Aaron Maybin
Aaron Maybin (born April 6, 1988) is an American former professional football player, visual artist, and community activist based in Baltimore, Maryland.[1] After earning consensus All-American honors as a defensive end at Penn State University, Maybin was selected by the Buffalo Bills as the 11th overall pick in the first round of the 2009 NFL Draft.[2][3] His professional football career spanned four NFL seasons with the Bills, New York Jets, and Cincinnati Bengals—where he recorded six sacks and 26 solo tackles—before brief stints in the Canadian Football League, after which he retired from the sport in 2013.[1][4] Regarded as a draft disappointment due to underwhelming production relative to his high selection, Maybin subsequently pursued careers in contemporary art and education, founding initiatives to integrate creative arts into Baltimore's public schools amid local program cuts.[5][6][7] As an art-activist, he teaches literacy through visual expression and advocates for community empowerment via nonprofit efforts like Project Mayhem, emphasizing practical intervention in urban challenges over performative responses.[2][8]Early life and background
Childhood and family influences
Aaron Maybin was born on April 6, 1988, in Baltimore, Maryland, where he spent his early childhood in the West Baltimore neighborhood.[1] His father, Michael Maybin, worked as an inspector and spokesman for the Baltimore City Fire Department before retiring and founding a Pentecostal church in South Carolina.[9][10] His mother, Constance Williams Maybin, a former Rutgers University lacrosse captain employed in the insurance industry, died in January 1995 from preeclampsia complications during the birth of Maybin's younger sister, Connie, when Maybin was six years old.[9][10] The family subsequently relocated from West Baltimore to Howard County, Maryland.[10] Diagnosed in grade school with borderline attention deficit disorder, Maybin's parents rejected recommendations for Ritalin treatment, instead channeling his high energy into sports such as baseball, football, and wrestling, as well as artistic pursuits like sketching and sculpting.[9][10] His family, which maintained a strong interest in art, provided substantial support for his creative development; they purchased 500-sheet reams of drawing paper and encouraged his endeavors, with Maybin recalling eruptions of drawing activity even during television time, using materials like pencil, paper, or aluminum foil for sculptures.[10][11] Both parents fostered this outlet, and family friend Larry "Poncho" Brown, a local artist, supplied art materials that further nurtured Maybin's talents; by age 11, he had completed a 40-by-50-foot mural in Southwest Baltimore.[10][11] The loss of his mother profoundly affected Maybin, contributing to periods of anger toward his family, faith, and surroundings amid the challenges of his urban upbringing.[12] His father's guidance emphasized resilience and long-term planning, shaping Maybin's approach to balancing athletic and artistic identities from an early age.[12][11]High school athletics and initial art interests
Maybin attended Mount Hebron High School in Ellicott City, Maryland, where he distinguished himself as a defensive end on the football team.[1] He developed into one of Maryland's premier high school players, recording dominant performances that earned him dozens of accolades and recognition as the school's first Division I football prospect in 33 years.[13][14] His pass-rushing ability and overall athleticism drew interest from major programs, culminating in full scholarship offers from universities including Virginia before he committed to Penn State.[13][15] Alongside athletics, Maybin nurtured early interests in visual arts, which originated in elementary school through studies and competitions in Baltimore.[16] By age 11, he had completed his first public mural, a 40-by-50-foot piece commissioned for the city, and continued winning local art contests nearly annually.[17] In middle school, preceding his high school years, he took college-level courses at the Maryland Institute College of Art, fostering skills in painting and mural work.[18] During high school, these pursuits intersected with football as he secured his first paid art commission, demonstrating his ability to balance both disciplines despite external pressures favoring athletics.[18][19]College career
Penn State performance and accolades
Maybin redshirted during the 2006 season at Penn State.[20] As a redshirt freshman in 2007, he appeared in all 13 games, primarily as a rotational defensive end, accumulating 12 tackles (8 solo, 4 assisted), 4.5 tackles for loss, 4.0 sacks, 1 forced fumble, and 1 pass deflection.[20] Maybin's performance exploded in his redshirt sophomore year of 2008, when he started all 13 games and established himself as one of the nation's premier pass rushers. He recorded 49 tackles (30 solo, 19 assisted), a team-high 20.0 tackles for loss, a Big Ten-leading 12.0 sacks, 3 forced fumbles, and 3 pass deflections, contributing significantly to Penn State's 11-2 record and Capital One Bowl victory over LSU.[20][21][22] His disruptive play earned him Consensus All-American honors, first-team All-Big Ten selection, and Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week recognition for a standout performance earlier in the season.[20][23] Maybin was also named a semifinalist for the Maxwell Award, recognizing the outstanding player in college football.[23]Draft preparation and scouting reports
Maybin declared for the 2009 NFL Draft following his redshirt sophomore season at Penn State, forgoing his remaining eligibility after recording career highs of 49 tackles, 20 tackles for loss, and 12 sacks in 2008.[1] His decision was influenced by projections as a top defensive end prospect, though some analysts noted he might benefit from additional college seasoning to add bulk and refine technique.[24] In preparation, Maybin participated fully in the NFL Scouting Combine on February 20–26, 2009, in Indianapolis, where he measured 6 feet 4 inches and 249 pounds.[25] His combine performance included a 40-yard dash time of 4.64 seconds, a 38-inch vertical jump, a 22-repetition bench press, a 124-inch broad jump, and a 7.52-second three-cone drill, highlighting his athleticism despite criticisms of underwhelming straight-line speed relative to expectations for an edge rusher.[25] He emphasized strength training, demonstrating feats like heavy bench presses in pre-draft workouts to counter concerns about his frame's ability to hold up against NFL offensive linemen.[26] At Penn State's pro day on March 11, 2009, Maybin focused on pass-rush drills, showcasing his explosive first step, which scouts viewed as better suited to specialized evaluations than raw combine metrics.[24] Scouting reports praised Maybin's elite burst and pass-rush potential, describing him as an "explosive" athlete with a "tremendous burst off the line" and outstanding speed for his position, particularly effective when attacking the edge.[27] [28] Analysts highlighted his competitiveness, hustle, and production in pursuit, noting he "never quits on a play" and chases ball carriers across the field with high energy.[29] [30] However, concerns centered on his slight build at 249 pounds, limited experience against elite competition, and reliance on one dominant season for tape, with some viewing him as raw and risky for teams needing immediate run defense due to insufficient power against double-teams.[31] [32] Overall, he was projected as a first-round pick for his upside as a situational pass rusher in a 4-3 scheme, though his youth (age 20) and need for technical development tempered enthusiasm for a top-10 selection.[33]Professional football career
2009 NFL Draft selection and expectations
Aaron Maybin, a defensive end from Penn State, was selected by the Buffalo Bills with the 11th overall pick in the first round of the 2009 NFL Draft, held April 25–26 in New York City.[1][34] The Bills, seeking to bolster their pass rush under new head coach Dick Jauron, traded down from the ninth spot before targeting Maybin, whose college production included 12 sacks and 20 tackles for loss in his junior season.[35] Pre-draft projections had placed him in the mid-to-late first-round range, often between picks 13 and 20, reflecting his raw athleticism but unproven consistency against the run. Scouting evaluations highlighted Maybin's elite burst off the line, with reports noting his ability to anticipate snaps and disrupt quarterbacks using speed rather than power, drawing comparisons to a "sensational athlete" capable of taking over games behind the line of scrimmage.[30][36] At 6 feet 4 inches and 249 pounds, he was viewed as versatile for either 4-3 or 3-4 schemes, with potential as an outside linebacker emphasizing edge rushing, though evaluators flagged risks in his lighter build, relative inexperience at age 20, and need for added strength to handle NFL offensive tackles.[27][28] His nickname "Mayhem," earned for disruptive plays at Penn State, fueled optimism that he could emerge as a double-digit sack producer if coached to refine technique and bulk up.[37] The Bills' front office expressed high expectations for immediate impact, positioning Maybin as a cornerstone for their defensive rebuild amid a 7–9 record the prior year, with general manager Russ Brandon emphasizing his "upside" as a twitched-up pass rusher in a league increasingly valuing speed over size.[35] Analysts projected him as a high-floor prospect in pass-oriented offenses but cautioned that his success hinged on scheme fit and development, given college stats skewed toward big plays in a 4-3 alignment rather than consistent run stopping.[31] Overall, the selection carried a boom-or-bust label, with Maybin's 4.54-second 40-yard dash time underscoring athletic traits that justified the top-15 investment despite debates over his readiness.[33]Buffalo Bills tenure and underperformance
Maybin was selected by the Buffalo Bills with the 11th overall pick in the 2009 NFL Draft, projected as an explosive edge rusher to bolster a defense that ranked near the bottom in sacks the prior season with only 24.[38] On August 21, 2009, he signed a five-year, $17.6 million rookie contract, including a $10.5 million signing bonus, reflecting high expectations for immediate impact in a 4-3 defensive scheme under coordinator Perry Fewell.[39] At 6'4" and 249 pounds, Maybin's elite speed (4.89-second 40-yard dash) was touted as a remedy for Buffalo's pass-rush woes, though scouts noted concerns about his lighter frame limiting run-stopping ability.[40] In his rookie 2009 season, Maybin appeared in all 16 games but started none, logging 14 combined tackles and zero sacks while primarily serving in rotational and situational pass-rush roles.[1] Production remained minimal in 2010 under new head coach Chan Gailey and defensive coordinator George Edwards, where he started 15 of 14 games played, accumulating 40 tackles and three sacks—his only notable output with the Bills—but struggling against the run and failing to consistently disrupt quarterbacks.[1]| Year | Games Played | Games Started | Combined Tackles | Sacks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | 16 | 0 | 14 | 0.0 |
| 2010 | 14 | 15 | 40 | 3.0 |
Stints with New York Jets and Cincinnati Bengals
After being waived by the Buffalo Bills on August 15, 2011, Maybin signed with the New York Jets on August 17, 2011, to a one-year league minimum contract as a pass-rush specialist.[44] He was waived again on September 4, 2011, during final roster cuts but was re-signed to the active roster on September 28, 2011, after clearing waivers.[45] In the 2011 season, Maybin appeared in 13 games without starting, recording 11 combined tackles (10 solo, 1 assist), 6.0 sacks, 4 forced fumbles, 3 tackles for loss, and 8 quarterback hits, leading the Jets in sacks and providing situational pass-rushing value under defensive coordinator Mike Pettine.[1] His breakout performance included a career-high 2.0 sacks against his former team, the Bills, on November 27, 2011.[46] As a restricted free agent following the 2011 season, Maybin re-signed with the Jets on April 17, 2012, to a one-year, $1.015 million contract, with expectations for expanded role as a third-down rusher.[47] However, he struggled in 2012, appearing in only 8 games without starting and registering just 1 solo tackle, 0 sacks, 0 forced fumbles, and 1 quarterback hit amid reduced snaps and competition from other edge rushers.[1] The Jets released Maybin on November 13, 2012, citing his lack of production despite added weight to around 250 pounds for better run defense.[48] On January 25, 2013, the Cincinnati Bengals signed Maybin to a reserve/future contract, hoping to revive his career as a depth linebacker and potential pass rusher in their 4-3 scheme.[49] He did not play in any regular season games for the Bengals, as the team released him on August 19, 2013, during training camp cuts after he failed to secure a roster spot amid competition from established players like Michael Johnson and Wallace Gilberry.[50] Maybin recorded no statistics during his brief tenure with Cincinnati.[1]Career statistics and post-career analysis
Maybin appeared in 46 regular-season games over four NFL seasons (2009–2012), starting 2, with the Buffalo Bills (2009–2010), New York Jets (2011–2012), and Cincinnati Bengals (2012).[1] His career totals included 37 combined tackles (26 solo, 11 assisted), 6.0 sacks, 5 forced fumbles, and no interceptions.[51] Production was minimal during his first two seasons with Buffalo, where he recorded 23 tackles and zero sacks across 24 games, including one start, leading to his release in 2011.[52] A situational role with the Jets yielded his lone productive year in 2011 (11 tackles, 6.0 sacks, 4 forced fumbles in 15 games), before declining output and a brief, inactive stint with Cincinnati (3 tackles in 7 games).[53]| Year | Team | Games Played | Starts | Combined Tackles | Sacks | Forced Fumbles |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | BUF | 13 | 0 | 9 | 0.0 | 0 |
| 2010 | BUF | 11 | 1 | 14 | 0.0 | 1 |
| 2011 | NYJ | 15 | 1 | 11 | 6.0 | 4 |
| 2012 | NYJ/CIN | 7 | 0 | 3 | 0.0 | 0 |
| Career | - | 46 | 2 | 37 | 6.0 | 5 |
Transition from football
Decision to leave NFL
After being released by the Cincinnati Bengals on March 12, 2013, following a brief and unproductive stint where he appeared in three games without recording a statistic, Maybin did not pursue further opportunities in the National Football League.[1] His NFL tenure, spanning 48 games from 2009 to 2012 across the Buffalo Bills, New York Jets, and Bengals, yielded only 6.0 sacks and 36 tackles, far below expectations for an 11th overall draft pick who signed a four-year, $12.5 million rookie contract.[1] [37] Maybin's dissatisfaction with professional football stemmed from early experiences that eroded his passion for the sport, particularly during his initial years with the Bills, where he cited subtle coaching comments and a lack of player autonomy as factors that "killed the love I had for the game."[12] He also reflected on broader systemic issues in athlete development, noting in college realizations about conditioning influenced by racial and patriarchal dynamics within football culture.[12] These elements, combined with repeated releases— including from the Bills in August 2011 and the Jets in November 2012—contributed to his shift away from the NFL.[48] [58] Instead of continuing to chase NFL roster spots, Maybin signed with the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League in May 2013, playing in seven games before departing.[37] He formally retired from professional football on May 13, 2014, at age 26, citing the opportunity to dedicate himself fully to his longstanding passion for visual art, which he had balanced with football since childhood but could now pursue without the constraints of the sport's demands.[37] [10] Maybin later described this transition as liberating, allowing him to "lock into the art studio and not give a damn about what anybody had to say."[12] His pro football career had not fulfilled its projected potential, marked by struggles with consistency, run defense, and adapting to NFL schemes, as noted in contemporaneous scouting critiques.[41]Initial challenges and motivations
After his release from the Cincinnati Bengals in 2012 following brief stints with the team, Aaron Maybin opted not to pursue further NFL opportunities as a journeyman player, formally retiring around 2014 after four professional seasons. His primary motivation stemmed from a diminished passion for football, eroded by early experiences with the Buffalo Bills, including subtle racism and organizational pressures that discouraged his community involvement in Baltimore. Maybin articulated that continuing without full commitment felt unethical amid the sport's physical demands, as it would deprive more dedicated players of opportunities.[59][12] Maybin's drive to transition was rooted in pre-existing commitments to art and activism, having founded an arts-based nonprofit in 2009 while still in the league to address budget cuts eliminating school programs in Baltimore. He sought sustained impact on at-risk youth through teaching and creative expression, drawing from his childhood interest in drawing since age three or four and a desire to counter the overemphasis on sports in underserved communities. This shift allowed him to leverage his athletic platform for broader advocacy, including arts education, rather than relying solely on NFL earnings to sporadically aid his hometown.[59][60][12] Initial challenges included financial instability from forgoing potential multimillion-dollar contracts, an identity crisis after football defined his public persona, and difficulties scaling his foundation due to limited personal funding and staffing. As an independent contractor teaching in West Baltimore schools, Maybin faced immersion in a high-crime environment while raising a young family, compounded by the need to prove tangible progress beyond short-term workshops. These hurdles underscored his realization that athlete status alone could not resolve systemic issues like underfunded education, prompting a deeper, hands-on commitment to community rebuilding.[59][19][60]Artistic career
Development as a professional artist
Maybin's interest in art predated his football career, beginning in early childhood when he created drawings and sculptures as young as three or four years old, prior to developing verbal skills.[59] His parents supported this by purchasing large quantities of paper for his practice, and by age 11, he won a city-sponsored competition through the Ponchatrain Art program, earning a commission to paint a 40-by-50-foot mural depicting three hands representing unity in Southwest Baltimore.[61] [10] This early work marked his first public artistic output and highlighted his precocious talent in large-scale painting. During middle school, Maybin enrolled in college-level courses at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), where he further developed techniques in drawing, painting, and sculpture alongside pursuits like African dance.[62] He continued summer classes at MICA into his youth, building foundational skills without pursuing a formal degree, as football dominated his adolescence and professional life.[19] While playing in the NFL from 2009 to 2012, and briefly in Canada until 2014, Maybin maintained artistic involvement through his 2009-founded Project Mayhem foundation, which emphasized arts education, though he prioritized football training and deferred full artistic commitment.[59] [2] Following his NFL departure in 2014, Maybin transitioned to full-time artistry around 2016, leveraging self-taught proficiency and prior coursework to produce contemporary works focused on Baltimore's social conditions.[62] This shift intensified after personal losses, including his mother's death, which deepened his expressive use of art as a therapeutic and activist medium, evolving from childhood hobbies into professional practice without institutional art training beyond MICA's non-degree programs.[17] [60]Notable works, exhibitions, and commercial success
Maybin's early notable work includes a 40-by-50-foot mural commissioned for the city of Baltimore, created at age 11 after winning a youth art competition sponsored by artist Larry "Poncho" Brown.[19][61] His mature pieces, primarily paintings and mixed-media works, explore social issues including urban poverty, crime, and community resilience in Baltimore, often incorporating bold colors and expressive figures to evoke emotional responses.[12][63] Key exhibitions include a solo show at Penn State's Robeson Gallery from February 16 to April 28, 2017, featuring his transition from athletics to visual art.[64] In November 2022, he presented "Diary of a Mad Black Artist," a solo exhibition at Guilford Hall Brewery in Baltimore, marking his first major showing in two years amid pandemic disruptions and displaying recent paintings on themes of personal and societal turmoil.[65][66] Other presentations encompass the live "Smocks & Jocks" art exhibition in 2021 and international gallery and museum displays of his photography, writing, and paintings addressing socially relevant issues.[67][63] His works have also appeared in events like "Lines of Impact: Drawing with Aaron Maybin" at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum on September 5, 2025.[68] Commercially, Maybin has sustained his practice through direct sales, with original paintings priced up to $3,000 depending on size as of 2013, alongside prints starting at $50.[11] He markets pieces via his personal website and has described art as a viable income source post-NFL, enabling full-time dedication without reliance on major auction houses or galleries.[62] While not achieving widespread high-volume sales, his output supports ongoing production and community initiatives, reflecting niche success in regional and activist-oriented markets.[69]Integration of art with social themes
Maybin's artistic practice centers on weaving social critique into visual and literary forms, drawing from his Baltimore upbringing and observations of urban decay. His paintings, often bold and expressive, depict scenes of poverty, gun violence, and systemic neglect in Black communities, using vibrant colors and raw imagery to humanize affected individuals and challenge stereotypes. For instance, works like those in his Diary of a Mad Black Artist series explicitly counter misperceptions of Black life by portraying resilience amid hardship, exhibited in galleries as of 2022.[65][12] Through poetry and photography integrated into his oeuvre, Maybin addresses miseducation and economic disparity, as seen in his 2017 book Art-Activism: The Revolutionary Art, Poetry, & Reflections of Aaron Maybin, which pairs visuals with critiques of policy failures in education and policing. These elements serve not merely as aesthetic choices but as tools for sparking public discourse, with Maybin stating that art breaks down ideological silos to facilitate conversations on racial inequality and community empowerment.[16][18][70] A core theme is the advocacy for arts education as a remedial force against social ills, reflected in curricula he developed for Baltimore schools, where students create art tied to personal and communal narratives of injustice. Exhibitions, such as those at the Baltimore Museum of Art in discussions up to 2023, highlight how his pieces examine intersections of athleticism, Black identity, and civic neglect, positioning art as a proactive agent for change rather than passive commentary.[8][63][71]Activism and community involvement
Founding of key initiatives like Project Mayhem and Operation Heat
In 2009, while still an active NFL player, Aaron Maybin founded Project Mayhem, a nonprofit organization aimed at providing personal and economic support to underprivileged and at-risk youth in Baltimore, with a particular emphasis on supplementing arts education in underfunded schools.[2][6] The initiative emerged from Maybin's observations of educational disparities in his hometown, where he sought to mentor young artists and implement art-based programs to foster creativity and personal development among inner-city children.[63] Through Project Mayhem, Maybin has conducted workshops and developed curricula integrated into Baltimore City schools, prioritizing empirical outcomes like improved literacy and self-expression over broader ideological goals.[72] Building on this foundation, Maybin co-founded Operation Heat in 2018 as a targeted fundraising campaign under Project Mayhem's umbrella, in partnership with Bmore United, to address acute heating failures in Baltimore public schools during winter months.[72][2] The effort was prompted by immediate crises, such as subfreezing classroom temperatures reported at schools like Furman L. Templeton Elementary, where Maybin taught at the time, leading to a GoFundMe drive that initially raised over $40,000 within days to repair HVAC systems and provide emergency warmth.[73] Overall, Operation Heat has collected more than $90,000, enabling repairs and sustained heating solutions for multiple facilities, demonstrating a pragmatic response to verifiable infrastructural neglect rather than systemic overhauls.[63] These initiatives reflect Maybin's focus on direct, measurable interventions in community needs, distinct from politicized advocacy.[10]Advocacy for arts education and Baltimore school issues
Maybin developed the Art Activism Curriculum, a program integrating visual arts with themes of social justice and personal empowerment, which has been implemented in multiple Baltimore City public schools to address cuts in arts programming.[6][2] Through his nonprofit Project Mayhem, founded during his NFL career, he has delivered art workshops and literacy sessions to schools lacking dedicated arts resources, emphasizing creative expression as a tool for student engagement and resilience amid urban challenges.[6][10] As a certified teacher, Maybin has instructed creative arts and literacy classes at Matthew A. Henson Elementary School in Baltimore since at least 2018, directly countering the city's documented underfunding of arts education, where per-pupil spending on such programs lags national averages.[12][60] He publicly critiques the systemic deprioritization of arts in Baltimore's budget-strapped districts, arguing that eliminating these programs exacerbates student disengagement and limits cognitive development, based on his firsthand observations in under-resourced classrooms.[61][63] Beyond curriculum advocacy, Maybin co-founded Operation Heat under Project Mayhem to tackle infrastructural failures in Baltimore schools, raising over $82,000 by 2018 to install or repair heating systems in facilities where students endured unheated classrooms during winter months, a persistent issue tied to deferred maintenance and fiscal constraints.[74] This initiative highlighted broader school conditions, including outdated HVAC systems affecting attendance and health, with data from the era showing dozens of Baltimore schools operating without adequate heat.[12] His efforts underscore a causal link between physical learning environments and educational outcomes, prioritizing direct intervention over policy rhetoric.[10]Broader social and political positions, including NFL critiques
Maybin has critiqued aspects of his NFL experience, particularly his tenure with the Buffalo Bills from 2009 to 2010, where he described the environment as "miserable" and the coaching style as abusive rather than constructive, stating, "I was belittled and talked down to. That's how they treated me. I didn't feel like I was being coached. I felt like I was being abused."[19] He has also addressed broader systemic issues in the league, including racism exemplified by the NFL's race-norming practices in concussion settlements, which adjusted baseline cognitive scores lower for Black players on the assumption of inherently inferior intellectual capacity, as he noted in reference to the scandal: "their IQ may have dropped from concussions, but our baseline... is lower" due to racial factors.[75] Maybin has portrayed NFL players as often expendable "mercenaries," especially those on lower roster tiers facing repeated concussions without adequate long-term support, citing the deterioration and death of a fellow player from football-related injuries as evidence of the sport's human toll.[75] Beyond football, Maybin's positions emphasize community empowerment and structural reforms, particularly in Baltimore, where he advocates reallocating resources to public education and arts programs to combat miseducation, poverty, and violence, arguing that basic needs like functional classrooms—free of lead contamination or extreme temperatures (e.g., 40°F conditions)—must precede learning demands, especially for Black and Brown students.[59] He has called for economic measures such as living wages, drug treatment centers, and development initiatives to reduce the city's annual murder rate exceeding 300, while urging Black churches to prioritize direct community uplift over institutional maintenance.[16] Maybin frames art and activism as tools against racism and oppression, rejecting narrow athletic identities in favor of multifaceted self-expression, and opposing practices like book bans that suppress narratives from marginalized communities.[75][59] He views professional sports as secondary to personal fulfillment and societal impact, prioritizing family, health, and activism over athletic accolades.[16]Criticisms and debates
Evaluation of NFL career as a draft bust
Aaron Maybin was selected by the Buffalo Bills with the 11th overall pick in the 2009 NFL Draft, a high selection predicated on his explosive college production at Penn State, where he recorded 12 sacks and 20 tackles for loss in his senior season.[1][76] Expectations centered on his athleticism as a hybrid defensive end/outside linebacker capable of pass-rushing disruption, but concerns about his raw technique and undersized frame—often playing around 240 pounds—were noted pre-draft.[77][52] In his rookie year of 2009, Maybin appeared in 16 games for the Bills, starting none, and registered 24 tackles (18 solo) with 3.5 sacks and 2 forced fumbles, showing flashes of speed off the edge but struggling against the run due to leverage issues.[1][51] His production dropped sharply in 2010, limited to 10 games with 7 tackles and no sacks, as he was often a healthy inactive or relegated to special teams amid coaching changes and a poor team scheme fit under defensive coordinator George Edwards.[1][78] The Bills waived him in September 2010, marking the end of his tenure there after just 26 games and minimal impact relative to his draft status.[79] Maybin briefly revived his career with the New York Jets in 2011, signing as a free agent and recording 11 tackles, 2 sacks, and 3 forced fumbles in 15 games (3 starts), benefiting from a situational pass-rush role in Rex Ryan's defense.[1][53] However, subsequent stints with the Pittsburgh Steelers (2012: 1 game, no stats) and Cincinnati Bengals (2013: signed but did not play) yielded negligible contributions, leading to his retirement from football after four seasons.[1] Career totals stood at 43 games, 37 tackles, 6 sacks, and 5 forced fumbles—far below the benchmark for a top-15 pick, who typically accumulate double-digit sacks and Pro Bowl consideration early.[51][1] Analyses consistently label Maybin a draft bust due to his inability to translate athletic traits into sustained NFL production, exacerbated by failure to bulk up effectively, refine hand usage, or adapt beyond one-dimensional rushing.[80][54] Pro Football Focus ranked his selection among the Bills' worst first-round choices since 2006, citing overhyped college stats from a non-dominant role and physical limitations that prevented run-stopping viability.[54] Bleacher Report deemed him the franchise's most notable bust, highlighting zero starts in two Bills seasons and a league-wide perception of underachievement despite opportunities.[52] While some attributed partial fault to Bills' coaching instability, the consensus attributes primary responsibility to Maybin's developmental shortcomings, as evidenced by his brief resurgence only in niche roles elsewhere.[79][76]| Year | Team | Games Played | Tackles | Sacks | Forced Fumbles |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | BUF | 16 | 24 | 3.5 | 2 |
| 2010 | BUF | 10 | 7 | 0 | 0 |
| 2011 | NYJ | 15 | 11 | 2.0 | 3 |
| 2012 | PIT | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 2013 | CIN | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Career | - | 43 | 37 | 6.0 | 5 |