Oroville Mercury-Register

Teams rely on tape with virus altering their pre-draft routine

- By Arnie Stapleton

AURORA, COLO. » Let’s go to the tape.

NFL teams are having to rely more heavily on game film of college prospects as they prepare for the draft at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic has halted business as usual across the globe.

The social distancing spawned by the new coronaviru­s has halted pro timing days at college campuses. It’s also led the league to forbid teams from hosting prospects at team headquarte­rs or visiting them for in-person interviews, meetings that are usually such an integral part of the annual evaluation­s that they can make or break a franchise’s fortunes.

“We’ll just have to conclude the best we can from what we can see on the tape,” Denver Broncos general manager John Elway said in a conference call Tuesday.

Broncos coach Vic Fangio said scouts and college personnel appraisers are fond of suggesting that ninth-tenths of the evaluation of a player is based on what he did in college, with just 10% coming off

the NFL scouting combine, college pro days and personal interviews.

“This is the year it will really be tested,” Fangio said. “It will be 90% what you see on tape, and we’ll go from there.”

Fangio is putting a positive spin on the situation.

“We do not have the workout times that you normally have to evaluate guys, but sometimes those workout times and that informatio­n just clouds the issue,” Fangio said. “It’s nice to know what a guy runs a 40 in, but how fast does he look on tape is more important.

“A lot of times you can guess how fast a guy runs, generally speaking. It’s more important what the tape says.”

Less than an hour’s drive from the Broncos’ headquarte­rs, new University of Colorado football coach Karl Dorrell is lamenting how FaceTime has replaced face time with his players because of the shelter-inplace and stay-at-home orders that have been issued amid the pandemic.

While emphasizin­g that these measures are what’s most important to curtail the spread of the virus, Dorrell, who left his job as the

Miami Dolphins receivers coach to take over at Colorado following Mel Tucker’s departure in February, said truer evaluation­s are made in person.

“Tape kind of gives you an idea, but from my experience, it’s getting your hands on the players on the grass,” Dorrell said. “That’s when you know what you have. You can kind of feel their movement, their explosiven­ess, their lack thereof, anything that are important ingredient­s for you to make an assessment.”

That’s why he’s so eager for normalcy to return, so that he can get up- close looks at the roster he inherited.

“To me it’s always been best when I see it live and when I see them running around, when I see them competing against each other. Those are the best telltale signs of making your evaluation,” Dorrell said.

And, Dorrell said, that holds true whether it’s an NFL assistant assessing college talent as he once did or a college coach checking out a high school prospect as he’s doing now.

“I’d rather see the person to evaluate a person. When I was in the NFL evaluating receivers, the combine’s fine, but that’s a group setting

and you’re not really getting specific informatio­n that you need,” Dorrell said. “I would get more out of when I went back to that particular student-athlete’s university and worked him out and got him on the board and we talked football and we did all these different things.”

A recent example he pointed to was former Colorado State receiver Preston Williams, whose off-thefield issues kept him from getting drafted last year.

Williams signed with Miami after getting bypassed in the seven-round draft and had 32 catches for 428 yards and three touchdowns before a knee injury cut short his sensationa­l rookie season.

“He was a transfer there from Tennessee and he had a little bit of a baggage background,” Dorrell said. “But when I met the kid we had a great conversati­on at the combine, we continued to stay in contact with each other, I continued to do my research with coaches both at Tennessee and at Colorado State.

“And you know we felt that we got a steal, to make a long story short, when we were able to pick him up as an undrafted free agent in Miami last year,” Dorrell said. “If you don’t dive into the informatio­n like that, you tend to miss a lot of things.”

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? On Tuesday, Denver Broncos general manager John Elway said in a conference call, “We’ll just have to conclude the best we can from what we can see on the tape.”
MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE On Tuesday, Denver Broncos general manager John Elway said in a conference call, “We’ll just have to conclude the best we can from what we can see on the tape.”
 ?? WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Alabama wide receiver Jerry Jeudy (4) eyes a pass as Oklahoma cornerback Parnell Motley (11) attempts to defend, during the second half of the Orange Bowl on Dec. 29, 2018, in Miami Gardens, Fla.
WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Alabama wide receiver Jerry Jeudy (4) eyes a pass as Oklahoma cornerback Parnell Motley (11) attempts to defend, during the second half of the Orange Bowl on Dec. 29, 2018, in Miami Gardens, Fla.

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