Wyoming’s Josh Allen is widely considered one of the four top quarterback prospects in this year’s draft along with Sam Darnold, Baker Mayfield, and Josh Rosen. Allen is probably the most impressive physical specimen of the four thanks to his prototypical size, build, athleticism, and arm strength for a quarterback.

But the big knock likely keeping Allen from being the top overall pick is his accuracy. He was unable to complete over 57 percent of his passes in his two seasons as a starter in college, which is definitely concerning. However, Allen believes that the months of predraft work with QB coach Jordan Palmer has helped him fix a big factor in his inaccuracy in college, which is his footwork.

“I think that any time I would miss in college, it was largely due to my feet,” Allen said in an appearance on SiriusXM NFL Radio . “In getting with Jordan, I've been trying to correct my feet through every throw and make sure that I was sequencing consistently. Once my feet started to clean up, that's when you started seeing the ball placed in the right positions.”

It’s certainly not inconceivable to believe Allen can still improve his accuracy. He’s only 21, and with better coaching at the next level, he can clean up some of the fundamentals and finally tap into his undoubted potential.

With his immense physical tools and star potential, there’s obviously going to be a team in need of a franchise quarterback – the Browns, Giants, Jets, Broncos, and Bills to name five – that talks themselves into Allen.

Although, the team that picks him must realize that he’s far from a finished product and will likely need at least a year or two to fix that footwork among other things. Moreover, the track record of physically-impressive quarterback prospects with accuracy problems like Allen succeeding in the NFL is not great, and he possesses some major bust potential.