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2018 NFL Combine

fballcoach65

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Aug 11, 2014
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The list of participants in this year's NFL combine was released, and there are 336 invitees, but only 25 from FCS or lower divisions.

Kyle, as well as Jalil Demby (OG - Maine), Bilal Nichols (DT - UD) and Timon Paris (OT - Stony Brook) will represent the CAA. The Missouri Valley and Ohio Valley each had 3-4 players invited as well.
 
https://www.sbnation.com/2018/2/6/16978940/nfl-combine-2018-participants-roster-list

When is NFL Combine 2018?
The 2018 NFL Scouting Combine is scheduled to begin Tuesday, Feb. 27 and run through Monday, March 5 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

Most of the Combine will take place behind the scenes in the form of prospect interviews and physicals. The on-field workouts will be televised by NFL Network. Below is the broadcast schedule for those workouts.

  • Friday, March 2: RB, OL, K, ST
  • Saturday, March 3: QB, WR, TE
  • Sunday, March 4: DL, LB
  • Monday, March 5: DB
 
interesting to watch but if somehow one could get inside the interview process, that would be a hoot.
 
• NFL Network will have 52 hours of live coverage from Indianapolis, starting Wednesday. The four days of coverage of on-field stuff commences at 9 a.m. ET Friday and runs through Monday. Friday workouts will be running backs, offensive linemen and kickers; quarterbacks, receivers and tight ends go Saturday; linebackers and defensive linemen work Sunday; defensive backs work Monday.

• ESPN will do “NFL Live” from Indianapolis on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 1:30 to 3 p.m. and add significant coverage on “SportsCenter” each night of the combine.
 
Watched a replay of 3rd qtr. of Senior Bowl. Kyle is no doubt the real deal. Their was no other qb at the Senior Bowl better, I don't care what the experts say.
 
Watched a replay of 3rd qtr. of Senior Bowl. Kyle is no doubt the real deal. Their was no other qb at the Senior Bowl better, I don't care what the experts say.

Agreed. The biggest knock from the experts has been arm strength - "he makes up for it with trajectory." Well, half the successful deep balls I see in the NFL aren't exactly hitting those receivers in stride - they're going and getting jump balls, or the DB mislplays it because it's underthrown, etc.

If Kyle gets drafted where he's projected, he'll be picked ahead of Russell Wilson. Something to think about.
 

Brian McLaughlin
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@BrianMacWriter
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EDITOR'S NOTE: Kyle Lauletta was a three-year starter for Richmond and threw for more than 10,000 career yards, with a 64-percent completion mark -- and he was named a HERO Sports All American in December. A native of Exton, Pennsylvania, he is now considered an NFL Draft lock, aided greatly by his performance during the week of the Senior Bowl -- where he picked up overall MVP honors.

This is the first of a series of diaries Lauletta will do in "as told to" form with HERO Sports senior writer Brian McLaughlin. Lauletta is one of several subjects who will periodically break down what it is like to be an NFL Draft prospect, day in and day out. He is currently training for the NFL Combine in Bradenton, Florida at IMG. Lauletta is represented by Michael McCartney with Priority Sports and Entertainment. Lauletta met with all 32 teams in Mobile.


RELATED: Don't Miss Richmond QB Kyle Lauletta's Highlight Video

THE SENIOR BOWL EXPERIENCE
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I did not start out well in the game, as people saw. The first play I went in, I was cold and of course they’re putting me in the game for a play and I put a pass behind the running back. But I guess it was almost good to get an incomplete pass out of the way.

I didn't get real nervous or panic, I said to myself that you might only get two more series to play, so make the most of it. The next drive I went in and we ran the ball a couple times for positive plays, then the big play-action play came when (LSU’s) D.J. Chark was open down sideline. All week in practice, that never came open, but it worked in the game.

OXLEY: Top Senior Bowl Performers

Once I got that one touchdown I felt like I was in a rhythm, it felt like playing football at Richmond again. I didn't think about the MVP award at all during the game. It didn't cross my mind until I began to notice all these cameras all around me as time was running out at the end of the game. And I thought, wait a minute, maybe I got it? That was crazy.

I was told, ‘we’re going to interview you on NFL Network’. So many emotions were going through me at that moment. It was so cool. When I was in the game, I had a lot of good guys making plays for me. I didn't feel like I did anything superhuman, just playing football and doing what I love to do. It was even more special for me because I had all my family there, maybe 20-plus family and friends.


KyleLauletta-WithFansFamily.jpg

Lauletta with a group of family and other fans, following the Senior Bowl (courtesy Kyle Lauletta)

THE MVP HONOR
It's huge. My agent recently told me only one FCS QB had won the MVP award before, it was in 1981 (two-time NFL pro bowler and future Cardinal Neil Lomax, out of Portland State). I think Phil Savage did an awesome job of getting FCS players represented in the game. You love to see that, more so than anybody we’re the guys who need to prove we belong.

The Power 5 guys are on TV all the time, watched by millions. For guys like me, it’s a perfect platform. To put us with the big boys, to see how we perform and compete. The scouts knew me, but most people didn’t. More so now, people might see my name more and think, 'hey, this guy can play'. I think I did a little bit to increase my stock, plus with wearing the big red spider on my helmet, maybe that helps the University of Richmond too. Hopefully it can pave the path for future FCS players.


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Lauletta threw for 3 TDs and nearly 200 yards to nab MVP honors (Senior Bowl)

WHO IMPRESSED YOU?
I would say D.J. Chark from LSU was very impressive and James Washingtonfrom Oklahoma State was impressive, and Marcus Davenport from UTSA is a beast. We did a charity event together, and Marcus not only is a great player, but he is a great guy too. Marquis Haynes from Ole Miss was also impressive all week.

There was a teammate I am training with in IMG, Tre Williams, the linebacker out of Auburn, he did well. One interesting thing happened, J.K. Scott, the kicker from Alabama -- he came up before the game and said ‘do you mind if do a prayer with you?’ And I said, ‘absolutely I'll do a prayer with you’. So he said a beautiful prayer. Right after that, he tapped me on the chest and said, 'you’re going to do great'.


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Lauletta and his Senior Bowl teammates got a chance to visit a school, and he had a blast (courtesy Kyle Lauletta)

DURING THE WEEK
The week was interesting, even in practice you get limited reps. You feel like you really need to take advantage of the time when you're in. At Richmond, I would get 70 percent of the reps, whereas in Mobile I was getting one quarter of the reps. So, at times, I’m thinking, man I’ve really got to make it happen on this one pass. It was interesting. You definitely feel like every eye is watching you at all times. They’re watching how you stretch and warm up and how you throw, so you want to make an impression.

I just tried to show that I’m a passer that is accurate and consistent. I do have the arm strength to zip it in there when I need to. The first time I was in practice, I was thinking, man I’m not doing anything to show off my arm strength. But the more I thought about it, I realized that’s not the way I want to think. I just needed to relax, take a deep breath, and take what the defense is giving me.

I think I did well at all three practices. I saw a few reports and a couple people who said I was the best QB the first two days, while others felt like maybe (Western Kentucky's) Mike White or one of the others had the best practices. Overall, I felt like if I took advantage of the moment and played my game, the rest would take care of itself.


KyleLauletta-WithCAAguysJamilDemby-BilalNichols-e1517338598927.jpg

CAA brothers (L to R) - Maine's Jamil Demby, Lauletta and Delaware's Bilal Nichols (courtesy Kyle Lauletta)

SHAKY START TO THE WEEK
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Not everything about the week was picture perfect. We got in Sunday afternoon and had a player’s meeting from 9 p.m. to 10 p.m in the dining room. They walked us through housekeeping items and gave us a few suggestions to help us when interviewing with media, and speaking with scouts throughout the week.

All of a sudden, my stomach started turning, I was nauseous – but I knew it was not from nerves. I realized that I was about to get sick. I think people were probably looking at me strange, staring, but I didn't want to get up because it was our very first meeting.

Right after the meeting ending, I hustled to the restroom, and sure enough there was a scout in there from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers who I was scheduled to talk to later that night. I excused myself and explained to him that my stomach was not feeling well. He was really great about it and said told me we could catch up at another time.
 
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Continued-

My mind is now all over the place. I literally took off running and ran into my room and barely made it to my hotel bathroom before getting sick. Once I was finished, I thought maybe that would be it but I proceeded to get sick every hour until the morning. It would wake me up. It was ugly, and it was horrible between the chills and the sweats. It was not a good time.

My mom just happened to be in (nearby) Pensacola staying with friends, and I was able to get a hold of her to let her know what was happening. She immediately said, ‘I’m coming over now’. She got Pedialyte and did a great job taking care of me. After it finally stopped, they took me to the ER where they ran a bunch of tests and I was able to get an IV. I unfortunately missed some events and was unable to meet with Coach Payton and the Saints, but we have since rescheduled.

It turned out it that it wasn't the flu or anything serious like that, maybe just something I had eaten? I’m not quite sure what it was. The guys who took me to the hospital told me that last year they had taken a player to the hospital and he’d ended up one of the MVPs. When I saw them again after the game, they said, ‘See, we told you this was a sign!’

Thanks for reading
 
Waiters at Indy’s St Elmo’s steak house getting ready for NFL combine with their own training.
The lobster cocktail tray lift ain’t easy.

 
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Looks like Kyle put on 5lbs and his hand grew 1/8 inch since Mobile. Measured in at 6'2-5/8" 222lbs and 9 6/8" hands today.
 
Looks like Kyle put on 5lbs and his hand grew 1/8 inch since Mobile. Measured in at 6'2-5/8" 222lbs and 9 6/8" hands today.
Believe I heard he was sick with the flu at the senior bowl so that might explain why he is five pounds heavier now.
 
NFL DRAFT: Richmond QB Kyle Lauletta Draft Diary (2)
The QB has blown up the NFL draft projection charts in recent months, and his Senior Bowl performance was outstanding. What's next?


  • Brian McLaughlin
    @BrianMacWriter
    clock.jpg
    Published on March 01, 2018 at 4:48 PM EST

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    Updated on March 01, 2018 at 6:27 PM EST



    EDITOR'S NOTE: Kyle Lauletta was a three-year starter for Richmond and threw for more than 10,000 career yards, with a 64-percent completion mark -- and he was named a HERO Sports All American in December. A native of Exton, Pennsylvania, he is now considered an NFL Draft lock, aided greatly by his performance during the week of the Senior Bowl -- where he picked up overall MVP honors.

    This weekend, he takes on the NFL Combine in Indianapolis.

    This is the second of a series of diaries (here's Diary No. 1) Lauletta will do in "as told to" form with HERO Sports senior writer Brian McLaughlin. Lauletta is one of several subjects who will periodically break down what it is like to be an NFL Draft prospect, day in and day out. He just wrapped up his training for the NFL Combine in Bradenton, Florida at IMG Academy. Lauletta is represented by Michael McCartney with Priority Sports and Entertainment. Lauletta met with all 32 teams in Mobile.




    MORE: Compare Any Two College Players or Any Two FCS Teams



    RELATED: Don't Miss Richmond QB Kyle Lauletta's Highlight Video

    FINAL WEEK AT IMG
    Richmond-KyleLauletta-mug-football-2016-e1478555416200.jpg
    (As told to Saturday) My parents are coming down to visit me for my last few days at IMG in Bradenton. In fact, I’m actually in the car – as we speak -- driving up to the Tampa airport to pick them up. It’s going to be great to see them! They’re just coming down to see where I’ve been working out all this time. In a couple days when they head back to Philly I will be off to Indianapolis for the combine. After the combine, I’ll fly home to Philadelphia.

    LAULETTA: What Round Is He Projected To Go In?

    At this point, you’ve already put in all the work and lifted all the weights, and we’ve actually tapered down our running and lifting lately. Earlier we were running as many reps (of the 40-yard dash) as we wanted, maybe five or six each. Now we just try to get one or two runs with good times. We do the 10-yard dash and then the full 40. The goal is just to be completely healthy at the combine with no muscle fatigue. You never know … fresh legs might help improve your time at the Combine by a tenth of a second in the 40. You just want your body feeling fresh, but still explosive and moving like we want it to.


    Richmond-KyleLauletta-with-parents-e1519937144311.jpg

    LAULETTA WITH HIS PARENTS, KIM AND JOE, WHO CAME TO FLORIDA TO VISIT THIS WEEK (COURTESY KYLE LAULETTA)

    MENTALLY PREPARED FOR THE MEAT MARKET
    (The Pittsburgh Steelers’) Josh Dobbs just came back to IMG to train, and he told the receivers here, “You guys will be floored. At the combine, you’ll run like eight routes and that’s it”. When we’re in Indy doing our throwing routine, it may not be many throws. But you have the tape from our college seasons, you have the Senior Bowl and you’ll throw more at the Pro Day. Throwing 100 balls isn’t always necessary. You can pretty much tell a lot about a quarterback from as few as five throws.

    COMBINE: Top FCS Performances Of All-Time

    So this week I’m collecting all of my things and sending them home. Other than my time at the Senior Bowl I’ve been here in Bradenton since December. After the combine, I’ll be flying out to Philadelphia until March 9th and then I’m going to drive to Richmond that Friday for final prep for my Pro Day (March 13). That’s another thing we’ve worked on is our Pro Day script. We’ve refined the routine and scripted it to 50 or 60 throws. We scripted them to the tight end, the running back and the wide receivers. You know, hitch to the left, slant to the right, bench route to the left, curl to the right. I am looking forward to getting down to Richmond, get with my receivers and run through it all a few times to feel it out. We will decide which receiver will run which routes, that sort of thing.


    Richmond-KyleLauletta-IMG-training-e1519940500177.jpg

    LAULETTA TRAINING WITH IMG ACADEMY STUDENTS LOOKING ON (CREDIT: KYLE LAULETTA)

    THEN ON TO PRO DAY
    Players participating in our Pro Day have to be draft eligible, so I can’t throw to my Richmond teammates like (2017 1,000-yard receiver) Cortrelle Simpson or Dejon Brissett or Tyler Wilkins – who were my top three wide receivers. They’re all underclassmen. I am excited to hook back up with my tight end, Garrett Hudson. There are interesting rules where you can’t participate unless you’re within 30 or 50 miles of the school, so I can’t use my IMG buddies I’ve been throwing to for months either.

    COMBINE: FCS Invitees This Weekend

    I look at all of this preparation in three phases – the Senior Bowl, the NFL Combine and the Pro Day. They’re really equal portions of the evaluation process and I wouldn’t say the Senior Bowl was any more important than the Combine or Pro Day. In phase one (Senior Bowl), I was really pleased with my performance, but I still have to do well with these other two phases, and then hopefully I will be drafted. I think I’m ready to go. We’ve been training hard, and I’m ready for the next two phases – and then I’ll be able to head back home and relax a little before the draft.


    Richmond-KyleLauletta-IMG-students-e1519940738446.jpg

    LAULETTA WITH IMG ACADEMY'S HIGH SCHOOL QUARTERBACKS WHO ARE IN TRAINING (CREDIT: KYLE LAULETTA)

    THE WHISPER GAME - WHICH TEAM LIKES ME MOST?
    I do hear some of the things that are said. But in the end, to me, it’s a waste of my energy and time if I really read into it. It all sounds great and reads well on paper but who really knows if Bill Belichick or any other coach loves me? Who knows? Maybe I’ll learn more at the NFL Combine. At IMG we had a nine-year veteran, Bryan Bulaga from the Green Bay Packers, talk to all of us about this. It was part of something IMG called “NFL Life”, where guest speakers like Pepper Johnson, who played with Lawrence Taylor and has the Super Bowl rings, talked to us about the process and NFL life in general.

 
Continued-

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PRO DAYS: Full FCS Schedule of On Campus Pro Days

Once when Bryan Bulaga was our guest speaker I asked him about the combine process. He told me he did several combine interviews and he had seven or eight in-depth interviews with teams, but with the Packers, he really only filled out a questionnaire. That was the only thing he heard from the Packers until they picked him in the first round. So, it’s cool to hear in the media that a team likes you, but you could have a team that hasn’t had many conversations with you draft you in the end. It’s a strange position to be in. I think down the stretch my agent will have a better feel for it. I am just focusing on what I can control.


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LAULETTA DURING THE SENIOR BOWL (CREDIT: SENIOR BOWL)

To me? If a team really shows interest, they might not want the others to know. I am sure there is a lot of gamesmanship that goes on. Projected fourth round picks sometime become priority free agents. You know, it’s similar to college recruiting. Who are you going to get that college scholarship from? Coming out of high school I really got my hopes up because of some things I heard from big schools and an early offer I received just off my film. So, I thought I was going to get a bunch of offers but it never happened. So now I’m guarding myself against that for the draft. I am confident I will put myself in a good position, but I want to stay level headed and not get too excited and just do the best I can.

Thanks for reading!
 
Is Kyle not running the 40? Just saw the QB's run the 40 and didn't see him out there.
 
NFL COMBINE: Which FCS Player Had The Best Saturday
Several FCS products shined on Saturday as the running backs and offensive linemen took center stage.


  • Richmond QB impressed the assembled scouts during the NFL Combine and now moves on to Richmond's Pro Day on March 13.


    Brian McLaughlin
    @BrianMacWriter
    clock.jpg
    Published on March 03, 2018 at 6:24 PM EST

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    Updated on March 03, 2018 at 6:38 PM EST



    Saturday marked the beginning of the on-field work for the NFL Combine, with quarterbacks, wide receivers and tight end prospects all running, jumping and lifting to prove their athleticism. The FCS had 3 prospects in the mix.


    MORE: COMPARE ANY TWO FCS PLAYERS OR ANY TWO FCS TEAMS

    FCS PROSPECTS: What round are they projected to be taken?

    Richmond-KyleLauletta-mug-football-2016-e1478555416200.jpg
    Needless to say, things went rather well for Richmond quarterback Kyle Lauletta on Saturday. While an NFL Draft prospect at QB will need to prove his worth "upstairs" to scouts, coaches and G.M.s, it never hurts to prove you're also athletic and can get out of a bind. Lauletta certainly proved that, and he's hard considered a dual-threat quarterback.

    MCLAUGHLIN: This week's diary with Kyle Lauletta

    Lauletta was in the top six among 19 quarterbacks in the five categories he competed in -- the 40-yard dash, the vertical, the broad jump, the 3-cone and the 20-yard shuttle run. He actually came away with the top time among QBs in the 20-yard shuttle, and that time (4.07 seconds) also is the 4th best mark to ever be hit by an FCS quarterback prospect at the NFL Combine. The FCS names ahead of him in the 20-yard shuttle? Josh McCown (2002), Rhett Bomar (2009), Jason Garrett (1989) and Travis Lulay (2006).

    Along with the meat market stuff, Lauletta also threw well in the route drills with the receivers, and probably his biggest strength -- one-on-one interviews -- will undoubtedly come away as his top attribute. His overall performance from the Senior Bowl to the NFL Combine has led many draft experts to label him a strong day two draft pick, meaning a 2nd/3rd round type guy. With an exceptionally strong QB class, that remains to be seen, but it seems locked in that he'll be a draft pick of some sort.

    COMBINE: Greatest FCS Performances Of All Time

    WienekeJake2016.jpg
    The other two FCS participants were the South Dakota State pass-catching tandem of TE Dallas Goedert and WR Jake Wieneke -- you know, the duo that all Missouri Valley Football Conference head football coaches are glad have now graduated after tormenting defenses for what seems like a decade? Both had their bright spots, probably more so with Goedert. The rangy tight end with soft hands proved he was strong, posting the No. 1 mark in the bench press with 23 reps of 225 pounds. This also happens to be the No. 5 mark with FCS tight ends in the NFL Combine, so comparably it was an impressive lift total.

    MCLAUGHLIN: SDSU's Dallas Goedert and Jake Wieneke - The Tandem

    Goedert is still considered by most analysts to be the No. 2 tight end in this year's draft class behind Oklahoma's Mark Andrews, but he may be pushing even that at this point. Many draft analysts have Goedert going in the second round and possibly flirting with the first, making him the top FCS prospect in this year's class. Wieneke didn't have the day that Lauletta did, and Goedert opted out of several tests. Wieneke ran a 4.67 in the 40-yard dash and had a top 10 effort in the 60-shuttle, which measures quickness. He did have some nice catches in the route-running drills.



 
understand second effort was 4.77 thus the 4.81 average time -- not a blazer but works for a QB
 
Richmond QB Lauletta a standout at NFL Combine

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(AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
By CRAIG HALEY

STATS FCS Senior Editor

(STATS) - To think Richmond quarterback Kyle Lauletta was recovering from a torn ACL at this time last year, his ascension in NFL draft talk is incredible.

His recovery from the injury couldn't have gone much better in his senior season when he was named the CAA Football offensive player of the year. But the last two months have been nothing short of spectacular.

Lauletta was voted the most valuable player at the Reese's Senior Bowl in January, and he might have raised his draft stock more than any of the 20 FCS players who participated in the NFL scouting combine which concluded on Monday.

The 6-foot-2 5/8, 222-pound Lauletta threw well during the on-field drills, and he posted the quickest 20-yard shuttle (4.07 seconds) among the 19 quarterbacks. Also among the signal-callers, he was fourth in the 3-cone drill (6.95 seconds) and the broad jump (9 feet, 5 inches), and tied for fourth in the vertical jump (31 inches). His 40-yard dash in 4.81 tied for sixth best.

Over combine week, Lauletta drew comparisons by the media to San Francisco 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo, the 2013 Walter Payton Award winner who had similar size coming out of Eastern Illinois and was the MVP of the East-West Shrine Game.

"I definitely see some similarities," Lauletta said. "He's obviously an FCS guy. He has quick feet. He's accurate. He's an outstanding leader from the soundbites I've seen. As a quarterback, you have to be a great communicator, and Jimmy is a great communicator. It just seems like he has a mojo to him, a little bit of a swagger to him that is infectious. He's a player I'd love to model my game around."

NFL.com projects Lauletta to be drafted in the fifth round, but his spot might rise come the three-day event from April 26-28. At Richmond, he threw for over 3,000 yards in each of the last three seasons to set the school's all-time records for passing yards (10,465), touchdown passes (73) and total offensive yards (10,651).

Updated March 5, 2018
 
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4 FCS Players Whose Stock is Rising after Combine (And 3 Whose Isn’t)
By Craig Haley, 3/6/18, 11:00 AM EST

Richmond QB Kyle Lauletta steals some of the spotlight in Indianapolis
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There are so many ways to impress at the NFL Scouting Combine — measurements, on-field drills, team interviews — and some players from the FCS must feel they aced the test that concluded on Monday in Indianapolis.

Always feeling they have to do just a bit more, FCS prospects made their mark in the week-long meat market that leads toward the 2018 NFL Draft from April 26-28 in Arlington, Texas. And some players didn't leave the best of impressions.

Here are some of the players who should feel good after the Combine and a few who have plenty of work ahead of them.

Thumbs Up

Davontae Harris, CB, Illinois State
5-11 3/8, 205

Always physical in run support, Harris finished first among cornerbacks with 22 reps in the 225-pound bench press. In addition, he posted a solid 4.43 in the 40-yard dash, boosting his resume for man-to-man coverage. Not a prototypical cover corner, however, he could transition to safety at the next level.

Kyle Lauletta, QB, Richmond
6-2 5/8, 222

Lauletta showed off his athleticism and threw well during the workout portion of the Combine. Among the quarterbacks, he posted the quickest 20-yard shuttle (4.07 seconds), was fourth in the 3-cone drill (6.95) and the broad jump (9 feet, 5 inches), and tied for fourth in the vertical jump (31 inches). There’s also little doubt the MVP of the Reese’s Senior Bowl impressed with team interviews as he known for having a high football IQ.

John Franklin, DL, Stephen F. Austin
6-3 7/8, 283

Franklin, a defensive end in college who likely projects there in a 3-4 alignment, trimmed nearly 10 pounds off his 2017 weight, and it allowed him to post excellent numbers at the Combine, including a 4.75 40-yard dash that ranked fifth among defensive linemen. His 26 reps in the bench press also were a strong showing considering his 82-inch wingspan. He could be a late-round find.

Brandon Parker, OT, North Carolina A&T
6-7 5/8, 305

Many consider Parker will be the second FCS player drafted after South Dakota State tight end Dallas Goedert, who’s likely a second-round pick. Parker measured in well, including an exceptional wingspan (84 7/8). His athleticism was on display with a 9-foot, 5-inch broad jump, which tied for third among offensive linemen. Basically, the three-time MEAC offensive lineman of the year did little to tarnish the intrigue surrounding him.

Thumbs Down

Nick DeLuca, ILB, North Dakota State
6-2 5/8, 251

The negative during DeLuca’s outstanding NDSU career was injuries, and as he moves toward the next level, his NFL.com bio notes he “doesn't run fast even when healthy,” so scouts would have preferred to be surprised in the speed drills at the Combine. Instead the hard-nosed tackler had a 4.85 40, beating only one other linebacker. His 18 reps on the bench press were pedestrian as well.

D’Montre Wade, CB, Murray State
5-11 1/8, 206

Wade was five pounds heavier than his measurement at the Senior Bowl and wasn’t exceptional with speed (4.57 in the 40 and 4.40 in the 20-yard shuttle) or power (15 reps in the bench press). Considering he didn’t face a high level of opposing quarterbacks as a senior, he needed to do more at the Combine.

Jake Wieneke, WR South Dakota State
6-4, 221

While he showed good hands in the pass-catching drills, Wieneke (above, right) disappointed in the 40 by clocking 4.67. That’s not necessarily an ominous development — Eastern Washington’s Cooper Kupp had a 4.62 at last year’s combine — but a little more quickness would have helped Wieneke stand out a little more in what appears to be a fairly deep wide receiver draft class. Plus, his nine reps on the bench press were well below average for his position.
 
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Found this nice piece:
https://www.dawgsbynature.com/2018/3/7/17091340/qb1-the-kyle-lauletta-chronicle

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It's time to take a look at a QB that is not a big name, or is he?


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If you like a QB that is a true pocket passer that's both accurate and throws the football with anticipation, also places the football almost perfect.... Kyle Lauletta is the guy to like this draft.

Young Kyle Lauletta

The senior signal caller out of Richmond has been molded to be a successful NFL QB since an early age. His father (played QB for Navy), grandfather, brother and uncle all played college football. Kyle was not even 5 years old when he started playing football back in 1999. His father can be handed the award for getting his son into football by fudging Kyle's date of birth to say he was old enough to play flag football when Kyle was 4, in that league you had to be 5 to play. His father ran the league, and despite Joe (father) signing his underage son up for flag football at an early age, he let Kyle choose his own path.....with some slight nudging. Joe worked with his son on mechanics in the back yard and at local gyms.

"I played everything as a kid," Lauletta said. "My parents never forced me to play football. I just loved it. Man, I was the most competitive kid. If you asked my parents about me when I was younger, I was the most competitive kid ever. I would throw a fit when I would lose, and I would get real upset, no matter what it was. If we’re playing a board game, I’m just trying to rip people’s heads off and win. That’s how I always was."

In high school (Downingtown East-Pa) Kyle did not start at QB until he was a junior, sitting on the bench as a back up behind his brother Trey. Once given the opportunity to start in the Pro style system that Downingtown East ran, it really helped Kyle to be prepared for the college level. Suffering a knee injury in his senior season playing Lax, Kyle did not get the chance to showcase his abilities in front of FBS coaches at camps heading into college. The chip on his shoulder still remains as Kyle selected Richmond as his college.

"I thought I was good enough to play at that level," Lauletta said. "I got recruited by a lot of those schools but for whatever reason they didn’t pull the trigger on scholarship offers. I thought Richmond was an outstanding place for me to go. I get a world-class education, I get an opportunity to play CAA football, which is still very, very competitive."

Richmond
Red-shirted in 2014 Lauletta continued to showcase his abilities as a pro style QB from 2015-2017 with his best games in 2017 coming against at Sam Houston state, and at home vs Howard.

"I love to be coached and there’s so many people that have coached me hard and really pushed me, really helped me to be where I’m at right now," Lauletta said.

Lauletta has had his share of coaching changes at Richmond. Jeff Durden being the latest OC at the school ( 4th in 4 years) took notice of Kyle as soon as he saw the kid on the field.

"Student of the game" Durden used to describe Lauletta. " I make fun of him all the time. He carries a little notebook, he looks like a reporter. He is always writing stuff down to reference in the future. When you tell him something, he's going to remember it and use it".

"always carry a notebook where ever I go" Lauletta said at the senior bowl (which was blue, he used a brown one at Richmond). "I like to have everything written down. I keep my notes neat and organized, it's definitely a big part of my game" Kyle said when asked about the notebook at the senior bowl.

Tale of the tape:
Lauletta is known for pinpoint ball placement.

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Another study of Lauletta's game is how well he keeps his eyes down field at all times.

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Here we can see that Lauletta is a bruiser as well.

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When the pocket breaks down, and there is no option down field, Lauletta takes matters into his own hands.

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One of the knocks that seems to be out there about Lauletta is arm strength. As you can clearly tell, that is not an issue.

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Here Lauletta shows his ability to sell the play action and make the LB bite hard, use the pump fake to pause the DB and throws a dime to his WR in stride.

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The Senior bowl
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With the "big names" in this up coming NFL draft set to showcase their skills at the 2018 Senior Bowl, it was Lauletta going 8-12, throwing 198 yards and tossing 3 TD's that stole the show and was named MVP of the game.

75 yards Lauletta to DJ Clark.

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Here we can see again Lauletta keeps his eyes down field and places the football perfectly for another score connecting with Deon Yelder for the South team.

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In the 4th quarter with the game basically in the books Lauletta puts the nail in the coffin connecting with Marcell Ateman for a 14 yard TD ( again showing his skills with ball placement).

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Some will say Kyle is a one read QB. I say that is not the case.

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The Combine

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Putting up an impressive 4.8 40 yard dash time for a pocket QB the Richmond spiders QB is also prototypical size for any NFL team at 6'3" weighing 222 lbs.

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SPARQ Scoring

*SPARQ- Speed, Power, Agility, Reaction, Quickness (the results from these various test are combined and weighed using a sport specific formula)

Lauletta again shows why his name is on the up raise as a NFL QB coming out of college.

Beyond the tape

One of the things I keep hearing about Lauletta is how he is a one read QB. Lauletta is known for locking onto a pass catcher at times but his reads after his first are typically his best.
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*again coming out better than the "big name" QB's in the up coming draft.

Strengths:

Ball placement

Accuacy

Footwork

Pocket awareness

Competitiveness

Leadership

Weaknesses:

Locks onto WR's

Arm strength-at times

*his flaws are not as bad as the other "top" QB's in the draft.


The fields Pro Comparison:

Jimmy Garoppolo

*yet I think he is better than Jimmy G coming out of college
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The University of Richmond's NFL Draft picks in top five rounds (Is QB Kyle Lauletta next?)

JOHN O'CONNOR·7 hours ago


First round

  • Art Jones (B), 1941, Philadelphia Eagles
  • Walker Gillette (WR), 1970, San Diego Chargers
  • Barty Smith (RB), 1974, Green Bay Packers
  • Barry Redden (RB), 1982, Los Angeles Rams

Third round

  • Jim Livesay (WR), 1971, St. Louis Cardinals

Fourth round

  • Frank Pajaczkowski (B), 1956, San Francisco 49ers
  • Jeff Nixon (DB), 1979, Buffalo Bills
  • Shawn Barber (LB), 1998, Washington Redskins
  • Arman Shields (WR), 2008, Oakland Raiders
  • Lawrence Sidbury (DE), 2009, Atlanta Falcons

Fifth round

  • Bill Ventura (T), 1963, Baltimore Colts
  • Mike Bragg (P), 1968, Washington Redskins
  • Muneer Moore (WR), 2000, Denver Broncos
  • Tim Hightower (RB), 2008, Arizona Cardinals
  • Cooper Taylor (DB), 2013, New York Giants




- Sources: UR, NFL.COM
 
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