Todd McClure spent 14 seasons as the Atlanta Falcons’ center without earning a single All-Pro selection. On June 27, he joins the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame in Natchitoches. That gap between his impact and his recognition is what the NFL keeps getting wrong about the position.
The Baton Rouge native defied every prototype at 6-foot-2 and 290 pounds. He started 159 of 160 games at his peak and drew just 22 NFL penalties across 198 regular-season games.
His football legacy is not a story about surviving the odds. It is a lesson the league has not absorbed.
The Day That Changed Everything
A high school coach in Central, Louisiana made a sophomore furious at practice. That moment built a Hall of Famer.
Randy Blanchard, the Central High offensive line coach, pulled Todd McClure off tight end and told him to snap the ball. McClure wanted his name on the loudspeaker for touchdowns, not penalties.
He hated the switch. He did it anyway.
Blanchard was also the Central baseball coach whose program won four straight Class 4A state titles, with McClure as his All-State catcher. He recognized what he had.
The move was not a demotion. It was a redeployment.
A Coach’s Gamble
Blanchard did not move McClure because of strategic genius. He did it out of necessity.
“There wasn’t a whole lot else Todd could do at tight end that day,” Blanchard said in a June 2026 interview with the LSWA. “So I asked him to move over to center. He did not like it one bit and I knew it.”
That shift exposed something. The blocking technique and footwork McClure had built as a multi-sport athlete translated directly to center. Spatial awareness, pre-snap reads, and leverage do not develop on a depth chart.
Athletes build those skills across sports. Understanding what a tight end demands athletically clarifies why Blanchard spotted something a position-only evaluator would have missed.
Todd McClure’s Hall of Fame Career at the Atlanta Falcons
McClure earned All-SEC honors twice at LSU and claimed first-team All-America recognition from the American Football Coaches Association in 1998. The Atlanta Falcons drafted him in the seventh round of the 1999 NFL Draft. He tore his ACL in training camp.
Most NFL careers stop there. He accelerated.
The Falcons placed McClure on injured reserve, a designation that keeps a player under contract during recovery rather than releasing him. They had seen enough on film to hold the spot. McClure used that year to study defensive tendencies, read sideline signals, and build a pre-snap library.
He went on to start 159 of 160 games at his peak. Over 198 games, officials flagged him just 22 times. In 2011, he drew zero.
Clean, decisive blocking shapes field position on every down across a 16-game season. McClure understood that compounding effect better than almost anyone at the position.
| Category | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| NFL seasons played | 14 | LSWA / Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame |
| Regular-season games played | 198 | LSWA |
| Games started (peak stretch) | 159 of 160 | LSWA |
| Career NFL penalties | 22 | LSWA |
| Penalties in 2011 season | 0 | LSWA |
| Avg. penalties per season | 1.7 | Calculated |
All-Pro Snub and Coach’s Praise
All-Pro voters never gave McClure the nod. Former Falcons head coach Mike Smith calls that a flat-out misnomer.
“In my opinion, Todd was an All-Pro, without question,” Smith said in a June 2026 interview with the LSWA. “The blocking calls and pretty much everything go through the center. Todd was a master of that and also the best teammate I ever coached.”
Every protection call on the offensive line flows through the center first. Both quarterbacks the Falcons ran during McClure’s tenure changed. McClure stayed.
His penalty rate, sideline communication, and film work show up nowhere in a traditional box score. Teams like the Broncos now build their offensive line around continuity as an explicit strategy. McClure delivered it for Atlanta over a decade before front offices thought to frame it that way.
The Multi-Sport Foundation
McClure’s path challenges the early-specialization culture that now dominates youth football. He never trained as a center during his childhood. He trained as a multi-sport athlete.
Blanchard believed McClure had Major League potential as a catcher. LSU football coach Gerry DiNardo recruited him after watching him play basketball. DiNardo told him to keep playing it, because the footwork carried over.
Basketball and Baseball Roots
“DiNardo loved him and told him to keep playing basketball because it would help his footwork so much,” former Central basketball coach Gary Duhe said in June 2026 to the LSWA. “Todd was just an all-around athlete.”
That insight disappears when youth programs lock kids into a single position too early. Bodies and coordination need time to catch up.
Former LSU lineman Alan Faneca, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, called McClure the best player he ever lined up beside. Former LSU quarterback Herb Tyler credited him as the anchor who made the offense function.
Those are technical judgments, not tributes. A center who processes the game at that level lifts everyone around him. Protecting a franchise quarterback starts at the snap and radiates outward from there.
Family Legacy and Leadership
McClure’s leadership did not arrive by accident. His grandfather Archie coached at Central. His father Leo served as head men’s basketball coach at Southeastern Louisiana University.
McClure and his brothers Trey and Tanna grew up as ball boys inside that program. They sat in the SLU locker room on game days and watched what real preparation looked like.
The McClure Way
“That’s where I saw what leadership looked like from players and coaches every day,” McClure said in a June 2026 interview with the LSWA. “We saw things up close. That’s where I saw what being a good teammate looked like.”
That formation is what made him the glue guy every offensive line needs. A combine drill does not teach it. A technique session does not replicate it.
Former Falcons lineman Tyson Clabo still calls McClure a brother after more than a decade apart. That bond came from real moments on the field.
McClure calmed a nervous freshman linebacker before his first LSU start. He got in a lineman’s face mid-drive to relay a defensive tell. None of the draft picks Atlanta cycled through the roster trying to replace him lasted.
The NFL consistently undervalues centers. It misreads what makes them elite and passes on them in the NFL draft when they fall short of a size template. Todd McClure’s Hall of Fame induction on June 27 corrects the record on one name.
The deeper lesson is harder to dismiss. Adaptability, multi-sport roots, and leadership built through real coaching are things teams should identify earlier. Pre-snap safety coverages shift faster than ever, and the center who reads all of it penalty-free is worth far more than his draft round suggests.
Todd McClure proved that for 14 seasons in Baton Rouge and Atlanta. It just took 27 years for the official record to say so.
