Anthony Richardson Highlights Post-Combine Risers

Florida Gators QB Anthony Richardson
Florida Gators QB Anthony Richardson
Photo: USA Today Sports Images

NFL Draft - Trust the tape. This mantra is spoken ad nauseam throughout every draft season immemorial as a reminder that a player's tape is his most important attribute. However, like any other piece of information, tape can lie! A player can be older and dominate younger competition or play a soft schedule that doesn't truly challenge him.

Statistics and data can also lie. A defensive back can accrue fewer pass breakups or interceptions than a teammate simply by being targeted less by opposing offenses, while a wide receiver can gather more targets simply because he plays alongside someone who demands double coverage.

Do you know what also lies (at least relatively speaking)? The turf on the field at Lucas Oil Stadium. No, not the turf exactly. While this turf is probably very similar to turf used in stadiums across the NFL, even combine data is crooked. Per an analysis by data scientist Bud Davis, players are opting into performing the drills that make them look the best and opting out of drills that would put them in a less than flattering light. What are the implications? Average times for drills such as the prized 40-yard dash are down, as is the share of athletes participating.

Chart 1

Despite this, the combine does provide useful information. It generally helps to differentiate elite athletes who are NFL contenders from pretender prospects who got by on tape or reputation alone. In my Grinding the Mocks combine risers and fallers column from last year, I identified rising prospects such as Georgia edge rusher Travon Walker, Tulsa offensive tackle Tyler Smith, and Western Michigan wide receiver Skyy Moore, all of whom were impact players for their teams as rookies. Which prospects will be primed for big bumps in their expected draft position and important roles on their future teams? Read ahead to find out!

Risers

Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida

Anthony Richardson draft stock

If Travon Walker was the clear-cut winner of the 2022 NFL combine, then 2023's winner must be Florida's Anthony Richardson. Both are winners for similar reasons. As players without high levels of college production, it was well known that athleticism would be each player's calling card. However, what we witnessed from both Richardson and Walker went above and beyond expectations and made them both post-combine contenders for top overall pick honors. Richardson put up the best ever performance by a quarterback at the NFL combine. His speed, size, and explosion offer a glimpse into the type of talent he can show if he can develop as a player.

Richardson's comparisons as a player abound. Optimists (such as myself) see him similarly to Cam Newton or Josh Allen while pessimists see him more like Jake Locker or JaMarcus Russell. No matter who you compare him to, what Richardson did at the combine puts him in rarified air as an athlete at the quarterback position and will surely intrigue many teams come late April.

Adetomiwa Adebawore, ER, Northwestern

Adetomiwa Adebawore Draft Stock

Coming into the combine, I didn't know that Northwestern edge rusher Adetomiwa Adebawore's first name translates to "crown of one," but afterwards, that name makes a lot more sense. He was one of the best linemen at this year's Senior Bowl, where he first got on draftniks' radar in a big way by showing inside and outside versatility as a defensive lineman. With the performance he put on at the combine, he has now made himself known to the rest of the broader NFL community.

No one has ever run a faster 40-yard dash than Adebawore (4.49 seconds) at a greater weight (270 pounds). Most players would have just stopped there (like my fellow Pittsburgh alum Calijah Kancey), but Adebawore kept going, putting up elite numbers in the vertical and broad jumps and in the bench press. The main thing that he lacks is height, but at Grinding the Mocks we stan a "short" king (prince, but who's counting). Adebawore has utilized the draft process to the fullest, working himself into the mid-Round 2 range with more room to grow.

Nolan Smith, ER, Georgia

Nolan Smith Draft Stock

They forgot about Nolan Smith like they forgot about Dre … and I don't necessarily blame them. Injured for a decent part of his last year in Athens, Smith was on the sideline as Georgia repeated as national champions this January. Once healthy, Smith showed at the combine why he was in the conversation to be taken in the first round of last year's draft along with his Bulldogs teammates who had decided to go pro after the first of what would be back-to-back championships.

This year's draft class is stacked with top end talent and athletes at the edge rusher position, so adding Smith fully back into the Round 1 mix is a boon to teams seeking pass-rush help. Smith ran a blazing 4.39s 40-yard dash, which is fast even given his lower weight for his position, but more importantly ran a 1.52s 10-yard split and put out elite performances in the vertical and broad jumps, which measures explosion more than speed. I put Smith with the Philadelphia Eagles with the 30th pick in my first mock for Football Outsiders. Probably not gonna happen!

2023 Grinding the Mocks Post-Combine Risers
Name Pos School Pre-Combine EDP Post-Combine EDP) Difference
Anthony Richardson QB Florida 12.1 (10) 3.5 (3) +8.6 (+7)
Adetomiwa Adebawore ER Northwestern 95.0 (114) 49.9 (47) +45.1 (+67)
Nolan Smith ER Georgia 34.0 (33) 20.8 (19) +13.2 (+14)

Fallers

Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia

Jalen Carter draft stock

Talking about fallers is a lot less fun than talking about risers, and the biggest faller is even less enjoyable to write about than most. Georgia's Jalen Carter is an all-world football talent on the field whom draftniks believe is a top-five player in this class. Off the field, however, Carter has become mired in legal proceedings surrounding the car crash that caused the deaths of Devin Willock and Chandler LeCroy, a former teammate and a member of the football recruiting staff respectively.

Because of the court case hanging over him due to his recklessness and poor judgment (as well as the changing landscape at the top of the draft), Carter's stock accounting for draft pick value has fallen the most of any player since before the combine. I'm not a lawyer, but I don't need to be one to know that it is not good for him to have this situation clouding over his head. Even if that changes, the stigma from this incident will likely be a stain on his character going forward and could give teams pause when drafting him. Maybe I'm being optimistic, but Carter's stock could continue to fall.

Kayshon Boutte, WR, LSU

Kayshon Boutte draft stock

Kayshon Boutte started off the 2022 college football season the same way his LSU Tigers did: with plenty of hype followed by a good deal of disappointment before rounding out with some hope for the future. That hope was probably what lured Boutte to initially announce that he would be returning to Baton Rouge for another season, which is the cause of the gap between mock drafts for Boutte in the chart above. However, right before the deadline for underclassmen to declare, Boutte announced that he would be forgoing his eligibility and entering the draft.

An about-face like that from a player isn't usually a good sign, especially if he had his heart on initially returning to school. Boutte would need a strong combine to show that he wasn't just a player whose last college campaign didn't quite live up to the lofty expected draft position he had before the season began. However, not only did he show up under 6 feet tall, but Boutte performed poorly in the explosion drills and only ran a 4.5s 40-yard dash, with subpar splits as well. Those types of numbers will still get you drafted, but likely not inside the top 100.

Myles Murphy, ER, Clemson

Myles Murphy draft stock

Myles Murphy's is labeled as a post-combine faller less because of the things he did at the combine and more for the things he didn't do in Indianapolis. Murphy unfortunately managed to tweak his hamstring while warming up to work out, so he didn't have the opportunity to show off how he compares athletically to his peers at the edge rusher position.

Before and immediately after the 2022 college season, Murphy was regarded as the ER2 behind Alabama's Will Anderson. However, in the time leading up to the combine, Texas Tech's Tyree Wilson (who also didn't work out at the combine due to an injury sustained during the season) saw his stock grow in leaps and bounds as he overtook Murphy for the ER2 spot and challenged Anderson for ER1. Now squarely in the mix with the next group of edge rushers, Murphy has a wider draft range than he did before as players such as Lukas Van Ness of Iowa or Georgia's Nolan Smith also compete for the chance to be the next edge rusher drafted .

2023 Grinding the Mocks Post-Combine Fallers
Name Pos School Pre-Combine EDP Post-Combine EDP Difference
Jalen Carter DT Georgia 3.0 (3) 6.6 (6) -3.6 (-3)
Kayshon Boutte WR LSU 45.7 (51) 82.0 (77) -36.3 (-26)
Myles Murphy ER Clemson 9.0 (7) 16.0 (15) -7.0 (-8)

Comments

36 comments, Last at 23 Mar 2023, 8:47am

#1 by Aaron Brooks G… // Mar 16, 2023 - 11:06am

Maybe I'm being optimistic, but Carter's stock could continue to fall.

And is in free-fall, based on a disappointing pro day where he showed up fat and unprepared.

He's badly failing what is a pretty trivial intelligence test in this process.

Points: 0

#2 by serutan // Mar 16, 2023 - 11:24am

Yup.  Any chance he might have had of convincing teams he'd learned his lesson from the accident went out the window when he showed he couldn't be arsed to prepare for his pro day.

Points: 3

#5 by halfjumpsuit // Mar 16, 2023 - 12:12pm

9 pounds in two weeks is impressively bad but he just reached a plea deal so it would seem that he was fairly preoccupied since the Combine. At least that's how his agent will spin it. If he does team workouts and does well, the pro day will be overlooked.

Points: 4

#20 by Chuckc // Mar 17, 2023 - 11:35am

I don't think it's "spin" to say he may be distracted after being involved in an incident where a teammate and staff member were killed. If anyone gets a bit of a pass for lack of preparation, this is it.

Points: 4

#21 by rpwong // Mar 17, 2023 - 4:28pm

100% this. Some of us are forgetting that these players are human beings, not just NFL prospects. Most of us would struggle at our jobs while going through what he's dealing with right now, and most of us aren't 21 years old.

Points: 3

#26 by Theo // Mar 18, 2023 - 1:09pm

In my darkest days, my workout routine was my best distraction. 

I understand that a court case is a distraction, but if being a top .01% athlete really is your life/goal, I would think working out and taking care would be at least still on the radar. 

Points: 0

#32 by LionInAZ // Mar 19, 2023 - 2:06am

Most of the rest of us struggling to get by aren't getting involved in street races. 

Points: 2

#24 by LondonMonarch // Mar 18, 2023 - 12:01pm

"Involved" in an "accident"   [cry-laughing emoji]

Oddly enough participating in a drag race where your mate and a "member of recruitment of staff" get killed - and members of the public (who unlike the team-mate and hanger-on are entirely innocent) are seriously endangered, does not get you a free pass.

The NFL will overlook bad character if you are talented enough and focused on delivering on the field (hi Ray) but if your off-field misdemeanours are going to affect your performance that will not work.

Points: 3

#3 by rh1no // Mar 16, 2023 - 11:41am

I'm still low on Anthony Richardson. He struggled against elite competition in the SEC, and that's the baseline talent level he'll be facing in the NFL.

Additionally, his sudden rise means he's going to be drafted by a bad team and put into a starting role immediately. That means he's going to develop bad habits and shuffle through multiple head coaches and/or offensive coordinators looking to implement their own systems.

He would have been perfect as a late first-rounder going to a winning team where he can sit behind a franchise legend for a few years à la Jordan Love. Instead, he's going to get the Alex Smith treatment.

Points: 2

#4 by Joey-Harringto… // Mar 16, 2023 - 11:52am

I wouldn't hate it if the Lions drafted him at 18, and sat him behind Goff (giving Goff the 2017 version of the Alex Smith treatment).  He may not last until 18, though, and 6 is too high IMO.

Points: 4

#8 by rh1no // Mar 16, 2023 - 12:40pm

Yeah, I think the Lions would be a great spot for him. Develop him behind Goff and if Goff continues to shine, trade Richardson to a QB-needy team in a couple years for draft capital. If Goff goes through more up-and-down seasons, let Richardson take over and see how it works out.

Points: 3

#9 by halfjumpsuit // Mar 16, 2023 - 12:47pm

Develop him behind Goff and if Goff continues to shine, trade Richardson to a QB-needy team in a couple years for draft capital.

This doesn't happen any more. 

Points: 0

#15 by Vincent Verhei // Mar 16, 2023 - 4:02pm

It doesn't happen often, but Trey Lance may be halfway there.

Points: 2

#17 by halfjumpsuit // Mar 16, 2023 - 4:13pm

Trey Lance might very well get traded but good luck to SF getting anything of value for him.

Points: 2

#7 by serutan // Mar 16, 2023 - 12:26pm

There's always somebody whose Combine numbers make teams forget what's on tape and this year it's Richardson.

Points: 4

#10 by Aaron Brooks G… // Mar 16, 2023 - 1:57pm

The big problem with Richardson, as compared to say Josh Allen, was Allen was a guy who had slipped through the QB Development Machine. 

That's not Richardson -- you aren't QB1 for a premier SEC team if you slipped through the QB Development Machine. Maybe only Tannehill pulled that off, and his QB stats were actually pretty good. You're now looking at Newton or Jackson. Newton and Jackson has substantially more individual production and way more team success than Richardson has had. If you have hopes for Richardson, your comp is Michael Vick. But Richardson's numbers aren't as good as Vick's were -- 25 years ago. Vick looked better versus his era's comps than Richardson does.

Mike Mamula's career was better than we remember it being, but he's still perceived as a cautionary tale. If you're all-in on Richardson, it's for his Mamulian performance.

\Mamulian is better than Tracian, which was very over-rated.

Points: 0

#11 by halfjumpsuit // Mar 16, 2023 - 2:05pm

Tannehill played in the Big-12.

Mamula is an unfair comparison for Richardson. Richardson was already a potential 1st round pick before the season started because of his physical gifts.

Points: 2

#12 by Aaron Brooks G… // Mar 16, 2023 - 2:33pm

It's still just an obsession with physical gifts completely divorced from production.

And Mamula actually had pretty good college production!

Points: 1

#19 by Eddo // Mar 17, 2023 - 10:48am

Further supporting your point, Vick also had far more team success than Richardson did.

Points: 1

#23 by BSK // Mar 18, 2023 - 10:27am

"That's not Richardson -- you aren't QB1 for a premier SEC team if you slipped through the QB Development Machine."

Are you sure about that?  He was "only" a four-star recruit, coming out of a public high school without any real history of producing NFL talent.  He had offers from BC, Cinci, FAU, Louisville, South Alabama, South Florida, and Southern Miss.  He likely got the Florida offer because he was a local kid (grew up in Gainsville).  He had 2 years of Dan Mullen as his coach and one of Billy Napier.

Points: 1

#14 by Tom Tulpa // Mar 16, 2023 - 3:58pm

You can be faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, and be able to leap tall buildings in a single bound, but if you can't read a defense and thus cannot competently run even a rollout-and-one-read offense, QB is not the job for you.

Points: 3

#18 by KnotMe // Mar 16, 2023 - 5:54pm

You would probably have a really good career as a running back however. 

Points: 1

#6 by ImNewAroundThe… // Mar 16, 2023 - 12:25pm

Boutte has lost himself legit millions over the past year. 

His 29 inch vertical is much more concerning (2nd percentile among WRs since 1999) than his 40 (54th) or height (26th). 

Points: 0

#16 by tsmonk // Mar 16, 2023 - 4:03pm

When it comes to grading QBs it's like somewhere along the line a lot of writers and scouts turned into the over-the-hill scouting team in Moneyball. Everyone clamoring over how the guy looks in blue jeans.

Points: 0

#28 by apocalipstick // Mar 18, 2023 - 3:42pm

Some years ago, I remember the scouts waxing rhapsodic about some WR's "high, tight bubble".

Points: 0

#29 by Vincent Verhei // Mar 18, 2023 - 5:07pm

Oh, lord, I was listening to the draft on the radio decades ago and they had mega-bass voiceover guy going over each player's physical attributes. "6-foot-3. 250 pounds. THICK BUBBLE." It was so uncomfortable, for many reasons.

Points: 0

#34 by TomC // Mar 19, 2023 - 12:13pm

If you ever want to truly lose your lunch, pull up audio of Jerry Krause describing the physical attributes of a potential draft pick's mother.

Points: 0

#25 by Theo // Mar 18, 2023 - 12:59pm

The main thing that he lacks is height, but at Grinding the Mocks we stan a "short" king (prince, but who's counting).

Anyone know what this sentence means?

Points: 0

#30 by rh1no // Mar 18, 2023 - 7:47pm

"Stan" was a song by Eminem about an obsessed fan who committed a horrific crime due to his obsession. People started using it as a verb to describe being obsessed with someone while losing the dark nature of the Eminem song.

As for "short king," guys under 6 feet tall catch a lot of flack from some women for their height. Calling each other "short king" is a way of reminding men that their self worth shouldn't be dictated by some women's preference for tall guys. Here, "short" is in quotation marks because Adetomiwa Adebawore is actually 6'2", which is short for his position but tall for a man overall.

Why is Adetomiwa Adebawore a "prince" and not actually a "king?" I'm not sure about that. Maybe it's a reference to the fact that he hasn't been drafted or played in the pros just yet.

So the author is saying that while some draft experts think Adebawore's short stature relative to other athletes at his position might hinder his on-field performance, the author himself believes that Adebawore is a shorter athlete who has the talent and ability to perform at the same level as his taller peers.

You're welcome.

Points: 6

#36 by Benjamin Robinson // Mar 23, 2023 - 8:47am

Thanks for filling in the details there!  The "prince" is in reference to the fact that Adebawore is in fact African royalty!

https://fox4kc.com/news/education/this-north-kc-junior-and-son-of-african-royalty-knows-the-value-of-hard-work-in-the-classroom-on-the-field-and-in-life/

Points: 0

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