Mason Leak
Bio
Recruiting
Scouting Report
Mason Leak is a 4-star Edge defender (0.8944 composite, #409-425 nationally, top-3 in Connecticut) who signed with Boston College in December 2025. A muscular, twitchy 6-4, 230-pound prospect with legitimate track-and-field explosiveness, he projects as a high-upside developmental edge whose physical tools currently outpace his pass-rush refinement.
Physical Profile
At 6-4 / 230, Leak has the prototypical ACC-edge frame with room to add 15-20 pounds without sacrificing his elite lower-body juice. His athleticism is verified, not projected: a 6-5 high jump (3rd at the New England Indoor Championship), 18-1 long jump, and 12.13 100m translate to real lower-body explosion (94 Explosion Score per NextGen Prospects) and the change-of-direction needed to flatten the corner. The build is muscular and powerful rather than lean-and-bendy, pointing to a power-rusher profile with developing length-and-leverage as his weight catches up to his frame.
Play Style
A power-over-finesse edge who attacks half-the-man and rams the corner rather than dipping-and-bending around it. On film he plays downhill, using his burst to close ground in a hurry and his strength to stack-and-shed in the run game, finishing as a violent, sure tackler. The athleticism shows up in pursuit and second-effort plays; the polish — converting his straight-line power into a multi-move rush — is the part still under construction.
Strengths
- Elite lower-body explosion confirmed by track credentials (6-5 HJ, 18-1 LJ) and a 94 Explosion Score — generates real power off the edge and can convert speed-to-power, exploding through contact to collapse the pocket corner
- Plays with violent hands and physicality at the point of attack; Andrew Ivins notes he 'can explode through contact and ram protection on the corner' and 'strikes as a tackler' who finishes in the backfield with authority — a genuine asset against the run, not just a pass-rush specialist
- Significant developmental ceiling — a muscular frame with room to grow, raw power, and multi-sport athleticism gives him one of the higher trait floors among 2026 edges in the Northeast (top-3 in CT)
Areas to Improve
- Pass-rush technique and counters — currently wins on traits (power/burst) over a developed plan; needs a refined rush arsenal (hand-fighting sequences, secondary moves, a reliable inside counter) to consistently beat ACC-caliber tackles
- Functional bulk and anchor — at 230 on a 6-4 frame he must add weight and play with more consistent pad level/leverage to hold up as a base-defending edge and avoid getting washed against the run at the next level
College Projection
Likely a developmental redshirt or rotational depth piece early at Boston College who needs a year or two in a college strength program to add functional weight before competing for a starting edge role. Realistic timeline is a meaningful rotational contributor by Year 2-3, with starter upside as the technique catches up to the tools. The transfer to Avon Old Farms (a prep powerhouse) for his senior year suggests a player and family investing in development against elite competition.
NFL Outlook
Developmental NFL traits exist — the explosion metrics and frame are the kind of athletic baseline that draws late-round/priority-UDFA interest if the pass-rush plan develops — but he is several steps of refinement away from a draftable projection. His ceiling is tied entirely to technical growth and added mass; the floor is a productive college rotational edge. Too early and trait-dependent to project meaningful draft capital today.
Best Fit
A 4-3 base scheme that lets him attack as a wide-9 or 5-technique edge and play downhill, where his explosion and power are weaponized rather than asking him to drop into coverage as a stand-up OLB. He fits a development-first program with a strong strength staff and a defined edge-rush plan — exactly the kind of patient, trait-banking projection Boston College has historically done well with along the defensive front.
Player Comparison
Both prospects share the ideal 6'4" 230 lb frame that translates well to multiple positions in modern football, particularly tight end or linebacker. Pitts was similarly ranked as a high 4-star recruit (#409 nationally mirrors Pitts' top-500 status) from a prestigious prep program, demonstrating the versatility and athletic traits that make coaches project them at the next level before settling on a defined position.