Oakland Raiders 2010 season McClain was selected by the
Oakland Raiders in the first round with the eighth overall pick in the
2010 NFL draft. He was the highest drafted Alabama Crimson Tide linebacker since
Keith McCants went fourth overall to the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the
1990 NFL draft. McClain signed his contract with the Raiders on July 28, 2010, in time to make the first day of training camp. The contract was estimated to be for $40 million over 5 years. McClain finished his first season with 85 tackles (second on the team), 0.5 sacks, one interception, and 6 passes defended. In week 2 of the 2010 season against the
St. Louis Rams, McClain
body slammed
Danny Amendola, which drew an "unnecessary roughness" call and eventually a $5,000 fine by the NFL. He recorded his first career sack in week 7 against
Kyle Orton of the
Denver Broncos and his first career interception in week 12 against
Chad Henne of the
Miami Dolphins.
2011 season In 2011, he appeared in 15 games (14 starts), posting 99 tackles (second on the team), 77 solo tackles, 5 sacks, 14 passes defended, and one safety.
2012 season During the 2012 NFL season, in which the Raiders' defense struggled and was statistically the worst defense in the league, McClain saw his playing time decrease following a 37–6 rout by the division rival
Denver Broncos. During a week 4 game against Denver, McClain played in 73 snaps, but following the bye, the Raiders made the decision to replace him with 4th round rookie
Miles Burris in their nickel package, resulting in McClain playing only 17 snaps compared to Burris' 55 in the week 6 game against the
Atlanta Falcons. Head coach
Dennis Allen said he has been impressed with Burris' ability to make corrections on the fly, and that the linebacker was not a "repeat offender" when it came to mistakes and a smart football player overall, indicating the coaching staff's belief that McClain was guilty of poor decision-making and too many errors. According to sources within the Raiders, it was reported by NFL.com's Albert Breer and Ian Rapoport that McClain had been kicked out of an official team practice session on November 29 due to an "incident". McClain then took to social media outlet
Facebook and released a series of comments stating that he was ". . .no longer an Oakland Raider!!" and that he was ". . .mentally done." with the team, wishing ". . .to be anywhere besides here". He appeared in 11 games (9 starts), registering 90 tackles, one sack, 3 passes defensed and one forced fumble. After various off-the-field incidents, however, he was waived by the Raiders on April 5, 2013. McClain had been drafted with the hopes that he could help improve the Raiders' run defense, an area where the team had been consistently among the worst in the league. Following a string of poor first round picks by late owner/
GM Al Davis, the selection of McClain was applauded by many analysts. However, throughout his tenure with the Raiders, the team remained poor at defending the run.
Baltimore Ravens McClain signed with the
Baltimore Ravens on April 10, 2013. The contract was reportedly a one-year, $700,000 deal that included no guaranteed money. On May 15, McClain announced his retirement at the age of 23, before even the beginning of the offseason
training camp.
Dallas Cowboys 2014 season On July 1, 2014, after linebacker
Sean Lee was lost for the season, the
Dallas Cowboys acquired McClain along with a seventh-round pick (No. 243:
Laurence Gibson) from the
Baltimore Ravens, in exchange for the Cowboys' sixth-round pick (No. 204:
Darren Waller) in the
2015 NFL draft. McClain became an unquestioned team leader and played a critical role in the resurgence of the Cowboys' defense. Although he was slowed down with groin and knee injuries after Week 9 of the season, the unit raised its level when he was healthy and was setting the tone with his physical style and play-making ability. He finished with 12 starts in 13 games, one sack, five quarterback pressures, nine tackles for loss, two interceptions, five passes defensed, one forced fumble and 81 tackles. He took part in his first two postseason games, but suffered concussions in both contests.
2015 season On April 1, 2015, McClain agreed to a new one-year, $3 million contract with the Cowboys. On July 2, the NFL announced that he would be suspended for the first four games of the
2015 season for violating the league's substance abuse policy. He also had a surprise knee surgery during the offseason, which forced him to miss the entire conditioning program and most of training camp. He played in 11 of 12 games as the starting
middle linebacker, with Lee moving to
weakside linebacker. Although he got off to a slow start in his return from the suspension, he finished with 97 tackles (third on the team), 2 sacks, 3 passes defensed, and returned an interception for a touchdown against the
Miami Dolphins.
2016 season On March 9, 2016, McClain agreed to another one-year deal with the Cowboys for $5 million. On June 30, he was suspended for the second season in a row for violating the NFL substance abuse policy, this time for the first 10 games of the 2016 NFL season. Midway through the season, he then failed another drug test and his suspension was extended indefinitely. On August 2, it was reported that McClain had become addicted to
codeine after consuming the mixture known as
purple drank, and that he is "a long way from ever resuming his NFL career". Jason Cole of
Bleacher Report said McClain's return to the Cowboys is "almost impossible". McClain was conditionally reinstated by the NFL on August 30, 2019. However, he was released by the Cowboys when the reinstatement became official on September 2. McClain was suspended indefinitely again on December 30. On December 13, 2023, after eight years of inactivity, McClain was reinstated by the NFL and declared a free agent. Following the lift of the ban, McClain announced his intention to return to the NFL. ==Career statistics==