Jase McClellan
Position: RB — Projected: 7th Round
History & Measurables
Born: June 25, 2002 – Aledo, TX
High School: Aledo
College: Alabama
Height – 5’10″ Weight – 221 lbs
Traits & Characteristics
The Good
- Power Between the Tackles
- Patient Runner
- Speed to get Outside
The Bad
- Average Vision
- Injury History
Advanced Analytics Notes
2023 Rushing
- 3.19 Yards After Contact/Attempt (85th Among FBS RBs, min. 100 rush attempts)
- 32.9% of total rushing yards came on runs of 15+ yards (102nd Among RBs)
- 49 Missed Tackles Forced (T-34th Among RBs)
- 26 Runs of 10+ Yards (T-42nd Among RBs)
- 46% of carries in zone scheme, 54% of carries in gap scheme
2023 Receiving
- 77.2% Route Participation (T-81st Among FBS RBs, min. 10 targets)
- 0.84 Yards per Route Run (T-139th Among RBs)
- 9.2 YAC/REC (96th Among RBs)
- 56.9 PFF Receiving Grade (97th Among RBs)
- 27.6 PFF Pass Blocking Grade (T-529th Among RBs)
Film Notes and Highlights
Jase McClellan has had an up and down career at Alabama. He had to wait behind some talented running backs and had injuries that set back his playing time. When he is on the field he has shown good things, with a 5.6 yards per carry average over the course of his college career. I think one of the best things I saw on film was McClellan’s power running between the tackles and consistently getting extra yards. He also has the speed to get outside when there is nothing up the middle.
McClellan shows good patience for blocks, but at times can wait too long and miss a hole. He has average vision and it can be inconsistent. Sometimes he sees the cutback lanes and other times he just runs right up the middle. He is a capable receiver but not necessarily a difference maker on tape. McClellan definitely has tools to be a successful back in the NFL but I do not believe as a starter. -Brandon Haye
(Games Watched: vs Ole Miss 2023, vs Georgia 2023, vs Texas 2022, vs Austin Peay 2022)