AUBURN, Ala. – Struggling to make an impact on his football team early in high school, Jalen McLeod wanted to quit, but his older brother, Aubrey, would not let him.
“He’s the one who made me stay with football,” Jalen recalled. “I wasn’t fast enough. I was too skinny. He’s the one who told me to get in the gym.”
Said Aubrey to Jalen: “’Bro, you’re different from everybody. You’ve got a chance. Your head is on straight. You want to get somewhere in life. This is your way out.’”
Aubrey believed Jalen’s athletic prowess could be the avenue to obtain a college education.
“He made sure I stayed in school,” Jalen said. “He made sure I wasn’t like the crowd. He made sure I moved away from the crowd. He did everything for me.”
When Jalen signed with Appalachian State after graduating from high school in Washington D.C., Aubrey continued to look after his younger brother.
“He basically was like my father,” Jalen said. “Anything I needed, he had it for me. He was always there for me. He was there for everybody in my family. That’s the type of person he was.”
Tragically, Aubrey McLeod passed away in April at age 29, the victim of a shooting while taking his sons to football practice in Washington D.C.
Jalen dedicated his final college football season to Aubrey.
“This whole season is for him,” Jalen said. “Everything he poured into me, I’m pouring out on that field. Everything he put into me, it didn’t go to waste.”