Cade McConnell didn’t arrive at Vanderbilt with a straight path or much certainty. After two seasons at Minnesota without seeing the field, he entered the transfer portal looking for a place where he could get on the field and grow up at the same time. Two years later, he says he’s found both.
“Vanderbilt is home,” McConnell told Vandy on SI. “I tell people all the time ‘football is gonna go on as long as it can, but I think being back in Nashville and being around this university is where I want to end up in life.’”
That feeling has taken shape in more than one way since he came to Vanderbilt as a rising junior. McConnell has earned a Vanderbilt degree, grown in his faith and built a relationship with Taylor Lewan through his Bussin’ With The Boys internship. He’s also put himself in position to chase the next step, which is becoming a pro.
His 2025 season was the strongest of his college career so far. McConnell played 759 snaps and became a steady starter on Klenakis’ line.
On PFF, he finished with a 52.5 overall grade, a 55.9 in pass protection and a 40.8 in the run game. By season’s end, he was Vanderbilt’s second-highest graded offensive lineman behind center Jordan White.
McConnell says the biggest change has come between the ears. What he understands now about playing at a high level is different from what he knew when he first got to Nashville as a depth option.
“I think mentally I became a lot older than I was when I got here,” McConnell said. “That’s no knock on anywhere else.
That’s just how it is at Vanderbilt. Credit to Coach K and Coach Nady, they’ve really pulled me along and forced me to do the things I need to do to be the best I can be.”
He points to the daily details as the real difference. His food choices are more disciplined.
He puts in extra work on the field. He studies more film.
His training approach has changed, too. For McConnell, that growth has come down to habits and maturity.
“I think habits is a good point to make,” McConnell said. “The maturity piece alongside knowing what I need to do to get better, that’s probably the biggest area of growth in maturity, is the habits.”
Clark Lea sees McConnell as a key part of Vanderbilt’s offensive line because of his experience and because he can help bring the group’s new faces along. McConnell embraces that role and says he feels responsible for serving as an ambassador for the program.
And for him, that means chasing the kind of season that matches everything else he’s built in Nashville.
“I think an All-Conference player, an All-SEC player, All-American, all those big tag words are at the forefront of my mind as well as winning 17 or 18 games,” McConnell said. “Obviously being the best in my self standards is the goal.”
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