Updating an older article:
VMAC visits 2014 (official and local):
WR Cody Latimer, Indiana -- 6'2, 215
WR Brandin Cooks, Oregon State -- 5'10, 190 (may be offsite visit)
RB Terrance West, Towson -- 5'9, 225
FB/DT Nikita Whitlock, Wake Forest -- 5'11, 255
OT/OG Laurent Duvernay-Tardif, McGill -- 6'5, 300 (aka LDT or "Larry")
LB Brock Coyle, Montana -- 6'1, 235
LB Jordan Tripp, Montana -- 6'3, 234
WR Kevin Cummings, Oregon State -- 6'1,184
WR Kevin Smith, Washington -- 5'10, 215
OT Ulrick John, Georgia State -- 6'7, 300
OT William Poehls, Montana -- 6'8, 334
OL Davonte Wallace, New Mexico St. -- 6'3, 308
Go ahead and note below, with citation, if you've seen others. We'll add them to the list.
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Each NFL team is allowed 30 "official visits" by Draft prospects to their facilities. These visits are ostensibly used to get to know a player better and to see how they interact with coaches and staff, among other things. We've tracked these visits in the past, with varied success and results, and this can be an exercise in futility - teams legitimately use these as smokescreens to hide their true interest, or they may in fact be interested and want you to think it's a smokescreen. It's lying season at its best, and John Schneider has said in the past that he takes great pride in his scouting team's ability to keep things under wraps.
As former NFL personnel exec Greg Gabriel wrote recently,
What I used to do when scheduling visits was to change whom I brought in every year so there was never a pattern as to which player was going to visit. One year, we brought in players whom we were thinking of targeting in the first three rounds. The next year I brought in some people we had already eliminated and players we wanted to "recruit" for post-draft free agency. The following year I brought in a combination of the two.
By doing this there is no way the media or other teams could gauge how we were approaching a given draft.
One year, we had pretty much made up our minds on the player we wanted in the first round by January. In February, I made a visit to the school this player was attending to talk to the player and his coaches.
In an attempt to not let anyone link that player to us, we didn't interview the player at that year's combine, nor did we send a coach to work him out at his pro day. When we brought in other players at the same position for a pre-draft visit we let the local media know who those players were.
In the last two weeks leading up to the draft many in the media felt that it was a lock we were going to take a high-profile player we brought in for a visit. On draft day that year, a team behind us traded up to get in front of us before selecting the same player linked to us by media analysts. We just quietly smiled as a different player-the one we had for months actually wanted-was still there when we made the pick.
So, is there a point in tracking this stuff? Maybe, maybe not! I will say that in the past, Seattle has used some of these visits to host a few late-round UDFA types that they like. They'd have them come to the VMAC and visit CenturyLink Field as a sort of recruitment pitch -- get them into the excellent facilities and get them pumped up to become a Seahawk by putting their names on the big screen in the CLink -- knowing these players might be undrafted and get the option of choosing from a number of clubs.
Like Gabriel said above though, I think the Hawks rotate their strategy to avoid a pattern, so who knows what any of all this means.
Nonetheless, we toil. This list what Davis Hsu has compiled thus far. The Oregon, Montana, and surrounding area visits may be considered 'local' visits and not be part of the official 30-count.