Sports
England are losing the wrong man – Brendon McCullum and Rob Key can’t survive while Ben Stokes quits
It was a strangely unsatisfying, unedifying way to end one of the great Test careers.
Ben Stokes’s retirement was announced over loudspeakers at Trent Bridge in the midst of an almighty 11-over spell of bowling, and the attention shifted away from New Zealand’s deserved series victory to England’s captain. Stokes received guards of honour and later opened the batting, flailing for sixes, swinging at the sun. It was like the game had descended into a one-man ego trip, as if Stokes might perform the “Siuuu” at any moment.
If Stokes’s 30 off 20 balls set the tone for England’s fourth-innings chase, then that tone was self-sabotage. England abandoned all sense. It was 6pm in Nottingham and Stokes had ushered in the last days of Rome, headless bloodlust, Test cricket depravity, Harry Brook debauching the ball to fine leg – leading Michael Vaughan to describe his effort as “an absolutely pathetic Test match innings”. In doing so, Brook made a compelling case for not being Stokes’ successor.

That bizarre finale – has a cricketer ever retired between overs before? – will not diminish what Stokes achieved for England. The numbers might not sound stratospheric: a bowling average of 31; a batting average of 34, in line with Ollie Pope. Then again, only one other player, Jacques Kallis, has surpassed both 7,000 Test runs and 250 wickets.
But Stokes didn’t play cricket by numbers. His famous Headingley innings alongside the obdurate Jack Leach in 2019 was a moment of eternal sport and national meaning not because he scored 135 runs but because of how it felt to watch every agonising ball, how it defied all logic. His gift was to make every England fan place their faith in the improbable, the unfathomable, the previously untouchable. Then he went out and proved they were right to believe.
There was the breathtaking 2019 World Cup final, the rapid 258 against South Africa, the outrageous catches. Evidence of cricket beyond reason mounted up, so when Stokes took over the captaincy and said England could chase down 300 runs in the fourth innings of Test matches, and actively chose to field first, possibility rippled through the stands and in the dressing room too. He may not be the perfect captain, but no other player could have carried England on that ride.

He retires as a rare kind of English Test cricket superstar, perhaps the last of his kind, given the format’s shrinking platform. In that summer of 2019, the summer before the world’s walls closed in, Stokes broke new bounds. He was the best cricketer on the planet, perhaps the best athlete on the planet.
His legacy has since been coloured by the odd denouement to Bazball, which shone so brightly at first. McCullum was the name on the jar but Stokes was the secret sauce. It is a period that has taken a mental toll. There is an irony in Stokes falling out of love with his England role when the onus of the past four years has been on unfettered joy and entertainment.
McCullum and ECB director Rob Key have plenty to answer for. Perhaps the only reason to keep them after the Ashes was their close relationship with Stokes, but those relationships had become strained and now it is hard to see what either party brings without their talisman on the field. Is there even an argument that McCullum leaving the scene would make a dramatic Stokes return down the line more likely? Would an SOS call ahead of next summer’s Ashes, for example, be completely out of the question…?
When McCullum first took charge, he injected the new energy that England needed. Stuart Broad talked of feeling free and inspired, Joe Root spoke of seeing cricket in a whole new light. McCullum gave drifting careers fresh purpose. But that was a 12-month job, and he hasn’t shown he can lead England to a higher level. He turns up to interviews in sliders and a backwards cap looking cool and calm when they’re winning, but can seem detached when they’re losing.
Key does not seem to have the answers either. Failing to prepare the team for the actual Ashes was a red flag against the entire hierarchy and the fact that heads didn’t roll following that winter debacle on and off the field remains baffling. Key is passionate about the job but his ability to say words while saying nothing much at all is impressive and troubling in equal measure.
England have stalled. They are fourth in the Test rankings, about to lose a home series to the team ranked fifth, a first home defeat in a series of at least three Tests since 2012. Their free-wheeling approach has lost its way, and Stokes’ departure will leave a void of leadership, of character, of talent, even of intrigue.
Stokes, McCullum and Key came as a trio, and for all Stokes’ flaws, it is hard to escape the feeling England are losing the wrong one.
Sports
Rivers United Sign Goalkeeper Clinton Ezekiel from Bayelsa United
Nigeria Premier Football League side Rivers United have completed the signing of highly-rated goalkeeper Clinton Ezekiel from Bayelsa United ahead of the new season.
The talented shot-stopper joins the Port Harcourt club after an impressive campaign with Bayelsa United, where he established himself as one of the team’s first-choice goalkeepers despite their struggles in the league.
Ezekiel began his football career with Calabar Rovers before securing a move to Bayelsa United for the 2024/25 season. During the 2025/26 NPFL campaign, he made 25 league appearances and kept six clean sheets.
Although Bayelsa United suffered relegation after finishing 19th on the table with 43 points from 38 matches, Ezekiel’s performances stood out throughout the season. The Yenagoa-based club recorded 11 wins, 10 draws and 17 defeats.
His impressive displays attracted interest from several clubs in the NPFL, but Rivers United eventually won the race for his signature.
The arrival of Ezekiel is another important addition for head coach Finidi George, who continues to strengthen his squad ahead of a busy season that will include domestic competitions and the CAF Champions League.
The former Super Eagles coach is building a team capable of competing for major honours, and the signing of the young goalkeeper will increase competition in the goalkeeping department while adding quality and depth to the squad.
After experiencing the disappointment of relegation with Bayelsa United, Ezekiel now has the opportunity to compete at the highest level of Nigerian football and also test himself in continental competition.
Having shown composure, sharp reflexes and consistency during his time at Bayelsa United, the young goalkeeper will be hoping to establish himself at Rivers United and help the Port Harcourt club challenge for the NPFL title and make a strong impact in the CAF Champions League.
Sports
Kidambi Srikanth finishes runner-up at US Open Super 300 after fighting defeat to Su Li-yang | Badminton News
NEW DELHI: India’s Kidambi Srikanth finished runner-up at the US Open Super 300 badminton tournament after losing a hard-fought men’s singles final to Chinese Taipei’s Su Li-yang. The 33-year-old former world No. 1 showed great fighting spirit by recovering after losing the opening game, but eventually went down 15-21, 21-16, 9-21 in a physically demanding contest that lasted just over an hour.Playing his first final of the season, Srikanth started brightly but lost momentum after an unusual error when his racquet crossed the net during a rally. Although he battled back to level the score midway through the opening game, Su raised the intensity after the break, using his speed and deceptive shot-making to take control and secure the first game.The second game was a much tighter affair, with both players matching each other point for point. Srikanth showcased his experience and sharp net play, taking control during the middle stages of the game. Despite a late challenge from Su, the Indian held his nerve, earning multiple game points before sealing the game with a powerful down-the-line smash to force a deciding third game.
Su dominates final game to claim maiden title
The decider, however, belonged to the younger Su, who came out aggressively and never allowed Srikanth to settle. The Chinese Taipei player maintained a relentless pace and built a comfortable lead. Srikanth mixed brilliant winners with unforced errors and was also left frustrated after being denied permission by the chair umpire to change his shirt during the game.Su continued to dominate the rallies and eventually earned 12 championship points. Although Srikanth saved one, Su closed out the match to win the first BWF World Tour title of his career, while Srikanth had to settle for another runner-up finish.
Sports
Sharks sign defenceman Michael Kesselring to three-year deal
The Sharks signed Kesselring to a three-year contract with an annual-average value of $4.5 million on Sunday, sources confirmed to Sportsnet.
San Jose traded the 20th-overall pick in Friday’s NHL Draft to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for Kesselring and the 27th pick.
Buffalo selected forward Ilia Morozov with the 20th pick while the Sharks used No. 27 as part of a package to trade up again and take defenceman Ryan Lin at No. 21.
Kesselring was limited to just 34 regular-season games in 2025-26, recording just two assists. Prior to that, he had a career-best season in 2024-25, playing all 82 games for the Utah Mammoth, potting seven goals and 29 points.
He was acquired by Buffalo alongside Josh Doan in the 2025 off-season in the deal that sent JJ Peterka to Utah.
“Michael has a big frame with solid two-way ability,” said Sharks general manager Mike Grier in a statement on Wednesday. “He is a responsible player in the defensive zone with a well-rounded offensive game, and will be a good upgrade for us patrolling the blue line. We’re happy to have him a part of the organization.”
Sports
South Africa v England: Manie Libbok to start at 10 for Springboks
While coach Rassie Erasmus has named a more conventional set of replacements, with five specialist forwards rather than the seven he has experimented with in the past, former Harlequins centre Andre Esterhuizen has been deployed as a flanker off the bench in the past.
Cheslin Kolbe and Damian Willemse will both win their 50th caps as part of the starting line-up.
“England are a quality outfit, and we are expecting them to give everything they have in this match, so it was important to select a squad with experience combined with a few younger players, who have proved that they have what it takes to perform at this level,” said Erasmus, whose team beat a Barbarians side 80-31 in a warm-up fixture on 20 June.
England’s team announcement is expected towards the end of this week.
South Africa: Willemse; Kolbe, Kriel, De Allende, Arendse; Libbok, Williams; Nche, Marx, T du Toit, Etzebeth, Nortje, Kolisi, P-S du Toit, Wiese
Replacements: Wessels, Steenekamp, Porthen, Van Staden, Hanekom, Reinach, Esterhuizen, Moodie
Sports
World Cup 2026: 215 goals scored in record-breaking group stage

Austria and Algeria went down to the wire in a match full of drama. Austria’s last-minute goal means both teams are through to the next round. Celebrations are also due for the Democratic Republic of Congo, who have qualified for the first time in their history thanks to a 3-1 win against Uzbekistan. Portugal and Colombia stayed level at 0-0. England finished top of group L, putting two past Panama. The round of 32 fixtures are all confirmed. The first knockout game has Canada go up against South Africa in Los Angeles.
Sports
World Cup quiz: How well do you know the group stage in numbers?
The biggest ever group stage at a World Cup is over – and the tournament bracket has been settled all the way to the final.
After 72 games, we now know which of the 48 teams participating have made it to the round of 32.
But how well do you know the numbers that helped – or hindered – teams in getting there?
Test yourself in our quiz below!
After more quizzes? Go to our dedicated Football Quizzes and Sports Quizzes pages and sign up for notifications to get the latest quizzes sent straight to your device.
Sports
Alexander, Philpot shine as Alouettes hold on for win over Redblacks
Davis Alexander didn’t seem like a quarterback who’d just led his team to another victory — and a 3-1 record.
The Montreal Alouettes’ star pivot offered a brutally honest assessment of what had just transpired at Percival Molson Memorial Stadium on Sunday night.
“I’m gonna say it. It was awful,” a visibly frustrated Alexander said on the side of the field post-game. “Way too close of a game, awful for our standard.”
Despite big performances from Alexander and wideout Tyson Philpot, the Alouettes only barely held on to beat the struggling Ottawa Redblacks 37-35, a score line that looked unlikely when favoured Montreal cruised to a 21-6 halftime lead.
The Redblacks posted just 76 yards of net offence in the first half before responding with a pair of quick touchdowns to outscore the Alouettes 12-0 in the third quarter, continuing a woeful early-season trend for Montreal (3-1) after halftime.
“There’s something about that third quarter that we need to clean up,” Philpot said. “It pisses us off when we let teams back in, and we know when we play championship-winning football teams, we’re not going to find a way to win (playing) football like that.”
So, what’s the solution?
“I don’t know. I want to say laser focus through four quarters,” Alexander said. “But I don’t know, can you measure that? Is that actually the problem? That’s just the way I see it. I mean, I’m obviously pretty frustrated and pissed, but we just have to be better.”
Veteran defensive back Wesley Sutton offered a more philosophical explanation after another tough second half for the Alouettes’ defence.
“It’s not just football, it’s life. You get a promotion, you have success, and you just tend to fall back, but you have to continue to fight that,” said Sutton, who had one interception. “We have to fight that temptation to take our foot off the gas and relax.
“It’s just an innate feeling, you have success and you want to relax. You’ve got to fight, we have to be on each other to continue to keep pushing and finish.”
Head coach Jason Maas, meanwhile, wasn’t buying into the negative slant.
“Was it awful? I would never say that. I’m sorry, I don’t believe in that,” he said. “The CFL is hard to win games. Bottom line.
“Can you get upset about not playing to a standard on every play? Sure, you can do that. But a totality of a game and you win a game? You’ve got to be happy about that and proud of that.”
To Maas’ point, it wasn’t all bad.
Alexander completed 22-of-30 passes for 345 yards and two touchdowns for Montreal, improving his record as a CFL starter to 15-1 in the regular season.
His favourite target was Philpot, who hauled in 12 receptions for 198 yards — including 125 in the first half — before 17,138 fans.
In perhaps the play of the night, Alexander went deep up the middle to Snead on a 46-yard heave, helping the Alouettes take a nine-point lead with 56.4 left on a José Maltos Diaz field goal. The clutch play came moments after Alexander limped off a tackle, saying post-game he felt fine.
“It’s the way I’m built, the way I’m wired,” he said. “I’m in the Grey Cup, I’m playing on a torn hamstring, I throw a ball 65 yards to Snead. I mean, it doesn’t matter.”
The Redblacks immediately answered in stunning fashion as Kalil Pimpleton returned the ensuing kickoff 94 yards to make it 37-35 with 42 seconds remaining. But Philpot retrieved Ottawa’s onside kick to run out the clock and secure an Alouettes victory.
Ottawa, meanwhile, is still searching for its first win under head coach and general manager Ryan Dinwiddie (0-3), but had an encouraging second half.
Jake Maier was 27-of-38 passing for 336 yards with three touchdowns and one interception for Ottawa (0-3), while Keelan White caught two touchdowns as the offence and special teams found a rhythm against an Alouettes team that has surrendered 124 points through four games.
“I thought Jake battled, I thought the offence battled, where we kind of found an identity in the second (half) and we got to build off of that,” Dinwiddie said. “But no moral victories. We’re 0-3. That’s where we’re at.
“You can’t point fingers and blame. I told the guys, everybody’s got to have a lens and look in the mirror, including myself and the rest of the coaches.”
Redblacks: Host the Saskatchewan Roughriders on Friday.
Alouettes: Have a bye week, then host the Calgary Stampeders on Saturday, July 11.
Sports
Cricket at LA Olympics: Why two-time T20 World Cup champions West Indies will miss out – explained | Cricket News
New Delhi: Two-time Men’s T20 World Cup champions West Indies will miss cricket’s return to the Olympics in 2028 after the qualification process was revealed on Monday (June 29). Six teams each will play in the men’s and women’s T20 competitions at the Los Angeles Summer Olympics.Besides four-highest ranked eligible National Olympic Committees (NOC) continentally and one quota place for the hosts USA, one more place will be decided by virtue of a Final Olympic Global Qualification Tournament (FOCGQT). Based on the rankings on 31 December 2026, a qualifying tournament will be played featuring the “next eight highest-ranked eligible teams not yet qualified.”If West Indies, who are currently seventh in the ICC T20I rankings, the ICC will organise a West Indies Nations Regional Tournament.It will be played to decide which NOC will compete in the FOCGQT. Unlike the ICC, which recognises the collection of Caribbean islands as the West indies, it is not the case with the IOC (International Olympic Committee).So, IOC recognises Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, British Virgin Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica , St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, and the US Virgin Islands, as separate NOCs. ICC, however, do not.The NOC that wins the FOGQT will secure the final Olympic quota place.Cricket returns to the Olympics after a 126 year period. The last time cricket was played at the Olympics was in Paris 1900.Cricket at LA2028Men: 6 teamsWomen: 6 teamsMen’s event1 team: Host USA qualifies if they remain in top-15 rankings on 31 December 2026.4 teams: Highest-ranked eligible NOCs continentally on December 31 (India, England, Australia, South Africa qualify based on current rankings)1 team: Final Olympic Global Qualification Tournament (FOGQT) of the next eight highest-ranked eligible teams that haven’t already qualified. West Indies, if it meets the rankings criteria, will play a regional tournament of its Caribbean islands.* New Zealand (currently 4th in the rankings) would not qualify automatically because Australia is already Oceania’s highest-ranked team.* Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka would miss out because India occupies Asia’s continental berth. They will likely head to the qualifier.Women’s eventUnlike the men’s event which is decided by the rankings, the women’s will be decided by the ongoing T20 World Cup.4 teams: The automatic places go to the highest-placed eligible NOCs from four different continents at the World Cup.1 team: USA qualify as hosts if they stay within the top-15 rankings. They’re currently 20th.1 team: One final spot comes via the Global Qualification Tournament which will be played between the next eight highest-ranked eligible teams that haven’t qualified.Again, West Indies, if they are in this category, will play a regional tournament to ascertain which NOC qualifies for the Olympics.
Sports
‘I Want To Fight Against Him’ – Rifdean Masdor Eyes Nadaka After Earning Six-Figure Deal At The Inner Circle 19
Rifdean “Magic Boy” Masdor came to The Inner Circle 19 with a point to prove. He left with a knockout, a US$100,000 main roster contract, and a callout that sent a message to the entire atomweight Muay Thai division.
The 23-year-old delivered a fierce first-round stoppage of Iran’s Javad Mozafari on the subscriber-only card, which streamed live at live.onefc.com from Bangkok’s revered Lumpinee Stadium.
The win – his seventh in ONE Championship and his fifth first-round promotional knockout – earned the Sor Sommai and Sor Kitrungroj product the six-figure deal.
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In doing so, he joined Johan “Jojo” Ghazali and Aliff Sor Dechapan in an exclusive club of Malaysians who have been handed that life-changing opportunity on the global stage.
For Rifdean, three years of grinding, sacrificing, and believing had finally produced exactly what he always knew they would.
He said:
“I’ve been waiting for this contract for three years. I’ve got it because I worked hard. Discipline and motivation have always been number one for me.
“Thank you so much to Boss Chatri [Sityodtong] for giving me the contract and the bonus, and thank you to my big boss at Sor Sommai. Thank you to my fans and my family. Thank you, everyone.”
The path to that contract ran through a performance that Rifdean himself did not entirely see coming. Despite already owning four first-round knockouts in ONE heading into the fight, he was not banking on a swift finish.
What followed, though, left little room for doubt. The Malaysian imposed himself from the opening bell and gave his foe no time to breathe. A telling body shot soon dropped Mozafari. The Iranian beat the count – but two left hooks to the body finished the job for good at the 94-second mark.
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“Magic Boy” continued:
“I wasn’t expecting to get the knockout win in the first round because anything can happen in a fight. But, Alhamdulillah, I kept pushing until my opponent went down.”
The finish was the exclamation point on a brilliant campaign that had been building toward this exact moment. Five straight victories, five finishes, and now a main roster contract that opens an entirely new chapter.
What came next made clear that he had no intention of stopping there. He had inserted himself firmly into the atomweight Muay Thai conversation, and his message to the division was equally unambiguous.
Rifdean shared:
“Now that I’ve got the contract, I’m happy. But it’s not over yet. See you in the next fight. I will do my best.”
Rifdean Has Nadaka In His Sights
True to his word, Rifdean Masdor intends to do his best, and he has already identified exactly who he wants to do it against.
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No opponent has been officially confirmed for his main roster debut. But following his knockout of Mozafari, the Sor Sommai and Sor Kitrungroj athlete fixed his gaze firmly on reigning ONE Atomweight Muay Thai World Champion Nadaka.
He continued:
“My next goal is to become a ONE World Champion. So, for my next fight, see you in Japan, Nadaka. I want to fight against him.”
The callout carries genuine conviction – but it is not the words of a fighter getting ahead of himself.
Rifdean has long admired what the Japanese slugger has built throughout his rise to become arguably the finest striker of this generation. Now, with a main roster contract in hand, the young Malaysian believes he belongs in the same conversation.
The 23-year-old concluded:
“I’ll train hard to get the belt. Nadaka is my idol, and I want to fight with my idol. It will be a good fight.”
Sports
Top 100+ EA SPORTS College Football 27 Players from West
The updated game introduces major enhancements, including the Dynasty Blueprint system, new Road to Glory mechanics, Mascot Mashup mode, and expanded on-field gameplay, like refined zone coverage and the jump snap.
The vast majority of players actively opted into the game, but there are a few notable absences in the database ahead of launch.
Here are the ratings of the Top 100+ players from the West, with their school, position, and conference.
Top 100+ EA SPORTS College Football 27 Players from the West
| Overall Rating | Player | Team | Position | Conference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 95 | Dante Moore | Oregon | QB | Big Ten |
| 94 | Matayo Uiagalelei | Oregon | Edge | Big Ten |
| 93 | A’Mauri Washington | Oregon | DT | Big Ten |
| 93 | Iapani Laloulu | Oregon | C | Big Ten |
| 93 | Koi Perich | Oregon | S | Big Ten |
| 92 | Jayden Maiava | USC | QB | Big Ten |
| 92 | LJ Martin | BYU | RB | Big 12 |
| 92 | Teitum Tuioti | Oregon | Edge | Big Ten |
| 91 | Brandon Finney Jr. | Oregon | CB | Big Ten |
| 91 | Bruce Mitchell | BYU | C | Big 12 |
| 91 | Danny Scudero | Colorado | WR | Big 12 |
| 91 | Jontez Williams | USC | CB | Big Ten |
| 90 | Bear Alexander | Oregon | DT | Big Ten |
| 90 | Evan Johnson | BYU | CB | Big 12 |
| 90 | Faletau Satuala | BYU | S | Big 12 |
| 90 | Ian Strong | Cal | WR | ACC |
| 90 | Jamari Johnson | Oregon | TE | Big Ten |
| 90 | Noah Fifita | Arizona | QB | Big 12 |
| 90 | Wayne Knight | UCLA | RB | Big Ten |
| 89 | Devon Dampier | Utah | QB | Big 12 |
| 89 | Dorian Thomas | Cal | TE | ACC |
| 89 | Jai’Den Thomas | UNLV | RB | Mountain West |
| 89 | Jaxton Eck | New Mexico | LB | Mountain West |
| 89 | Jayden Virgin-Morgan | Boise State | Edge | Pac-12 |
| 89 | Simeon Harris | Fresno State | CB | Pac-12 |
| 88 | C.J. Fite | ASU | DT | Big 12 |
| 88 | Dakorien Moore | Oregon | WR | Big Ten |
| 88 | Demond Williams Jr. | Washington | QB | Big Ten |
| 88 | Dylan Riley | Boise State | RB | Pac-12 |
| 88 | Gideon Lampron | Colorado | LB | Big 12 |
| 88 | Iverson Hooks | Oregon | WR | Big Ten |
| 88 | Jay’Vion Cole | Arizona | CB | Big 12 |
| 88 | Matt Rose | Stanford | LB | ACC |
| 88 | Owen Long | ASU | LB | Big 12 |
| 88 | Owen Allen | Air Force | RB | Mountain West |
| 88 | Tao Johnson | UCLA | S | Big Ten |
| 88 | Waymond Jordan | USC | RB | Big Ten |
| 87 | Ashton Stamps | ASU | CB | Big 12 |
| 87 | Boo Carter | Colorado | CB | Big 12 |
| 87 | Chase Hendricks | Cal | WR | ACC |
| 87 | Dezmen Roebuck | Washington | WR | Big Ten |
| 87 | Dylan Labarbera | Nevada | Edge | Mountain West |
| 87 | Elijah Paige | USC | OL | Big Ten |
| 87 | Evan Stewart | Oregon | WR | Big Ten |
| 87 | Isaiah Glasker | BYU | LB | Big 12 |
| 87 | Jacob Manu | Washington | LB | Big Ten |
| 87 | Jide Abasiri | USC | DT | Big Ten |
| 87 | Jordon Davison | Oregon | RB | Big TEn |
| 87 | Keanu Tanuvasa | BYU | DT | Big 12 |
| 87 | King Miller | USC | RB | Big Ten |
| 87 | Lucky Sutton | SDSU | RB | Pac-12 |
| 87 | Maddux Madsen | Boise State | QB | Pac-12 |
| 87 | Nico Iamaleava | UCLA | QB | Big Ten |
| 87 | Omarion Miller | ASU | WR | Big 12 |
| 87 | Reed Harris | ASU | WR | Big 12 |
| 87 | Taye Brown | Arizona | LB | Big 12 |
| 87 | Tyson Ruffins | Cal | OL | ACC |
| 86 | Cade Uluave | BYU | LB | Big 12 |
| 86 | DeAndre Moore Jr. | Colorado | WR | Big 12 |
| 86 | Jeremiah McClellan | Oregon | WR | Big Ten |
| 86 | Roger Carreon | Boise State | OL | Pac-12 |
| 86 | Terrell Anderson | USC | WR | Big Ten |
| 86 | Tony Freeman | WSU | WR | Pac-12 |
| 86 | Wayshawn Parker | Utah | RB | Big 12 |
| 85 | Adrian Wilson | ASU | S | Big 12 |
| 85 | Aiden Sullivan | Oregon State | LB | Pac-12 |
| 85 | Braden Pegan | Utah | WR | Big 12 |
| 85 | Brandon Nicholson | Stanford | CB | ACC |
| 85 | Dave Iuli | Oregon | OL | Big Ten |
| 85 | Dierre Hill Jr. | Oregon | RB | Big Ten |
| 85 | Drew Azzopardi | Washington | OL | Big Ten |
| 85 | Elijah Palmer | Hawai’i | CB | Mountain West |
| 85 | Elinneus Davis | Washington | DT | Big Ten |
| 85 | Jackson Bennee | Utah | S | Big 12 |
| 85 | Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele | Cal | QB | ACC |
| 85 | Jordan Napier | SDSU | WR | Pac-12 |
| 85 | Pofele Ashlock | Hawai’i | WR | Mountain West |
| 85 | Sire Gaines | Boise State | RB | Pac-12 |
| 85 | Tano Letuli | SDSU | LB | Pac-12 |
| 85 | Tre Smith | Arizona | Edge | Big 12 |
| 84 | Alex McLaughlin | Washington | S | Big Ten |
| 84 | Andrew Gentry | BYU | OL | Big 12 |
| 84 | Bear Bachmeier | BYU | QB | Big 12 |
| 84 | Bernock Iya | New Mexico State | S | CUSA |
| 84 | Blake Fletcher | Air Force | LB | Mountain West |
| 84 | Brevin Hamblin | Utah State | S | Pac-12 |
| 84 | Bryson Donelson | Fresno State | RB | Pac-12 |
| 84 | Daniel Harris | Cal | CB | ACC |
| 84 | Decker DeGraaf | Washington | TE | Big Ten |
| 84 | Desman Stephens II | USC | LB | Big Ten |
| 84 | DJ Barksdale | UCLA | CB | Big Ten |
| 84 | Ify Obidegwu | Oregon | CB | Big Ten |
| 84 | JeRico Washington Jr. | Boise State | CB | Pac-12 |
| 84 | Jerry Mixon | Oregon | LB | Big Ten |
| 84 | Joseph Williams | Colorado | WR | Big 12 |
| 84 | Kalan Ellis | SDSU | OL | Pac-12 |
| 84 | Oumar Diomande | CSU | LB | Pac-12 |
| 84 | Randon Fontenette | Colorado | S | Big 12 |
| 84 | Rayshon Luke | Fresno State | RB | Pac-12 |
| 84 | Sahir West | UCLA | Edge | Big Ten |
| 84 | Therrian Alexander III | BYU | CB | Big 12 |
| 84 | Tristan Bounds | Arizona | OL | Big 12 |
| 84 | Zach Cochnauer | Nevada | OL | Mountain West |
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