With four players, Baylor is well represented at this year’s Senior Bowl, the college all-star game that is known most for serving as a mini scouting combine leading up to this April’s NFL draft.

Most represented schools on the #SeniorBowl rosters: 5 – #OhioState, #Alabama 4 – #Stanford, #Baylor 3 – Seven schools tied

— Dane Brugler (@dpbrugler) January 25, 2016

The home states most represented on @seniorbowl rosters: California, Texas, Florida, Georgia all with 8 players. Next is Ohio and PA with 6

— Patrick Woo (@P_Woo) January 23, 2016

Practices are so scrutinized that ESPNU will telecast them in their entirety Wednesday and Thursday. The game is Saturday.

Baylor’s four are offensive lineman Spencer Drango, receiver Jay Lee, deep snapper Jimmy Landes and defensive end Shawn Oakman.

Oklahoma is represented by linebacker Eric Striker, receiver Sterling Shepard and defensive end Charles Tapper.

Texas Tech (OL Le’Raven Clark and RB DeAndre Washington), Kansas State (TE Glenn Gronkowski, OL Cody Whitehair) and West Virginia (Nick Kwiatkoski, K.J. Dillon) each had two players selected. Gronkowski reported Sunday after he’d watched his big brother Rob play in the AFC championship game for New England.

Other Big 12 players on the roster are TCU running back Aaron Green and Oklahoma State cornerback Kevin Peterson.

For the full rosters, click it here.

CBS Sports writes that Drango, Clark and Whitehair are among the top 10 offensive players to watch.

From the site:

The analysis on Drango, who starred for Cedar Park High School: “A four-year starter at left tackle, Drango has been a consistent performer in Waco and played well on the edges, but can he hold up there in the NFL? His performance this week will help answer that question. Drango plays with the snap quickness, body angles and awareness to handle speed, but his body type is better suited for guard and he needs technical refinement that can’t be masked at the next level like it was in the Big 12.

On Clark: Groomed at left tackle in the Texas Tech offense, Clark was asked to retreat off the snap and his technique faces a learning curve under pro coaching at the Senior Bowl and once he is drafted. But he has the wide base, moldable frame and lower body flexibility required to start in the NFL, showing terrific knee bend and weight transfer in his kickslide. Once his upper body mechanics catch up, Clark projects as a NFL starter at tackle or guard.

On Whitehair: North Dakota State quarterback Carson “Wentz is the best offensive prospect in Mobile, but Whitehair is a close second. A college left tackle, he will move inside to guard for the Senior Bowl and in the NFL, which he considers his best (and favorite) position. Whitehair is an assignment sound blocker, staying square to his target with anchor strength and aggressive hands. Although he isn’t quite on the same level, Whitehair is the closest prospect to Zack Martin that this draft class has to offer.”

The site also includes Houston’s William Jackson as one of the top 10 defensive players worth watching, writing:

“A physically imposing corner, Jackson has the size and length to match up well with the bigger receivers in the NFL. He does a lot of wide receiver-like things at the catch point, evidence by his 48 career passes defended, but does he have the short-area agility to hold up vs. the quick pass-catchers at the next level? NFL scouts will keep their eyes trained on his transition technique during practice drills.”