Having been unavailable for the recent NAB AFL Draft Combine after suffering a knee injury, as well as missing other testing opportunities across the past two seasons, clubs considering Wright were desperate for additional information on the 203cm prospect.
The League ran the private screening at Maribyrnong College, which saw Wright complete the 20-metre sprint and agility tests, and the standing vertical jump and running jump tests.
Of three 20-metre sprints, Wright's best time was 3.1 seconds, while he completed one agility run at 8.65 seconds.
He recorded a 65cm standing vertical jump and an 81cm running vertical jump off his left foot. The results were then passed on to clubs, who did not attend the session.
Wright’s testing results would seem to fall into line with the average for someone of his height, although he didn't undergo any endurance testing.
It came after he was one of 12 players to be medically screened by club doctors at AFL House on Tuesday, after significant interest from recruiters.
Having been touted as a possible No.1 selection for the first half of the year, Wright enters draft week as one of the most difficult prospects to pin down for clubs.
He has had a number of interviews scheduled this week, including Greater Western Sydney (picks four, six and seven), Gold Coast (pick eight) and Geelong (pick 10), with all considered in the mix to select him.
A number of clubs further back in the order have also focused closer on Wright in recent weeks, reviewing vision and notes, after it became clear he may drift deeper into the first round than originally anticipated, as reported on AFL.com.au earlier this month.