Dayton Daily News

Seeking any possible edge

GMs, coaches meet to assay top college prospects.

- By Arnie Stapleton

Lured INDIANAPOL­IS — out of the broadcast booth with a $100 million contract that makes him the highest-paid football coach ever, Jon Gruden sauntered up to the podium and flashed that mischievou­s smile.

“I’m very excited to be back here in Indianapol­is,” Gruden declared. “I sure have missed the combine.”

Gruden is navigating an offseason NFL landscape that’s changed drasticall­y since he last roamed the sideline nearly a decade ago.

“It’s a lot different because you’re not allowed to have any interactio­n with the players, and I’ve always complained about that since the new (collective bargaining agreement) came into place,” Gruden said Wednesday. “A lot of players would come to see me in Tampa to get their football fix.

“So you’re not allowed to have contact with these guys. But what’s most discouragi­ng to me is we’ve got to make some decisions on our roster, on salaries, on players and their futures, and you can’t even meet them,” Gruden grumbled.

“I don’t know these guys. I’ve never coached them. I never met half of them. So that’s been very, very difficult for me, and I’ve been emotional about it at times.”

On the next podium was Matt Patricia, who, unlike his former colleague Josh McDaniels, didn’t balk at leaving Bill Belichick’s brigade.

Then there was Andy Reid, in the midst of another major roster shakeup, and his protégé, Doug Pederson, still basking in Philadelph­ia’s first Super Bowl triumph in just his second season as coach of the Eagles.

All are gathered this weekend in Indianapol­is hoping to better their chances of winning in 2018.

Top college prospects, including a group of quarterbac­ks that could produce five first-round draft picks, will spend four days getting poked and prodded, tested and timed.

GMs and coaches are peppering them with questions either in formal 15-minute interviews or during a mixed zone after their physical assessment­s.

“It’s a chance to get to know these guys, to know exactly what you’re getting when they come into the building,” said new Texans general manager Brian Gaine.

He said their athleticis­m and acumen are already wellknown, and they’ll flash their strength, speed and swiftness this week at Lucas Oil Stadium.

What the GMs and coaches want to do is get a look under the hood.

“We’d like to talk about football as much as we can, but we need to know everything we can to find out about these players,” Gaine said. “So when they come into our building (we know) that they’re a good fit for us in the locker room, in the weight room, in the training room, in the meeting rooms, out on the practice field.”

After this week, teams will retreat to their headquarte­rs and begin preparing for the annual flood of free agents that will hit the market in mid-March.

NFL.com reported this week that teams will soon receive in-game player-tracking data on every NFL player in the league, something that could change the way they scout opponents and evaluate free agents.

The league has gathered the data since 2014 through sensors in players’ shoulder pads. Until now, teams only had data on their own players.

Some teams have embraced the new tools more than others.

“Are you talking about the analytics, the GPS, all the modern technology?” Gruden said. “Man, I’m trying to throw the game back to 1998.

“You know, really as a broadcaste­r, I went around and observed every team, asked a lot of questions, took a look at the facilities, how they’re doing business; there’s a stack of analytic data ... people don’t even know how to read it.

“So I’m not going to rely on GPSes and all the modern technology. I will certainly have some people that are profession­al that can help me from that regard. But I still think doing things the old-fashioned way is a good way, and we’re going to try to lean the needle that way a little bit.”

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Raiders coach Jon Gruden, at the NFL combine Wednesday in Indianapol­is, faces a changed offseason NFL landscape since he last roamed the sideline.
DARRON CUMMINGS / ASSOCIATED PRESS Raiders coach Jon Gruden, at the NFL combine Wednesday in Indianapol­is, faces a changed offseason NFL landscape since he last roamed the sideline.

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