second unanimous NFL MVP in league history, or any of the five black, mobile quarterbacks who finished in the top 13 of Football Outsiders’ opponent-adjusted, season-cumulative efficiency metrics last season (Mahomes, Jackson, Russell Wilson, Dak Prescott, and Deshaun Watson) — the quarterback paradigm in the NFL is undergoing a drastic, seismic, generational shift.

For quarterback prosepcts like Utah State’s Jordan Love, the opportunity to put his mobility and off-script ability on the table as a net positive as he might not be able to in previous years? Well, that might make up for the wonky mechanics and general inconsistency that had him throwing 17 interceptions against 20 touchdowns in 2019. It was a big drop in efficiency from his 32-touchdown, 6-pick 2018, but when he spoke at the podium before the assembled media on Tuesday, Love understood that the ability to create plays out of structure is a big deal these days.

Utah State quarterback Jordan Love at the 2020 Senior Bowl. (Vasha Hunt-USA TODAY Sports)

“That’s something I feel is a huge part of my game,” he said. “When the play breaks down, being able to make off-schedule plays and get out of the pocket. Throwing on the move, and being able to take off and run. So, that’s just an instinct from growing up and playing backyard football. You either have it or you don’t, and I feel that I have that playmaking ability.”

Backyard football is all well and good. Every team would love a guy like Mahomes or Jackson who merges the thrillingly unpredictable with the ruthlessly efficient. The problem in picking such a quarterback, and helping him reach his peak at the NFL level, is that you also have to provide a specific system in which that quarterback can thrive.

In addition, you have to have an intelligent alpha dog on the field, whether your quarterbacks runs around or not. Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians, whose quarterback models have generally leaned more to less-mobile, statuesque pocket passers such as Peyton Manning, Carson Palmer and (comparatively speaking) Ben Roethlisberger, acknowledged that with Mahomes, the stuff above the neck was his ticket to optimal professional success.

“I think… just seeing the athleticism of some of the guys now has changed from when I [evaluated] Peyton Manning, or Ben, even, coming out,” Arians said, when I asked him how the new wave of quarterbacks might change how the noted quarterback whisperer evaluates the position. “These are more athletic quarterbacks who are coming out of spread offenses, but you still have to… Patrick Mahomes had one of the greatest [combine] interviews I’ve ever had. Right there with Andrew Luck and Peyton Manning as knowing what the hell he’s doing and how to play football. So, there is no shock to me that he’s great.”

It’s a pretty big step for a coach who, at the 2015 combine, dressed down the typical spread offense/Air Raid quarterback as “a quarterback who has never called a play in the huddle, never used a snap count. They [the coaches] hold up a card on the sideline, he kicks his foot and throws the ball. That ain’t playing quarterback. There’s no leadership involved there. There might be leadership on the bench, but when you get them and they have to use verbiage and they have to spit the verbiage out and change the snap count, they are light years behind.”

Perhaps Mahomes has changed a lot of minds. Mahomes’ Texas Tech tape was sufficiently impressive, but I had the opportunity to watch tape with him before the Chiefs took him with the 10th overall pick in the 2017 draft, and it was patently obvious that both mentally and physically, he had a lot more on the ball than the average college guy who was favorably greased up by an explosive offense that did not relate to to the NFL in any meaningful fashion.

Mahomes had clear differentiators. Whether those differentiators can be seen in more of those types of quarterbacks in his wake, or whether Mahomes is as much of a one-off as a bunch of supply planes landing on remote islands because there’s a war going on? That remains to be seen.

Falcons general manager Thomas Dimitroff, who has had pocket passer Matt Ryan since 2008, hasn’t let that impact his study of the new wave. Ryan is still a very good quarterback, but these days, you just never know how things will change, and how you might have to be up on the way the game is going.

“Oh, there’s no question,” Dimitroff said when I posed the same question to him about how quarterback evaluation has changed over the last few years. “We look at some of the quarterbacks in the NFL today — most of the people I talk to, and my contemporaries, would suggest that where the athleticism is in the NFL with those quarterbacks and how they can keep defenses on their heels, that dual threat… not just dual-threats because they’re runners, but they’re running quarterbacks with a very fine eye for what the scheme is, and how to throw the ball — man, that’s a tough thing to defend, as we all know. So, I believe it is changing. It’s not just a flash-in-the-pan. Look at Justin Herbert, who’s 6-foot-6 and moving around as he does. That’s a pretty interesting thing to see.”

So, what is the most important attribute, regardless of style? “Of course, the elements of leadership with a quarterback… I mean, I’ve been around Tom Brady when I was with the Patriots, and now seeing Matt [Ryan] over many years. It’s not just leading the offense and the receivers; it’s also leading the team fully. It’s a very important thing. You can have a guy who has a great arm and he can move around, but if he’s a dud when it comes to leadership, I don’t think you have a chance. We know how important that is. The leadership is big. Obviously, you have to have accuracy. You don’t always have to have the huge gun, but you have to be able to work the ball around, make proper decisions, and again, interact and communicate with your teammates from a leadership standpoint. It’s imperative to thriving in this league, in my mind.”

Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn shakes hands with Patrick Mahomes in 2018. (Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports_

Mahomes has proven leadership, so proof of concept is there. You don’t need to tell Anthony Lynn, who also went to Texas Tech and has studied the way the game is going — not only for years, but by drilling down the clearest precedents.

“I mean, I study high-school football,” Lynn said. “I love high-school football. I’m from the state of Texas, obviously. But when you study high-school football, you know the direction of the National Football League down the road. All those quarterbacks are athletes now, and they’re passing all year ’round in those 7-on-7 camps. So now, you have athletes who are really good passers. And you can do a lot of things with that, but there are still a handful of quarterbacks who can win from the pocket.

An interesting statement, to be sure. Is the pocket passer the outlier these days? And if Mahomes is the leader of this new wave, what makes him so great? Good to ask a head coach whose team has to face Mahomes twice a year.

“His knowledge of the game,” Lynn concluded. “His ability to make every throw. He extends plays all the time. And he’s a leader, His intangibles are off the charts. I don’t think we talk about his leadership enough. I’ve known him for a long time. We went to the same school; I’ve known him since he was in high school. Right now, he’s the best in the game, and if you want to be the best, you’ve got to beat the best. And that’s what we’re going to have to do.”

So, it’s harder to find the next Patrick Mahomes than people seem to think?

“I think it’s going to be a LOT harder than people think.”

And perhaps that is where we should leave it. Not that it’s where we’ll leave it, but when the people in the NFL tell you that there simply aren’t Patrick Mahomeses all over the place, it should be a serious caveat emptor to those other teams interested in perhaps over-bidding on the next guy who looks like that on the surface, but might not be able to carry the burden. Cargo cult science doesn’t work any more effectively in the NFL than it does on an island landing strip, no matter how well-intentioned the gesture.

Doug Marrone explains his approach to tackling 2 London games in 2020

Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Doug Marrone answered questions about the team’s approach to an extra London game in 2020.

Tuesday morning, Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Doug Marrone spoke to the media ahead of the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis. One of the first questions asked in the press conference was about how the team will deal with having two back-to-back games in London in the upcoming season.

As he has done throughout his time in Jacksonville, Marrone was as candid as possible in his response. He said his top priority will be to make the players comfortable as the team will be away from their families for over a week (10 days).

“We’re looking at things first and foremost to make sure our players are good,” Marrone said. “That’s the first thing we’ve been talking about, looking at, and investigating. You know, making things right for our players.”

Whilst this is the first time in NFL history that a team will play back-to-back games in London, he did note that teams have stayed on the West Coast between two cross-country games and have reached out to them to understand how the process of such a trip works logistically.

The Jaguars have a turbulent history with international fixtures, only winning three of the seven games they’ve played at Wembley Stadium. Despite that, Marrone is keen to make London “an advantage” and is looking to shift the Jaguars’ approach to the international series in hopes of more favorable results.

“I’ve done it a lot of different ways,” Marrone said. “I’ve been out there a whole week where we played on a Sunday when I was with New Orleans and immediately after the game we flew to London and stayed there the whole week. […] What I’m trying to do is go back to that experience when we flew out after that Sunday game. I’ll reach out to coach [Sean] Payton just to kind of get a reminder of what we did.”

The Saints beat the Chargers during their first trip to London and Marrone added that he knows it’s a performance-based business where he’ll need to provide the right results regardless of how hard the traveling schedule is.

“Any time you win you look back and say, OK, what did we do there? Let’s do the same thing,” Marrone said of the Saints approach to London in the past. “If you lose, you want to make sure you change it up.”

In addition to having empathy for the disruption that an added London game will bring to his players, Marrone also showed an understanding of the strain that the news has put on local fans. He’s stated that he’s even had a chance to talk to fans in person while being out in the community this offseason.

“I get a chance to connect and talk to the fan who is doing everything they can to get the season ticket and enjoy the games,” Marrone said. “I have a great amount of empathy for the challenges they have. I look at it as a challenge for our fans, coaches, and players to sustain our team in Jacksonville. If that’s what we have to do, then it’s just what we have to do. […] I think for the fans who can afford to go out there, it’s going to be an outstanding trip. For those who can’t, hopefully, my goal is to win games and we can help them at the end of the year and get some home [playoff] games.”

Of course, the last time the Jags hosted a playoff game was during the 2017 season when they defeated the Buffalo Bills in the wildcard round, and clearly, Marrone believes they can get back to that point. If he can win the two international games this season, it would certainly help the Jags’ playoff chances as they haven’t quite been able to handle their business these past two seasons in the United Kingdom.

Complete guide to the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine

All of the important details that you need to know ahead of the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine.

General managers, coaches and scouts are set to descend on Lucas Oil Stadium to watch the next generation of NFL athletes compete. Below you’ll find all the important details on how you can follow along throughout the week at the NFL Scouting Combine.

How to watch:

  • What: 2020 NFL Scouting Combine
  • Where: Lucas Oil Stadium – Indianapolis, Indiana.
  • TV: NFL Network
  • Stream: fuboTV (try it for free)

On-field workouts:

  • Thursday, Feb. 27 at 3 p.m. CT: Tight Ends, Quarterbacks, Wide Receivers
  • Friday, Feb. 28 at 3 p.m. CT: Kickers, Punters, Offensive Linemen, Running Backs
  • Saturday, Feb. 29 at 3 p.m. CT: Defensive Linemen, Linebackers
  • Sunday, Mar. 1 at 1 p.m. CT: Defensive Backs

For a look at the general player schedule, go here.

Media Availability:

  • Tuesday, Feb. 25 at 11:00 a.m. CT: Andy Reid
  • Tuesday, Feb. 25 at 11:15 a.m. CTBrett Veach
  • Tuesday, Feb. 25: Tight Ends, Quarterbacks, Wide Receivers
  • Wednesday, Feb. 26: Kickers, Punters, Offensive Linemen, Running Backs
  • Thursday, Feb. 27: Defensive Linemen, Linebackers
  • Friday, Feb. 28: Defensive Backs

Measurable drills:

Here is some information on several measurable drills courtesy of the NFL combine workouts page:

40-yard dash
The 40-yard dash is the marquee event at the combine. It’s kind of like the 100-meters at the Olympics: It’s all about speed, explosion and watching skilled athletes run great times. These athletes are timed at 10, 20 and 40-yard intervals. What the scouts are looking for is an explosion from a static start.

Bench press
The bench press is a test of strength — 225 pounds, as many reps as the athlete can get. What the NFL scouts are also looking for is endurance. Anybody can do a max one time, but what the bench press tells the pro scouts is how often the athlete frequented his college weight room for the last 3-5 years.

Vertical jump
The vertical jump is all about lower-body explosion and power. The athlete stands flat-footed and they measure his reach. It is important to accurately measure the reach, because the differential between the reach and the flag the athlete touches is his vertical jump measurement.

Broad jump
The broad jump is like being in gym class back in junior high school. Basically, it is testing an athlete’s lower-body explosion and lower-body strength. The athlete starts out with a stance balanced and then he explodes out as far as he can. It tests explosion and balance, because he has to land without moving.

3 cone drill
The 3 cone drill tests an athlete’s ability to change directions at a high speed. Three cones in an L-shape. He starts from the starting line, goes 5 yards to the first cone and back. Then, he turns, runs around the second cone, runs a weave around the third cone, which is the high point of the L, changes directions, comes back around that second cone and finishes.

Shuttle run
The short shuttle is the first of the cone drills. It is known as the 5-10-5. What it tests is the athlete’s lateral quickness and explosion in short areas. The athlete starts in the three-point stance, explodes out 5 yards to his right, touches the line, goes back 10 yards to his left, left hand touches the line, pivot, and he turns 5 more yards and finishes.

16 new drills

There will be 16 new drills featured at the NFL Scouting Combine this year. You can find out more about those drills here.

Participants

Find a complete list of the players participating in the combine here. We’ve also highlighted a player at each position that Chiefs fans should watch here.

Follow Chiefs Wire live

Be sure to follow Charles Goldman and Ed Easton Jr. on Twitter for live updates and interviews from the combine.

Tex Schramm pulled a Stringer Bell and now we have the 2020 Scouting Combine

Everything you need to know about the 2020 Scouting Combine. Plus a Wire reference.

Some of the final pieces of the pattern are about to be woven into the narrative of the 2020 NFL draft class. On Monday, the poking, prodding and non-stop onslaught of folk acting way-too-familiar will get started as the early parts of the NFL Scouting Combine commence. Save for a few “work ethics and competitive spirits” winding their way up river to a Day 3 draft-pick status, most everyone with a realistic shot of being selected is in Indianapolis for the week, or they’re on their way.

The combine has been around for almost 40 years;  with data entry specialists probably plugging heights, weights and 40 times into Commodore 64s.

Dallas” Tex Schramm engineered the original Stringer-Bell-New-Day-Co-op and convinced the competition committee to “go in together so they could get the best discount on New York Package.” The consortium gathered the Lesko, Quadra and individual scouting departments around conference room table thanks to the market they all shared.

163 prospects took part in the inaugural combine in 1982.

Now each year the NFL invites every eligible draft participant deemed worthy by the scouting committees and this year the spectacle has been moved to primetime during the last half of the week.

The number of invitees has reached 337, and all can peep the full list here.

The on-field workouts will run Thursday through Sunday, as clusters of positions go a five-day stir fry.

Here’s a look at the full schedule of arrivals and activities, courtesy of Draft Network’s Jordan Reid, which started Sunday with the quarterbacks, tight ends and wide receivers descending on Naptown.

Prior to putting the prospects through the  physical ringer, team representatives and doctors take the players through psychological warfare, though things are supposed to have calmed down compared to some of the weirdo tactics previously employed.

— Interviews (each team is allowed 60 interviews in 15-minute intervals)
— Physical measurements
— Injury evaluation
— Drug screen
— The Cybex test
— The Wonderlic Test

The on-field work will be televised on NFL Network live starting at 4:00 p.m. ET on Thursday and airing at the same time, through 11:00 p.m. ET for three days. Wanting to hit the bricks and get out of town, Sunday’s session is from 2:00 p.m. through 7:00 p.m.

The sessions will also be livestreamed online; through the NFL apps.

On field, there are seven basic drills every player has the opportunity to do, and then their are a series of position-specific drills which have several new additions in 2020.

Seven basic drills

40-yard dash
Bench press
Vertical jump
Broad jump
Three-cone drill
20-yard shuttle
60-yard shuttle

Position drills

The links in the heading if you want to dive into what each of these routines involves.

Quarterbacks

End zone fade routes added to routes thrown, timed smoke/now route drill

Running backs

Duce Staley drill; Inside routes with change of direction added to routes run

ELIMINATED: Pitch and cone drill, find the ball drill

Receivers

End zone fade route

ELIMINATED: Toe tap drill

Tight ends

End zone fade route

ELIMINATED: Toe tap drill

Offensive line

New mirror drill, new screen drill

Miscellaneous: Pull drills will include engaging a one-man sled instead of a bag. Inclusion of “rabbit” is eliminated in pass rush drops and pass pro mirror drill, with a coach’s hand motion changing direction of lateral slide in latter drill.

Defensive line

Run and club drill, run the hoop drill

ELIMINATED: Stack and shed drill

Linebackers

Shuffle, sprint, change of direction drill; short zone breaks drill

ELIMINATED: Pass drop

Defensive backs

Line drill, Teryl Austin drill, box drill, gauntlet drill

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How Travelle Gaines prepares draft prospects for the scouting combine

Los Angeles trainer Travelle Gaines has prepared draft prospects for the scouting combine for 14 years. Here’s how he does it.

WESTLAKE VILLAGE, Calif. — Look in one direction, and you’ll see UCF receiver Gabe Davis working with resistance bands at a furious pace. Look in another, and there’s Utah running back Zack Moss benching 225 pounds over and over. Florida running back Lamichal Perine, fresh off a great Senior Bowl week, is stretching out, getting ready for another day of training. Alabama safety Xavier McKinney and Minnesota safety Antoine Winfield Jr. are in and out, alternating between pre-combine training and flying home to work with their position coaches. NFL players like Jets guard Kelechi Osemele show up every day. Other NFL players, like receivers Brandin Cooks, Randall Cobb, and Kenny Golladay, are working out at Gaines’ other facility at a small strip mall in Calabasas, about 12 miles away.

It’s not what you’d expect to see in an unimposing industrial park just down the 101 from Thousand Oaks, but here’s where several of the most interesting prospects in the 2020 draft class are getting ready for the combine at the Athletic Gaines facility, run by longtime performance coach Travelle Gaines. A multi-sport athlete in high school who was drafted by the Montreal Expos and dreamed of coaching at the University of Washington, Gaines started helping a handful of NFL players in the Pacific Northwest with their own training processes after injuries derailed his own athletic dreams.

Travelle Gaines works with Lions receiver Kenny Golladay in Calabasas, Calif. (Doug Farrar/USA Today Sports Media Group)

Former Seahawks cornerback Marcus Trufant was Gaines’ big breakthrough.

“In 2006, [Trufant] didn’t have a good year with the Seahawks, he had been injury-riddled and he was at a make-or-break point,” Gaines recalled when I first met him in 2010. “2007 was his contract year, and he had to change something. He committed to change his lifestyle. We got him on a strict nutritional plan, got him to decrease his body fat dramatically. He bought into the program I put in place for him, went out and had a great season, started in the Pro Bowl, and received a [six-year, $50.2 million] contract a few months later. He was a huge story of mine; a lot of people wanted to know what he did. That brought in other Seahawks players. They had friends, and the friends had friends, and by the end of that summer, I had 30 guys working with me.”

Draft prospects came next, and with a quickness. Gaines has worked with 45 eventual first-round picks, including Andrew Luck, Myles Garrett, Anthony Barr, N’Keal Harry, Ronnie Stanley, Jimmy Smith, and Bradley Roby, and this is his 14th year preparing prospects especially for the scouting combine. It’s obviously a different manner of training; the NFL players Gaines works with in the offseason are concerned with maintaining their football conditioning, while prospects like McKinney and Winfield and Moss are specifically getting ready for the 40-yard dash, the bench press, the vertical jump, and other aspects of the track meet. Football comes later, when many of the guys Gaines and his staff work with at this point come back to him once their NFL futures are secured.

Draft prospects warm up before their training at Travelle Gaines’ Athletic Gaines facility in Westlake Village, Calif. (Doug Farrar/USA Today ports Media Group)

Now, it is absolutely about being bigger, stronger, and faster, and as Gaines explains, he prepares his chargers for the mental rigors as much as anything.

“The biggest thing, when guys come in… the first thing you’re dealing with is the mental side,” Gaines told me. “A lot of them have been coddled their whole lives. Put on a pedestal. And for the first time in their lives, they’re really and truly on their own. You have guys who will show up with their support systems — four, five, six people. Sometimes, their parents say to me, ‘I’m giving you my baby.’ For the first time, they have money — they’re coming in here with 10, 20, 30, maybe 100 thousand dollars from endorsements or agent advances. And you never know how you’re going to act until it’s actually there. I was one of those people who said, ‘When I make a million dollars, I’m never going to do this. Then, you make a million dollars, and it’s like, ‘I’m gonna do this and then some.’

“So, mentally — by coming out to L.A., it accelerates that transition. You’re going from a small town in Florida or Alabama to one of the major markets. We have to determine where each one of these kids is at, mentally. For the most part, honestly, I can tell if they’re going to make it or not.”

Bert Whigham, Gaines’ Director of Football, got a bit more specific when it comes to how prospects are vetted from a mental readiness perspective. It’s Whigham and the rest of Gaines’ expanding staff who allow Gaines to perform double duty with prospects and pros.

“There’s three forms of thought,” he said. “There’s Alphas, there’s Cerebrals, and there’s Primes. Alphas see opportunities everywhere; that’s what makes them Alphas. They see the opportunity to win, to make money, to dominate. A Cerebral person sees threats. Now, they can still be great, but they see it like, I need to prepare in order to beat this guy. He can beat me if I don’t prepare. Primes have the ability to see both, and that’s what’s rare. You see the opportunity to beat the guy, but you also understand that he’s a threat to you, so you need to prepare and get used to that.

As Whigham explained, a lot of people in football are total alphas, but that mindset can get them in trouble on and off the field, because they see the ability to dominate, and the threat of the metaphorical brick coming right at their head doesn’t matter, because they can beat the brick. Or, they fail to understand that unless they prepare in different ways, they’re going to lose their job to a younger player. Because they always think they can beat the competition.

“But the ability to see both, that the differentiator. Gabe has both. Lamical Perine has both. That’s a rare trait. Zack Moss has both.”

Next, for Gaines and his staff, is the physical perspective. This includes strict medical, dietary, and conditioning programs that allow prospects to redefine their bodies healthily in a pretty big hurry.

“A lot of times, when you see these body transformations… I mean, I was a college strength coach myself,” Gaines said. “There, you have 105 players, and with the rules changes, you only have five strength coaches. Add in the 20-hour rule, and you can only do so much. Now, they’re coming into an environment where they’re getting a customized program for them. They’re working out three times a day, and they’re on very strict nutrition plans designed for these eight weeks.

A performance coach works with Utah running back Zack Moss during his training at Travelle Gaines’ Athletic Gaines facility in Westlake Village, Calif. (Doug Farrar/USA Today Sports Media Group)

“So, mentally, it’s how are you going to handle this money and being in L.A. And how are you going to handle the rigorous demands of this — will you stay focused and concentrate on all that? How are you going to not pay attention to what the media is saying about you? Everybody has their own mock draft. Everybody has their own opinion of you. Taking everything in stride is important, and you just have to remember that it only takes one team to fall in love with you.

“This is my 14th combine class, and just having NFL players around… Brandin Cooks has talked to the kids. N’Keal Harry has spent time with the guys. It’s different than the day-to-day grind of getting ready for an actual game. It’s preparing the mental aspect as well, and preparing for the biggest job interview of your life. It’s how you handle the pressure. How you handle the media scrutiny. How you handle the team [interviews]. How you handle all these things, and preparing for the NFL.”

At this point in his career, Gaines is in a position where he doesn’t have to go looking for clients — he goes with word-of-mouth exclusively, and the vetting process for training prospects doesn’t have to be as rigorous, because there isn’t a conveyor belt of combine participants showing up at his door every day.

“Every player who’s here is because he has a relationship with somebody I trained, or somebody I know. I’m training a lot fewer kids now, because I want to provide more personal attention. I like working in extremely small groups, or one-on-one. I have six players preparing for the combine this year. When I was at Athletes Performance, we had 150 kids a year. My process now is, I try to do an extremely good job of knowing that they’re super-dialed in. They really, really want to do this. Because like them, my job depends on… if a guy has bad results, I’m not going to have clients next year. There’s a new facility popping up every day. Everybody has a new gimmick — that special ‘pixie dust.’ What I’ve learned in 14 years is that nobody has a magic potion. If they did, we’d all be using it. So, it’s about having clients who really want to be here, and are really focused. They aren’t going to take this process for granted.”

With that in mind, Gaines gave me an insight into the guys he’s training this year.

UCF cornerback Nevelle Clarke: “6-foot-2 cornerback who can run. He’s an LOB type. Tough. I like Nevelle. His dad’s there [in the gym]. Norman. His dad’s funny. He’s there wearing all the loud colors, taking photos with his high-tech camera. As far as what we’re working on, change of direction is huge with Nevelle. We’re working on his hip flexibility and mobility — getting him to open his hips so he can turn and run better. His overall speed and agility; that’s the biggest thing.”

Utah running back Zack Moss: “The biggest thing we’re working on with Zack is his stride length. If you were building a running back — compact, boxy, low to the ground, great lower half, very powerful, very tough — that’s Zack Moss. And he was one of the best pass-catching running backs in the NCAA last year. But we’re working specifically on his stride length, turning him into more of a track star, and getting him ready for that track meet.”

Utah running back Zack Moss (foreground) works with barbells as his gymmates look on. (Doug Farrar/USA Today Sports Media Group)

UCF receiver Gabe Davis: “What I’m working on with Gabe? Man… trying to kick him out of the gym. He’s there seven days a week. He’s obsessive. He came from nothing — a small town outside of Orlando, Florida called Sanford. He has not taken this process for granted. He is laser-focused. He’s flying out massage therapists and Pilates instructors. I don’t know where he’s going to get drafted, but if you’re looking for a hard-working athlete who’s not going to get in trouble and will do whatever you tell him, that’s Gabe Davis. He’s going to be great wherever he goes. With his height/weight/skills and his mindset, Gabe is special.”

Gaines refused to go on the record when I asked him what he thought Davis would run at 6-foot-3 and 220 pounds, but let’s just say, if you’re thinking about a 4.5 40-yard dash, bet the under.

One reason? “His body compensation. In five weeks with us, he lost 5% of his body fat. 14% to 9%. We’ll have him at 7% before he gets to the combine [the picture below shows the 7% result]. That’s nutrition, the way we work him out, his metabolics. And that shows you how hard he works. He eats five times a day. We take him through blood work, allergy tests, and we design his program from there.”

UCF receiver Gabe Davis: From 14% body fat to 7% in six weeks. (Travelle Gaines)

Florida RB Lamical Perine: My guy! Lamical Perine has probably had the dream postseason. MVP of the Orange Bowl, and he was the Offensive MVP of the Senior Bowl. His trajectory… he’s getting out at the right time. I think he’s going to have a very good combine, and it’s similar to Zack. We’re working on his speed and his body compensation, and getting him ready. He’s such a great kid, and he’s just a pleasure to be around. Very respectful. He’s probably one of my favorites. We’re looking at his change of direction, his agility, and his 40. The 40 is key. The biggest thing for the running backs is that I want to make sure they run a great 40 time, and that they have a great bench press. They’re showing that they can take that pounding, and they’re strong up top. And that they have the speed to break away from anybody.”

Judging from the activity in that gym in mid-Februady, the impetus was strong for Indianapolis, and it will have only gotten stronger as the combine looms.

“When I was training two weeks ago, it was more about trying to stay in football shape — just trying to keep my body in a football mode,” Perine told me then. “Now, I’m basically training for a track meet. Working on my speed and quickness, and everything about the 40. A lot of band resistance work, running 10-yard splits… lower-body stuff so I’m ready to run.”

Minnesota safety Antoine Winfield Jr.: “Great kid. He is extremely focused. Obviously a great pedigree; he’s been around the game his whole life. He is very polished and buttoned-up. He works extremely hard. We’re working on speed with him.”

Okay, I posited to Gaines, we hear this a lot. Improving somebody’s speed. Working on speed. But what does that actually mean?

“The two ways you get faster are stride length, and stride frequency,” Gaines said. “You can help your stride length by doing repetitive technique drills. Hurdles, skipping drills. Things that will force your knee drive up, increase your hip fexibility, and help with your ankle dorsiflexion. The way you get more frequency is by being more explosive. You use plyometrics and other drills to increase the elasticity of your muscles. So, we do a combination of technique work, every single day, twice a day, and we do explosive training drills twice a day.”

Draft prospects run hurdles drills at Travelle Gaines’ Athletic Gaines facility in Westlake Village, Calif. (Doug Farrar/USA Today ports Media Group)

And then, when the hay’s in the barn, the prospects are as prepped as they’re going to be, and it’s time to get rolling, everyone will travel to Indianapolis for — yes, it’s a cliche, but it’s true — the biggest job interviews of their lives. Gaines and his crew will be there for the players, working to help them navigate a combine schedule through the week that wouldn’t be out of place in Navy SEAL training.

“We’ll have a suite for the kids, with equipment and food and massage therapists and everything. Bert gets there first; he’ll be there Sunday night. I’ll come later in the week because of the pros that are here. What I tell the kids is that sleep and nutrition are the most important things. These teams only have 15 minutes with each kid, so they try and grab them after that time. It’ll be even worse now, because each team has fewer player interviews and the drills are in prime time. It’s great for the west coast kids, because they’re getting up a 6:00 a.m., which is really 3:00 a.m. I’ve gone through it several years with kids, where they’re staying up too late because they’re nervous. And you don’t run until the fifth day. So, you’re going through 24 hours in the hospital with MRIs, psychiatric meetings, interviews, and you’re just mentally drained. And if you’re mentally drained, you’re just not going to perform. You’re trying to protect your sanity, so your rest and your downtime are the most important things.”

Of course, everybody wants proof of concept. People want to know how Gaines’ training methods have worked. He’s happy to refer to a few examples.

“Three off the top of my head. First, Kyle Long. Had a seventh-round projected grade, went 20th overall [to the Bears in 2013], made three Pro Bowls. He just destroyed the combine. Lamarr Houston, he had an undrafted grade. Went 44th overall [to the Raiders in 2010], and he just destroyed the combine, too. I think he ran a 4.77 40 at 6-foot-3 and 274 pounds. And then, I don’t know if you remember a kid named Josh Robinson — he was the fastest kid at the 2012 combine. He ran a 4.29 and came out of nowhere. Came out of UCF and became a multi-year starter for the Vikings. Those are three guys who were projected to either not get drafted or go really late, who all went really early and had successful NFL careers.”

And the final message for the prospects?

“The same thing Marshawn said: Protect yo’ chickens. It’s the same thing — save your money, don’t make any impulse buys, protect your body, Because it goes fast, man. Randall Cobb is 29 years old, and he’s been in the NFL for 10 years. A third of his life. It’s crazy. You’ve got to have the right people around you.”

Getting the right people around you starts at the beginning. And for these prospects, as has been the case for so many before them over the last 14 years, it’s the ability to prepare them for the combine that has defined and enhanced Gaines’ reputation as a developer of football talent.

At this point in the NFL timeline, nothing means more than that.

Touchdown Wire editor Doug Farrar previously covered football for Yahoo! Sports, Sports Illustrated, Bleacher Report, the Washington Post, and Football Outsiders. His first book, “The Genius of Desperation,” a schematic history of professional football, was published by Triumph Books in 2018 and won the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Nelson Ross Award for “Outstanding recent achievement in pro football research and historiography.”

NFL announces 16 new drills coming to 2020 Scouting Combine

As the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine moves into prime time, there will be some new drills for the national audience

Well, this should be fun.

The NFL Scouting Combine is already one of the most exciting events surrounding the NFL draft, and it somehow just got even more exciting with the announcement that 16 new drills are coming to the combine.

The new additions include end zone fade routes added to the routes thrown by quarterbacks, change of direction added to the routes ran by running backs, end zone fade routes ran by receivers and tight ends, and more.

They’ve also eliminated some drills such as the pitch and cone drill for running backs, toe tap drills for receivers and more.

Each year we see prospects build some buzz for themselves with an excellent combine performance. It’ll be exciting to see which prospects set themselves apart with the addition of these new drills.

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5 QB prospects Bears should watch at NFL Scouting Combine

The Bears are expected to target a veteran QB in free agency, but it wouldn’t be a surprise if they also drafted a young QB to develop.

Easily the biggest offseason conversation surrounding the Bears has been how they’re going to handle the quarterback position.

While Mitchell Trubisky has been named the starter for the 2020 season, that’s not guaranteed beyond this season or even at the start. Which means the Bears will likely be in the market for a new quarterback.

Chicago is already expected to target a veteran signal caller in free agency, but it wouldn’t be a surprise if they also drafted a young quarterback to develop.

With that in mind, here are five quarterback prospects the Bears should watch at the NFL Scouting Combine next week:

1. Jordan Love, Utah State

Troy Babbitt-USA TODAY Sports

Utah State quarterback Jordan Love is the kind of player the Bears would love — an athletic, dual-threat quarterback with a big arm. But Chicago certainly wouldn’t be the only team in need of his services.

Love certainly regressed in his senior season, throwing for 20 touchdowns and 17 interceptions in 2019 compared to 32 touchdowns, six interceptions in 2018. But his upside is enough for the Bears to consider taking a chance on him if he’s still on the board come the second round.

NFL.com calls WR Tee Higgins ‘must watch’ prospect for Bills

WR Tee Higgins a ‘must watch’ prospect for Buffalo Bills at NFL Scouting Combine.

With the 2020 NFL Scouting Combine en route later this month, NFL.com tabbed one prospect for each team that they have to keep a good eye on during the workouts.

For the Bills, the selection was wide receiver Tee Higgins:

BUFFALO BILLS: Tee Higgins, WR, Clemson. The Bills need to score more points, so drafting a receiver early is certainly in play.

Short, sweet and to the point. The Bills had an improved offense in 2019, but they basically just came out of the bottom of the barrel (while the Jets found their way down there). That Bills have to set the bar higher again this offseason to continue their improvement toward NFL legitimacy.

Prior to last year, the Bills added Cole Beasley and John Brown at the receiver position. Both had productive seasons. However, Higgins or another young wideout would provide the Bills with a youthful prospect to grow with quarterback Josh Allen. In addition, it’s well known by now that Higgins has the size at 6-foot-4 that you just can’t teach. He can go up and get passes others just can’t.

Higgins will be in play for selection around the Bills’ first pick, No. 22 overall, in Round 1.

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NFL announces prospect media availability throughout scouting combine

The league has the announced the days and times NFL hopefuls and prospects will be available to the media during the scouting combine,

With the Super Bowl in the rearview mirror and the 2020 NFL Draft months away, the league is now focused on the annual scouting combine, which will take place in Indianapolis late February.

The NFL has announced the dates and times the prospects attending this year’s combine will be available to the media.

Potential NFL players will be grouped according to their assigned positions between 8:00 a.m. ET and 11:00 a.m. ET, Tuesday, Feb. 25 through Friday, Feb. 28. The hopefuls will not be in the room for the entire hour, however.

Seattle fans had best get up early, as all interview slots listed below are in Eastern Time!

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Here is the complete interview schedule by position:

Tuesday, Feb. 25

8:00 – 9:00 a.m. Tight Ends

9:00 – 10:00 a.m. Quarterbacks, Wide Receivers

10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Quarterbacks, Wide Receivers

Wednesday, Feb. 26

8:00 – 9:00 a.m. Kickers, Offensive Linemen

9:00 – 10:00 a.m. Offensive Linemen

10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Running Backs

Thursday, Feb. 27

8:00 – 9:00 a.m. Defensive Linemen

9:00 – 10:00 a.m. Defensive Linemen

10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Linebackers​

Friday, Feb. 28                ​​

8:00 – 9:00 a.m. Defensive Backs

9:00 – 10:00 a.m. Defensive Backs

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