Pro Days Are Stupid; More On Martez

March 20th, 2011

Draft guru Justin Pawlowski, The Commish of WDAE-AM 620, is a huge fan of the NFL Scouting combine. Oh yes, The Commish considers it an extraordinarily valuable exercise.

But pro days? Well, The Commish isn’t sold.

In today’s draft podcast, The Commish explains in great detail why pro days are stupid. Some great points, for sure. He also shares takes on pro days and Martez Wilson from the astute Chris Landry of FOX Sports.

Click the arrow below to listen, or download here.

[audio: 32011podcast.mp3]

Don’t forget to follow The Commish on Facebook, and shoot him your draft questions for Wednesday’s “inbox,” commish@620wdae.com.

7 Responses to “Pro Days Are Stupid; More On Martez”

  1. gotbbucs Says:

    havent had a chance to listen to this cause im on my phone but i think i can probably figure it out. commish loves martez wilson, wilson sucked at his pro day, in turn making pro days stupid. i guess i’ll find out later if im right.

  2. admin Says:

    Joe here,

    @gotbbucs — Nice guess. Not quite.

  3. gotbbucs Says:

    Ok, after listening to it now I have to agree 100%. That’s why there is absolutely no substitute for game film. He still hasn’t convinced me that Martez Wilson is worth the 20th pick, but to each their own.

  4. HIRE GREG OLSON! Says:

    Haven’t listened yet. But I do agree that the combine adds the element of competition and pressure to perform. That’ll tell you a lot more about a guy than how he performs in the comfy confines of his alma ma…(wait, non of these graduate)

  5. HIRE GREG OLSON! Says:

    *none

  6. BigMacAttack Says:

    Justin makes a very good point, then goes on to back it up.

  7. Architek Says:

    I have said this before and I will say it again. The Commish analysis is always solid because he backs it up with factual information and it’s never sold as truth, only probability, which is the entire draft process in a nutshell. I like Wilson a lot but maybe not in the 1st round not saying he’s not going to be this ir that but solely based on his lack of collegiate production.