Los Angeles Times

Importance is hard to measure

The yearly showcase of NFL prospects scores with fans, but team execs are drawn to it for different reasons

- By Dan Woike

Fans love combine, but most NFL scouts have already seen what they need.

INDIANAPOL­IS — The half mile or so that leads you from Hall A to Hall K is full of distractio­ns. There are sessions on “Deadly Dust” … “A Safer Look at Welding” … “A Safety Manager’s Guide to Millennial­s” …

A cardboard cutout of Pope Francis has instructio­ns on how to find a worship area.

But, no offense to the papacy or to the fine folks with the Indiana Safety and Health Conference & Expo, those aren’t the reasons 30,000-plus fans will walk through the doors of the Indiana Convention Center over the next four days.

They’ll come because they want to watch draft prospects run, jump, lift and bend — a testament to the appetite for profession­al football and the willingnes­s of the NFL to serve it up.

If fans make it to Hall K without being diverted, they can even post up in the stadium-style seating and watch prospects bench press. The NFL doesn’t even charge for the privilege — yet.

But while some of the footballcr­azy public yearns for 40-yard dash times, bench reps and official weights, executives around the NFL view the data almost with a shrug.

“The times and stuff might come into play when you have guys who are kind of tied,” Tampa Bay General Manager Jason Licht said.

The combine the public sees, and apparently wants, is centered on “measurable­s,” where tenths of a second are the difference between being “fast” and “meh.” But NFL execs know the numbers here in Indianapol­is, where the combine has been since 1987, can lie.

In 2000, Norwegian strongman Leif Larsen bench-pressed 225 pounds 45 times — then the secondmost in combine history. The Buffalo Bills, undoubtedl­y wowed by his strength, spent a sixth-round pick on him. Five picks later, the New England Patriots took the leadfooted Tom Brady.

It’s why teams like the Buccaneers come to the combine with their draft board already set, looking more to affirm opinions than to uncover diamonds on the turf.

“It’s just confirmati­on. We have our draft board,” Licht said. “We try to get it as set as much as possible before we come here so we’re not getting caught up in workout wonders.”

The most important and valuable informatio­n at the combine isn’t uncovered on the bench press, at the cone drill or between the 40yard dash starting and finishing lines. Instead, it happens in medical rooms where gaggles of doctors examine each of the more-than 300 prospects.

When Tennessee General Manager Jon Robinson took to the podium to speak with the assembled press, he opened by listing three things he wanted out of the weekend — and medical examinatio­n, probably not coincident­ally, came first.

“If nothing else … our doctors putting their hands on guys, that’s worth its weight in gold,” said Licht, who included interviews and onfield performanc­es on his list. “That’s what the combine was really set up for.”

The measurable­s shouldn’t be ignored. Historical data say that.

“The high-end players in our league have certain physical traits that allow them to be high-end players. And if they don’t have one of those traits, they’d better have something that offsets it,” Indianapol­is Colts General Manager Chris Ballard said.

“If they’re deficient in one area, they’d better be really special in another.”

But if they’re really special, everyone probably knew before coming to Indianapol­is.

The times can break a tie. They can settle side bets inside front offices. But, they’re not shaping decisions.

“It’s usually the tape you’re going to,” Licht said.

daniel.woike@latimes.com Twitter: @DanWoikeSp­orts

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