Sports agent Drew Rosenhaus. Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Drew Rosenhaus explains massive change for NFL Draft prospects

Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk mentioned ahead of this past weekend that the Athletes First and Rosenhaus Sports agencies are instructing prospects to not participate in any cognitive tests related to the 2024 NFL Draft. 

Well-known agent Drew Rosenhaus explained the reasoning for that decision during a recent conversation with NFL insider Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated. 

"In just speaking with people around the league, I have a lot of respect for doing whatever we can to help our clients get drafted and get drafted as high as they can," Rosenhaus said. "But in this particular case, I think a lot of these tests actually work against our clients. I don’t want to point any fingers at anyone or hurt anyone’s feelings, the people that put these tests together, and I personally don’t want to speak for the teams, but I would like for our clients' character and intelligence and football IQ to be measured in individual meetings and interviews." 

Former Ohio State Buckeyes quarterback C.J. Stroud repeatedly found his name in headlines last spring after he reportedly posted a poor score in the S2 Cognition Test ahead of the 2023 draft. 

The Carolina Panthers ultimately made Alabama Crimson Tide signal-caller Bryce Young the draft's first pick, and the Houston Texans grabbed Stroud via overall selection No. 2. 

Needless to say, the Texans are quite pleased with how things played out. 

According to Pro-Football-Reference, Stroud finished the regular season ranked sixth in the NFL among qualified players with a 100.8 passer rating and first with an average of 273.9 passing yards per game. 

Across 15 contests, he threw 23 touchdown passes and only five interceptions en route to earning Pro Football Writers of America and Associated Press Offensive Rookie of the Year honors. 

To compare, Young ended the regular season ranked 32nd with a 73.7 passer rating after he reportedly scored in the 98th percentile on the S2 Cognition Test. Stroud scored in the 18th percentile.

Rosenhaus also told Breer he'd advise clients to pass on taking the Wonderlic test during the upcoming scouting combine. 

Shanna McCarriston of CBS Sports noted last April that the S2 Cognition Test replaced the Wonderlic for testing of to-be NFL rookies that "scientifically measures an athlete's game-speed cognitive abilities down to a millisecond level." 

Florio, meanwhile, blasted NFL teams for conducting "intrusive testing" and then leaking results "to reporters who will publish it without thinking twice about whether they should."

It remains to be seen how front offices and coaches will react if handfuls of players refuse to take certain tests at the advice of their agents. 

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Pacers' Pascal Siakam leads team to Game 6 win vs. Knicks
Watch: Matt Duchene's 2OT winner sends Stars to conference final
Scottie Scheffler shoots improbable 66 after warming up for PGA Championship in a jail cell
Report: Tua Tagovailoa away from Dolphins amid contract chatter
Nuggets star has worrying comment about latest injury
Paul Skenes makes incredible Wrigley Field history in second-career MLB start
Giants rookie CF to undergo season-ending labrum surgery
Yankees' Juan Soto reacts to Hal Steinbrenner contract talk
Late goal sends Panthers to Eastern Conference Finals
Ex-teammate of Shohei Ohtani placed bets with same illegal bookmaker as interpreter 
Former Rams first-round pick retires from NFL after 11 seasons
Insider provides major injury update on Celtics' Kristaps Porzingis
Watch: Bruins strike first in Game 6 with incredible backhand goal
Dodgers make series of moves involving notable players
Hurricanes not expected to re-sign defenseman, center
Maple Leafs tab former Stanley Cup winner as new head coach
NFL insider expands on competition between Steelers QBs Russell Wilson, Justin Fields
NFL sets outrageous prices for Eagles-Packers Brazil game
Broncos 'very unlikely' to bring back former NFL interceptions leader
Greg Olsen offers broadcasting advice to Tom Brady