Relative Athletic Score (RAS) Explained

📖 9 min read 🏈 NFL Draft 📊 Combine Analytics

Relative Athletic Score is one of the most useful tools in NFL draft analysis — and one of the most misunderstood. Here's exactly how it works, what scores mean at every position, the best and worst scores in history, and how much it actually predicts NFL success.

What Is Relative Athletic Score?

Relative Athletic Score — commonly called RAS — is a metric created by analyst Kent Lee Platte that converts NFL combine and pro day measurements into a single score on a scale of 0 to 10. The key word is relative: every measurement is graded not against all players in the league, but specifically against historical data for players at that same position.

This matters enormously. A 4.55 forty-yard dash is below average for a wide receiver but exceptional for a linebacker. A 6'5" frame is ideal for an offensive tackle but undersized for a center. RAS accounts for these positional differences by comparing each measurement to what's historically been recorded at that specific spot on the field.

A RAS of 10.00 means you posted the best athletic profile ever recorded for your position. A RAS of 5.00 is exactly average for your position historically. A RAS of 0.00 means historically poor athleticism at that spot.

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Who created RAS? Kent Lee Platte developed RAS and has tracked it publicly on social media and his website since around 2012. It's become a widely referenced tool in draft analytics communities and is cited by major sports media during combine season. The methodology is transparent and the historical database spans decades of combine data.

How RAS Is Calculated

RAS pulls from up to ten combine and pro day measurements and organizes them into four categories:

Category Measurements Included What It Captures
SizeHeight, weightPhysical frame relative to position norms
Speed40-yard dash, 10-yard split, 20-yard splitLinear speed and acceleration
ExplosionVertical jump, broad jumpLower body explosive power
AgilityThree-cone drill, 20-yard shuttleChange of direction and quickness
Strength225 lb bench press repsUpper body strength endurance

Each individual measurement is converted to a score between 0 and 10 based on where it falls in the historical distribution for that position. Those individual scores are then averaged — weighted by category — into the final composite RAS.

Missing measurements don't automatically tank a score. If a player skips the bench press, RAS uses only the available data. However, players who skip multiple tests have less reliable scores because fewer data points are available. This is why some analysts prefer to look at individual category scores rather than the composite when key measurements are missing.

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Pro day data: When combine measurements aren't available, RAS incorporates pro day numbers. Pro day conditions are less standardized than the combine — surfaces, timing methods, and conditions vary. Pro day times are generally considered slightly faster than combine times. This introduces some noise into RAS comparisons across players who tested at different venues.

The RAS Scale — What Scores Mean

RAS Score Tiers — What Each Range Means
9.0–10.0
Exceptional
8.0–8.9
Elite Athleticism
7.0–7.9
Above Average
5.5–6.9
Solid / Average+
4.0–5.4
Below Average
0.0–3.9
Poor Athleticism

It's worth noting that the distribution of RAS scores is not uniform. Most NFL draft prospects cluster in the 4.0 to 7.0 range — the extremes on both ends are relatively rare. A score above 8.5 genuinely represents a rare physical profile at that position.

RAS by Position — What to Look For

Each position prioritizes different physical attributes, which means the most important sub-scores within RAS vary by where a player lines up. Here's what matters most and what average and elite RAS looks like at each position.

Wide Receiver
Speed + Explosion Most Important
6.2
Avg RAS
8.5+
Elite RAS
Speed score and explosion score are most predictive for WRs. Agility matters less than raw speed — many elite WRs have below-average three-cone scores. Size is secondary to athleticism at this position.
Cornerback
Speed + Agility Critical
6.4
Avg RAS
8.5+
Elite RAS
CBs need both speed and agility — unlike WRs where pure speed dominates. The three-cone drill is highly predictive for corners. Size is a separate evaluation from RAS — a small CB with a 9.0 RAS faces different NFL questions than a big one.
Running Back
Explosion + Speed Balance
6.1
Avg RAS
8.0+
Elite RAS
Explosion and agility scores carry the most weight for RBs. A high broad jump and short shuttle time suggest a back who can accelerate quickly and cut sharply — the most valuable physical traits at the position.
Linebacker
Agility + Size Balance
5.8
Avg RAS
8.0+
Elite RAS
Linebackers need size within their position range plus agility to cover ground in space. A LB who is large but runs well relative to his size scores extremely high. The three-cone and shuttle are more predictive than the 40 for this group.
Offensive Tackle
Size + Agility For Frame
5.5
Avg RAS
7.5+
Elite RAS
For OTs, size and athleticism relative to that size matter most. A 320-pound tackle who runs a 4.9 forty scores extremely well. The broad jump is predictive for OTs — it correlates with the lateral explosion needed in pass protection.
Quarterback
Athleticism Context Varies
5.2
Avg RAS
7.0+
Athletic QB
RAS is least predictive for QBs because the position is so skill-dependent. Many great QBs have terrible RAS scores. A high QB RAS signals a dual-threat profile — it says almost nothing about accuracy, decision-making, or arm talent.
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Notable High and Low RAS Scores in NFL History

Elite RAS Scores

Player Position RAS Notable For
Bo JacksonRB~10.00One of the highest RAS ever recorded — exceptional in every category
Darius LeonardLB9.93Elite size, speed, and agility combination for a linebacker
David NjokuTE9.93Freakish combination of size and athletic testing for a tight end
Myles GarrettDE9.81Exceptional speed off the edge for his size — became elite pass rusher
Calvin JohnsonWR9.83Size-speed-explosion combination that defined his "Megatron" nickname
Vernon DavisTE9.93Ran a 4.38 forty at 254 pounds — one of the most freakish TE profiles ever

Famous Low RAS Scores

Player Position RAS Career Result
Tom BradyQB~1.07× Super Bowl champion — arguably the greatest NFL player ever
Jerry RiceWR~3.5Widely considered the greatest wide receiver of all time
Drew BreesQB~2.8All-time passing yards leader at retirement
Wes WelkerWR/ST~2.1 5× Pro Bowl, one of the most productive slot receivers in NFL history
Jimmy GrahamTE~4.05× Pro Bowl, dominant receiving tight end for a decade
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The Tom Brady problem: Tom Brady's RAS is frequently cited as proof that athletic testing doesn't predict NFL success. His combine performance was so poor — slow forty, average size, poor explosion — that it remains one of the lowest scores ever recorded for a quarterback. His career is the clearest possible demonstration that RAS measures physical tools, not football players.

Does RAS Actually Predict NFL Success?

This is the most important question — and the answer is nuanced.

What the Data Shows
Studies on RAS and NFL success show a modest positive correlation — meaning high-RAS players on average have slightly better NFL careers than low-RAS players. But the correlation is weak, and the variance is enormous. Many elite NFL players have terrible RAS scores, and many highly-rated athletes have short or unproductive careers.

Where RAS Is Most Predictive

Where RAS Is Least Predictive

How to Use RAS as a Draft Tool

The most sophisticated way to use RAS in draft evaluation is as a floor indicator rather than a ceiling predictor. Here's what that means in practice:

High RAS + high production = strong prospect. When a player has elite athleticism AND elite college production, the combination is genuinely predictive. The physical tools are verified and so is the ability to use them.

High RAS + low production = boom-or-bust. A physically gifted player who didn't produce in college may have untapped potential — or may simply lack the football skills to translate athleticism into results. These are the players who "look the part" but carry significant risk.

Low RAS + high production = underrated. Players who beat their athletic profile are often the ones who succeed through superior technique and football intelligence. These prospects are frequently undervalued in draft circles that over-weight combine results.

Low RAS + low production = avoid. Players with neither athletic tools nor college production have very little going for them at the next level.

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RAS vs Other Draft Metrics

RAS is not the only athleticism metric used in NFL draft analysis. Here's how it compares to other commonly referenced tools:

Metric What It Measures Strength Weakness
RASOverall athleticism vs position historyPositional context, composite viewDoesn't capture football skill
Speed Score40 time adjusted for weightGreat for skill positionsSingle metric, ignores explosion
SPARQNike's composite athleticism scoreUsed widely at the high school levelLess common in NFL draft analytics
Burst ScoreCombines vertical and broad jumpStrong predictor for certain positionsIgnores speed and agility
Agility ScoreCombines three-cone and shuttleHighly predictive for CBs and LBsLess relevant for speed positions

RAS is generally preferred by analysts because it's the most comprehensive single number that accounts for positional context. Its main limitation — that it says nothing about football skill — is a feature, not a bug. It's designed to answer one specific question: how does this player's physical profile compare to others who have played this position?

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good RAS score for the NFL draft?
A RAS above 6.5 is above average athleticism for an NFL prospect. Scores above 8.0 are elite. Scores of 9.0 or above are exceptional and represent some of the best physical profiles ever recorded at that position. However, a good RAS alone does not make a good NFL player — college production and football-specific skills matter far more for predicting actual career success.
Does RAS matter more for some positions than others?
Yes. RAS is most predictive for wide receivers, cornerbacks, and edge rushers — positions where athleticism directly converts to on-field production. It is least predictive for quarterbacks and offensive linemen, where technique, intelligence, and football-specific skills dominate over raw athleticism. For skill positions going in the first round, RAS is a meaningful data point. For linemen or late-round picks, it's much less relevant.
What is Tom Brady's RAS score?
Tom Brady's RAS is approximately 1.0 — one of the lowest ever recorded for a quarterback. His combine included a 5.28 forty-yard dash, poor explosion scores, and an unremarkable physical profile by NFL standards. He was drafted 199th overall in the sixth round of the 2000 draft. His career is the definitive example of why RAS is a measure of physical tools, not of football players.
How is RAS different from the NFL combine score?
The NFL combine doesn't produce an official composite score — it produces individual measurements for each test. RAS is a third-party metric created by analyst Kent Lee Platte that converts those individual combine measurements into a single 0-to-10 score by comparing them to historical data at that specific position. Think of RAS as the analytics community's way of summarizing what the raw combine numbers mean in context.
Where can I find a player's RAS score?
RAS scores are tracked and published by Kent Lee Platte, who posts them regularly on social media during combine and pro day season. The scores are also referenced by major sports analytics sites and draft publications during the pre-draft period each spring. Searching a player's name along with "RAS" will typically surface their score quickly.
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