
By SuperWest Sports Staff
Sports
Winners and losers: Duke, Arizona win regular-season conference titles
The final day of February saw multiple Power Five teams clinch at least a share of their league’s conference title. On Friday night, Michigan defeated Illinois to clinch its first Big Ten title since 2021 in Year 2 of Dusty May’s tenure.
Less than 24 hours later, Duke, Arizona and Florida joined the party. The No. 1-ranked Blue Devils defeated No. 11 Virginia 77-51 at home to lock up the No. 1 seed in the ACC Tournament. Duke can clinch the outright ACC crown next week with a win over NC State or North Carolina.
For the third consecutive season, someone other than Kansas – the team that’s dominated the Big 12 for the better part of 20 years — will win the conference. With No. 2 Arizona’s dominant 84-61 win at home over Kansas, the Wildcats clinched at least a share of the Big 12 title for the first time. Houston won the Big 12 regular-season title in each of its first two seasons as a member of the conference.
Florida clinched its first regular season title since 2014 with a blowout win over Arkansas on Saturday night. The reigning national champions have now won nine consecutive games since losing to Auburn, which created separation at the top of the SEC standings.
The Big East title will likely be decided next week, with UConn and St. John’s still in contention to win at least a share of the regular season title. Now let’s get to the biggest winners and losers of the Saturday college basketball slate.
Winner: Isaiah Evans shines, Duke clinches ACC title
No. 1 Duke stayed hot with a 77-51 win over No. 11 Virginia behind a standout performance from Evans. The star guard scored 14 of Duke’s first 19 points and finished the day with a team-high 19 points. Evans knocked down 5 of his 9 attempts from the 3-point line and also dished out three assists in 29 minutes. Entering March, Duke has the best player in the sport (Cameron Boozer) on its roster, but this game was a reminder that the top-ranked team in the country isn’t just a one-trick-pony. — Cameron Salerno
Loser: Seton Hall’s misses its best remaining opportunity
Seton Hall entered the day among the “First Four Out” in CBS Sports Bracketology and with a golden opportunity on the road against No. 6 UConn. The Pirates looked poised to capitalize in the second half until UConn came to life for a 71-67 victory. Seton Hall (19-11, 9-9 Big East) might look back on the last eight minutes with some regret come Selection Sunday as UConn used a 23-11 closing run to pull away. It’s getting harder to envision a realistic path to an at-large bid for Seton Hall, which closes the regular season at Xavier and against St. John’s next week.
— David Cobb
Loser: Gonzaga gets shoved out of the WCC
Saint Mary’s gave No. 9 Gonzaga a firm shove out the WCC door, beating the Bulldogs 70-59 as the longtime league rivals played their final regular season conference game. With Gonzaga headed to the Pac-12 next season, one of college basketball’s great rivalries will never be the same.
Gaels guard Mikey Lewis led the way with a career-high 31 point as Saint Mary’s turned a 36-29 halftime deficit into a convincing victory. The win also secured the Gaels a share of the league title with Gonzaga, marking a fourth straight season Saint Mary’s has claimed a conference title. The teams could still play in the WCC Tournament title game, but their final on-campus meeting as WCC foes will be remembered as a decisive Saint Mary’s win. — Cobb
Loser: Arkansas no-shows in SEC showdown
Two games back in the SEC standings and chasing conference-leading Florida, No. 20 Arkansas had a prime opportunity to gain ground in the league with a road tilt in the swamp.
And summarily blew it.
The Razorbacks trailed by 19 at halftime and eventually fell 111-77 to Florida, effectively handing the Gators – who will likely be favorites in their two remaining regular-season games – the SEC crown.
Arkansas has largely strayed away from stinkers of late, but two in particular – a road blowout at Georgia in January and a home loss to Kentucky two weeks later – loom particularly large now. With those losses and the Saturday loss to Florida, John Calipari and Co. can kiss a shot at conference hardware goodbye. — Kyle Boone
Winner: Wounded Texas Tech won’t go down quietly
Texas Tech clearly did not hear any bell after JT Toppin‘s season-ending knee injury. The Red Raiders walked into Hilton Coliseum and emerged with an eyebrow-raising 82-73 victory over No. 4 Iowa State. It’s the Cyclones’ first home loss of the season, and reiterates just how tough of an out these short-handed Red Raiders will be in March. Texas Tech splashed 14 treys. Donovan Atwell continued his magnificent season with six triples and 18 points. Tyeree Bryan, who was buried on the bench for long stretches of Big 12 play, revitalized his season with 10 enormous points and a couple massive treys. Jaylen Petty, Josiah Moseley and Luke Bamgboye were also outstanding in expanded roles. Texas Tech has now bulldozed Kansas State, Cincinnati and Iowa State in three games without Toppin.
The Red Raiders likely do not have the firepower to win six in a row in March Madness without its All-American big fella, but this outfit is tougher than a two-dollar steak. — Isaac Trotter
Winner: UConn’s Karaban gets a fitting sendoff
Consecutive Alex Karaban 3-pointers helped spark UConn as it rallied late for a 71-67 win over Seton Hall. That was fitting considering it was Karaban’s Senior Day and since he has made so many clutch shots over the course of his Huskies career. Senior Day doesn’t always mean what it used to in the era of mass transferring and one-year rentals. But Karaban is UConn’s all-time winningest player, and he played a pivotal role on the program’s 2023 and 2024 title teams.
The deep connection between Karaban, coach Dan Hurley and the UConn program were evident in an emotional pregame scene. But Karaban locked in and led UConn with 23 points on 8 of 11 shooting as the Huskies retained their grasp on the fourth No. 1 seed in CBS Sports Bracketology. — Cobb
Loser: Iowa suffers ugly loss vs. Penn State
On paper, Iowa‘s 71-69 loss to Penn State will go down as just a Quad 2 setback. However, losing to 12-17 Penn State isn’t great for the resume. Iowa entered the weekend as a No. 7 seed in CBS Sports’ latest Bracketology projections. It wouldn’t be surprising to see the Hawkeyes take a hit because of the loss. Iowa was previously 7-0 in Quad 2 games, with the closest margin of victory coming against USC (73-72). — Salerno
Winner: New Mexico picks up key bubble win
Entering the weekend, New Mexico was among the “Last Four Out” in CBS Sports’ latest Bracketology projections. The importance of this win over San Diego State — a team that entered as a No. 11 seed in the latest Bracketology projections — is significant. New Mexico is now 10-6 against Quad 1 and Quad 2 opponents this season. There is still work to do, but picking up an 81-76 win over SDSU after trailing by as many as 11 in the first half is a solid start heading into the home stretch. — Salerno
Loser: NC State’s slide continues
Year 1 of the Will Wade era at NC State has been a mixed bag. Sure, the Wolfpack are on track to return to the NCAA Tournament, but their recent stretch is cause for concern heading into March. NC State has now lost four of its last five games after a 96-90 loss in overtime against Notre Dame. During that stretch, NC State suffered losses to Louisville, Miami, Virginia, and Notre Dame, as well as a blowout win over in-state foe North Carolina. After getting off to a 9-2 start in ACC play, it looked like a double-bye in the ACC Tournament would be a lock. That’s no longer the case, especially with a matchup against No. 1 Duke looming next week. — Salerno
Winner: Clemson stops the tailspin
Clemson got a desperately needed 80-75 win over Louisville to stop a four-game losing streak that had dropped it from ACC title contention to the NCAA Tournament bubble. The Tigers (21-7, 11-5 ACC) led by as much as 15 late in the second half following an offensive explosion from Justin Porter. Louisville star Mikel Brown Jr. was less than 100% healthy and mostly ineffective in just 21 minutes, which certainly aided Clemson’s cause. The Tigers needed a victory in whatever form they could find one after falling to a No. 10 seed in CBS Sports Bracketology. Next up is a Tuesday night road game at North Carolina that will give this club a chance to prove that its 20-4 start was no fluke.
— Cobb
Loser: UCLA cools off in loss at Minnesota
Just when it seemed like UCLA had steadied the ship and might even be finding its stride, the Bruins took another hit. Minnesota absolutely shredded the Bruins in a 78-73 home win, shooting 58% from the floor, which included a 12 of 23 mark from deep. It was the Gophers’ second-best shooting performance of the season. The only team which has shot it better against the Bruins this season is Michigan. UCLA entered the day as a No. 9 seed in CBS Sports Bracketology and still has a little wiggle room, but this was a reality check after momentum-building wins against Illinois and USC. — Cobb
Winner: Arizona makes a statement in win over Kansas
Less than three weeks ago, Arizona walked away from Allen Fieldhouse with its first loss of the season despite star freshman Darryn Peterson being out of the lineup. On Saturday, Arizona avenged that loss with a statement victory over No. 14 Kansas behind the stellar play of Koa Peat and Brayden Burries. With the win, the Wildcats clinched at least a share of the Big 12 title and are in line to earn the No. 1 seed in the Big 12 Tournament. — Salerno
Loser: Cal takes brutal home loss
Cal entered the day as one of the “Last Four In: according to CBS Sports Bracketology and with a simple assignment: don’t lose at home to a bad Pitt team. The Bears failed the assignment, falling 72-56 in a game they never led. Cal hit just five 3-pointers, turned it over 16 teams and only attempted seven free throws. This was a horrendous showing from a bubble team that couldn’t afford a bad loss. The Bears entered at No. 43 in Wins Above Bubble (WAB), which is a vital resume metric. They will wake up on Sunday around 50th. — Cobb
Winner: A bobblehead-night game-winner
Northwestern‘s Nick Martinelli drained one of his patented ‘flippers’ in the final seconds to knock off Oregon, 63-62. The Wildcats star senior delivered the game-winner on his bobblehead night.
Yeah, that’ll play. — Trotter
Loser: Tennessee collapses at end in loss to Alabama
No. 22 Tennessee led for almost the entire 40 minutes of action against No. 17 Alabama … until the final minute. With the game tied at 69, Alabama star guard Labaron Philon got the switch he wanted at the top of the key, got to the paint and hit a jumper with 24 seconds left to give his team its first lead of the night. On the other end, Tennessee didn’t get a quality look on its final possession. After leading by as many as 13 in the second half, Alabama came away with a stunning 71-69 win. — Salerno
Loser: Louisville creeps into dangerous territory
A season filled with promise crept further into the danger zone at Louisville, which on Saturday dropped its second consecutive game – and fell for a third time in its last four outings – with an 80-75 defeat at Clemson. The Cardinals and their high-octane offense made ten 3-pointers – their fourth consecutive game to hit at least ten in a game – but their defense again failed them in yet another close loss.
Clemson got 27 points from its bench unit, finished with a 17-point winning margin at the free-throw line and shot 50% from the field in the final 20 minutes of play. There’s plenty of time for this talented Louisville team to right the ship, but it appears to be trending the wrong direction as March Madness approaches. — Boone
Loser: BYU stumbles again down the stretch
On Jan. 14, BYU was ranked No. 11 in the AP Top 25 and 16-1 on the season.
On Feb. 28, as the calendar flips to March, the Cougars – 4-8 in their last 12 games – are 20-9 and falling apart at the seams after a 79-71 road loss at West Virginia.
The Cougars haven’t been the same team we saw earlier in the season – and they’ve been a shell even of the team we saw in the heart of the season after losing Richie Saunders to an ACL injury earlier this month. In his absence, they are now 1-3 – and 8-8 in Big 12 play with two conference games remaining.
Freshman star AJ Dybantsa and sophomore guard Rob Wright were productive as ever on Saturday, finishing with 20 and 23 points, respectively. But this team’s depth has been laid bare on the back-end of Big 12 play. What once was one of the most fun offensive teams in the country is now a shorthanded team spiraling downward with no reprieve in sight. — Boone
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NBA Play-In Highlights (home)
NBA Play-In Highlights (home)
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Oleksandr Usyk sums up Tyson Fury’s performance against Makhmudov
Oleksandr Usyk has shared his thoughts on Tyson Fury‘s display against Arslanbek Makhmudov.
This past weekend saw Fury make his return to the ring after not competing since his two defeats to Usyk in 2024, taking on imposing Russian Makhmudov at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London.
Fury was comfortable throughout the contest as he claimed a one-sided unanimous decision win, but certain onlookers believe ‘The Gypsy King’ showed signs of rustiness as he took part in his first fight in 16 months.
Usyk himself has now weighed in on his former rival’s performance, telling The Ring that he thought it was a good victory for Fury.
“Tyson’s win is good. I watched the first six rounds. I remember maybe fourth/fifthround, Makhmudov punched Tyson and I say ‘be careful, woah woah Tyson hands up please.’ Congrats. Great. Good [come]back.”
Some fans have criticised Fury for being unable to stop Makhmudov inside the distance, and in a separate interview with The Stomping Ground, Usyk also admitted that he wanted to see that happen.
Tyson’s win is good. It’s a win. It’s not loss. Maybe a lot of people want Tyson to knock him out. Me too. 12 rounds. Tyson win. Congrats.”
Fury is now hoping to finally secure a showdown with long-term rival and countryman Anthony Joshua, with ‘AJ’ also having suffered two losses to Usyk earlier in his career.
Having taken on both men, the Ukrainian has made his prediction for how a potential bout between ‘The Gypsy King’ and Joshua would go.
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RBC Heritage 2026 parlay, props, predictions: PGA longshot picks from proven model
Two-time green jacket winner, Rory McIlroy, is taking a well-deserved break after the Masters, so you won’t be able to target him when constructing a 2026 RBC Heritage parlay. However, any PGA picks or golf props can utilize several others who competed at Augusta, such as Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Justin Thomas or Shane Lowry. After his runner-up last week, Scheffler is the +390 favorite in the RBC Heritage 2026 odds, followed by Schauffele (+1500), Matt Fitzpatrick (+1600), Cameron Young (+1800) and Russell Henley (+1800). Four of the top five favorites this week finished in the top 10 at the Masters, with Fitzpatrick being the exception.
Meanwhile, Lowry recorded an ace at Augusta, and predicting a hole-in-one is an RBC Heritage pick that could go into your golf longshot parlay. Every player in the field has +10000 golf odds to notch an ace at Harbour Town Golf Links, and the four par-3s on the course give several chances to do so. Play begins at 7:05 a.m. ET on Thursday. Before making any 2026 RBC Heritage picks or golf parlays, you need to see this PGA Tour parlay from the proven computer model at SportsLine.
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SportsLine’s proprietary model, built by DFS pro Mike McClure, has been red-hot since the PGA Tour resumed in June 2020.
This same model has also nailed a whopping 17 majors entering the weekend, including the 2026 Masters — its fifth Masters in a row — as well as last year’s PGA Championship and Open Championship. Anyone who has followed its golf betting picks could have seen massive returns on betting sites.
Now that the 2026 RBC Heritage field is locked in, SportsLine simulated the tournament 10,000 times. It has locked in betting picks to form a golf parlay that pays out almost $90,000 for a $10 bettor. See the picks and full parlay by heading to SportsLine.
Top 2026 RBC Heritage parlay, PGA Tour picks
For the RBC Heritage 2026, one of the picks featured in the model’s PGA Tour parlay is Chris Gotterup Top 10 finish at +310. Gotterup has three top 10s this season, incudling a pair of victories, and he held his own in his first Masters appearance, notching a top 25 finish. He’ll compete at the RBC Heritage for the first time, but his strengths as a ball-striker should play well at this course.
Gotterup bombs off the tee, ranking fourth in driving distance, as his driver should eat up a course which is among the shortest on the PGA Tour at just over 7,200 yards. Overall, Gotterup ranks in the top 16 in strokes gained: total, SG: tee-to-green and SG: off-the-tee. With a sixth place finish in his last non-major, and with Gotterup ranking sixth in FedEx Cup standings, betting him to record a top 10 this week is a golf prediction worth making. See the rest of the PGA Tour parlay legs here.
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How to make PGA Tour parlay picks
The model has also picked an outright winner, plus a prop that returns well over +500 among its six PGA picks for the 2026 RBC Heritage parlay that pays almost $90,000 on just a $10 bet. You can only see the picks and the full parlay at SportsLine.
So, who will win the RBC Heritage 2026, and what combination of PGA Tour props could unlock a payday of almost $90,000 on just a $10 bet? Visit SportsLine now to get the PGA Tour parlay and picks for the RBC Heritage, all from the golf model that’s nailed a whopping 17 majors entering the weekend, and find out.
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Hugo Ekitike ruled out for season and World Cup with serious Achilles injury
Liverpool have confirmed Hugo Ekitike has sustained a serious Achilles injury and will miss this summer’s World Cup with France.
The 23-year-old was injured during the first half of Tuesday night’s 2-0 Champions League quarter-final second-leg defeat by Paris St Germain at Anfield and the full extent of the injury became clear on Wednesday.
France boss Didier Deschamps revealed Ekitike would have to sit out the World Cup and Liverpool have now revealed scans confirm a rupture of the Achilles tendon.
“Liverpool FC can confirm Hugo Ekitike has sustained a serious Achilles injury,” the Premier League club said in a statement on Thursday.
“The forward had to be substituted during the first half of Tuesday’s Champions League match against Paris Saint-Germain at Anfield after a slip on the turf.
“Scans on the issue have subsequently confirmed a rupture of the Achilles tendon.
“Ekitike will therefore be sidelined for the remaining weeks of the club season and unable to participate at this summer’s World Cup with France.
“Further updates will be provided at the appropriate time, with Hugo receiving the full support of everyone at LFC.”
Ekitike, a £69million summer signing from Eintracht Frankfurt, was carried from the field on a stretcher, 31 minutes into Tuesday’s game.
He has scored 17 goals in all competitions for Liverpool this season and become a firm favourite with Reds’ fans.
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Ohtani strikes out 10 as Dodgers send Mets to 7th straight loss
LOS ANGELES — Shohei Ohtani pitched one-run ball over six innings and struck out 10, which he had not done since 2021, and the Los Angeles Dodgers routed the Mets 8-2 Wednesday night, sending New York to its seventh straight defeat.
Dalton Rushing, who replaced Ohtani as designated hitter, hit his first career grand slam off Mets closer Devin Williams in the eighth. Kyle Tucker added a two-out solo shot — his first at home as a Dodger — off Austin Warren, making it 8-1.
Ohtani (2-0) had tossed 33 consecutive innings without an earned run before MJ Melendez’s RBI double in the fifth trimmed New York’s deficit to 2-1. It was his first earned run allowed since Aug. 27 against Cincinnati.
Ohtani wasn’t in the batting lineup during a mound start for the first time since May 28, 2021, with the Los Angeles Angels. Manager Dave Roberts said it was because Ohtani was still sore after getting hit in the back of his right shoulder by Mets pitcher David Peterson on Monday.
Ohtani’s strikeouts were a season high by a Dodgers pitcher. He twice fanned Francisco Lindor in a battle of All-Stars. The second time, Lindor laughed as Ohtani blew a 99 mph fastball past him on his 11th and last pitch to end the third. Ohtani smiled wryly.
Ohtani walked two on 95 pitches, 63 for strikes. He struck out the side in the sixth to end his outing. Ohtani had 22 swing and misses, his most with the Dodgers.
The Dodgers (14-4) swept the Mets at home for the first time since June 19-22, 2017. Along with sweeps of Arizona and Washington, the Dodgers are 9-0 against National League opponents this season.
The Dodgers led 2-0 on Hyeseong Kim’s two-run homer off Mets starter Clay Holmes (2-2) in the second. Teoscar Hernández added an opposite-field solo shot leading off the sixth against reliever Tobias Myers.
The Mets managed five hits playing their 11th game without injured slugger Juan Soto (calf). They were outscored 14-4 in the series.
Melendez was the only Met with any success against Ohtani, going 2-for-2 with a pair of doubles after being called up from triple-A Wednesday.
The Dodgers improved to 18-4 on Jackie Robinson Day — best mark in the majors — since MLB first declared a special day in 2004 for the player who broke baseball’s colour barrier in 1947 with Brooklyn.
Mets RHP Kodai Senga (0-2, 7.07 ERA) starts Friday against Chicago Cubs RHP Edward Cabrera (1-0, 1.62). Also Friday, Dodgers RHP Tyler Glasnow (1-0, 4.00) starts at Colorado against Rockies RHP Tomoyuki Sugano (1-0, 2.16).
Sports
World Snooker Championship 2026: Match schedule, seeds, BBC TV times and prize money
The 2026 World Snooker Championship takes place at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield from 18 April to 4 May – and you can watch every shot of the tournament live on the BBC.
Zhao Xintong, who became the first champion from China by beating Mark Williams in last year’s final, will get the 17-day tournament under way against qualifier Liam Highfield at 10:00 BST on Saturday.
Zhao is one of a record 11 players from China in the field of 32, beating the previous high of 10 from last year.
Ronnie O’Sullivan hopes to win a record eighth world title at the age of 50 – 25 years after claiming his first – to finally move clear of Stephen Hendry as the championship’s most successful player.
World number one Judd Trump will aim to lift the trophy for the second time, while other contenders include four-time champions Mark Selby and John Higgins, three-time winner Mark Williams and 2024 champion Kyren Wilson.
There are four debutants including England’s Stan Moody, 19, and Liam Pullen, 20.
This year is the 50th championship to be held at the Crucible since the tournament moved to Sheffield in 1977.
The two-day final starts on 3 May, with the winner taking home £500,000.
He will need to win 71 frames over four matches to lift the trophy.
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Thunder secure two first-round picks after play-in results
Sam Presti and the Oklahoma City Thunder have just secured themselves two more first-round picks in this year’s NBA Draft, including one that is in the lottery.
After Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors eliminated the Los Angeles Clippers from the Play-In Tournament on Wednesday night, OKC now has the right to a 2026 pick swap with the Clippers. They also acquired the 76ers’ first-round pick after Philadelphia beat the Orlando Magic to secure the No. 7 seed in the East.
The Clippers’ pick was acquired in 2019 as part of the blockbuster trade that sent Paul George to Los Angeles in exchange for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Danilo Gallinari, and numerous picks.
Depending on the play-in results, the pick could be No. 11 in the lottery if Golden State beats the Phoenix Suns to secure the No. 8 seed, or No. 12 if the Warriors fall short.
The 76ers’ pick had been top-four protected, but now goes to the Thunder as part of a 2020 trade that saw Philadelphia offload Al Horford’s contract to the Thunder in exchange for Danny Green.
The Thunder, who finished the regular season with an NBA-best 64-18 record and are the defending NBA champions, will open its playoff run on Sunday against the winner of the Suns-Warriors matchup.
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Todd McShay’s Mock Draft Throws a Grenade at Vikings
For the last five weeks, nine out of ten NFL mock drafts have featured Oregon Safety Dillon Thieneman to the Minnesota Vikings. Only very recently has the mock-draft community begun to diversify. Among those examples is The Ringer‘s Todd McShay, formerly of ESPN. connecting Minnesota to Washington wide receiver Denzel Boston in Round 1.
McShay may have reopened Minnesota’s WR debate at No. 18.
Fans shouldn’t rule out a WR pick, and one week before the draft, McShay is all over it.
Why a Receiver at No. 18 Has Real Traction
The idea sounds jarring, though the logic is easy to find.
McShay: Boston to MIN at No. 18
Passing on Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq and Tennessee cornerback Jermod McCoy, McShay rolled with Boston to Kevin O’Connell’s team.
He defended the selection, “The Vikings had real issues catching the football last season, and the situation hasn’t exactly improved. With Jalen Nailor now in Las Vegas, they’re currently planning to give Tai Felton and his three rookie receptions a starting role. That’s a problem.”
“This pick might feel a bit rich for Boston, but based on conversations I had with a couple of teams over the weekend, the gap between him, KC Concepcion, and Omar Cooper Jr. isn’t nearly as wide for some teams as the draft community may think. It really comes down to stylistic preference, and for Minnesota, the need is clear: a big, physical outside receiver to complement Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison. Boston fits that mold perfectly.”
It’s the first prominent mock draft to link Boston to the Vikings.
Boston’s Rookie Profile
Boston is 6’4″ and 210 pounds. He’s 22 and ran a 4.6 forty at the NFL Combine. The Washington alumnus is a deep-ball killer, touchdown scorer, and yards-after-catch guy on top of it all. On the downside, he might struggle to beat man coverage early in the pros, and the 4.6 speed obviously isn’t dazzling.
At Washington in the last two seasons, Boston tabulated 125 receptions, 1,715 yards, and 20 touchdowns.
NFL Draft Buzz on Boston: “Boston isn’t going to run past NFL corners with pure speed, and his decision to skip the 40-yard dash at Washington’s pro day only adds to the questions about his long speed. When a receiver with his profile chooses not to run, evaluators notice.”
“The vertical jump improvement to 37.5 inches at the pro day was a nice touch, reinforcing the short-area explosiveness, but it doesn’t answer the straight-line concerns. Still, he plays the position with intelligence and physicality that should translate.”
The Vikings don’t have many tall receivers, and Boston would instantly fix that.
NDB added, “The adjustment period at the next level will center on his release package and ability to defeat press coverage consistently. Physical NFL corners will test him early, and he’ll need more variety and craftiness off the line to avoid getting rerouted.”
“The speed questions won’t go away until he proves it on Sundays, and that’s a fair concern for a receiver being discussed in the first-round conversation. That said, his ball skills are dependable, his competitive makeup suggests he’ll put in the work, and he has the tools and mentality to develop into a productive starter who wins his share of one-on-one opportunities.”
Yes, a WR Could Be the Pick
Some fans will see wide receiver for the Vikings in mock drafts and think, “What are we even doing?” On the surface, that’s a fair assessment.
However, Justin Jefferson’s guaranteed money runs out after 2026, Jalen Nailor no longer works for the Vikings, Jordan Addison’s off-the-field patterns are sketchy, and no one knows if last year’s rookie, Tai Felton, is any good. Then, that’s it for Vikings wide receivers.
The position is not an urgent need, but the case for a Round 1 wideout in Minnesota is not silly. Also remember that Minnesota has a rich, rich history of drafting wide receivers. It’s the Vikings’ thing.
Other Frontrunners
If you want the Vikings to pick a wide receiver next week, with the plan for that man to contribute sooner rather than later, but Boston isn’t quite the guy, then the draft list looks like this with one week to go:
- Makai Lemon (USC | R1)
- Jordyn Tyson (Arizona State | R1)
- Omar Cooper Jr. (Indiana | R1)
- Kevin Concepcion (Texas A&M | R1)
- Chris Bell (Louisville | R2)
- Chris Brazzell (Tennessee | R2)
- Germie Bernard (Alabama | R2)
- Zachariah Branch (Georgia | R2)
- Antonio Williams (Clemson | R3)
- Malachi Fields (Notre Dame | R3)
- Elijah Sarratt (Indiana | R3)
- Ted Hurst (Georgia State | R3)
- Skyler Bell (UConn | R3)
- Bryce Lance (North Dakota State | R3)
- Deion Burks (Oklahoma | R3)
- Ja’Kobi Lane (USC | R4)
- Brenen Thompson (Mississippi State | R4)
- De’Zhaun Stribling (Mississippi | R4)
The Vikings have reportedly met with Williams, Hurst, and Stribling.
Boston will turn 23 in December.
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Mike Trout achieves a Yankee Stadium first since 2013

Angels center fielder Mike Trout is enjoying his time in the Bronx. He homered against the Yankees, again, Wednesday night. Here’s the video proof:
Trout homered twice on Monday and then hit another on Tuesday, so this gives him four homers in the series and at least one in each of the three games so far. If that seems rare to you, you’re correct.
This is the first time an opposing player has homered in three consecutive games in Yankee Stadium since Miguel Cabrera did it for the 2013 Tigers (via MLB Stats). Of course it was Miggy and then Trout, right? Those two are destined to be tied together forever in baseball lore.
Remember, in 2012, there was a massive debate between old- and new-school baseball people regarding whether Trout or Cabrera should win the MVP. Cabrera won the Triple Crown in the AL, but Trout had 10.5 WAR to Cabrera’s 7.1. Cabrera prevailed. The next season, we were treated to a similar argument and Cabrera again won the MVP after slashing .348/.442/.636 (all three marks led the majors) while Trout led in WAR over Cabrera, 8.9 to 7.5. Trout had two full seasons and two MVP runner-up finishes behind Cabrera. In 2013, Trout was his first of three MVPs.
Trout now has 410 home runs in his career. This means he’s passed Mark Teixeira on the all-time list and sits 57th all-time, two shy of Alfonso Soriano. He’s signed through 2030, so the hallowed mark of 500 is on the table, health permitting.
Trout is likely done winning MVPs. He’s 34 and has had trouble staying on the field the last several years. He last won MVP in 2019 and last finished in the top 10 in 2022, when he finished eighth despite appearing in only 119 games.
We still see plenty of flickers of his all-time great prowess, though. Through the first 17 games this season, Trout had already racked up 1.1 WAR and led the AL with 17 runs scored. He’s now up to six homers and 15 RBI in 18 games — and he can still do things that very few other players can.
This series in Yankee Stadium has been a nice reminder of that.
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All-Time First-Round NFL Draft Picks by Schools in the West
Since the first NFL Draft in 1936, a total of 376 players from schools in the West have been taken in the First Round.
USC leads all 25 schools with 88, followed by UCLA with 37, Washington with 31, Arizona State and Cal with 27, Stanford with 25, Colorado with 25, and Oregon with 24.
All others have less than 20.
Here are tables of all the players from the region for each school that has had players drafted in the First Round.
You’ll find a breakdown of the picks by program in a table at the bottom.
Arizona (8)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 8 | Tetairoa McMillan | CAR | WR |
| 2024 | 25 | Jordan Morgan | GNB | OL |
| 1999 | 10 | Chris McAlister | BAL | DB |
| 1990 | 8 | Chris Singleton | NWE | LB |
| 1990 | 11 | Anthony Smith | RAI | DE |
| 1984 | 7 | Ricky Hunley | CIN | LB |
| 1976 | 22 | Mike Dawson | STL | DT |
| 1939 | 10 | Walt Nielsen | NYG | FB |
Arizona State (27)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 25 | Brandon Aiyuk | SFO | WR |
| 2015 | 30 | Damarious Randall | GNB | S |
| 2003 | 10 | Terrell Suggs | BAL | LB |
| 2002 | 10 | Levi Jones | CIN | T |
| 2001 | 20 | Adam Archuleta | STL | DB |
| 2001 | 31 | Todd Heap | BAL | TE |
| 2000 | 26 | Erik Flowers | BUF | DE |
| 1995 | 32 | Craig Newsome | GNB | DB |
| 1994 | 23 | Shante Carver | DAL | DE |
| 1991 | 14 | Leonard Russell | NWE | RB |
| 1988 | 19 | Randall McDaniel | MIN | G |
| 1988 | 20 | Aaron Cox | RAM | WR |
| 1983 | 23 | Jim Jeffcoat | DAL | DE |
| 1982 | 9 | Gerald Riggs | ATL | RB |
| 1980 | 28 | Mark Malone | PIT | QB |
| 1979 | 9 | Al Harris | CHI | DE |
| 1978 | 14 | John Jefferson | SDG | WR |
| 1976 | 5 | Mike Haynes | NWE | DB |
| 1976 | 17 | Larry Gordon | MIA | LB |
| 1974 | 16 | Woody Green | KAN | RB |
| 1973 | 16 | Steve Holden | CLE | WR |
| 1971 | 4 | J.D. Hill | BUF | WR |
| 1969 | 15 | Ron Pritchard | HOU | LB |
| 1967 | 22 | John Pitts | BUF | DB |
| 1965 | 3 | Larry Todd | OAK | RB |
| 1964 | 3 | Charley Taylor | WAS | WR |
| 1964 | 7 | Tony Lorick | OAK | RB |
Boise State (6)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 6 | Ashton Jeanty | LVR | RB |
| 2018 | 19 | Leighton Vander Esch | DAL | Esch |
| 2012 | 19 | Shea McClellin | CHI | DE |
| 2012 | 31 | Doug Martin | TAM | RB |
| 2010 | 29 | Kyle Wilson | NYJ | DB |
| 2008 | 12 | Ryan Clady | DEN | T |
BYU (10)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 2 | Zach Wilson | NYJ | QB |
| 2013 | 5 | Ezekiel Ansah | DET | DE |
| 2000 | 28 | Rob Morris | IND | LB |
| 1999 | 14 | John Tait | KAN | T |
| 1987 | 11 | Shawn Knight | NOR | DE |
| 1987 | 17 | Jason Buck | CIN | DE |
| 1985 | 28 | Trevor Matich | NWE | C |
| 1984 | 24 | Todd Shell | SFO | LB |
| 1982 | 5 | Jim McMahon | CHI | QB |
| 1980 | 15 | Marc Wilson | OAK | QB |
Cal (27)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | 1 | Jared Goff | LAR | QB |
| 2011 | 24 | Cameron Jordan | NOR | DE |
| 2010 | 10 | Tyson Alualu | JAX | DT |
| 2010 | 30 | Jahvid Best | DET | RB |
| 2009 | 21 | Alex Mack | CLE | C |
| 2007 | 12 | Marshawn Lynch | BUF | RB |
| 2005 | 24 | Aaron Rodgers | GNB | QB |
| 2003 | 19 | Kyle Boller | BAL | QB |
| 2003 | 31 | Nnamdi Asomugha | OAK | DB |
| 2001 | 7 | Andre Carter | SFO | DE |
| 2000 | 15 | Deltha O’Neal | DEN | DB |
| 1997 | 13 | Tony Gonzalez | KAN | TE |
| 1997 | 19 | Tarik Glenn | IND | T |
| 1996 | 12 | Regan Upshaw | TAM | DE |
| 1996 | 16 | Duane Clemons | MIN | DE |
| 1994 | 19 | Todd Steussie | MIN | T |
| 1993 | 16 | Sean Dawkins | IND | WR |
| 1988 | 12 | Ken Harvey | PHO | LB |
| 1984 | 20 | David Lewis | DET | TE |
| 1981 | 6 | Rich Campbell | GNB | QB |
| 1977 | 15 | Ted Albrecht | CHI | T |
| 1976 | 3 | Chuck Muncie | NOR | RB |
| 1975 | 1 | Steve Bartkowski | ATL | QB |
| 1972 | 2 | Sherman White | CIN | DE |
| 1965 | 5 | Craig Morton | DAL | QB |
| 1953 | 4 | Johnny Olszewski | CRD | FB |
| 1952 | 2 | Les Richter | DTX | LB |
Colorado (25)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2 | Travis Hunter | JAX | CB/WR |
| 2011 | 17 | Nate Solder | NWE | T |
| 2011 | 27 | Jimmy Smith | BAL | DB |
| 2003 | 32 | Tyler Brayton | OAK | DE |
| 2002 | 21 | Daniel Graham | NWE | TE |
| 1997 | 10 | Chris Naeole | NOR | G |
| 1997 | 27 | Rae Carruth | CAR | WR |
| 1995 | 4 | Michael Westbrook | WAS | WR |
| 1995 | 21 | Rashaan Salaam | CHI | RB |
| 1994 | 17 | Charles Johnson | PIT | WR |
| 1993 | 23 | Deon Figures | PIT | DB |
| 1993 | 24 | Leonard Renfro | PHI | DT |
| 1991 | 13 | Mike Pritchard | ATL | WR |
| 1991 | 18 | Alfred Williams | CIN | DE |
| 1980 | 8 | Mark Haynes | NYG | DB |
| 1980 | 12 | Stan Brock | NOR | T |
| 1976 | 12 | Pete Brock | NWE | C |
| 1976 | 13 | Troy Archer | NYG | DT |
| 1976 | 23 | Mark Koncar | GNB | T |
| 1974 | 2 | Bo Matthews | SDG | RB |
| 1974 | 7 | J.V. Cain | STL | TE |
| 1972 | 16 | Herb Orvis | DET | DT |
| 1970 | 11 | Bobby Anderson | DEN | RB |
| 1962 | 13 | Jerry Hillebrand | NYG | LB |
| 1938 | 4 | Whizzer White | PIT | TB |
Colorado State (5)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1987 | 6 | Kelly Stouffer | STL | QB |
| 1979 | 2 | Mike Bell | KAN | DE |
| 1976 | 26 | Kevin McLain | RAM | LB |
| 1975 | 25 | Mark Mullaney | MIN | DE |
| 1956 | 1 | Gary Glick | PIT | DB |
Fresno State (5)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 12 | Ryan Mathews | SDG | RB |
| 2005 | 32 | Logan Mankins | NWE | G |
| 2002 | 1 | David Carr | HOU | QB |
| 1994 | 6 | Trent Dilfer | TAM | QB |
| 1990 | 16 | James Williams | BUF | DB |
Hawai’i (1)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | 19 | Ashley Lelie | DEN | WR |
Idaho (2)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 17 | Mike Iupati | SFO | G |
| 1967 | 13 | Ray McDonald | WAS | RB |
Montana State (1)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1974 | 23 | Bill Kollar | CIN | DE |
Nevada (1)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1949 | 5 | Stan Heath | GNB | QB |
New Mexico (2)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 9 | Brian Urlacher | CHI | LB |
| 1977 | 21 | Robin Cole | PIT | LB |
Oregon (24)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 21 | Derrick Harmon | PIT | DT |
| 2025 | 29 | Josh Conerly Jr. | WAS | OT |
| 2024 | 12 | Bo Nix | DEN | QB |
| 2023 | 17 | Christian Gonzalez | NWE | DB |
| 2022 | 5 | Kayvon Thibodeaux | NYG | DE |
| 2021 | 7 | Penei Sewell | DET | OL |
| 2020 | 6 | Justin Herbert | LAC | QB |
| 2016 | 7 | DeForest Buckner | SFO | DE |
| 2015 | 2 | Marcus Mariota | TEN | QB |
| 2015 | 17 | Arik Armstead | SFO | DT |
| 2013 | 3 | Dion Jordan | MIA | DE |
| 2013 | 20 | Kyle Long | CHI | G |
| 2008 | 13 | Jonathan Stewart | CAR | RB |
| 2006 | 12 | Haloti Ngata | BAL | DT |
| 2002 | 3 | Joey Harrington | DET | QB |
| 1999 | 3 | Akili Smith | CIN | QB |
| 1996 | 11 | Alex Molden | NOR | DB |
| 1987 | 13 | Chris Miller | ATL | QB |
| 1976 | 18 | Mario Clark | BUF | DB |
| 1975 | 16 | Russ Francis | NWE | TE |
| 1972 | 4 | Ahmad Rashad | STL | WR |
| 1972 | 22 | Tom Drougas | BAL | T |
| 1968 | 12 | Jim Smith | WAS | DB |
| 1955 | 1 | George Shaw | BAL | QB |
Oregon State (7)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 14 | Taliese Fuaga | NOR | OL |
| 2014 | 20 | Brandin Cooks | NOR | WR |
| 2004 | 24 | Steven Jackson | STL | RB |
| 2003 | 29 | Nick Barnett | GNB | LB |
| 1963 | 1 | Terry Baker | RAM | QB |
| 1950 | 13 | Ken Carpenter | CLE | HB |
| 1938 | 10 | Joe Gray | CHI | B |
San Diego State (10)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 27 | Rashaad Penny | SEA | RB |
| 1998 | 7 | Kyle Turley | NOR | T |
| 1994 | 2 | Marshall Faulk | IND | RB |
| 1991 | 16 | Dan McGwire | SEA | QB |
| 1973 | 15 | Isaac Curtis | CIN | WR |
| 1972 | 7 | Willie Buchanon | GNB | DB |
| 1969 | 13 | Fred Dryer | NYG | DE |
| 1968 | 9 | Haven Moses | BUF | WR |
| 1967 | 25 | Don Horn | GNB | QB |
| 1965 | 6 | Gary Garrison | SDG | WR |
San Jose State (6)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | 22 | Gill Byrd | SDG | DB |
| 1982 | 21 | Gerald Willhite | DEN | RB |
| 1981 | 16 | Mark Nichols | DET | WR |
| 1977 | 20 | Wilson Faumuina | ATL | DT |
| 1976 | 19 | Kim Bokamper | MIA | DE |
| 1975 | 17 | Louis Wright | DEN | DB |
Stanford (25)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | 3 | Solomon Thomas | SFO | DE |
| 2017 | 8 | Christian McCaffrey | CAR | RB |
| 2016 | 28 | Joshua Garnett | SFO | G |
| 2015 | 13 | Andrus Peat | NOR | T |
| 2012 | 1 | Andrew Luck | IND | QB |
| 2012 | 24 | David DeCastro | PIT | G |
| 2003 | 26 | Kwame Harris | SFO | T |
| 1993 | 22 | Darrien Gordon | SDG | DB |
| 1992 | 8 | Bob Whitfield | ATL | T |
| 1992 | 9 | Tommy Vardell | CLE | RB |
| 1988 | 23 | Brad Muster | CHI | RB |
| 1983 | 1 | John Elway | BAL | QB |
| 1982 | 7 | Darrin Nelson | MIN | RB |
| 1981 | 19 | Brian Holloway | NWE | T |
| 1978 | 6 | James Lofton | GNB | WR |
| 1978 | 10 | Gordon King | NYG | T |
| 1972 | 6 | Greg Sampson | HOU | T |
| 1972 | 10 | Jeff Siemon | MIN | LB |
| 1971 | 1 | Jim Plunkett | NWE | QB |
| 1969 | 16 | Gene Washington | SFO | WR |
| 1957 | 3 | John Brodie | SFO | QB |
| 1954 | 1 | Bobby Garrett | CLE | QB |
| 1942 | 3 | Pete Kmetovic | PHI | HB |
| 1942 | 10 | Frankie Albert | CHI | QB |
| 1941 | 3 | Norm Standlee | CHI | FB |
UCLA (37)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 15 | Laiatu Latu | IND | DL |
| 2018 | 10 | Josh Rosen | ARI | QB |
| 2018 | 15 | Kolton Miller | OAK | T |
| 2017 | 26 | Takkarist McKinley | ATL | DE |
| 2016 | 27 | Kenny Clark | GNB | DT |
| 2014 | 9 | Anthony Barr | MIN | LB |
| 2013 | 26 | Datone Jones | GNB | DE |
| 2006 | 28 | Marcedes Lewis | JAX | TE |
| 2002 | 31 | Robert Thomas | STL | LB |
| 2001 | 25 | Freddie Mitchell | PHI | WR |
| 1999 | 12 | Cade McNown | CHI | QB |
| 1998 | 24 | Shaun Williams | NYG | DB |
| 1996 | 4 | Jonathan Ogden | BAL | T |
| 1995 | 10 | J.J. Stokes | SFO | WR |
| 1994 | 10 | Jamir Miller | ARI | LB |
| 1992 | 25 | Tommy Maddox | DEN | QB |
| 1991 | 2 | Eric Turner | CLE | DB |
| 1989 | 1 | Troy Aikman | DAL | QB |
| 1988 | 14 | Gaston Green | RAM | RB |
| 1986 | 18 | Mike Sherrard | DAL | WR |
| 1984 | 18 | Don Rogers | CLE | DB |
| 1982 | 16 | Luis Sharpe | STL | T |
| 1981 | 3 | Freeman McNeil | NYJ | RB |
| 1981 | 4 | Kenny Easley | SEA | DB |
| 1979 | 18 | Manu Tuiasosopo | SEA | DT |
| 1979 | 21 | Jerry Robinson | PHI | LB |
| 1974 | 10 | Bill Sandifer | SFO | DT |
| 1974 | 17 | Fred McNeill | MIN | LB |
| 1967 | 7 | Mel Farr | DET | RB |
| 1963 | 5 | Kermit Alexander | DEN | DB |
| 1963 | 8 | Kermit Alexander | SFO | DB |
| 1961 | 6 | Jimmy Johnson | SFO | DB |
| 1961 | 11 | Billy Kilmer | SFO | QB |
| 1953 | 9 | Donn Moomaw | RAM | C |
| 1947 | 4 | Cal Rossi | WAS | B |
| 1947 | 6 | Ernie Case | GNB | QB |
| 1946 | 9 | Cal Rossi | WAS | B |
USC (88)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 1 | Caleb Williams | CHI | QB |
| 2023 | 23 | Jordan Addison | MIN | WR |
| 2022 | 8 | Drake London | ATL | WR |
| 2021 | 14 | Alijah Vera-Tucker | NYJ | OL |
| 2020 | 18 | Austin Jackson | MIA | T |
| 2018 | 3 | Sam Darnold | NYJ | QB |
| 2017 | 18 | Adoree’ Jackson | TEN | CB |
| 2015 | 6 | Leonard Williams | NYJ | DE |
| 2015 | 20 | Nelson Agholor | PHI | WR |
| 2012 | 4 | Matt Kalil | MIN | T |
| 2012 | 28 | Nick Perry | GNB | DE |
| 2011 | 9 | Tyron Smith | DAL | T |
| 2009 | 5 | Mark Sanchez | NYJ | QB |
| 2009 | 15 | Brian Cushing | HOU | LB |
| 2009 | 26 | Clay Matthews | GNB | LB |
| 2008 | 7 | Sedrick Ellis | NOR | DT |
| 2008 | 9 | Keith Rivers | CIN | LB |
| 2008 | 21 | Sam Baker | ATL | T |
| 2008 | 28 | Lawrence Jackson | SEA | DE |
| 2006 | 2 | Reggie Bush | NOR | RB |
| 2006 | 10 | Matt Leinart | ARI | QB |
| 2005 | 10 | Mike Williams | DET | WR |
| 2005 | 31 | Mike Patterson | PHI | DT |
| 2004 | 20 | Kenechi Udeze | MIN | DE |
| 2003 | 1 | Carson Palmer | CIN | QB |
| 2003 | 16 | Troy Polamalu | PIT | DB |
| 2000 | 29 | R. Jay Soward | JAX | WR |
| 1999 | 9 | Chris Claiborne | DET | LB |
| 1997 | 2 | Darrell Russell | OAK | DT |
| 1996 | 1 | Keyshawn Johnson | NYJ | WR |
| 1996 | 27 | John Michels | GNB | T |
| 1995 | 2 | Tony Boselli | JAX | T |
| 1994 | 4 | Willie McGinest | NWE | DE |
| 1994 | 21 | Johnnie Morton | DET | WR |
| 1993 | 7 | Curtis Conway | CHI | WR |
| 1991 | 11 | Pat Harlow | NWE | T |
| 1991 | 24 | Todd Marinovich | RAI | QB |
| 1990 | 5 | Junior Seau | SDG | LB |
| 1990 | 6 | Mark Carrier | CHI | DB |
| 1988 | 8 | Dave Cadigan | NYJ | G |
| 1986 | 13 | James FitzPatrick | SDG | T |
| 1985 | 5 | Duane Bickett | IND | LB |
| 1985 | 7 | Ken Ruettgers | GNB | T |
| 1983 | 9 | Bruce Matthews | HOU | G |
| 1983 | 19 | Joey Browner | MIN | DB |
| 1983 | 26 | Don Mosebar | RAI | C |
| 1982 | 3 | Chip Banks | CLE | LB |
| 1982 | 10 | Marcus Allen | RAI | RB |
| 1982 | 24 | Roy Foster | MIA | G |
| 1981 | 8 | Ronnie Lott | SFO | DB |
| 1981 | 11 | Keith Van Horne | CHI | T |
| 1981 | 15 | Dennis Smith | DEN | DB |
| 1980 | 3 | Anthony Munoz | CIN | T |
| 1980 | 11 | Brad Budde | KAN | G |
| 1980 | 27 | Charles White | CLE | RB |
| 1978 | 12 | Clay Matthews | CLE | LB |
| 1977 | 1 | Ricky Bell | TAM | RB |
| 1977 | 4 | Marvin Powell | NYJ | T |
| 1977 | 5 | Gary Jeter | NYG | DE |
| 1974 | 21 | Lynn Swann | PIT | WR |
| 1974 | 25 | Steve Riley | MIN | T |
| 1973 | 6 | Charle Young | PHI | TE |
| 1973 | 11 | Sam Cunningham | NWE | RB |
| 1973 | 22 | Pete Adams | CLE | G |
| 1971 | 12 | Marv Montgomery | DEN | T |
| 1971 | 25 | Tody Smith | DAL | DE |
| 1970 | 5 | Al Cowlings | BUF | DE |
| 1970 | 26 | Sid Smith | KAN | C |
| 1969 | 1 | O.J. Simpson | BUF | RB |
| 1969 | 21 | Bob Klein | RAM | TE |
| 1968 | 1 | Ron Yary | MIN | T |
| 1968 | 10 | Mike Taylor | PIT | T |
| 1968 | 14 | Tim Rossovich | PHI | LB |
| 1968 | 16 | Mike Hull | CHI | RB |
| 1968 | 24 | Earl McCullouch | DET | WR |
| 1966 | 7 | Rod Sherman | OAK | WR |
| 1964 | 2 | Pete Beathard | KAN | QB |
| 1964 | 5 | Pete Beathard | DET | QB |
| 1961 | 4 | Marlin McKeever | RAM | LB |
| 1960 | 10 | Ron Mix | BAL | T |
| 1957 | 2 | Jon Arnett | RAM | HB |
| 1953 | 7 | Al Carmichael | GNB | HB |
| 1952 | 11 | Frank Gifford | NYG | HB |
| 1946 | 7 | Leo Riggs | PHI | B |
| 1945 | 8 | Jim Hardy | WAS | QB |
| 1942 | 7 | Bobby Robertson | BKN | C |
| 1940 | 6 | Doyle Nave | DET | B |
| 1940 | 10 | Grenny Lansdell | NYG | HB |
Utah (10)
| Year | Pick | Team | Player | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 25 | BUF | Dalton Kincaid | TE |
| 2022 | 27 | JAX | Devin Lloyd | LB |
| 2017 | 20 | DEN | Garett Bolles | T |
| 2013 | 14 | CAR | Star Lotulelei | DT |
| 2005 | 1 | SFO | Alex Smith | QB |
| 2003 | 8 | CAR | Jordan Gross | T |
| 1998 | 16 | TEN | Kevin Dyson | WR |
| 1995 | 20 | DET | Luther Elliss | DT |
| 1971 | 17 | STL | Norm Thompson | DB |
| 1959 | 10 | NYG | Lee Grosscup | QB |
Utah State (1)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 26 | Jordan Love | GNB | QB |
Washington (31)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 8 | Michael Penix | ATL | QB |
| 2024 | 9 | Rome Odunze | CHI | WR |
| 2024 | 20 | Troy Fautanu | PIT | OL |
| 2022 | 21 | Trent McDuffie | KAN | CB |
| 2021 | 32 | Joe Tryon-Shoyinka | TAM | OLB |
| 2019 | 31 | Kaleb McGary | ATL | T |
| 2018 | 12 | Vita Vea | TAM | DT |
| 2017 | 9 | John Ross | CIN | WR |
| 2015 | 12 | Danny Shelton | CLE | NT |
| 2015 | 18 | Marcus Peters | KAN | CB |
| 2015 | 25 | Shaq Thompson | CAR | OLB |
| 2013 | 22 | Desmond Trufant | ATL | DB |
| 2011 | 8 | Jake Locker | TEN | QB |
| 2004 | 9 | Reggie Williams | JAX | WR |
| 2002 | 28 | Jerramy Stevens | SEA | TE |
| 1995 | 18 | Napoleon Kaufman | OAK | RB |
| 1995 | 27 | Mark Bruener | PIT | TE |
| 1993 | 9 | Lincoln Kennedy | ATL | T |
| 1992 | 1 | Steve Emtman | IND | DE |
| 1992 | 18 | Dana Hall | SFO | DB |
| 1990 | 23 | Bern Brostek | RAM | C |
| 1987 | 7 | Reggie Rogers | DET | DE |
| 1986 | 11 | Joe Kelly | CIN | LB |
| 1985 | 8 | Ron Holmes | TAM | DE |
| 1981 | 23 | Curt Marsh | OAK | G |
| 1980 | 9 | Doug Martin | MIN | DE |
| 1978 | 16 | Blair Bush | CIN | C |
| 1967 | 16 | Dave Williams | STL | WR |
| 1952 | 9 | Hugh McElhenny | SFO | HB |
| 1941 | 4 | Rudy Mucha | RAM | G |
| 1941 | 8 | Dean McAdams | BKN | TB |
Washington State (13)
| Year | Pick | Player | Team | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | 22 | Andre Dillard | PHI | T |
| 2014 | 27 | Deone Bucannon | ARI | DB |
| 2003 | 11 | Marcus Trufant | SEA | DB |
| 1998 | 2 | Ryan Leaf | SDG | QB |
| 1995 | 13 | Mark Fields | NOR | LB |
| 1993 | 1 | Drew Bledsoe | NWE | QB |
| 1990 | 20 | Steve Broussard | ATL | RB |
| 1984 | 13 | Keith Millard | MIN | DT |
| 1979 | 3 | Jack Thompson | CIN | QB |
| 1978 | 19 | Ken Greene | STL | DB |
| 1965 | 9 | Clancy Williams | RAM | DB |
| 1953 | 12 | Ed Barker | RAM | E |
| 1937 | 2 | Ed Goddard | BKN | B |
Wyoming (4)
| Year | Pick | Team | Player | POS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 7 | BUF | Josh Allen | QB |
| 1976 | 16 | DET | Lawrence Gaines | RB |
| 1976 | 27 | DAL | Aaron Kyle | DB |
| 1967 | 14 | SDG | Ron Billingsley | DT |
First-Round NFL Draft Picks by Program
| Program | Number | Most Recent |
|---|---|---|
| USC | 88 | 2024 |
| UCLA | 37 | 2024 |
| Washington | 31 | 2024 |
| Arizona State | 27 | 2020 |
| Cal | 27 | 2016 |
| Stanford | 25 | 2017 |
| Colorado | 24 | 2011 |
| Oregon | 22 | 2024 |
| Washington State | 13 | 2019 |
| BYU | 10 | 2021 |
| San Diego State | 10 | 2018 |
| Utah | 10 | 2023 |
| Arizona | 7 | 2024 |
| Oregon State | 7 | 2024 |
| San Jose State | 6 | 1983 |
| Boise State | 5 | 2018 |
| Colorado State | 5 | 1987 |
| Fresno State | 5 | 2020 |
| Wyoming | 4 | 2018 |
| Idaho | 2 | 2010 |
| New Mexico | 2 | 2000 |
| Hawai’i | 1 | 2002 |
| Montana Stte | 1 | 1974 |
| Nevada | 1 | 1949 |
| Utah State | 1 | 2020 |
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