Call & Times

Remote combine invite still ‘golden ticket’ for prospects

- By ARNIE STAPLETON

Kansas State tight end Briley Moore, a graduate transfer from Northern Iowa, franticall­y scrolled through his waterproof phone.

“It was a dream of mine since I was a little kid to go to the combine,” Moore said. “So, once I had seen a couple on Twitter got the combine invite, I was taking a shower, checked my phone.” Nothing.

His heart sank. Then, it hit him. “Checked my spam on one of my old email addresses from when I was at Northern Iowa and it was in there,” Moore said. “So, my uncle, his wife, and my fiancée were all out in the living room and I started screaming when I was in the shower.”

They came running. What was the fuss all about?

“I told them I got it.” The annual NFL scouting combine in Indianapol­is was canceled because of the pandemic, leaving prospects to show off for scouts, coaches and general managers at their college pro days instead.

While players lamented the lost opportunit­y to gather in Indy and square off against their peers, an invitation to the combine was still considered a golden ticket for the 323 prospects who were

“invited” to the reimagined combine (really, 103 pro days spread out over several weeks on college campuses this spring).

“It’s not fun not being able to be there and get that experience. But at the end of the day it’s what made today so important,” Moore said at Kansas State’s pro day.

The scouting combine has morphed from a small gathering of players and talent evaluators to an annual event that even went prime time last year just before COVID-19 upended everything. The annual get-together is the capstone to college football careers for the 300plus invitees who get to see how they stack up against their peers in their draft class, or even historical­ly.

“We’ve been watching it since we were little and that’s something that we look forward to,” Oklahoma running back Rhamondre Stevenson said. “It’s kind of a bummer not being able to do it.”

Scrapped along with the combine were visits to team facilities, leaving Zoom calls as the way to get to know players.

“That’s something that all of us college players going into the draft look forward to, the combine,” Stevenson said. “But I think I had the upper hand by going to the Senior Bowl and talking to a lot of scouts and showcasing my game there. Then, I had a second chance here at my pro day. I’m blessed.”

For those who didn’t get to the Senior Bowl, their pro day was their one and only shot to show off in front of NFL teams.

“As far as the combine not being had, I was obviously a little disappoint­ed from the fact that I wanted my numbers to be next to everybody else’s numbers at my position because I’ll take my number up against anybody,” Texas safety Caden Sterns said. “So, I was a little disappoint­ed.

“But life and football are all about making adjustment­s. It’s what you have to do.”

Northweste­rn O-lineman Rashawn Slater looked at the bright side: He had 10 teammates on hand at the Wildcats’ pro day.

“It’s definitely nice to be able to do it around all my guys,” Slater said, adding that being around them “one last time was really cool.”

“As far as the combine getting canceled, I knew it was a possibilit­y from the start,” Slater said. “So, my focus was just being prepared for whatever happens, control what I can control. It’s unfortunat­e, but it wasn’t something I was super upset about.”

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