The entire “hand size” myth has been thoroughly debunked

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The entire “hand size” myth has been thoroughly debunked

I really love the value for Cedrick Wilson. I think he was an overlooked  Madden 24 coins receiver who’s making a pittance of some of the bigger names signed this period. Whether it ends up being Tua Tagovailoa who plays all season, or if the team transitions to Bridgewater, I think they’ll be a more complete team who are still building for the future.

In case we need to mention is again, the Madden NFL 24 Scouting Combine is one of the most overblown events in football. Its popularity is based on the ability for most of us to become armchair draft experts and forge big opinions off little information.

It’s fun, sure — but the actual impact the combine has on the draft process, assuming you’re discussing a functional, smart franchise, is really fairly minimal. For teams it’s more often a chance for coaches and front office executives to see prospects up close that the scouting department has already put on their radar. A bad combine outing rarely completely destroys a prospect, nor does a mammoth combine alone create one.

That said, there are opportunities for players to show another side of their game. To bolster those previously written scouting reports and find a team who will fall in love with them. It’s an chance for scouts to say “I told you so” to their directors of college scouting when a player breaks out, or have more questions to answer if someone they’ve been advocating for completely blows it in Indianapolis.

I hate the idea of calling anyone a combine “loser,” because there’s so much that goes into the process, and some players just aren’t great at these standardized tests. A lot of work is put into having players master the 40 yard dash to bolster their combine stock, regardless of how quick they did (or didn’t) look on the field. Despite my misgivings there was one big loser of the combine, and we’ll kick it off there.

The entire “hand size” myth has been thoroughly debunked time and time again, but it’s a fallacy that teams buy into. Teams having bizarre arbitrary measurements for what “proper sized hands” are has unquestionably led to prospects sliding in the draft.

Hell, look at Teddy Bridgewater. Bridgewater was seen as a lock to be a Top 10 pick for the majority of his final season at Louisville. Hell, he threw for 4,000 yards, completed 71 percent of his passes, tossed 31 TDs and only 4 interceptions. Every sign pointed him to being an absolute stud in the Madden NFL 24. Then the combine rolled along and suddenly everyone freaked out about his 9.25” hands. The entire “small hands” argument reached a fever pitch, and on draft day Bridgewater fell to the 32nd pick, taken after Blake Bortles and Johnny Manziel — both of whom flamed out, while Teddy is still starting for Madden NFL 24 teams.

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