Booger926 wrote:
And since there are only 7 skill based drills at the real combine that all combine participants do, (the 40, the bench, the vertical and broad jump, the 3 cone drill, and the 20 and 60 yard shuttles) these should be the only information that owners should have on their radar.
There is a lot of other data NFL teams have access to in addition to the combine drills.
Many games worth of film to watch, Pro-days, one on one interviews / drills, etc.
I think the volatility rating being shown is good and needed.
With it, you still don't know if the player is going to improve or decline.
Without it, you have nothing at all to consider when deciding if you want to draft player A or player B (all things being equal).
I like for there to be at least
something I can use to help decide if I want to take a chance on a player other than the max speed rating.