California - Golden Bears
Bryan Anger - #19 - P
| Height: | 6-3 5/8 |
| Weight: | 208 |
| Speed: | 5.00e |
| Arm: | 33 1/4 |
| Hand: | 9 1/8 |
| Wingspan: | 78 1/8 |
| Birthdate: | 10/06/1988 |
| Hometown: | Camarillo, CA |
| Grade: | 5.20 |
PROSPECT MEASURABLES
| Event | Ht | Wt | Hand | Arm | Wing | Wonderlic | 40 yard | BP | BJ | VJ | 20s | 60s | 3 Cn |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 02/29/2012 Combine | 6-3 5/8 | 208 | 9 1/8 | 33 1/4 | 78 1/8 | ||||||||
| 01/16/2012 East-West Shrine | 6-3 1/2 | 202 | 9 | 32 3/4 | 78 | ||||||||
| 03/15/2011 Junior Pro Day | 6-3 3/4 | 207 | 5.00 |
Notes: Was a USA Today All-America kicker as a California prep (also played receiver). Redshirted in 2007 before taking over punting duties — booted 71 punts for 43.1-yard average with a long of 76 and 26 dropped inside the 20-yard line in ’08. Totaled 67-42.1-L72-24 in ’09. Broke a 23-year-old school record for punting average in ’10, posting 62-45.6-L71-21. In ’11, he totaled 53-44.2-L64-19. Had only two punts blocked in his career — his first collegiate game in ’08 vs. Michigan State and vs. Presbyterian his senior season.
Positives:Powerful leg to drive punts downfield and send returners into retreat mode. Timely get-off. Is athletic and has good hands. Experienced, four-year punter. Pro work ethic.
Negatives:Can work on placing punts with accuracy. Can be inconsistent striking the ball. Used to mild climate.
Summary:A big, athletic, strong-legged punter, Anger was a four-year starter and has the leg strength and makeup to win a job as a rookie.
Bryan Anger's Draft Stock
| PFW Grade Scale |
|---|
| Grade | Round |
| 7.01-9.00 | Top 10 |
| 6.01-7.00 | 1 |
| 6.00 | 1-2 |
| 5.61-5.99 | 2 |
| 5.60 | 2-3 |
| 5.41-5.59 | 3 |
| 5.40 | 3-4 |
| 5.31-5.39 | 4 |
| 5.30 | 4-5 |
| 5.21-5.29 | 5 |
| 5.20 | 5-6 |
| 5.16-5.19 | 6 |
| 5.15 | 6-7 |
| 5.11-5.14 | 7 |
| 5.10 | 7-PFA |
| 4.75-5.09 | PFA |
| 4.00-4.74 | FA |
*PFW Grade indicates the value PFW assigned to prospects.
*Draft Projection indicates where players are more likely to be drafted and reflects the consensus opinion from the NFL scouting community.