
By SuperWest Sports Staff
Sports
Historical NFL 40-Yard Dash Results for Players from West
The 2026 NFL Combine runs from February 26 through March 1, and we’ll have you covered with both up-to-date and historical coverage.
Here’s a look at previous 40-yard dash results for players from schools in the West.
Here are the historical vertical jump marks and bench press marks as well.
The NFL Combine’s 40-yard dash is a sprint designed to evaluate the speed and acceleration of football players by scouts for the Draft.
Traditionally, a player’s recorded time would only impact his prospects at the “skill” positions, but these days a fast time is telling for almost every position on the field.
Of course, the 40 is not an official race in track and field athletics. So why that distance and not a 50 or 100?
According to Michael MacCambridge in America’s Game: The Epic Story of How Pro Football Captured a Nation, the origin of timing football players for 40 yards comes from the average distance of a punt and the time it takes to reach that distance, as determined by Paul Brown in the mid-1940s.
Punts average around 40 yards in distance from the line of scrimmage, and the hangtime (or time of flight) averages approximately 4.5 seconds.
Theoretically, then, if a player can run 40 yards in 4.5 seconds, he will be able to leave the line of scrimmage when a punt is kicked and reach the point where the ball comes down as it arrives.
Below we’ve compiled the 40-yard-dash time for every player from the region who has run it at the NFL Combine since 2000, along with their position, school, and the year they participated, in a searchable, sortable table.
Since the Combine wasn’t held in 2021 due to the pandemic, we’ve included the team Pr0-Day drill results for that year instead.
Washington’s John Ross recorded the fastest 40-yard-dash time among former SuperWest players and owns the all-time NFL Combine mark.
| Player | Time | School | Year | Pos |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| John Ross | 4.22 | Washington | 2017 | WR |
| Javelin Guidry | 4.29 | Utah | 2020 | CB |
| Mike Thomas | 4.30 | Arizona | 2009 | WR |
| Taylor Mays | 4.31 | USC | 2010 | S |
| Orlando Scandrick | 4.32 | Boise St | 2008 | CB |
| Chris McKenzie | 4.32 | ASU | 2005 | CB |
| Jason Hill | 4.32 | WSU | 2007 | WR |
| Brandin Cooks | 4.33 | OSU | 2014 | WR |
| R. Jay Soward | 4.34 | USC | 2000 | WR |
| Josh Barrett | 4.34 | ASU | 2008 | S |
| Jahvid Best | 4.34 | California | 2010 | RB |
| Justin Fargas | 4.35 | USC | 2003 | RB |
| Roc Alexander | 4.35 | Washington | 2004 | CB |
| Karl Paymah | 4.35 | WSU | 2005 | CB |
| DeSean Jackson | 4.35 | California | 2008 | WR |
| LaMichael James | 4.35 | Oregon | 2012 | RB |
| Fabian Moreau | 4.35 | UCLA | 2017 | CB |
| Eric Wright | 4.36 | UNLV | 2007 | CB |
| Cliff Russell | 4.36 | Utah | 2002 | WR |
| Stanley Wilson | 4.36 | Stanford | 2005 | CB |
| Chris Owusu | 4.36 | Stanford | 2012 | WR |
| Ryan Mathews | 4.37 | Fresno St | 2010 | RB |
| Reggie Bush | 4.37 | USC | 2006 | RB |
| Terrence Wheatley | 4.37 | Colorado | 2008 | CB |
| Marcus Trufant | 4.38 | WSU | 2003 | CB |
| Dennis Weathersby | 4.38 | OSU | 2003 | CB |
| Desmond Trufant | 4.38 | Washington | 2013 | CB |
| Christian Gonzalez | 4.38 | Oregon | 2023 | DB |
| Jacob Cowing | 4.38 | Arizona | 2024 | WR |
| Jamar Taylor | 4.39 | Boise St | 2013 | CB |
| Marcus McCauley | 4.39 | Fresno St | 2007 | CB |
| Samie Parker | 4.39 | Oregon | 2004 | WR |
| Maurice Jones-Drew | 4.39 | UCLA | 2006 | RB |
| De’Anthony Thomas | 4.39 | Oregon | 2014 | RB |
| Kevon Seymour | 4.39 | USC | 2016 | CB |
| Isaiah Dunn | 4.39 | OSU | 2021 | DB |
| Anthony Gould | 4.39 | OSU | 2024 | WR |
| Kyle Williams | 4.40 | WSU | 2025 | WR |
| Dontay Moch | 4.40 | Nevada | 2011 | LB |
| Jeff Webb | 4.40 | SDSU | 2006 | WR |
| Todd Watkins | 4.40 | BYU | 2006 | WR |
| Andre Dyson | 4.40 | Utah | 2001 | CB |
| Colin Branch | 4.40 | Stanford | 2003 | S |
| Troy Polamalu | 4.40 | USC | 2003 | S |
| J.J. Arrington | 4.40 | California | 2005 | RB |
| Chris Henry | 4.40 | Arizona | 2007 | RB |
| Wilrey Fontenot | 4.40 | Arizona | 2008 | CB |
| Brandon Hughes | 4.40 | OSU | 2009 | CB |
| Joe McKnight | 4.40 | USC | 2010 | RB |
| Kyle Williams | 4.40 | ASU | 2010 | WR |
| Paul Richardson | 4.40 | Colorado | 2014 | WR |
| Justin Reid | 4.40 | Stanford | 2018 | S |
| Jalen Cropper | 4.40 | Fresno St | 2023 | WR |
| Tory Horton | 4.41 | CSU | 2025 | WR |
| Kitan Crawford | 4.41 | Nevada | 2025 | S |
| Tyler Ervin | 4.41 | SJSU | 2016 | RB |
| DeMarco Sampson | 4.41 | SDSU | 2011 | WR |
| Ian Johnson | 4.41 | Boise St | 2009 | RB |
| Legedu Naanee | 4.41 | Boise St | 2007 | WR |
| Trung Canidate | 4.41 | Arizona | 2000 | RB |
| Steve Smith | 4.41 | Utah | 2001 | WR |
| Brandon Breazell | 4.41 | UCLA | 2008 | WR |
| Pat Lee | 4.41 | Colorado | 2008 | CB |
| Kevin Thomas | 4.41 | USC | 2010 | CB |
| Shareece Wright | 4.41 | USC | 2011 | CB |
| Joe Williams | 4.41 | Utah | 2017 | RB |
| Dane Cruikshank | 4.41 | Arizona | 2018 | S |
| Troy Franklin | 4.41 | Oregon | 2024 | WR |
| Jalen Royals | 4.42 | Utah St | 2025 | WR |
| Robert Turbin | 4.42 | Utah St | 2012 | RB |
| Ronnie Hillman | 4.42 | SDSU | 2012 | RB |
| Curtis Marsh | 4.42 | Utah St | 2011 | CB |
| Kealoha Pilares | 4.42 | Hawaii | 2011 | WR |
| A.J. Jefferson | 4.42 | Fresno St | 2010 | CB |
| Quincy Black | 4.42 | New Mexico | 2007 | LB |
| Richard Marshall | 4.42 | Fresno St | 2006 | CB |
| Kevin Curtis | 4.42 | Utah St | 2003 | WR |
| Luke Staley | 4.42 | BYU | 2002 | RB |
| Kareem Kelly | 4.42 | USC | 2003 | WR |
| Justin Tryon | 4.42 | ASU | 2008 | CB |
| Jimmy Smith | 4.42 | Colorado | 2011 | CB |
| Bill Bentley | 4.42 | Colorado | 2012 | CB |
| Steve Williams | 4.42 | California | 2013 | CB |
| Nelson Agholor | 4.42 | USC | 2015 | WR |
| Trevor Davis | 4.42 | California | 2016 | WR |
| Byron Marshall | 4.42 | Oregon | 2016 | WR |
| Adoree Jackson | 4.42 | USC | 2017 | CB |
| Michael Rector | 4.42 | Stanford | 2017 | WR |
| Isaac Taylor-Stuart | 4.42 | USC | 2022 | CB |
| Avery Williams | 4.43 | Boise St | 2021 | CB |
| John Hightower | 4.43 | Boise St | 2020 | WR |
| Titus Young | 4.43 | Boise St | 2011 | WR |
| Jonathon Amaya | 4.43 | Nevada | 2010 | S |
| Lonyae Miller | 4.43 | Fresno St | 2010 | RB |
| Kyle Wilson | 4.43 | Boise St | 2010 | CB |
| Marko Mitchell | 4.43 | Nevada | 2009 | WR |
| Eddie Berlin | 4.43 | New Mexico | 2001 | WR |
| Dennis Northcutt | 4.43 | Arizona | 2000 | WR |
| Shaun McDonald | 4.43 | ASU | 2003 | WR |
| Ken Crawley | 4.43 | Colorado | 2016 | CB |
| Chidobe Awuzie | 4.43 | Colorado | 2017 | CB |
| Kevin King | 4.43 | Washington | 2017 | CB |
| Khalil Shakir | 4.43 | Boise St | 2022 | WR |
| Elic Ayomanor | 4.44 | Stanford | 2025 | WR |
| Chris Owens | 4.44 | SJSU | 2009 | CB |
| Adam Jennings | 4.44 | Fresno St | 2006 | WR |
| Rashad Bauman | 4.44 | Oregon | 2002 | CB |
| Steve Smith | 4.44 | USC | 2007 | WR |
| Wopamo Osaisai | 4.44 | Stanford | 2009 | CB |
| Mychal Kendricks | 4.44 | California | 2012 | ILB |
| Josh Shaw | 4.44 | USC | 2015 | CB |
| Jaelen Strong | 4.44 | ASU | 2015 | WR |
| Simi Fehoko | 4.44 | Stanford | 2021 | WR |
| Trent McDuffie | 4.44 | Washington | 2022 | CB |
| Jaylin Smith | 4.45 | USC | 2025 | CB |
| Marcus Harris | 4.45 | Cal | 2025 | CB |
| Craig Woodson | 4.45 | Cal | 2025 | S |
| Bailey Gaither | 4.45 | SJSU | 2021 | WR |
| Alex Green | 4.45 | Hawaii | 2011 | RB |
| Kevin Jurovich | 4.45 | SJSU | 2010 | WR |
| Paul Williams | 4.45 | Fresno St | 2007 | WR |
| Marviel Underwood | 4.45 | SDSU | 2005 | S |
| Nnamdi Asomugha | 4.45 | California | 2003 | CB |
| Derek Hagan | 4.45 | ASU | 2006 | WR |
| Antoine Cason | 4.45 | Arizona | 2008 | CB |
| Terrell Thomas | 4.45 | USC | 2008 | CB |
| Chauncey Washington | 4.45 | USC | 2008 | RB |
| Sammie Stroughter | 4.45 | OSU | 2009 | WR |
| Markus Wheaton | 4.45 | OSU | 2013 | WR |
| Eric Rowe | 4.45 | Utah | 2015 | CB |
| Budda Baker | 4.45 | Washington | 2017 | S |
| Ahkello Witherspoon | 4.45 | Colorado | 2017 | CB |
| Paulson Adebo | 4.45 | Stanford | 2021 | CB |
| Daniel Scott | 4.45 | Cal | 2023 | DB |
| Rome Odunze | 4.45 | Washington | 2024 | WR |
| Cole Bishop | 4.45 | Utah | 2024 | DB |
| LaJohntay Wester | 4.46 | Colorado | 2025 | WR |
| Kain Medrano | 4.46 | UCLA | 2025 | LB |
| Jimmy Horn Jr. | 4.46 | Colorado | 2025 | WR |
| Zayne Anderson | 4.46 | BYU | 2021 | LB |
| Rashaad Penny | 4.46 | SDSU | 2018 | RB |
| Doug Martin | 4.46 | Boise St | 2012 | RB |
| Andre Maddox | 4.46 | Boise St | 2005 | S |
| Adam Archuleta | 4.46 | ASU | 2001 | S |
| Freddie Mitchell | 4.46 | UCLA | 2001 | WR |
| Brian Allen | 4.46 | Stanford | 2002 | RB |
| Tank Williams | 4.46 | Stanford | 2002 | S |
| Chris Brown | 4.46 | Colorado | 2003 | RB |
| Craig Bragg | 4.46 | UCLA | 2005 | WR |
| Tab Perry | 4.46 | UCLA | 2005 | WR |
| Marshawn Lynch | 4.46 | California | 2007 | RB |
| Jonathan Stewart | 4.46 | Oregon | 2008 | RB |
| Ronald Johnson | 4.46 | USC | 2011 | WR |
| Marvin Jones | 4.46 | California | 2012 | WR |
| Damarious Randall | 4.46 | ASU | 2015 | S |
| Daniel Lasco | 4.46 | California | 2016 | RB |
| Kalen Ballage | 4.46 | ASU | 2018 | RB |
| Dillon Mitchell | 4.46 | Oregon | 2019 | WR |
| Terrell Burgess | 4.46 | Utah | 2020 | S |
| Nahshon Wright | 4.46 | OSU | 2021 | DB |
| MarShawn Lloyd | 4.46 | USC | 2024 | RB |
| Darren Hall | 4.47 | SDSU | 2021 | CB |
| Ryan Mouton | 4.47 | Hawaii | 2009 | CB |
| Jeremy Childs | 4.47 | Boise St | 2009 | WR |
| Kris Richard | 4.47 | USC | 2002 | CB |
| Will Poole | 4.47 | USC | 2004 | CB |
| Jerome Harrison | 4.47 | WSU | 2006 | RB |
| Sabby Piscitelli | 4.47 | OSU | 2007 | S |
| Keenan Lewis | 4.47 | OSU | 2009 | CB |
| Sean Smith | 4.47 | Utah | 2009 | CB |
| Jaison Williams | 4.47 | Oregon | 2009 | WR |
| Jordan Payton | 4.47 | UCLA | 2016 | WR |
| Sidney Jones | 4.47 | Washington | 2017 | CB |
| Connor Wedington | 4.47 | Stanford | 2021 | WR |
| Mekhi Blackmon | 4.47 | USC | 2023 | DB |
| Devin Culp | 4.47 | Washington | 2024 | TE |
| Devaughn Vele | 4.47 | Utah | 2024 | WR |
| Jalen McMillan | 4.47 | Washington | 2024 | WR |
| Donnel Pumphrey | 4.48 | SDSU | 2017 | RB |
| Robert Herron | 4.48 | Wyoming | 2014 | WR |
| Nevin Lawson | 4.48 | Utah St | 2014 | CB |
| Tim Cornett | 4.48 | UNLV | 2014 | RB |
| Kerwynn Williams | 4.48 | Utah St | 2013 | RB |
| Duke Williams | 4.48 | Nevada | 2013 | S |
| John Wendling | 4.48 | Wyoming | 2007 | S |
| J.R. Redmond | 4.48 | ASU | 2000 | RB |
| Brian Poli-Dixon | 4.48 | UCLA | 2002 | WR |
| Onterrio Smith | 4.48 | Oregon | 2003 | RB |
| Eric Weddle | 4.48 | Utah | 2007 | S |
| Tevin Carter | 4.48 | Utah | 2016 | S |
| Brian Allen | 4.48 | Utah | 2017 | CB |
| Christian McCaffrey | 4.48 | Stanford | 2017 | RB |
| Marquise Blair | 4.48 | Utah | 2019 | S |
| Darnay Holmes | 4.48 | UCLA | 2020 | CB |
| Dezmon Patmon | 4.48 | WSU | 2020 | WR |
| Jevon Holland | 4.48 | Oregon | 2021 | S |
| Deommodore Lenoir | 4.48 | Oregon | 2021 | CB |
| Rachaad White | 4.48 | ASU | 2022 | RB |
| Chase Lucas | 4.48 | ASU | 2022 | CB |
| Chris Steele | 4.48 | USC | 2022 | CB |
| Calen Bullock | 4.48 | USC | 2024 | DB |
| DJ Johnson | 4.49 | Oregon | 2023 | EDGE |
| Andre Chachere | 4.49 | SJSU | 2018 | CB |
| Jeremy McNichols | 4.49 | Boise St | 2017 | RB |
| Marqueston Huff | 4.49 | Wyoming | 2014 | S |
| Travis Brown | 4.49 | New Mexico | 2008 | WR |
| Kendrick Starling | 4.49 | SJSU | 2004 | WR |
| Dexter Wynn | 4.49 | Colorado St | 2004 | CB |
| Ashley Lelie | 4.49 | Hawaii | 2002 | WR |
| Wesly Mallard | 4.49 | Oregon | 2002 | S |
| Sultan McCullough | 4.49 | USC | 2003 | RB |
| Jeremy Bloom | 4.49 | Colorado | 2006 | WR |
| LenDale White | 4.49 | USC | 2006 | RB |
| Jordan Kent | 4.49 | Oregon | 2007 | WR |
| Patrick Chung | 4.49 | Oregon | 2009 | S |
| Shane Vereen | 4.49 | California | 2011 | RB |
| Johnathan Franklin | 4.49 | UCLA | 2013 | RB |
| Deone Bucannon | 4.49 | WSU | 2014 | S |
| Tyler Gaffney | 4.49 | Stanford | 2014 | RB |
| Bishop Sankey | 4.49 | Washington | 2014 | RB |
| Steven Nelson | 4.49 | OSU | 2015 | CB |
| Jordan Miller | 4.49 | Washington | 2019 | CB |
| Joshua Kelley | 4.49 | UCLA | 2020 | RB |
| Davion Taylor | 4.49 | Colorado | 2020 | LB |
| Thomas Graham Jr. | 4.49 | Oregon | 2021 | CB |
| Jordan Addison | 4.49 | USC | 2023 | WR |
| Nohl Williams | 4.50 | Cal | 2025 | CB |
| Toby Gerhart | 4.50 | Stanford | 2010 | RB |
| David Johnson | 4.50 | New Mexico | 2015 | RB |
| Mo Alexander | 4.50 | Utah St | 2014 | S |
| Brandyn Thompson | 4.50 | Boise St | 2011 | CB |
| Glover Quin | 4.50 | New Mexico | 2009 | S |
| Derrick Martin | 4.50 | Wyoming | 2006 | CB |
| Hank Baskett | 4.50 | New Mexico | 2006 | WR |
| Pete Rebstock | 4.50 | Colorado St | 2002 | WR |
| Margin Hooks | 4.50 | BYU | 2001 | WR |
| Windrell Hayes | 4.50 | USC | 2000 | WR |
| Chad Morton | 4.50 | USC | 2000 | RB |
| Keith Smith | 4.50 | Arizona | 2000 | RB |
| Marques Anderson | 4.50 | UCLA | 2002 | S |
| Chris Cash | 4.50 | USC | 2002 | CB |
| Chase Lyman | 4.50 | California | 2005 | WR |
| Jon Alston | 4.50 | Stanford | 2006 | OLB |
| Quinton Ganther | 4.50 | Utah | 2006 | RB |
| Thomas DeCoud | 4.50 | California | 2008 | S |
| Brandon Burton | 4.50 | Utah | 2011 | CB |
| Jermaine Kearse | 4.50 | Washington | 2012 | WR |
| Travis Feeney | 4.50 | Washington | 2016 | OLB |
| Jordan Lasley | 4.50 | UCLA | 2018 | WR |
| Isaiah Oliver | 4.50 | Colorado | 2018 | CB |
| Justin Hollins | 4.50 | Oregon | 2019 | EDGE |
| Brandon Aiyuk | 4.50 | ASU | 2020 | WR |
| Jaylon Johnson | 4.50 | Utah | 2020 | CB |
| Khyree Jackson | 4.50 | Oregon | 2024 | DB |
| Brenden Rice | 4.50 | USC | 2024 | WR |
| Tez Johnson | 4.51 | Oregon | 2025 | WR |
| Bisi Johnson | 4.51 | Colorado St | 2019 | WR |
| Michael Gallup | 4.51 | Colorado St | 2018 | WR |
| Will Davis | 4.51 | Utah St | 2013 | CB |
| Jeron Johnson | 4.51 | Boise St | 2011 | S |
| Marcus Smith | 4.51 | New Mexico | 2008 | WR |
| Gerald Alexander | 4.51 | Boise St | 2007 | S |
| Wendell Mathis | 4.51 | Fresno St | 2006 | RB |
| Nate Burleson | 4.51 | Nevada | 2003 | WR |
| Matt Farmer | 4.51 | Air Force | 2000 | WR |
| Damen Wheeler | 4.51 | Colorado | 2000 | CB |
| Robert Thomas | 4.51 | UCLA | 2002 | OLB |
| Jason Shivers | 4.51 | ASU | 2004 | S |
| Jake Locker | 4.51 | Washington | 2011 | QB |
| Omar Bolden | 4.51 | ASU | 2012 | CB |
| Coby Fleener | 4.51 | Stanford | 2012 | TE |
| Marquess Wilson | 4.51 | WSU | 2013 | WR |
| Robert Woods | 4.51 | USC | 2013 | WR |
| Shaquelle Evans | 4.51 | UCLA | 2014 | WR |
| Josh Huff | 4.51 | Oregon | 2014 | WR |
| Keith McGill | 4.51 | Utah | 2014 | CB |
| Rashaad Reynolds | 4.51 | OSU | 2014 | CB |
| Alex Carter | 4.51 | Stanford | 2015 | CB |
| Kaelin Clay | 4.51 | Utah | 2015 | WR |
| Ugo Amadi | 4.51 | Oregon | 2019 | S |
| Amon-Ra St. Brown | 4.51 | USC | 2021 | WR |
| Jack Jones | 4.51 | ASU | 2022 | CB |
| Jaylen Watson | 4.51 | WSU | 2022 | CB |
| Clark Phillips III | 4.51 | Utah | 2023 | DB |
| Dominique Hampton | 4.51 | Washington | 2024 | DB |
| Michael Wiley | 4.51 | Arizona | 2024 | RB |
| D.J. Harper | 4.52 | Boise St | 2013 | RB |
| DeAndre Wright | 4.52 | New Mexico | 2009 | CB |
| Drisan James | 4.52 | Boise St | 2007 | WR |
| Donnie O’Neal | 4.52 | ASU | 2002 | WR |
| Ricky Manning | 4.52 | UCLA | 2003 | CB |
| Devard Darling | 4.52 | WSU | 2004 | WR |
| O.J. Atogwe | 4.52 | Stanford | 2005 | S |
| Demetrius Williams | 4.52 | Oregon | 2006 | WR |
| Chris McGaha | 4.52 | ASU | 2010 | WR |
| Alterraun Verner | 4.52 | UCLA | 2010 | CB |
| Damian Williams | 4.52 | USC | 2010 | WR |
| Jalil Brown | 4.52 | Colorado | 2011 | CB |
| Chris Conte | 4.52 | California | 2011 | S |
| Chris Polk | 4.52 | Washington | 2012 | RB |
| Trevin Wade | 4.52 | Arizona | 2012 | CB |
| Kenjon Barner | 4.52 | Oregon | 2013 | RB |
| Marqise Lee | 4.52 | USC | 2014 | WR |
| Ifo Ekpre-Olomu | 4.52 | Oregon | 2015 | CB |
| Marcus Mariota | 4.52 | Oregon | 2015 | QB |
| Michael Pittman | 4.52 | USC | 2020 | WR |
| Kyler Gordon | 4.52 | Washington | 2022 | CB |
| Kyu Blu Kelly | 4.52 | Stanford | 2023 | DB |
| Tyreque Jones | 4.52 | BSU | 2023 | DB |
| George Holani | 4.52 | Boise St | 2024 | RB |
| Ja’Lynn Polk | 4.52 | Washington | 2024 | WR |
| Khalid Wooten | 4.53 | Nevada | 2013 | S |
| Colin Kaepernick | 4.53 | Nevada | 2011 | QB |
| Greg Salas | 4.53 | Hawaii | 2011 | WR |
| Austin Collie | 4.53 | BYU | 2009 | WR |
| Ryan Grice-Mullen | 4.53 | Hawaii | 2008 | WR |
| Ben Kelly | 4.53 | Colorado | 2000 | CB |
| Maurice Morris | 4.53 | Oregon | 2002 | RB |
| Raonall Smith | 4.53 | WSU | 2002 | OLB |
| Paul Arnold | 4.53 | Washington | 2003 | WR |
| Donald Strickland | 4.53 | Colorado | 2003 | CB |
| D.J. Hackett | 4.53 | Colorado | 2004 | WR |
| Darnell Bing | 4.53 | USC | 2006 | S |
| Walter Thurmond | 4.53 | Oregon | 2010 | CB |
| Allen Bradford | 4.53 | USC | 2011 | RB |
| Jordan Cameron | 4.53 | USC | 2011 | TE |
| Ryan Whalen | 4.53 | Stanford | 2011 | WR |
| Eddie Pleasant | 4.53 | Oregon | 2012 | S |
| Nickell Robey | 4.53 | USC | 2013 | CB |
| Javorius Allen | 4.53 | USC | 2015 | RB |
| Marcus Peters | 4.53 | Washington | 2015 | CB |
| Tre Madden | 4.53 | USC | 2016 | RB |
| Chad Hansen | 4.53 | California | 2017 | WR |
| N’Keal Harry | 4.53 | ASU | 2019 | WR |
| Iman Lewis-Marshall | 4.53 | USC | 2019 | CB |
| Keaontay Ingram | 4.53 | USC | 2022 | RB |
| Zach Charbonnet | 4.53 | UCLA | 2023 | RB |
| Woody Marks | 4.54 | USC | 2025 | RB |
| Daiyan Henley | 4.54 | WSU | 2023 | LB |
| Dax Milne | 4.54 | BYU | 2021 | WR |
| Brian Hill | 4.54 | Wyoming | 2017 | RB |
| Damontae Kazee | 4.54 | SDSU | 2017 | CB |
| Leaon McFadden | 4.54 | SDSU | 2013 | CB |
| Rishard Matthews | 4.54 | Nevada | 2012 | WR |
| Mike Ball | 4.54 | Nevada | 2012 | RB |
| Virgil Green | 4.54 | Nevada | 2011 | TE |
| Dwight Lowery | 4.54 | SJSU | 2008 | CB |
| James Jones | 4.54 | SJSU | 2007 | WR |
| Antwoine Sanders | 4.54 | Utah | 2003 | S |
| Arnold Parker | 4.54 | Utah | 2004 | S |
| Andrae Thurman | 4.54 | Arizona | 2004 | WR |
| Matt Ware | 4.54 | UCLA | 2004 | S |
| Chris Horton | 4.54 | UCLA | 2008 | S |
| Keith Rivers | 4.54 | USC | 2008 | OLB |
| Anthony Kimble | 4.54 | Stanford | 2009 | RB |
| Richard Sherman | 4.54 | Stanford | 2011 | CB |
| Gerell Robinson | 4.54 | ASU | 2012 | WR |
| Keelan Johnson | 4.54 | ASU | 2013 | S |
| Dion Jordan | 4.54 | Oregon | 2013 | OLB |
| Jordan Poyer | 4.54 | OSU | 2013 | CB |
| Dres Anderson | 4.54 | Utah | 2015 | WR |
| Paul Perkins | 4.54 | UCLA | 2016 | RB |
| Victor Bolden Jr. | 4.54 | OSU | 2017 | WR |
| JuJu Smith-Schuster | 4.54 | USC | 2017 | WR |
| Royce Freeman | 4.54 | Oregon | 2018 | RB |
| Keith Taylor | 4.54 | Washington | 2021 | DB |
| Elijah Higgins | 4.54 | Stanford | 2023 | WR |
| Chau Smith-Wade | 4.54 | WSU | 2024 | DB |
| Jordan James | 4.55 | Oregon | 2025 | RB |
| Cedrick Wilson | 4.55 | Boise St | 2018 | WR |
| Deandre Elliott | 4.55 | Colorado St | 2016 | CB |
| Cecil Sapp | 4.55 | Colorado St | 2003 | RB |
| Troy Walters | 4.55 | Stanford | 2000 | WR |
| Hakim Akbar | 4.55 | Washington | 2001 | S |
| Patrick Dyson | 4.55 | Utah | 2001 | CB |
| Jermaine Chatman | 4.55 | Arizona | 2002 | CB |
| Marquis Cooper | 4.55 | Washington | 2004 | OLB |
| Steven Jackson | 4.55 | OSU | 2004 | RB |
| Brian Paysinger | 4.55 | Oregon | 2008 | WR |
| Nick Perry | 4.55 | USC | 2012 | DE |
| Troy Hill | 4.55 | Oregon | 2015 | CB |
| Ty Montgomery | 4.55 | Stanford | 2015 | WR |
| Darrell Daniels | 4.55 | Washington | 2017 | TE |
| Shalom Luani | 4.55 | WSU | 2017 | S |
| Byron Murphy | 4.55 | Washington | 2019 | CB |
| Brady Breeze | 4.55 | Oregon | 2021 | S |
| Demetric Felton | 4.55 | UCLA | 2021 | RB |
| Alex Austin | 4.55 | Oregon St | 2023 | DB |
| Kedon Slovis | 4.55 | BYU | 2024 | QB |
| Bucky Irving | 4.55 | Oregon | 2024 | RB |
| Andrew Wingard | 4.56 | Wyoming | 2019 | S |
| Mark Nzeocha | 4.56 | Wyoming | 2015 | LB |
| Adam Muema | 4.56 | SDSU | 2014 | RB |
| Davante Adams | 4.56 | Fresno St | 2014 | WR |
| Mike Edwards | 4.56 | Hawaii | 2013 | CB |
| Ziggy Ansah | 4.56 | BYU | 2013 | DE |
| Austin Pettis | 4.56 | Boise St | 2011 | WR |
| Jared Zabransky | 4.56 | Boise St | 2007 | QB |
| Shaunard Harts | 4.56 | Boise St | 2001 | S |
| Trent Gamble | 4.56 | Wyoming | 2000 | S |
| Marcus Williams | 4.56 | WSU | 2001 | WR |
| Coy Wire | 4.56 | Stanford | 2002 | S |
| Keenan Howry | 4.56 | Oregon | 2003 | WR |
| Reggie Williams | 4.56 | Washington | 2004 | WR |
| Mike Williams | 4.56 | USC | 2005 | WR |
| Dante Hughes | 4.56 | California | 2007 | CB |
| David Reed | 4.56 | Utah | 2010 | WR |
| T.J. Ward | 4.56 | Oregon | 2010 | S |
| Jeff Maehl | 4.56 | Oregon | 2011 | WR |
| Devontae Booker | 4.56 | Utah | 2016 | RB |
| Myles Jack | 4.56 | UCLA | 2016 | OLB |
| Gabe Marks | 4.56 | WSU | 2017 | WR |
| Marcus Williams | 4.56 | Utah | 2017 | S |
| Steven Mitchell | 4.56 | USC | 2018 | WR |
| Ben Burr-Kirven | 4.56 | Washington | 2019 | LB |
| Caleb Wilson | 4.56 | UCLA | 2019 | TE |
| Lorenzo Burns | 4.56 | Arizona | 2021 | CB |
| Frank Darby | 4.56 | ASU | 2021 | WR |
| Dorian Thompson-Robinson | 4.56 | UCLA | 2023 | QB |
| Edefuan Ulofoshio | 4.56 | Washington | 2024 | LB |
| Nick Nash | 4.57 | SJSU | 2025 | WR |
| Traeshon Holden | 4.57 | Oregon | 2025 | WR |
| Devante Davis | 4.57 | UNLV | 2015 | WR |
| Jay Ajayi | 4.57 | Boise St | 2015 | RB |
| David Anderson | 4.57 | Colorado St | 2006 | WR |
| Daryl Towns | 4.57 | Nevada | 2004 | LB |
| Maurice Mann | 4.57 | Nevada | 2004 | WR |
| Chad Johnson | 4.57 | OSU | 2001 | WR |
| DeShaun Foster | 4.57 | UCLA | 2002 | RB |
| Ben Emanuel | 4.57 | UCLA | 2005 | S |
| Lavelle Hawkins | 4.57 | California | 2008 | WR |
| David Buehler | 4.57 | USC | 2009 | K |
| Jeremiah Johnson | 4.57 | Oregon | 2009 | RB |
| Ed Reynolds | 4.57 | Stanford | 2014 | S |
| D.J. Foster | 4.57 | ASU | 2016 | WR |
| Peter Kalambayi | 4.57 | Stanford | 2018 | EDGE |
| Eno Benjamin | 4.57 | ASU | 2020 | RB |
| Jermar Jefferson | 4.57 | OSU | 2021 | RB |
| Mykael Wright | 4.57 | Oregon | 2022 | CB |
| Mohamed Kamara | 4.57 | CSU | 2024 | DL |
| Carson Bruener | 4.58 | Washington | 2025 | LB |
| Tre Walker | 4.58 | SJSU | 2021 | WR |
| Evan Tyler | 4.58 | Boise St | 2021 | S |
| Cole McDonald | 4.58 | Hawaii | 2020 | QB |
| Hunter Sharp | 4.58 | Utah St | 2016 | WR |
| Isaiah Burse | 4.58 | Fresno St | 2014 | WR |
| Chris Carter | 4.58 | Fresno St | 2011 | LB |
| Rob Myers | 4.58 | Utah St | 2009 | FB |
| Jerard Rabb | 4.58 | Boise St | 2007 | WR |
| Bernard Berrian | 4.58 | Fresno St | 2004 | WR |
| Danny Farmer | 4.58 | UCLA | 2000 | WR |
| Omare Lowe | 4.58 | Washington | 2002 | CB |
| Adimchinobi Echemandu | 4.58 | California | 2004 | RB |
| Aric Williams | 4.58 | OSU | 2005 | CB |
| Brandon Harrison | 4.58 | Stanford | 2007 | S |
| Dennis Dixon | 4.58 | Oregon | 2008 | QB |
| Clay Matthews | 4.58 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Troy Nolan | 4.58 | ASU | 2009 | S |
| Josh Pinkard | 4.58 | USC | 2010 | S |
| Rahim Moore | 4.58 | UCLA | 2011 | S |
| Keenan Allen | 4.58 | California | 2013 | WR |
| Su’A Cravens | 4.58 | USC | 2016 | OLB |
| Ryan Nall | 4.58 | OSU | 2018 | RB |
| Myles Gaskin | 4.58 | Washington | 2019 | RB |
| Bobby Okereke | 4.58 | Stanford | 2019 | LB |
| James Williams | 4.58 | WSU | 2019 | RB |
| Juwan Johnson | 4.58 | Oregon | 2020 | WR |
| Laviska Shenault Jr. | 4.58 | Colorado | 2020 | WR |
| Camryn Bynum | 4.58 | California | 2021 | CB |
| Hamilcar Rashed | 4.58 | OSU | 2021 | OLB |
| Kayvon Thibodeaux | 4.58 | Oregon | 2022 | EDGE |
| Kyle Philips | 4.58 | UCLA | 2022 | WR |
| Michael Wilson | 4.58 | Stanford | 2023 | WR |
| Kitan Oladapo | 4.58 | OSU | 2024 | DB |
| Jamaal Williams | 4.59 | BYU | 2017 | RB |
| Bene’ Benwikere | 4.59 | SJSU | 2014 | CB |
| Jamel Hamler | 4.59 | Fresno St | 2011 | WR |
| Chastin West | 4.59 | Fresno St | 2010 | WR |
| David Richmond | 4.59 | SJSU | 2009 | WR |
| Jason Rivers | 4.59 | Hawaii | 2008 | WR |
| Brady Poppinga | 4.59 | BYU | 2005 | DE |
| Brian Urlacher | 4.59 | New Mexico | 2000 | LB |
| Nijrell Eason | 4.59 | ASU | 2001 | CB |
| Lamont Thompson | 4.59 | WSU | 2002 | S |
| Marcell Allmond | 4.59 | USC | 2004 | CB |
| Mike Hass | 4.59 | OSU | 2006 | WR |
| Jamar Williams | 4.59 | ASU | 2006 | OLB |
| Syndric Steptoe | 4.59 | Arizona | 2007 | WR |
| Dennis Keyes | 4.59 | UCLA | 2008 | S |
| Craig Stevens | 4.59 | California | 2008 | TE |
| Brandon Gibson | 4.59 | WSU | 2009 | WR |
| Patrick Turner | 4.59 | USC | 2009 | WR |
| Ed Dickson | 4.59 | Oregon | 2010 | TE |
| Jacquizz Rodgers | 4.59 | OSU | 2011 | RB |
| Andrew Luck | 4.59 | Stanford | 2012 | QB |
| T.J. McDonald | 4.59 | USC | 2013 | S |
| Stephen Anderson | 4.59 | California | 2016 | TE |
| Takkarist McKinley | 4.59 | UCLA | 2017 | OLB |
| Aaron Fuller | 4.59 | Washington | 2020 | WR |
| Quentin Lake | 4.59 | UCLA | 2022 | S |
| Teddye Buchanan | 4.60 | Cal | 2025 | LB |
| Kenny Young | 4.60 | UCLA | 2018 | ILB |
| James-Michael Johnson | 4.60 | Nevada | 2012 | LB |
| George Iloka | 4.60 | Boise St | 2012 | S |
| Seyi Ajirotutu | 4.60 | Fresno St | 2010 | WR |
| Adam Seward | 4.60 | UNLV | 2005 | LB |
| Colby Bockwoldt | 4.60 | BYU | 2004 | LB |
| Doug Jolley | 4.60 | BYU | 2002 | TE |
| Deltha O’Neal | 4.60 | California | 2000 | CB |
| Michael Lewis | 4.60 | Colorado | 2002 | S |
| Keary Colbert | 4.60 | USC | 2004 | WR |
| Keith Lewis | 4.60 | Oregon | 2004 | S |
| Mike Bell | 4.60 | Arizona | 2006 | RB |
| Zach Catanese | 4.60 | ASU | 2007 | S |
| Dashon Goldson | 4.60 | Washington | 2007 | S |
| Isaiah Stanback | 4.60 | Washington | 2007 | QB |
| C.J. Anderson | 4.60 | California | 2013 | RB |
| Tedric Thompson | 4.60 | Colorado | 2017 | S |
| Alijah Holder | 4.60 | Stanford | 2019 | CB |
| Curtis Robinson | 4.60 | Stanford | 2021 | LB |
| Tyler Allgeier | 4.60 | BYU | 2022 | RB |
| Ronnie Rivers | 4.60 | Fresno St | 2022 | RB |
| Johnny Johnson III | 4.60 | Oregon | 2022 | WR |
| Evan Williams | 4.60 | Oregon | 2024 | DB |
| Ricky White III | 4.61 | UNLV | 2025 | WR |
| Derron Smith | 4.61 | Fresno St | 2015 | S |
| Josh Mauga | 4.61 | Nevada | 2009 | LB |
| Kevin O’Connell | 4.61 | SDSU | 2008 | QB |
| Kyle Boller | 4.61 | California | 2003 | QB |
| Kerry Carter | 4.61 | Stanford | 2003 | RB |
| Teyo Johnson | 4.61 | Stanford | 2003 | WR |
| Sean Tufts | 4.61 | Colorado | 2004 | OLB |
| Darrell Brooks | 4.61 | Arizona | 2006 | S |
| Eric Frampton | 4.61 | WSU | 2007 | S |
| Ryan Torain | 4.61 | ASU | 2008 | RB |
| Cameron Morrah | 4.61 | California | 2009 | TE |
| Donald Butler | 4.61 | Washington | 2010 | ILB |
| Cliff Harris | 4.61 | Oregon | 2012 | CB |
| Delano Howell | 4.61 | Stanford | 2012 | S |
| James Rodgers | 4.61 | OSU | 2012 | WR |
| Colt Lyerla | 4.61 | Oregon | 2014 | TE |
| Eric Kendricks | 4.61 | UCLA | 2015 | ILB |
| Isaiah Hodgins | 4.61 | OSU | 2020 | WR |
| J.J. Taylor | 4.61 | Arizona | 2020 | RB |
| Luke Musgrave | 4.61 | Oregon St | 2023 | TE |
| Tanner McLachlan | 4.61 | Arizona | 2024 | TE |
| Jalen Robinette | 4.62 | Air Force | 2017 | WR |
| Shea McClellin | 4.62 | Boise St | 2012 | LB |
| Chad Owens | 4.62 | Hawaii | 2005 | QB |
| Abraham Eimimian | 4.62 | Hawaii | 2005 | CB |
| Jeff Shoate | 4.62 | SDSU | 2004 | CB |
| Larry Ned | 4.62 | SDSU | 2002 | RB |
| Rashidi Barnes | 4.62 | Colorado | 2000 | S |
| Markus Steele | 4.62 | USC | 2001 | OLB |
| James Allen | 4.62 | OSU | 2002 | OLB |
| Steve Smith | 4.62 | Oregon | 2002 | S |
| Steve Savoy | 4.62 | Utah | 2005 | WR |
| John Walker | 4.62 | USC | 2006 | CB |
| Dwayne Jarrett | 4.62 | USC | 2007 | WR |
| Michael Johnson | 4.62 | Arizona | 2007 | S |
| Justin Forsett | 4.62 | California | 2008 | RB |
| Alexis Serna | 4.62 | OSU | 2008 | K |
| Dexter Davis | 4.62 | ASU | 2010 | OLB |
| Stafon Johnson | 4.62 | USC | 2010 | RB |
| Aaron Hester | 4.62 | UCLA | 2013 | CB |
| Owamagbe Odighizuwa | 4.62 | UCLA | 2015 | DE |
| Devon Cajuste | 4.62 | Stanford | 2016 | WR |
| Treston DeCoud | 4.62 | OSU | 2017 | CB |
| Salvon Ahmed | 4.62 | Washington | 2020 | RB |
| Myles Bryant | 4.62 | Washington | 2020 | CB |
| Casey Toohill | 4.62 | Stanford | 2020 | LB |
| Gary Brightwell | 4.62 | Arizona | 2021 | RB |
| Elijah Molden | 4.62 | Washington | 2021 | DB |
| Tyler Vaughns | 4.62 | USC | 2021 | WR |
| Sione Vaki | 4.62 | Utah | 2024 | DB |
| Jeffrey Bassa | 4.63 | Oregon | 2025 | LB |
| Terrance Ferguson | 4.63 | Oregon | 2025 | TE |
| Logan Wilson | 4.63 | Wyoming | 2020 | LB |
| Josh Oliver | 4.63 | SJSU | 2019 | TE |
| Sione Takitaki | 4.63 | BYU | 2019 | LB |
| Cody Fajardo | 4.63 | Nevada | 2015 | QB |
| Schuylar Oordt | 4.63 | New Mexico | 2011 | TE |
| Coye Francies | 4.63 | SJSU | 2009 | CB |
| Erik Olson | 4.63 | Colorado St | 2000 | S |
| Kevin McDougal | 4.63 | Colorado St | 2000 | RB |
| Terrence Carroll | 4.63 | OSU | 2001 | S |
| Terrell Roberts | 4.63 | OSU | 2003 | CB |
| Brandon Browner | 4.63 | OSU | 2005 | CB |
| Joe Klopfenstein | 4.63 | Colorado | 2006 | TE |
| Jarrad Page | 4.63 | UCLA | 2006 | S |
| Husain Abdullah | 4.63 | WSU | 2008 | S |
| Marc Anthony | 4.63 | California | 2013 | CB |
| Terrance Mitchell | 4.63 | Oregon | 2014 | CB |
| Brett Hundley | 4.63 | UCLA | 2015 | QB |
| Mitch Wishnowsky | 4.63 | Utah | 2019 | P |
| Evan Worthington | 4.63 | Colorado | 2019 | S |
| Daniel Bellinger | 4.63 | SDSU | 2022 | TE |
| Chad Muma | 4.63 | Wyoming | 2022 | LB |
| Noah Sewell | 4.64 | Oregon | 2023 | LB |
| Fred Warner | 4.64 | BYU | 2018 | LB |
| Rashard Higgins | 4.64 | Colorado St | 2016 | WR |
| Josh Harper | 4.64 | Fresno St | 2015 | WR |
| Davone Bess | 4.64 | Hawaii | 2008 | WR |
| DonTrell Moore | 4.64 | New Mexico | 2006 | RB |
| Kevin Thomas | 4.64 | UNLV | 2002 | CB |
| John Howell | 4.64 | Colorado St | 2001 | S |
| Ifeanyi Ohalete | 4.64 | USC | 2001 | S |
| Scott Fujita | 4.64 | California | 2002 | OLB |
| Daniel Graham | 4.64 | Colorado | 2002 | TE |
| Rich Alexis | 4.64 | Washington | 2004 | RB |
| Erik Coleman | 4.64 | WSU | 2004 | S |
| Manuel White | 4.64 | UCLA | 2005 | FB |
| Brian Cushing | 4.64 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Devin Ross | 4.64 | Arizona | 2010 | CB |
| Stanley Havili | 4.64 | USC | 2011 | FB |
| John Boyett | 4.64 | Oregon | 2013 | S |
| Jawanza Starling | 4.64 | USC | 2013 | S |
| Shaq Thompson | 4.64 | Washington | 2015 | OLB |
| Kenny Lawler | 4.64 | California | 2016 | WR |
| Cody Barton | 4.64 | Utah | 2019 | LB |
| Laiatu Latu | 4.64 | UCLA | 2024 | DL |
| Mykal Walker | 4.65 | Fresno St | 2020 | LB |
| Leighton Vander Esch | 4.65 | Boise St | 2018 | LB |
| Cody Hoffman | 4.65 | BYU | 2014 | WR |
| Phillip Thomas | 4.65 | Fresno St | 2013 | S |
| Keith Smith | 4.65 | SJSU | 2011 | WR |
| Vai Taua | 4.65 | Nevada | 2011 | RB |
| Ryan Wolfe | 4.65 | UNLV | 2010 | WR |
| Ezra Butler | 4.65 | Nevada | 2008 | LB |
| Jorge Cordova | 4.65 | Nevada | 2004 | LB |
| Pisa Tinoisamoa | 4.65 | Hawaii | 2003 | LB |
| Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila | 4.65 | SDSU | 2000 | LB |
| Jeff Ulbrich | 4.65 | Hawaii | 2000 | LB |
| Matt Beck | 4.65 | California | 2000 | ILB |
| Casey Moore | 4.65 | Stanford | 2003 | FB |
| Carson Palmer | 4.65 | USC | 2003 | QB |
| Kaluka Maiava | 4.65 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Everson Griffen | 4.65 | USC | 2010 | DE |
| Verran Tucker | 4.65 | California | 2010 | WR |
| Mike Mohamed | 4.65 | California | 2011 | ILB |
| Brooks Reed | 4.65 | Arizona | 2011 | OLB |
| Jordan Richards | 4.65 | Stanford | 2015 | S |
| Cayleb Jones | 4.65 | Arizona | 2016 | WR |
| Lavon Coleman | 4.65 | Washington | 2018 | RB |
| Ronald Jones | 4.65 | USC | 2018 | RB |
| Uchenna Nwosu | 4.65 | USC | 2018 | EDGE |
| Tony Brown | 4.65 | Colorado | 2020 | WR |
| Zack Moss | 4.65 | Utah | 2020 | RB |
| Talanoa Hufanga | 4.65 | USC | 2021 | S |
| Nick Pickett | 4.65 | Oregon | 2021 | S |
| Devon Williams | 4.65 | Oregon | 2022 | WR |
| Kameron Kelly | 4.66 | SDSU | 2018 | S |
| Dwayne Wright | 4.66 | Fresno St | 2007 | RB |
| Sam Brandon | 4.66 | UNLV | 2002 | S |
| Kofi Shuck | 4.66 | Wyoming | 2000 | WR |
| Keith Brown | 4.66 | UCLA | 2000 | RB |
| Reuben Droughns | 4.66 | Oregon | 2000 | RB |
| Dave Minnich | 4.66 | WSU | 2002 | RB |
| Bobby Wade | 4.66 | Arizona | 2003 | WR |
| Virgil Williams | 4.66 | WSU | 2004 | S |
| Brian Iwuh | 4.66 | Colorado | 2006 | OLB |
| Cary Harris | 4.66 | USC | 2009 | CB |
| Nyan Boateng | 4.66 | California | 2010 | WR |
| Juron Criner | 4.66 | Arizona | 2012 | WR |
| Dion Bailey | 4.66 | USC | 2014 | S |
| Anthony Barr | 4.66 | UCLA | 2014 | OLB |
| Boseko Lokombo | 4.66 | Oregon | 2014 | OLB |
| Bralon Addison | 4.66 | Oregon | 2016 | WR |
| Devin Lloyd | 4.66 | Utah | 2022 | LB |
| Jordan Burch | 4.67 | Oregon | 2025 | DE |
| Kahale Warring | 4.67 | SDSU | 2019 | TE |
| Alexander Mattison | 4.67 | Boise St | 2019 | RB |
| Tanner Vallejo | 4.67 | Boise St | 2017 | LB |
| Kapri Bibbs | 4.67 | Colorado St | 2014 | RB |
| Daniel Sorensen | 4.67 | BYU | 2014 | S |
| Duke Ihenacho | 4.67 | SJSU | 2012 | S |
| Miles Burris | 4.67 | SDSU | 2012 | LB |
| Gartrell Johnson | 4.67 | Colorado St | 2009 | RB |
| Bryan Kehl | 4.67 | BYU | 2008 | LB |
| J.R. Tolver | 4.67 | SDSU | 2003 | WR |
| Paris Gaines | 4.67 | Fresno St | 2002 | FB |
| David Carr | 4.67 | Fresno St | 2002 | QB |
| Delvon Flowers | 4.67 | ASU | 2002 | RB |
| Nick Barnett | 4.67 | OSU | 2003 | OLB |
| Malaefou MacKenzie | 4.67 | USC | 2003 | RB |
| Bobby Purify | 4.67 | Colorado | 2005 | RB |
| Tyron Brackenridge | 4.67 | WSU | 2007 | CB |
| Josh Kaddu | 4.67 | Oregon | 2012 | OLB |
| Marion Grice | 4.67 | ASU | 2014 | RB |
| Trevor Reilly | 4.67 | Utah | 2014 | OLB |
| Vince Mayle | 4.67 | WSU | 2015 | WR |
| Pita Taumoepenu | 4.67 | Utah | 2017 | OLB |
| Nephi Sewell | 4.67 | Utah | 2022 | LB |
| Warren Jackson | 4.68 | Colorado St | 2021 | WR |
| Cleveland Wallace III | 4.68 | SJSU | 2016 | CB |
| Ezell Ruffin | 4.68 | SDSU | 2015 | WR |
| Stefphon Jefferson | 4.68 | Nevada | 2013 | RB |
| Vincent Brown | 4.68 | SDSU | 2011 | WR |
| Dennis Pitta | 4.68 | BYU | 2010 | TE |
| Freddy Keiaho | 4.68 | SDSU | 2006 | LB |
| Billy Strother | 4.68 | New Mexico | 2004 | LB |
| Kassim Osgood | 4.68 | SDSU | 2003 | WR |
| Reno Mahe | 4.68 | BYU | 2003 | WR |
| Todd Heap | 4.68 | ASU | 2001 | TE |
| Dameon Hunter | 4.68 | Utah | 2002 | RB |
| Jashon Sykes | 4.68 | Colorado | 2002 | OLB |
| Clarence Farmer | 4.68 | Arizona | 2004 | RB |
| Jonathan Pollard | 4.68 | OSU | 2005 | OLB |
| Fred Davis | 4.68 | USC | 2008 | TE |
| Jairus Byrd | 4.68 | Oregon | 2009 | CB |
| Rob Gronkowski | 4.68 | Arizona | 2010 | TE |
| Nate Williams | 4.68 | Washington | 2011 | S |
| Soma Vainuku | 4.68 | USC | 2016 | FB |
| Justin Herbert | 4.68 | Oregon | 2020 | QB |
| Steven Montez | 4.68 | Colorado | 2020 | QB |
| Matt Araiza | 4.68 | SDSU | 2022 | P |
| Gabriel Murphy | 4.68 | UCLA | 2024 | LB |
| Dillon Johnson | 4.68 | Washington | 2024 | RB |
| Darian Thompson | 4.69 | Boise St | 2016 | S |
| Kamalei Correa | 4.69 | Boise St | 2016 | DE |
| Derek Carr | 4.69 | Fresno St | 2014 | QB |
| Ryan Otten | 4.69 | SJSU | 2013 | TE |
| Kory Sperry | 4.69 | Colorado St | 2009 | TE |
| Kevin Robinson | 4.69 | Utah St | 2008 | WR |
| Travis Laboy | 4.69 | Hawaii | 2004 | DE |
| Ryan Hannam | 4.69 | New Mexico | 2002 | TE |
| Mike Pinkard | 4.69 | ASU | 2003 | TE |
| Tank Johnson | 4.69 | Washington | 2004 | DT |
| Kirk Yliniemi | 4.69 | OSU | 2004 | K |
| Spencer Havner | 4.69 | UCLA | 2006 | ILB |
| Terrence Whitehead | 4.69 | Oregon | 2006 | RB |
| Mark Bradford | 4.69 | Stanford | 2008 | WR |
| Anthony Felder | 4.69 | California | 2009 | ILB |
| Zack Follett | 4.69 | California | 2009 | OLB |
| Kyle Bosworth | 4.69 | UCLA | 2010 | OLB |
| Reid Forrest | 4.69 | WSU | 2011 | P |
| Matt Scott | 4.69 | Arizona | 2013 | QB |
| Ka’Deem Carey | 4.69 | Arizona | 2014 | RB |
| Nelson Spruce | 4.69 | Colorado | 2016 | WR |
| Solomon Thomas | 4.69 | Stanford | 2017 | DE |
| Kylie Fitts | 4.69 | Utah | 2018 | EDGE |
| Porter Gustin | 4.69 | USC | 2019 | EDGE |
| Cameron Smith | 4.69 | USC | 2019 | LB |
| Joe Tryon | 4.69 | Washington | 2021 | OLB |
| Greg Dulcich | 4.69 | UCLA | 2022 | TE |
| Brennan Jackson | 4.69 | WSU | 2024 | DL |
| Marcus Demps | 4.70 | SDSU | 2006 | S |
| Jarrod Baxter | 4.70 | New Mexico | 2002 | FB |
| Orlando Huff | 4.70 | Fresno St | 2001 | LB |
| Trevor Insley | 4.70 | Nevada | 2000 | WR |
| Greg Dulcich | 4.70 | UCLA | 2022 | TE |
| Mike Bush | 4.70 | WSU | 2003 | WR |
| Scott Ware | 4.70 | USC | 2006 | S |
| Michael Okwo | 4.70 | Stanford | 2007 | ILB |
| Robert James | 4.70 | ASU | 2008 | OLB |
| LeGarrette Blount | 4.70 | Oregon | 2010 | RB |
| Keaton Kristick | 4.70 | OSU | 2010 | OLB |
| Marc Tyler | 4.70 | USC | 2012 | RB |
| Khairi Fortt | 4.70 | California | 2014 | OLB |
| Devon Kennard | 4.70 | USC | 2014 | OLB |
| Silas Redd | 4.70 | USC | 2014 | RB |
| Jayon Brown | 4.70 | UCLA | 2017 | ILB |
| Demario Richard | 4.70 | ASU | 2018 | RB |
| Darius Muasau | 4.70 | UCLA | 2024 | LB |
| Nat Berhe | 4.71 | SDSU | 2014 | S |
| Kyle Van Noy | 4.71 | BYU | 2014 | LB |
| Jovon Bouknight | 4.71 | Wyoming | 2006 | WR |
| Justin Ena | 4.71 | BYU | 2002 | LB |
| Marques Tuiasosopo | 4.71 | Washington | 2001 | QB |
| Brandon Drumm | 4.71 | Colorado | 2003 | FB |
| Brandon Chillar | 4.71 | UCLA | 2004 | OLB |
| Jared Newberry | 4.71 | Stanford | 2005 | OLB |
| Aaron Rodgers | 4.71 | California | 2005 | QB |
| Alex Smith | 4.71 | Utah | 2005 | QB |
| Paris Warren | 4.71 | Utah | 2005 | WR |
| Dallas Sartz | 4.71 | USC | 2007 | OLB |
| Jordon Dizon | 4.71 | Colorado | 2008 | OLB |
| Anthony McCoy | 4.71 | USC | 2010 | TE |
| Stevenson Sylvester | 4.71 | Utah | 2010 | OLB |
| Nick Kasa | 4.71 | Colorado | 2013 | TE |
| Blake Martinez | 4.71 | Stanford | 2016 | ILB |
| Drew Sample | 4.71 | Washington | 2019 | TE |
| E.J. Muhammad | 4.72 | Nevada | 2021 | DB |
| Nick Vigil | 4.72 | Utah St | 2016 | LB |
| Kyler Fackrell | 4.72 | Utah St | 2016 | LB |
| Brandon Marshall | 4.72 | Nevada | 2012 | LB |
| Joel Dreessen | 4.72 | Colorado St | 2005 | TE |
| Demario Brown | 4.72 | Utah St | 2000 | RB |
| Justin Wyatt | 4.72 | USC | 2006 | CB |
| Victor Butler | 4.72 | OSU | 2009 | OLB |
| Obum Gwacham | 4.72 | OSU | 2015 | DE |
| Anthony Jefferson | 4.72 | UCLA | 2015 | S |
| Thomas Duarte | 4.72 | UCLA | 2016 | TE |
| Austin Hooper | 4.72 | Stanford | 2016 | TE |
| Azeem Victor | 4.72 | Washington | 2018 | ILB |
| Jake Bailey | 4.72 | Stanford | 2019 | P |
| Bralen Trice | 4.72 | Washington | 2024 | DL |
| Dax Raymond | 4.73 | Utah St | 2019 | TE |
| Jimmy Pruitt | 4.73 | SJSU | 2016 | CB |
| Alani Fua | 4.73 | BYU | 2015 | LB |
| Antwan Applewhite | 4.73 | SDSU | 2007 | DE |
| Jonathan Harrell | 4.73 | New Mexico | 2004 | LB |
| Sean Brewer | 4.73 | SJSU | 2001 | TE |
| Byron Frisch | 4.73 | BYU | 2000 | DE |
| Javon Green | 4.73 | Colorado | 2001 | WR |
| Tyler Brayton | 4.73 | Colorado | 2003 | DE |
| Derek McCoy | 4.73 | Colorado | 2004 | WR |
| Gilbert Harris | 4.73 | Arizona | 2006 | FB |
| John Torp | 4.73 | Colorado | 2006 | P |
| Daniel Te’o-Nesheim | 4.73 | Washington | 2010 | DE |
| Chris Galippo | 4.73 | USC | 2012 | ILB |
| Cory Littleton | 4.73 | Washington | 2016 | OLB |
| Rasheem Green | 4.73 | USC | 2018 | DE |
| Devin Asiasi | 4.73 | UCLA | 2020 | TE |
| Easton Gibbs | 4.73 | Wyoming | 2024 | LB |
| Jordan Love | 4.74 | Utah St | 2020 | QB |
| Derek Schouman | 4.74 | Boise St | 2007 | FB |
| Randy Black | 4.74 | UNLV | 2001 | S |
| Nick Murphy | 4.74 | ASU | 2002 | P |
| Gabe Nyenhuis | 4.74 | Colorado | 2004 | DE |
| Tim Day | 4.74 | Oregon | 2006 | TE |
| Will Derting | 4.74 | WSU | 2006 | ILB |
| David Lonie | 4.74 | California | 2006 | P |
| Evan Moore | 4.74 | Stanford | 2008 | TE |
| Kahlil Bell | 4.74 | UCLA | 2009 | RB |
| Cameron Jordan | 4.74 | California | 2011 | DE |
| Sean Cattouse | 4.74 | California | 2012 | S |
| Kiko Alonso | 4.74 | Oregon | 2013 | ILB |
| Brandon Magee | 4.74 | ASU | 2013 | OLB |
| Jake Browning | 4.74 | Washington | 2019 | QB |
| Hunter Bryant | 4.74 | Washington | 2020 | TE |
| Tavion Thomas | 4.74 | Utah | 2023 | RB |
| Josh Allen | 4.75 | Wyoming | 2018 | QB |
| David Wells | 4.75 | SDSU | 2018 | TE |
| Garrett Grayson | 4.75 | Colorado St | 2015 | QB |
| Kevin Basped | 4.75 | Nevada | 2010 | DE |
| David Veikune | 4.75 | Hawaii | 2009 | DE |
| John Beck | 4.75 | BYU | 2007 | QB |
| Kirk Morrison | 4.75 | SDSU | 2005 | LB |
| Matt Payne | 4.75 | BYU | 2005 | K |
| Aaron Francisco | 4.75 | BYU | 2005 | S |
| Erik Flowers | 4.75 | ASU | 2000 | DE |
| DaShon Polk | 4.75 | Arizona | 2000 | OLB |
| Sekou Sanyika | 4.75 | California | 2000 | OLB |
| Kori Dickerson | 4.75 | USC | 2002 | FB |
| Justin Peelle | 4.75 | Oregon | 2002 | TE |
| Lance Briggs | 4.75 | Arizona | 2003 | ILB |
| Jesse Ainsworth | 4.75 | ASU | 2007 | K |
| Justin Hickman | 4.75 | UCLA | 2007 | OLB |
| Kevin Ellison | 4.75 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Worrell Williams | 4.75 | California | 2009 | ILB |
| Koa Misi | 4.75 | Utah | 2010 | OLB |
| Earl Mitchell | 4.75 | Arizona | 2010 | DT |
| Syd’Quan Thompson | 4.75 | California | 2010 | CB |
| Mason Foster | 4.75 | Washington | 2011 | OLB |
| Austin Seferian-Jenkins | 4.75 | Washington | 2014 | TE |
| Christian Sam | 4.75 | ASU | 2018 | ILB |
| Dalton Schultz | 4.75 | Stanford | 2018 | TE |
| Kevin Thomson | 4.75 | Washington | 2021 | QB |
| Justin Cole | 4.76 | SJSU | 2010 | LB |
| Zeke Moreno | 4.76 | USC | 2001 | ILB |
| James Newson | 4.76 | OSU | 2004 | WR |
| Matt Grootegoed | 4.76 | USC | 2005 | S |
| Keith Ellison | 4.76 | OSU | 2006 | OLB |
| David Kirtman | 4.76 | USC | 2006 | FB |
| Dale Robinson | 4.76 | ASU | 2006 | ILB |
| Anthony Trucks | 4.76 | Oregon | 2006 | OLB |
| Trent Edwards | 4.76 | Stanford | 2007 | QB |
| Kyle Moore | 4.76 | USC | 2009 | DE |
| Zach Ertz | 4.76 | Stanford | 2013 | TE |
| Stepfan Taylor | 4.76 | Stanford | 2013 | RB |
| Carl Bradford | 4.76 | ASU | 2014 | OLB |
| Xavier Grimble | 4.76 | USC | 2014 | TE |
| Jordan Zumwalt | 4.76 | UCLA | 2014 | OLB |
| Hercules Mata’afa | 4.76 | WSU | 2018 | EDGE |
| Evan Weaver | 4.76 | California | 2020 | LB |
| Ahmed Hassanein | 4.77 | Boise St | 2025 | DE |
| Nate Ilaoa | 4.77 | Hawaii | 2007 | RB |
| Patrick Chukwurah | 4.77 | Wyoming | 2001 | LB |
| Rob Morris | 4.77 | BYU | 2000 | LB |
| DeLawrence Grant | 4.77 | OSU | 2001 | DE |
| Randy Fasani | 4.77 | Stanford | 2002 | QB |
| Lonnie Ford | 4.77 | USC | 2002 | DE |
| Jerramy Stevens | 4.77 | Washington | 2002 | TE |
| Kenechi Udeze | 4.77 | USC | 2004 | DE |
| Quinn Sypniewski | 4.77 | Colorado | 2006 | TE |
| Matt Asiata | 4.77 | Utah | 2011 | RB |
| Darron Thomas | 4.77 | Oregon | 2012 | QB |
| Colby Parkinson | 4.77 | Stanford | 2020 | TE |
| Tyler Batty | 4.78 | BYU | 2025 | DE |
| Brian Stahovich | 4.78 | SDSU | 2012 | P |
| Adam Tafralis | 4.78 | SJSU | 2008 | QB |
| Ryan Claridge | 4.78 | UNLV | 2005 | LB |
| Samson Sherrod | 4.78 | SJSU | 2000 | LB |
| Rashon Spikes | 4.78 | Boise St | 2000 | RB |
| Dave Stachelski | 4.78 | Boise St | 2000 | TE |
| Marcus Bell | 4.78 | Arizona | 2000 | ILB |
| John Frank | 4.78 | Utah | 2000 | DE |
| Charles Frederick | 4.78 | Washington | 2005 | WR |
| Desmond Bishop | 4.78 | California | 2007 | ILB |
| Dante Rosario | 4.78 | Oregon | 2007 | TE |
| Bruce Davis | 4.78 | UCLA | 2008 | OLB |
| Kai Forbath | 4.78 | UCLA | 2011 | K |
| Casey Matthews | 4.78 | Oregon | 2011 | ILB |
| Rhett Ellison | 4.78 | USC | 2012 | TE |
| Hayes Pullard | 4.78 | USC | 2015 | ILB |
| Kevin Hogan | 4.78 | Stanford | 2016 | QB |
| Dallin Holker | 4.78 | CSU | 2024 | TE |
| David Woodward | 4.79 | Utah St | 2020 | LB |
| Carl Granderson | 4.79 | Wyoming | 2019 | EDGE |
| Colt Brennan | 4.79 | Hawaii | 2008 | QB |
| Tully Banta-Cain | 4.79 | California | 2003 | DE |
| Kevin Ware | 4.79 | Washington | 2003 | TE |
| Cody Pickett | 4.79 | Washington | 2004 | QB |
| Dominique Byrd | 4.79 | USC | 2006 | TE |
| Paul Kruger | 4.79 | Utah | 2009 | DE |
| David Paulson | 4.79 | Oregon | 2012 | TE |
| Jake Murphy | 4.79 | Utah | 2014 | TE |
| Davis Webb | 4.79 | California | 2017 | QB |
| Keishawn Bierria | 4.79 | Washington | 2018 | ILB |
| Michael Turk | 4.79 | ASU | 2020 | P |
| Dee Hart | 4.80 | Colorado St | 2015 | RB |
| Demarcus Lawrence | 4.80 | Boise St | 2014 | DE |
| Robbie Rouse | 4.80 | Fresno St | 2013 | RB |
| Leonard Peters | 4.80 | Hawaii | 2007 | S |
| Jamaal Brimmer | 4.80 | UNLV | 2005 | S |
| Mike Seidman | 4.80 | UCLA | 2003 | TE |
| Troy Bienemann | 4.80 | WSU | 2006 | TE |
| Marcedes Lewis | 4.80 | UCLA | 2006 | TE |
| Datone Jones | 4.80 | UCLA | 2013 | DE |
| Nate Orchard | 4.80 | Utah | 2015 | DE |
| Jared Norris | 4.80 | Utah | 2016 | ILB |
| Tavares Martin | 4.80 | WSU | 2018 | WR |
| Moliki Matavao | 4.81 | UCLA | 2025 | TE |
| Jarron Gilbert | 4.81 | SJSU | 2009 | DE |
| Anton Palepoi | 4.81 | UNLV | 2002 | DE |
| Brandon Doman | 4.81 | BYU | 2002 | QB |
| Wendell Montgomery | 4.81 | Wyoming | 2000 | WR |
| Yvenson Bernard | 4.81 | OSU | 2008 | RB |
| Travis Goethel | 4.81 | ASU | 2010 | ILB |
| Akeem Ayers | 4.81 | UCLA | 2011 | OLB |
| Francis Bernard | 4.81 | Utah | 2020 | LB |
| Uani’ Unga | 4.82 | BYU | 2014 | LB |
| Kellen Moore | 4.82 | Boise St | 2012 | QB |
| Tyrone Crawford | 4.82 | Boise St | 2012 | DE |
| Gabe Reid | 4.82 | BYU | 2003 | TE |
| Ortege Jenkins | 4.82 | Arizona | 2001 | QB |
| Lawrence Vickers | 4.82 | Colorado | 2006 | FB |
| John David Booty | 4.82 | USC | 2008 | QB |
| Lawrence Jackson | 4.82 | USC | 2008 | DE |
| Louie Sakoda | 4.82 | Utah | 2009 | K |
| Jim Dray | 4.82 | Stanford | 2010 | TE |
| Joseph Fauria | 4.82 | UCLA | 2013 | TE |
| Jeff Locke | 4.82 | UCLA | 2013 | P |
| Jared Goff | 4.82 | California | 2016 | QB |
| Davis Mills | 4.82 | Stanford | 2021 | QB |
| Nick Burley | 4.83 | Fresno St | 2003 | DE |
| Jason Fife | 4.83 | Oregon | 2004 | QB |
| Ryan Riddle | 4.83 | California | 2005 | DE |
| Lofa Tatupu | 4.83 | USC | 2005 | ILB |
| J.D. Nelson | 4.83 | Oregon | 2007 | S |
| Brock Osweiler | 4.83 | ASU | 2012 | QB |
| Joe Kruger | 4.83 | Utah | 2013 | DE |
| Randall Telfer | 4.83 | USC | 2015 | TE |
| Vernon Adams | 4.83 | Oregon | 2016 | QB |
| Hunter Kampmoyer | 4.83 | Oregon | 2021 | TE |
| John Bates | 4.84 | Boise St | 2021 | TE |
| John Lotulelei | 4.84 | UNLV | 2013 | LB |
| Gavin Escobar | 4.84 | SDSU | 2013 | TE |
| Robert Malone | 4.84 | Fresno St | 2010 | P |
| Manase Tonga | 4.84 | BYU | 2010 | FB |
| Max Hall | 4.84 | BYU | 2010 | QB |
| Jonny Harline | 4.84 | BYU | 2007 | TE |
| Peter Sirmon | 4.84 | Oregon | 2000 | ILB |
| Andre Carter | 4.84 | California | 2001 | DE |
| Terrell Suggs | 4.84 | ASU | 2003 | DE |
| Blair Phillips | 4.84 | Oregon | 2007 | ILB |
| Louis Holmes | 4.84 | Arizona | 2008 | DE |
| D’Aundre Reed | 4.84 | Arizona | 2011 | DE |
| Scott Crichton | 4.84 | OSU | 2014 | DE |
| Marcel Jensen | 4.85 | Fresno St | 2014 | TE |
| Ikaika Alama-Francis | 4.85 | Hawaii | 2007 | DE |
| Naufahu Tahi | 4.85 | BYU | 2006 | FB |
| Curtis Hodges | 4.85 | ASU | 2022 | TE |
| Spencer Larsen | 4.85 | Arizona | 2008 | ILB |
| Sam Darnold | 4.85 | USC | 2018 | QB |
| Curtis Hodges | 4.85 | ASU | 2022 | TE |
| Brandon Dorlus | 4.85 | Oregon | 2024 | DL |
| Ryan Lindley | 4.86 | SDSU | 2012 | QB |
| Billy Winn | 4.86 | Boise St | 2012 | DE |
| Carl Ihenacho | 4.86 | SJSU | 2010 | LB |
| Spencer Nead | 4.86 | BYU | 2003 | TE |
| Ryan Denney | 4.86 | BYU | 2002 | DE |
| Richard Seigler | 4.86 | OSU | 2004 | ILB |
| Andrew Walter | 4.86 | ASU | 2005 | QB |
| Thomas Williams | 4.86 | USC | 2008 | ILB |
| Pannel Egboh | 4.86 | Stanford | 2009 | DE |
| Erik Lorig | 4.86 | Stanford | 2010 | DE |
| Bryan Anger | 4.86 | California | 2012 | P |
| Levine Toilolo | 4.86 | Stanford | 2013 | TE |
| Trent Murphy | 4.86 | Stanford | 2014 | DE |
| Xavier Cooper | 4.86 | WSU | 2015 | DT |
| Tom Hackett | 4.86 | Utah | 2016 | P |
| Bronson Kaufusi | 4.87 | BYU | 2016 | DE |
| Chris Cooley | 4.87 | Utah St | 2004 | TE |
| Jason Gesser | 4.87 | WSU | 2003 | QB |
| Tom Malone | 4.87 | USC | 2006 | P |
| Zach Miller | 4.87 | ASU | 2007 | TE |
| Tyson Alualu | 4.87 | California | 2010 | DE |
| Owen Marecic | 4.87 | Stanford | 2011 | FB |
| Derrick Shelby | 4.87 | Utah | 2012 | DE |
| Ryan Hewitt | 4.87 | Stanford | 2014 | FB |
| Richard Rodgers | 4.87 | California | 2014 | TE |
| Connor Halliday | 4.87 | WSU | 2015 | QB |
| Will Dissly | 4.87 | Washington | 2018 | TE |
| Setema Gali | 4.88 | BYU | 2001 | DE |
| Alex Smith | 4.88 | Stanford | 2005 | TE |
| Frostee Rucker | 4.88 | USC | 2006 | DE |
| Ricky Elmore | 4.88 | Arizona | 2011 | DE |
| Crockett Gillmore | 4.89 | Colorado St | 2014 | TE |
| Jason Beauchamp | 4.89 | UNLV | 2010 | LB |
| Coutney Anderson | 4.89 | SJSU | 2004 | TE |
| Brett Keisel | 4.89 | BYU | 2002 | DE |
| Kellen Diesch | 4.89 | ASU | 2022 | OT |
| Joey Harrington | 4.89 | Oregon | 2002 | QB |
| Solomon Bates | 4.89 | ASU | 2003 | ILB |
| George Wrighster | 4.89 | Oregon | 2003 | TE |
| Kellen Clemens | 4.89 | Oregon | 2006 | QB |
| Justin Medlock | 4.89 | UCLA | 2007 | K |
| Joe Newton | 4.89 | OSU | 2007 | TE |
| Rudy Carpenter | 4.89 | ASU | 2009 | QB |
| Cassius Marsh | 4.89 | UCLA | 2014 | DE |
| Cody Kessler | 4.89 | USC | 2016 | QB |
| James Looney | 4.89 | California | 2018 | DE |
| Jacob Eason | 4.89 | Washington | 2020 | QB |
| Zeandae Johnson | 4.89 | California | 2021 | DE |
| Levi Onwuzurike | 4.89 | Washington | 2021 | DL |
| Kellen Diesch | 4.89 | ASU | 2022 | OT |
| Jake Ingram | 4.90 | Hawaii | 2009 | LS |
| Beau Bell | 4.90 | UNLV | 2008 | LB |
| Cedric Pittman | 4.90 | Nevada | 2000 | LB |
| Mark Mariscal | 4.90 | Colorado | 2003 | P |
| Trent Bray | 4.90 | OSU | 2006 | ILB |
| Copeland Bryan | 4.90 | Arizona | 2006 | DE |
| Matt Leinart | 4.90 | USC | 2006 | QB |
| Abraham Wright | 4.90 | Colorado | 2007 | DE |
| Scooby Wright III | 4.90 | Arizona | 2016 | ILB |
| Brett Rypien | 4.91 | Boise St | 2019 | QB |
| Kevin Davis | 4.91 | Colorado St | 2017 | LB |
| Jeff Rowe | 4.91 | Nevada | 2007 | QB |
| Jeremiah Pharms | 4.91 | Washington | 2001 | OLB |
| Joe Tafoya | 4.91 | Arizona | 2001 | DE |
| Nate Fikse | 4.91 | UCLA | 2003 | P |
| Rey Maualuga | 4.91 | USC | 2009 | ILB |
| Matt Barkley | 4.91 | USC | 2013 | QB |
| Kyle Long | 4.91 | Oregon | 2013 | OG |
| Chase Thomas | 4.91 | Stanford | 2013 | OLB |
| Marcus Hardison | 4.91 | ASU | 2015 | DT |
| J.R. Tavai | 4.91 | USC | 2015 | OLB |
| Joel Bitonio | 4.92 | Nevada | 2014 | OG |
| Ben Miller | 4.92 | Air Force | 2002 | C |
| Kevin Feterik | 4.92 | BYU | 2000 | QB |
| Abraham Lucas | 4.92 | WSU | 2022 | OT |
| Russell Stewart | 4.92 | Stanford | 2001 | TE |
| Khalif Barnes | 4.92 | Washington | 2005 | OT |
| T.C. Ostrander | 4.92 | Stanford | 2008 | QB |
| Brandon Bair | 4.92 | Oregon | 2011 | DE |
| Taylor Hart | 4.92 | Oregon | 2014 | DE |
| Jason Fanaika | 4.92 | Utah | 2016 | DE |
| Josh Rosen | 4.92 | UCLA | 2018 | QB |
| Jalen Jelks | 4.92 | Oregon | 2019 | EDGE |
| Kaden Smith | 4.92 | Stanford | 2019 | TE |
| Abraham Lucas | 4.92 | WSU | 2022 | OT |
| Roger Rosengarten | 4.92 | Washington | 2024 | OL |
| Ezra Cleveland | 4.93 | Boise St | 2020 | OL |
| Vaughn Meatoga | 4.93 | Hawaii | 2012 | DT |
| Tyler Schmitt | 4.93 | SDSU | 2008 | LS |
| Larry Tripplett | 4.93 | Washington | 2002 | DT |
| Tim Euhus | 4.93 | OSU | 2004 | TE |
| Mike Patterson | 4.93 | USC | 2005 | DT |
| Mark Sanchez | 4.93 | USC | 2009 | QB |
| Sean Canfield | 4.93 | OSU | 2010 | QB |
| Tyron Smith | 4.93 | USC | 2011 | OT |
| Hau’oli Kikaha | 4.93 | Washington | 2015 | OLB |
| Bradlee Anae | 4.93 | Utah | 2020 | DL |
| Daniel Coats | 4.94 | BYU | 2007 | TE |
| Brian Gray | 4.94 | BYU | 2000 | CB |
| Willie Howard | 4.94 | Stanford | 2001 | DT |
| Andrew Larson | 4.94 | California | 2008 | P |
| Frank Crum | 4.94 | Wyoming | 2024 | OL |
| Jonah Savaiinaea | 4.95 | Arizona | 2025 | OL |
| Derrick Harmon | 4.95 | Oregon | 2025 | DT |
| Aaron Davis | 4.95 | Colorado St | 2015 | LB |
| D.J. Tialavea | 4.95 | Utah St | 2014 | TE |
| Scott Rislov | 4.95 | SJSU | 2004 | QB |
| David Neill | 4.95 | Nevada | 2002 | QB |
| Fred Jones | 4.95 | Colorado | 2000 | OLB |
| Brett Pierce | 4.95 | Stanford | 2004 | TE |
| Nick Folk | 4.95 | Arizona | 2007 | K |
| Garrett Bolles | 4.95 | Utah | 2017 | OT |
| Kolton Miller | 4.95 | UCLA | 2018 | OT |
| Ryan Winterswyk | 4.96 | Boise St | 2011 | DE |
| Jeremy Geathers | 4.96 | UNLV | 2008 | DE |
| Joey Huber | 4.96 | Colorado St | 2003 | P |
| Igor Olshansky | 4.96 | Oregon | 2004 | DT |
| Ryan Kalil | 4.96 | USC | 2007 | C |
| Alex Brink | 4.96 | WSU | 2008 | QB |
| Lawrence Guy | 4.96 | ASU | 2011 | DT |
| Nate Solder | 4.96 | Colorado | 2011 | OT |
| Jamaar Jarrett | 4.96 | ASU | 2012 | DE |
| Matt Kalil | 4.96 | USC | 2012 | OT |
| Ka’Imi Fairbairn | 4.96 | UCLA | 2016 | K |
| Andre Dillard | 4.96 | WSU | 2019 | OT |
| Zach Thomas | 4.96 | SDSU | 2022 | OG |
| Alex Dunnachie | 4.97 | Hawaii | 2013 | P |
| Isaac Sopoaga | 4.97 | Hawaii | 2004 | DT |
| Clark Haggans | 4.97 | Colorado St | 2000 | LB |
| Keith Miller | 4.97 | California | 2000 | ILB |
| Kenyon Coleman | 4.97 | UCLA | 2002 | DE |
| Matt Leonard | 4.97 | Stanford | 2003 | DT |
| DaJohn Harris | 4.97 | USC | 2012 | DT |
| Henry Anderson | 4.97 | Stanford | 2015 | DE |
| Leonard Williams | 4.97 | USC | 2015 | DT |
| Gardner Minshew | 4.97 | WSU | 2019 | QB |
| Adam Bishop | 4.98 | Nevada | 2008 | TE |
| Bradlee Van Pelt | 4.98 | Colorado St | 2004 | QB |
| Scott Jackson | 4.98 | BYU | 2004 | C |
| Adrian Klemm | 4.98 | Hawaii | 2000 | OT |
| James Lee | 4.98 | OSU | 2003 | DT |
| Sam Paulescu | 4.98 | OSU | 2006 | P |
| Stephen Paea | 4.98 | OSU | 2011 | DT |
| Caleb Benenoch | 4.98 | UCLA | 2016 | OT |
| Blake Freeland | 4.98 | BYU | 2023 | OL |
| David Fales | 4.99 | SJSU | 2014 | QB |
| Jerry DeLoach | 4.99 | California | 2000 | DT |
| Rob Meier | 4.99 | WSU | 2000 | DE |
| Brandon Manumaleuna | 4.99 | Arizona | 2001 | TE |
| Mike Pollak | 4.99 | ASU | 2008 | C |
| Brian Schwenke | 4.99 | California | 2013 | C |
| George Uko | 4.99 | USC | 2014 | DT |
| Tony Washington | 4.99 | Oregon | 2015 | OLB |
| Eddie Vanderdoes | 4.99 | UCLA | 2017 | DT |
| Braeden Daniels | 4.99 | Utah | 2023 | OL |
| Brett Roy | 5.00 | Nevada | 2012 | DT |
| Terrelle Smith | 5.00 | ASU | 2000 | FB |
| Justin Bannan | 5.00 | Colorado | 2002 | DT |
| Bill Swancutt | 5.00 | OSU | 2005 | DE |
| Zach Tuiasosopo | 5.00 | Washington | 2005 | FB |
| Fred Matua | 5.00 | USC | 2006 | OG |
| Mkristo Bruce | 5.00 | WSU | 2007 | DE |
| Rulon Davis | 5.00 | California | 2009 | DE |
| Morris Wooten | 5.00 | ASU | 2009 | ILB |
| Riar Geer | 5.00 | Colorado | 2010 | FB |
| Vontaze Burfict | 5.00 | ASU | 2012 | ILB |
| Tanner Carew | 5.00 | Oregon | 2018 | LS |
| Jay Tufele | 5.00 | USC | 2021 | DL |
| Saul Patu | 5.01 | Oregon | 2001 | DE |
| Trevor Guyton | 5.01 | California | 2012 | DE |
| Jake Fisher | 5.01 | Oregon | 2015 | OT |
| Jake Brendel | 5.01 | UCLA | 2016 | C |
| Renell Wren | 5.01 | ASU | 2019 | DL |
| Jon Gaines II | 5.01 | UCLA | 2023 | OL |
| Troy Fautanu | 5.01 | Washington | 2024 | OL |
| Joey Iosefa | 5.02 | Hawaii | 2015 | FB |
| Jared Roberts | 5.02 | Colorado St | 2015 | K |
| Mike Karney | 5.02 | ASU | 2004 | FB |
| Sione Pouha | 5.02 | Utah | 2005 | DT |
| Jimmy Verdon | 5.02 | ASU | 2005 | DE |
| Jarrett Kingston | 5.02 | USC | 2024 | OL |
| Junior Tafuna | 5.03 | Utah | 2025 | DT |
| Shelley Smith | 5.03 | Colorado St | 2010 | OG |
| Rick Crowell | 5.03 | Colorado St | 2001 | LB |
| Carlos Nuno | 5.03 | BYU | 2000 | TE |
| Derek Anderson | 5.03 | OSU | 2005 | QB |
| Julian Jenkins | 5.03 | Stanford | 2006 | DE |
| Jeff Baca | 5.03 | UCLA | 2013 | OG |
| Hroniss Grasu | 5.03 | Oregon | 2015 | C |
| Joshua Gray | 5.04 | Ore St | 2025 | OL |
| Teton Saltes | 5.04 | New Mexico | 2021 | OL |
| Alex Holmes | 5.04 | USC | 2005 | TE |
| Jeff Byers | 5.04 | USC | 2010 | C |
| Jurrell Casey | 5.04 | USC | 2011 | DT |
| Xavier Su’a-Filo | 5.04 | UCLA | 2014 | OG |
| Kingsley Suamataia | 5.04 | BYU | 2024 | OL |
| Jordan Morgan | 5.04 | Arizona | 2024 | OL |
| Josh Conerly Jr. | 5.05 | Oregon | 2025 | OL |
| Luke Ingram | 5.05 | Hawaii | 2013 | LS |
| Donald Penn | 5.05 | Utah St | 2006 | OT |
| Daryn Colledge | 5.05 | Boise St | 2006 | OT |
| Tyler Jones | 5.05 | Boise St | 2005 | K |
| Jabari Issa | 5.05 | Washington | 2000 | DT |
| Makoa Freitas | 5.05 | Arizona | 2003 | OG |
| Jordan Gross | 5.05 | Utah | 2003 | OT |
| Eric Manning | 5.05 | OSU | 2003 | DT |
| Shaun Cody | 5.05 | USC | 2005 | DT |
| Deforest Buckner | 5.05 | Oregon | 2016 | DE |
| Gionni Paul | 5.05 | Utah | 2016 | ILB |
| Kaleb McGary | 5.05 | Washington | 2019 | OT |
| Alijah Vera-Tucker | 5.05 | USC | 2021 | OL |
| Logan Mankins | 5.06 | Fresno St | 2005 | OG |
| Erick Streelman | 5.06 | Nevada | 2003 | TE |
| Vince Manuwai | 5.06 | Hawaii | 2003 | OG |
| Ryan Boschetti | 5.06 | UCLA | 2004 | DT |
| Dorian Smith | 5.06 | OSU | 2008 | DE |
| Cory Harkey | 5.06 | UCLA | 2012 | TE |
| Josh Hubner | 5.06 | ASU | 2013 | P |
| Arik Armstead | 5.06 | Oregon | 2015 | DE |
| Kenny Clark | 5.06 | UCLA | 2016 | DT |
| Matt Dickerson | 5.06 | UCLA | 2018 | DE |
| Anthony Pudewell | 5.07 | Nevada | 2007 | TE |
| Mat McBriar | 5.07 | Hawaii | 2003 | P |
| Kevin Jordan | 5.07 | Fresno St | 2001 | OG |
| Brad Bedell | 5.07 | Colorado | 2000 | OG |
| Scott Peters | 5.07 | ASU | 2002 | C |
| Dave Ball | 5.07 | UCLA | 2004 | DE |
| Fili Moala | 5.07 | USC | 2009 | DT |
| Austin Jackson | 5.07 | USC | 2020 | OL |
| David Quessenberry | 5.08 | SJSU | 2013 | OT |
| Timmy Chang | 5.08 | Hawaii | 2005 | QB |
| Scott Young | 5.08 | BYU | 2005 | OG |
| Wayne Hunter | 5.08 | Hawaii | 2003 | OT |
| Adam Koets | 5.08 | OSU | 2007 | OT |
| Sefo Liufau | 5.08 | Colorado | 2017 | QB |
| Josiah Bronson | 5.08 | Washington | 2021 | DL |
| Terry Poole | 5.09 | SDSU | 2015 | OT |
| Mac Tuiaea | 5.09 | Washington | 2000 | DT |
| Kyle Kosier | 5.09 | ASU | 2002 | OT |
| Greg Schindler | 5.09 | Stanford | 2003 | OG |
| Drew Olson | 5.09 | UCLA | 2006 | QB |
| Shayne Skov | 5.09 | Stanford | 2014 | ILB |
| Scott Quessenberry | 5.09 | UCLA | 2018 | C |
| Weston Richburg | 5.10 | Colorado St | 2014 | C |
| Paul Pinegar | 5.10 | Fresno St | 2006 | QB |
| Manaia Brown | 5.10 | BYU | 2006 | DT |
| Quinn Christensen | 5.10 | BYU | 2004 | OG |
| Ennis Davis | 5.10 | USC | 2001 | DT |
| Rien Long | 5.10 | WSU | 2003 | DT |
| Paul Soliai | 5.10 | Utah | 2007 | DT |
| Tenny Palepoi | 5.10 | Utah | 2014 | DT |
| Vita Vea | 5.10 | Washington | 2018 | DT |
| Nick Harris | 5.10 | Washington | 2020 | OL |
| Tom Ashworth | 5.11 | Colorado | 2001 | OG |
| Joe Toledo | 5.11 | Washington | 2006 | OT |
| Matt Toeaina | 5.11 | Oregon | 2007 | DT |
| Shane Lemieux | 5.11 | Oregon | 2020 | OL |
| Drew Dalman | 5.11 | Stanford | 2021 | C |
| Loni Fangupo | 5.12 | BYU | 2012 | DT |
| Ryan Colburn | 5.12 | Fresno St | 2011 | QB |
| Erik Pears | 5.12 | Colorado St | 2005 | OT |
| Brad Meester | 5.12 | New Mexico | 2000 | OL |
| Junior Ioane | 5.12 | ASU | 2000 | DT |
| Dwan Edwards | 5.12 | OSU | 2004 | DT |
| Lorenzo Alexander | 5.12 | California | 2005 | DT |
| Sammie Hill | 5.12 | Colorado | 2009 | DT |
| Alex Parsons | 5.12 | USC | 2010 | OG |
| Brian Price | 5.12 | UCLA | 2010 | DT |
| Kris O’Dowd | 5.12 | USC | 2011 | C |
| Deandre Coleman | 5.12 | California | 2014 | DT |
| Max Tuerk | 5.12 | USC | 2016 | C |
| Christian Westerman | 5.12 | ASU | 2016 | OG |
| John Molchon | 5.13 | Boise St | 2020 | OL |
| Richard Seals | 5.13 | Utah | 2000 | DT |
| Haloti Ngata | 5.13 | Oregon | 2006 | DT |
| Elijah Qualls | 5.13 | Washington | 2017 | DT |
| Penei Sewell | 5.13 | Oregon | 2021 | OL |
| Taliese Fuaga | 5.13 | OSU | 2024 | OL |
| Will Baumann | 5.14 | Boise St | 2015 | P |
| Eben Britton | 5.14 | Arizona | 2009 | OT |
| Matt Kopa | 5.14 | Stanford | 2010 | OT |
| Nick Foles | 5.14 | Arizona | 2012 | QB |
| Star Lotulelei | 5.14 | Utah | 2013 | DT |
| Sean Mannion | 5.14 | OSU | 2015 | QB |
| Austin Corbett | 5.15 | Nevada | 2018 | OG |
| Travis Claridge | 5.15 | USC | 2000 | OG |
| Rodney Leisle | 5.15 | UCLA | 2004 | DT |
| Doug Nienhuis | 5.15 | OSU | 2005 | OG |
| Mark Fenton | 5.15 | Colorado | 2007 | C |
| Brandon Mebane | 5.15 | California | 2007 | DT |
| Sean Harlow | 5.15 | OSU | 2017 | OG |
| Leki Fotu | 5.15 | Utah | 2020 | DL |
| Jamaree Caldwell | 5.16 | Oregon | 2025 | DT |
| Eathyn Manumeleuna | 5.16 | BYU | 2014 | DT |
| Ryan Tujague | 5.16 | WSU | 2000 | OG |
| Junior Siavii | 5.16 | Oregon | 2004 | DT |
| Winston Justice | 5.16 | USC | 2006 | OT |
| Chilo Rachal | 5.16 | USC | 2008 | OG |
| Ryan Miller | 5.16 | Colorado | 2012 | OG |
| Jojo Wicker | 5.16 | ASU | 2018 | DE |
| Greg Gaines | 5.16 | Washington | 2019 | DL |
| Nesta Jade Silvera | 5.16 | ASU | 2023 | DL |
| Rees Odhiambo | 5.17 | Boise St | 2016 | OT |
| Tyler Larsen | 5.17 | Utah St | 2014 | C |
| Alex Mack | 5.17 | California | 2009 | C |
| Tyeler Davison | 5.18 | Fresno St | 2015 | DT |
| Ryan Clady | 5.18 | Boise St | 2008 | OT |
| Mason Crosby | 5.18 | Colorado | 2007 | K |
| Caleb Schlauderaff | 5.18 | Utah | 2011 | OG |
| Zack Williams | 5.18 | WSU | 2011 | C |
| David Bakhtiari | 5.18 | Colorado | 2013 | OT |
| Andrus Peat | 5.18 | Stanford | 2015 | OT |
| Joe Dahl | 5.18 | WSU | 2016 | OT |
| Antwaun Woods | 5.18 | USC | 2016 | NT |
| Conor McDermott | 5.18 | UCLA | 2017 | OT |
| Jackson Barton | 5.18 | Utah | 2019 | OT |
| Parker Ferguson | 5.19 | Air Force | 2021 | OT |
| Chris Colmer | 5.19 | Boise St | 2005 | OT |
| Sir Henry Anderson | 5.19 | OSU | 2006 | DT |
| Tony Bergstrom | 5.19 | Utah | 2012 | OT |
| Kyle Murphy | 5.19 | Stanford | 2016 | OT |
| Isaac Seumalo | 5.19 | OSU | 2016 | OG |
| Chuma Edoga | 5.19 | USC | 2019 | OT |
| Scooter Harrington | 5.19 | Stanford | 2021 | TE |
| Roy Lopez | 5.19 | Arizona | 2021 | DL |
| William Sherman | 5.19 | Colorado | 2021 | OL |
| Darrell Greene | 5.20 | SDSU | 2016 | OG |
| Braden Brown | 5.20 | BYU | 2013 | OT |
| Todd Husak | 5.20 | Stanford | 2000 | QB |
| Brent McCaffrey | 5.20 | USC | 2001 | OG |
| Kwame Harris | 5.20 | Stanford | 2003 | OT |
| Andrew Carnahan | 5.20 | ASU | 2007 | OT |
| Fenuki Tupou | 5.20 | Oregon | 2009 | OT |
| Luke Wattenberg | 5.20 | Washington | 2022 | C |
| Syrus Tuitele | 5.21 | Fresno St | 2021 | OL |
| George Silvanic | 5.21 | Air Force | 2021 | DT |
| Tyler Roemer | 5.21 | SDSU | 2019 | OT |
| Joe Hawley | 5.21 | UNLV | 2010 | C |
| Levi Jones | 5.21 | ASU | 2002 | OT |
| Lauvale Sape | 5.21 | Utah | 2003 | DT |
| Charles Brown | 5.21 | USC | 2010 | OT |
| Josh Mauro | 5.21 | Stanford | 2014 | DE |
| Ellis McCarthy | 5.21 | UCLA | 2015 | DT |
| Tyler Johnstone | 5.21 | Oregon | 2016 | OT |
| Harrison Phillips | 5.21 | Stanford | 2018 | DT |
| Tala Esera | 5.22 | Hawaii | 2007 | OT |
| Chester Pitts | 5.22 | SDSU | 2002 | OT |
| Eric Heitmann | 5.22 | Stanford | 2002 | OG |
| Shawn Lauvao | 5.22 | ASU | 2010 | OG |
| Williams Robinson | 5.23 | SDSU | 2008 | OT |
| Tim Provost | 5.23 | SJSU | 2003 | OT |
| Chad Ward | 5.23 | Washington | 2001 | OG |
| Scott Tercero | 5.23 | California | 2003 | OG |
| Tyrell Crosby | 5.23 | Oregon | 2018 | OT |
| Malaesala Aumavae-Laulu | 5.23 | Oregon | 2023 | OL |
| Samson Satele | 5.24 | Hawaii | 2007 | C |
| Marvin Philip | 5.24 | California | 2006 | C |
| Coleman Shelton | 5.24 | Washington | 2018 | C |
| John Ojukwu | 5.24 | BSU | 2023 | OL |
| Charles Leno | 5.25 | Boise St | 2014 | OG |
| Chris Barker | 5.25 | Nevada | 2013 | OG |
| Ryan Johanningmeier | 5.25 | Colorado | 2000 | OG |
| Jamil Douglas | 5.25 | ASU | 2015 | OG |
| Sean Rhyan | 5.25 | UCLA | 2022 | OG |
| Rob Crisp | 5.26 | Boise St | 2015 | OT |
| Nate Potter | 5.26 | Boise St | 2012 | OT |
| Travis Bright | 5.26 | BYU | 2009 | OG |
| Broderick Lancaster | 5.26 | Colorado St | 2002 | OG |
| Langston Walker | 5.26 | California | 2002 | OT |
| Sedrick Ellis | 5.26 | USC | 2008 | DT |
| Max Unger | 5.26 | Oregon | 2009 | C |
| Matt Reynolds | 5.27 | BYU | 2012 | OT |
| Andrew Jackson | 5.27 | Fresno St | 2011 | OG |
| Brandon Keith | 5.27 | New Mexico | 2008 | OG |
| Alan Harper | 5.27 | Fresno St | 2002 | DT |
| Babatunde Oshinowo | 5.27 | Stanford | 2006 | DT |
| Mike Gibson | 5.27 | California | 2008 | OG |
| Jonathan Martin | 5.27 | Stanford | 2012 | OT |
| Sam Tevi | 5.27 | Utah | 2017 | OT |
| Dohnovan West | 5.27 | ASU | 2022 | C |
| Dane Uperesa | 5.28 | Hawaii | 2007 | OT |
| Kynan Forney | 5.28 | Hawaii | 2001 | OG |
| Wayne Lucier | 5.28 | Colorado | 2003 | C |
| Juan Garcia | 5.28 | Washington | 2009 | OG |
| Zane Beadles | 5.28 | Utah | 2010 | OG |
| Sione Fua | 5.28 | Stanford | 2011 | DT |
| John Cullen | 5.28 | Utah | 2012 | OT |
| Cameron Fleming | 5.28 | Stanford | 2014 | OT |
| Roy Schuening | 5.29 | OSU | 2008 | OG |
| Khaled Holmes | 5.29 | USC | 2013 | C |
| DAnte Smith | 5.29 | Arizona | 2021 | LB |
| Devin Clark | 5.30 | New Mexico | 2008 | OT |
| Ed Ta’amu | 5.30 | Utah | 2002 | OG |
| Jacob Rogers | 5.30 | USC | 2004 | OT |
| Tyler Polumbus | 5.30 | Colorado | 2008 | OT |
| Alameda Ta’amu | 5.30 | Washington | 2012 | DT |
| Alex Redmond | 5.30 | UCLA | 2016 | OG |
| Bradley Northnagel | 5.30 | California | 2017 | LS |
| Walker Little | 5.30 | Stanford | 2021 | OT |
| Marquise Muldrow | 5.31 | ASU | 2002 | OG |
| Drew Hodgdon | 5.31 | ASU | 2005 | C |
| Sam Wilder | 5.31 | Colorado | 2005 | OT |
| Mike Tepper | 5.31 | California | 2010 | OG |
| Ray Feinga | 5.32 | BYU | 2009 | OG |
| Mark Asper | 5.32 | Oregon | 2012 | OG |
| David DeCastro | 5.32 | Stanford | 2012 | OG |
| Jeremiah Poutasi | 5.32 | Utah | 2015 | OG |
| Joshua Garnett | 5.32 | Stanford | 2016 | OG |
| Sam Jones | 5.32 | ASU | 2018 | OG |
| Andre James | 5.32 | UCLA | 2019 | OT |
| Jason Scukanec | 5.33 | BYU | 2002 | C |
| Matt Hill | 5.33 | Boise St | 2002 | OT |
| Victor Leyva | 5.33 | ASU | 2001 | OG |
| Drew Radovich | 5.33 | USC | 2008 | OG |
| Andy Levitre | 5.33 | OSU | 2009 | OG |
| Cole Madison | 5.33 | WSU | 2018 | OL |
| Nolan Laufenberg | 5.34 | Air Force | 2021 | OL |
| Keith Ismael | 5.34 | SDSU | 2020 | OL |
| Matt Paradis | 5.34 | Boise St | 2014 | C |
| Kaulana Noa | 5.34 | Hawaii | 2000 | OT |
| Manuia Savea | 5.34 | Arizona | 2000 | OG |
| Kevin Barry | 5.34 | Arizona | 2002 | OG |
| Andre Gurode | 5.34 | Colorado | 2002 | OG |
| Chris Kemoeatu | 5.34 | Utah | 2005 | OG |
| Adam Snyder | 5.34 | Oregon | 2005 | OG |
| Isaac Asiata | 5.34 | Utah | 2017 | OG |
| Nico Siragusa | 5.35 | SDSU | 2017 | OG |
| E.J. Whitley | 5.35 | UNLV | 2006 | OT |
| Blaine Saipaia | 5.35 | Colorado St | 2000 | OG |
| Deuce Lutui | 5.35 | USC | 2006 | OG |
| Ty Sambrailo | 5.36 | Colorado St | 2015 | OT |
| Mark Wilson | 5.36 | California | 2004 | OT |
| Geoff Schwartz | 5.36 | Oregon | 2008 | OT |
| Alex Linnenkohl | 5.36 | OSU | 2011 | C |
| Will Sutton | 5.36 | ASU | 2014 | DT |
| Adam Jewell | 5.37 | Air Force | 2021 | OL |
| Cole Pemberton | 5.37 | Colorado St | 2010 | OT |
| Marvel Smith | 5.37 | ASU | 2000 | OT |
| Zach Quaccia | 5.37 | Stanford | 2002 | C |
| Shawn Murphy | 5.38 | Utah St | 2008 | OG |
| Justin Bates | 5.38 | Colorado | 2003 | OG |
| Stephen Berg | 5.38 | ASU | 2007 | OG |
| Lionel Dotson | 5.38 | Arizona | 2008 | DT |
| Sealver Siliga | 5.38 | Utah | 2011 | DT |
| Garth Gerhart | 5.38 | ASU | 2012 | C |
| Mitchell Schwartz | 5.38 | California | 2012 | OT |
| Christian Tupou | 5.38 | USC | 2012 | DT |
| Marcus Martin | 5.38 | USC | 2014 | C |
| David Parry | 5.38 | Stanford | 2015 | DT |
| Keaton Bills | 5.38 | Utah | 2024 | OL |
| Terrance Pennington | 5.39 | New Mexico | 2006 | OT |
| Ryan O’Callaghan | 5.39 | California | 2006 | OT |
| Alex Fletcher | 5.39 | Stanford | 2009 | C |
| Senio Kelemete | 5.39 | Washington | 2012 | OG |
| Stephane Nembot | 5.39 | Colorado | 2016 | OT |
| Salesi Uhatafe | 5.40 | Utah | 2018 | OG |
| Josh Parrish | 5.41 | WSU | 2004 | OT |
| Nate Herbig | 5.41 | Stanford | 2019 | OL |
| Pearce Slater | 5.42 | SDSU | 2016 | OT |
| Chad Rinehart | 5.42 | New Mexico | 2008 | OG |
| Harvey Dahl | 5.42 | Nevada | 2005 | OT |
| Claude Terrell | 5.42 | New Mexico | 2005 | OG |
| Dustin Rykert | 5.42 | BYU | 2003 | OT |
| Andrew Kline | 5.43 | SDSU | 2000 | OG |
| Elliot Silvers | 5.43 | Washington | 2001 | OT |
| Chad Setterstrom | 5.44 | New Mexico | 2003 | OG |
| Kirk Chambers | 5.44 | Stanford | 2004 | OT |
| William Dunkle | 5.44 | SDSU | 2022 | OG |
| Stevie Tu’Ikolovatu | 5.45 | USC | 2017 | DT |
| Jake Curhan | 5.45 | California | 2021 | OL |
| Enoka Lucas | 5.46 | Oregon | 2007 | C |
| Ryan Cook | 5.47 | New Mexico | 2006 | OT |
| Doug Kaufusi | 5.47 | Utah | 2002 | OT |
| Matt Spanos | 5.47 | USC | 2008 | C |
| Tony Terrell | 5.48 | UNLV | 2003 | OG |
| Paul Fanaika | 5.48 | ASU | 2009 | OG |
| David Yankey | 5.48 | Stanford | 2014 | OG |
| Chad Wheeler | 5.48 | USC | 2017 | OT |
| T.J. Bass | 5.48 | Oregon | 2023 | OL |
| Kurth Connell | 5.49 | Washington | 2000 | OT |
| Sam Baker | 5.50 | USC | 2008 | OT |
| Jake Hanson | 5.50 | Oregon | 2020 | OL |
| Henry Bainivalu | 5.50 | Washington | 2023 | OL |
| Calvin Armstrong | 5.51 | WSU | 2005 | OT |
| Zane Taylor | 5.52 | Utah | 2011 | C |
| Chase Roullier | 5.54 | Wyoming | 2017 | C |
| Adam Grant | 5.54 | Arizona | 2011 | OT |
| Foster Sarell | 5.54 | Stanford | 2021 | OL |
| Erik Cook | 5.55 | New Mexico | 2010 | C |
| Matt Johnson | 5.56 | BYU | 2000 | OG |
| Lui Fuata | 5.57 | Hawaii | 2003 | C |
| Victor Rogers | 5.57 | Colorado | 2002 | OG |
| Calvin Throckmorton | 5.57 | Oregon | 2020 | OL |
| Zach Banner | 5.58 | USC | 2017 | OG |
| Brett Boyko | 5.60 | UNLV | 2015 | OG |
| Tim Stuber | 5.60 | Colorado St | 2001 | OG |
| Trey Adams | 5.60 | Washington | 2020 | OL |
| Chris Denman | 5.62 | Fresno St | 2007 | OT |
| Danny Shelton | 5.64 | Washington | 2015 | DT |
| Joseph Hayes | 5.67 | SJSU | 2004 | OG |
| Nick Steitz | 5.70 | Oregon | 2005 | OG |
| Damien Mama | 5.84 | USC | 2017 | OG |
| Palauni Ma Sun | 5.86 | Oregon | 2007 | OG |
| Regis Crawford | 6.05 | ASU | 2004 | OG |
Sports
Ryan Garcia will now only fight Shakur Stevenson under one condition
Ryan Garcia’s father and trainer, Henry Garcia, has outlined the determining factor for whether a showdown between his son and Shakur Stevenson gets made.
The 27-year-old called out Stevenson immediately after his victory over Mario Barrios, which saw him claim the WBC welterweight title last Saturday.
Prior to their clash, many questioned whether Garcia was in the right mental space to dethrone Barrios, a tough but technically limited world champion.
As it happened, though, ‘King Ry’ was able to drop his man in the opening round, before piecing together a dominant unanimous decision victory in Las Vegas.
But before facing Barrios, Garcia had expressed his desire to lock horns with Stevenson, the WBO super-lightweight champion, in a bid to test himself against one of his sport’s most elite operators.
Stevenson, meanwhile, has insisted that their potential clash can only take place at a catchweight of 144lbs, to which Garcia verbally agreed before defeating Barrios.
Speaking with MillCity Boxing, though, Henry Garcia has said that Stevenson must move up to 147lbs, or else they will pursue a rematch with Devin Haney.
“Absolutely [the Haney rematch is bigger than a Shakur Stevenson fight], by far, there is no comparison. In order for [Stevenson] to fight us, he’s going to have to come up to [147lbs]. Didn’t [Crawford] go up [to fight] Canelo [at 168lbs]? And he got respect, right?
“Why doesn’t Shakur go up to [fight] Ryan? He wants Ryan to [agree to] a catchweight. We don’t want to start going down – unless it makes sense, but I doubt it.”
Stevenson comes off a one-sided points victory over Teofimo Lopez, for which he moved up from 135lbs, and became a four-division world champion last month.
But despite Stevenson’s lofty status as a pound-for-pound star, Henry Garcia firmly believes that a rematch between his son and Haney, the WBO welterweight champion, is a much bigger fight.
Their first encounter came in April 2024, though Garcia’s majority decision victory was later overturned to a no-contest due to him testing positive for banned substance ostarine.
Sports
No. 8 Purdue, No. 13 Michigan State meet for smaller stakes than usual
Michigan State’s Jeremy Fears Jr., right, guards Purdue’s Braden Smith during the second half on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, at the Breslin Center in East Lansing. In previous seasons, Michigan State and Purdue playing this late with both ranked among the nation’s top 15 would feel like the Big Ten’s most important game of the year.
But entering their only regular-season meeting on Thursday night in West Lafayette, Ind., this clash between No. 13 Michigan State (22-5, 12-4 Big Ten) and No. 8 Purdue (22-5, 12-4) has no banner-hanging implications.
With Michigan owning a commanding lead in the conference title race, the Spartans and Boilermakers are left to play for postseason seeds and bragging rights instead of league titles.
Considering Purdue and Michigan State have won the last three Big Ten crowns — and their coaches have combined for 16 league titles — this is not an insignificant concession.
“Not being able to win the Big Ten championship is tough,” said Purdue head coach Matt Painter, whose team comes off a 93-64 rout of Indiana on Friday. “That’s tough. But we’re the ones that lost the games. So we’ve got to try to get better, try to improve. I thought (Indiana) was a great bounceback for our guys, but it’s hard to take. It’s really hard to take when you have lofty goals and one of them is out the window.”
Purdue comes in having won five of its last six games. The only problem for the Boilermakers is that the defeat was a 91-80 home loss to Michigan, which essentially ended their hopes for a league title.
Purdue will forge on and focus on Michigan State in what will be a battle of two of the best point guards in the country.
In fact, Michigan State junior Jeremy Fears and Purdue senior Braden Smith are 1-2 in the country in assists. Fears averages 9.2 assists while Smith, who ranks fifth all-time with 994 assists, averages 8.7 per contest. The Spartans are coming off back-to-back home wins over UCLA and Ohio State, but they have lost their last two road games and don’t have a signature road win yet.
After Purdue, Michigan State will have another tough road game at Indiana.
“We have to get better,” Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo said. “We talked a lot with the group about what the next couple of days are going to be like and what the next couple of weeks are going to be like. Our schedule ends about as tough as anybody’s.”
Michigan State will try to achieve that in a place that’s been a house of horrors lately. The Spartans have lost their last five games at Mackey Arena — six if you count an NCAA Tournament loss to UCLA during the COVID-plagued 2020-21 season.
The last time Michigan State won at Mackey Arena was in 2014.
“Mackey Arena is one of the toughest we play in during the conference or nonconference,” Izzo said. “I think this is a really experienced Purdue team. They’ve got three guys in Smith, (Fletcher) Loyer and (Trey) Kaufman-Renn where it seems like they’ve been there forever.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Launceston Cup Day 2026 set for Star Thoroughbreds dominance by Denise Martin
Star Thoroughbreds stands to enjoy a monumental Wednesday at the Launceston Cup, even without Denise Martin represented in the signature event.
Expect Martin’s signature purple and white to fly on the leading hopes in four races adjacent to the $250,000 Group 3 Cup, the ninth race at 5.29pm.
The Vamos Stakes (1400m), another Group 3 35 minutes pre-Cup, sees Sanniya as firm favourite, after Durazzo‘s tilt at the Listed Hellova Street Stakes (1600m) and Mazzini‘s bid in the non-Black Type $125,000 3YO Classic (1200m).
Barry Campbell, trainer for Star Thoroughbreds in Tasmania, also saddles Azonto in the 1200m benchmark 64 curtain-closer.
Favouritism is keenly contested among the four, Sanniya and Mazzini odds-on shots, with Sanniya pursuing five in a row while Mazzini hopes to recover from his recent four-win sequence interruption.
This three-year-old by Needs Further ran fourth at $1.16 in the $75,000 Magic Millions 3&4YO Classic (1200m) on February 6’s Tasmanian Derby undercard, and Martin later pinpointed a cause.
“When Barry took him home that night the horse ate up, he was not unsound, he was well, but we had bloods taken on him on the Monday and his iron levels were a little bit down,” Martin said.
“He had whatever is the usual supplement that vets make sure horses for blood irregularities like that have and since that time he’s been really good.”
At $1.90 for the 3YO Classic, Mazzini gets stall two and jockey Kelvin Sanderson.
The rest of Martin’s runners ride with Craig Newitt, featuring Sanniya – three-year-old Stratosphere daughter, six-for-seven – at $1.55 trying 1400m first up.
“Craig is adamant that she will run 1400 metres,” Martin said.
Durazzo, full brother to Mazzini, thrills with a return to Launceston (seven-for-eight record) to rectify his tight Thomas Lyons Stakes reverse against Steparty on February 8, per the Listed Thomas Lyons Stakes.
“He seems to enjoy Mowbray even more than Hobart and he loves 1600, so I think the owners are very keen for another contest with Steparty to see if he can turn it around.”
Only six acceptors in the Hellova Street Stakes, Durazzo widest and Steparty from barrier four.
Discover competitive racing betting markets ahead of the Launceston Cup.
Sports
Looking Forward, Backward and Sideways at the Vikings’ Offseason
Looking Forward, Backward and Sideways at the Vikings’ Offseason
During the NFL offseason, it is time to look forward, backward and sideways (and in this case we look at the Minnesota Vikings). There is always plenty to look forward to, as this is the season of speculation designed specifically for Purple prognostication. And, as far as the Vikings are concerned, there is a great history of individual performances, near misses and more than an odd or exceptional win/loss to discuss. The Vikings are an infinitely fascinating franchise if not ultimately a successful one (where success is often only defined by winning the Super Bowl).
But this time on the Vikings Territory Breakdown podcast, the fellas—Joe Oberle, senior writer at vikingsterritory.com and purplePTSD.com and Mark Craig, NFL and Vikings writer for the Star Tribune and startribune.com—look back in sadness to a couple of players who wore Viking purple, and are, unfortunately, no longer with us: WR Rondale Moore and defensive back Ronyell Whitaker.
The news of these passings brings sadness to Purple Nation, for sure. But couple the news of their passing with the death of rookie draft pick Khyree Jackson last summer, and the Vikings organization has experienced more than enough of highly emotional difficulties of late. We will pay tribute to a couple players who, though only playing a short time in Minnesota, still deserve their due.
In addition, we will look forward to free agency, the draft and the NFL Combine just on the horizon. But if you want to know what we look sideways at, well, you’ll just have to tune in and check it out. Skol!
Sports
Bleacher Report Names Bizarre “Dream” Candidate for Vikings in Draft
Do you consider the absolute dream candidate for the Minnesota Vikings a 3rd-Round cornerback? Probably not — but Bleacher Report does. BR’s Gary Davenport picked a “dream target” for every team in this year’s draft, and for Minnesota, that man is Texas’s Malik Muhammad.
He’s twitchy, competitive, and sticky in coverage, with the kind of edge Minnesota keeps chasing at corner.
Muhammad would be a sweet addition, indeed, but few consider him Minnesota’s top priority.
Muhammad Would Evidently Fit Brian Flores’ CB Mold
A curveball some eight weeks before the draft.
BR: Muhammad Is the Vikings’ Dream Rookie
Most opened Davenport’s article expecting to find a running back like Jeremiyah Love or a cornerback like Mansoor Delane. But Davenport disagreed.
On Muhammad as the Vikings’ dream pick, he explained, “The quarterback position in Minnesota will dominate the offseason conversation surrounding the Vikings, but if the team adds competition for J.J. McCarthy this spring, it will likely come via a veteran free agent. The Vikings were stout defensively in 2025, allowing fewer passing yards per game (158.5) than any team in the NFC.”
“But the team has a potential issue on the back end—outside of Byron Murphy Jr. and Isaiah Rodgers, the team’s depth at the cornerback position is essentially non-existent. That should lead the Vikes to look to add a cornerback relatively early in this year’s draft, and Malik Muhammad of Texas could be an intriguing target on Day 2.”
The Consensus Big Board has Muhammad listed at No. 82 as of February 24th. A 3rd-Rounder.
Davenport continued, “A 6’0″ 188-pounder who spent the 2025 season matched up with opponents’ No. 1 receivers, Muhammad has it all — size, speed, athleticism, fluidity in coverage…you name it.”
“He also has a background in track and basketball, which can’t hurt at a position that involves a fair amount of running, jumping and whatnot.”
The Scouting Report
Muhammad is 6’0″ and 190 pounds. He played 41 games at Texas, logging 97 tackles, 16 passes defended, and 3 interceptions. He also has youth on his side; he won’t turn 22 until September. Muhammad is known for his versatility, twitchiness, and role as a defensive field general.
NFL Draft Buzz on Muhammad: “Muhammad brings immediate value as a defender who can contribute in multiple packages from day one. What jumps off the tape is his natural feel for route distributions and ability to process passing concepts – he sees the game unfold with veteran anticipation despite his youth.”
“Watching him navigate complex coverage assignments against elite SEC competition revealed a corner who rarely finds himself out of position and consistently plays above his experience level. His best NFL fit appears to be with defensive schemes employing pattern-match principles that maximize his instincts and football IQ.”
It’s worth noting that the Vikings are in the middle — hopefully near the end — of a severe drought in drafting cornerbacks. Ten years have passed since the franchise picked one of any round with staying power.
NBD added, “Coordinators who prioritize versatility in their secondary will appreciate his ability to execute both man and zone techniques with equal proficiency. While Muhammad doesn’t possess elite length, he compensates with exceptional footwork and transitional quickness that lets him mirror even the craftiest route runners.”
“The technical refinement he displays in press technique and zone spacing indicates a prospect who’s been meticulously coached. The comparison that resonates when studying Muhammad is a young Marcus Peters.”
Perhaps the Value Is Really That Great
Davenport must love Muhammad and his fit in Minnesota because it’s not often that a 2nd- or 3rd-Rounder pulls down “dream” draft candidate status a couple of months before the event.
So, how would Davenport’s assertion come true? Well, first, the Vikings would have to scoop Muhammad from Round 2 or 3, fitting his current stock. Thereafter, if he immediately latched on as a starter and remained for longer than a few years, Davenport would be vindicated.
The Vikings must also get into the habit — soon — of playing rookies. In the last four years, rookies don’t often see the field in Year No. 1, with the exception of wide receiver Jordan Addison and guard Ed Ingram. For example, Minnesota drafted wideout Tai Felton in Round 3 last year; the guy barely played on offense as a rookie.
If Davenport is correct, the Vikings grab Muhammad from Round 2 or 3, and he plays right away, fans will treat him like a supreme breath of fresh air.
Other Dream Candidates
How about real dream draft candidates for Minnesota? Here’s a look at Round 1 rookies who would bring tremendous joy to the fan base if they [somehow] fell to Pick No. 18:
- Mansoor Delane (CB, LSU)
- Caleb Downs (S, Ohio State)
- Jeremiyah Love (RB, Notre Dame)
- Sonny Styles (LB, Ohio State)
Downs, Love, and Styles live in a category of their own; they’re virtually guaranteed to be gone by Pick No. 18. Delane would turn heads, as he’s considered the top corner in the draft.
The NFL Draft is about eight weeks away.
Sports
TGL Doubleheader (Feb. 24)
TGL Doubleheader (Feb. 24)
Sports
10 NFL Combine Sleepers Ready to Boost Their Draft Stock
Combine drills are fast approaching as players touch down in Indianapolis and begin to run the gauntlet of medical testing, official measurements, team interviews and on-field testing and drills.
Cue the lights, these men in tights are ready to steal the show at the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine.
Demond Claiborne, RB, Wake Forest
Only one running back, Notre Dame’s Jeremyiah Love, is a first-rounder. Claiborne’s shifty nature and explosive burst out of the backfield are coveted by teams shopping for change-of-pace backs. If Claiborne can run in the 4.3 range and deliver a dynamite three-cone agility test result, this weaker RB class is his for the taking.
Brenen Thompson, WR, Mississippi State
A candidate to break Xavier Worthy’s 40-yard dash record, Thompson is small and can’t do much about that. His downfield speed could cause heads to turn with a target in the 4.2s.
Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State
Hurst’s small-school pedigree has left some wondering if he can adjust against NFL cornerbacks. If he continues to show precision and explosiveness in and out of breaks, Hurst can erase enough doubt to be in the top 64 picks.
Jaren Kanak, TE, Oklahoma
Some feigned surprise he was invited to Indy, but if you’ve been keying in on the Sooners, you know why Kanak is here. He will likely have one of the fastest times for the tight end position, and his defensive experience should translate to impressive bench press rep counts as well.
Gennings Dunker, OG, Iowa
Dunker’s combine performance will be a double-edged sword. He’s almost certainly going to nail his bench press reps with his yolked arms and impressive frame, but teams will be looking to see how he performs during agility drills. Everyone knows Dunker is strong. The question is, Can he move like an NFL lineman? Performing well could send him into the top 50.
Zane Durant, DT, Penn State
Durant’s first-step explosiveness is intense. As a speed-rushing tackle, he has a knack for penetrating inside gaps, a valued skill for a position valuing speed to power. If he can crush his 40 and agility drills, Durant won’t be easy to pass on draft day.
Athletically he’s a no-doubt first-round prospect. Following a down year in terms of production, his final grade isn’t set in stone. Woods participating in the combine drills and showing off his athletic prowess would cement his stock. As a former five-star recruit, Perkins’ athletic pedigree should be highly valued. He currently is a mid-round prospect. With talk of him moving to edge in some schemes, timed speed and strength will be more important for Perkins than ever, especially if he’s carrying the weight to reflect his desire to play outside.
Cisse is looking to break into a packed conversation around corners with first-round value. The combine is his best opportunity. His size, speed and strength are exceptional. Putting numbers down on paper to match the film would mean booking himself tickets to Pittsburgh in April.
The battle for the third-best safety in the class is wide open — Ohio State’s Caleb Downs is the clear-cut No. 1 and top five overall. If Payne backs up his impressive athletic traits evident on film in on-field drills and testing, he’ll be a big-time riser.
Aug 31, 2024; Morgantown, West Virginia, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions defensive tackle Zane Durant (28) celebrates after a stop during the third quarter against the West Virginia Mountaineers at Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Ben Queen-USA TODAY Sports
Peter Woods, DT, Clemson
Harold Perkins, LB, LSU
Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina
VJ Payne, S, Kansas State
Sports
Women’s pro golf tour responds to trans athlete’s lawsuit
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Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson filed a lawsuit against the women’s golf tour NXXT in December after it changed its policies to prevent biological males from competing against females.
NXXT and its attorneys from America First Policy Institute filed its motion to dismiss this week, and believe the suit will be thrown out.
“We are asking the courts to dismiss the claims and we’re addressing the matter,” NXXT Golf CEO Stuart McKinnon told Fox News Digital.
“This was about simply protecting women’s sports. So the goal was really clarity and competitive integrity, and, as a professional tour, we believe it was our responsibility to define those categories.”
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Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson looks after shot at pre-qualifying stage of LPGA Q-Series. (Riley Gaines/X)
McKinnon said after the organization updated its policies, he reached out to Davidson to offer the golfer a chance to compete on the tour in an open category, free of cost, and would even pay for Davidson’s Q School – an annual, multi-stage tournament where golfers compete for playing status on the PGA Tour and Korn Ferry Tour.
“I had a talk with Davidson. And at that time, prior to the change, I had offered Davidson the opportunity to play in an open division. And in that open division, I had offered Hayley Davidson to play in that open division and even a management position in that open division, and we would allow Davidson to play for free,” McKinnon said.
“We would pay for Q School fees for Davidson. So we were very generous and respectful of what Davidson wanted to do. And my message to Davidson was simply that perhaps your legacy is forging the path for future generations. But it can’t be right now in this women’s tour right now, when I’m running it, and we are going to make the policy change.”
McKinnon said the trans athlete rejected the offer.
Now, his tour is engaged in a legal battle against Davidson. It was an outcome he expected when he made the policy change, but believed it was necessary based on the feedback of his golfers.
McKinnon said he came to the decision after distributing an anonymous poll to the female golfers on his tour, as the vast majority of them expressed concern over Davidson’s presence.
“We did an anonymous player poll, which we had a high response rate within a very short period of time. Within two or three days, we had 80% plus response rate, and it was clear that the players, you know, were speaking, that they felt the policy change was in order,” McKinnon said.
“The theme was that it was unfair, and they wanted us to address our policies.”
McKinnon said that a few female golfers expressed support for maintaining the current policy and allowing Davidson to compete.
“We just respectfully disagreed with one another,” McKinnon said.
McKinnon had to watch Davidson finish first place on the tour in January 2024, marking Davidson’s third first-place finish at the event. The win put Davidson in the race to earn an Epson Tour exemption, which is the developmental tour of the LPGA Tour. The top 10 players of the Epson Tour graduate to the LPGA Tour.
At the time, the LPGA’s policy allowed biological males to compete without much restriction.
NXXT was one of the first women’s tours that stepped up to make a policy change. The LPGA then changed its own policy to bring about more restrictions to protect the women’s category in December 2024.
Now, as Davidson wages a legal battle against NXXT for pioneering the protection of women’s golf, McKinnon doesn’t expect the lawsuit will impede his tour’s operations.
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“Nothing has changed from an operational standpoint. We’re going to continue to grow,” McKinnon said.
“We’ve expanded the tour from the NXXT Women’s Pro Tour to the NXXT Battle Tour, which is a professional co-ed tour that we’re launching, as well our NXXT Gen Tour, which is our junior tour. It’s a competitive pathway for elite juniors, male and female. And we just actually have announced a partnership with Sir Nick Faldo for the NEXT Faldo Junior Tour. So all systems are go here at NXXT. We’re growing the pathway. We’re growing the tour.”

Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson during pre-qualifying stage of LPGA Q-Series. (Riley Gaines/X)
Fox News Digital has reached out to Davidson’s attorneys for a response.
Davidson’s lawsuit argues NXXT breached its contractual obligations and made false representations to Davidson, leading to wrongful exclusion from professional golf opportunities.
“Defendants breached the Contracts by implementing the Policy Change that resulted in Ms. Davidson being prohibited from participating in the entirety of the NXXT Winter Series; failing to allow Ms. Davidson to compete in any NXXT Winter Series tournaments after the Policy Change; retaining Ms. Davidson’s annual NXXT Golf membership fees and entry fees for NXXT Winter Series tournaments; and not awarding Ms. Davidson the Epson Exemptions she had earned,” the lawsuit stated.
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Sports
Stephanie Vaquer sends a message after her real-life boyfriend wins WWE championship
Women’s World Champion Stephanie Vaquer is currently in a relationship with an NXT star. Last year, they confirmed they were dating. While La Primera is making waves on RAW as its top titleholder, her boyfriend also won his first WWE championship this week.
The NXT star in question here is Myles Borne. On the latest episode of NXT, Borne won the NXT North American Championship. He defeated Ethan Page, ending the longest (tied with Oba Femi) NXT North American Title reign. Vaquer recently took to Instagram to express how she felt about her boyfriend’s achievement.
Thanks for the submission!
Vaquer wrote that she was proud of Myles Borne because she knew how hard he worked to achieve his goals. The Women’s World Champion added that Borne deserved the North American Championship win and much more. On her Instagram Story, she also posted a picture of the 26-year-old holding his newly won title.
“I’m so proud of you because I truly know how hard you work day after day. You deserve this and so much more [red heart emoji],” Vaquer wrote.
Stephanie Vaquer has had one of the best rookie years in WWE
Stephanie Vaquer is heading into WrestleMania 42 as the Women’s World Champion. She has had a stellar rookie year, winning a total of four titles. She first won the Women’s North American Championship from Fallon Henley. Later, she captured the NXT Women’s Championship from Giulia. At one point, she held both the titles simultaneously.
La Primera quickly transitioned to the main roster and held her ground. At Evolution, she won a 20-woman Battle Royal for a shot at the Women’s World Championship. She battled IYO SKY in possibly the best match of the night at Wrestlepalooza to capture the coveted gold.
At Crown Jewel: Perth, Stephanie Vaquer squared off against then-WWE Women’s Champion Tiffany Stratton in a Women’s Crown Jewel Title match. The RAW Superstar reigned supreme, adding another major accolade to her resume. Ahead of her match against Liv Morgan at ‘Mania, the fan-favorite star seems unstoppable.
Read all the hottest WWE news from Sportskeeda by choosing us as your preferred source. Click HERE.
Edited by Pratik Singh
Sports
Raptors find fight, but struggles against top teams persist
TORONTO — The Oklahoma City Thunder will be the defending NBA champions until sometime in mid-to-late June.
They remain favourites to be champions again, but the group that was on the floor at Scotiabank Arena are not those guys.
Not with defending MVP (and defending Finals MVP) Shai Gilgeous-Alexander back home in Oklahoma nursing an abdominal injury that has kept him out for 10 games and counting, and all-NBA wing Jalen Williams out with a bad hamstring and Ajay Mitchell — their newly discovered bench sparkplug — out now for 14 games and counting.
They are trying to navigate a post-championship season that has been more notable for who has not been playing than who has. Gilgeous-Alexander has now joined fellow starters Luguentz Dort (12), Isaiah Hartenstein (27) and Williams (33) for the dubious distinction of having missed double-digit games through the Thunder’s 59th start. As well, key reserves Mitchell (16), Aaron Wiggins (16) and Alex Caruso (21) have missed significant time.
But somehow the Thunder continue to roll.
They were able to squeeze out a 116-107 win over the Raptors that they earned thanks to a dominant second and third quarter where they out-scored Toronto by 27, and a fantastic flurry in the final four minutes. They finished with a 15-point surge, shutting down a Raptors rally that saw them come back down 24 with one minute left in the third to tie it up with just over four minutes left.
For the Raptors (34-24), it was another loss to a quality team, this one a little more concerning since Scottie Barnes left the game early after bruising his right thigh in a collision with Hartenstein. Barnes will be listed as questionable as the Raptors host the San Antonio Spurs Wednesday night.
For the Thunder (45-14), it was one more bit of evidence that their championship pedigree extends past Gilgeous-Alexander or Williams and runs all the way through most of their rotation. On Tuesday night, it was Cason Wallace — the Thunder’s third-year on-ball stopper and the league-leader in steals — who exploded for 27 points, eight rebounds and seven assists. His run included six quick points after the Raptors had tied the game on a Jamal Shead three with 4:06 to play. Meanwhile, Canadian national team star Dort shed his defence-first reputation (though not before helping hold Raptors leading scorer Brandon Ingram to 14 points on 14 shots) long enough to score four of his 15 points in the final minutes on a pair of tough jumpers with the game in the balance.
“We’ve been in a lot of those situations before, obviously we’re still without our main guys, but we know that we have to execute and find the best shot that we can get,” said Dort. “Credit to the Raptors, they didn’t give up, but down the stretch we had to find the best shots, which we did.”
It was a familiar situation for the Raptors, too. The loss dropped Toronto to 4-14 against the top 10 teams in the league by winning percentage. Three of those wins came against a (then) struggling Cleveland Cavaliers team early in the season and the other came on the road against a short-handed Thunder team back in January, although that version did have Gilgeous-Alexander in the lineup.
It’s a bit of a good news, bad news story: It’s not nothing that the Raptors are 30-10 against the league’s other 19 teams, but beating good teams is essential if all that work is going to deliver something in the post-season.
“I mean, we made a huge jump from where we were last year, like, where were we last year versus now?” said RJ Barrett, who led the Raptors with 21 points on 8-of-15 shooting, including 4-of-6 from three, his best offensive outing since returning from knee and ankle injuries that forced him to miss 24 games in a 30-game stretch over December and January. The Raptors won just 30 games all season, was his point.
“A lot of these teams have already been good, already been in playoff situations [or] like tonight, won a championship. They already have these guys that are battle-tested.
“It’s good for us to play these teams right now, go through these tough losses during the season so we’ll figure it out,” Barrett added. “Detroit game we got blown out [just prior to the all-star break], tonight we went down and fought all the way back, so we’re already learning and we got to continue to learn and scratch and claw and beat these good teams.”
They certainly have some blueprints they could work from, namely how they performed during the first and fourth quarters — or at least until those final four minutes.
The Raptors jumped out to a 32-25 lead after the first as they forced the Thunder into six turnovers in 12 minutes, continuing the ferocious perimeter defence they have shown since the all-star break in road wins over Chicago (23 turnovers with 14 steals) and Milwaukee (19 turnovers with 11 steals).

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It was the Raptors at their best. Rookie Collin Murray-Boyles (four points, four rebounds, two assists, two blocks and a steal in 30 minutes), starting at centre for Jakob Poeltl (out resting his back), got his hands on seemingly every pass the Thunder tried to throw. Barnes (15 points, seven assists, three steals and four blocks), back in the lineup after missing Sunday’s game for personal reasons, stripped Caruso’s dribble on consecutive possessions, each turning into transition lay-ups, giving the Raptors a 10-point lead — their high-water mark for the game.
They reprised that energy for a nine-minute stretch bridging the end of the third quarter and first eight minutes of the fourth as they went on a 27-3 run where they held the Thunder to 1-of-15 shooting and forced them into seven turnovers. OKC looked very much like a team needing the defending MVP to bail them out.
“I mean [the Raptors] defend really well,” said Dort. “The pressure and the way they turn us over was extremely tough, but obviously it’s hard to pressure for 48 minutes and we had to find a way to break that.”
They did. It began in the second quarter when the Thunder began taking care of the ball and some of their secondary scorers got cooking.
Wallace — getting all the point guard reps he could hope for with Gilgeous-Alexander out — exploded for 13 of his game-high 27, making all five of his field goal attempts, including three triples. The Thunder led 60-51 at half.
In the third quarter, it was three-point specialist Isaiah Joe shaking loose, knocking down five threes, including two for four-point plays, finishing with 19 points in the frame and pushing OKC’s lead to as high as 25 — creating an 18-point cushion to start the fourth. Over the pivotal second and third quarters, OKC had just five turnovers while forcing the Raptors into seven. Related, the Raptors’ offence cratered, as they scored just 48 points over the middle two frames.
“I wish I had the answers. Hopefully the film is going to help us understand better, but the second, third quarter was not us, and it was not our identity,” said Raptors head coach Darko Rajakovic, as his team allowed the Thunder to shoot 54 per cent over the middle two periods. “That was not what we did in the first quarter to start the game. We were dictating and dominating on the offensive end, creating a lot of turnovers, which fueled our offence and we took our foot [off the] gas.”
They got onto the gas again in the fourth and made it a game. The Raptors deserve plenty of credit for that. But two good quarters are not going to cut it against the NBA’s better teams, and certainly not against the defending champion Thunder — even the short-handed version.
Barnes in good spirits: The Raptors’ workhorse banged his leg on Hartenstein’s knee with 3:38 to play and immediately limped to the bench. The Raptors were down two at the time. The Thunder quickly scored on a lay-up from Wallace, a triple from Joe and a jumper by Dort. Barnes subbed back in with the Raptors suddenly down nine with 2:29 to play and was subbed out again 90 seconds later. In the locker room, he seemed to be in a good mood, joking with locker mates Ingram and Jamal Shead, but could be seen rubbing the inside of his right thigh or knee area before going for treatment post-game. Barnes has missed just two games this season, and the Raptors won his 32 minutes against the Thunder by 18 points.
To the winners go the spoils: When Dort spoke with the media after the Thunder’s win, he had a massive diamond-encrusted necklace on over his black turtleneck sweater. At the end of the chain was a pendant shaped as a wolf’s head, roughly the size of a toddler’s hand. It’s his championship wolf, Dort told me, a gift to himself for winning the NBA title last year. His last name, translated, means wolf. “A [championship]ring wasn’t enough,” he said, laughing.
Silver lining for SGA? Gilgeous-Alexander has played a lot of high-pressure basketball in the past three years. To review: the Canadian national team star led the Thunder to the second round of the 2023 FIBA World Cup, helped the Thunder to the second round of the 2024 playoffs, led Canada to a fifth-place finish at the 2024 Olympics and helped the Thunder to their first-ever championship last summer. Chances are he’ll be playing deep into June this year and beyond, while the 2027 World Cup and 2028 Olympics aren’t all that far in the future. In that context, is missing a month or more of basketball (he’s been out since February 3rd and will be re-evaluated next week) the worst thing? “He wants to play, he doesn’t want to miss games and he didn’t want to miss this game, I’ll tell you that, so that’s a high cost to him,” said Thunder head coach Mark Daigenault. “… But getting a good reprieve out of this [could be a benefit] — not that he would ever want that — but you can’t fight your circumstances.”
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