PDA

View Full Version : Did JP score a 14 on the Wonderlic test?????



Patrick76777
02-27-2006, 01:20 PM
I just heard that he did!

Ebenezer
02-27-2006, 01:25 PM
I don't put a lot of stock into those things...I wonder what some of our HOF Bills scored.

Patrick76777
02-27-2006, 01:27 PM
I don't put a lot of stock into those things...I wonder what some of our HOF Bills scored.
I only care how QB’s do on it.

Captain Obvious
02-27-2006, 01:48 PM
He supposedly had to "pee" something fierce the whole time he took the test.... When he took the test again I believe he scored a 29 or 31...There is a correlation between how well a QB plays and his WOnderlic score..Jeff george scored a 10..Akili SMith somewhere in the teens.. ANd the Manning brothers scored well into the 30s and Tom Brady had a 29..There are exceptions..Dan Marino only scored a 16 and David Klinger well into the 30s but generally when A QB scores less than 20 on the WOnderlic there should be red flags raised

YardRat
02-27-2006, 01:53 PM
I've seen 31.

ICE74129
02-27-2006, 02:18 PM
How about 31.

http://www.bendomenech.com/blog/archives/001444.html

Mitchy moo
02-27-2006, 02:28 PM
Kellen Winslow, Miami - 12


how true is that?

redeye5
02-27-2006, 02:33 PM
The Wonderlic Personnel Test ™
WPT ™ Sample Questions

1. Look at the row of numbers below. What number should come next?
8 4 2 1 ½ ¼ ?


2. Assume the first two statements are true. Is the final one:
1. true, 2. false, 3. not certain?
The boy plays baseball. All baseball players wear hats. The boy wears a hat.

3. Paper sells for 21 cents per pad. What will four pads cost?

4. How many of the five pairs of items listed below are exact duplicates?
Nieman, K.M. Neiman, K.M.
Thomas, G.K. Thomas, C.K.
Hoff, J.P. Hoff, J.P.
Pino, L.R. Pina, L.R.
Warner, T.S. Wanner, T.S.


5. RESENT RESERVE • Do these words
1. have similar meanings, 2. have contradictory meanings, 3. mean neither the same nor opposite?

6. One of the numbered figures in the following drawing is most different from the others. What is the number in that figure?
http://espn.go.com/i/page2/logos/020228_shapes.gif

7. A train travels 20 feet in 1/5 second. At this same speed, how many feet will it travel in three seconds?

8. When rope is selling at $.10 a foot, how many feet can you buy for sixty cents?

9. The ninth month of the year is
1. October, 2. January, 3. June, 4. September, 5 May.


10. Which number in the following group of numbers represents the smallest amount?
7 .8 31 .33 2


11. In printing an article of 48,000 words, a printer decides to use two sizes of type. Using the larger type, a printed page contains 1,800 words. Using smaller type, a page contains 2,400 words. The article is allotted 21 full pages in a magazine. How many pages must be in smaller type?

12. The hours of daylight and darkness in SEPTEMBER are nearest equal to the hours of daylight and darkness in:
1. June, 2. March, 3. May, 4. November.


13. Three individuals form a partnership and agree to divide the profits equally. X invests $9,000, Y invests $7,000, Z invests $4,000. If the profits are $4,800, how much less does X receive than if the profits were divided in proportion to the amount invested?

14. Assume the first two statements are true. Is the final one:
1. true, 2. false, 3. not certain?
Tom greeted Beth. Beth greeted Dawn. Tom did not greet Dawn.

15. A boy is 17 years old and his sister is twice as old. When the boy is 23 years old, what will be the age of his sister?

These are sample test questions and are intended for demonstration purposes only. The Wonderlic Personnel Test is published by Wonderlic, Inc.

eyedog
02-27-2006, 02:37 PM
How do you score a 6 on that test ? Vince Young.

You have to be pretty stupid. You probably shouldn't even be allowed to walk the streets.

redeye5
02-27-2006, 02:39 PM
answers to follow

ICE74129
02-27-2006, 02:40 PM
Kellen Winslow, Miami - 12


how true is that?

LMAO Scoob, can you see this now...

(question 35) Is it safe to ride at high speeds on your motercycle with no helmet?

(KW) YES!

LOL!

redeye5
02-27-2006, 02:40 PM
Answers...

1. 1/8
2. true
3. 84 cents
4. 1
5. 3
6. 4
7. 300 feet
8. 6 feet
9. September
10. .33
11. 17
12. March
13. $560
14. not certain
15. 40 years old

redeye5
02-27-2006, 02:43 PM
Wonderlic Test
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
The Wonderlic Personnel Test (often referred to as Wunderlich) is an intelligence test primarily known for being administered to prospective players in the National Football League since the 1970s. The Wonderlic is a twelve minute, fifty question exam to assess aptitude for learning a job and adapting to solve problems for employees in a wide range of occupations. The score is calculated as the number of correct answers given in the alloted time. A score of 20 is intended to indicate average intelligence (corresponding to an intelligence quotient of 100). It is rumored that at least one player has scored a 1 on the test.


Famous scores
Pat McInally, a wide receiver/punter from Harvard who played for the Cincinnati Bengals from 1977 to 1985, is the only player known to have scored a perfect 50. In 2005, it was rumored that Ryan Fitzpatrick, a quarterback also from Harvard, scored a perfect 50 but his actual accomplishment was to finish the test in 9 minutes with a score of 38 — the most impressive speed ever seen at the NFL Combine. Fitzpatrick was drafted in 2005 by the St. Louis Rams — referenced in The Wall Street Journal (September 30, 2005) as the NFL's Smartest Team.

Some rumoured, but unconfirmed, scores of other NFL players and draft candidates:

Pat McInally, punter — 50
Kevin Curtis, wide receiver — 48
Alex Smith, quarterback — 40
Brian Griese, quarterback — 39
Eli Manning, quarterback — 39
Akili Smith, quarterback — 37 (suspected of cheating; scored 15 on first attempt)
Matt Leinart, quarterback — 35
Tom Brady, quarterback — 33
Steve Young, quarterback — 33
John Elway, quarterback — 30
Peyton Manning, quarterback — 28
Troy Aikman, quarterback — 29
Ben Roethlisberger, quarterback — 25
Brett Favre, quarterback — 22
Michael Vick, quarterback — 20
Vinny Testaverde, quarterback — 18
Antwaan Randle El, wide reciever — 17
Dan Marino, quarterback — 16
Randall Cunningham, quarterback — 15
Jeff George, quarterback — 10

ICE74129
02-27-2006, 02:43 PM
Wow, looking at those questions I thought I had taken that before. A school I wanted to attend had that test.

ICE74129
02-27-2006, 02:45 PM
Wonderlic Test

Some rumoured, but unconfirmed, scores of other NFL players and draft candidates:

Pat McInally, punter — 50
Kevin Curtis, wide receiver — 48
Alex Smith, quarterback — 40
Brian Griese, quarterback — 39
Eli Manning, quarterback — 39
Akili Smith, quarterback — 37 (suspected of cheating; scored 15 on first attempt)
Matt Leinart, quarterback — 35
Tom Brady, quarterback — 33
Steve Young, quarterback — 33
John Elway, quarterback — 30
Peyton Manning, quarterback — 28
Troy Aikman, quarterback — 29
Ben Roethlisberger, quarterback — 25
Brett Favre, quarterback — 22
Michael Vick, quarterback — 20
Vinny Testaverde, quarterback — 18
Antwaan Randle El, wide reciever — 17
Dan Marino, quarterback — 16
Randall Cunningham, quarterback — 15
Jeff George, quarterback — 10

And JP scored a 31.

Captain Obvious
02-27-2006, 02:46 PM
How do you score a 6 on that test ? Vince Young.

You have to be pretty stupid. You probably shouldn't even be allowed to walk the streets.

Ask Roscoe Parrish..He supposedly only scored a 6..And Willis McGahee a 8..Kevin Everett a 12.. All U. of Miami guys

eyedog
02-27-2006, 03:02 PM
How do these guys even get into college ? If you can't get at least 8-9 of those 15 sample questions you have problems. I would say an average middle school student could get at least half of those correct.

ICE74129
02-27-2006, 03:04 PM
Ask Roscoe Parrish..He supposedly only scored a 6..And Willis McGahee a 8..Kevin Everett a 12.. All U. of Miami guys

Well sure. Why do you think they call it 'Tha U'? They can't spell anymore of it than that :roflmao:

Iehoshua
02-27-2006, 03:06 PM
How do these guys even get into college ? If you can't get at least 8-9 of those 15 sample questions you have problems. I would say an average middle school student could get at least half of those correct.
College is a joke, especially if you're an elite athlete.

Meister
02-27-2006, 03:22 PM
It would be interesting to find how what percentage of NFL players are illiterate. It would be tough to score less than a 15 on that test unless you couldnt read or add.

Gunzlingr
02-27-2006, 03:51 PM
:lolpoint: Jason Peters and his 9