T master Posted February 12, 2022 Posted February 12, 2022 On 1/5/2022 at 11:01 AM, RyanC883 said: totally ridiculous. Can teams have players take them during a pre-draft visit? I was wondering the same thing i wouldn't think that you would want a multi Million dollar QB that can't think quickly or decipher a defense i would think that this could d be a NFL thing to drop the test but the teams can still give it if they decide to to protect their best interests . 1 Quote
WhoTom Posted February 12, 2022 Posted February 12, 2022 On 1/5/2022 at 11:16 AM, Hapless Bills Fan said: From taking the Wonderlic samples available online, it struck me as really a kind of “SAT lite”. Players who were specifically coached for it and academically successful would do well, and players who were not coached for it and not particularly academically successful would not, but it really wouldn’t test the football smarts and football-specific memory teams really care about. I think they’ve decided (and took long enough) that Wonderlic really doesn’t have a lot of bearing on a player’s football success, so why do it? Agreed. It's the same reason that a lot of colleges and universities aren't using SAT scores in their admission process. The test was designed to predict one's probability of success in college, but research has demonstrated that it doesn't do what it was designed to do. Quote
CoudyBills Posted February 12, 2022 Posted February 12, 2022 1 hour ago, Chaos said: in the past 1. Legacy ties 2. Political connections 3. Objective Academic Measures 4. Subjective academic measures 5. Geography current state 1. Legacy ties 2. Political connections 3. Identity. 4. Geography 5. Subjective academic measures Sounds like a recipe for success. No wonder some people don't want to hire them. Quote
BigAl2526 Posted February 12, 2022 Posted February 12, 2022 On 1/5/2022 at 12:17 PM, Ridgewaycynic2013 said: No, Allen higher...at least according to this: Wonderlic scores for 2018 QBs Josh Allen: 37 Josh Rosen: 29 Sam Darnold: 28 Baker Mayfield: 25 Lamar Jackson: 13 He was being facetious. Before the draft, Josh Rosen was touted by many as the most NFL ready QB. He was smart and philosophical, a real "Rennaisance man." Our Josh Allen just didn't get that much attention. In the draft,, a number of observers thought Buffalo should have drafted Josh Rosen. Hence, he was seen as the "right" Josh. Ridgeway likes Josh Allen and agrees the Bills made the right choice. He's using sarcasm too diss all who thought otherwise a few years ago. Josh Allen was indeed the smartest QB in that draft. Quote
RoyBatty is alive Posted February 12, 2022 Posted February 12, 2022 6 hours ago, CoudyBills said: So what does Harvard use as selection criteria? Harvard has their own agenda, They use a lot, mostly $ and if you are the right ethnicity, GPA, extracurricular activity, excel in a sport, do a lot of charity work 1 Quote
Hapless Bills Fan Posted February 12, 2022 Posted February 12, 2022 1 minute ago, RoyBatty is alive said: Harvard has their own agenda, They use a lot, mostly $ and if you are the right ethnicity, GPA, extracurricular activity, excel in a sport, do a lot of charity work You forgot #1, Legacy. 1 Quote
RoyBatty is alive Posted February 14, 2022 Posted February 14, 2022 On 2/12/2022 at 1:57 PM, Hapless Bills Fan said: You forgot #1, Legacy. I don't know how impactful that is anymore, they were getting a lot of backlash on that swaying it perpetrated elitism and didn't lead to diversity. Quote
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