Aggies Already Knew De'Von Achane Was Built For This Moment

Deck: De'Von Achane's extraordinary performance and efficiency after contact have him rising to the top of the NFL, earning accolades as the best in the league for his hard-hitting rushes.

Texas A&M has sent its share of running backs into the NFL, from John David Crow to Darren Lewis to Trayveon Williams. But none of that Aggie lineage looks quite like De'Von Achane, the former College Station standout who has turned a reputation for explosiveness into something even more valuable: production after contact.

Achane’s college résumé was already loud. Over three seasons at Texas A&M, he ran for 2,376 yards and 21 touchdowns, while adding 554 rushing yards and five receiving touchdowns.

He was one of the most electric players in Jimbo Fisher’s tenure, right there with wide receiver Ainias Smith. Even so, he entered the 2023 NFL Draft as something of an overlooked name despite what he had done in Aggieland, and Miami grabbed him 84th overall.

That pick has aged like a steal.

Achane has since built a résumé that keeps growing. He earned his first Pro Bowl nod after the 2025 season and still owns the NFL record for highest yards per carry average at 7.8 from his 2023 rookie year. His career bests include 1,350 rushing yards and eight touchdowns, along with 488 receiving yards and four scores.

Miami also locked him in this offseason with a four-year, $64 million extension, a deal that has been viewed as one of the league’s better bargains. And now Pro Football Focus has put a bow on the rise, naming Achane the top running back after contact entering the 2026 season.

The case is built on numbers that jump off the page. PFF said, "Achane has completely redefined expectations for post-contact production. The Dolphin owns a career average of 3.8 yards after contact per rushing attempt, the best mark among active running backs.

More impressively, Achane led the NFL with 4.1 yards after contact per carry last season and already holds the highest single-season figure ever recorded in the PFF era. As a rookie in 2023, he generated an astonishing 4.9 yards after contact per attempt. No other qualifying season has surpassed 4.5.

What makes those numbers so remarkable is Achane’s build. At 5-foot-8 and 188 pounds, he falls in the bottom 20th percentile for running back size. Conventional wisdom suggests only larger runners should dominate after contact, but Achane has consistently proven otherwise.

He also posted multiple impressive seasons after contact during his collegiate career at Texas A&M, demonstrating many of the same traits that have translated to the NFL. Achane’s raw acceleration hinders the quality of his opponent’s tackle attempts. Meanwhile, his contact balance allows him to absorb glancing blows, resulting in a deceptively powerful ball carrier through traffic."

The source material also notes that Achane stands 5'9" and 190 pounds, and says his rise is another reminder that contact balance matters more than raw speed, even in a league full of fast backs. With new Dolphins head coach Jeff Hafley expected to lean on him to drive the offense again in 2026, Achane’s value keeps looking bigger than his frame.

In Other News...

Aggies Suddenly Face A Familiar Fear In Pivotal 5-Star Battle

Texas A&Ms pursuit of five-star running back Landen Williams-Callis has become one of the more closely watched recruiting battles on the board, and for good reason. The Aggies have stayed active on the trail while also building momentum elsewhere, including a wide receiver group that has drawn praise for both its recent commitments and the way last seasons pass catchers performed.

Nico Partidas selection to USA Baseballs Collegiate National Team only adds to the sense that A&Ms roster and pipeline are moving in the right direction. Still, the Williams-Callis chase carries familiar stakes for the Aggies, who know how quickly a marquee recruiting win can shift the conversation and how easily one can slip away when the final decision comes into focus. [Read more 🡒]

Aggies Transfer Suddenly Looks Like More Than Linebacker Insurance

After Texas A&Ms College Football Playoff run ended, Mike Elko and his staff went to work in the transfer portal, bringing in 17 newcomers to reshape the roster for another push. One of those additions, Tulsa linebacker Ray Coney, arrived with the kind of profile that suggested depth and insurance at a position where the Aggies needed help, especially with veteran Taurean York gone and Daymion Sanford dealing with an injury.

Coney has quickly looked like more than a fallback option. The early reviews on his athleticism and defensive play have been strong, and he is now expected to step into a meaningful role alongside sophomore Noah Mikhail when the season opens. For Texas A&M, that makes Coney one of the more important portal pickups on a defense that is still sorting out its linebacker picture. [Read more 🡒]

Aggies Await Another Massive 2027 Recruiting Domino to Fall

Texas A&Ms 2027 class is already shaping up as one of the more intriguing groups in the country, and the Aggies may be on the verge of adding another important piece. Linebacker Mikahi Allen of Don Bosco Prep has set his commitment announcement for July 11, giving one of the classs biggest remaining names a public finish line after a competitive national recruitment.

Allens final group includes Texas, Texas A&M and South Carolina, and the Aggies have been viewed as the team to beat in the race. His profile has also drawn plenty of mixed evaluation across the industry, which only adds to the intrigue around where he lands. For Texas A&M, this is the kind of decision that could help shape the rest of the class, and now the waiting game is down to one more summer date. [Read more 🡒]