NorthHawk wrote:It might be a good move for him with Macdonald having a different eye for traits in his Defense.
I’m not concerned with his 40 time but I think the more valuable time would be his 10 yard split which shows quickness and power. If that’s mediocre then he might have some difficulty making the adjustment.
Edit: He had a 1.4 10 yard split at his combine which is very fast so he might be able to make an impact.
c_hawkbob wrote:Two things; 1- The QB is virtually never 40 yards in the backfield on a pass rush. 2 - If he has to go 40 yards downfield into coverage we lost that play at the play call.
c_hawkbob wrote:For the show. The 40 yard dash is the biggest 'draw' the combine has.
c_hawkbob wrote:No it's not, it's never been relevant to linemen on either side of the ball.
It's really a lot less relevant for every position now that prospects are training strictly how run a faster 40 to get the extra money a few draft positions is worth. It's been less and less relevant to actual football speed at any position for a long time, but has always been that way for linemen.
c_hawkbob wrote:I have answered it. "to get the extra money a few draft positions is worth" absolutely applies to pro days as well.
NorthHawk wrote:It's relevant for the skill positions and LB in some schemes, but the main benefit of those times is knowing how well they stack up against their opponents.
For years we didn't draft a WR who ran less than 4.4, but that didn't matter for the players at the LoS like DL and OL where explosion is more important than speed (as shown in the 10yd split times).
The 40 for the Linemen is probably more for show as it attracts a bigger audience when a 350lb man gets rumbling to a 4.8 40. Most scouts don't use it as it almost never happens in a game or a career for those players.
But they do pay attention to the explosive tests like broad jump, how high they can jump, and 10 yd splits.
NorthHawk wrote:I'm not sure that I really understand what MacDonald wants to do. I hear a lot of things like simulated blitzing, lots of stunting, Defensive looks that are meant to confuse the other Offense and so forth.
So maybe playing OLB for Jones is part of a deception or maybe the scheme is he is to only cover a short area and a CB/Safety would cover the TE down field as they switch off for coverage responsibilities.
I don't worry about him not being able to set the edge because he's had to do that fairly often in his career in Denver and it's where the 10yd split is important to get off blocks and attack the ball carrier.
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