Usage / Role
4%
Rotational offensive role
Player Dossier
2015-2016Oklahoma State
RB • 5'7" • Temple, TX, USA
Jeff Carr leans balanced backfield option traits and 46.7 efficiency.
Usage / Role
4%
Rotational offensive role
Impact Production
17
Developing production for a back
Reliability
17
Sporadic game-to-game production
Star Power
31
Limited ceiling signals so far
Career Arc
Value trend by season
Best season by Season Value: 2015 Postseason · Oklahoma State
Snapshot
Player Story
Jeff Carr built his college career from 2015 through 2016 as a running back from Temple, TX wearing No. 20, spending time with Oklahoma State. The clearest part of Jeff Carr's career was his backfield work: 225...
Read the storyJeff Carr, RB. Best season Best season by Season Value: 2015 Postseason · Oklahoma State. Jeff Carr leans balanced backfield option traits and 46.7 efficiency.
Stat Footprint
Quick Answers
Season Ledger
| Season | Team | Games | Scrimmage | Rush Yds | Rec Yds | TD | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 Postseason | Oklahoma State | 13 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 45.9 |
| 2015 Regular Season | Oklahoma State | 13 | 166 | 142 | 24 | 3 | 45.9 |
| 2016 Regular Season | Oklahoma State | 6 | 87 | 83 | 4 | 1 | 33.1 |
Related Context
Jeff Carr played RB for Oklahoma State. Across 2 tracked seasons, Jeff Carr recorded 225 rushing yards, 28 receiving yards, and 4 touchdowns. His top tracked season came in 2015 with Oklahoma State.
Lead takeaway
Best season by value score: 2015 Postseason
Oklahoma State paired 166 primary output with 32.5 efficiency.
Supporting note
2016 Regular Season role shape
backfield-heavy usage with 46.7 efficiency.
Supporting note
Career value cooled off
2016 Regular Season fell back from the prior stop by season value score.
Supporting note
Peak game by takeover score: SE Louisiana
Win with 46 yards from scrimmage and efficient touch value. It landed in the 100th percentile of the selected season.
Analysis workspace
Filter the strongest season sample, inspect game-level shape, and then drop into the full log without losing the story of the year.
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Games
6
Scrimmage Yards / G
14.5
Efficiency
46.7
Usage
3.3
Consistency
23.8
Best Game by takeover score
SE Louisiana
Active game
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Follow how the selected stat changes from one game to the next. Spikes mark standout outings, while dips show quieter weeks.
Chronological game order.
Game by game trend chart. SE Louisiana: 46. Pittsburgh: 0. Baylor: 10. Texas: 1. Iowa State: 33. Kansas: -3
Each dot is a game. Farther right means the player carried more of the workload, and higher means they were more efficient with those chances.
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Volume on the x-axis, quality on the y-axis.
Volume versus efficiency scatter chart. SE Louisiana: 7 by 71.1. Baylor: 2 by 52.1. Texas: 1 by 10.4. Iowa State: 1 by 100. Kansas: 2 by 0
Compare how this player performed across different situations. "Games" shows how many matchups are included in each split.
Dense stat lines with inline explanations and season-linked highlights.
6 games
Featured metric
Scrimmage Yards
Top game by takeover score
SE Louisiana
Best efficiency game
100 vs Iowa State
Player Story
Jeff Carr built his college career from 2015 through 2016 as a running back from Temple, TX wearing No. 20, spending time with Oklahoma State. The clearest part of Jeff Carr's career was his backfield work: 225 rushing yards, 48 carries, 2 rushing touchdowns, and 28 receiving yards across 19 career games in the available record. His largest box-score season came in 2015 with Oklahoma State. Those numbers show where he fit, how often the ball or action found him, and how his role developed over time.
The value of the career arc is that it connects production to role, not just a name on a roster. His career also includes 28 receiving yards and 671 return yards, giving the story more than a single-category snapshot. With 19 career games in the available record, his career has enough shape to show both opportunity and production across Oklahoma State.
The arc is straightforward: Jeff Carr moved through the depth chart, found a larger role, and turned that opportunity into production that can be understood through standard football numbers.
Track team changes, role shifts, and season-to-season movement.
Oklahoma State
2015-2016
Opening stop
Season Value Progression
| Season | Team | Primary | Efficiency | Usage | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 Postseason | Oklahoma State | 166 | 32.5 | 6 | — |
| 2015 Regular Season | Oklahoma State | 166 | 32.5 | 6 | 0 |
| 2016 Regular Season | Oklahoma State | 87 | 46.7 | 3.3 | -79 |
#1 Featured game
vs SE Louisiana
Week 1 · W 61-7
Win with 46 yards from scrimmage and efficient touch value.
46
Scrimmage Yards
67.4 takeover
46 scrimmage yards and 10.9 usage.
#2
vs Kansas
Week 8 · W 58-10 · Conference game
51
Scrimmage Yards
63.5 takeover
Win with 51 yards from scrimmage and efficient touch value.
51 scrimmage yards and 16.2 usage.
#3
vs Iowa State
Week 6 · W 38-31 · Conference game
33
Scrimmage Yards
58.9 takeover
Win with 33 yards from scrimmage and efficient touch value.
33 scrimmage yards and 1.7 usage.
#4
vs Central Arkansas
Week 2 · W 32-8
38
Scrimmage Yards
57.7 takeover
Win with 38 yards from scrimmage and efficient touch value.
38 scrimmage yards and 11.7 usage.
#5
@ Texas Tech
Week 9 · W 70-53 · Conference game
15
Scrimmage Yards
39 takeover
Win with 15 yards from scrimmage and efficient touch value.
15 scrimmage yards and 3.3 usage.
#1 Season by Season Value
2015 Postseason · Oklahoma State
166 primary output · 32.5 efficiency · 6 usage
45.9
#2
2015 Regular Season · Oklahoma State
45.9
166 primary · 32.5 efficiency · 6 usage
#3
2016 Regular Season · Oklahoma State
33.1
87 primary · 46.7 efficiency · 3.3 usage
0
100+ rush yards
0
150+ scrimmage yards
0
2+ TD games
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