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Football IQs

The NFL requires all college players hoping to be drafted to take the 12 minute Wonderlic IQ test of 50 questions. I found the stats for the top 309 prospects in the Spring 2003 draft (the one where USC’s quarterback Carson Palmer went #1). I’ve converted it into IQ scores by assuming that 20 answers right out of 50 questions = 100 and each additional right answer is worth 2 points, although that might be overstating the IQs a little (Some sources say the mean is 21 right.) The average for all the prospects was 103, which is quite good. (I suspect, however, that players practice the test more than the typical job applicant, and I’d hardly be surprised if some of the football superagents didn’t find a way for their clients to cheat.)

Here are the scores by position and for the leading football powerhouses (although the sample sizes aren’t big enough to say much for sure about colleges’ recruiting strategies — if I could find a few more years’ worth of data, we could evaluate Paul Hornung’s controversial comment that Notre Dame [2003 average 109] needs to ease up on admissions standards so it can compete with Miami [92]):

PositionCountIQ
Guard19113
QB17112
Center11110
Tackle36108
Free Safety11108
Tight End21108
Wide Receiver40103
Defensive End33100
Int. Linebacker17100
Fullback7100
Cornerback2699
Strong Safety1099
Outside LB1498
Defensive Tackle2197
Running Back2695
California4119
Stanford7117
Colorado6112
Wisconsin6111
Arizona St.4111
Iowa8110
BYU4110
Notre Dame8109
Louisville4109
Florida St.8108
Hawaii4108
Michigan6106
Washington St.4106
Florida10105
Oklahoma5104
Penn St.7103
Ohio St.6103
Nebraska4103
Texas5102
Illinois6102
Boston College4102
N.C. State4101
Texas A&M5100
USC699
Georgia1096
Tennessee1095
Oregon St.594
Louisiana St.493
TCU493
Miami1092
Alabama591
Mississippi St.489

Top 10 Ranked players:

1Carson PalmerUSCQB112
2Charles RogersMichigan St.WR80
3Terence NewmanKansas St.CB96
4Andre JohnsonMiamiWR88
5Byron LeftwichMarshallQB110
6Terrell SuggsArizona St.DE122
7William JosephMiamiDT74
8Jordan GrossUtahT140
9Jerome McDougleMiamiDE80
10Marcus TrufantWashington St.CB98

Clearly, the NFL is willing to take guys who score low if they’ve got the physical skills, but it likes its QBs and offensive linemen to have 3-digit IQs. (Only 2 of the 17 quarterbacks on the list scored below 100 — those playbooks are complicated). I hope these guys with 74s and 80s have honest agents and business managers to look after all those millions they’re making.

Smartest:

149Kevin CurtisUtah St.WR156
8Jordan GrossUtahT140
297David PorterIowaT138
65Jon StinchcombGeorgiaT134

I’ll skip the names of the lowest scorers, but the lowest was a defensive lineman on Utah with a 70. When he lined up across from Jordan Gross (140) in practice, I wonder what their colloquys sounded like?