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Historical NFL Bench Press Results for Players from West

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  By SuperWest Sports Staff


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.

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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:

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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.

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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

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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.

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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

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Paris Saint-Germain edge Monaco to reach Champions League last 16

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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)

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Bold Prediction Connects Vikings to New QB

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Jets QB Aaron Rodgers in 2024 aganst the Vikings
Oct 6, 2024; London, United Kingdom; New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) the ball against the Minnesota Vikings in the first half at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

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.

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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.

Aaron Rodgers sits on the bench before a Green Bay Packers road game. Aaron Rodgers Vikings rumors.
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers sits on the bench before kickoff against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Heinz Field, Nov. 26, 2017, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Rodgers prepared for an interconference matchup during the middle stage of his Packers tenure, when he remained one of the league’s most productive and closely watched quarterbacks. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports.

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.”

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“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.

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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

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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.”

Aaron Rodgers throws a pass during a Pittsburgh Steelers game against the Ravens.
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers throws a pass against the Baltimore Ravens at M&T Bank Stadium, Dec. 7, 2025, in Baltimore, Maryland. Rodgers stepped into the pocket during a late-season AFC North contest, working to move the offense against pressure as Pittsburgh pushed toward the postseason stretch. Mandatory Credit: Peter Casey-Imagn Images.

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?”

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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.

Aaron Rodgers runs onto the field before a Pittsburgh Steelers road game.
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers runs onto the field before kickoff against the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium, Sep. 21, 2025, in Foxborough, Massachusetts. Rodgers led pregame introductions as Pittsburgh prepared for an early-season road test, continuing his veteran tenure with the franchise after a high-profile arrival. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images.

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.

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Titans GM Mike Borgonzi breaks down top edge prospects

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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.

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Canucks’ Tyler Myers sitting vs. Jets for trade purposes

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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.

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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.

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Malik Willis Revelation Not Ideal for Vikings

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Packers QB Malik Willis against the Ravens in 2025
Dec 27, 2025; Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA; Green Bay Packers quarterback Malik Willis (2) throws a pass during the third quarter against the Baltimore Ravens at Lambeau Field. Mandatory Credit: Kayla Wolf-Imagn Images.

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.

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Willis’s Market Could Price Him Beyond Minnesota’s Comfort Zone

A miniature Willis bombshell just 12 days before the start of free agency.

Malik Willis warms up on the field before a Tennessee Titans road game. Malik Willis Vikings rumors.
Tennessee Titans quarterback Malik Willis prepares during pregame warmups before a matchup with the Kansas City Chiefs at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, Nov. 6, 2022, in Kansas City, Missouri. Willis went through his routine as Tennessee evaluated the young quarterback’s readiness during a challenging road environment. Mandatory Credit: George Walker IV / Tennessean.com.

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.”

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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.

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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

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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.

Malik Willis throws a touchdown pass during a Green Bay Packers game against the Giants.
Green Bay Packers quarterback Malik Willis throws a touchdown pass during second-quarter action against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium, Nov. 16, 2025, in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Willis delivered the scoring throw while working through the pocket as the Packers tested their offensive rhythm in a road matchup. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images.

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.

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Malik Willis warms up on the field before a Tennessee Titans home game.
Tennessee Titans quarterback Malik Willis takes part in pregame warmups before facing the Atlanta Falcons at Nissan Stadium, Oct. 29, 2023, in Nashville, Tennessee. Willis worked through throwing drills and preparation routines as Tennessee evaluated depth at quarterback during the regular-season stretch. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-USA TODAY Sports.

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.


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Man City Champions League opponents confirmed after Real Madrid drama and Bodo/Glimt heroics

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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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Lloyd Kelly: Why Juventus player’s second yellow card became ‘awful’ straight red

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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”.

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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.

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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.

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Why PSG aren’t top-tier Champions League title contenders

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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. 

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xG race from PSG’s 2-2 draw with Monaco, whose sending off came in the 58th minute
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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.

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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.

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Major star claims his relationship is an upgrade from other WWE couples

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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.

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.

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“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.

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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.