Every year, the most polarizing offseason event outside of the NFL Draft comes to you from the NFL Scouting Combine. This season is no different, and the eyes of the NFL are descending upon Indianapolis once again.
With 319 athletes invited to the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine, the results from all the on-field testing will be listed below. Bookmark this page as the PFSN staff will update each on-field result from the top prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft.
Looking for the latest measurements? Make sure to check out PFSN’s 2026 NFL Combine Measurements Tracker.
2026 NFL Combine Results
The table is best viewed in landscape, or for the ultimate experience of the table, view the page on a desktop. To view the 10-yard split, broad jump, 20-yard shuttle, and 3-cone drill information, click the + button to the left of the player’s name.
A field marked with “–” indicates a player opted out of that drill. Any blank fields indicate that a particular measurement has not yet been made available. Once these are made official, we will update the table.
Please note that we will continue to update this tracker as events take place.
Top NFL Draft Prospects to Watch at the Combine
Arvell Reese, LB/EDGE, Ohio State
Arvell Reese is one prospect for whom the Combine is a very important marker. Not only will teams get to interview him in person and get a feel for his mentality, but he’ll also display his hyper-elite raw traits on a national stage.
How Reese runs, how he tests in explosiveness and agility drills, and how he measures will all be fodder for the EDGE vs. LB question at the center of his long-term projection. It will also be interesting to see whether he participates in both off-ball and EDGE on-field drills, as some teams may want to see his skill set in simulated rush situations.
Caleb Downs, DB, Ohio State
For a prospect already facing an uphill battle against the “positional value” conundrum, the NFL Combine will be crucial if Caleb Downs wishes to solidify his case for top-ten capital.
Downs is clearly a plus athlete on tape, but the NFL Combine will provide valuable context for his testing athleticism. Even more important, however, is the coverage athleticism required to manage zones and route spacing: hip fluidity, balance, sink, and freedom in redirection.
That coverage mobility is a major strength on Downs’ film, and regardless of his 40-yard dash time, he should enamor evaluators with his effortless elasticity in space, similar to how Malaki Starks did last March.
Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame
Jeremiyah Love’s dynamic athleticism is evident on film, but it’ll be exciting to see him test it in on-field and athletic drills.
It’s more likely than not that he doesn’t; he has very little to gain and would risk injury. But if he does test, expect eye-popping numbers.
Love is widely considered the consensus RB1 in the 2026 NFL Draft, and for him, the Combine will be just as crucial for meeting with potential suitors. Despite being a common top-10 prospect on boards, his draft range is wide due to conflicted RB positional value.
Makai Lemon, WR, USC
The 2025 Biletnikoff Award winner, Lemon is almost exclusively a top-three WR prospect on boards, and at his highest, he’s a top-ten prospect in the 2026 NFL Draft. But he still has a decent amount riding on the Combine, as he attempts to stay with Carnell Tate and Tyson.
While Lemon is listed at 5’11”, 195 pounds, his exact measurements will be under close watch. He could measure in smaller sizes, and his length and wingspan at times incite concerns on film.
Additionally, while Lemon displays hyper-elite short-area quickness and foot speed, he’s not a consistent field-stretcher, and his 40-yard dash time will be watched as a result.
Those who do watch, however, would be wise to remember that functional athletic components, such as bend and redirection freedom, are even more important at WR. And that’s where Lemon shines.
Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama
The QB2 mantle in the 2026 NFL Draft is Ty Simpson’s if he wants it, but that means no opportunity can go wasted from this point onward.
Right now, Simpson is seen as being on the fringe between Round 1 and Round 2. Many expect him to go in the same range that Tyler Shough went last year. If he desires to be taken in Round 1, there’s more he has to prove to evaluators in early March.
Interviews will be big for Simpson, who distinguished himself as an offensive leader in his lone season as Alabama’s starter. Handling schematic questions and showing a mind for the game’s moving parts will instill teams with additional confidence, and he stands to gain from on-field drills, too.
Simpson could run, or he could ultimately choose to bypass athletic testing. On film, he’s a good-not-great athlete, whose middling rushing production corroborates his status as a pocket passer first. Within that lens, the throwing routine will be just as crucial for the Alabama alumnus.
Simpson’s mechanics are a strength of his game, but throwing with consistent accuracy and precision has been a sticking point at times. If he can stay consistent, in-rhythm, and on-target, albeit in a very confined and controlled environment, that’ll give evaluators a fresh look at his throwing ability at its best.
Either way, Simpson most needs to improve under pressure, when mind and mechanics both become frenetic, and that’s not something the NFL Combine can fix. But the Combine can give evaluators a positive final impression to work with, along with the pro day. And if he sells them on his intangibles in the interview room, that could be enough.

