For a couple months, the most popular three letters in the NFL are RAS. Relative Athletic Score is the brainchild of Kent Lee Platte. It takes a player’s height, weight, 40-yard time (and the 10- and 20-yard times within it) and other measurables and places them on a 0-to-10 scale with players at the same position. For instance, the Packers’ first draft pick, cornerback Brandon Cisse in the second round, ran a 4.41 in the 40. That was a 91.4 percentile result among corners, meaning a RAS of 9.14 in that drill. All the results are combined to form a player’s total RAS. With four elite scores, the Packers had the 11th-best RAS in this year’s draft. Their overall mark was hurt by third-round defensive tackle Chris McClellan’s underwhelming athleticism. More on that in a moment. The Packers ranked 11 of 32 for Average #RAS of their 2026 draft class with a 8.82 average for their 5 players who had a score.…