Player Dossier

2013-2014

West Virginia

Kevin White

WR • 6'3" • Plainfield, NJ, USA

Alpha targetExplosive finisher

Kevin White reads as a alpha target based on recent role and receiving efficiency.

Usage / Role

36%

Rotational offensive role

lowfeatured

Impact Production

100

Top-tier box-score impact for a receiver

lowelite

Reliability

100

Regular contributor with several takeover games

lowhigh

Star Power

90

Blue-chip, NFL-level ceiling

limitedstar

Career Arc

Value trend by season

Best season by Season Value: 2014 Postseason · West Virginia

131414

Snapshot

Career Teams
1
Unique Seasons
2
Program Path
West Virginia
Peak Game
Peak game by takeover score: Baylor

Player Story

Kevin White built his college career from 2013 through 2014 as a wide receiver from Plainfield, NJ wearing No. 11, spending time with West Virginia. The clearest part of Kevin White's career was his receiving role:...

Read the story

NFL Draft

Draft Year
2015
Selection
Round 1 · Pick 7
Overall
No. 7
NFL Team
Chicago Bears

Kevin White, WR. Best season Best season by Season Value: 2014 Postseason · West Virginia. Kevin White reads as a alpha target based on recent role and receiving efficiency.

Stat Footprint

Career production snapshot

Receiving yards
1,954
Receptions
144
Touchdowns
15

Quick Answers

Kevin White quick answers

Latest team and position
West Virginia · WR
Career Receiving Yards
1,954
Tracked sample
2 unique seasons · 3 entries · 23 games
Best season
2014 Postseason · West Virginia
Top game
Baylor
NFL Draft
2015 · Round 1 · Pick 7 · Chicago Bears
Latest roster
No. 11 · Class 2014
2014 Receiving yards rank
1,447 receiving yards · WR 6th (top 1%) · Big 12 2nd (top 2%) · National 6th (top 1%)

Season Ledger

Crawlable season-by-season stats

SeasonTeamGamesRecRec YdsTDOverall
2013 Regular SeasonWest Virginia1035507555.1
2014 PostseasonWest Virginia137129188.5
2014 Regular SeasonWest Virginia131021,318988.5

Related Context

Kevin White played WR for West Virginia. Across 2 tracked seasons, Kevin White recorded 1,954 receiving yards and 15 touchdowns. His top tracked season came in 2014 with West Virginia.

Player insights

Lead takeaway

Best season by value score: 2014 Postseason

West Virginia paired 1,447 primary output with 80.6 efficiency.

Supporting note

2014 Postseason role shape

target-driven usage with 80.6 efficiency.

Supporting note

Career value stayed steady

2014 Regular Season tracked close to the prior stop by season value score.

Supporting note

Peak game by takeover score: Maryland

Win with an explosive receiving profile. It landed in the 100th percentile of the selected season.

Analysis workspace

Season Workbench

Filter the strongest season sample, inspect game-level shape, and then drop into the full log without losing the story of the year.

Season Explorer

Understand the selected season before dropping into the full game log.

2014 Postseason · West Virginia

Games

13

Receiving Yards / G

111.3

Efficiency

80.6

Usage

30.9

Consistency

73.6

Best Game by takeover score

Maryland

Hover a point or expand a game row to keep the active game context visible here.

Active game

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Game-by-Game Trend

Follow how the selected stat changes from one game to the next. Spikes mark standout outings, while dips show quieter weeks.

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Chronological game order.

Game by game trend chart. Texas A&M: 129. Alabama: 143. Towson: 101. Maryland: 216. Oklahoma: 173. Kansas: 132. Texas Tech: 123. Baylor: 132. Oklahoma State: 27. TCU: 28. Texas: 132. Kansas State: 63. Iowa State: 48

Volume vs Efficiency

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.

Low volumeHigh quality

High volumeHigh quality

Low volumeLower quality

High volumeLower quality

Volume on the x-axis, quality on the y-axis.

Volume versus efficiency scatter chart. Texas A&M: 7 by 100. Alabama: 9 by 100. Towson: 10 by 67.3. Maryland: 13 by 100. Oklahoma: 10 by 100. Kansas: 6 by 100. Texas Tech: 13 by 63.1. Baylor: 8 by 100. Oklahoma State: 3 by 60. TCU: 3 by 62.2. Texas: 16 by 55. Kansas State: 7 by 60. Iowa State: 4 by 80

Split Comparison

Compare how this player performed across different situations. "Games" shows how many matchups are included in each split.

Wins111.3 · Games = 7 · -0.0 vs Losses
Losses111.3 · Games = 6 · +0.0 vs Wins

Game Log

Dense stat lines with inline explanations and season-linked highlights.

13 games

Featured metric

Receiving Yards

Top game by takeover score

Maryland

Best efficiency game

100 vs Texas A&M

Result
Mon 12/29vs Texas A&M100 receiving yardsL 37-45712918.418.40149
Sat 11/29@ Iowa StateW 37-244481212018
Fri 11/21vs Kansas StateL 20-2676399118
Sat 11/8@ Texas100 receiving yards · High volumeL 16-33161328.38.30021
Sat 11/1vs TCUL 30-313289.39.30023
Sat 10/25@ Oklahoma StateW 34-1032799119
Sat 10/18vs Baylor100 receiving yards · High volumeW 41-27813216.516.50237
Sat 10/11@ Texas Tech100 receiving yards · High volumeW 37-34131239.59.50126
Sat 10/4vs Kansas100 receiving yardsW 33-1461322222163
Sat 9/20vs Oklahoma100 receiving yards · High volumeL 33-451017317.317.30168
Sat 9/13@ Maryland100 receiving yards · High volumeW 40-371321616.616.60144
Sat 9/6vs Towson100 receiving yards · High volumeW 54-01010110.110.10024
Sat 8/30@ Alabama100 receiving yards · High volumeL 23-33914315.915.90129

Player Story

Kevin White story

Kevin White built his college career from 2013 through 2014 as a wide receiver from Plainfield, NJ wearing No. 11, spending time with West Virginia. The clearest part of Kevin White's career was his receiving role: 144 catches, 1,954 receiving yards, and 15 touchdowns across 23 career games in the available record. His largest box-score season came in 2014 with West Virginia. 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. With 23 career games in the available record, his career has enough shape to show both opportunity and production across West Virginia.

The arc is straightforward: Kevin White moved through the depth chart, found a larger role, and turned that opportunity into production that can be understood through standard football numbers.

Career Arc

Track team changes, role shifts, and season-to-season movement.

  1. 1

    West Virginia

    2013-2014

    Opening stop

Season Value Progression

201320142014
SeasonTeamPrimaryEfficiencyUsageDelta
2013 Regular SeasonWest Virginia50777.617
2014 PostseasonWest Virginia1,44780.630.9940
2014 Regular SeasonWest Virginia1,44780.630.90

Signature Performances

Top Games

#1 Featured game

@ Baylor

Week 6 · L 42-73 · Conference game

Loss with an explosive receiving profile.

130

Receiving Yards

100 takeover

130 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.

#2

@ Maryland

Week 3 · W 40-37

216

Receiving Yards

100 takeover

Win with an explosive receiving profile.

216 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.

#3

vs Oklahoma

Week 4 · L 33-45 · Conference game

173

Receiving Yards

93.4 takeover

Loss with an explosive receiving profile.

173 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.

#4

@ Alabama

Week 1 · L 23-33

143

Receiving Yards

88.7 takeover

Loss with an explosive receiving profile.

143 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.

#5

vs Texas

Week 11 · L 40-47 · Conference game

89

Receiving Yards

87.1 takeover

Loss with an explosive receiving profile.

89 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.

Top Seasons

#1 Season by Season Value

2014 Postseason · West Virginia

1,447 primary output · 80.6 efficiency · 30.9 usage

88.5

#2

2014 Regular Season · West Virginia

88.5

1,447 primary · 80.6 efficiency · 30.9 usage

#3

2013 Regular Season · West Virginia

55.1

507 primary · 77.6 efficiency · 17 usage

Milestones

10

100+ receiving yards

7

8+ catch outings

2

2+ TD games