NFL Draft gurus often have a strange and complicated series of methodology they go through when evaluating prospects.
That usually involves removing players from draft boards based solely on obscure intangibles or measurements. For quarterbacks, there’s often a paranoia about height or hand size; for skill players and defensive backs, offseason discourse hyperfixates on minuscule differences in shuttle drills or vertical leaps.
Decades ago, quarterbacks were practically lumbering dinosaurs compared to the dual-threat velociraptors of today, an archetype exemplified by Arkansas quarterback Taylen Green.
For offensive linemen, you would think the make-or-break data point would be the bench press, or another strength-related feat.