The NFL combine’s 40-yard dash is a critical evaluating metric, but the slowest times—like Regis Crawford’s 6.05 and Tom Brady’s infamous 5.28—reveal more than just speed. We analyze why linemen dominate this list, how quarterback success defies timings, and why some slow performers still thrive in the league.
The 40-yard dash is the most iconic drill at the NFL combine, but while blazing times garner headlines, the slowest performers shape a compelling narrative of resilience, craft, and positional evolution. Top-of-the-charts slow performers, like Regis Crawford (6.05 seconds) and 40-year-old Tom Brady (5.28), prove a crucial insight: speed alone doesn’t dictate success. This is why the slowest 40 times across positions reveal more about team philosophy, roster management, and player development than the raw numbers suggest.
Slowest Overall: Regis Crawford and the Illusion of “Too Slow”
Regis Crawford, an offensive guard from Arizona State, delivered the slowest recorded 40-yard dash at 6.05 seconds during the 2004 combine. His second run clocked at 6.07 — the slowest single attempt ever. Despite not playing a snap in the NFL, Crawford’s results underscore a critical reality: offensive linemen can dominate the slowest 40 times precisely because their game is leverage, not sprinting.
Since 2000, offensive linemen have recorded eight of the top 10 slowest 40 times, including Orlando Brown Jr. (5.85) — the only name on this list to rise to Pro Bowl status with the Kansas City Chiefs. This anomaly spotlights a vital evolution: slow 40 times on the O-line are less a liability and more a badge of functional strength, balance, and durability in the trenches.
- Regis Crawford: 6.05 (2004) – Undrafted, never played
- Orlando Brown Jr.: 5.85 (2018) – Third-round pick, Pro Bowl tackle
- Isiah Thompson (6.00)
Slow paced success is rare, but not impossible — especially along the trenches where Mayor Bloomberg-style patience wins over sprinting Bears.
Quarterbacks: The Tom Brady Exception
Tom Brady’s 2000 combine 40-yard dash of 5.28 seconds is iconic, but it wasn’t the slowest — that honor belongs to Ryan Mallett and Chris Redman, each clocking 5.37. Yet quarterbacks are judged less on pure speed and more on accuracy, field awareness, and mental dexterity. Brady’s metric reinforcement is instructive: teams value quarterback traits far beyond dash times.
- Ryan Mallett: Arkansas, New England Patriots, third-round pick (2011)
- Tom Brady: Michigan, sixth-round pick (2000)
This divergence spotlights a positional truth: quarterbacks are measured by vision, poise, and arm strength — not a three-digit stopwatch.
Running Backs and Receivers: The Draft Penalty for Slower Speeds
For skill positions, 40 times are vital drafting signals. Only two of 10 slowest RBs since 2000 were drafted — seventh-round pick Kenny Hilliard — and none had meaningful NFL careers. At receiver, the threshold is even stricter: slowest official combine time by a receiver goes to De’Runnya Wilson with 4.85 — two of thirteen slowest receivers earned roster spots, both short-lived. Teams rarely draft slow skill players; they instead prize quickness, quick feet, and sudden snap-to-snap burst.
The draft is a ruthless efficiency market. It rewards elite 40 times in contests; it rarely forgives slow runners unless lined up at center or tackle.
Tight Ends: A Position in Transition
Scooter Harrington holds the slowest combine 40 time among tight ends — a precise 5.19. But modern tight ends like Travis Kelce or Rob Gronkowski don’t uniform timings. Aggregated top-10 tight end performances skewing above 4.9 speak to a positional duality: block-first hybrid tight ends often sacrifice sprint speed for leverage and in-line strength. The slowest tight ends follow a pattern — few drafted, even fewer remain. Those who do usually pivot to blocking-only roles.
Why It Matters: The Unseen Value in Slow 40s
Slow 40 times are sometimes misread as a universal negative; contextualizing the combine as a data auction reine fundamental value. Offensive linemen and quarterbacks often build careers despite slow 40s via functional football intelligence and positional fit.
Teams now use AI-enhanced kinetic tracking and cognitive load assessments to curate modern 40-yard dash philosophy. Every Tom Brady success lap in fact strengthens threshold ceilings, emphasizing that NFL success always requires compounding value at its core.
browse the fastest, sharpest sports analysis — direct me to onlytrustedinfo.com . We deliver insight on the finds — the trends that matter before the ball even snaps.