The Underrated
RB Shawnbrey McNeal, Southern Methodist
Why McNeal is Underrated: He originally enrolled at the University of Miami, but after earning a grand total of 33 carries for 152 yards and 3 scores in two years while sitting behind Javarris James and Graig Cooper, he transferred to S.M.U. The Mustangs’ offense proved to be an excellent fit for McNeal. In his only season as a starter, the junior gained nearly 1,500 total yards and scored 14 touchdowns. McNeal is underrated because of three factors: he has only one season as a starter; S.M.U. doesn’t use a pro-style offense; and at 190 pounds, he is considered light for a potential feature back.
Why McNeal Has Promise: Coach June Jones says McNeal is the best receiving back he has ever coached, and that includes his tenure in the N.F.L. Known as a dangerous open field runner with speed, lateral agility and cutback skills, McNeal also knows how to get small in traffic to gain extra yardage between the tackles. He will never be a punishing runner, but unlike many backs with his elusiveness, McNeal is willing to lower his pads and initiate contact with defenders when necessary.
Bottom Line: A lot of people automatically say a 5’10†190-pound back is too small to be an every-down runner. Those same people don’t factor in that young players are still developing physically. Clinton Portis, Priest Holmes and Terrell Davis are just a few examples of runners considered small by pro standards, but all three proved they had feature back talent and added muscle to their frames as their careers progressed.
http://fifthdown.blogs.nytimes.com/2010 ... the-n-f-l/