As the NFL Draft 2020 draws near, it’s open season for scouts and analysts, whose commentary about Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa is starting to resemble pages from Regina George’s Burn Book from “Mean Girls.”
The Athletic’s Bob McGinn of the All-American quarterback on Friday that he collected from NFL scouts.
“Iām playing the odds. I donāt want to put my whole franchise on a left-handed, beat-up, 6-foot quarterback. No thank you,” an AFC personnel man .
āHeās a great college player but, wow, he is fragile,ā another AFC personnel man said. “Heās a super kid and I donāt wish ill will, but thereās three, four or five red flags staring us all in the face saying, āYou know what? This guyās not going to be all that heās cracked up to be.ā”
āI donāt൩ have a magical answer whether heās going to stay healthy or not,ā an AFC decision-maker said. āIt is a concern. Heās had medical issues for much of his career.ā

The 22-year-old has been riddled with injuries throughout his career at Alabama, the most concerning of which occurred on Nov. 16 against Mississippi State. The Crimson Tide signal-caller suffered a dislocated hip that required surgery and prematurely ended his season with 2,840 yards, 33 touchdowns, thrą“ee interceptionsź¦ and a 71.4 completion percentage through nine games.
This spate of Tagovailoa commentary comes in spite of “overwhelmingly positive reports” from medical staff at the NFL Combine, social media workouts and a virtual Pro Day, all of which have done little to temper šthe chatter and anxiety among members of the football community.
āIt would be irresponsible to take him in the top 10,ā former Jets executive Mike Tannenbaum told the South Florida Sun Sentinel last week.
āI think this is the bigš§gest gamble in the history ofš¦ the NFL Draft,ā former Jets coach Rex Ryan said.
āItās not just his hip,ā former general manager Mike Lombardi said on his āGM Shuffleā podcast. āItās his ankle. Itās his wrist. He broke his wrist the first day of spring ball one year. ⦠Heās brittle. He is brittle. You canāt deną¹y it.ā
Tagovailoa’s perceived declining stock coincides with an uptick ininterest for Oregon’s Justin Herbert, who some predict could be selected by the Dolphins as the second quarterback off the board behind LSU’s Joe Burrow.
āI have Tua Tagovailoa rated higher than Herbert, but I think thereās a legitimate chance the Oregon QB goes ahead of Tua,ā NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah wrote in a recent mock draft where he projected the Dolphins to take Herbert at No. 5.
The Dolphins intended to meet with Tagovailoa in-person first, but the two parties were ꦺunable tāo work out the details before visits were halted by the league in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, .
Herbert recently met with the Dolphins via video-conference, a source told Barry Jacksš”on of the Miami Herald.
“[Tagovailoa and Herbert are] both interesting kids. I’ve gotten to know both of them through this process. They’re really good people,” Dolphins general manager Chris Grier said Thursday during a pre-draft teleconference. “They’re both very talented players. Both have won a lot of games. They’re both intelligent players and winners.”