From now until the 2026 NFL Draft, we will scout and create profiles for as many prospects as possible, examining their strengths, weaknesses, and what they can bring to an NFL franchise. These players could be potential top-10 picks, down to Day 3 selections, and priority undrafted free agents. Today, a scouting report on Texas A&M RB Le’Veon Moss.
#8 Le’Veon Moss/RB Texas A&M – 5-11, 220 pounds (Senior)
MEASUREMENTS
Player Ht/Wt Hand Size Arm Length Wingspan
Le’Veon Moss 5-11/220 N/A N/A N/A
40-Yard Dash 10-Yard Dash Short Shuttle 3-Cone
N/A N/A N/A N/A
Broad Jump Vertical Bench Press
N/A N/A N/A
THE GOOD
– High-cut, leggy player but big upper half and good frame
– Quick feet and consistent ability to run through arm tackles
– Follows blockers and doesn’t outrun them, patient runner with a plan
– Shows leg drive and desire to finish
– Good feel for when to bounce runs wide
– Makes quick jump cuts at/behind LOS
– Good hands, quick to tuck after the catch, and shows value as a receiver
– Capable in pass protection, good eyes to identify blitzers with size/stoutness to square up and absorb contact
– Good ball security
The Bad
– Lacks long speed and gets tracked down in open grass
– Runs a little tall and could improve his pad level
– Has some juice but not overly explosive
– Can stay attached to blockers for too long and tends to run into contact, leaving yards on the field
– Pure power is just average
– Nominal career production with 2025 regression
– Sample size as receiver is limited, with too many drops for his target share with a simple route tree
– Almost zero special teams value/experience
– History of leg injuries
Stats
– Career: 321 carries for 1,767 yards (5.5 YPC), and 22 TDs with 24 receptions for 236 yards and zero touchdowns (32 games)
– 2025: 77 carries for 404 yards (5.2 YPC), and 6 TDs with two receptions for 3 yards (7 games)
– 1,754 rushing yards and 23 touchdowns in high school career, averaged nearly 8.0 YPC as senior (had season cut short due to COVID)
– 743 career offensive snaps
– 175 offensive snaps in 2025 (166 backfield, six slot, two wide)
– PFF’s No. 122 overall offensive grade among 279 qualified RBs (No. 109 rushing)
– 2025: 3.47 average yards after contact (104th), 3.66 career mark (4.40 in 2024)
– 44 career runs of 10-plus yards (16 in 2024, 12 in 2025)
– Career: 176 zone runs, 143 gap runs
– Two career fumbles (both in 2024)
– Five drops on 37 career targets
– Five career 100-yard rushing games (one in 2025)
– 15 career special teams snaps, all coming as a freshman in 2022
Injury History
– 2023: suffered injury vs Ole Miss, possibly to his knee, missing next game against Mississippi State
– 2024: Tore ACL and MCL in right knee in November against South Carolina, returned to practice in July 2025, and ready for start of regular season
– 2025: Missed six games with possible ankle sprain after October injury, returned for first round of College Football Playoffs with seven carries for 15 yards
Bio
– Turns 24 in November 2026
– Four-star recruit from Walker, Louisiana
– Chose Texas AM over Alabama, Florida, Georgia, LSU, and plenty of other marquee programs; chose Aggies despite growing up a Tigers fan
– Initially committed to Alabama but decommitted two months later
– Nine starts in 2025, but largely part of a 2/3 man committee throughout college career
– Ran track in high school with 10.84 in 100m and 23.04 in 200m
– Won the team’s Toughness Award as a freshman and was praised for his tough mentality
– Arrested in July 2025 on a disorderly conduct charge; the charge was dropped four days later, clearing his name
– Reportedly ran a 4.34 40-yard dash in high school
– Once said running out of bounds is like “running from a fight”
Tape Breakdown
Le’Veon Moss was praised for his toughness and flashes at Texas A&M, but battled injuries in college that partially delayed his career. He possesses good size and consistently runs through arm tackles.
He shares not just a first name with Le’Veon Bell, but also Bell’s patience. Moss isn’t quite as stop-and-go, but he follows his blocks and doesn’t outrun the guys ahead of him. He also shows quick feet to make jump cuts and create behind the line of scrimmage. Clips of both are below.
In pass protection, Moss stands out. His bigger frame helps, but he displays active eyes and a stout base to get the job done. He improved in this area throughout 2025. Examples of Moss’ pass protection are included below.
In this second clip, Moss gets steamrolled initially. But he finds the blitzer and takes on the contact to give his quarterback time to escape and complete a pass. Job well done.
Negatively, his long speed is just average despite a reportedly fast 40 time. Either that stopwatch was wrong, or the mass Moss has added has slowed him down. He tends to run into his blockers, too. He’s almost too patient.
Injuries hampered his career and limited his production. That’s a clear negative. Though he’s flashed good hands, he caught the ball only a little in college, with just two receptions in seven games last year. It’s fair to expect that Moss can be more helpful than those stats suggest. But how he catches at the Combine will be worth watching and noting.
Conclusion
Overall, Le’Veon Moss is a well-rounded running back. His size, pass protection, and patience are interesting traits. He isn’t highly explosive, and that limits his true running ability and upside. Likely a backup and not a full-fledged starter, a lack of special teams value will hurt him, too. But some traits help him stand out and compete for a roster spot, offering different elements than his peers in the class. That is, if he can stay healthy and avoid his history of leg injuries.
My NFL comp in style is Rhamondre Stevenson, though Moss may lack quite as high a ceiling. Their traits, however, are similar: bigger, quick-footed backs who can block.
NFL Projection: Late Day Three-Undrafted
Steelers Depot Draft Grade: 7.2 MED (Spot Starter)
Grade Range – 6.5-7.8
Games Watched: at Notre Dame (2025), vs Missouri (2025), vs Auburn (2025)
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