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How 16 top recruits’ 40-yard dash times changed at the 2017 NFL Combine

For years, star recruits were somehow listed as getting slower while entering the pros, thanks to dubious high school 40 times. We’ve sometimes got better numbers these days, though.

NFL: Combine
NFL: Combine
Deshaun Watson ran a 4.66-second 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine. In 2013, he was time at 4.89.
Brian Spurlock-USA TODAY Sports

Up until just a few years ago, almost all 40-yard dashes for high school prospects were hand-timed, often by their own high school coaches.

That led to some hilarious discrepancies between players’ times as recruits and as NFL prospects, with some allegedly getting slower despite being enrolled in high-quality training programs for four years.

If we go by hand-timing at the 2013 combine, we’re left to think former Notre Dame running back Theo Riddick got 0.28 seconds slower in college. We’d think one LSU offensive lineman, P.J. Lonergan, got 0.60 seconds slower. It doesn’t add up.

But for some recruits, we have more accurate numbers these days. We don’t have verifiable 40 times for everybody, and plenty of recruits still tout eye-popping, hand-timed results. Recruits who participated in Nike’s The Opening recruiting showcase after their sophomore or junior years of high school, though, have partially laser-timed results.

The NFL now uses a half-laser approach, where the timing is hand-triggered when the runner starts, but his finish is motion-sensed. That’s a little bit more accurate, and that’s what The Opening uses as well.

The former elite recruits who tested at the combine posted faster 40 times after college than they did before it.

This only includes players who ended up making the combine. Just about every player beefs up while he’s on campus, but most of the players whose speed we can measure didn’t get slower while they were packing on extra poundage.

We’ve cross-referenced available players’ 40 times from the 2013 Opening, which also uses a half-laser method, and this year’s combine. Here are the splits:

Player

Position

College

Opening 40

Combine 40

Change

Of course, this doesn’t apply to every recruit. One example of how far off high school numbers can still be, if they’re not being measured at a standardized location: East Carolina WR Zay Jones.

It makes sense that most players get faster during their time in college. Despite adding muscle and/or fat, they’re spending their offseasons in finely tuned conditioning programs. They’re doing workouts that increase their explosion, a critical trait when running the 40.

The half-laser method of timing a 40 involves human error, because a hand-starter can’t be fully precise about when a runner starts to move. But now that the combine and at least one recruiting event are on the same system, we can track some changes a little bit better.

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