July 8, 2024

Live updates for the Senior Bowl and Shrine Bowl in 2024: the most recent information, highlights, and practice notes.

Prospects for the NFL Draft try out for professional teams at exhibitions in Mobile, Alabama, and Frisco, Texas. For observations and analysis, click this link.

Considering how unimpressive all of the quarterbacks were, I was tempted to leave this spot empty. Michael Penix Jr. of Washington was very much an up-and-down player. Bo Nix of Oregon had a slow start but improved throughout the course of the week. Nevertheless, Penix and Nix’s overall performance on the field fell short of the expectations.

I said that Spencer Rattler of South Carolina was the quarterback who could “make the greatest jump during the draft process” in my Senior Bowl preview, and I felt that this week’s practices were a good starting step in that direction. Rattler displayed his exceptional arm talent by hitting precise, well-timed spirals to players at every position on the field. Additionally, he showed that he could layer throws.

During the week, Ray Davis of Kentucky and MarShawn Lloyd of USC both demonstrated excellent ball-catching skills. However, Dylan Laube was at a different level, as anyone who watched his tape from the previous season—more especially, the Central Michigan game—should have known.

Standing five feet ten inches tall and weighing two hundred and twenty pounds, Laube’s quickness on pivot routes and ability to snare the football regularly caused linebackers to clash. He also went through some wide receiver drills, and he demonstrated above-average tracking and finishing skills while outpacing cornerbacks downfield.

The analogies to Danny Woodhead are a bit obvious, but they make sense. On Day 3, Laube could be drafted anywhere, and that wouldn’t surprise me.

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