
"He looked like the rare interior guy whose movement skills popped straight off the bat. He put in an impressive 5.02s forty yard time plus an explosive 32" vertical (both 94th percentile), and then he repeatedly stood out in the drills. The on-field activity was the separator with Bisontis, his pass-pro sets looked natural for a player with tackle experience, so the workout read like a plug-and-play starter."
"Burton's combine was a clinic in functional athleticism for a zone interior. A rapid 4.94s forty time with a 1.76s ten-yard split and a 9'3" broad jump truly showed off the speed and power. Then he backed it with fluidity in the positional work. It's the kind of clean, controlled drill tape that moves a guy from mid-round depth to top-100."
"When a center is both fast and technically composed in space, teams stop arguing if can he move and start arguing how early does he get drafted. He made an offensive line-best forty time at 4.90s plus a 7.46s three-cone with a 32" vertical. He was steady and consistent in the drill circuit which mattered most."
The final day of combine testing featured offensive linemen competing in athletic and positional drills. Chase Bisontis impressed with a 5.02-second forty-yard dash and 32-inch vertical, both in the 94th percentile, displaying natural pass-protection technique. Jager Burton showcased functional athleticism with a 4.94-second forty and 9'3" broad jump, moving from mid-round consideration to top-100 potential. Max Iheanachor validated his size with a 4.91-second forty at 321 pounds and fluid movement work. A center posted the day's best forty time at 4.90 seconds with a 7.46-second three-cone, demonstrating both speed and technical composure. Emmanuel Pregnon jumped 35 inches and displayed smooth lateral movement with strong contact technique, establishing himself as a powerful, explosive prospect.
Read at Blogging The Boys
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