@@kaelmeister6860 could be wrong but i think thats what he was giving him props for holding his drive phase for 30 yards. cause thats a long time told it
Impressive, but running in pads is much different. That’s why sometimes we will see players who run a 4.6, yet are the fastest players on the field. Or we will see players who rana 4.3 have average NFL speed
@@jsilva7005My middle school coach used to cook me for that exact reason lol every day during sprints. I’d be fast without them but with them on he always had something to say😂
@@BennyNegroFromQueensyes you do u don’t know speed training you get faster through strength power pylometric form training and sprinting which every single power 5 school does
not a stumble. keeping toes down and as close to the ground as possible without dragging out of the block while keeping head and torso down is the textbook technique. only looks like he's stumbling.
@@darnellbutts8421 Trindon also ran 4.21 but they only gave him a 4.34. Trindon is the second fastest NFL player in history with a 10.00 he ran twice & the fastest ever is Jim Hines 9.95. Jeff Demps 10.01 at 3rd & Jacoby Ford 10.01 is considered 4th. 5th place is Bob Hayes 10.06. These NFL combine 40 yard dashes are semiautomatic timed which makes it inaccurate. Bc the start is hand time & lazer finish. So this makes the NFL combines 40 yard dash booty.
@@boreed5734 I’ll take the 4:21 any day..Anything under 4:4 is rare..the question is can he ball? Coleman is a professional track guy a few linebacker crack backs that 4.19 will probably look more like 4:3 🤣 he has amazing speed no doubt..but his name is Noah Lyles 😆✌🏽
@@coff2x387 I wasn't putting down your comment or the guy's time I know 4.21 is elite. I was just comparing him to the world's best and that's pretty doggone good if a professional world-class sprinter can barely beat him.
By the time he held his head up the race was already over🤯! Baylor is a well known track school tho so this doesn't surprise me, but it damn sure impresses me
*Bullet Bob Hayes, VALIDATED by His 100M Olympic Gold•Medal In The Mexico Olympic Games, stands untested & undefeated in regards to being the fastest NFL Player The Game has ever seen*
As a track and football fan (I play both) that start gave him a good -2 or 3 milliseconds, which is. A big difference in track, can definitely tell a track coach trained him.
@@canyonbruce I understand that. Unofficial times don’t count for anything. So there’s really no point in acknowledging them. So like I said. He didn’t run a 4.21.
@@canyonbruce No he didn’t run a 4.21. That’s why it’s unofficial… the official time when they reviewed it was a 4.28. The 4.21 was a essentially a mistake. He didn’t run it.
Alexander Wright was one of the fastest players in the league, winning the NFL's "Fastest Man" competition in 1992 and 1993. In May 1991, he was timed to have run the 40-yard dash in 4.14 seconds. Not an official combine time though.
Calvin Austin Ran a 4.03 at combine. They said it was a 4.32 😂 I paused the video myself at 4.2 & he was fully past the line. I'm a steelers Fan so I'm happy he fell to the 3rd RD lol
@@princeaceroyale Bo and others claimed that it was electronic. But they literally don't track of any of the 1980's-90's players 40's in the history books.
@@BigBrownGaga That's one of the reasons why. They never taped combines back then. It wasn't viewed as something worth keeping as a record like it is now. It was more for the teams to see talent. Today it is made for the fans to view as well, and it is recorded and kept in records.
@@tatum088 I did watch it bro, I can send you a screen shot of his body over the starting line and the clock still at 0.00. The on screen clock is delayed from the actual clock on the field. If you believe he ran 4.03 that would make him by far the fastest man in earth