Le’Veon Moss Scouting Report
By: Michael Higgins
(Image courtesy of John Bunch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
School: Texas A&M
Class: Senior
Position: RB
HT: 5’11
WT: 210 lbs
Background: Le’Veon Moss was a 4-star and top 100 player in the class of 2022. Moss was a top 5 running back and top 10 player in Louisiana in the class. Throughout his high school career at Istrouma College Prep, Moss accumulated 1,754 yards and 23 touchdowns. Le’Veon was selected to participate in both the Under Armour All-American Game and the Polynesian Bowl. Moss ran track in high school along with football. Moss committed to play for Texas A&M over Alabama, LSU, and others.
College: Moss did not get significant run until his sophomore year in 2023, where he led the team in yards per carry and finished the season with 484 rushing yards and 5 rushing touchdowns. 2024 saw Moss take another step forward as the Aggies’ RB1. He was named an All-SEC Second Team member after rushing for 765 yards and 10 touchdowns. 2025 was off to a great start before Moss got injured. Across 7 games, Moss had 389 yards and 6 touchdowns.
Strengths: Le’Veon Moss has excellent lateral agility to avoid and get around would-be tacklers. His change of direction ability is elite. He can cut on a dime to get north and into the second level of the defense quickly. Moss has a nice frame that allows him to absorb contact and move forward while doing so. He reaches his top speed faster than defenders are ready for. He is a violent runner who combines that acceleration with violent steps, making it difficult for defenders to tackle him in the open field. Moss has good vision in the backfield, waiting for blocks to develop before he exploits the best gap in the line. He gets very skinny between the tackles. It feels almost like a shark lingering in the waters as he is patient between the tackles before exploding and attacking the second level of the defense with violent acceleration.
Weaknesses: Moss is a powerful runner, but he plays too upright. He needs to get lower on a consistent basis if he has any hope of executing his power running style at the next level. With many power runners comes great contact balance, but that is not the case with Moss. He goes down far too easily for a player of his stature. It is also worth mentioning his injury history, and his most recent season was significantly limited due to injury.
Conclusion: Le’Veon Moss could be the thunder to another runner’s lightning in an NFL backfield. He does not have the durability or skillset to be an every down back, but can be effective in his role.
Best Team Fits: MIA, MIN, DEN
Player Comparison: Devin Neal
Player Grade: Round 3 (73.3)

