Wyoming quarterback Josh Allen has been working with former NFL quarterback Jordan Palmer in preparation for the 2018 NFL Draft.

Allen has several holes. It is a coaching staff's job to determine whether or not those issues are able to be corrected.

"You have got to find the holes in their game. Turnovers. Played at a small school. Didn't get that many starts. With any quarterback, you have got to identify what those holes are. The analysts, the media, the scouts even, they don't do the second part of it because it doesn't matter. The coaches only do the second part of it and that is 'can we fix this hole?' If a guy played at a small school. If it's Carson Wentz, played at a small school, and I don't know if he can project to the league, that's going to come down to the staff's ability. Do they think he has what it takes to make that transition? Can they coach him through that?," Palmer explained on 92.3 The Fan's 'Bull & Fox Show.'

"If a guy is scared to death to get hit, a coach has to go 'can I coach him through that?' And I would tell you, you can. But if it's turnovers, then you have to look at what led to those turnovers. I think as teams look into Sam's turnovers, being that that is one of the areas of concern. They will find out that these are things you can train. Ball security in the pocket? That's drills. Any interceptions that he threw, and they will do this in the meetings, why did you throw it to him? Then you can look at the offense that he played in and say 'well, did they give you three options on this route or one option and you read it wrong? Coaches really have to dive deep when they comb through this particularly with the No. 1 pick. Really dive deep and go through it and get to the root of 'what were his issues, can we fix them, are we going to put him in a position where those don't show up or is this something that I can't fix."

Allen completed just 56-percent of his passes over the last two seasons. It is a concern for most who break down the California native's game but Palmer said that those concerns are overblown.

"[Accuracy issues] come for different reasons. When I say this person has accuracy issues, I'm saying every single quarterback has missed throws, some more than others and for different reasons. I think [Patriots QB Tom] Brady misses throws a lot. With Josh Allen, his misses come from a very simple mechanical thing that is, by the time the Combine and the Pro Day roll around, they'll be muscle memory, you'll see very few misses in Indy and then on his Pro Day you'll probably see one or two out of 70 because it's a trainable thing. Josh, with a low completion percentage, you have got to look at the team and the situation," said Palmer.

"He doesn't say these things, this is my opinion only. The way that I articulate Josh's situation last year is, he was an eighth grader playing on a sixth grade team. If I am on an eighth grade basketball team and I am playing with sixth graders and I am bigger, faster and stronger than everybody and I am a right handed dribbler, I don't really ever have to dribble with my left hand. I don't really have to go to the rim with my left hand. I can probably just beat everybody playing with my right. Now when I go to play with tenth graders, I have got to have both sides of my game. I have got to play defense, get rebounds, push the ball down the court, all of that. With Josh, he is a tougher guy to evaluate, as I talk to people, because a lot of his tape is irrelevant. His stats are kind of irrelevant because it's hard to evaluate when you're an eighth grader playing with sixth graders."

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A year ago, Chiefs General Manager John Dorsey, now with the Browns, encountered a similar hurdle when evaluating Texas Tech quarterback Patrick Mahomes, which means he should not be intimidated as it relates to Allen.

"We saw this a lot last year, different version, but with Patrick Mahomes. His offense is so different and they don't ask him to do anything footwork in the pocket so it's just harder to evaluate. What I challenge teams, Cleveland and some of these teams to look at with Josh Allen is look at the root of his misses. Look at how he did in tape, in the Senior Bowl, the progression to the Combine, the progression to the Pro Day. You are going to see things get really, really tight. I'm not patting myself on the back. He is putting in the work but he has gotten to the root of what the issues are and he is just training them and they are becoming muscle memory. I do not think he is going to be a guy that misses in the league. He definitely has one of, if not the strongest arm I've ever seen in person and that pretty much encapsulate every quarterback ever," Palmer finished.

The Browns hold the No. 1 and No. 4 overall selections. Insiders have tied Cleveland to Oklahoma's Baker Mayfield and Allen more than any other. Most mock drafts project them to select Darnold, however.

He completed 152-of-270 passes for 1,812 yards, 16 touchdowns and six interceptions. He also had 92 carries for 204 yards and five touchdowns.