Mark Jarvis

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Mark Jarvis

Mark Jarvis

@JarvisAFP

General Manager @Agents4Players Former Sac State player personnel "Beliefs are hypotheses to be tested, not treasures to be guarded."

Se unió Haziran 2015
2.2K Siguiendo8.2K Seguidores
Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
Hard to be under the radar as a 6'5" 260 guy who can move but think not being at ORST rising SR day last year + ORST having a down year have led to being overlooked a bit. Looks like an NFL guy physically & has ST exp. Worth a look. I'm biased but think he should be MPFA-HPFA.
Aaron Wilson@AaronWilson_NFL

Nikko Taylor Oregon State @BeaverFootball edge (6-5 2/8, 262, 4.73 40, 7.13 3-cone) a two-year starter. One of two edges in #NFLDraft class to run 4.7s at over 6'5 and 260 plus pounds. Turned down SEC offers to stay at Oregon State. Interest from #Browns, #Packers, others Pro Day @agents4players

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Chris Hummer
Chris Hummer@chris_hummer·
San Diego State is hiring Sacramento State Director of Recruiting CJ Pollard as recruiting coordinator, a source tells @CBSSports. Pollard has made previous career stops at UNLV and UC Davis. He's a former player at USC and Utah State.
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
@NotSoAngryScout The sheer quantity of players would make it so a lot of players would go w/o proper representation if a 3% cap + covering training was in a CBA. Would make only the top of the market profitable or lead to agents stretching too thin to rep wider # of players.
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AngryScoutVet
AngryScoutVet@NotSoAngryScout·
HS players and college players who sign a NIL agent need to make them commit to paying their training and only take 3% like the draft eligible players. NIL agents are taking advantage. If they are gonna attack coaches then HS/college players need to get what draft eligible get.
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AngryScoutVet
AngryScoutVet@NotSoAngryScout·
From listening to agents they love NIL and make way more money. They say younger players are naive and dumb and NIL is their way to make legit money off all of them. Agents screwed themselves paying for training and a stipend to sign draft picks but found loophole with NIL.
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
@seabadger Need an "it depends" button that I can press every time.
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BigBoardLab
BigBoardLab@bigboardlab·
Ever wondered who you draft like? We built a quiz to tell you exactly which GM your style matches, and whether you're more 🐈‍⬛ Dan Morgan or 🏴‍☠️ John Spytek or 🤠 Jerry Jones... You'll make decisions in real draft scenarios. It's quick, try it out here: bigboardlab.com/gm
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Chris Hummer
Chris Hummer@chris_hummer·
Two years ago Miami (Ohio) football had a $80,000 roster. Now? Sources say the RedHawks' roster cost could be 100x that number. Amid an unbeaten run from its men's hoops team, Miami is pushing BIG in all sports. "You want to invest or you don't." cbssports.com/college-footba…
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
@ScoutingNE I did, coach. Referring specifically to the comment on attaining those numbers by SO or beginning of JR yr in HS. Suggesting that players should hit those benchmarks by SO yr/beginning of JR yr or they have a less than 1% chance to play D1 ball is mathematically impossible.
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Coach Silva
Coach Silva@ScoutingNE·
@JarvisAFP Try reading the entire post comments I wrote supporting the data that includes RB’s before you comment again?
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
These are unrealistic benchmarks to expect by JR yr of HS, especially given the steep growth many players have from SO to JR year in HS. Only 5/18 RBs at the NFL combine were over 6'0" 210. Only 6/21 safeties were over 6'2" 200. These are SEC powerhouse type benchmarks.
Coach Silva@ScoutingNE

🏈📢🏉📢🏈"REAL TALK" - Here are some estimated benchmarks for D1 football players. If your son doesn’t meet these benchmarks by let’s say SOPHOMORE year or the BEGINNING of his JUNIOR year, the analytics suggest he has LESS THAN A ONE PERCENT chance to play D1 football. Understand, the culture has shifted tremendously. College coaches are under more pressure to WIN NOW with the portal approach! So the pressure to MAKE SURE Little Johnny has what it takes has been dialed up!!!!! This is why I’ve suggested to many when im asked about this, to consider forgoing winter/spring 7v7 tournaments that I see so many going to and instead get with a trainer/track coach now. This isn’t just about scholarships anymore. It’s about CASHING CHECKS! For example, at one prominent university as a “non-starting freshman,” little Johnny has an opportunity to earn $20K. If he’s a “starting freshman”, he can earn $100k at said university. A far cry from when many former D1 scholarship athletes had just $80 left for the month from their scholarship check. This is why, as parents, you must MANAGE EXPECTATIONS for yourself & your son. Make no mistake about it, he must be EXCEPTIONAL to play D1. To keep it in perspective, Division 1- FBS is a step down from the NFL (98.7 % of NFL Draftees come from Division I, FBS + FCS). With that said, ACADEMICS is the truest opportunity. Take your Mom & Dad hat & glasses off, and understand this is not what you perceive it to be. The goal should be a FREE EDUCATION! Period!

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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
If you answered yes to all of these, you're almost certainly a D1 level player unless you are extremely small (like a 5'7" 160 corner). If you answered yes to 3/4, you're probably still going to get D1 looks. Sometimes it comes early. Sometimes it comes late. But it usually will.
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
Every coach & team recruits differently so there's no catch all but here's what I would ask. Do you play the highest classification of ball in your state (such as 6A in TX)? Did you start as a SO or JR? Are you productive? Are you faster than most players you played against?
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
@clay_fink Correlation between arm & wing in the historical data I have was about 0.9. Probably more justifiable to project off wing & vibes than to take the arms as is. Maybe could just do what teams do w/ pro day 40 conditions and have an offset to put on the original measure.
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Clay Fink
Clay Fink@clay_fink·
While I agree that arm length measurements have been seemingly inconsistent these past two years, I don’t think that wingspan is an effective way to support that argument. Some guys just have broad shoulders and short arms. If you compare Fano and Will Campbell without pads, the arm length vs wingspan differentials show up quite a bit. These were the best pics I could find to express this difference
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Mike Renner
Mike Renner@mikerenner_·
a HUGE point I would make coming out of the combine is that the arm lengths were actually just wrong. Or at least not in line with how arm length has been measured historically. For example, I've seen people want to kick Spencer Fano to guard because he measured w/ 32 1/8" arms. Given Fano's arm length compared to his wingspan (80 1/4"), his shoulder breadth (16") comes in 3.75" wider than Tristan Wirfs and full inch wider than Dawand Jones and Orlando Brown Jr. That obviously sounds absurd! I'll wait on kicking Fano inside until we get accurate pro day measurement
Ray Carpenter@csv_enjoyer

Early signs of Combine Shapeshifter Analysis show that almost everyone's arms shrank

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Jourdan Rodrigue
Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue·
Before a player is an NFL draft pick, he is the longtime subject of a scouting report. These, and the scouts that build and evolve them, are the DNA of a roster. I spent the combine talking to scouts about how they write the reports that shape their teams - and the draft:
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
Also - regional component matters. A DB running an 11.3 in 45° windy Ohio in April is not same as a TX 11.3 April run. Some states (like TX) tend to be uniquely good at maximizing track times but it doesn't always = better play speed on field. Have to offset for region.
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
My rule of thumb is to expect -0.20 to -0.25 per yr for track so 11.3 SO I'd expect to turn into 10.7-10.9 as SR. Track times not linear (smaller jumps for guys as they get close to low-mid 10s) but have to account for age they do it at just as much as time IMO.
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Mark Jarvis
Mark Jarvis@JarvisAFP·
Can't be overstated how much geography & timing plays a role in recruitment. Some areas have surplus talent relative to the college ball played in that area. It's part of why the Montana & Dakota schools have unique FCS talent. Ferris State, Harding, CO Mines/Pueblo good D2 ex.
Mark Branstad@TRCKFTBLGUY

@seancooper_C4 Cooper Kupp ran 23.30/200 in high school which ranks in 50th% for ALL Division I WRs since 2010 (over 6000 WRs). He was approx 6’02/180 out of HS, 4-sport athlete, Kupp wasn’t under recruited because he ran “slow” track times. Geography is as much to blame.

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BigBoardLab
BigBoardLab@bigboardlab·
BIG update on BigBoardLab... we added college stats to our Combine data visualization tool. You can now view every 2026 NFL Draft prospect by measurables, traits, and production. It's fun to see dominators across positions, breakout years, yards per carry, QB Hurries, etc.
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