A 6-foot-2, 270-pound nose tackle would have an extremely hard time getting noticed by NFL scouts today.
Even in 1983, in the previous generation's iteration of pro football, a player that size had to fight, claw, scratch and do whatever he could to pop up on game tape and get a team to give him a tryout, let alone a spot in its significantly deeper draft class (drafts went 12 rounds back then, as opposed to the current seven).
But that's exactly what happened when the Cincinnati Bengals decided Wisconsin defensive tackle Tim Krumrie belonged in their minicamp.