Deadline approaches for junior running back to declare for draft

National Signing Day is still three weeks away, but there is a decision looming this week that will have a significant impact on the 2010 season for the SMU football team.
By the end of the day this Friday, underclassmen who plan to make themselves eligible for the NFL Draft in April have to file papers with the league to make their intentions known, nearly a month before recruits can ink their names on national letters-of-intent.
For the first time in about two decades, the deadline to declare for the NFL Draft affects the SMU Mustangs, as junior running back Shawnbrey McNeal decides whether to forego his senior season and go pro.
With less than 48 hours to go until the deadline to declare, McNeal said Wednesday he remains undecided about his future.
“I’ve been meeting every day with Coach (June) Jones,†McNeal said, “because this decision affects more than just me. It affects my mom, my son, my daughter and my teammates. I’ve got a lot to think about.â€
McNeal said that at times during the process, he has leaned toward going pro, and toward staying. At the moment, he says he is no closer to making a decision than he was before the whole process started.
“My mind is going in circles right now,†he said.
McNeal said he has gotten feedback from a number of people, including Jones, family and friends, and said “everyone†wants him to return for his senior year.
“I’ve had all the positives and all of the negatives presented to me,†he said. “Pretty much everyone is pushing me to stay, because a degree from SMU weighs more in my future than chasing my dream right now.â€
The reasons on either side are clear: should he move on, he will be in a position to help his mother, Mattie, as well as his two young children. If he stays, he’ll be able to pursue his degree, and play on a team that he says — despite losing a small-but-talented senior class that includes key players like wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders, linebacker Chase Kennemer and center Mitch Enright — will be even better in 2010 than it was this season, when it qualified for a bowl game for the first time in 25 years.
“The money (that comes with playing professionally) is what I consider one of the accolades for doing a job,†McNeal said. “I don’t play football for accolades. I play because it’s a game I love. I have a passion for it.â€
Since SMU destroyed Nevada Dec. 24 in the Sheraton Hawaii Bowl, McNeal has made a concerted effort to allow his body to heal. “It was a brutal season,†he said. “I took a couple of shots.†One of those “shots†included a sprained A.C. joint in his right shoulder, an injury that nagged him throughout the rest of the season.
But McNeal said that whenever he chooses to turn pro, he has no concerns about whether his body can survive the rigors of playing against the bigger, stronger athletes who earn their living playing the game.
“I’ll be bigger and stronger, too,†he said, adding that if he stays, he expects to be eligible and healthy enough to take part in spring practice.
McNeal said that even if he joins the seniors on the list of former players by testing the NFL waters, the 2010 Mustangs should be even better than in 2009. He points to players like linebackers Ja’Gared Davis and Taylor Reed, cornerback J.R. McConico and wide receivers Terrance Wilkerson, Aldrick Robinson and Cole Beasley as youngsters who will help fill the voids left by the outgoing seniors.
“And Kyle†Padron, McNeal said of the Mustangs’ quarterback who guided the Mustangs to their victory in Honolulu. “You’re going to see a lot more games from Kyle like he had in the bowl game. He comes from a high school where they know how to win. He loves being the quarterback. No matter the circumstances, he likes to have fun, but when it’s time to play, he’ll make plays.â€
As for his own future, McNeal said he has no set timetable for when he’ll make his decision, and said it will be one based on information he receives from those around him.
“I don’t know,†he said. “I’ve got a couple more days to decide. I’m going to continue to talk to people like Coach Jones, and I’m going to make the best decision for me and for my family.â€