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~ The daily blog written by ITL's Neil Stratton

Succeed in Football

Monthly Archives: March 2016

When It’s Over: A Real Agent’s Experiences

31 Thursday Mar 2016

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NFL agent

I asked longtime NFLPA contract advisor Howard Shatsky of Professional Football Management to provide me with his thoughts on how, and when, to tell a player it’s time to ‘pursue his life’s work,’ as legendary Steelers coach Chuck Noll used to tell players he’d cut.

Howard made some excellent points. His thoughts are below:


What’s the best way to handle a player who is projected as a late-round pick or an undrafted free agent?  When is too long when it comes to pursuing NFL dreams?

Obviously, many of these players are released before even making an NFL roster, or after a season on the practice squad, or at best a year or two on the 53-man roster.  So what’s an agent’s obligation regarding a young man’s non-football future? During my 27 years as an agent, I have had to have this conversation with many players.

Some agents choose the easy way out.  They just stop taking the player’s phone calls until they are fired and no longer have to deal with that client.  Others will tell the player to keep working hard, that an opportunity is coming. The reality is that if one of these “bottom of the roster” players is released and is not picked up for an entire year, he has very little chance of getting back in the league.

This is not to say it does not happen.  I recently represented a player from a small school who went undrafted and sat out the entire year.  However while sitting out, he had a job and would work out before and after going to work.  Most players do not work during this time, even though it is physically impossible to train for eight hours a day.  When asked what they are up to, they often say they are “training to get back in the NFL.”  To me, that is a synonym for unemployed.  There is no reason a player cannot work while attempting to get back in the league.

Ultimately my client’s hard work paid off.  He performed so well at the Regional Combine that 14 NFL teams expressed interest in him.  He ultimately signed with a team and was released, then picked up by another NFL club and spent the entire season on their practice roster.  The next season he finally made the 53-man roster and will now enter 2016 with one season toward his pension and free agency.  But looking at things realistically, if he makes the 53 for the next few seasons, by the time he is an unrestricted free agent — which is when the majority of NFL players “cash in” — he will be 29, so he is playing in hopes of getting that one big contract.

But again, this is the exception, not the rule.  Most players who sit out an entire NFL season have very little chance of making it back to the NFL.  This is not always because they do not have the ability to play at the NFL level. It’s just that the reality of the business is that most NFL teams would rather take a chance on a player coming out of college than one who has been “on the street” for a year.  That is extremely frustrating to both the agent and his client.  Some players who have been in training camps feel they have the ability to play in the NFL and in some cases they are correct.  Many times I have had a client tell me, “just get me an opportunity and I know I will get it done.”  The problem is that often, even though an agent may spend hours calling NFL teams and even trying to call in favors, he is unable to get another opportunity for the player.  It is at that point I feel an agent has an obligation to speak with his player and tell him it is time to move on.


More from Howard on Friday, including a recent experience with a client in just this situation.

The Road Ends

29 Tuesday Mar 2016

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NFL agent

Today, Howard Shatsky, a longtime agent who’s pretty active on Twitter (and worth a follow) tweeted this. It reminded me of a conversation I had with a scout last week at Rice’s pro day.

We’ve always had a friendly relationship, so we talk when we bump into each other on the road. He was lamenting the emails he gets from agents this time of year, pitching him on obscure players that are long shots at best. He contrasted that with a recent experience with one of the biggest agents in the game, who’s representing a top pick this spring. It was a great illustration of the dilemma hundreds of agents are going to have over the next 30-60 days.

The hard part about this business is that there are so many players that get signed by, at times, desperate agents who just want to get someone on SRA. The agents, in turn, spend weeks promoting these players to scouts. Slowly, they come to the realization that their clients are not getting traction. Usually, that’s around the end of March, i.e., now. After all, teams should be expressing interest in the player, not vice versa. Anyway, at this point, these agents have one of two reactions.

One is that they hope against hope that, somehow, their clients are super-sleepers despite the lack of attention. This is mostly denial. The other is that they realize that the time and money they’ve spent on their clients will not be rewarded, barring a miracle. When they come to this realization, deep down, they know they need to have the conversation that Howard is referring to.

The question is, how do you do this? How do you crush a kid’s dreams? How do you cut your losses when you’ve poured so many resources into a player?

There’s another element that makes it harder. Every year, it seems, there’s another form of minor-league football that comes along and tries to make a go of it. All of them ultimately fail, but for as long as they hang around, they give players the idea that there’s a post-college level that can vault them into the NFL. In very rare cases, this does happen, but in the vast majority of cases, there’s no ‘AAAA’ level of football.

If you leave college and aren’t on a roster in May, the NFL pretty much turns the page. There are exceptions, like in everything else in life, but not many. So if you’re and agent and you’re honest with yourself, and you’re honest with your client, you have to have that conversation.

More on this topic later this week.

 

WSW: My Brush With Trump (Sort Of)

23 Wednesday Mar 2016

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Since it’s primary season and so many people are obsessed with Donald Trump, I thought I’d trot out the one time my career crossed paths with him. Kind of, anyway.

In the fall of ’07, I was running the Hula Bowl, which at the time was still the No. 3 all-star game. Part of my job was trying to start a buzz around Honolulu, hoping to generate ticket sales and sponsorships, so I decided to reach out to the Rotary Club. My hope was that associating with some of the movers and shakers of the city’s business leaders would create a few synergies. I will never forget addressing that group, about 200 strong, in the ballroom of a downtown hotel. As I looked out at the audience, they sat with their backs to a series of bay windows looking out on white sandy beaches, and as I spoke, gentle breezes blew across the waters. What a cool view that was.

Anyway, one of the people I met that day was a man named Jesse James. His was a name that was easy to remember. He was a good guy, very engaging and friendly, and he offered to help me build a few relationships that might help get me connected locally. I was happy to take him up on that. As I recall, he introduced me to several people at local restaurants that helped out with meals for the players, as well as several other people.

That fall, I’d come to the island for a week at a time to conduct business and gin up excitement about the game before returning home, so one day he invited me over to his apartment for a drink. I couldn’t say no; he had been terribly friendly and helpful. At the time, I knew he had a sales-related job, but didn’t know exactly what he did.

Shortly after I arrived at his high-rise apartment downtown, that became crystal clear. I remember he welcomed me in and showed me to a table in his kitchen, providing me with a beverage. He then pulled a large signboard from behind his furniture. On it, Jesse had diagrammed an extensive plan for a hotel and entertainment complex in American Samoa. He was charged with finding investors for the project, and he hoped my boss, the Hula Bowl’s owner and a purported multimillionaire, might be interested. The centerpiece of Jesse’s pitch was that Donald Trump would be involved.

I knew my boss would not be interested, but I played along. “When is Trump coming down?” I asked.

Jesse made it clear that Trump’s involvement would be very superficial. In fact, Trump would not be integral to the project. Basically, Trump had sold his brand to the people that surrounded the project, and they hoped that his clout would help them find investors. He had already made his money on the project, and though it looked like he was an investor himself, he wasn’t anything of the sort. He had cashed a check, and now, if they found investors, his name would be on the buildings, at which point he would case more checks. He had no skin in the game. He couldn’t lose.

If there’s anything I take from that moment, it’s that Trump has become a master of being all things to all people without having to make any real sacrifices. It’s interesting that his sales pitch during primary season has been successful in creating buzz for his brand, while he hasn’t had to come out of pocket for advertising. I guess that’s one positive thing you can say about him, if nothing else.

Wrapping Up with Ray

21 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by itlneil in Scouts

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Broncos GM, NFL Scouting, Ray Farmer

Here’s Part 4 of our breakdown of former Browns GM Ray Farmer’s presentation at our seventh annual ITL Seminar in Indianapolis last month. Click here to review the first half of his presentation.

  • Here’s Ray’s take on late-round picks vs. UDFAs: “If I know that one percent of seventh-rounders make it, but three percent of college free agents make it, would y’all call me stupid for trading seventh-round picks away? . .  . Seventh-rounders have got a one percent chance. I’d rather trade my seventh-round pick, move up in another round, get a better player that I like, don’t take anybody in the seventh round, then bring in 55 guys for a workout after the draft, and let the cream rise to the top.” It’s an interesting strategy. When you go that route, you may lose a chance at the marquee UDFAs, but you put the numbers on your side. Often, a team will strike gold at these camps, but it makes scouts nervous because their favorite post-draft players don’t make it to these camps.
  • Like most scouts, Ray doesn’t put much stock in a player’s pro day. “It may change them from a free agent to a priority free agent,” but it won’t move him into the third round. “When ball is done being played, that’s it.” So don’t put too much into a much-hyped pro day.
  • On the other hand, bad character will drop a player. This is a bit of a departure from last year’s speaker, ex-Bears GM Phil Emery, who seemed to lean more in favor of talent over conduct and behavior.
  • Every year in April, some of my agent clients are getting no interest whatsoever from teams. It’s hard for me to do this, but I have to tell them that their client is probably not going to be a post-draft signee, much less a draftee. On the other hand, if a scout calls, there’s an even-money chance the player will get signed as an undrafted free agent. The real difference-maker, however, is if a position coach is calling. That’s when you know a team is interested.
  • Ray says that it’s easy to figure out who a team is looking for, if you pay attention. That makes sense. There’s so much information out there now about free agent signees, futures deals, numbers on contracts, etc., that a good agent should know exactly what teams are the best for his client.
  • Ray makes an interesting point about how teams could significantly reduce the amount of money they spend in free agency — they could hold free agency after the draft. So often, teams sign veterans to plug holes, then get to the draft and find that they could have drafted cheaper, younger players at those key positions.
  • If your client carries a jug of water to weigh-ins, hide that jug from the scouts, because it says “his weight ain’t real,” according to Ray. Yet every year, you see kids in line at weigh-ins at each all-star game carrying a jug of water. Use common sense.
  • Ray recommends that players drop all their social media accounts during draft season, because teams are scrutinizing them for any false moves.
  • Here’s an interesting quote from Ray: “There are a number of quarterbacks in this league that have lived the exact lifestyle that (Johnny Manziel) led for their first three, four, six, seven seasons.” Of course, he’s referring to the party lifestyle, not the domestic abuse allegations. It’s interesting. I agree with Ray: part of Manziel’s failure in Cleveland was his lack of discretion. Another part was that he failed to realize he was a marked man when he entered the league, and he needed to rein things in a bit.

 

More Notes on Our Seminar Presentation

17 Thursday Mar 2016

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Broncos GM, NFL Scouting, Ray Farmer

With the first half of Ray Farmer’s presentation annotated (here and here), we press forward to check out the first 10 minutes of the second half of Ray’s presentation.

  • Ray called agents ‘professional ambulance chasers,’ but in a good way. “If a kid takes a bad hit in practice, you should know. If a kid rolls his ankle, you should know.” It’s true. Ray relates a story about a player who suffered a minor injury during the early part of practice, and after a writer Tweeted it, Ray immediately got a call.
  • In Ray’s two seasons with the Browns, they had 161 players on their draft board (total!) the first year and 168 the second year. From these lists, they drafted their players and signed their underrated free agents. That’s from a list that started of about 2800 players, he said. That’s about right for all teams. Obviously, that 150-170 players varies per team, but only by about 100 players. So out of that 2800 players to start with, there’s only around 300 players that all NFL teams saw as draftable. Now, think about every player you’ll read about on your favorite Twitter account or draft site as having a legit chance of being drafted. Five hundred players? 600? 800? That’s the disconnect between media perception and what the league really sees. There’s a big difference.
  • Of course, the powers that be in the league don’t care. They want to see the event hyped up as much as possible. But the people doing evaluation aren’t looking at nearly as many players as you might be lead to believe.
  • Ray asks a key question of players on the bubble: “Can he run 4.5 and cover on kickoffs? Because if he can’t, he can’t play.” That’s a great question for an agent to ask himself when he’s looking for sleepers that can make a team despite going undrafted.
  • Ray reminded the crowd to understand what a team does before trying to pitch its scouts on a player’s ability. He even said he’s insulted when an agent calls him with a player that’s obviously a bad fit. This is so important.
  • The idea that ‘coaches coach and scouts scout’ is an old-school mentality, according to Ray. The new-school idea is that everything is collaborative. Of course, at the end of the day, someone makes the final call, but I think teams try to sell all decisions as team decisions to mitigate the damage and criticism if things go wrong.
  • Ray encourages agents to tell their clients to be humble, “even if they’re not humble.” That’s because scouts will take a player who’s full of himself as a challenge, even if he’s just confident, not cocky.
  • The Browns gave scouts two years to prove themselves. Ray had planned on evaluating his scouts this year, but he got let go before he had a chance to complete their evaluation. This differs from most teams, which, I’ve heard, give their scouts three years.
  • What’s true of scouts is true of players: no one wants to develop anyone anymore. They want someone who’s ready right out of the chute. “No one wants anything but instant coffee anymore,” Ray said.
  • The way to get an undrafted free agent signed for the most money possible is to start planning for him to go undrafted in the fifth round. Rather than waiting and hoping, the good agent starts politicking with teams after the fourth round and trying to find his best situation. The time for negotiating is not after the draft, but during the draft. This is a key distinction. After the draft, take whatever is offered to you, Ray recommends, because if you don’t, it’s on to the next one.
  • Also, Ray advises, “don’t take the money.” In other words, don’t hunt for the $10,000 UDFA bonus to make yourself look good. Hunt for the team that gives your client the best chance to make a 53 and earn $435,000 as an active NFL player. This takes a little extra work on your part, but it’s critical. The big bonus is meaningless if your client is on the street in September.
  • Ray said that, for a lot of teams, evaluation is over once the combine starts. The combine is no more than confirmation. I guess that’s true of pro days, as well. Though you hear about sleepers and whatever that suddenly shoot up the board in late February and March, those players didn’t move with teams, just with media folks. The NFL already knew about them, for the most part.
  • Ray was asked about analytics, and he illustrated its value this way. He asked, if you knew that only players that caught at least 75 percent of catchable balls would be successful in the NFL, would that be valuable information? Sure it is, most would answer. OK, but what’s a catchable ball? At some point, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. At the end of the day, really every number is subjective, or almost every one.

We’ll finish up with our dissection of Ray’s presentation next week.

Notes On Our Seminar Video (Pt. 2)

15 Tuesday Mar 2016

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Broncos GM, NFL Scouting, Ray Farmer

Today, a few notes on Ray Farmer’s presentation at our seventh annual seminar in Indianapolis last month. It’s a continuation of Monday’s post. Today’s post covers the second half of this video.

  • One thing that rarely gets mentioned is the fine line new agents must walk as they establish relationships with NFL personnel. Stay in their lanes and they risk never making the contacts they need. Push a prospect too hard and risk destroying any credibility if the prospect turns out to be a dud.
  • When he ran Kansas City’s pro department, Ray classified every player into four categories: on the 53; one of the 46 that travels with the team and is squarely on the roster; ‘bubble plus,’ or guys who are just outside the 46; and the rest, the 3-4 players (maybe one on the ‘bubble plus’ list) that are constantly in danger of being upgraded. Everyone else who crosses his desk (street free agent, recently released player, etc.) was considered LS (long shot) or claim (as in, if he’s cut, he’s worth claiming).
  • Of the ‘LS’ and ‘claim’ list, the two subdivisions are ‘practice squad plus’ and ‘workout.’ These are the only players that might rate a look, that might actually get worked out. Everyone else doesn’t even get a rating. The only way out of the ‘everyone else’ group is if you play in another league and generate more tape, which makes a player more interesting.
  • At around the 28-minute mark, Ray talks about a player the Browns signed off the Cleveland Gladiators’ roster last season named Brandon Stephens. Here’s his story. Two interesting points Ray makes are that Stephens had his game film on his phone, so after a chance meeting with Ray, he could hand Ray his phone for a quick verification of skills. The other point is that Stephens had talent, but he got sunk when he pulled his hamstring. It’s just one more reminder that health is as important as skill level when it comes to making it in the NFL.
  • Ray effectively says that if your client is 25, and he’s never played in the NFL, it’s time for him to start looking for another job. The learning curve is just too steep. That seems to be a rather hard and fast rule, and it’s one reason why ex-baseball players that start their careers late have such poor NFL careers.
  • You can’t change what a player did on tape for four years. “That’s what he is,” Ray said. There’s nothing you can do to jump-start his prospects, plain and simple.
  • Thousands of dollars are invested in interview prep for top prospects every year, but it all comes down to, ‘can I trust you?’ Ray says a player needs to get it all out in the open right off the bat. Ray’s example: “Hi, I’m Ray Farmer, and I killed three people on the way to this interview, but I just wanted you to know so we could get it out of the way.” That line got a lot of laughs, but it’s true.
  • One of the questions I always get is, how do I build relationships with scouts? Ray says it’s all about people skills, and he illustrated this by his conduct at our seminar. Ray sat in the crowd before the program started and was never approached. Later, he walked outside, where several people were, and still no one approached him. Sure, people were intimidated, but you have to get past this if you really want to make friends with important people. I have the same struggles — it’s hard to risk messing up a relationship before it starts. But it’s a risk worth taking.
  • Ray closes this segment by emphasizing the importance of building a relationship with your client, and truly knowing him. The difficulty is that schools spend four years doing everything they can to prevent agents from building relationships with their players (and often expressing very little interest in getting to know the agents themselves). The time agents get to spend building that relationship is usually after the hire, at which point it’s January or February and almost too late to make a change. It’s the paradox of the agent world.

We’ll have more later this week as we wrap up Ray’s presentation.

 

Notes On Our Seminar Video

14 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by itlneil in Scouts

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Broncos GM, NFL Scouting, Ray Farmer

This weekend, Rick Serritella from NFL Draft Bible posted the video from our seventh annual seminar held a couple weeks ago in Indianapolis. It’s here, and of course, it’s totally free.

Today I want to talk about the first half of the presentation ex-Browns GM Ray Farmer gave (Rick broke it into two parts). Here are a few notes and observations after the second listen to the video. Note: These notes are only based on the first 26 minutes of Part 1. I’ll be back with more notes to wrap Part 1 Tuesday.

  • Ray’s a pretty selfless individual and not a ‘me’ guy, and I think that comes through here. He’s a real person, very approachable.
  • Ray mentions that he doesn’t have any real hobbies. He just watches football. That’s pretty cool. I find myself looking for escapes when it comes to my free time, and I think most people in the game are similar, but not Ray. It shows what kind of a passion he has for the game and everything around it.
  • The first question he handles involves game tape. When he’s answering this question, keep in mind that he’s looking at it from the standpoint of a pro scout, not a college scout (Ray got the Browns job because he excelled at running the pro department in KC). Everything he says here involves players who are not draft-eligible; they’re players who are looking for an in-season tryout.
  • He discusses how the pro scouting intern is the first person who looks at film that comes in, be it game film or a YouTube clip. If you’re looking to be an NFL intern, maybe it’s smarter to go the pro scouting route rather than another college scouting assistant. Pro scouting involves fewer people, meaning more opportunities.
  • Ray was the only man in the pro department when Scott Pioli came to Kansas City to take over as GM in January ’09. For two years, he was the only guy in the pro department. If you’re looking to intern with a team, keep that in mind. There are just more opportunities on the pro side.
  • This is pretty basic, but Ray points out that agents who think they’re buddies with a scout or director are only truly connected to them if they have their cell number. “I probably shouldn’t be telling you that secret . . . but that’s the reality,” Ray said.
  • All NFL teams carry emergency lists by position. If you have a client who’s a street free agent, and he’s not at least on a team’s emergency list the September after he was draft-eligible, his NFL chances are nil, at least to me.
  • Ray said that sometimes practice squad players are cut simply to prove a point. They don’t want PS players getting comfortable. He also said it’s important not to look at the practice squad as a developmental position. Show promise or you’re gone.
  • There’s a constant push and pull among a player’s ‘champions’ on the team. There’s always someone who pushed hard to bring in a player, and he hears it from others if that player doesn’t perform. Hey, it’s human nature.
  • Ray pointed out that Steelers OB James Harrison was cut 11 times before he made the team once and for all. This is why a player has to stay in shape and keep charging.

WSW: Two Years, Two Scouts’ Projections

09 Wednesday Mar 2016

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NFL scout

I heard a story in Indianapolis that I’ve hesitated to run, not because it’s controversial, but because I can’t figure out what to make of it. It was told to me by Andy Ross, a top agent with a top firm, Houston-based Select Sports Group (though Andy is based in Virginia).

Andy recruited Wake Forest OB Aaron Curry in late ’07 and January of ’08 when he was considering entering the draft as a junior. As most top prospects do, Curry put in for his draft projection with the NFL’s College Advisory Committee, and he received a third-round grade. Maybe that would have proven to be true; maybe it wouldn’t have.

For perspective, the top five picks in the draft were Michigan OT Jake Long (Dolphins), Virginia DE Chris Long (Rams), Boston College QB Matt Ryan (Falcons), Arkansas OH Darren McFadden (Raiders) and LSU DT Glenn Dorsey (Chiefs). Two linebackers went in the first round that year, Southern Cal’s Keith Rivers (No. 9 to Cincinnati) and Tennessee’s Jerod Mayo (No. 10 to New England), while Oklahoma’s Curtis Lofton (more of a pure inside linebacker) went No. 37 overall to the Falcons. Maybe he would have proven to be a third-rounder; maybe he wouldn’t have.

Anyway, Curry chose to stay in school. The draft came and went, and then a couple weeks later, National Football Scouting, one of the two services that grades players for subscribing NFL teams, had him as the No. 1-rated player for the ’09 draft. National usually meets with teams around the Memorial Day weekend, so this was literally weeks after the ’08 draft. It’s possible he was rated No. 1 overall by BLESTO, the other scouting service used by NFL teams, as well. Either way, at the end of the day, he was seen as a truly elite player by two highly respected scouting services just a few months after he’d been rated as a third-rounder by NFL teams’ scouts.

Now, if you believe Cara Luterek (and we do — read our interview with her here), all 32 NFL teams are represented on the CAC, as well as National and BLESTO. Luterek used to work on the College Advisory Committee (CAC) for the NFL. Though only a handful of teams contributed to the report on Curry, clearly, several NFL evaluators must have graded Curry down quite a bit to counter BLESTO and National, which clearly liked him.

As a postscript, National and BLESTO both were right. Curry went No. 4 in ’09 to the Seahawks (and Andy signed him, doing quite well on his contract, by the way, getting him $34 million guaranteed, a tremendous sum). I guess that says a lot about the effectiveness of the two scouting services that year vs. the quality of evaluation for the handful of teams that graded Curry before the ’08 draft.

Increasing A Player’s Interested NFL Teams

08 Tuesday Mar 2016

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NFL agent

Here’s another way to look at the race to get a player drafted, or at least signed after the draft. It’s kind of got an analytics feel to it. Hear me out. It involves creating a market for a player, and how you do that. Today, I’m speaking directly to agents who are new and/or have limited client lists, and have lower-rated players they hope to get onto a team.

I think there’s a perception (and this is reinforced by the draft media) that all teams see players about the same way. I think there’s also a perception that every team rates about 250 players, one through 250, in a similar form to the draft itself. Also not true. Most teams start by evaluating 2,000 players heading into the season and reduce that number to about 150-180 draftable players on draft day. Whittling that number down is done differently by different teams.

For example, some teams (Cincinnati, Dallas, maybe New England) have higher risk tolerance. These teams are more likely to keep a Randy Gregory, for example, on their board even though he’s got a roomful of red flags related to this drug issues. We’re now seeing why so many teams pulled Gregory off their boards. On the other hand, I was talking to one GM who interviewed him before last year’s draft, and he applauded him for “getting naked” about his drug issues and what he’d done at Nebraska. The GM still took him off his team’s board.

Then there’s injury issues. If your client has had surgeries on his knees, ankles, hamstring, or anything from the waist down, he’s in trouble, especially if he’s a ballcarrier who’s going to take a lot of punishment. I don’t have a rule of thumb for when such injuries are fatal, draft-wise, but injuries are a real factor in the draft process. I’ve often heard that hospital day is the most important day of the week for a player, at least in the eyes of teams.

Now let’s look at performance. If a player was on a team with a player rated as draft-worthy, then his film is in the NFL’s Dub Center. That means there’s a better chance someone has seen him and, perhaps, taken an interest in him.

If you can make sure your client (a) doesn’t have any character red flags, (b) hasn’t suffered a series of major injuries, and (c) has been seen by NFL teams, plus he comes from an FBS school and he’s at least 6-feet tall, you’ve improved your chances of having the most number of teams liking him. In turn, this improves his chances of being on a 90-man roster in a couple months.

Phase 4

04 Friday Mar 2016

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NFL Scouting

Like most football fans, I’m always trying to crack the NFL code and think the way scouts and evaluators think. That’s why this time of year — NFL combine and pro day evaluation — has always been a bit of a puzzle to me.

Obviously, the NFL wants to beat the drum for its new class of prospects in March and April as it builds the draft to a fever pitch. Hype sells ads, right? But are pro days where teams really go to ‘discover’ players that somehow slid past them until the last 60 days before the draft?

More than a week after our seventh annual ITL Seminar featuring former Browns GM Ray Farmer, I’m still sifting through all the things he said. One of my takeaways is that in the passel of information he got from the various stops along the pre-draft calendar (from January until the draft) during his time with the Falcons, Chiefs and Browns, he always valued what he got back from the all-star games as the most valuable of all. After that, it’s the combine, followed by pro days.

To recap, when you consider that game tape is always No. 1 — former Redskins and Texans GM Charley Casserly says that what a player did on the field is an unchangeable 80 percent of his grade — you can break each segment of evaluation into four phases. These are, in order of importance (and chronologically), playing career, all-star competition, NFL combine, and pro days.

This jibes with what I’ve most often gotten back from scouts and evaluators. Pro days are used as a screen or a net. When a scout goes to an out-of-the-way school and a player surprises him with his 40 time, the scout immediately goes to the tape to see if his physical ability matches what was on film. On draft day, according to former Jags and Browns scout Ken Moll (shown here at our 2014 seminar), teams put all the outstanding workout performances on a wall and use this list when they want to roll the dice on late-round flyers or post-draft signings. However, what they don’t do is move pro day all-stars into the top 3-4 rounds, which is kind of the ‘real draft’ when it comes to the players NFL teams genuinely expect to make the team. With combine prep having become a standard part of almost all prospects’ January and February, teams have learned their lessons from the Mike Mamulas of the world.

We’re in the midst of Phase 4 of the evaluation process. While’s it’s an important part of evaluations, it’s still fourth in importance by a rather wide margin. With the NFL combine in the books and pro days just kicking off, I thought I’d pass this reminder along to help you put the hype from the next 4-6 weeks in perspective.

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