The East-West Shrine Bowl took its measurements today, giving us 630 data points on 126 players. Let’s go position-by-position, breaking down what can be taken away from the scale and measuring tape day from a Green Bay Packers perspective.

I’m going to reference a Size Score to rank players, which is really just the combined Z-scores of the five measurements taken: height, weight, hand size, arm length and wingspan. NFL scouts list height in a four-digit number, with the first being feet, the next two being inches and the final digits being eighths of an inch. We’ll be referencing heights as such throughout this article (it’s just so much easier than fractions).

For example, 5114 would mean that a player is 5’11.5”. 6012 would mean they’re 6’1.25”.

Every player who is currently given a draftable grade on the consensus draft board will be noted with their number in parentheses in their size score ranking. Here is the full document with the official measurements, including our conversions into inches and our Size Scores, if you just want to look at that yourself. Be warned, it’s a lot of numbers.

Mark Gronowski, Iowa: 1.4Kyron Drones, Virginia Tech: 0.9Joe Fagnano, UConn: -0.8Cade Klubnick (#161), Clemson: -1.9Haynes King, Georgia Tech: -2.4Jalon Daniels, Kansas: -2.6Behren Morton, Texas Tech: -2.7Miller Moss, Louisville: -4.1

The two big measurements that teams like to pay attention to at the position are whether a quarterback is over 6’2” or not and whether they have 9” hands. Among the Shrine Bowl quarterbacks, the only passers over 6’2”-flat were Gronowski (6022), Fagnano (6026) and King (6021). All but King (8 7/8”) hit the 9” hand mark.

Klubnik, the expected draft pick on the roster, measured in at 6017 and 206 pounds with 9 3/8” hands. Gronowski, who has some ties to the Packers, weighed in at 233 pounds with the biggest hands by far at 10 1/4”.

CJ Donaldson (#242), Ohio State: -0.3Chip Trayanum, Toledo: -2.7Eli Heidenreich, Navy: -5.3Dean Connors, Houston: -5.6Robert Henry (#250), UTSA: -5.9Demond Claiborne (#136), Wake Forest: -6.8

We talked about it in our Shrine Bowl preview, but the Packers really like to have bigger backs under head coach Matt LaFleur. As expected, Donaldson (6014, 234) fits that mold. Unfortunately, Henry (5090, 197) and Claiborne (5092, 187) fell short of the mark, though. It appears that Roman Hemby of Indiana (#197) did not report to the event.

Jeff Caldwell, Cincinnati: 1.0Noah Thomas (#196), Georgia: 0.9J.Michael Sturdivant, Florida: 0.2Colbie Young, Georgia: 0.0Chase Roberts, BYU: -0.3Skyler Bell (#88), UConn: -2.1Jalen Walthall, Incarnate Word: -2.4Dillon Bell, Georgia: -3.1Malik Benson, Oregon: -3.2Emmanuel Henderson, Kansas: -4.5Zavion Thomas, LSU: -5.8Eric Rivers (#178), Georgia Tech: -6.4Michael Wortham, Montana: -7.4Kaden Wetjen, Iowa: -8.1

Mississippi receiver De’Zhaun Stribling (#186) appears not to have reported to Frisco, leaving Thomas, Bell and Rivers as the receivers with draftable grades on the consensus board at the event.

As far as the Packers go, Thomas very much looks like a LaFleur-era receiver, while Bell and Rivers don’t. Thomas measured in an eight-inch shorter (6045) than the tallest receiver at the Shrine Bowl, Cincinnati’s Jeff Caldwell (6046), and also weighed in at 200 pounds.

Meanwhile, Bell came in 5112 and 187 pounds (but had 10” hands) and Rivers was sub-5’10” (5096) and 179 pounds. Overall, the smallest player at the entire event is Wetjen, who was measured at 5086 and 195 pounds with 8.5” hands and a 72” wingspan.

Eli Raridon (#135), Notre Dame: 3.9Dallen Bentley (#145), Utah: 1.9Seydou Traore, Mississippi State: 1.8Lake McRee (#209) USC: 1.1Lance Mason, Wisconsin: 1.1Bauer Sharp, LSU: 0.6Max Bredeson, Michigan: -1.5Jaren Kanak, Oklahoma: -2.3Riley Nowakowski (#256), Indiana: -2.5

For the most part, the tight ends were as advertised. Texas tight end Jack Endries didn’t make the weigh-ins, but he did participate in practice today. He is one of the better prospects at this event, ranked 106th on the consensus board.

Yes, Indiana’s Nowakowski is small, but I only threw him in here because I view fullbacks pretty similarly to tight ends overall (and the NFL does too, based on how they line up players officially listed at either position). I wouldn’t make too much of Nowakowski coming in at 6020, 239 pounds. He did have smaller than 8.5” hands, though, which might hurt him. Overall, his hands were tied for the third-smallest out of the 126 players measured for the event.

Micah Pettus, Florida State: 8.6Josh Braun (#175), Kentucky: 8.3Nolan Rucci, Penn State: 7.5Aamil Wagner (#176), Notre Dame: 7.3Ar’maj Reed-Adams (#142), Texas A&M: 7.0Fa’alili Fa’amoe (#168), Wake Forest: 6.6Diego Pounds (#247), Mississippi: 6.5Micah Morris, Georgia: 6.3Jaeden Roberts (#148), Alabama: 6.0DJ Campbell (#151), Texas: 5.9Joe Cooper, Slippery Rock: 5.7Garrett DiGiorgio, UCLA: 5.5James Neal, Iowa State: 5.4Giovanni El-Hadi, Michigan: 5.1Febechi Nwaiwu, Oklahoma: 4.6Jager Burton, Kentucky: 4.6Dillon Wade, Auburn: 4.0Riley Mahlman, Wisconsin: 3.9Jayden Williams, Mississippi: 3.6Brian Parker (#80), Duke: 3.3Caden Barnett, Wyoming: 3.2Evan Beerntsen, Northwestern: 1.8Pete Nygra, Louisville: 1.4

The draft-caliber linemen mostly measured among the top players at the position. The largest lineman, though, is projected free agent Pettus, who was listed at 6064, 346 pounds and had an 85” wingspan.

The smallest draftable lineman might also be the top player of the game, Duke’s Brian Parker, who played right tackle in college but is expected to move to center, and could be the top prospect there this cycle. Parker said yesterday that he will spend all week practicing at center, as his lack of length wasn’t exactly a secret. Despite being measured at 6046 and 306 pounds, he has sub 32.25” arms. No other draftable lineman in this game has arms under 33.5”.

Indiana center Pat Coogan (#140) appears to have dropped out of the event.

The Packers like to take 320-pounders on the line now. That works in favor of Roberts (335), Braun (333), Pounds (332) and Campbell (321) but not Fa’amoe (311), Parker (306 – might be an exception because of center) and Wagner (302). Reed-Adams (317) is really a borderline case.

Interior Defensive Linemen

Darrell Jackson (#99), Florida State: 10.0DeMonte Capehart (#134), Clemson: 6.3Tyler Onyedim, Texas A&M: 5.5Aaron Hall, Duke: 4.5Gary Smith (#255), UCLA: 3.1James Thompson, Illinois: 2.8Kaleb Proctor, Southeastern Louisiana: 1.4Albert Regis (#181), Texas A&M: 1.2David Gusta, Kentucky: 1.1Jackie Marshall, Baylor: 1.0Brandon Cleveland, NC State: 1.0Landon Robinson (#252), Navy: -1.2Donay Corleone (#91), Cincinnati: N/A

The largest overall player at the event is Jackson, who measured in at 6051 and 328 pounds with 11” hands and an 86” wingspan. Both his hands and wingspan were the largest of anyone at the Shrine Bowl, despite there being 12 players taller than him, including two legit 6’8” players (OL Nolan Rucci of Penn State and Riley Mahlman of Wisconsin).

Capehart (6046, 314) and Smith (6011, 328) also measured in at nose tackle size, while Regis (6012, 308) measured in about 10 pounds below expectation. Robinson (5112, 291) was known to be small coming in.

Apparently, Cincinnati’s Corleone, expected to be a third-round pick, was measured in for everything but his weight. That’s…interesting. Corleone was listed by the Bearcats at 335 pounds and was expected to be around that range.

Anthony Lucas (#119), USC: 6.1Ethan Burke, Texas: 6.0Patrick Payton (#154), Florida State: 4.3Mason Reiger, Wisconsin: 3.5Malachi Lawrence (#111), UCF: 2.7Marvin Jones, Oklahoma: 2.2Wesley Williams, Duke: 1.3Keyshawn James-Newby, New Mexico: 1.0Aidan Hubbard, Northwestern: 0.8Bryan Thomas, South Carolina: -1.5

Lucas (6046, 267), Payton (6045, 251) and Lawrence (6040, 247) certainly have the frames of NFL draft picks. It probably helps Lucas that he came in under the 285-pound mark that USC listed him at, honestly.

For what it’s worth, Tyreak Sapp (#129) of Florida got a late invite to the Senior Bowl and will not be participating at the Shrine Bowl.

Eric Gentry (#187), USC: 7.6Jaden Dugger, Louisiana: 5.5Lander Barton (#125), Utah: 1.5Red Murdock, Buffalo: 0.0Karson Sharar, Iowa: -0.7Jackson Kuwatch, Miami (OH): -1.4Declan Williams, Incarnate Word: -1.6West Weeks, LSU: -2.2Harold Perkins (#87), LSU: -3.2Caden Fordham, NC State: -3.8Taurean York (#108), Texas A&M: -4.7

Two of these players are not like the others. USC’s Gentry is a 6063, 221-pounder with 10.5” hands and an 85.6” wingspan. He’s truly built like a basketball player. While he drew a lot of the attention today, Louisiana’s Dugger (6045, 240) also has an 84.6” wingspan. For reference, no other linebackers on this list cracked 80”. Go look up pictures of them. Built different.

Both Perkins (6003, 222) and York (5104, 232) measured in on the smaller size of things, but Barton (6037, 233) checked the box today. Cincinnati’s Jake Golday (#61) apparently did not attend the event after accepting his invitation.

Devonta Smith, Notre Dame: -3.0Marcus Allen, North Carolina: -3.1Andre Fuller, Toledo: -3.6Domani Jackson (#128), Alabama: -4.1Ceyair Wright, Nebraska: -4.5Devon Marshall (#190), NC State: -5.2Jaylon Guilbeau, Texas: -5.2Jarod Washington, South Carolina State: -5.2Harvey Ahmari, Georgia Tech: -5.3Jadon Canady, Oregon: -5.6Tyreek Chappell, Texas A&M: -6.2Austin Brent, California: -7.0Avery Smith, Toledo: -8.0

There is no freakazoid cornerback on this list (no one even measured 6’1”-flat), but there is some good news for Packers fans: Jackson (6005, 192) and Marshall (5103, 197) had solid measurements today. Green Bay likes to have its CBs measure in at 5’10”+ and 185+ (the absolute minimums). There was some concern that Marshall would fall below the 5’10” line, but he checked that box today.

The following cornerbacks weighed in under 190, which is usually a no-go for the Packers: Allen, Wright, Guilbeau, Washington, Ahmari, Canady, Chappell and Brent.

Cole Wisniewski (#172), Texas Tech: -0.9Miles Scott, Illinois: -1.7Kentrel Bullock, South Alabama: -2.0Austin Brown, Wisconsin: -2.1Jalen Huskey, Maryland: -2.2DQ Smith, South Carolina: -3.6Bishop Fitzgerald (#156), USC: -4.0Dalton Johnson, Arizona: -4.3Myles Rowser, Arizona State: -4.7Louis Moore (#123), Indiana: -4.7Ahmaad Moses, SMU: -6.1

Wisniewski (6033, 214) and his size score would have been bigger than half of the linebackers at the Shrine Bowl. The Sparta, Wisconsin, native is pretty massive for a safety, even at the NFL level. The former FCS All-American transferred from North Dakota State to Texas Tech after having to sit out a year with an injury.

Neither Fitzgerald (5107, 205) nor Moore (5105, 191) has measurements that you’d write home about, one way or another.