After a stellar 2019 season with 2019 FCS national champion North Dakota State, and a one-game showcase in the fall of 2020, former Bisons starting quarterback Trey Lance announced his intentions to end his college career and enter the 2021 NFL Draft.

Following his Friday afternoon Pro Day at NDSU in Fargo, North Dakota, it's easy to see why.

Lance wowed scouts and other onlookers with his athleticism and prolific arm strength. CBS Sports Bryan DeArdo reported scouts from the Panthers, Broncos, Eagles, Bears and Jets were among those in attendance, including head coaches from Chicago (Matt Nagy), Detroit (Dan Campbell) and Carolina (Matt Rhule).

The most widely reported of Lance's throws, however, was his 52-yard bomb to the left sideline through a simulated multiple-step drop in the pocket. Clearly, there's no pressure coming, but it's an impressive throw in which he hits his receiver directly in the hands, and in stride.

As NFL teams inch ever-closer to draft day, the real question is: where will Lance land? Most pundits agree that Clemson QB Trevor Lawrence and BYU QB Zach Wilson are the top two talents at the position, while Ohio State's Justin Fields and Alabama's Mac Jones deserve to be in the early-draft mix.

Lance, however, has one major skill-set those other four don't: elite elusiveness. In his lone full season at NDSU (2019), the 6-foot-4, 226-pound Marshall, Minnesota native rushed for 1,100 yards and 14 touchdowns on 169 carries (6.5 ypc). And against Central Arkansas this past October, he gashed for 143 yards and two more scores on 15 carries.

Guys like Randall Cunningham, Steve Young and Michael Vick started the rushing revolution for NFL quarterbacks, but current signal-callers in Baltimore's Lamar Jackson, Arizona's Kyler Murray, New England's Cam Newton and Buffalo's Josh Allen have done nothing but carry the baton through the next turn.

Sporting News writer Vinnie Iyer lists eight potential landing spots for Trey Lance's talents: the San Francisco 49ers, the New England Patriots, the Panthers, the Washington Football Team, the Denver Broncos, the Minnesota Vikings and the Chicago Bears.