The Standard (St. Catharines)

One-handed linebacker combine’s top story

- CINDY BOREN AND JACOB BOGAGE

The first time Shaquem Griffin was held out of a football game, he was eight years old. Football was for people with two hands, an opposing coach told him, and his left hand had been amputated four years earlier as the result of a painful prenatal condition.

“That was the moment I realized I was always going to have to prove people wrong,” Griffin wrote on the Players’ Tribune.

Griffin, the Central Florida linebacker, has done that and more, vanquishin­g even more doubters with attention-getting performanc­es last weekend that led him to become the best story at this year’s NFL combine.

On Saturday, he bench pressed 225 pounds 20 times with the use of his right hand and a prosthetic device on his left wrist. That was only four reps off the pace of the combine’s leader, West Virginia wide receiver Ka’Raun White. On Sunday, he followed that up with a blazing, official time of 4.38 seconds in his first attempt at the 40-yard dash, and a 4.58 in his second.

How good was that? Well, the NFL Network reported that 4.38 was the fastest 40 time by a linebacker at the combine since 2003.

After initially not being invited to the combine, Griffin’s draft stock has been on the rise, with scouts now predicting he could be taken anywhere from late in the third to the fifth round at next month’s draft. Richard Sherman, the Seattle Seahawks’ cornerback, tweeted that if Griffin isn’t drafted in the first three rounds, “the system is broken.”

Scouts told Sports Illustrate­d’s Peter King and Albert Breer that they had Griffin going in the middle rounds of the sevenround draft. “Late third, early fourth,” King wrote. “He can be the best special-teams player on any team early, and maybe have a pass-rushing or subpackage role right away.” Breer added: “A college scouting director told me on Sunday that he thinks Griffin leaves (the combine) a fourthroun­der, and I ran that by a couple other scouts and they agreed.”

Rick Spielman, the Vikings’ general manager, told Bleacher Report’s Doug Farrar that he didn’t think Griffin having one hand “should be a factor, just because he’s shown he can be productive at a high level against some high-level competitio­n.”

Griffin’s twin brother, Seahawks cornerback Shaquill Griffin, ran a 4.38 a year ago, and was drafted in the third round, as the 90th overall pick.

It felt like everyone was talking about Shaquem and his road to the combine, a road that began with surgery when he was four. That’s when doctors decided to amputate his left arm the day after his mother found him threatenin­g to cut off his fingers with a kitchen knife. It was the only way he could think of to cope with the searing pain in his hand, the result of Amniotic Band Syndrome his mother suffered while pregnant, causing an amniotic membrane to wrap around his hand.

“It’s a thin tissue you can barely see,” Tangie, Griffin’s mother, told the Los Angeles Times. “The doctor answered the questions and explained the options. It could be taken off with a needle (during pregnancy), but even the slightest move could have punctured (either of the twins) and it was possible one wouldn’t survive. I was not going to take that chance.”

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shaquem Griffin, of Central Florida, gestures during the first half of the Senior Bowl NCAA college football game in Mobile, Ala., in January.
BRYNN ANDERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shaquem Griffin, of Central Florida, gestures during the first half of the Senior Bowl NCAA college football game in Mobile, Ala., in January.

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