Riddlewire
Master
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2007
- Messages
- 2,570
The NFL has announced that along with the National Scouting Combine that is held in Indianapolis, the league will also host eight Regional Combines across the country to allow players to showcase their skills to NFL teams prior to the 2012 NFL draft.
According to the league, the new combines will be for college players eligible for the 2012 draft that weren't invited to the Scouting Combine, players with college experience who want to gauge their pro potential and former professional players who have been out of the game for some time.
"Out of the game for some time"?
So... what, is Emmitt Smith going to make a comeback?
More:
Like at the Scouting Combine in Indianapolis, the Regional Combines will involve players being weighed and measured, along with being evaluated on the field by NFL scouts and personnel.
The times and dates of the eight Regional Combines are:
* January 26 in Los Angeles
* February 4 in Houston
* February 11 in Baltimore
* February 18 in Tampa Bay
* February 25 in New York/New Jersey
* March 3 in Chicago
* March 10 and 11 in Atlanta
* March 17 in Cleveland
All workouts will take place at the practice facilities of the local NFL team, with the exception of Los Angeles. That event will be at Orange Coast College.
There will be an NFL Super Regional Combine to be held at Ford Field on March 30-31. Players that attend a Regional Combine may be invited to that.
A "Super Regional" combine.:crazy:
So now the combine is like the NCAA tournament. I wonder if the combine participants will be seeded.
My take:
The traditional combine has a relatively low number of players. There are always a few token white skill players invited to the combine. NFL execs are beginning to feel conspicuous about drafting every black player at the combine each year while some of the white players go undrafted (and the teams then fill their draft slots with non-combine black players. This is what happened to Blair White.). This is a way to cover their asses. Now, with all these other "official" combines spread around the country, they can pass on all the white skill players they want because the total number of black players who are "official combine performers" will be much higher, thus making it unnecessary to draft a non-invited black scrub over a top white performer at the combine.
On a related note, how can this possibly be a good way to compare and contrast talent? They will all be performing on different surfaces at different locations. And we all know that 0.05 seconds in a measurement can be critical to scouts (even if it's not actually important).
I wonder if they will try to turn these into spectator events over time. Full of tiered ticket pricing and lots of ad revenue.
---------------------------------------------------------
Addendum:
I suspect this will also reduce scout attendance at the Pro Days of smaller schools (ex: Wyoming, Ohio U), since the NFL types will now have a built-in excuse not to show up. "I already saw hundreds of the best players at the five combines I attended!"