Marcelino McCrary-Ball may not be a name that jumps off the page on the Jets’ roster, but he’s done the one thing undrafted players have to do to survive in this league: he’s stayed.
Now heading into his fourth season with New York, McCrary-Ball has carved out a real role on special teams, and that’s where his value to the Jets has been clearest. The linebacker’s path to this point started with the 49ers in 2022, when he signed out of Indiana as an undrafted free agent. He then landed on the Jets’ practice squad just before the 2023 season, and last year brought his biggest chance yet.
That opportunity came with McCrary-Ball opening the year as the Jets’ third linebacker and seeing meaningful defensive snaps for the first time in his NFL career. The problem was health. Recurring hamstring injuries cut him down to just five games, and he never got the chance to settle into a steady defensive rhythm.
Even with that limited action, he made his presence felt where it mattered most. McCrary-Ball finished second on the Jets with eight special teams tackles, and he did it in only those five appearances. He also posted an 85.0 Pro Football Focus special teams grade, the best on the team, while serving as the Jets’ special teams captain.
The numbers tell the story even more sharply. McCrary-Ball logged those eight tackles on just 44 combined kick and punt coverage snaps, which means he was making a tackle on roughly 18 percent of his coverage reps.
That kind of rate would have led the NFL if he had played enough snaps to qualify. He also didn’t miss a tackle all season on either defense or special teams.
That’s the kind of profile that keeps a player in the league. It’s also why Chris Banjo is likely to keep leaning on him in that phase of the game.
For 2026, the biggest thing McCrary-Ball has to do is stay on the field. If he can shake the hamstring issues and keep producing on special teams, he’ll give himself a strong shot at another roster spot.
The Jets’ linebacker depth looks a lot like it did a year ago, which gives him a path to stick. He’s currently in the mix with Mykal Walker and Kiko Mauigoa for the top backup linebacker job.
Still, the safer bet is that McCrary-Ball’s best value comes on special teams rather than defense. His 46.4 PFF grade in 2025 doesn’t exactly suggest he’s ready to be a dependable defensive piece, even in a small sample.
What he has already proven is enough to justify a roster spot. If he can stay healthy and remain one of Banjo’s most dependable special teams contributors, 2026 will count as a success for both McCrary-Ball and the Jets.
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