Vanderbilt safety CJ Heard has gone from a Group of Five newcomer to a key piece of an SEC defense in a hurry, and he’s not shy about what comes next.
After one season at Florida Atlantic, Heard transferred to Vanderbilt and immediately became a fixture in the Commodores’ lineup. He started all 13 games in the 2025 season and quickly earned the trust of head coach Clark Lea and defensive coordinator Steve Gregory. The production matched the responsibility: Heard finished tied with linebacker Bryan Longwell for the team lead with 71 tackles, and he added an interception, a fumble recovery and two sacks.
Now heading into his junior season, Heard wants even more. He believes he should be a player Vanderbilt fans notice every week, and he wants that expectation to be part of the conversation before the season even begins.
“Expect a player who's going to play with a lot of effort, man. Like, you turn that tape, you're gonna see effort every snap.
Whatever it takes to help the team win, I'm willing to do it,” Heard told Vandy On SI. “I'm going to take away the ball this year, just the coaches trust me, put me in positions.
I just feel like this is the year that everything is going to lay all out for me.”
That confidence is tied to the work he’s put in this offseason. Heard said he feels more comfortable entering the fall, and a big reason is the faith the coaching staff has shown in him. He has also been working with the staff on becoming faster and more mobile than he was a year ago.
There’s a chance Heard lands on a preseason award watchlist later this summer, and he could even be considered for preseason All-SEC honors. He isn’t spending much time on that, though. For him, the formula stays simple: play well, and the recognition will follow.
Still, Heard made it clear why he believes he belongs in that conversation.
“I'll say turnovers. I'm gonna be a guy that creates turnovers, if that's interceptions, forced fumbles, I'm making a lot of plays on the ball.
I'm gonna be around the ball a lot. I’m going to be one of the best faces in the SEC on defense not only because I play, but because of my leadership with the way I’m going to bring the team together and the defense together,” Heard said.
The confidence doesn’t stop there. Vanderbilt’s staff views him as a veteran presence on the defense, someone who helps settle things down on the field and sees the game in a calmer, slower way when he’s out there.
Heard also thinks the Commodores can surprise people on that side of the ball, even with roster turnover and several new starters on both sides. He sees a defense with plenty of energy and plenty of room to make noise.
“The energy is going to be crazy. I’m excited for Vanderbilt fans and SEC fans to see how crazy the defense is going to be this year,” Heard told Vandy On SI.
