View Full Version : Young scores a six on wonderlic
Wullf
02-26-2006, 08:09 AM
Vince Young scored a 6 on the wonderlic test. Will this hurt his stock going into the draft?
http://www.profootballtalk.com/rumormill.htm
scroll down a little to find it.
VINCE'S PICK-SIX IS CONFIRMED
We've confirmed that Texas quarterback Vince Young has indeed scored a measly six on the Wonderlic test, administered annually to the potential members of the draft class at the scouting combine.
Said one league insider, "It's also the number of the round he'll be drafted in."
There's a significant buzz in Indy regarding the ridiculously low marks. Though we're not quite sure that there's much of a correlation between book smarts and football ability, we've got a feeling that, of all positions, quarterback is the one that requires at least some basic cognitive ability.
Unless, of course, the offense consists of making one read and then pulling the ball down and running -- which is the very approach the team that drafts Young might have to employ.
Though the suggestion that Young will last until round six is an exaggeration, the thinking is that he lost millions of dollars via his poor performance on the test, and that it's now a virtual certainty that Vanderbilt quarterback Jay Cutler will pass him in round one.
All_da_way
02-26-2006, 09:26 AM
If this is true it will drop his stock.
With thta said PFT is not exactly the most reliable source.
NFLs_Future
02-26-2006, 10:59 AM
"Said one league insider, 'It's also the number of the round he'll be drafted in.'"
Yeah this definitely looks real. :rolleyes:
JustMeAdrian
02-26-2006, 11:03 AM
I'm a little skeptic of this...
how would he stay at Texas this long if he didn't make literacy? I understand football players have a "pass" when it comes to passing but come on. (yes I remember Frank Gore got a 6 as well at the U)
nolesfan4life
02-26-2006, 11:55 AM
I'm a little skeptic of this...
how would he stay at Texas this long if he didn't make literacy? I understand football players have a "pass" when it comes to passing but come on. (yes I remember Frank Gore got a 6 as well at the U)
they definately have a "pass" when it comes to the books. The thing about college sports is, if you're that good, you can get away with not being the brightest one.
I remember Katzenmoyer for OSU a few years a go, kid was dumb as a rock, but still made it through school and into the NFL. His lack of smarts didn't show on the college fields, but on the NFL, it did and he was a flop.
I've got a few athletes in some of my classes here, even football players in a school were our football team can't go .500. And alot of them just really aren't smart, yet they pull better grades than most of the people.
Confuzed Azn
02-26-2006, 11:58 AM
I believe Culpepper's results were in the single digits, and he turned out alright and would have had a nice career if not for the 05 season.
I'm an 0-26 Survivor
02-26-2006, 03:28 PM
Pep turned himself into a good student.
Here's something interesting about Young:
http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/sports/13930534.htm
Posted on Wed, Feb. 22, 2006
Young suffers by comparison to Vick
By PAUL DOMOWITCH
pdomo@aol.com
Five years ago, the Atlanta Falcons made one of the boldest moves in their history, swapping three draft picks and a player to the San Diego Chargers for the top pick in the 2001 draft. They used it to select quarterback Michael Vick.
The Falcons knew Vick had thrown fewer than 400 passes at Virginia Tech. They knew he had a strong but wildly inaccurate arm. And they knew it was going to be a painfully slow process educating him on the complexities of NFL coverage schemes.
But they were seduced by his incredible athleticism and felt his speed and Houdini-like elusiveness would be ample-enough offensive ammunition while they waited for him to develop as a quarterback.
Five years later, the Falcons still are waiting for Vick to develop. Five years later, he still is averaging more yards running the football (6.9) than throwing it (6.7). Five years later, he has yet to complete better than 56.4 percent of his passes in a season, or throw more than 16 touchdowns.
And now, along comes Vince Young, and a lot of NFL scouts and draft analysts are wondering whether the University of Texas quarterback is deja Vick.
The predraft evaluation of Young will begin in earnest tomorrow when he and more than 300 other top draft prospects descend on Indianapolis for the league's annual scouting combine.
Scouts are saying many of the same things about Young they were saying about Vick 5 years ago: off-the-charts athleticism; jaw-dropping running ability that helped him rack up 3,136 rushing yards at Texas, including 200 of his 467 yards in the Longhorns' 41-38 Rose Bowl win over USC. But the $10 million or $20 million question is can he cut it as an NFL passer?
Like Vick when he came out, Young, an early-entry junior, still is very raw. He averaged only seven more pass attempts per game (19.4) than rush attempts (12.4) during his career at Texas. Coach Mack Brown's option offense was a poor preparatory course for what is awaiting Young at the next level.
"If you accept the principle that to be successful at a high level in the NFL you need a quarterback who can be an effective passer rather than a runner, then you've got to look at [Young] and ask yourself, 'Is he ever going to be anything more than a glorified Michael Vick?' '' said Mike Mayock, chief draft analyst for the NFL Network.
"There definitely is some worry because of [Vick's struggles],'' said an AFC player personnel man for a team with a top-10 pick in April's draft. "If Young had come out a year or 2 earlier when Vick was the hottest thing since sliced bread, [the comparison to Vick] would've been a good thing for him. But now, it's a negative.''
Vick finished 25th in the league in passer rating (73.1), 29th in completion percentage (.553), 26th in yards per attempt (6.23) and 25th in interception rate (3.4 percent) last season. In a recent interview with a reporter from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Vick admitted to being "a little lost right now'' in the Falcons' offense.
Even though he played in 15 more games and threw 358 more passes at Texas than Vick did at Virginia Tech before coming out, there is universal agreement among scouts and analysts that Young would have been better served staying in Austin for his final year of eligibility.
"I'd feel a lot better if he had stayed in college another year,'' said ESPN analyst Ron Jaworski. "I would love to evaluate him with another year of [college] seasoning under his belt.
"When I look at Vince, this guy is an absolutely phenomenal collegiate quarterback. Maybe as good as I've seen play the position at the collegiate level. But his style doesn't project for success in the NFL. To be successful and consistent over the long term in the NFL, you've got to be able to throw the football accurately and you've got to be mechanically and fundamentally sound. I don't see that in him right now.''
During his three seasons at Texas, Young made steady improvement as a passer. Both his completion percentage and his touchdown-to-interception ratio got better each year. He's a little more accurate than Vick was coming out of college, but his arm isn't nearly as strong. He also has a funky sidearm delivery that negates his 6-5 height. While the team that drafts him can correct that, scouts weren't thrilled recently when Young was quoted as saying he doesn't plan to change his mechanics or his delivery when he gets to the NFL. His decision not to throw at the combine also has caused some consternation among teams.
"I think that's an absolutely huge mistake on his part,'' Jaworski said. "That would scare me if I'm a GM or a personnel guy. The first thing I would wonder is, what's he afraid of?''
Said the NFL Network's Mayock: "I'm seeing more and more people who are sitting there and getting nervous about whether or not they can invest that kind of [high] draft pick and those kind of [signing bonus] dollars against the unknown of what he can become as a passer.''
All of that said, even Young's harshest critics are fairly certain he'll end up being a top-five selection. He and USC's Matt Leinart are expected to be the first two quarterbacks taken.
"In today's game, there's such a dearth of good quarterbacks,'' Jaworski said. "I think there will be a team that will say, 'Hey, he's got tremendous God-given talent. We've got a good coaching staff. We can work with him and make him a star.''
Said an NFC pro personnel man: "There'd be a much bigger comfort level with Young if he had played in a pro-style offense. But guys come out of different settings and do fine. If he convinces people in the interviews and the testing that he's smart enough, that won't scare people. They'll figure they can help him figure it out as he goes along. They'll give him a lot of blackboard work, a lot of video work before the draft.''
Mayock believes the adjustment from a college option offense to the NFL is going to be extremely difficult for Young, just like it was and still is for Vick.
"The most disturbing thing I read was a quote from Mack Brown where he said when he finally stopped trying to push multiple reads on [Young], that's when his natural athletic ability came out,'' he said. "In other words, Mack Brown stopped coaching the kid, and that's when he became a better player. And while that's probably true, it would scare the heck out of me if I'm an NFL head coach or offensive coordinator. Because I'm going to demand that he learn his progressions and go through them. Because that's how he's going to get me to a Super Bowl. That's how he's going to become a better quarterback.''
It's easier to teach some guys that than others. Steve Young learned. Donovan McNabb learned. Vick hasn't. Still takes off at the first sign of trouble, real or imagined. The next time he looks for his fourth read will be the first.
Only time will tell whether Young will learn. He ran the ball a lot more at Texas than Vick did at Virginia Tech. Rushed for 1,000 yards in each of his last two seasons.
"Like most kids with a run-first mentality, when that internal clock goes off in the pocket, whether the pocket has broken down or not, he's looking to get out of the gate,'' Mayock said. "He did better as the season progressed. He completed 75 percent of his passes in the USC game.
"But when I saw a talented defense like Ohio State rush him the way I think you have to rush him, where you're not flying up the field and creating lanes for him to run, where you're just trying to keep four, five people in front of him at all times, he was extremely frustrated. I can show you plays on tape in that game where the pocket is totally intact and he's pulled the ball down and is looking to get out because his internal clock said it's time to go.''
While Young won't throw or work out at the combine, he will interview with clubs, which will give them some sense of how big a project he's going to be.
"The personal interviews will go a long way in helping teams make an evaluation on him as far as whether he's going to be receptive to coaching and things like that,'' Jaworski said.
"When these coaches put him on the [black] board and start asking him to start drawing coverages and where would he throw the ball, that's when they'll find a lot out about how much knowledge he has of the game.''
Blue Devil
02-26-2006, 03:50 PM
Mods here don't consider profootballtalk to be a credible news source...and I don't know if selling a thread exists in this forum...but I'm just warning you...
Enigma85
02-26-2006, 04:11 PM
I believe Culpepper's results were in the single digits, and he turned out alright and would have had a nice career if not for the 05 season.
Culpepper had a 15 the first time. He took it again later and scored a 21.
Wullf
02-26-2006, 05:25 PM
Mods here don't consider profootballtalk to be a credible news source...and I don't know if selling a thread exists in this forum...but I'm just warning you...
Only posted it because it said it was confirmed. But here is another source to help back it up,
http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060226/SPORTS01/602260387/1328/SPORTS
Young's test result a wonder to scouts
Texas quarterback Vince Young isn't working out at the NFL Combine, but if the buzz here yesterday is true, he may have hurt his draft status significantly without throwing a football.
With pro prospects running and jumping inside the RCA Dome, word outside began to spread that Young scored a six on the Wonderlic test given to prospects.
The 12-minute, 50-multiple choice question test is just one factor teams look at when gauging a player's intelligence. The average score for an NFL prospect is roughly 19.
The NFL doesn't make Wonderlic scores public.
Most draft experts viewed Young as a Top 3 pick. A low Wonderlic score, however, could result in him sliding in the draft if teams believe he is not capable of grasping the myriad of responsibilities of an NFL quarterback.
Players are allowed to take the test multiple times, so Young could take the test again. Word is USC quarterback Matt Leinart scored a 35 on the test, while the results for Vanderbilt QB Jay Cutler were unknown. Cutler scored in the upper-20s on the test before the NFL Combine.
This one also states Leinart scoreing a 35 on it also.
HighOnMtZion
02-26-2006, 06:50 PM
culpepper's an idiot. went to school and hung out with him in an apartment complex a friends shared with him. then whoever the coordinator for the Vikings a few years later had to dumb down the play book cause it was too complicated for culpepper. if he scored a 15-20 on the wonderlic i cant imagine how dumb young has to be to score a 6.......no ones going to do it but someone might want to make him a reciever, just like they should do with vick. running qb's are worthless cept for winning a few games before they get injured. ill take smart an mobile over dumb and athletic everytime.
Wullf
02-26-2006, 09:02 PM
I don't see Young slipping past the top 5 even with a score of six, just because of the hype surrounding him.
O-State-BUC
02-26-2006, 09:32 PM
They are re-scoring his test. Apparently it was screwed up. I do not think it would have mattered anyhow as far as his draft status.
http://www.profootballtalk.com/rumormill.htm
Psykes
02-26-2006, 10:58 PM
Though the suggestion that Young will last until round six is an exaggeration, the thinking is that he lost millions of dollars via his poor performance on the test, and that it's now a virtual certainty that Vanderbilt quarterback Jay Cutler will pass him in round one.
Simply because Cutler did like 23 bench presses, and Young (who's a pretty big guy himself) only score a 6 on the Wonderlic.
bucsfan68
02-27-2006, 03:37 AM
I believe you get a 8 just for signing your name correctly.
Catfish42
02-27-2006, 05:37 AM
I dont buy any of that! Until i hear it on ESPN or Fox Sports,it is all "rumor"! That site looks like it is ran by a 10 year old anyway, so i doubt it is reliable!
BucsLJohnson34
02-27-2006, 10:25 AM
NCAA | Agent speaks about Young's Wonderlic score
Mon, 27 Feb 2006 05:54:58 -0800
John McClain, of the Houston Chronicle, reports Saturday, Feb. 25 a rumor that Texas QB Vince Young had scored a six on the Wonderlic test sent shock waves through the NFL Combine. Sunday, Feb. 26, the Combine said the test score of six that was being reported by some media outlets was false. Young took the test again and scored 16. According to Young's agent, Major Adams, the Sunday test was administered by Jeff Foster, executive director of National Scouting Combine. "The combine officials assured us that score (six) was false and that the accurate score will be known when the combine results are given to each team," Adams said. Wonderlic scores are supposed to be confidential and are never confirmed publicly by the NFL, because they are included in Combine results given to teams after the Combine, scores leak out. Prospects can take the Wonderlic tests as many times as they want. While Young's Wonderlic tests created a huge controversy, he was busy interviewing with different teams.
mtnbucman
02-28-2006, 11:20 AM
Mods here don't consider profootballtalk to be a credible news source...and I don't know if selling a thread exists in this forum...but I'm just warning you...
The Washington Times quotes them.
http://www.washtimes.com/sports/20060227-124636-9510r.htm
Maybe they are more credible than people think. Then again, most are posting from info they find in the RUMOR MILL.
^mtn^
ZenoZone
02-28-2006, 11:41 AM
I remember Katzenmoyer for OSU a few years a go, kid was dumb as a rock, but still made it through school and into the NFL. His lack of smarts didn't show on the college fields, but on the NFL, it did and he was a flop.
You're right on most aspects, Kat was a *former* acquaintance of a younger friend of mine, another OSU guy. Kat's career in the NFL died because of his neck injury mostly, not because he was dumb as a bag of nails. Although his lack of smarts didn't help him much. He got the starting spot in his rookie year for New England because of an injury to the regular starter, and he was 'fair.' Had he not gotten injured, I bet he'd be boucing around the league still, going from camp to camp, hoping to be signed somewhere.
As much as my friend didn't like him at the end, it was almost fitting that Andy left the team in camp in summer of 2001, then the Patriots went on to win three Super Bowls in his absence. They even offered him a ring for officially being part of the '01 squad, and he refused it. :confused:
Blue Devil
02-28-2006, 12:02 PM
It's not a 6 anymore...he got a 16...way to go profootballtalk...and bucsfan68...you only get the full 8 points if you spell it right...from what I hear he spelled it as follows...
Vinse yUng...
nolesfan4life
02-28-2006, 02:34 PM
It's not a 6 anymore...he got a 16...way to go profootballtalk...and bucsfan68...you only get the full 8 points if you spell it right...from what I hear he spelled it as follows...
Vinse yUng...
yeah 6 is ****ty, but 16 isn't something a player would brag about either
Blue Devil
02-28-2006, 03:22 PM
Wonderlic scores are overrated...Marino and McNabb both scored 16's...Young won't fail because of his wonderlic score...
...he'll fail because he's a poor mans Mike Vick...
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