
By SuperWest Sports Staff
Sports
Historical NFL Bench Press 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 bench press results for former players from schools in the West.
You may also be interested in the historical vertical jump marks and 40-yard dash times.
The bench press is one of the first drills that participants typically go through at the NFL Combine.
In addition to testing a prospect’s strength, it gives scouts an indication of their cardio fitness and endurance.
These attributes measure a player’s ability to withstand the rigors of NFL weight-lifting and fitness programs.
The bench press weight is standardized at 225 pounds, consisting of four 45-pound metal plates and a 45-pound bar, subject to the following NFL rules:
1) The participant lies flat on his back on the bench.
2) Hands must be positioned shoulder-width apart on the barbell.
3) The goal of the drill is to press as many times as possible.
4) When pressing, the participant must keep his hips on the bench and touch his chest slightly with the bar without bouncing it off the trunk. Arching the back and bouncing the weight causes rep nullification.
The average NFL prospect has little trouble benching 225 pounds, but the exercise becomes much more difficult with increasing reps.
Naturally, more reps tend to improve draft stock, especially for offensive and defensive linemen, but the NFL has a baseline for different players by their position on the gridiron.
Here are the bench press baselines:
– Defensive backs and receivers: 15-20 reps
– Running backs: 20-25 reps
– Tight ends and linebackers: 25-30 reps
– Linemen: 30-39 reps
The best mark by a player from the region is held by Oregon State’s Stephen Paea with 49 reps in 2011. He is also recognized as the all-time Combine record-holder.
(Justin Ernest logged 51 reps in 1999, but the NFL changed equipment in 2006, and some Combine performances before then are looked upon in a different light.)
The second-best Pac-12 performer is Stanford’s Harrison Phillips with 42 reps in 2018. Oregon’s Igor Olshansky (2004) and Washington’s Vita Vea (2018) are tied for third and fourth with 41 reps.
Below we’ve compiled the bench press reps for every SuperWest player that has participated in 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.
| Player | Reps | School | Year | Pos |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stephen Paea | 49 | OSU | 2011 | DT |
| Scott Young | 43 | BYU | 2005 | OG |
| Isaac Sopoaga | 42 | Hawaii | 2004 | DT |
| Harrison Phillips | 42 | Stanford | 2018 | DT |
| Vita Vea | 41 | Washington | 2018 | DT |
| Igor Olshansky | 41 | Oregon | 2004 | DT |
| Andrew Vorhees | 38 | USC | 2023 | OL |
| Wayne Hunter | 37 | Hawaii | 2003 | OT |
| Haloti Ngata | 37 | Oregon | 2006 | DT |
| Victor Leyva | 37 | ASU | 2001 | OG |
| Loni Fangupo | 36 | BYU | 2012 | DT |
| Roy Lopez | 36 | Arizona | 2021 | DL |
| Alijah Vera-Tucker | 36 | USC | 2021 | OL |
| Tyler Larsen | 36 | Utah St | 2014 | C |
| Makoa Freitas | 36 | Arizona | 2003 | OG |
| Scott Peters | 36 | ASU | 2002 | C |
| Matt Johnson | 35 | BYU | 2000 | OG |
| Travis Laboy | 35 | Hawaii | 2004 | DE |
| Naufahu Tahi | 35 | BYU | 2006 | FB |
| David Veikune | 35 | Hawaii | 2009 | DE |
| Joe Hawley | 35 | UNLV | 2010 | C |
| Khyiris Tonga | 35 | BYU | 2021 | DL |
| Isaac Asiata | 35 | Utah | 2017 | OG |
| Nick Perry | 35 | USC | 2012 | DE |
| Alameda Ta’amu | 35 | Washington | 2012 | DT |
| Donald Butler | 35 | Washington | 2010 | ILB |
| Daniel Coats | 34 | BYU | 2007 | TE |
| Travis Bright | 34 | BYU | 2009 | OG |
| Christian Westerman | 34 | ASU | 2016 | OG |
| David Parry | 34 | Stanford | 2015 | DT |
| Danny Shelton | 34 | Washington | 2015 | DT |
| David DeCastro | 34 | Stanford | 2012 | OG |
| Brian Price | 34 | UCLA | 2010 | DT |
| Juan Garcia | 34 | Washington | 2009 | OG |
| Sedrick Ellis | 34 | USC | 2008 | DT |
| Ryan Kalil | 34 | USC | 2007 | C |
| Enoka Lucas | 34 | Oregon | 2007 | C |
| Shaun Cody | 34 | USC | 2005 | DT |
| Adam Seward | 33 | UNLV | 2005 | LB |
| Drew Dalman | 33 | Stanford | 2021 | C |
| Jake Hanson | 33 | Oregon | 2020 | OL |
| Elijah Qualls | 33 | Washington | 2017 | DT |
| Zane Taylor | 33 | Utah | 2011 | C |
| Jeff Byers | 33 | USC | 2010 | C |
| Shawn Lauvao | 33 | ASU | 2010 | OG |
| Desmond Bishop | 33 | California | 2007 | ILB |
| Babatunde Oshinowo | 33 | Stanford | 2006 | DT |
| Eric Heitmann | 33 | Stanford | 2002 | OG |
| Jarrett Kingston | 32 | USC | 2024 | OL |
| Quinn Christensen | 32 | BYU | 2004 | OG |
| Brett Roy | 32 | Nevada | 2012 | DT |
| Stephane Nembot | 32 | Colorado | 2016 | OT |
| Tyeler Davison | 32 | Fresno St | 2015 | DT |
| Tony Bergstrom | 32 | Utah | 2012 | OT |
| Ryan Miller | 32 | Colorado | 2012 | OG |
| Everson Griffen | 32 | USC | 2010 | DE |
| Kevin Ellison | 32 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Joe Toledo | 32 | Washington | 2006 | OT |
| Sione Pouha | 32 | Utah | 2005 | DT |
| Nick Barnett | 32 | OSU | 2003 | OLB |
| Kenyon Coleman | 32 | UCLA | 2002 | DE |
| John Frank | 32 | Utah | 2000 | DE |
| Kingsley Suamataia | 31 | BYU | 2024 | OL |
| Byron Frisch | 31 | BYU | 2000 | DE |
| Brandon Keith | 31 | New Mexico | 2008 | OT |
| Miles Burris | 31 | SDSU | 2012 | LB |
| Porter Gustin | 31 | USC | 2019 | EDGE |
| Kylie Fitts | 31 | Utah | 2018 | EDGE |
| Tenny Palepoi | 31 | Utah | 2014 | DT |
| Brian Schwenke | 31 | California | 2013 | C |
| Kris O’Dowd | 31 | USC | 2011 | C |
| Shane Vereen | 31 | California | 2011 | RB |
| Mike Gibson | 31 | California | 2008 | OG |
| Lawrence Jackson | 31 | USC | 2008 | DE |
| Tank Johnson | 31 | Washington | 2004 | DT |
| Rodney Leisle | 31 | UCLA | 2004 | DT |
| Junior Siavii | 31 | Oregon | 2004 | DT |
| Adam Archuleta | 31 | ASU | 2001 | S |
| Jackson Powers-Johnson | 30 | Oregon | 2024 | OL |
| Jason Scukanec | 30 | BYU | 2002 | C |
| Ray Feinga | 30 | BYU | 2009 | OG |
| Brady Christensen | 30 | BYU | 2021 | OL |
| Penei Sewell | 30 | Oregon | 2021 | OL |
| Jay Tufele | 30 | USC | 2021 | DL |
| Ezra Cleveland | 30 | Boise St | 2020 | OL |
| Cody Barton | 30 | Utah | 2019 | LB |
| Greg Gaines | 30 | Washington | 2019 | DL |
| Renell Wren | 30 | ASU | 2019 | DL |
| Solomon Thomas | 30 | Stanford | 2017 | DE |
| Joshua Garnett | 30 | Stanford | 2016 | OG |
| Alex Redmond | 30 | UCLA | 2016 | OG |
| Joey Iosefa | 30 | Hawaii | 2015 | FB |
| Khairi Fortt | 30 | California | 2014 | OLB |
| Matt Kalil | 30 | USC | 2012 | OT |
| Christian Tupou | 30 | USC | 2012 | DT |
| Sione Fua | 30 | Stanford | 2011 | DT |
| Brooks Reed | 30 | Arizona | 2011 | OLB |
| D’Aundre Reed | 30 | Arizona | 2011 | DE |
| Brian Cushing | 30 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Alex Fletcher | 30 | Stanford | 2009 | C |
| Kaluka Maiava | 30 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Jon Alston | 30 | Stanford | 2006 | OLB |
| Jacob Rogers | 30 | USC | 2004 | OT |
| Matt Leonard | 30 | Stanford | 2003 | DT |
| Shawn Murphy | 29 | Utah St | 2008 | OG |
| Jeremy Geathers | 29 | UNLV | 2008 | DE |
| Otito Ogbonnia | 29 | UCLA | 2022 | DT |
| Levi Onwuzurike | 29 | Washington | 2021 | DL |
| Nate Herbig | 29 | Stanford | 2019 | OL |
| Kenny Clark | 29 | UCLA | 2016 | DT |
| Xavier Cooper | 29 | WSU | 2015 | DT |
| Eathyn Manumaleuna | 29 | BYU | 2014 | DT |
| Chris Barker | 29 | Nevada | 2013 | OG |
| Datone Jones | 29 | UCLA | 2013 | DE |
| Sealver Siliga | 29 | Utah | 2011 | DT |
| Tyron Smith | 29 | USC | 2011 | OT |
| Daniel Te’o-Nesheim | 29 | Washington | 2010 | DE |
| Mike Pollak | 29 | ASU | 2008 | C |
| Quinton Ganther | 29 | Utah | 2006 | RB |
| Marquise Muldrow | 29 | ASU | 2002 | OG |
| Travis Claridge | 29 | USC | 2000 | OG |
| Alex Forsyth | 29 | Oregon | 2023 | OL |
| Scott Jackson | 28 | BYU | 2004 | C |
| Terrance Pennington | 28 | New Mexico | 2006 | OT |
| Ryan Cook | 28 | New Mexico | 2006 | OT |
| Jarron Gilbert | 28 | SJSU | 2009 | DE |
| Robert Turbin | 28 | Utah St | 2012 | RB |
| Brandon Marshall | 28 | Nevada | 2012 | LB |
| Tyrone Crawford | 28 | Boise St | 2012 | DE |
| Doug Martin | 28 | Boise St | 2012 | RB |
| Sam Jones | 28 | ASU | 2018 | OG |
| James Looney | 28 | California | 2018 | DE |
| Lowell Lotulelei | 28 | Utah | 2018 | DT |
| Christian Sam | 28 | ASU | 2018 | ILB |
| Nico Sirgusa | 28 | SDSU | 2017 | OG |
| Stevie Tu’Ikolovatu | 28 | USC | 2017 | DT |
| Eddie Vanderdoes | 28 | UCLA | 2017 | DT |
| Darrell Greene | 28 | SDSU | 2016 | OG |
| Joe Dahl | 28 | WSU | 2016 | OT |
| Jamil Douglas | 28 | ASU | 2015 | OG |
| David Bakhtiari | 28 | Colorado | 2013 | OT |
| Allen Bradford | 28 | USC | 2011 | RB |
| Lawrence Guy | 28 | ASU | 2011 | DT |
| Zack Williams | 28 | WSU | 2011 | C |
| Mike Tepper | 28 | California | 2010 | OG |
| Anthony Felder | 28 | California | 2009 | ILB |
| Sam Baker | 28 | USC | 2008 | OT |
| Chilo Rachal | 28 | USC | 2008 | OG |
| Jonathan Stewart | 28 | Oregon | 2008 | RB |
| Fred Matua | 28 | USC | 2006 | OG |
| Lorenzo Alexander | 28 | California | 2005 | DT |
| Alex Smith | 28 | Stanford | 2005 | TE |
| Jordan Gross | 28 | Utah | 2003 | OT |
| Ed Ta’amu | 28 | Utah | 2002 | OG |
| Coy Wire | 28 | Stanford | 2002 | S |
| Joe Tafoya | 28 | Arizona | 2001 | DE |
| DJ Johnson | 28 | Oregon | 2023 | EDGE |
| Ahmed Hassanein | 27 | Boise St | 2025 | DE |
| Tyler Batty | 27 | BYU | 2025 | DE |
| Brian Urlacher | 27 | New Mexico | 2000 | LB |
| Kaulana Noa | 27 | Hawaii | 2000 | OT |
| Vince Manuwai | 27 | Hawaii | 2003 | OG |
| Jonathan Harrell | 27 | New Mexico | 2004 | LB |
| Claude Terrell | 27 | New Mexico | 2005 | OG |
| Derek Schouman | 27 | Boise St | 2007 | FB |
| Dennis Pitta | 27 | BYU | 2010 | TE |
| Vaughn Meatoga | 27 | Hawaii | 2012 | DT |
| Chad Luma | 27 | WSU | 2022 | LB |
| Kayvon Thibodeaux | 27 | Oregon | 2022 | EDGE |
| Josiah Bronson | 27 | Washington | 2021 | DL |
| Mustafa Johnson | 27 | Colorado | 2021 | DE |
| Austin Jackson | 27 | USC | 2020 | OL |
| N’Keal Harry | 27 | ASU | 2019 | WR |
| J.J. Dielman | 27 | Utah | 2017 | OT |
| Marcus Hardison | 27 | ASU | 2015 | DT |
| John Boyett | 27 | Oregon | 2013 | S |
| Coby Fleener | 27 | Stanford | 2012 | TE |
| Zane Beadles | 27 | Utah | 2010 | OG |
| Sammie Hill | 27 | Colorado | 2009 | DT |
| Spencer Larsen | 27 | Arizona | 2008 | ILB |
| Craig Stevens | 27 | California | 2008 | TE |
| Sir Henry Anderson | 27 | OSU | 2006 | DT |
| Joe Klopfenstein | 27 | Colorado | 2006 | TE |
| Marvin Philip | 27 | California | 2006 | C |
| Justin Fargas | 27 | USC | 2003 | RB |
| Sultan McCullough | 27 | USC | 2003 | RB |
| Kurth Connell | 27 | Washington | 2000 | OT |
| Rob Meier | 27 | WSU | 2000 | DE |
| Noah Sewell | 27 | Oregon | 2023 | LB |
| Teddye Buchanan | 26 | Cal | 2025 | LB |
| Sataoa Laumea | 26 | Utah | 2024 | OL |
| Andrew Kline | 26 | SDSU | 2000 | OG |
| Brett Keisel | 26 | BYU | 2002 | DE |
| Dietrich Canterberry | 26 | UNLV | 2004 | DT |
| Brady Poppinga | 26 | BYU | 2005 | DE |
| Chad Rinehart | 26 | New Mexico | 2008 | OG |
| Bryan Kehl | 26 | BYU | 2008 | LB |
| Ian Johnson | 26 | Boise St | 2009 | RB |
| Kevin Basped | 26 | Nevada | 2010 | DE |
| Lonyae Miller | 26 | Fresno St | 2010 | RB |
| Shelley Smith | 26 | Colorado St | 2010 | OG |
| Foster Sarell | 26 | Stanford | 2021 | OL |
| John Molchon | 26 | Boise St | 2020 | OL |
| Matt Dickerson | 26 | UCLA | 2018 | DE |
| Cole Madison | 26 | WSU | 2018 | OL |
| Hercules Mata’afa | 26 | WSU | 2018 | EDGE |
| Sean Harlow | 26 | OSU | 2017 | OG |
| Soma Vainuku | 26 | USC | 2016 | FB |
| Rob Crisp | 26 | Boise St | 2015 | OT |
| Jeremiah Poutasi | 26 | Utah | 2015 | OG |
| Josh Shaw | 26 | USC | 2015 | CB |
| Cameron Fleming | 26 | Stanford | 2014 | OT |
| Trevor Reilly | 26 | Utah | 2014 | OLB |
| Bishop Sankey | 26 | Washington | 2014 | RB |
| Braden Brown | 26 | BYU | 2013 | OT |
| Derrick Shelby | 26 | Utah | 2012 | DE |
| Brandon Bair | 26 | Oregon | 2011 | DE |
| Jurrell Casey | 26 | USC | 2011 | DT |
| Ricky Elmore | 26 | Arizona | 2011 | DE |
| Pannel Egboh | 26 | Stanford | 2009 | DE |
| Justin Forsett | 26 | California | 2008 | RB |
| Roy Schuening | 26 | OSU | 2008 | OG |
| Thomas Williams | 26 | USC | 2008 | ILB |
| Chris Henry | 26 | Arizona | 2007 | RB |
| Matt Toeaina | 26 | Oregon | 2007 | DT |
| Deuce Lutui | 26 | USC | 2006 | OG |
| Calvin Armstrong | 26 | WSU | 2005 | OT |
| Khalif Barnes | 26 | Washington | 2005 | OT |
| Chris Kemoeatu | 26 | Utah | 2005 | OG |
| Mike Patterson | 26 | USC | 2005 | DT |
| Eric Manning | 26 | OSU | 2003 | DT |
| Raonall Smith | 26 | WSU | 2002 | OLB |
| Chad Ward | 26 | Washington | 2001 | OG |
| John Ojukwu | 26 | BSU | 2023 | OL |
| Gabriel Murphy | 25 | UCLA | 2024 | LB |
| MarShawn Lloyd | 25 | USC | 2024 | RB |
| Brad Meester | 25 | New Mexico | 2000 | C |
| Tony Terrell | 25 | UNLV | 2003 | OG |
| Kirk Morrison | 25 | SDSU | 2005 | LB |
| Antwan Applewhite | 25 | SDSU | 2007 | DE |
| Samson Satele | 25 | Hawaii | 2007 | C |
| Nate Ilaoa | 25 | Hawaii | 2007 | RB |
| Beau Bell | 25 | UNLV | 2008 | LB |
| Devin Clark | 25 | New Mexico | 2008 | OT |
| Kyle Wilson | 25 | Boise St | 2010 | CB |
| Andrew Jackson | 25 | Fresno St | 2011 | OG |
| Matt Reynolds | 25 | BYU | 2012 | OT |
| Devin Lloyd | 25 | Utah | 2022 | LB |
| William Dunkle | 25 | SDSU | 2022 | OG |
| Hamilcar Rashed | 25 | OSU | 2021 | OLB |
| Bradlee Anae | 25 | Utah | 2020 | DL |
| Michael Turk | 25 | ASU | 2020 | P |
| Ryan Pope | 25 | SDSU | 2019 | OT |
| Jackson Barton | 25 | Utah | 2019 | OT |
| Justin Hollins | 25 | Oregon | 2019 | EDGE |
| Dane Cruikshank | 25 | Arizona | 2018 | S |
| Scott Quessenberry | 25 | UCLA | 2018 | C |
| Jojo Wicker | 25 | ASU | 2018 | DE |
| Bronson Kaufusi | 25 | BYU | 2016 | DE |
| Jake Brendel | 25 | UCLA | 2016 | C |
| Terry Poole | 25 | SDSU | 2015 | OT |
| David Johnson | 25 | New Mexico | 2015 | RB |
| Jake Fisher | 25 | Oregon | 2015 | OT |
| Owamagbe Odighizuwa | 25 | UCLA | 2015 | DE |
| Weston Richburg | 25 | Colorado St | 2014 | C |
| Xavier Su’a-Filo | 25 | UCLA | 2014 | OG |
| John Lotulelei | 25 | UNLV | 2013 | LB |
| David Quessenberry | 25 | SJSU | 2013 | OT |
| Garth Gerhart | 25 | ASU | 2012 | C |
| Adam Grant | 25 | Arizona | 2011 | OT |
| Cameron Jordan | 25 | California | 2011 | DE |
| Kyle Bosworth | 25 | UCLA | 2010 | OLB |
| Dexter Davis | 25 | ASU | 2010 | OLB |
| Earl Mitchell | 25 | Arizona | 2010 | DT |
| David Buehler | 25 | USC | 2009 | K |
| Patrick Chung | 25 | Oregon | 2009 | S |
| Fili Moala | 25 | USC | 2009 | DT |
| Julian Jenkins | 25 | Stanford | 2006 | DE |
| Marquis Cooper | 25 | Washington | 2004 | OLB |
| Dwan Edwards | 25 | OSU | 2004 | DT |
| Tim Euhus | 25 | OSU | 2004 | TE |
| Clarence Farmer | 25 | Arizona | 2004 | RB |
| Mike Karney | 25 | ASU | 2004 | FB |
| Gabe Nyenhuis | 25 | Colorado | 2004 | DE |
| Richard Seigler | 25 | OSU | 2004 | ILB |
| Tully Banta-Cain | 25 | California | 2003 | DE |
| Tyler Brayton | 25 | Colorado | 2003 | DE |
| Lance Briggs | 25 | Arizona | 2003 | ILB |
| Scott Tercero | 25 | California | 2003 | OG |
| Mac Tuiaea | 25 | Washington | 2000 | DT |
| Junior Tafuna | 24 | Utah | 2025 | DT |
| Keaton Bills | 24 | Utah | 2024 | OL |
| George Holani | 24 | BSU | 2024 | RB |
| Jeff Ulbrich | 24 | Hawaii | 2000 | LB |
| Adrian Klemm | 24 | Hawaii | 2000 | OT |
| Dave Stachelski | 24 | Boise St | 2000 | TE |
| Patrick Chukwurah | 24 | Wyoming | 2001 | LB |
| Anton Palepoi | 24 | UNLV | 2002 | DE |
| Quincy Black | 24 | New Mexico | 2007 | LB |
| Ryan Clady | 24 | Boise St | 2008 | OT |
| Coye Francies | 24 | SJSU | 2009 | CB |
| Billy Winn | 24 | Boise St | 2012 | DE |
| Abraham Lucas | 24 | WSU | 2022 | OT |
| Cameron Thomoas | 24 | SDSU | 2022 | DE |
| Parker Ferguson | 24 | Air Force | 2021 | OT |
| Walker Little | 24 | Stanford | 2021 | OT |
| DAnte Smith | 24 | Arizona | 2021 | LB |
| Sione Takitaki | 24 | BYU | 2019 | LB |
| Andre Dillard | 24 | WSU | 2019 | OT |
| Myles Gaskin | 24 | Washington | 2019 | RB |
| Kolton Miller | 24 | UCLA | 2018 | OT |
| Pharaoh Brown | 24 | Oregon | 2017 | TE |
| Joe Mathis | 24 | Washington | 2017 | DE |
| Takkarist McKinley | 24 | UCLA | 2017 | OLB |
| Pita Taumoepenu | 24 | Utah | 2017 | OLB |
| Tyler Johnstone | 24 | Oregon | 2016 | OT |
| Tre Madden | 24 | USC | 2016 | RB |
| Mark Nzeocha | 24 | Wyoming | 2015 | LB |
| Arik Armstead | 24 | Oregon | 2015 | DE |
| Ellis McCarthy | 24 | UCLA | 2015 | DT |
| Marcel Jensen | 24 | Fresno St | 2014 | TE |
| Kapri Bibbs | 24 | Colorado St | 2014 | RB |
| Deandre Coleman | 24 | California | 2014 | DT |
| Scott Crichton | 24 | OSU | 2014 | DE |
| Jake Murphy | 24 | Utah | 2014 | TE |
| Will Sutton | 24 | ASU | 2014 | DT |
| Luke Ingram | 24 | Hawaii | 2013 | LS |
| Zach Ertz | 24 | Stanford | 2013 | TE |
| Joe Kruger | 24 | Utah | 2013 | DE |
| Omar Bolden | 24 | ASU | 2012 | CB |
| Mychal Kendricks | 24 | California | 2012 | ILB |
| Jalil Brown | 24 | Colorado | 2011 | CB |
| Alex Linnenkohl | 24 | OSU | 2011 | C |
| Jimmy Smith | 24 | Colorado | 2011 | CB |
| Taylor Mays | 24 | USC | 2010 | S |
| Eben Britton | 24 | Arizona | 2009 | OT |
| Victor Butler | 24 | OSU | 2009 | OLB |
| Paul Kruger | 24 | Utah | 2009 | DE |
| Cameron Morrah | 24 | California | 2009 | TE |
| Fenuki Tupou | 24 | Oregon | 2009 | OT |
| Fred Davis | 24 | USC | 2008 | TE |
| Tyler Polumbus | 24 | Colorado | 2008 | OT |
| Keith Rivers | 24 | USC | 2008 | OLB |
| Dorian Smith | 24 | OSU | 2008 | DE |
| Zach Catanese | 24 | ASU | 2007 | S |
| Brandon Mebane | 24 | California | 2007 | DT |
| Abraham Wright | 24 | Colorado | 2007 | DE |
| Tim Day | 24 | Oregon | 2006 | TE |
| Keith Ellison | 24 | OSU | 2006 | OLB |
| Dave Ball | 24 | UCLA | 2004 | DE |
| Mark Wilson | 24 | California | 2004 | OT |
| James Allen | 24 | OSU | 2002 | OLB |
| Justin Bannan | 24 | Colorado | 2002 | DT |
| Kevin Barry | 24 | Arizona | 2002 | OG |
| Kyle Kosier | 24 | ASU | 2002 | OT |
| Zeke Moreno | 24 | USC | 2001 | ILB |
| Erik Flowers | 24 | ASU | 2000 | DE |
| Keith Miller | 24 | California | 2000 | ILB |
| Manuia Savea | 24 | Arizona | 2000 | OG |
| Richard Seals | 24 | Utah | 2000 | DT |
| Marvel Smith | 24 | ASU | 2000 | OT |
| Mohamed Kamara | 23 | CSU | 2024 | DL |
| Carlos Nuno | 23 | BYU | 2000 | TE |
| Kynan Forney | 23 | Hawaii | 2001 | OG |
| Jarrod Baxter | 23 | New Mexico | 2002 | FB |
| Gabe Reid | 23 | BYU | 2003 | TE |
| Virgil Green | 23 | Nevada | 2011 | TE |
| Jeron Johnson | 23 | Boise St | 2011 | S |
| James-Michael Johnson | 23 | Nevada | 2012 | LB |
| DJ Davidson | 23 | ASU | 2022 | DT |
| Thomas Schaffer | 23 | Stanford | 2021 | DE |
| Jordon Scott | 23 | Oregon | 2021 | DT |
| William Sherman | 23 | Colorado | 2021 | OL |
| Hunter Bryant | 23 | Washington | 2020 | TE |
| Joshua Kelley | 23 | UCLA | 2020 | RB |
| John Penisini | 23 | Utah | 2020 | DL |
| Calvin Throckmorton | 23 | Oregon | 2020 | OL |
| Kaleb McGary | 23 | Washington | 2019 | OT |
| Lavon Coleman | 23 | Washington | 2018 | RB |
| Kenny Young | 23 | UCLA | 2018 | ILB |
| Harvey Langi | 23 | BYU | 2017 | LB |
| Rees Odhiambo | 23 | Boise St | 2016 | OT |
| Jason Fanaika | 23 | Utah | 2016 | DE |
| Daniel Lasco | 23 | California | 2016 | RB |
| Kyle Murphy | 23 | Stanford | 2016 | OT |
| Ty Sambrailo | 23 | Colorado St | 2015 | OT |
| Matt Paradis | 23 | Boise St | 2014 | C |
| Carl Bradford | 23 | ASU | 2014 | OLB |
| Devon Kennard | 23 | USC | 2014 | OLB |
| Marcus Martin | 23 | USC | 2014 | C |
| D.J. Harper | 23 | Boise St | 2013 | RB |
| Mark Asper | 23 | Oregon | 2012 | OG |
| John Cullen | 23 | Utah | 2012 | OT |
| Mitchell Schwartz | 23 | California | 2012 | OT |
| Jordan Cameron | 23 | USC | 2011 | TE |
| Ed Dickson | 23 | Oregon | 2010 | TE |
| Rob Gronkowski | 23 | Arizona | 2010 | TE |
| Alex Parsons | 23 | USC | 2010 | OG |
| Stevenson Sylvester | 23 | Utah | 2010 | OLB |
| Andy Levitre | 23 | OSU | 2009 | OG |
| Clay Matthews | 23 | USC | 2009 | OLB |
| Rey Maualuga | 23 | USC | 2009 | ILB |
| Worrell Williams | 23 | California | 2009 | ILB |
| Brandon Harrison | 23 | Stanford | 2007 | S |
| Justin Hickman | 23 | UCLA | 2007 | OLB |
| Blair Phillips | 23 | Oregon | 2007 | ILB |
| Marcedes Lewis | 23 | UCLA | 2006 | TE |
| Bill Swancutt | 23 | OSU | 2005 | DE |
| Lofa Tatupu | 23 | USC | 2005 | ILB |
| Sam Wilder | 23 | Colorado | 2005 | OT |
| Brandon Chillar | 23 | UCLA | 2004 | OLB |
| James Lee | 23 | OSU | 2003 | DT |
| Maurice Morris | 23 | Oregon | 2002 | RB |
| Zach Quaccia | 23 | Stanford | 2002 | C |
| Jashon Sykes | 23 | Colorado | 2002 | OLB |
| Ennis Davis | 23 | USC | 2001 | DT |
| Willie Howard | 23 | Stanford | 2001 | DT |
| Michael Wilson | 23 | Stanford | 2023 | WR |
| Frank Crum | 22 | Wyoming | 2024 | OL |
| Tim Stuber | 22 | Colorado St | 2001 | OG |
| Chris Cooley | 22 | Utah St | 2004 | TE |
| Jorge Cordova | 22 | Nevada | 2004 | LB |
| Joel Dreessen | 22 | Colorado St | 2005 | TE |
| John Wendling | 22 | Wyoming | 2007 | S |
| James Jones | 22 | SJSU | 2007 | WR |
| William Robinson | 22 | SDSU | 2008 | OT |
| Glover Quin | 22 | New Mexico | 2009 | S |
| Justin Cole | 22 | SJSU | 2010 | LB |
| Nate Potter | 22 | Boise St | 2012 | OT |
| Daniel Bellinger | 22 | SDSU | 2022 | TE |
| Teagan Quitoriano | 22 | OSU | 2022 | TE |
| Teagan Quitoriano | 22 | OSU | 2022 | TE |
| Teton Saltes | 22 | New Mexico | 2021 | OL |
| Zeandae Johnson | 22 | California | 2021 | DE |
| Curtis Robinson | 22 | Stanford | 2021 | LB |
| Joe Tryon | 22 | Washington | 2021 | OLB |
| Josh Oliver | 22 | SJSU | 2019 | TE |
| Alexander Mattison | 22 | Boise St | 2019 | RB |
| Zach Banner | 22 | USC | 2017 | OG |
| Devontae Booker | 22 | Utah | 2016 | RB |
| Scooby Wright III | 22 | Arizona | 2016 | ILB |
| Blake Martinez | 22 | Stanford | 2016 | ILB |
| Gionni Paul | 22 | Utah | 2016 | ILB |
| Max Tuerk | 22 | USC | 2016 | C |
| Obum Gwacham | 22 | OSU | 2015 | DE |
| Joel Bitonio | 22 | Nevada | 2014 | OG |
| David Yankey | 22 | Stanford | 2014 | OG |
| Jamar Taylor | 22 | Boise St | 2013 | CB |
| Nick Kasa | 22 | Colorado | 2013 | TE |
| Marvin Jones | 22 | California | 2012 | WR |
| Eddie Pleasant | 22 | Oregon | 2012 | S |
| Matt Asiata | 22 | Utah | 2011 | RB |
| Mason Foster | 22 | Washington | 2011 | OLB |
| Owen Marecic | 22 | Stanford | 2011 | FB |
| Toby Gerhart | 22 | Stanford | 2010 | RB |
| Kyle Moore | 22 | USC | 2009 | DE |
| Max Unger | 22 | Oregon | 2009 | C |
| Robert James | 22 | ASU | 2008 | OLB |
| Andrew Carnahan | 22 | ASU | 2007 | OT |
| Mark Fenton | 22 | Colorado | 2007 | C |
| Isaiah Stanback | 22 | Washington | 2007 | QB |
| Palauni Ma Sun | 22 | Oregon | 2007 | OG |
| Anthony Trucks | 22 | Oregon | 2006 | OLB |
| O.J. Atogwe | 22 | Stanford | 2005 | S |
| Matt Grootegoed | 22 | USC | 2005 | S |
| Doug Nienhuis | 22 | OSU | 2005 | OG |
| Kirk Chambers | 22 | Stanford | 2004 | OT |
| Colin Branch | 22 | Stanford | 2003 | S |
| Casey Moore | 22 | Stanford | 2003 | FB |
| Kevin Ware | 22 | Washington | 2003 | TE |
| Kori Dickerson | 22 | USC | 2002 | FB |
| Lonnie Ford | 22 | USC | 2002 | DE |
| Wesly Mallard | 22 | Oregon | 2002 | S |
| Saul Patu | 22 | Oregon | 2001 | DE |
| Daniel Scott | 22 | Cal | 2023 | DB |
| Jeffrey Bassa | 21 | Oregon | 2025 | LB |
| Jackson Woodard | 21 | UNLV | 2025 | LB |
| Brennan Jackson | 21 | WSU | 2024 | DL |
| Trent Gamble | 21 | Wyoming | 2000 | S |
| Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila | 21 | SDSU | 2000 | LB |
| Tim Provost | 21 | SJSU | 2003 | OT |
| Dustin Rykert | 21 | BYU | 2003 | OT |
| Logan Mankins | 21 | Fresno St | 2005 | OG |
| Donald Penn | 21 | Utah St | 2006 | OT |
| Manaia Brown | 21 | BYU | 2006 | DT |
| Daryn Colledge | 21 | Boise St | 2006 | OT |
| Leonard Peters | 21 | Hawaii | 2007 | S |
| Chris Denman | 21 | Fresno St | 2007 | OT |
| Tyler Schmitt | 21 | SDSU | 2008 | LS |
| Adam Bishop | 21 | Nevada | 2008 | TE |
| Jason Beauchamp | 21 | UNLV | 2010 | LB |
| Dontay Moch | 21 | Nevada | 2011 | LB |
| Mike Ball | 21 | Nevada | 2012 | RB |
| Zach Thomas | 21 | SDSU | 2022 | OG |
| Hunter Kampmoyer | 21 | Oregon | 2021 | TE |
| Kevin Thomson | 21 | Washington | 2021 | QB |
| Logan Wilson | 21 | Wyoming | 2020 | LB |
| Leki Fotu | 21 | Utah | 2020 | DL |
| Javelin Guidry | 21 | Utah | 2020 | CB |
| Davion Taylor | 21 | Colorado | 2020 | LB |
| Ben Burr-Kirven | 21 | Washington | 2019 | LB |
| Chuma Edoga | 21 | USC | 2019 | OT |
| Andre James | 21 | UCLA | 2019 | OT |
| Fred Warner | 21 | BYU | 2018 | LB |
| Keishawn Bierria | 21 | Washington | 2018 | ILB |
| Justin Davis | 21 | USC | 2017 | RB |
| Kamalei Correa | 21 | Boise St | 2016 | DE |
| Kyle Van Noy | 21 | BYU | 2014 | LB |
| Charles Leno | 21 | Boise St | 2014 | OG |
| Taylor Hart | 21 | Oregon | 2014 | DE |
| Josh Mauro | 21 | Stanford | 2014 | DE |
| Ziggy Ansah | 21 | BYU | 2013 | DE |
| Delano Howell | 21 | Stanford | 2012 | S |
| Jamaar Jarrett | 21 | ASU | 2012 | DE |
| Senio Kelemete | 21 | Washington | 2012 | OG |
| David Paulson | 21 | Oregon | 2012 | TE |
| Mike Mohamed | 21 | California | 2011 | ILB |
| Nate Solder | 21 | Colorado | 2011 | OT |
| Tyson Alualu | 21 | California | 2010 | DE |
| Charles Brown | 21 | USC | 2010 | OT |
| Travis Goethel | 21 | ASU | 2010 | ILB |
| Drew Radovich | 21 | USC | 2008 | OG |
| Ryan Torain | 21 | ASU | 2008 | RB |
| Justin Tryon | 21 | ASU | 2008 | CB |
| Mkristo Bruce | 21 | WSU | 2007 | DE |
| Ryan O’Callaghan | 21 | California | 2006 | OT |
| Lawrence Vickers | 21 | Colorado | 2006 | FB |
| Ben Emanuel | 21 | UCLA | 2005 | S |
| Jonathan Pollard | 21 | OSU | 2005 | OLB |
| Adam Snyder | 21 | Oregon | 2005 | OG |
| Marcell Allmond | 21 | USC | 2004 | CB |
| Sean Tufts | 21 | Colorado | 2004 | OLB |
| Brandon Drumm | 21 | Colorado | 2003 | FB |
| Justin Peelle | 21 | Oregon | 2002 | TE |
| Robert Thomas | 21 | UCLA | 2002 | OLB |
| Langston Walker | 21 | California | 2002 | OT |
| Marcus Bell | 21 | Arizona | 2000 | ILB |
| Ryan Tujague | 21 | WSU | 2000 | OG |
| Carson Schwesinger | 20 | UCLA | 2025 | LB |
| Oluwafemi Oladejo | 20 | UCLA | 2025 | DE |
| Sione Vaki | 20 | Utah | 2024 | DB |
| Cedric Pittman | 20 | Nevada | 2000 | LB |
| Clark Haggans | 20 | Colorado St | 2000 | LB |
| Kevin Jordan | 20 | Fresno St | 2001 | OG |
| Justin Ena | 20 | BYU | 2002 | LB |
| Wendell Mathis | 20 | Fresno St | 2006 | RB |
| Marcus Smith | 20 | New Mexico | 2008 | WR |
| Kory Sperry | 20 | Colorado St | 2009 | TE |
| Gartrell Johnson | 20 | Colorado St | 2009 | RB |
| Carl Ihenacho | 20 | SJSU | 2010 | LB |
| Vai Taua | 20 | Nevada | 2011 | RB |
| Alex Green | 20 | Hawaii | 2011 | RB |
| Duke Ihenacho | 20 | SJSU | 2012 | S |
| Rishard Matthews | 20 | Nevada | 2012 | WR |
| George Iloka | 20 | Boise St | 2012 | S |
| Max Borghi | 20 | WSU | 2022 | RB |
| Brady Breeze | 20 | Oregon | 2021 | S |
| Amon-Ra St. Brown | 20 | USC | 2021 | WR |
| Terrell Burgess | 20 | Utah | 2020 | S |
| Cohl Cabral | 20 | ASU | 2020 | OL |
| Nick Harris | 20 | Washington | 2020 | OL |
| David Wells | 20 | SDSU | 2018 | TE |
| Leighton Vander Esch | 20 | Boise St | 2018 | LB |
| Uchenna Nwosu | 20 | USC | 2018 | EDGE |
| J.R. Tavai | 20 | USC | 2015 | OLB |
| Randall Telfer | 20 | USC | 2015 | TE |
| Demarcus Lawrence | 20 | Boise St | 2014 | DE |
| Rashaad Reynolds | 20 | OSU | 2014 | CB |
| Austin Seferian-Jenkins | 20 | Washington | 2014 | TE |
| Kenjon Barner | 20 | Oregon | 2013 | RB |
| Markus Wheaton | 20 | OSU | 2013 | WR |
| Josh Kaddu | 20 | Oregon | 2012 | OLB |
| Rulon Davis | 20 | California | 2009 | DE |
| Jeremiah Johnson | 20 | Oregon | 2009 | RB |
| Antoine Cason | 20 | Arizona | 2008 | CB |
| Adam Koets | 20 | OSU | 2007 | OT |
| Marshawn Lynch | 20 | California | 2007 | RB |
| Joe Newton | 20 | OSU | 2007 | TE |
| Michael Okwo | 20 | Stanford | 2007 | ILB |
| Dante Rosario | 20 | Oregon | 2007 | TE |
| Dallas Sartz | 20 | USC | 2007 | OLB |
| Gilbert Harris | 20 | Arizona | 2006 | FB |
| Brian Iwuh | 20 | Colorado | 2006 | OLB |
| Quinn Sypniewski | 20 | Colorado | 2006 | TE |
| Josh Parrish | 20 | WSU | 2004 | OT |
| Kerry Carter | 20 | Stanford | 2003 | RB |
| Mike Seidman | 20 | UCLA | 2003 | TE |
| DeShaun Foster | 20 | UCLA | 2002 | RB |
| Scott Fujita | 20 | California | 2002 | OLB |
| Victor Rogers | 20 | Colorado | 2002 | OG |
| Tom Ashworth | 20 | Colorado | 2001 | OG |
| Andre Carter | 20 | California | 2001 | DE |
| Peter Sirmon | 20 | Oregon | 2000 | ILB |
| Nohl Williams | 19 | Cal | 2025 | CB |
| Brian Gray | 19 | BYU | 2000 | CB |
| Rick Crowell | 19 | Colorado St | 2001 | LB |
| Pisa Tinoisamoa | 19 | Hawaii | 2003 | LB |
| Spencer Nead | 19 | BYU | 2003 | TE |
| Marviel Underwood | 19 | SDSU | 2005 | S |
| Legedu Naanee | 19 | Boise St | 2007 | WR |
| Erik Cook | 19 | New Mexico | 2010 | C |
| Ryan Mathews | 19 | Fresno St | 2010 | RB |
| Robert Malone | 19 | Fresno St | 2010 | P |
| Manase Tonga | 19 | BYU | 2010 | FB |
| Kealoha Pilares | 19 | Hawaii | 2011 | WR |
| Shea McClellin | 19 | Boise St | 2012 | LB |
| Avery Williams | 19 | Boise St | 2021 | CB |
| John Bates | 19 | Boise St | 2021 | TE |
| Frank Darby | 19 | ASU | 2021 | WR |
| Jevon Holland | 19 | Oregon | 2021 | S |
| Francis Bernard | 19 | Utah | 2020 | LB |
| Zack Moss | 19 | Utah | 2020 | RB |
| J.J. Taylor | 19 | Arizona | 2020 | RB |
| Kahale Warring | 19 | SDSU | 2019 | TE |
| Jalen Jelks | 19 | Oregon | 2019 | EDGE |
| Austin Corbett | 19 | Nevada | 2018 | OG |
| Peter Kalambayi | 19 | Stanford | 2018 | EDGE |
| Azeem Victor | 19 | Washington | 2018 | ILB |
| Chase Roullier | 19 | Wyoming | 2017 | C |
| Jimmy Pruitt | 19 | SJSU | 2016 | CB |
| Tevin Carter | 19 | Utah | 2016 | S |
| Austin Hooper | 19 | Stanford | 2016 | TE |
| Myles Jack | 19 | UCLA | 2016 | OLB |
| Jared Norris | 19 | Utah | 2016 | ILB |
| Paul Perkins | 19 | UCLA | 2016 | RB |
| Jay Ajayi | 19 | Boise St | 2015 | RB |
| Eric Kendricks | 19 | UCLA | 2015 | ILB |
| Steven Nelson | 19 | OSU | 2015 | CB |
| Hayes Pullard | 19 | USC | 2015 | ILB |
| Eric Rowe | 19 | Utah | 2015 | CB |
| Deone Bucannon | 19 | WSU | 2014 | S |
| Ka’Deem Carey | 19 | Arizona | 2014 | RB |
| Trent Murphy | 19 | Stanford | 2014 | DE |
| T.J. McDonald | 19 | USC | 2013 | S |
| Chris Galippo | 19 | USC | 2012 | ILB |
| Chris Owusu | 19 | Stanford | 2012 | WR |
| James Rodgers | 19 | OSU | 2012 | WR |
| Marc Tyler | 19 | USC | 2012 | RB |
| Anthony McCoy | 19 | USC | 2010 | TE |
| Chris McGaha | 19 | ASU | 2010 | WR |
| Kevin Thomas | 19 | USC | 2010 | CB |
| T.J. Ward | 19 | Oregon | 2010 | S |
| Damian Williams | 19 | USC | 2010 | WR |
| Keenan Lewis | 19 | OSU | 2009 | CB |
| Mark Bradford | 19 | Stanford | 2008 | WR |
| Bruce Davis | 19 | UCLA | 2008 | OLB |
| Stephen Berg | 19 | ASU | 2007 | OG |
| Trent Edwards | 19 | Stanford | 2007 | QB |
| Sabby Piscitelli | 19 | OSU | 2007 | S |
| Mike Bell | 19 | Arizona | 2006 | RB |
| Jerome Harrison | 19 | WSU | 2006 | RB |
| Zach Tuiasosopo | 19 | Washington | 2005 | FB |
| Brett Pierce | 19 | Stanford | 2004 | TE |
| Jason Shivers | 19 | ASU | 2004 | S |
| Solomon Bates | 19 | ASU | 2003 | ILB |
| Onterrio Smith | 19 | Oregon | 2003 | RB |
| Brian Allen | 19 | Stanford | 2002 | RB |
| Tank Williams | 19 | Stanford | 2002 | S |
| Nijrell Eason | 19 | ASU | 2001 | CB |
| Elliot Silvers | 19 | Washington | 2001 | OT |
| Jerry DeLoach | 19 | California | 2000 | DT |
| Jabari Issa | 19 | Washington | 2000 | DT |
| Terrelle Smith | 19 | ASU | 2000 | FB |
| Kitan Crawford | 18 | Nevada | 2025 | S |
| Woody Marks | 18 | USC | 2025 | RB |
| Chau Smith-Wade | 18 | WSU | 2024 | DB |
| Rob Morris | 18 | BYU | 2000 | LB |
| Ryan Hannam | 18 | New Mexico | 2002 | TE |
| Doug Jolley | 18 | BYU | 2002 | TE |
| Ben Miller | 18 | Air Force | 2002 | C |
| Joseph Hayes | 18 | SJSU | 2004 | OG |
| DonTrell Moore | 18 | New Mexico | 2006 | RB |
| Ryan Mouton | 18 | Hawaii | 2009 | CB |
| Cole Pemberton | 18 | Colorado St | 2010 | OT |
| Schuylar Oordt | 18 | New Mexico | 2011 | TE |
| Ryan Winterswyk | 18 | Boise St | 2011 | DE |
| Jaylen Watson | 18 | WSU | 2022 | CB |
| Trey McBride | 18 | Colorado St | 2022 | TE |
| Paulson Adebo | 18 | Stanford | 2021 | CB |
| Nick Pickett | 18 | Oregon | 2021 | S |
| Colby Parkinson | 18 | Stanford | 2020 | TE |
| Tyler Roemer | 18 | SDSU | 2019 | OT |
| Ugo Amadi | 18 | Oregon | 2019 | S |
| Bryce Love | 18 | Stanford | 2019 | RB |
| Tanner Carew | 18 | Oregon | 2018 | LS |
| Alani Fua | 18 | BYU | 2015 | LB |
| Robert Herron | 18 | Wyoming | 2014 | WR |
| Silas Redd | 18 | USC | 2014 | RB |
| George Uko | 18 | USC | 2014 | DT |
| Johnathan Franklin | 18 | UCLA | 2013 | RB |
| Chase Thomas | 18 | Stanford | 2013 | OLB |
| Trevin Wade | 18 | Arizona | 2012 | CB |
| Akeem Ayers | 18 | UCLA | 2011 | OLB |
| Brandon Burton | 18 | Utah | 2011 | CB |
| Chris Conte | 18 | California | 2011 | S |
| Ryan Whalen | 18 | Stanford | 2011 | WR |
| Jahvid Best | 18 | California | 2010 | RB |
| LeGarrette Blount | 18 | Oregon | 2010 | RB |
| Joe McKnight | 18 | USC | 2010 | RB |
| Cary Harris | 18 | USC | 2009 | CB |
| Wilrey Fontenot | 18 | Arizona | 2008 | CB |
| Trent Bray | 18 | OSU | 2006 | ILB |
| Maurice Jones-Drew | 18 | UCLA | 2006 | RB |
| Dale Robinson | 18 | ASU | 2006 | ILB |
| Hamza Abdullah | 18 | WSU | 2005 | S |
| J.J. Arrington | 18 | California | 2005 | RB |
| Alex Holmes | 18 | USC | 2005 | TE |
| Ryan Riddle | 18 | California | 2005 | DE |
| Jimmy Verdon | 18 | ASU | 2005 | DE |
| Arnold Parker | 18 | Utah | 2004 | S |
| Justin Bates | 18 | Colorado | 2003 | OG |
| Terrell Roberts | 18 | OSU | 2003 | CB |
| Greg Schindler | 18 | Stanford | 2003 | OG |
| Marques Anderson | 18 | UCLA | 2002 | S |
| Trung Canidate | 18 | Arizona | 2000 | RB |
| Chad Morton | 18 | USC | 2000 | RB |
| DaShon Polk | 18 | Arizona | 2000 | OLB |
| Clark Phillips III | 18 | Utah | 2023 | DB |
| Zach Charbonnet | 18 | UCLA | 2023 | RB |
| Christian Roland-Wallace | 17 | USC | 2024 | DB |
| Erik Olson | 17 | Colorado St | 2000 | S |
| Courtney Anderson | 17 | SJSU | 2004 | TE |
| Harvey Dahl | 17 | Nevada | 2005 | OT |
| Aaron Francisco | 17 | BYU | 2005 | S |
| Andre Maddox | 17 | Boise St | 2005 | S |
| Derrick Martin | 17 | Wyoming | 2006 | CB |
| Marcus Demps | 17 | SDSU | 2006 | S |
| Marcus McCauley | 17 | Fresno St | 2007 | CB |
| Ryan Grice-Mullen | 17 | Hawaii | 2008 | WR |
| DeAndre Wright | 17 | New Mexico | 2009 | CB |
| Austin Collie | 17 | BYU | 2009 | WR |
| Ronnie Hillman | 17 | SDSU | 2012 | RB |
| Devon Wylie | 17 | Fresno St | 2012 | WR |
| Greg Bell | 17 | SDSU | 2022 | RB |
| Cole Turner | 17 | Nevada | 2022 | TE |
| Gary Brightwell | 17 | Arizona | 2021 | RB |
| Laviska Shenault Jr. | 17 | Colorado | 2020 | WR |
| Casey Toohill | 17 | Stanford | 2020 | LB |
| Taylor Rapp | 17 | Washington | 2019 | S |
| Evan Worthington | 17 | Colorado | 2019 | S |
| Tyrell Crosby | 17 | Oregon | 2018 | OT |
| Royce Freeman | 17 | Oregon | 2018 | RB |
| Daniel Brunskill | 17 | SDSU | 2017 | OT |
| Jayon Brown | 17 | UCLA | 2017 | ILB |
| Darrell Daniels | 17 | Washington | 2017 | TE |
| Tedric Thompson | 17 | Colorado | 2017 | S |
| Tyler Ervin | 17 | SJSU | 2016 | RB |
| Pearce Slater | 17 | SDSU | 2016 | OT |
| Byron Marshall | 17 | Oregon | 2016 | WR |
| Ezell Ruffin | 17 | SDSU | 2015 | WR |
| Alex Carter | 17 | Stanford | 2015 | CB |
| Marcus Peters | 17 | Washington | 2015 | CB |
| Tony Washington | 17 | Oregon | 2015 | OLB |
| Kerwynn Williams | 17 | Utah St | 2013 | RB |
| Khalid Wooten | 17 | Nevada | 2013 | CB |
| C.J. Anderson | 17 | California | 2013 | RB |
| Joseph Fauria | 17 | UCLA | 2013 | TE |
| Jawanza Starling | 17 | USC | 2013 | S |
| Stepfan Taylor | 17 | Stanford | 2013 | RB |
| Levine Toilolo | 17 | Stanford | 2013 | TE |
| Juron Criner | 17 | Arizona | 2012 | WR |
| Nate Williams | 17 | Washington | 2011 | S |
| Jim Dray | 17 | Stanford | 2010 | TE |
| Anthony Kimble | 17 | Stanford | 2009 | RB |
| Josh Barrett | 17 | ASU | 2008 | S |
| Terrence Wheatley | 17 | Colorado | 2008 | CB |
| Syndric Steptoe | 17 | Arizona | 2007 | WR |
| Darnell Bing | 17 | USC | 2006 | S |
| Russell Stewart | 17 | Stanford | 2001 | TE |
| Brad Bedell | 17 | Colorado | 2000 | OG |
| Fred Jones | 17 | Colorado | 2000 | OLB |
| Ben Kelly | 17 | Colorado | 2000 | CB |
| Jaden Hicks | 16 | WSU | 2024 | DB |
| Orlando Huff | 16 | Fresno St | 2001 | LB |
| Chad Setterstrom | 16 | New Mexico | 2003 | OG |
| Jamaal Brimmer | 16 | UNLV | 2005 | S |
| E.J. Whitley | 16 | UNLV | 2006 | OT |
| Eric Wright | 16 | UNLV | 2007 | CB |
| Dwight Lowery | 16 | SJSU | 2008 | CB |
| Greg Dulcich | 16 | UCLA | 2022 | TE |
| Verone McKinley III | 16 | Oregon | 2022 | S |
| Greg Dulcich | 16 | UCLA | 2022 | TE |
| Darren Hall | 16 | SDSU | 2021 | CB |
| Simi Fehoko | 16 | Stanford | 2021 | WR |
| David Woodward | 16 | Utah St | 2020 | LB |
| Devin Asiasi | 16 | UCLA | 2020 | TE |
| Iman Lewis-Marshall | 16 | USC | 2019 | CB |
| Justin Reid | 16 | Stanford | 2018 | S |
| Chidobe Awuzie | 16 | Colorado | 2017 | CB |
| Stephen Anderson | 16 | California | 2016 | TE |
| Su’A Cravens | 16 | USC | 2016 | OLB |
| Devante Davis | 16 | UNLV | 2015 | WR |
| Aaron Davis | 16 | Colorado St | 2015 | LB |
| Nevin Lawson | 16 | Utah St | 2014 | CB |
| Isaiah Burse | 16 | Fresno St | 2014 | WR |
| Brandin Cooks | 16 | OSU | 2014 | WR |
| Richard Rodgers | 16 | California | 2014 | TE |
| Will Davis | 16 | Utah St | 2013 | CB |
| Desmond Trufant | 16 | Washington | 2013 | CB |
| Ronald Johnson | 16 | USC | 2011 | WR |
| Richard Sherman | 16 | Stanford | 2011 | CB |
| Shareece Wright | 16 | USC | 2011 | CB |
| Keaton Kristick | 16 | ASU | 2010 | OLB |
| Devin Ross | 16 | Arizona | 2010 | CB |
| Husain Abdullah | 16 | WSU | 2008 | S |
| Evan Moore | 16 | Stanford | 2008 | TE |
| Dante Hughes | 16 | California | 2007 | CB |
| Copeland Bryan | 16 | Arizona | 2006 | DE |
| Erik Coleman | 16 | WSU | 2004 | S |
| Will Poole | 16 | USC | 2004 | CB |
| Nnamdi Asomugha | 16 | California | 2003 | CB |
| Donald Strickland | 16 | Colorado | 2003 | CB |
| George Wrighster | 16 | Oregon | 2003 | TE |
| Michael Lewis | 16 | Colorado | 2002 | S |
| Ifeanyi Ohalete | 16 | USC | 2001 | S |
| Kitan Oladapo | 15 | OSU | 2024 | DB |
| Larry Ned | 15 | SDSU | 2002 | RB |
| Freddy Keiaho | 15 | SDSU | 2006 | LB |
| Todd Watkins | 15 | BYU | 2006 | WR |
| Anthony Pudewell | 15 | Nevada | 2007 | TE |
| Jonny Harline | 15 | BYU | 2007 | TE |
| Gerald Alexander | 15 | Boise St | 2007 | S |
| Jake Ingram | 15 | Hawaii | 2009 | LS |
| Chastin West | 15 | Fresno St | 2010 | WR |
| Greg Salas | 15 | Hawaii | 2011 | WR |
| Jake Curhan | 15 | California | 2021 | OL |
| Deommodore Lenoir | 15 | Oregon | 2021 | CB |
| Jaylon Johnson | 15 | Utah | 2020 | CB |
| Dezmon Patmon | 15 | WSU | 2020 | WR |
| Evan Weaver | 15 | California | 2020 | LB |
| Dax Raymond | 15 | Utah St | 2019 | TE |
| Cameron Smith | 15 | USC | 2019 | LB |
| Kaden Smith | 15 | Stanford | 2019 | TE |
| Kalen Ballage | 15 | ASU | 2018 | RB |
| Will Dissly | 15 | Washington | 2018 | TE |
| Ryan Nall | 15 | OSU | 2018 | RB |
| Dalton Schultz | 15 | Stanford | 2018 | TE |
| Brian Hill | 15 | Wyoming | 2017 | RB |
| Brian Allen | 15 | Utah | 2017 | CB |
| Budda Baker | 15 | Washington | 2017 | S |
| JuJu Smith-Schuster | 15 | USC | 2017 | WR |
| Sam Tevi | 15 | Utah | 2017 | OT |
| Chad Wheeler | 15 | USC | 2017 | OT |
| Kyler Fackrell | 15 | Utah St | 2016 | LB |
| Anthony Jefferson | 15 | UCLA | 2015 | S |
| Marqueston Huff | 15 | Wyoming | 2014 | S |
| Nat Berhe | 15 | SDSU | 2014 | S |
| Anthony Barr | 15 | UCLA | 2014 | OLB |
| Colt Lyerla | 15 | Oregon | 2014 | TE |
| Ed Reynolds | 15 | Stanford | 2014 | S |
| Stefphon Jefferson | 15 | Nevada | 2013 | RB |
| Robbie Rouse | 15 | Fresno St | 2013 | RB |
| LaMichael James | 15 | Oregon | 2012 | RB |
| David Reed | 15 | Utah | 2010 | WR |
| Kahlil Bell | 15 | UCLA | 2009 | RB |
| Paul Fanaika | 15 | ASU | 2009 | OG |
| Morris Wooten | 15 | ASU | 2009 | ILB |
| Dennis Keyes | 15 | UCLA | 2008 | S |
| Pat Lee | 15 | Colorado | 2008 | CB |
| Michael Johnson | 15 | Arizona | 2007 | S |
| Scott Ware | 15 | USC | 2006 | S |
| Karl Paymah | 15 | WSU | 2005 | CB |
| Bobby Purify | 15 | Colorado | 2005 | RB |
| Adimchinobi Echemandu | 15 | California | 2004 | RB |
| Matt Ware | 15 | UCLA | 2004 | S |
| Delvon Flowers | 15 | ASU | 2002 | RB |
| Patrick McMorris | 14 | Cal | 2024 | DB |
| Sean Brewer | 14 | SJSU | 2001 | TE |
| John Howell | 14 | Colorado St | 2001 | S |
| Paris Gaines | 14 | Fresno St | 2002 | FB |
| Broderick Lancaster | 14 | Colorado St | 2002 | OG |
| Colby Bockwoldt | 14 | BYU | 2004 | LB |
| Abraham Elimimian | 14 | Hawaii | 2005 | CB |
| Dwayne Wright | 14 | Fresno St | 2007 | RB |
| Drisan James | 14 | Boise St | 2007 | WR |
| Chris Owens | 14 | SJSU | 2009 | CB |
| Kevin Jurovich | 14 | SJSU | 2010 | WR |
| Seyi Aijirotutu | 14 | Fresno St | 2010 | WR |
| DeMarco Sampson | 14 | SDSU | 2011 | WR |
| Austin Pettis | 14 | Boise St | 2011 | WR |
| Dax Milne | 14 | BYU | 2021 | WR |
| Lorenzo Burns | 14 | Arizona | 2021 | CB |
| Tony Brown | 14 | Colorado | 2020 | WR |
| Ashtyn Davis | 14 | California | 2020 | S |
| Juwan Johnson | 14 | Oregon | 2020 | WR |
| Keesean Johnson | 14 | Fresno St | 2019 | WR |
| Bisi Johnson | 14 | Colorado St | 2019 | WR |
| Byron Murphy | 14 | Washington | 2019 | CB |
| Joe Williams | 14 | Utah | 2017 | RB |
| Marcus Williams | 14 | Utah | 2017 | S |
| D.J. Foster | 14 | ASU | 2016 | WR |
| Damarious Randall | 14 | ASU | 2015 | S |
| Davante Adams | 14 | Fresno St | 2014 | WR |
| Josh Huff | 14 | Oregon | 2014 | WR |
| Cassius Marsh | 14 | UCLA | 2014 | DE |
| Mike Edwards | 14 | Hawaii | 2013 | CB |
| Phillip Thomas | 14 | Fresno St | 2013 | S |
| Robert Woods | 14 | USC | 2013 | WR |
| Cliff Harris | 14 | Oregon | 2012 | CB |
| Jermaine Kearse | 14 | Washington | 2012 | WR |
| Darron Thomas | 14 | Oregon | 2012 | QB |
| Nyan Boateng | 14 | California | 2010 | WR |
| Wopamo Osaisai | 14 | Stanford | 2009 | CB |
| Jaison Williams | 14 | Oregon | 2009 | WR |
| Lavelle Hawkins | 14 | California | 2008 | WR |
| Chris Horton | 14 | UCLA | 2008 | S |
| Terrell Thomas | 14 | USC | 2008 | CB |
| Justin Wyatt | 14 | USC | 2006 | CB |
| Stanley Wilson | 14 | Stanford | 2005 | CB |
| Antwoine Sanders | 14 | Utah | 2003 | S |
| Christian Gonzalez | 14 | Oregon | 2023 | DB |
| Jalen Royals | 13 | Utah St | 2025 | WR |
| Craig Woodson | 13 | Cal | 2025 | S |
| Jabbar Muhammad | 13 | Oregon | 2025 | CB |
| Brenden Rice | 13 | USC | 2024 | WR |
| Rashon Spikes | 13 | Boise St | 2000 | RB |
| Dexter Wynn | 13 | Colorado St | 2004 | CB |
| Travis Brown | 13 | New Mexico | 2008 | WR |
| Ryan Wolfe | 13 | UNLV | 2010 | WR |
| Brandyn Thompson | 13 | Boise St | 2011 | CB |
| Evan Tyler | 13 | Boise St | 2021 | S |
| Isaiah Dunn | 13 | OSU | 2021 | DB |
| Jermar Jefferson | 13 | OSU | 2021 | RB |
| Thomas Graham Jr. | 13 | Oregon | 2021 | CB |
| Elijah Molden | 13 | Washington | 2021 | DB |
| Connor Wedington | 13 | Stanford | 2021 | WR |
| Michael Pittman | 13 | USC | 2020 | WR |
| Andre Chachere | 13 | SJSU | 2018 | CB |
| Rashaad Penny | 13 | SDSU | 2018 | RB |
| Steven Mitchell | 13 | USC | 2018 | WR |
| Jalen Robinette | 13 | Air Force | 2017 | WR |
| Rashard Higgins | 13 | Colorado St | 2016 | WR |
| Bralon Addison | 13 | Oregon | 2016 | WR |
| Josh Harper | 13 | Fresno St | 2015 | WR |
| Dres Anderson | 13 | Utah | 2015 | WR |
| Jordan Richards | 13 | Stanford | 2015 | S |
| Daniel Sorenson | 13 | BYU | 2014 | S |
| Cody Hoffman | 13 | BYU | 2014 | WR |
| Shaquelle Evans | 13 | UCLA | 2014 | WR |
| Duke Williams | 13 | Nevada | 2013 | S |
| Khaled Holmes | 13 | USC | 2013 | C |
| Josh Hubner | 13 | ASU | 2013 | P |
| Bill Bentley | 13 | Colorado | 2012 | CB |
| Cory Harkey | 13 | UCLA | 2012 | TE |
| Casey Matthews | 13 | Oregon | 2011 | ILB |
| Riar Geer | 13 | Colorado | 2010 | FB |
| Stafon Johnson | 13 | USC | 2010 | RB |
| Sammie Stroughter | 13 | OSU | 2009 | WR |
| Brandon Browner | 13 | OSU | 2005 | CB |
| Reuben Droughns | 13 | Oregon | 2000 | RB |
| Shaunard Harts | 12 | Boise St | 2001 | S |
| Jeff Shoate | 12 | SDSU | 2004 | CB |
| Richard Marshall | 12 | Fresno St | 2006 | CB |
| Davone Bess | 12 | Hawaii | 2008 | WR |
| Curtis Marsh | 12 | Utah St | 2011 | CB |
| Vincent Brown | 12 | SDSU | 2011 | WR |
| Keith Taylor | 12 | Washington | 2021 | DB |
| Eno Benjamin | 12 | ASU | 2020 | RB |
| Darnay Holmes | 12 | UCLA | 2020 | CB |
| Jeff Allison | 12 | Fresno St | 2019 | LB |
| Dillon Mitchell | 12 | Oregon | 2019 | WR |
| Demario Richard | 12 | ASU | 2018 | RB |
| Shalom Luani | 12 | WSU | 2017 | S |
| Hunter Sharp | 12 | Utah St | 2016 | WR |
| Darian Thompson | 12 | Boise St | 2016 | S |
| Devon Cajuste | 12 | Stanford | 2016 | WR |
| Thomas Duarte | 12 | UCLA | 2016 | TE |
| Kevon Seymour | 12 | USC | 2016 | CB |
| Nelson Spruce | 12 | Colorado | 2016 | WR |
| Nelson Agholor | 12 | USC | 2015 | WR |
| Marc Anthony | 12 | California | 2013 | CB |
| Keelan Johnson | 12 | ASU | 2013 | S |
| Steve Williams | 12 | California | 2013 | CB |
| Troy Nolan | 12 | ASU | 2009 | S |
| Dashon Goldson | 12 | Washington | 2007 | S |
| Ricky Manning | 12 | UCLA | 2003 | CB |
| Omare Lowe | 12 | Washington | 2002 | CB |
| Dave Minnich | 12 | WSU | 2002 | RB |
| Lamont Thompson | 12 | WSU | 2002 | S |
| Zayne Anderson | 11 | BYU | 2021 | LB |
| Brandon Aiyuk | 11 | ASU | 2020 | WR |
| Quenton Meeks | 11 | Stanford | 2018 | DB |
| Damontae Kazee | 11 | SDSU | 2017 | CB |
| Kevin Davis | 11 | Colorado St | 2017 | LB |
| Treston DeCoud | 11 | OSU | 2017 | CB |
| Chad Hansen | 11 | California | 2017 | WR |
| Kevin King | 11 | Washington | 2017 | CB |
| Gabe Marks | 11 | WSU | 2017 | WR |
| Trevor Davis | 11 | California | 2016 | WR |
| Javorius Allen | 11 | USC | 2015 | RB |
| Rahim Moore | 11 | UCLA | 2011 | S |
| Alterraun Verner | 11 | UCLA | 2010 | CB |
| Kyle Williams | 11 | ASU | 2010 | WR |
| Rudy Carpenter | 11 | ASU | 2009 | QB |
| Eric Weddle | 11 | Utah | 2007 | S |
| Keith Lewis | 11 | Oregon | 2004 | S |
| Virgil Williams | 11 | WSU | 2004 | S |
| Marcus Trufant | 11 | WSU | 2003 | CB |
| Damen Wheeler | 11 | Colorado | 2000 | CB |
| Mekhi Blackmon | 11 | USC | 2023 | DB |
| Kevin Thomas | 10 | UNLV | 2002 | CB |
| Mike Bell | 10 | Fresno St | 2019 | S |
| Michael Gallup | 10 | Colorado St | 2018 | WR |
| Christian McCaffrey | 10 | Stanford | 2017 | RB |
| Kaelin Clay | 10 | Utah | 2015 | WR |
| Bene’ Benwikere | 10 | SJSU | 2014 | CB |
| Leon McFadden | 10 | SDSU | 2013 | CB |
| Nickell Robey | 10 | USC | 2013 | CB |
| Sean Smith | 10 | Utah | 2009 | CB |
| Eric Frampton | 10 | WSU | 2007 | S |
| Rashad Bauman | 10 | Oregon | 2002 | CB |
| Kris Richard | 10 | USC | 2002 | CB |
| Rashidi Barnes | 10 | Colorado | 2000 | S |
| Erick Streelman | 9 | Nevada | 2003 | TE |
| Marko Mitchell | 9 | Nevada | 2009 | WR |
| Bailey Gaither | 9 | SJSU | 2021 | WR |
| Isaiah Hodgins | 9 | OSU | 2020 | WR |
| Andrew Wingard | 9 | Wyoming | 2019 | S |
| Alijah Holder | 9 | Stanford | 2019 | CB |
| Kameron Kelly | 9 | SDSU | 2018 | S |
| Cedrick Wilson | 9 | Boise St | 2018 | WR |
| Victor Bolden Jr. | 9 | OSU | 2017 | WR |
| Cayleb Jones | 9 | Arizona | 2016 | WR |
| Dennis Weathersby | 9 | OSU | 2003 | CB |
| Jonathon Amaya | 8 | Nevada | 2010 | S |
| Jordan Lasley | 8 | UCLA | 2018 | WR |
| Darreus Rogers | 8 | USC | 2017 | WR |
| De’Anthony Thomas | 8 | Oregon | 2014 | RB |
| Jordan Poyer | 8 | OSU | 2013 | CB |
| Brandon Hughes | 8 | OSU | 2009 | CB |
| Aric Williams | 8 | OSU | 2005 | CB |
| A.J. Jefferson | 7 | Fresno St | 2010 | CB |
| Tyler Vaughns | 7 | USC | 2021 | WR |
| Marquess Wilson | 7 | WSU | 2013 | WR |
| Darrell Brooks | 7 | Arizona | 2006 | S |
| Nahshon Wright | 6 | OSU | 2021 | DB |
| Jordan Miller | 6 | Washington | 2019 | CB |
| Chris McKenzie | 6 | ASU | 2005 | CB |
| Donnel Pumphrey | 5 | SDSU | 2017 | RB |
| Jamel Hamler | 4 | Fresno St | 2011 | WR |
Sports
Paris Saint-Germain edge Monaco to reach Champions League last 16
Paris Saint-Germain came from behind and then survived a late scare against 10-man Monaco, drawing 2–2 in the second leg of their Champions League knockout phase play-off tie on Wednesday to reach the last 16 with a 5–4 aggregate victory.
The defending European champions came from two behind to win 3–2 in the principality in last week’s first leg, a game in which Monaco had a man sent off early in the second half.
The scenario this time was similar, with French international Maghnes Akliouche giving Monaco a deserved interval lead on the night to level the scores overall.
However, the visitors had Mamadou Coulibaly sent off on 58 minutes, and that proved the catalyst for PSG to make it 1–1 through Marquinhos before Khvicha Kvaratskhelia seemed to have clinched the aggregate triumph.
Jordan Teze did make it 2–2 in stoppage time, but PSG held on to progress to the next round.
Read morePSG fight back to beat Monaco in Champions League play-off
Luis Enrique’s team will now find out on Friday their potential opponents all the way to the final in Budapest, with Barcelona and Chelsea their possible rivals in the last 16.
Paris beat Barcelona 2–1 away during the league phase in October and have faced the Catalans in five knockout ties since 2013. They played Chelsea in the final of the Club World Cup last year, losing 3–0 – their only blip in a remarkable campaign.
PSG were widely expected to get the better of their domestic rivals here – Monaco are currently eighth in Ligue 1, 20 points behind leaders PSG, although they did beat the Parisians in November.
The principality side had not won a Champions League knockout tie since their run to the semi-finals in 2017 with a side featuring a teenage Kylian Mbappé.
Here coach Sébastien Pocognoli set his side up in a 5–3–1–1 formation with Akliouche supporting central striker Folarin Balogun, the US national team star who scored twice last week.
Monaco, with just one victory on their last 10 trips to the Parc des Princes, may have felt the pressure was completely off them, and PSG were missing last year’s Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembélé with a calf injury.
Red card changes game
Having been 2–0 up inside 18 minutes last week, Monaco really should have scored within 10 minutes here, but Coulibaly blazed over from an Akliouche cutback. They then came close again when a Balogun chip had to be tipped over by Matvei Safonov.
Bradley Barcola struck the bar for PSG, but Monaco had been the better team and took a deserved lead just before the half-time whistle.
Safonov could only partially clear a cross into the home box and Monaco kept the pressure on as Caio Henrique returned the ball into the middle and Coulibaly laid it off for Akliouche to slot in.
The tie was now all square once again, but it swung back the way of the defending champions when Coulibaly was sent off just before the hour, leaving his team down to 10 men like in the first leg when Aleksandr Golovin saw red.
Read moreMarseille’s hopes dented as Liverpool wins 3–0 in Champions League clash
Having been booked just a few minutes earlier for a foul on Nuno Mendes, this time he was late into a challenge on Achraf Hakimi and a second yellow was produced by the Romanian referee.
PSG then scored from the resulting free-kick, which was played short to Désiré Doué on the right and his low ball was turned in from close range by Marquinhos.
The momentum was now with PSG, and they took the lead on the night on 66 minutes as Hakimi’s powerful strike was only parried by goalkeeper Philipp Köhn, allowing Kvaratskhelia to convert the loose ball.
Monaco still came within a whisker of forcing extra time – substitute Teze turned in a deflected Simon Adingra centre in stoppage time to make it 2–2 and Wout Faes very nearly scored another.
Instead they go out at the play-off stage for the second season running, while PSG’s dream of retaining their title remains alive.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
Sports
Bold Prediction Connects Vikings to New QB
The Aaron Rodgers theories for the Minnesota Vikings aren’t quite dead yet. Rodgers claimed last summer that the 2025 campaign would be his last, but through seven weeks of the offseason, he’s up to his old tricks, not clearly articulating his future plans. And according to SI.com‘s Conor Orr, Rodgers will end up with the Vikings, a bold prediction as the offseason heats up.
If the Rodgers chatter persists, the Vikings must balance short-term buzz against protecting McCarthy’s long-term development.
Rodgers basked in the spotlight of the Vikings’ rumor mill in 2025. He hasn’t fully left.
The Vikings’ Quarterback Situation Changes Fast Once Rodgers Enters the Talk
The Vikings have about 25 quarterbacks from free agency and via trade to choose from in 2026.
Orr’s Prediction: Rodgers to MIN
Orr crafted one bold prediction per team for the 2026 offseason, and for the Vikings, it’s Rodgers in the saddle.
He explained, “The Vikings will bring in Aaron Rodgers to ‘compete’ with J.J. McCarthy. While it may be just a hunch, I don’t see Rodgers walking away from the chance to pass Peyton Manning on the NFL’s all-time touchdown list.”
“And I don’t see Kevin O’Connell walking away from the chance to add meaningful depth to his roster. While Rodgers and Zach Wilson ended up not being the developmental bridge the Jets had hoped, McCarthy must realize he’s in a similar sink-or-swim situation and can take copious notes.”
Rodgers’ 2025 Campaign
Rodgers posted 3,322 passing yards for the 2025 Steelers inside a run-happy, low-octane offense. He also delivered a 65.7% completion percentage, 24 passing touchdowns, and just 7 interceptions.
The volume numbers were presentable, though, of course, a substantial step back from his Green Bay Packers heyday. Per efficiency, Rodgers ranked as the league’s 19th-best quarterback, putting up an EPA+CPOE in the neighborhood of veteran Jacoby Brissett and rookie Tyler Shough.
If Rodgers signs with the Vikings, fans will merely have to hope that the New York Jets held Rodgers back in 2024 and the Steelers did the same in 2025 with their “boring” offense.
Steelers general manager Omar Khan said about Rodgers on Tuesday, “We certainly welcome Aaron back. It was a good experience with him and really enjoyed getting to know him. He was great to have around. But the reality is, we’re all looking for that next guy, the next 10-to-15-year guy.”
“Look, we’re all in on this. We all agree that we’re looking for that next franchise guy. We’re all excited to work with Will, but we know that has to be addressed. We’re all looking for the same thing. We’re just not there yet.”
A Friendship with Kevin O’Connell
After the Vikings-Rodgers rumor mill faded last offseason, O’Connell and Rodgers later clarified that they’re friends and that they discussed a possible free-agent contract. Both agreed that the talks never went too far, perhaps because former general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah wanted nothing to do with the Rodgers circus.
ESPN’s Adam Schefter also said this week about Rodgers to Minnesota, “The belief around the league, and let’s preface it by saying it is Aaron Rodgers, and so there are never any absolutes, and things can change like that. But the belief around the league is that he is supposed to give an answer by mid-March.”
“I think the feeling is that he could be back with the Pittsburgh Steelers. If we go back to last year, he wanted to play in Minnesota. That is the interesting one to me, right? I don’t know how Aaron Rodgers feels, I don’t know how the Vikings feel.”
If the Schefter-style comments continue, the Vikings will indeed have back-to-back offseasons with blustery Rodgers fodder.
Schefter added, “And I think the Vikings didn’t want to do it last year because they were being protective of J.J. McCarthy. Do they still feel the same way, or is Aaron Rodgers more in the conversation?”
Stunting McCarthy’s Development? Or Helping It?
Suppose Minnesota takes the plunge with Rodgers. He’d be virtually guaranteed to start. One might ask if that’s good or bad for McCarthy, who enters Year No. 3 as a pro.
In one scenario, the Vikings could plop McCarthy on the bench and ask him to watch and learn behind Rodgers for a year — like Jordan Love in 2020, 2021, and 2022. That plan worked in Green Bay. It’s just there’s very little precedent for a team to veer away from their 1st-Round quarterback after starting him for a season, only for the same team to re-promote him a year or two later.
Conversely, signing Rodgers — or anybody who might grab McCarthy’s job — would likely signal the end for McCarthy with the Vikings as a long-term solution. He’d embark on an adventure like Sam Darnold, Anthony Richardson, or Will Levis — former and notable quarterbacks looking for a second chance.
Rodgers will turn 43 in December.
Sports
Titans GM Mike Borgonzi breaks down top edge prospects
One of the hottest topics on social media is what the Tennessee Titans will do with the fourth overall selection in the 2026 NFL Draft, and while general manager Mike Borgonzi didn’t reveal any secrets, he did touch on some of the prospects during his NFL Scouting Combine press availability.
For the most part, Tennessee has often been linked to the three top edge rushers in this class: Reuben Bain, Arvell Reese, and David Bailey, in the majority of mock drafts published by different outlets. So it should be no surprise that when he was asked about the edge position and if the Titans had started dissecting the top prospects as the combine hits high gear.
While there was no clear indication of how the team is leaning, Borgonzi confirmed that all three prospects have had formal interviews with the Titans in Indianapolis, and they each bring something different to the table, ironically, all matching what defensive coordinator Gus Bradley described in his introductory press conference.
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Bain profiles as a power guy with the ability to slide inside on passing downs, Bailey attacks with speed and length off the edge, and Reese is versatile with the ability and experience to add an explosive playmaker at multiple positions.
The Titans are in dire need of some playmakers on their front seven, and any of those three can make an impact. Unfortunately, until the team kicks off free agency and starts adding some talent to their roster, figuring out which impressive prospect they have zeroed in on is impossible.
This article originally appeared on Titans Wire: Tennessee Titans GM Mike Borgonzi breaks down top edge prospects
Sports
Canucks’ Tyler Myers sitting vs. Jets for trade purposes
The 36-year-old has been with the Canucks since the 2019-20 season after signing a five-year free-agent contract with the team. He re-upped with the Canucks in 2024, signing a three-year, $9 million extension, of which he is in the second year.
The contract carries a no-movement clause through all three years, which Myers must agree to waive in order to be traded.
Myers has appeared in 57 games for the Canucks this season, registering one goal and eight points while averaging 20:30 in ice time.
The Canadian was selected 12th overall by the Buffalo Sabres in 2012 and spent parts of six seasons with the team before he was traded to the Winnipeg Jets ahead of the 2015 trade deadline.
In 1,123 career games, Myers has 100 goals and 403 points.
The Canucks, currently in last place in the NHL, are expected to be major sellers ahead of the March 6 trade deadline.
Sports
Malik Willis Revelation Not Ideal for Vikings
Malik Willis, the top free-agent quarterback on the market in 2026 (if one assumes the Indianapolis Colts re-sign Daniel Jones), will not be cheap. If the Minnesota Vikings are interested in his services, it will cost at least $30 million per year, says the latest intel from the NFL Combine.
If Willis is suddenly a $30M-a-year bet, Minnesota’s cap plight gets tight in a hurry.
The Vikings don’t have $30 million lying around, so if they want Willis, the salary cap magic must be sophisticated.
Willis’s Market Could Price Him Beyond Minnesota’s Comfort Zone
A miniature Willis bombshell just 12 days before the start of free agency.
Jordan Schultz: Willis to Be a $30M per Year Man
There will be no prove-it discount for Willis if NFL insider Jordan Schultz has it right.
He tweeted Wednesday, “Packers free agent QB Malik Willis is in demand, as expected, and interested teams I’ve spoken to at the Combine in Indianapolis believe him getting at least $30M per year is a foregone conclusion.”
Until the Schultz tweet, recent deals for passers like Sam Darnold and Baker Mayfield suggested Willis might pull down $20 million to $25 million annually. That forecast has changed.
The Vikings’ Salary Cap Situation
The “legal tampering” phase of free agency begins on March 9th, and the Vikings are over the cap by approximately $43 million. What does that mean? They’ll have to release several players or backload many existing contracts to free up any money at all.
The likelihood of a team over the cap by $43 million, some 12 days before free agency, finding $32 million to spend on a quarterback feels low. We’re talking about a $75 million gap. A team with cap problems isn’t usually in the market to sign the top available quarterback in free agency.
And, not for nothing: if Minnesota wanted to spend around $30 million on a quarterback, it should’ve re-signed Darnold last year.
Daily Norseman‘s Warren Ludford recently floated the idea of restructuring Justin Jefferson’s contract: “Jefferson has a $25 million base salary this season and a contract that runs through 2029 with a void year so converting that base salary to a signing bonus would spread the cap hit over the remaining years of his contract and save the Vikings around $20 million in cap space this year.”
“That’s probably enough to accommodate the signings of free agents such as Jalen Nailor, Eric Wilson, Ryan Wright, Andrew DePaola, Jalen Redmond (EFRA), Bo Richter (EFRA), Ivan Pace Jr. (RFA), and a few others, along with Mac Jones and Anthony Richardson if the Vikings opt to trade for them.”
Willis’s GB Production
Willis started three games for the Green Bay Packers over the last two years, leaving general managers around the sport drooling, according to Schultz’s reporting. In fact, a quarterback with three starts under his belt fetching a $30 million per year contract is wild.
Still, if one translates Willis’s statistics from those three starts to a 17-game sample, a full season would look like this:
- 3,468 Passing Yards
- 34 Total TDs
- 0 INTs
- 6 Fumbles
- 79.6% Comp
- 986 Rushing Yards
Those are Lamar Jackson numbers. Some team will take the risk.
The Frontrunners for Willis
Where will Willis land? A handful of teams may need quarterbacks in March. Here’s the theoretical list:
- Arizona Cardinals
- Cleveland Browns
- Miami Dolphins
- Minnesota Vikings
- New York Jets
- Pittsburgh Steelers
In the court of public opinion, the Dolphins and Jets are considered the frontrunners as of late February. In fact, the Green Bay Packers’ defensive coordinator, Jeff Hafley, landed the Dolphins’ head coaching job last month, and then Miami hired an executive from Green Bay’s front office as its general manager.
For the Jets, they have no quarterback solution on the horizon at all, unless they draft Alabama’s Ty Simpson in April and call it good.
Pro Football Network‘s Zachary Johnson noted on Willis’s free agency this week, “The Jets, meanwhile, signed former first-round pick Justin Fields to a two-year contract last spring. He’s entering the final year of his deal, but an uninspiring, injury-plagued campaign left head coach Aaron Glenn wanting more out of his signal-caller. The Cardinals are expected to release Kyler Murray for contractual reasons.”
“The former 1st overall pick is likely to have played his last down in Arizona, and, in the eyes of many, a divorce appears to be on the horizon. As for the Dolphins, the connections with Willis are obvious. Jon Eric-Sullivan was just hired as the team’s next general manager after ascending the ranks in the Packers’ front office over the last two decades.”
NFL franchises have watched in the last three seasons as Baker Mayfield and the aforementioned Darnold have reclaimed their careers. Willis is the next in line, or so goes the theory.
Sports
Man City Champions League opponents confirmed after Real Madrid drama and Bodo/Glimt heroics
Manchester City will discover their Champions League last-16 opponents on Friday when the draw takes place
Manchester City will face either Real Madrid or Bodo Glimt in the Champions League last 16 draw on Friday.
The play-off ties concluded on Wednesday evening with Madrid booking their place in the next round with a 2-1 win over Benfica (3-1 on aggregate). City had a straight path through to the last-16 as a result of securing a top eight spot in the League Phase and the Blues knew their four potential opponents ahead of the play-off fixtures.
Friday’s draw in Nyon, which is scheduled to start at 11am, will now confirm which of the two teams Pep Guardiola’s will be facing next month. City will also be allocated into a half of the draw which will enable the Blues to plot their path to a potential final in May.
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City already know they could face Bayern Munich or Arsenal in the quarter-finals but the draw on Friday will firm up the permutations.
City have already played Bodo/Glimt this season, slipping to a surprise 3-1 defeat in the League Phase in Norway. The Norwegians stunned last season’s beaten finalists Inter Milan in the play-off round, winning 3-1 at home and then knocking out the Italian champions with a 2-1 victory in the San Siro.
The last-16 ties take place next month with the first leg on March 10/11 and the second a week later. City, by virtue of finishing higher in the League Phase, will be at home in the second leg.
The quarter finals are on April 7/8 and 14/15 with the semi-finals following on April 28/29 and May 5/6. The final is in Budapest on Saturday, May 30.
City are one of six English sides still in the draw after Newcastle United came through the play-off round on Tuesday. Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and Tottenham are still in the hunt.
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Sports
Lloyd Kelly: Why Juventus player’s second yellow card became ‘awful’ straight red
Former Premier League defender Curtis Davies said the decision was an “absolute disgrace”.
“Kelly goes up for a header, he’s gone for the header cleanly. His feet have to land on the ground somewhere,” he added on BBC Radio 5 Live.
“Unfortunately, he lands on the player. There needs to be a level of understanding – where is he meant to put his feet? I understand Kelly’s frustration.”
Davies’ sentiments were echoed by football journalist Rory Smith, who called the decision “awful” and a “disgrace”.
Meanwhile, former Tottenham midfielder Andy Reid felt football was “moving closer and closer to being a non-contact sport”.
“There needs to be contact in football and sometimes people do get painful ones. It happens. There’s nothing you can do about that. It’s part of the game,” he said.
According to Uefa rules, any player sent off by the referee – whether that is via two yellows or a straight red – is automatically suspended for the next match in European club competition.
However, in light of Juventus’ exit from the Champions League, Kelly’s suspension will carry over to next season.
Former Manchester City defender Nedum Onuoha added: “If I was Kelly I’d be really disappointed, but with how football works, it’s always going to be a red.”
But former Liverpool full-back Stephen Warnock disagreed.
“I don’t agree with it because it is purely accidental. I understand the yellow card, but not the red,” he said.
Sports
Why PSG aren’t top-tier Champions League title contenders
The title defence rolls on, but, in sharp contrast to 12 months ago, Paris Saint-Germain really do not feel like a team who are bound for the final. The dynasty might just be on pause for this season at least.
If that seems a curious response to a 2-2 draw that took the holders beyond Monaco then ask yourself this question: how different might this tie have been if the young men from the principality had not contrived to get themselves sent off in the critical moments of both legs? For Aleksandr Golovin in the Stade Louis II read the previously exceptional Mamadou Coulibaly.
When he careened into Achraf Hakimi in the 58th minute, Monaco were level in the tie and looked slightly more likely to find its seventh goal. Adi Hutter’s side were doing a little with a lot: purposefully breaking out from their lines of five and four without the ball, exploiting the running power of Folarin Balogun out in the channels and getting players up in support of him. They might not have dominated possession — who does against a Luis Enrique team? — but they were getting into the right spots and doing with an energy that their illustrious hosts could not match.
That is a real problem for PSG, who did get the job done quite swiftly after Coulibaly saw red. Desire Doue’s cross from the byline was turned in by Marquinhos, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia pounced on the rebound when Philipp Kohn spilled a long ranger from Achraf Hakimi: these were partly a reward for the final third pressure the hosts applied with their man advantage but no less a reflection of a young opponent who’d had the stuffing knocked out of them by their reduction in numbers.
TruMedia
There might have been more in this for Monaco than they realised, Jordan Teze ghosting in at the back post to turn in almost unmarked in a fashion not dissimilar to the opener from Magnes Akliouche. On both occasions, PSG had the numbers to comfortably deal with the situation, and none of them seemed willing to take control of the season.
That could scarcely be a greater contrast from last season, when intensity was the defining trait of this team. Luis Enrique’s men would outrun anyone in Europe, and at this stage, their blend of quality and industry was shining through so clearly against Ligue 1 opposition that you suspected this was a different outfit to the many who had fallen short in the Champions League.
Tonight, you half expected to see one of the old guard ambling around the field out of possession, waiting for the other guys to do the defending and get the ball up to them. It is becoming increasingly clear that PSG relied on Ousmane Dembele for more than just his clutch goals. It is hard to believe that the best pressing Ballon d’Or-level striker of his generation would have allowed Monaco to so easily work their way out of the counter press when PSG frequently gave the ball away in the Monaco half.
The issue here is that the 13 total starts Dembele has made this season is altogether more normal for him than the run of fitness he found 12 months ago. Good squad planning means having good cover for the players you know are most vulnerable. It’s not entirely clear that a front three of Bradley Barcola, Doue and Kvaratskhelia, with Goncalo Ramos filling in here and there, is that.
Dembele is not the only one who is feeling the burn. Fabian Ruiz was missing tonight; it is hard to find a cornerstone of that championship team who hasn’t missed time. And that’s not a surprise. This was a team coached to hit its peak on May 31, 2025. Then they had to play on for another six weeks and seven games. The Club World Cup exacted a heavy burden. Luis Enrique has tried to mitigate that with rest and rotation, but maybe that explains why so many basic passes were going awry.
When they didn’t, this was still a team that could run rings around better opponents than Monaco. There is something irresistible about PSG’s left winger dragging the opposition out of position to create space for an underlapping Nuno Mendes to fizz in a low cross from the byline. Get Kvaratskhelia going at his man, and it’s good night and good luck. Last season, PSG could manufacture those spots a dozen times a night. Now they are flashes of what once was.
What they are now is not a team that exists at the same level as Arsenal and Bayern Munich, the two clear favorites to win this competition. It might not even be enough to get comprehensively clear of Barcelona or Chelsea, the two teams that they could get in Friday’s draw. At this stage a year ago PSG seemed to have the momentum to push themselves to the heights they had always dreamed of. Now they are back to the crushing realities of what a team looks like when it doesn’t have the energy to match its talent.
Sports
Major star claims his relationship is an upgrade from other WWE couples
A popular WWE Superstar made a massive claim about his real-life relationship. He compared his relationship to that of Seth Rollins & Becky Lynch and CM Punk & AJ Lee.
The star in question is former WWE NXT Champion Trick Williams. He is engaged to fellow SmackDown star Lash Legend. The couple recently made an appearance on Wake Up Barstool.
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The host asked the duo what it would take for them to be the number one power couple in professional wrestling, with the likes of Seth Rollins & Becky Lynch and CM Punk & AJ Lee already being there. Trick Williams came up with a cheeky response claiming that he and Lash Legend were like an upgraded version of the other WWE couples.
“Shout out to [CM] Punk, AJ [Lee], Seth [Rollins], Becky [Lynch]. But you ever put your phone down on the nightstand, and that thing updates overnight, and then you pull it out the next day, and you’re like, ‘Whoa, I didn’t know that my phone could do all this. Look at all these upgrades. Wow, this phone is better today than it was yesterday.’ That’s what happens when you get Trick and Lash,” Williams said.
You can check out his comments in the video below:
WWE Superstar Trick Williams recalled the time Lash Legend friend-zoned him
During a recent interview with SPORTbible, Trick Williams opened up about a hilarious conversation he had with Lash Legend back in the day when they were not dating.
The Anointed One recalled how he got nervous while approaching Lash Legend and forgot what he had planned to say to her. However, he still told her that they could be together. Williams added how Legend turned him down and friend-zoned him instead.
“So, I see her. She’s getting out of her Mercedes-Benz and everything. So I walk up and say, I don’t know what happens, like, as soon as I got to her, I had, like, this great promo in my head that I was gonna drop on her, but as soon as the moment of truth happened, like, no words was coming out. I was like, ‘So, yo Lash, I don’t know if everybody else saying it, but you and me together good.’ And then she friend-zoned me so quick. She was like, ‘Yeah, I heard people saying that, but nah you my homie for real,’” Williams said.
Both Trick Williams and Lash Legend have already impressed fans with their impressive performances on WWE’s main roster. It will be interesting to see what the future holds for the beloved wrestling couple.
If you use any quotes from the first half of this article, please credit Wake Up Barstool with an H/T to Sportskeeda Wrestling for the transcription.
Read all the hottest WWE news from Sportskeeda by choosing us as your preferred source. Click HERE.
Edited by Ankit Verma
Sports
Wild and Stars on playoff collision course in powerful Central Division as they chase NHL-best Avs
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — The Dallas Stars surged into the Olympic break on a six-game winning streak. The Minnesota Wild won their last five games to finish 8-1-1 before the NHL ‘s three-week schedule pause.
Both teams have maintained top-five records in the league for much of the season — and they’ve constantly been trying to catch the rival Colorado Avalanche.
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Such has been the predicament in the powerful Central Division, where the NHL’s siloed playoff format would pit the Stars against the Wild in the first round if the standings were to stay this way. The Avalanche would then be favored to face the winner in the divisional bracket, likely bouncing two of the top five teams in the league from the postseason by the second round.
“It’s a fun division to be a part of,” Wild goalie Filip Gustavsson said, “because every game really matters.”
The Avalanche went 37-9-9 for an NHL-leading 83 points before the break, a sparkling record that has actually lost some luster from earlier this winter. They led the division by 12 points on Jan. 11, but the Wild (34-14-10) with 78 points and Stars (34-14-9) with 77 points have narrowed their gaps.
Colorado came out of the break with a game at Utah on Wednesday, when Dallas hosted Seattle. Minnesota had an extra day before playing at, conveniently, Colorado on Thursday.
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“They become a little bit more human now and are losing a few games, so if we win tomorrow and get on a little run we might be able to catch up some ground to them,” Gustavsson said after practice on Wednesday.
Colorado and Dallas play three more times. The Stars won the first matchup with the Avalanche in a shootout. Dallas and Minnesota meet twice more, having split their first two games. The Avalanche and the Wild play two more times after splitting their first two matchups, with the Wild’s win coming in a shootout.
“We pretty much have to sweep them, and we’ve got to greatly outplay them to take that spot,” Stars center Matt Duchene said. “So could it be done? Yes. Will it be done? Probably not, to be honest, but that’s OK. It feels like in our division we’ve got go through the gauntlet every year, and we’re ready for that.”
The Avalanche had four players competing in the Olympic gold medal game in Italy on Sunday, alongside three from the Wild and two from the Stars. The three teams combined sent 23 players to the Winter Games, making the final stretch all the more intriguing. Not only will each club need to recreate the momentum it had prior to the break, but the Olympians — particularly the Americans and Canadians — must be reintegrated after not getting the time off that most of their NHL peers had.
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The Stars are expecting to miss leading scorer Mikko Rantanen for multiple weeks after he suffered a lower-body injury with Finland in the Olympics.
“My experience with these streaks is that when you have a big break like this, it kind of interrupts the rhythm,” Stars coach Glen Gulutzan said.
But that doesn’t mean he’s expecting a fade, considering his team’s recent performance.
“There was a very clear visual of what our players felt they were doing better and we as coaches felt we were doing better in those five or six games than we had prior,” Gulutzan said, “and I that hasn’t left us.”
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With defensemen Quinn Hughes and Brock Faber and forward Matt Boldy winning gold medals for the U.S. and then heading to the White House during their whirlwind celebratory return, the Wild will have three key players who’ve been on the go the whole time. But they’re young — and the experience ought to help them come playoff time, coach John Hynes said.
“When you get in those environments of high-stakes games, really it’s like three Game 7s because you have a quarterfinal, and then you have a semifinal, and then you have a medal game, and they’re all one and done,” Hynes said, as he broke down the benefits: “The preparation, understanding of how to play in those situations with that type of pressure and fanfare and knowing that one mistake could cost the game.”
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AP Sports Writer Stephen Hawkins in Dallas contributed to this report.
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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/NHL
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