Home/NFL
Home/NFL
feature-image

via Imago

feature-image

via Imago

google_news_banner

Brock Purdy is once again benched in 2025. This means backup quarterback Mac Jones is preparing to start Week 5. Originally drafted by the New England Patriots as the 15th overall pick in 2021, Jones’ journey hasn’t been very smooth. Call it a crooked offense. But his time with the Patriots set an early tone for his career. He was traded off to the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2024, before signing a two-year contract with the Niners. 

Watch What’s Trending Now!

Things are finally settling in. Jones has logged a 66.3% completion rate, catching 53-of-80 passes for 563 yards along with four touchdowns and one interception in two games. Week 5 will be his third start of the season; the previous two ended in the San Francisco 49ers’ victory, so there’s hope after all. As he began making headlines, fans are curious to know everything about the quarterback. This article will explore his background, including his ethnicity, religion, and nationality. So, let’s get started.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Where is Mac Jones from, and What is Mac Jones’s Nationality? 

Michael McCorkle Jones, who goes by the name of Mac Jones, was born on September 5, 1998, making him 27 years old. Born to Gordon and Holly Jones, his household was well-equipped with sports, and they were settled in Jacksonville, Florida. This shows Jones is American. 

His father, Gordon Jones, used to play tennis at Florida State University and then at Flagler College. All three of his children pursued sports as a career, but only his daughter, Sarah, walked in his footsteps into Tennis at the College of Charleston. 

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Will Jones pursued soccer at Mercer University, and Mac got into football at The Bolles School in Jacksonville. But you know, before he discovered football as his calling, he spent some time in acting. As a child actor, he appeared in commercials.

article-image

via Imago

There was a point in his life when he thought of pursuing law as a career like his parents. He said previously, “I like to talk so I might do something with sports broadcasting. But if you really want to make some good money I might go into law or maybe try to be a doctor.”

Read Top Stories First From EssentiallySports

Click here and check box next to EssentiallySports

But then he fell in love with gridiron. He developed his skills at his high school under legendary coach Corky Rogers. During his junior year in 2015, Mac helped lead the Bolles team all the way to the state regional final. Then, as a senior in 2016, he took it a step further by leading Bolles to win the Florida 4A state championship. He threw for 1,532 yards and found the end zone 29 times, proving himself as a playmaker that season. 

What is Mac Jones’s ethnicity? 

Jones has a pretty interesting mix going on in his family tree, tracing back to English, Scottish, Norwegian, German, Swiss German roots, with at least a touch of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry. On his father’s side, Mac’s grandfather was likely Wyly King Jones, whose parents, Lynn Prichett Jones and Lavinia King, were born in Georgia. His grandmother’s roots stretch to Minnesota and Norwegian ancestry.

On his mother’s side, Mac’s grandfather, Allan/Alan James McCorkle, was born in Shreveport, Louisiana. Allan’s father was born in New Orleans. His grandmother, Rosemary Hollander, was born in the Panama Canal Zone, connecting Mac to an Austrian and German Jewish heritage that crossed the Atlantic. And his great-grandparents had European origins, Swiss and German. 

Is Mac Jones Christian? 

Faith and religion are the subjects that the Niners quarterback never discussed openly. Nor is there any record of him practicing Christianity. However, Jones believes in god. This year is his fifth year in the league, and he commenced it with an Instagram post with his pictures in a 49ers jersey. 

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

The caption read, “Year 5 All Glory To God.”

He is certainly a believer. And that belief is what’s needed out there on the gridiron, to get the Faithful going behind him. 

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT