Alabama LB Reuben Foster was sent home from the NFL scouting combine following a heated argument with a hospital worker, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Yahoo Sports confirmed that Foster had a run-in with the employee Thursday and was sent home Friday.
Foster, the 2016 Butkus Award winner and a potential top-10 pick in the 2017 NFL draft, was only at the combine to be measured, medically evaluated following rotator cuff surgery and interviewed by teams. He was unable to work out this week or at his March 8 pro day because of the injury. Bleacher Report’s Matt Miller reported that Foster’s interviews did not go well with teams this week.
It’s not clear what led to the argument, but one team source indicated that it might have stemmed from a disagreement over how Foster’s shoulder was being handled by the worker. Yahoo Sports’ Charles Robinson added some more context to this odd story.
Per #Alabama LB Reuben Foster, #NFL source said he got into heated argument with a doctor. Felt mistreated. Wasn't a physical confrontation.— Charles Robinson (@CharlesRobinson) March 4, 2017
Two years ago, Todd Gurley — who eventually would be the 10th overall pick in the 2015 NFL draft — refused to let combine doctors evaluate his surgically repaired knee and reportedly got a bit terse with at least one person who repeatedly request he grant them permission to look at it.
Foster is roundly viewed as being the best inside linebacker in this draft class after his had 115-tackle, five-sack senior season for the Crimson Tide, who lost to Clemson in the national championship. But this incident clearly could have an effect on his draft stock if teams are worried about his character and could end up costing him a few million dollars the farther he slides.
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