Monday, October 28, 2024

2022 NFL Scouting Combine: Offensive line measurements, hand size, and more from Day 2 of workouts

2022 NFL Scouting Combine: Offensive line measurements, hand size, and more from Day 2 of workouts

The 2022 NFL Scouting Combine is officially underway, and this year looks a bit different compared to years past. Unlike previous editions of the NFL combine, players will do measurements, bench press and on-field workouts all in the same day.

With several teams in need of offensive linemen, you can rest assured that many NFL teams will be keeping a close eye on how the linemen fare during the combine. Among those teams are the Cincinnati Bengals, who may be a lineman or two away from capturing their first Lombardi Trophy. Among the top-ranked offensive linemen in this year’s draft are Iowa’s Tyler Linderbaum, Alabama’s Evan Neal, Mississippi State’s Charles Cross, N.C. State’s Ikem Ekwonu, and Texas A&M’s Kenyon Green. 

Below, we will list all the official measurements for the offensive linemen at the combine. 

Offensive line measurements

Tyler Smith 

6-4

324

10 3/4 

34

83 1/8

Joshua Ezeudu

6-4

308

9 1/2

34

82 1/4

Charles Cross

6-4 3/4

307

10 3/4

34 1/2

81

Evan Neal

6-7 1/2

337

10 1/8

34

83

Ikem Ekwonu

6-4

310

10 1/4

34

84 1/4

Daniel Faalele

6-8

384

11

35 1/8

85 1/8

Kenyon Green

6-3 7/8

323

10 3/8

34 1/8

83 3/8 

Tyler Linderbaum

6-2 1/8

296

10

31 1/8

75

Zion Johnson

6-3

312

10 5/8

34

Bernhard Raimann

6-6 303

10 1/4

32 7/8


Nicholas Petit-Frere

6-5 316 10 3/4

33 5/8


Darian Kinnard

6-5

322 11 1/4

35


Cole Strange 

6-5 307 10 1/8

33


Max Mitchell

6-6 307 10 33 1/2


Thayer Munford

6-6 328 10 1/8

35 1/8


Jamaree Salyer

6-3

321 10

33 5/8


Sean Rhyan

6-5 321 11 1/8

32 3/8


Dylan Parham 6-3 311 10 1/4

33 1/2


Abraham Lucas

6-6 315 10 1/2

33 7/8


Luke Goedeke

6-5 312 9 3/4

32 1/4


Logan Bruss

6-5 309 10 3/4

33 1/8


Luke Fortner

6-4

307 10

33 1/8


Cade Mays

6-5

311 10

34 1/8


Rasheed Walker

6-6 313 10 5/8

33 5/8


Andrew Stueber 6-7 325 10

34 1/8
Braxton Jones

6-5 310 10 1/4

35 3/8


Zach Tom

6-4 304 10 3/8

33 1/4


Chasen Hines

6-3

327 9 7/8

33 7/8


Vederian Lowe

6-5 314 10 3/8

35 3/8


Justin Shaffer

6-4

314 9 5/8

31 7/8


Ed Ingram

6-3 307 10

33 5/8


Spencer Burford

6-4

304 9 1/2

34 3/4


Nick Zakelj

6-6 316 9 7/8

32 1/2


Kellen Diesch

6-7 301 9 1/2

32 1/4


Dohnovan West

6-3 296 9 1/2

33


Marcus McKethan

6-6 1/2 340

10 1/4 

33 5/8


Marquis Hayes

6-5

318 8 7/8

34 7/8


Cordell Volson

6-6 315

10 1/2

33 7/8


Cam Jurgens

6-3 307

10

33 3/8


Ja’Tyre Carter

6-3 311 

10 1/4

33 5/8


Dare Rosenthal

6-7

290 9

33 1/2


Obinna Eze

6-6 1/2

321 9 7/8

36 1/8


Zach Thomas

6-5 308

10 1/4

33 7/8


Ben Brown

6-5

312 10 1/4

34 3/8


Dawson Deaton

6-5 1/2 306 9 5/8

32 7/8


Matt Waletzko

6-8 312 10 1/4

35 1/8


Alec Lindstrom

6-3

296 9 1/4

32 5/8


Chris Paul

6-4 323

9 3/8

33 5/8


Austin Deculus

6-5

321 9 1/4

34 3/8


Myron Cunningham

6-5 320 10 3/8

34 1/2


Tyrese Robinson

6-3 317

9 3/4

33 1/8


Blaise Andries

6-6

308 9 7/8

33 7/8


Andrew Rupcich

6-6 318 9 1/2

32 7/8


Luke Tenuta

6-8 319 10 1/8

32 7/8


Luke Wattenberg 

6-4

299 9 3/8

34 3/8


Offensive line winners

Evan Neal, Alabama. One of the favorites to be the No. 1 pick in the draft is certainly a massive human at 6-foot-7 and 337 pounds, but by the looks of it, he has exactly zero excess weight. He’s ready to be a solid Day 1 starter for whichever team selects him in the top five.

Charles Cross, Mississippi State. At a shade under 6-foot-5 with nearly 35-inch arms, Cross has the prototypical measurables for an NFL tackle. He has the skill set, too, as CBS Sports ranks him as the eighth-best prospect in this class.

Daniel Faalele, Minnesota. Faalele weighed in at a whopping 384 pounds, a number the combine scales haven’t seen since Wisconsin’s Aaron Gibson weighed in at 386 pounds in 1999. Many draft pundits are pegging him as a Day 2 selection.

Offensive line losers

Bernhard Raimann, Central Michigan. The reason the Austrian native lands here is because of his 32 7/8″ arms, which are just below the generally acceptable 33 inches for offensive tackles in the NFL. Usually players with 33-inch arms or shorter play guard at the next level, but the tight end-turned tackle has impressed scouts throughout the draft process. CBS Sports has Raimann as the No. 6 tackle prospect and the 29th-best prospect overall.

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