I don't understand what you mean...I have mixed emotions about Wonderlic scores. It is equivalent to the 40 yard dash times, you have to be smart on how you assess it.
I don't understand what you mean...
- Jerry Jeudy
Here is your link.Sorry I don't have a link but Stanley's score was 40. Highest of all QBs.
Drew Rosenhaus took good care of them.When ever the Wonderlic comes up I can't help but remember the pride of Story county; the Davis brothers. How the hell did those guys remain eligible.
Agree. If anything Nate is sometimes too mechanical on the field, processes too much, is too afraid of the big mistake.I have mixed emotions about Wonderlic scores. It is equivalent to the 40 yard dash times, you have to be smart on how you assess it.
They went to college at Iowa State.When ever the Wonderlic comes up I can't help but remember the pride of Story county; the Davis brothers. How the hell did those guys remain eligible.
Sometimes too much thinking is a negative for a QB. Stanley might fall into that category, too much thinking, too mechanical, not enough free flow. It is like a golf swing, too much think, you often stink.Sorry I don't have a link but Stanley's score was 40. Highest of all QBs.
If your three year starter at QB has a 40 on the Wonderlic, good thing Iowa didn't tweak the playbook. That would have been a disaster. Best to run off tackle and sweep to the short side of the field.
Sometimes a low scoring Wonderlic can mean a player has difficulty reading, or difficulty with a English, which could be a second language, other times it means the player isn't that bright and probably shouldn't have been admitted to college. At other times it means he is from Alabama or Nebraska.50 is a perfect score. Average score is 20. That's really damn good by Nate.
For comparison, Jake Fromm got a 35, Joe Burrow got a 34, and Tua Tagovailoa got a 13.
This is awesome. Got the size, arm, smarts, sneaky athleticism, and a lot of guts and grit. People, he just might be a heck of a pro!Sorry I don't have a link but Stanley's score was 40. Highest of all QBs.
Sometimes a low scoring Wonderlic can mean a player has difficulty reading, or difficulty with a English, which could be a second language, other times it means the player isn't that bright and probably shouldn't have been admitted to college. At other times it means he is from Alabama or Nebraska.
This is awesome. Got the size, arm, smarts, sneaky athleticism, and a lot of guts and grit. People, he just might be a heck of a pro!
IIRC Brian Griese or some other QB quite awhile back scored mid 40s and the announcers would bring that up time to time to comment "he is such a cerebral qb". Funny because it is good to be cerebral pre-snap, in the weekly meetings etc, but most qbs can handle pre-snap reads if they do the film and practice.
The real winners are after the snap as someone mentioned that you cant think a lot of just react and process fast.
As much as anything the really great QBs seem to have that mental, moving picture of the field in their head during plays and know where everyone is and who is open.
Not sure if the wonderlic high scores measure that.