Benjamin Watson, who scored very well on the Wonderlic test leading up to his entry into the NFL, isn't sure just how important the test is as a form of evaluation. "I don't know how much weight is put on it," Watson said. "Some teams, I hear, put a lot of weight on it. Some teams don't care. So I don't know for sure. What I do know is, it's not an exact science." Watson scored a 48 on the test when he took it. The Wonderlic has come into focus because of cornerback prospect Morris Claiborne's poor result. Expected to be among the first five or six picks this month, he scored a four on the test. "Does a higher Wonderlic mean you'll perform better on the football field? It might, or it might not," said Watson. "A person's football ability might be totally different than their ability to score high on an aptitude test. I mean, I understand why the test is there. They want to have some type of standardized benchmark. They want to compare, and keep everyone on the same level. But when you look at it, a Wonderlic score doesn't have as much to do with football as your film does in college and your body of work."