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Adam Randall 2026 NFL Draft Profile | RB from Clemson
Scouting Report
Adam Randall is a muscular downhill running back from Clemson who converted from wide receiver to running back and made the most of his first full season at the position producing more as a runner than he did in four years of receiving. At 6-2 and 235 pounds Randall has a powerful frame and runs hard getting north-south quickly with his shoulders squared at the line of scrimmage. Despite being a first-time running back he displays above-average patience following blocks to daylight on gap and pin-pull power schemes. His wide receiver background provides a pass-catching element and versatility that creates advantageous matchups out of the backfield. Randall is also a viable kick returner averaging 23.2 yards per kick return over his last two seasons and he played 82.1 percent of Clemson's offensive snaps the highest rate for any Power 4 running back. He excels in a downhill power scheme where he can use his size and strength to wear down defenses. However Randall lacks the reps at running back that show in his pass protection technique which does not play with the power his frame suggests. His history of dropped passes was one reason he transitioned from wide receiver and he is not a natural hands-catcher. His skill set is scheme-dependent as he does not display the stop-start ability needed for zone-heavy schemes. He lacks wiggle and elusiveness struggling to make defenders miss in tight spaces and create extra yards when blocking breaks down. Bleacher Report graded him 6.0 ranking him 179th overall and RB12 comparing him to Kalel Mullings.
Strengths
Powerful muscular frame at 6-2 235 running hard and getting north-south quickly
Above-average patience for a first-time RB following blocks to daylight
WR-to-RB convert providing pass-catching element and matchup versatility
Viable kick returner averaging 23.2 yards per return over two seasons
Played 82.1 percent of offensive snaps highest rate for Power 4 RB
Excels in gap and pin-pull power schemes with shoulders squared at LOS
Most productive season at RB outproduced four years of WR production
Weaknesses
Lacks reps at RB with pass protection technique not matching his frame
History of dropped passes contributing to WR-to-RB transition
Scheme-dependent lacking stop-start ability for zone-heavy schemes
No wiggle or elusiveness struggling to make defenders miss in tight spaces
Not a natural hands-catcher despite receiver background
Developmental prospect who needs technique refinement at the position
Player Comparisons
Kalel Mullings
College Stats
2025: Most productive rushing season outproduced four years as WR. Averaged 23.2 yds/kick return over two seasons. 82.1% offensive snap rate