DancingOutlaw
No sloppy, slimy eggs plz
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2010
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Not really. Its one part of what can make someone intelligent. But it is not an all encompassing test of general intelligence.
Didn't you start a thread just the other day over AK getting a better score than other RB rated higher than him? As if it were something that showed he should be drafted higher and that you've "always known he was a smart kid". Which is in itself a BS statement about his intelligence and what you know of it.
Even ignoring the fact that you don't know what the Wonderlic is, what you're describing is a rather useful and efficient way to test intelligence. Being able to quickly recognize patterns is more indicative of intelligence than, say, rote memorization.
The wonderlic is a baseline test. Get over the baseline (20) and your good. Its not like the higher the score you get the smarter you are. Like others have mentioned its a timed test. And most of the questions are pattern recognition questions like an IQ test. Its a good way of separating those that are not smart from those that are smart. But its not a test where you can rank people by intelligence based on the score.
The wonderlic like all tests just measures one little slice of what we would call intelligence. Pattern recognition. And it does it in a timed manner. I personally wouldn't call the person who is the best pattern recognizer in the shortest period of time the smartest person in the world.
D4H talk to me about Sojourn Shelton
I actually like him a lot. I didn't know much about him going into the season but he flashed during the LSU game to start the year. He's a little undersized but he is athletic and has good instincts. He reminds me of Brandon Flowers. I would say he's a solid 2nd round CB.
Did you really think the Wonderlic was a test of intelligence?
"People are asking, ‘Who’s the next Tom Brady? Who’s the next Dak Prescott?’ If I knew that I wouldn’t be talking to you right now. I’d be getting paid a lot of money by some team to do some scouting for them, but the guy I like is Josh Dobbs down at Tennessee. Good solid player, athletic, can throw the football. So if you say, 'Hey look at this guy. Dak Prescott went in the fourth round, Jaws, who’s the guy you like that might surprise some people?' This is the guy who might surprise some people.
"And Dobbs has experience. When you go to Bill Parcells, and we worked together at ESPN. Bill, when he talked about quarterbacks, he wanted experienced guys. He wanted guys that played three or four years in college, went to their senior year and guys that not only matured in the system, but matured as a person. They could handle the pressure. They could handle the huddle. They could handle the locker room. They could deal with the media. He liked those guys that had been the team captain, had been there four years or even an extra redshirt year, so five years. He liked those kinds of guys, and if you look at the history of this league, it’s probably better if you go that route. There’s always the isolated outliers, but for the most part, if you take that guy that stayed in college, gained experience, you have a better chance of long-term success."
ESPN NFL analyst Ron Jaworski is another expert that is high on Josh Dobbs NFL potential: http://www.phillyvoice.com/ron-jaworski-discusses-eagles-draft-options/
Looks like the guys at ESPN are big fans of what Josh can bring to the NFL.![]()
He basically said Dobbs stayed in college.