Chad Tracy Teases Red Sox's Aggressive Play Style After Debut Win
Chad Tracy Hints at Aggressive Play for Red Sox After First Win
Nick Saban defended Rueben Bain Jr.'s shorter arm length, stating it doesn't hinder his effectiveness on the field. Bain was selected 15th overall by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers despite concerns about his arm measurements.
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The conversation around Rueben Bain Jr. leading into the 2026 NFL Draft centered heavily on one measurable, but Nick Saban offered a different perspective after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers made him the 15th overall pick.
“I know everybody talks about his short arms,” Saban said, adding that he has yet to see anyone with enough length to consistently keep Bain from winning at the point of attack.
That comment directly challenges one of the biggest concerns consistently tied to Bain’s profile. At the NFL Combine, Bain measured in with arms just under 31 inches. This number is a tad smaller than what NFL teams are looking for when it comes to the arm length of a defensive lineman.
Despite that, his production tells a different story. Bain consistently won with power, leverage, and hand usage rather than relying on length to keep blockers off his frame. His ability to generate pressure and disrupt plays showed up on tape, which is why Tampa Bay was willing to overlook the measurable.
This is where Saban’s point matters. Arm length is often used as a baseline trait for projection, but it doesn’t account for how a player actually wins snaps. Bain’s game is built on closing space quickly and striking first, which minimizes the impact of shorter reach.
For the Buccaneers, the decision came down to production and play style over testing numbers, and Saban’s comment reinforces why teams that leaned too heavily on measurements may have overthought the evaluation.
This article originally appeared on Bucs Wire: Nick Saban believes in Rueben Bain Jr. as a prospect
Nick Saban remarked that Bain's shorter arms do not prevent him from winning at the point of attack, challenging concerns about his arm length.
Bain's arms measured just under 31 inches, which is shorter than what many NFL teams prefer for defensive linemen.
The Buccaneers chose Bain 15th overall due to his strong production and ability to generate pressure, despite concerns about his arm length.
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