Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NFL: Murray is 5-foot-10

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Kyler Murray may not show off his arm or his legs at the NFL scouting combine, but on Thursday he assuaged colossal concerns about his size.

The Heisman Trophy-winning dual-threat quarterbac­k and speedy outfielder from the University of Oklahoma checked in at just over 5-foot-10 and 207 pounds with a hand size, as measured from his pinkie to his thumb, of 9½ inches.

“I don’t know why people think Kyler is 5-8,” said running back Rodney Anderson, Murray’s college teammate and fellow NFL hopeful. “I don’t know where that came from. I’m 6-foot — I look small next to our offensive line. Anybody is going to look small next to our offensive line.

“He’s a solid 5-10, he’s heavy, he’s fast. He’s a heck of an athlete. His size was never an issue.”

And now it’s less of one for many NFL teams.

Although he’s the shortest quarterbac­k measured at the combine since 2003, those numbers were welcome news for Murray, the executives and coaches gathered in Indianapol­is and fans wondering how his size would affect his draft stock.

“Quarterbac­ks come in all shapes and sizes,” New York Giants Coach Pat Shurmur said. “Russell Wilson won a Super Bowl. I think you’ve got to look at the total player, you’ve got to look at his productivi­ty and you’ve got to look at whether he fits.”

Murray compares favorably to Wilson in 2012 and Baker Mayfield, last year’s top overall draft pick. Murray is a half-inch shorter but 3 pounds heavier than Wilson, and his hand is a quarter-inch larger than Mayfield’s.

Murray’s measuremen­ts might be his most significan­t results at the combine because he is not expected to throw or compete in any other quarterbac­k drills at Lucas Oil Stadium this week.

After signing a contract with a $4.66 million signing bonus as the ninth overall pick in June by baseball’s Oakland Athletics, Murray led Oklahoma to the College Football Playoff in his only season as the starter while posting the second-best passer efficiency rating in Bowl Subdivisio­n history.

Before throwing for 4,361 yards and 42 touchdowns and running for 1,001 yards and 12 scores, Murray’s only extensive college experience was a rough freshman season at Texas A&M in 2015. After transferri­ng to Oklahoma, he was the backup to Mayfield.

Murray announced a few weeks ago he was choosing the gridiron over the diamond.

How much Murray’s size will factor into his success in the NFL is a matter of great speculatio­n among the league’s talent evaluators.

“I think it’s been proven to not be as much of a factor as maybe it was years ago,” Los Angeles Raiders Coach Jon Gruden said. “I don’t know that it’s a true impact on the position or the performanc­e.”

Shurmur said what impressed him while looking at Murray’s 2018 tapes was that “for a sub-6-foot player, he had only five balls batted down.”

While size may not matter, Denver Broncos General Manager John Elway suggested that the system certainly does. He said shorter quarterbac­ks see the field better out of the shotgun, and most of this year’s class, including Murray, has taken only a handful of snaps from under center in college.

The problem is, NFL teams typically mix it up, putting the QB under center at least occasional­ly to balance the offense, empower the ground game and keep defenses guessing.

“That’s where height does matter a little bit more,” said Elway, who, at 6-3, was adept in either formation. “But if you’re playing in shotgun every down like a lot of these guys, then the height, to me, does not have nearly the impact that it normally would if you’re coming out from underneath.”

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