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StaTuesday: Boehringer measures up in speed, size to fellow NFL WR draftees

By Ryan Lund, Ryan Lund

Published May 03, 2016

FoxSports
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Moritz Boehringer, Wide Receiver of Schwaebisch Hall Unicorns, during a match between Schwaebisch Hall Unicorns and Vienna Vikings in Vienna, Austria, 17 May 2015. With a 45:23 victory, the team qualified for the Eurobowl for the first time. Boehringer is said to have realistic chances to be drafted during the draft in Chicago on Saturday. The 22-year-old would be the first German from the German Football League to receive a contract. Photo by: Manfred Löffler/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images

On Saturday, German receiver Moritz Boehringer became the first NFL Draft pick to be taken directly out of Europe, bypassing the NCAA and the league's typical college requirement.

On Monday, he became the first member of the class of 2016 to sign a pro contract.

"When we get a hint that someone may have the ability to play at this level, that's our job to go out and uncover it," Minnesota Vikings general manager Rick Spielman said.

But finding Boehringer wasn't exactly easy.

The hulking German's story has made the rounds on the sports media circuit over the last few days, that of the athletic 17-year-old engineering student so enamored with YouTube videos of Vikings star Adrian Peterson that it sparked a career change.

They became his favorite team, and joining them became his goal.

"I hoped that I would be drafted by the Vikings," Boehringer said.

He became a force for the German Football League's Schwabisch Hall Unicorns just a few years later, racking up 1,461 yards and 16 touchdowns.

And while curiosity at his unbelievable backstory drew scouts to his impromptu pro day at Florida Atlantic, his raw potential kept them watching.

"He's very powerful coming off the ball. He can drop his weight," Spielman said. "He shows quickness in and out of his cuts."

Because while Boehringer's story is intriguing, his numbers are downright staggering for a player built more like Calvin Johnson or Brandon Marshall than a speedster like Corey Coleman.

Simply put: 6-foot-4, 227-lb receivers aren't supposed to be this fast.

40-yard dash

Player Time Team
Will Fuller 4.32 Texans
Kolby Listenbee 4.39 Bills
Trevor Davis 4.42 Packers
Moritz Boehringer 4.43 Vikings
Ricardo Louis 4.43 Browns

3-cone drill

Player Time Team
Devon Cajuste 6.49 49ers
Trevor Davis 6.60 Packers
Moritz Boehringer 6.65 Vikings
Braxton Miller 6.65 Texans
D.J. Foster 6.75 Patriots

Vertical

Player Height Team
Josh Doctson 41.0 Redskins
Sterling Shephard 41.0 Giants
Corey Coleman 40.5 Browns
Moritz Boehringer 39.0 Vikings
Trevor Davis 38.5 Packers

(Note: All numbers taken from NFL Combine except for Boehringer's, which are from his Pro Day.)

And while combine measurable aren't always an accurate measure of NFL success, Boehringer would have been the only player to crack the top five in all three categories.

But his size and speed aren't the only qualities that sold the Vikings.

"Even Norv [Turner] when they spent a lot of time with him, just watching football and going through plays and route concepts and things like that, the kid's extremely smart," Spielman said. "That was the biggest thing. I knew the physical ability is there, it's just how far he is. From a mental standpoint, he was off-the-charts."

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