Ohio State Fans Will Love The Surprising Terry McLaurin Debate

Despite already having two Pro Bowls to his name, Terry McLaurin is surprisingly pegged as a "breakout candidate" for the 2026 season.

Terry McLaurin keeps stacking production, and somehow the conversation around him still finds room to call him a breakout candidate.

That was the angle ESPN’s Ben Solak took when he picked one name from each franchise and pointed to the Washington Commanders wideout for 2026. The case, at least on paper, is tied to volume: McLaurin, Solak said, could have “His first season with over 100 receptions.”

It’s an odd label for a receiver who already has five straight 1,000-yard seasons and two Pro Bowls on his résumé. But that’s the reality with McLaurin, whose value has often been bigger than the numbers people use to package it.

He has been the clear-cut top receiver in Washington for years, and his production has come through all kinds of quarterback turbulence. That situation may finally be changing with Jayden Daniels.

The raw career numbers tell the story just fine. McLaurin has 6,961 receiving yards, which already puts him fifth on Washington’s all-time list.

He trails only Art Monk (12,026), Charley Taylor (9,110), Gary Clark (8,742) and Santana Moss (7,867). He doesn’t even need another 1,000-yard season to pass Moss for fourth, and that could happen as soon as this year.

So when people talk about a breakout, it’s fair to ask: what exactly would that even look like for a player who is already historically productive for the franchise?

McLaurin’s path to this point started far from the NFL spotlight. At Cathedral High School in Indianapolis, he was a three-star recruit with early offers from Bowling Green, Purdue and Toledo after his junior year.

More schools followed - Boston College, Indiana, Iowa and Missouri - before Ohio State landed him, which had been his preferred destination from the beginning. The Buckeyes offer came after he attended a couple of camps in Columbus and caught the eye of Urban Meyer’s staff.

His college career followed a familiar pattern: always improving, always a little buried behind someone else. At Ohio State, McLaurin played in the shadows of Michael Thomas, Curtis Samuel, K.J.

Hill and Parris Campbell, but he kept raising his level until scouts had no choice but to notice. By 2018, he finished with a conference-leading 20.0 yards per reception.

That upward climb didn’t stop in Washington. McLaurin has led the team in six of his seven seasons there, and he even outperformed his former Ohio State teammate Samuel from 2021 to 2023.

Last season, he finished third on the team in catches and second in receiving yards despite playing only 10 games because of a nagging quad injury. He should be back at full speed in 2026.

That’s why the breakout tag feels a little off. If McLaurin hits 100 catches, it won’t be some new version of him arriving. It’ll just be Terry McLaurin doing what he’s always done: getting better and better with time.

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