Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Combine official measurements coming in


Growl

Recommended Posts

I'm not gonna babysit this thing but I'll post a few.

Troy T Antonio Garcia

6'6/293 lbs
32 7/8" arms, 9 7/8" hands

Utah T Garett Bolles:

6'5/297 lbs

34" arms, 9 3/8" hands.

Leonard Fournette weighed in at 240 pounds, the heaviest of all RBs. The lightest? San Diego State's Donnel Pumphrey (176). #NFLCombine

Ohio State C Pat Elflein:

6'3/303 lbs

33 1/3" arms, 9 3/4" hands

 

 

Josh Norris is the only guy I can find doling these out so far. Props if you have another account to follow.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Florida OL David Sharpe 6'6/343 lbs 35 3/8" arms 10" hands

 

Forrest Lamp 6'4/309 lbs 32 1/4" arms 10 5/8" hands Arms measured in over an inch longer than at that Senior Bowl (31 1/8)

Florida OL David Sharpe 6'6/343 lbs 35 3/8" arms 10" hands

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Updated from the Senior Bowl to Combine: Western Michigan OL Taylor Moton 6'5/319 lbs 34 1/8" arms, 10 5/8" hands Longer arms

 

Josh Norris Retweeted Nick Kendell

You will see A LOT of hand and arm lengths change. It is all dependent on who is doing the measuring.

 

Update: Troy T Antonio Garcia 6'6/302 lbs 33 3/8" arms, 9 7/8" hands Heavier, different arm length from the Senior Bowl

FSU T Roderick Johnson 6'7/298 lbs 36" arms, 10 3/4" hands

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Growl said:

If Bolles hangs around towards the end of the first, I'd probably consider moving back in for him, really really hard.

This. I'd definitely be willing to use our comp 3rd to move into the end of the 1st to grab Bolles.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure expecting Fournette to run a blazing 40 is entirely fair, mainly because this board mutinies against any prospect who doesn't run at an elite level

He's fast, but his combination of size and speed is what helps buy him so many extra yards.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • shaq Thompson was begging to comeback even on a vet min but they looked at rozebum and said "nah, we good"
    • Oh I'm sure they'll try I'd just be floored of they find a taker.
    • Just look at OTC. It takes like 30 seconds. Also, ESPN just covered this today. As Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel openly mulls a quarterback change late in Tua Tagovailoa's disappointing season, here's the math on where things stand with Tagovailoa and the Dolphins. He has $54 million in fully guaranteed compensation in 2026. That breaks down as a $39 million salary and a $15 million option bonus that needs to be exercised between the first and third days of the 2026 league year in March. Additionally, on the third day of the 2026 league year, $3 million of his $31 million 2027 salary becomes fully guaranteed. So if he's on Miami's roster as of 4 p.m. ET on March 13, the Dolphins will be on the hook for $57 million guaranteed.   If they were to release him prior to that date, they'd still have to pay him the $54 million in 2026 cash and would absorb $99.2 million in dead salary cap charges. (They could spread that out over two years if they designated him a post-June 1 release, but they'd still take $67.4 million in dead money charges on their 2026 cap and the remaining $31.8 million in 2027.) If they were to find a way to trade Tagovailoa before March 13, the acquiring team would become responsible for the $54 million in 2026 salary and bonuses, and the Dolphins' dead-money charge would drop to $45.2 million. If they traded him after March 13, presumably they'd be on the hook for the $15 million option bonus, while the new team would take the $39 million salary; the Dolphins' dead-money charge would be $60.2 million.   None of this is even close to ideal, obviously, as it would leave Miami in a terrible cap situation and also without a quarterback. The Broncos took $80 million in dead-money charges (spread over two years) when they released Russell Wilson in 2024, and they managed to make the playoffs last season and currently hold the 1-seed in the AFC playoff field for this season. So huge dead-money charges don't necessarily kill a team's chances. But one of the reasons it has worked for Denver is it found a first-round QB in Bo Nix who could play right away.   If the Dolphins bench Tagovailoa this week, it'd be for either Zach Wilson or rookie Quinn Ewers, either of whom could theoretically be a 2026 starting option if they show enough in these remaining three weeks. But moving on from Tagovailoa would probably require the Dolphins to be players in that Mac Jones/Kyler Murray/etc. second-chance QB market if they want to compete next year. Not a great spot for whoever their next general manager turns out to be. https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/47324378/nfl-week-16-buzz-news-updates-fantasy-intel-questions-predictions#trades
×
×
  • Create New...