LJ McCray spent much of Florida’s lost 2025 season learning what it means to miss football altogether.
For a player recruited as a five-star out of Daytona Beach, that kind of pause was never part of the plan. McCray arrived at Florida with big expectations and flashed some promise as a true freshman in 2024, finishing with 13 tackles, one tackle for loss and half a sack. Then came a season that barely got started: he sat out the opener against Long Island, played only four snaps against USF on Sept. 6 and broke his foot, ending his year almost immediately.
“That was my first time in my whole life missing a whole season of football,” McCray said. “That was definitely a different experience.
I had to learn a whole lot more about myself, learn with my family, got closer … I grew as a person and as a player, but I would say the biggest thing is just mental toughness, fighting adversity. That was literally one of the biggest challenges I had to face in my career.”
Now healthy, McCray is trying to turn that setback into the kind of offseason that changes a career. Working under new UF strength and conditioning coach Rusty Whitt, he said he has added more than 10 pounds of muscle and will report to fall camp at 6-foot-6 and 275 pounds.
"Coach Whitt has really been pushing me too so I don’t have too much of a choice," McCray said. "Being hurt kind of showed me how important the weight room is and how serious I need to take it this year.”
Florida has been waiting for McCray to match the billing that came with his recruiting profile. He and former UF quarterback DJ Lagway were the headliners of the Gators’ 2024 class, with McCray ranked sixth overall and Lagway second. Lagway transferred to Baylor after the coaching change from Billy Napier to Jon Sumrall, while McCray stayed put, in part because of his relationship with defensive line coach Gerald Chatman, the only position coach retained from Napier’s staff.
That connection mattered. Chatman and McCray met before spring drills, and Chatman was direct about what he wanted from the young defensive end. McCray said Chatman stayed in his ear even while he was injured, keeping him engaged and pushing him through the recovery process.
"The end of the season, he was already in my ear," McCray said. "Even when I was hurt, he was talking to me, trying to encourage me, letting me know what needs to be done. I mean he’s been a big role in my recovery process.”
Chatman liked what he saw in spring.
"I just want to turn him loose right now to get him enjoying playing the game," Chatman said. "I do believe he's enjoying playing the game right now. Now, we just got to continue to fine tune the details of his technique, but he is improving.”
McCray’s background helps explain why Florida still sees so much upside. At Mainland High in Daytona Beach, he was a three-sport athlete, splitting time between football in the fall, basketball in the winter and baseball in the spring. He began his high school football career at tight end and didn’t spend a full season on the defensive line until his senior year, when he helped Mainland win a FHSAA state title.
Even with that limited experience on defense, his frame and movement skills made him one of the country’s most coveted line prospects.
"I feel like there’s a lot of guys my size that can’t move as well as I can do or do the things I do," McCray said.
The next step won’t come easy. McCray will battle for snaps at defensive end with senior Kamran James and Jacksonville State transfer Emmanuel Oyebadejo, a 6-6, 303-pound edge player who had 6.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks last season.
Still, McCray sounds eager for what Florida’s new defensive setup could offer. Under Sumrall and defensive coordinator Brad White, the Gators want their linemen attacking more freely, and McCray sees room for the defense to improve after Florida finished 13th in the SEC in total defense at 376.8 yards allowed per game and 11th in sacks with 26, or 2.17 per game.
"Just making sure we’re all on the same page," McCray said. "We know what needs to be done. We have a good group of returning guys that have a decent amount of experience coming, so it’s just really tightening up the loose ends and playing as one."
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