2013 NFL Combine Results: Tight Ends
| Name | School | 40-Yard Dash |
Bench press |
Vertical jump |
Three-cone drill |
20-yard shuttle |
60-yard shuttle |
Broad jump |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Justice Cunningham | South Carolina | 4.94 | 31.5 | 7.12 | 4.45 | 11.88 | 116 | |
| Tyler Eifert | Notre Dame | 4.68 | 22 | 35.5 | 6.92 | 4.32 | 11.52 | 119 |
| Zach Ertz | Stanford | 4.76 | 24 | 30.5 | 7.08 | 4.47 | 11.92 | 111 |
| Gavin Escobar | San Diego St. | 4.84 | 32.0 | 7.07 | 4.31 | 11.86 | 114 | |
| Joseph Fauria | UCLA | 17 | - | |||||
| Matt Furstenburg | Maryland | 4.62 | 18 | 35.5 | 7.09 | 4.35 | 11.76 | 115 |
| Chris Gragg | Arkansas | 4.50 | 18 | 37.5 | 7.08 | 4.51 | 125 | |
| D.C. Jefferson | Rutgers | 3 | - | |||||
| Nick Kasa | Colorado | 4.71 | 22 | 31.5 | 113 | |||
| Travis Kelce | Cincinnati | - | ||||||
| Philip Lutzenkirchen | Auburn | 4.94 | 21 | 30.5 | 7.15 | 4.35 | 112 | |
| Vance McDonald | Rice | 4.69 | 31 | 33.5 | 7.08 | 4.53 | 11.73 | 119 |
| Ryan Otten | San Jose St. | - | ||||||
| Chris Pantale | Boston College | 4.99 | 17 | 33.5 | 7.48 | 4.50 | 12.22 | 110 |
| Jordan Reed | Florida | 4.72 | 16 | - | ||||
| Mychal Rivera | Tennessee | 4.81 | 17 | 31.0 | 7.17 | 4.43 | 112 | |
| Dion Sims | Michigan St. | 4.75 | 22 | 35.0 | 7.36 | 4.52 | 12.10 | 112 |
| Jake Stoneburner | Ohio St. | 4.65 | 18 | 34.5 | 7.12 | 4.27 | 11.50 | 116 |
| Levine Toilolo | Stanford | 4.86 | 17 | 31.0 | 7.09 | 4.57 | 11.97 | 113 |
| Michael Williams | Alabama | 4.52 | 13 | 37.5 | 4.00 | 126 |
The 2013 NFL Combine Timing and Testing Sessions will be held February 22-28 at the Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, IN. The scouting combine is an invitation only event, open only to invited players and NFL team officials. The workout and timing drills include: 40 yard dash, bench press, vertical jump, broad jump, 20-yard shuttle, three-cone drill, 60-yard shuttle, position-specific drills, interviews, physical measurements, injury evaluation, drug screen, cybex test, and wonderlic test. More than 300 top prospects have been invited.
Perhaps the most newsworthy test, the Wonderlic Test is an intelligence test has been given to prospective players in the National Football League since the 1970s. The Wonderlic is a 12 minute, 50 question exam meant to judge their aptitude for adapting to certain situations. Similar to other standardized tests, the Wonderlic uses a multiple choice format for its questions with increasing difficulty. It's designed so that most players won't have time to complete it. Pat McInally (P/WR from Harvard) is the only football player to record a confirmed perfect score.
