The most important numbers coming out of Indianapolis won’t show up on television.
They won’t flash across the screen during coverage of the NFL Scouting Combine. They won’t trend on social media next to a blazing 40-yard dash. They’ll be buried inside MRI scans, GPS tracking reports and private interview notes — guarded information exchanged quietly inside meeting rooms at the Indiana Convention Center.
The National Football League has turned the Combine into appointment viewing. Every February in Indianapolis, prospects sprint, jump and bench their way into highlight packages. This year is no different. Ohio State linebacker Sonny Styles has generated buzz with eye-popping athletic testing, reinforcing the “modern defensive chess piece” label scouts already attached to his tape. Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson has used podium sessions and throwing drills to make the case that he’s more than a developmental backup.
Those are the visible wins.
But for general managers, the Combine isn’t about discovering who runs the fastest. It’s about determining who represents the greatest financial risk.
Styles’ speed matters. So does the long-term outlook of his knees and shoulders. Simpson’s arm talent matters. So does how he processes coverage rotations on a whiteboard when a quarterbacks coach intentionally changes the look mid-sentence. The stopwatch can confirm athleticism. It cannot confirm durability or decision-making under stress.
“You draft traits,” said former Giants, Patriots, Jets and Cowboys head coach Bill Parcells. “You coach production.”
Every April, franchises commit millions in guaranteed money to first-round picks. A miss doesn’t just hurt the depth chart — it can derail a regime. That’s why the most consequential moments this week won’t be televised. They’ll happen in medical rechecks, where team doctors scrutinize past surgeries. They’ll happen in 20-minute interviews, where coaches probe how a prospect handled adversity when his college career stalled.
History offers cautionary tales of players who “won” the Combine but never mastered an NFL playbook. Teams remember those lessons. A spectacular broad jump might move a player up five spots. A red-flag medical evaluation can erase him entirely.
Consider how clubs approach a quarterback like Simpson in a year without a consensus No. 1 passer. The arm strength is measurable. The footwork can be refined. What teams are really trying to project is resilience — how he handles the volatility of Sundays when protections break down and defensive coordinators disguise coverages he’s never seen. Those answers won’t come from a radar gun.
The same is true on defense. Styles’ explosiveness suggests versatility — the ability to cover tight ends, blitz off the edge, chase sideline to sideline. But teams are also combing through GPS tracking data and workload histories, trying to determine whether that play style is sustainable over 17 games.
The irony of the Combine is that the most public portion is the least complicated. Straight-line speed is objective. Character, recovery timelines and psychological endurance are not. And yet those hidden variables often separate a five-year starter from a cautionary tale.
The Combine remains essential — not as a track meet, but as a risk-management summit. It’s a centralized week of verification. A chance for teams to stress-test convictions against new data.
The goal isn’t to leave Indianapolis with the fastest roster on paper.
It’s to leave without the mistake that costs you your job.