NIL
College Football Cheat Sheet: Separation Saturday
The last weekend college football Saturday in October has arrived. It will give us some separation in Week 9. We are separating pretenders from contenders in the race towards the 12-team playoff.
Most of the attention will be on the SEC this weekend but there is a monster game in the American and multiple Big Ten teams will be unofficially eliminated from playoff contention this weekend. Meanwhile, we could be in for some absolute chaos in the Big 12.
We’ve got a balanced slate with some fun conference matchups. KSR’s College Football Cheat Sheet is back to set the table.
The Slate
| No. 18 USF at Memphis | Noon | ESPN2 |
| Ohio at Eastern Michigan | Noon | CBS Sports Network |
| Northwestern at Nebraska | Noon | FS1 |
| Rutgers at Purdue | Noon | Big Ten Network |
| UCLA at No. 2 Indiana | Noon | FOX |
| No. 8 Ole Miss at No. 13 Oklahoma | Noon | ABC |
| Syracuse at No. 7 Georgia Tech | Noon | ESPN |
| No. 16 Virginia at North Carolina | Noon | ACC Network |
| SMU at Wake Forest | Noon | The CW |
| Kansas State at Kansas | Noon | TNT |
| App State at Old Dominion | Noon | ESPNU |
| Bowling Green at Kent State | Noon | ESPN+ |
| Auburn at Arkansas | 12:45pm | SEC Network |
| Akron at Buffalo | 1:00pm | ESPN+ |
| UConn at Rice | 3:00pm | ESPN+ |
| Utah State at New Mexico | 3:00pm | Mountain West Network |
| San Diego State at Fresno State | 3:30pm | FS1 |
| Western Michigan at Miami (Ohio) | 3:30pm | ESPN+ |
| UMass at Central Michigan | 3:30pm | ESPN+ |
| Ball State at Northern Illinois | 3:30pm | ESPN+ |
| Temple at Tulsa | 3:30pm | ESPN+ |
| Florida Atlantic at Navy | 3:30pm | CBS Sports Network |
| ULM at Southern Miss | 3:30pm | ESPN+ |
| NC State at Pittsburgh | 3:30pm | ACC Network |
| No. 11 BYU at Iowa State | 3:30pm | FOX |
| No. 15 Missouri at No. 10 Vanderbilt | 3:30pm | ESPN |
| No. 4 Alabama at South Carolina | 3:30pm | ABC |
| Minnesota at Iowa | 3:30pm | CBS |
| No. 23 Illinois at Washington | 3:30pm | Big Ten Network |
| Toledo at Washington State | 3:30pm | The CW |
| Baylor at No. 21 Cincinnati | 4:00pm | ESPN2 |
| Oklahoma State at No. 14 Texas Tech | 4:00pm | ESPNU |
| No. 22 Texas at Mississippi State | 4:15pm | SEC Network |
| TCU at West Virginia | 6:00pm | ESPN+ |
| Wisconsin at No. 6 Oregon | 7:00pm | FS1 |
| Stanford at No. 9 Miami | 7:00pm | ESPN |
| Georgia Southern at Arkansas State | 7:00pm | ESPN+ |
| Louisiana at Troy | 7:00pm | ESPN+ |
| No. 25 Michigan at Michigan State | 7:30pm | NBC |
| No. 3 Texas A&M at No. 20 LSU | 7:30pm | ABC |
| Boston College at No. 19 Louisville | 7:30pm | ACC Network |
| Colorado State at Wyoming | 7:30pm | CBS Sports Network |
| No. 17 Tennessee at Kentucky | 7:45pm | SEC Network |
| Houston at No. 24 Arizona State | 8:00pm | ESPN2 |
| Colorado at Houston | 10:15pm | ESPN |
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Separation Saturday in SEC
Texas A&M (4-0), Alabama (4-0), and Georgia (4-1) sit atop the SEC standings with four league wins. Below them are five teams with just one conference loss. Two of those five will have two league losses with multiple games left to play after Saturday.
We will have a clearer picture of the SEC race after this weekend. We also might learn if the league will have a third head coach opening.
— Ole Miss at Oklahoma: Both teams lost their first big SEC game away from home this season. Ole Miss has remaining games against South Carolina, Florida, and Mississippi State. A loss probably doesn’t prevent them from going 10-2. A win creates a 7-1 SEC path with a chance to get to Atlanta for the conference championship game for the first time. Oklahoma still has Tennessee, Alabama, Missouri, and LSU on the slate. This one means more for the Sooners. A loss could start a collapse.
— Auburn at Arkansas: Bobby Petrino is looking for a win to keep the Arkansas job. Hugh Freeze is looking for a win to keep the firing patrol away. That create some intrigue for this game between two teams without a victory in league play.
— Missouri at Vanderbilt: Both teams sit at 6-1 (2-1) entering Week 9. “College GameDay” has made the trip to Nashville for this top-15 showdown. The winner will have a great shot to get to 10-2. That record likely means a College Football Playoff berth. This feels like a true playoff elimination game.
— Texas A&M at LSU: A&M is rolling and has a great chance to get to Atlanta but their four league wins have a combined record of 2-12. LSU has two close road losses to top-10 teams and now has their back against the wall in a night game at Death Valley. A road win for the Aggies would say a lot.
Important weekend for the other Big Ten teams competing for a playoff spot
Ohio State, Indiana, and Oregon all seem headed for a record of 11-1 or better. That means that the biggest conference in college football is almost guaranteed to receive at least three bids. Can this conference get four teams in like last year? It depends if one second tier team can rise above the rest.
There are eight currently Big Ten teams with at least two losses. Six of them play each other this week while one other hits the road in a rivalry game. The potential playoff contender list could be cut in half after this week.
— Northwestern at Nebraska: Don’t look now but has been playing some good football since the Week 1 loss to Tulane that doesn’t exactly hurt the resume. The Wildcats have won three consecutive conference games and the win over UCLA is aging well. Nebraska played with fire against Cincinnati, Michigan State, and Maryland. They got burned by Minnesota. In a season with high expectations, this would be a bad home loss for the Huskers.
— Illinois at Washington: The Illini were a popular playoff dark horse pick before the season. They will be eliminated with a loss in Seattle on Saturday afternoon. However, a win would create a 10-2 path with remaining games against Rutgers, Maryland, Wisconsin, and Northwestern. Washington dropped a winnable game against Michigan last week and has a home game against Oregon on Thanksgiving weekend awaiting them. This game could determine if the Huskies are still alive in the playoff race when that rivalry game occurs.
— Minnesota at Iowa: Both teams dropped a winnable non-conference game on the road but are off to a 3-1 start in Big Ten play. The Gophers still have a road trip to Oregon left on the schedule. Iowa still has to go to USC and Nebraska but has the more manageable path to 10-2. This is a true playoff elimination game in Iowa City.
— Michigan at Michigan State: The Wolverines will be 9-2 (7-1) and hosting Ohio State on Thanksgiving Saturday if chalk holds. However, there are three remaining road games on the slate. This is the first one and it’s against the rival. Things are slipping away for Jonathan Smith early in his Michigan State tenure but this is the type of game that can help flip a tenure.
We could get Big 12 chaos on Saturday
BYU (4-0) and Cincinnati (4-0) are on top of the Big 12 standings after Arizona State (3-1) knocked off Texas Tech (3-1) last week. Houston (3-1) is also alive in this race. Don’t sleep on the two-loss teams (Iowa State, TCU, Utah, Baylor, Kansas, and Kansas State).
The chaos conference seems ready to deliver some good.
— BYU at Iowa State: Undefeated and ranked BYU is an underdog at reeling Iowa State. The Cyclones have dropped consecutive conference games, and are a loss on Saturday away from going a month without a win. Vegas might be telling us something here.
— BYU at Cincinnati: The Bears are one of those two-loss teams who could make a statement on Saturday. Cincinnati messed around in recent home games with Iowa State and UCF. Baylor has the firepower on offense to win a shootout in Nippert Stadium. However, a win for Scott Satterfield could create a clear path to the conference championship game with four games to play.
— Houston at Arizona State: I’m not sure anyone realizes that Houston is 6-1. Things are going well in year two for Willie Fritz but the schedule begins to get more difficult now. Arizona State is firmly in the hunt after last week’s win over Texas Tech. That head-to-head tiebreaker could matter. The Sun Devils have to go to Iowa State next week but get West Virginia, Colorado, and Arizona in the final three game. Kenny Dillingham‘s team sits in great position to potentially repeat in the Big 12.
The ACC is wide open
Eight teams in this league have one conference loss or less. One team (SMU) is undefeated in league play and not ranked. Literally anything is possible here. These are the two games to pay attention to this weekend.
— SMU at Wake Forest: The Mustangs are 0-2 in the Big 12 but 3-0 against the ACC this season. Rhett Lashlee has yet to lose an ACC regular season game. Wake Forest has been a tough out at home. A road win for the Ponies would create a monster matchup in Dallas with Miami next weekend.
— NC State at Pittsburgh: The Panthers have been rolling ever since making a quarterback change. Pitt (5-2, 3-1) plays Georgia Tech and Miami in their final two games. This team will control its own destiny if it keeps winning but NC State is off a bye and has the offensive firepower to maintain pace in a shootout.
South Florida-Memphis might be the game of the day
All signs point to the winner of the American securing the Group of Six bid for the 2025 College Football Playoff. Navy (4-0), South Florida (3-0), Tulane (3-0), Memphis (2-1), North Texas (2-1), East Carolina (2-1), and Temple (2-1) are all still alive. But one game stands above the rest.
Memphis will host ranked South Florida just a week after a shocking loss to UAB. The Tigers need this one badly. Meanwhile, the Bulls still have a road game against Navy on the slate in November but will be in great shape to make the conference championship game.
A loss would all but eliminate Memphis. That could allow some teams looking for a coach to start pushing hard for Ryan Silverfield.
NIL
Miami NIL financial commitment in 2026
The landscape is evolving fast, and more teams saw the success of Miami, Texas Tech, Oregon, and Indiana in the portal, and will become more
competitive. Texas Tech is doubling down, and we can expect more competition even inside the ACC with Clemson and VaTech. Point here, is what was good and competitive in 2025, wont be enough in 2026. Solid HS recruiting helps, but just look at the impact of our portal class this season. January 2nd through the 10th is going to be crucial, and hope we have our ducks in a row right now. The financial commitment needs to grow to be on par with Texas Tech and Oregon.
NIL
College football: Four key Gophers coming back in unique NIL campaign
PHOENIX — Four important Gopher football players were part of a unique media campaign on Tuesday.
Offensive linemen Greg Johnson and Nathan Roy, and defensive backs John Nestor and Kerry Brown allowed the Gophers’ NIL collective, Dinkytown Athletes, to share news they will play in the Rate Bowl against New Mexico on Friday, and will return to Minnesota for the 2026 season.
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The social media posts were “presented by Cub Foods,” and those players will be recipients of the grocer’s NIL contribution next year. Dinkytown Athletes serves as a subcontractor.
Athletics Director Mark Coyle called Cub Foods a “foundational partner” of Gopher sports.
“That is how we take the next step, with that type of involvement with NIL side of it,” Coyle told the Pioneer Press. “We are so grateful for their support.”
A few more current Gopher players are expected to join the Cub Foods campaign after the bowl game. But if players on the current roster aren’t included in this specific rollout, that doesn’t necessarily mean they are leaving the U to go into the transfer portal.
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For instance, quarterback Drake Lindsey said, independently, two weeks ago that he would return to Minnesota for his redshirt sophomore season in 2026. Other current players have shared they will be back with the Gophers next year.
Meanwhile, the futures of defensive end Anthony Smith, safety Koi Perich and running back Darius Taylor have yet to be shared. Smith and Taylor said Wednesday they have not yet made decisions on their plans for 2026; both are in line to play in the bowl game at Chase Field.
“I really haven’t thought about that stuff,” Taylor said. “I’m just worried about the game. I will figure all that out after the game.”
Smith said he hasn’t ruled out entering the transfer portal. “I don’t know,” he said.
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Johnson, who started all 12 regular-season games at guard, will return for his senior season next fall. The Prior Lake native played nearly 700 snaps and was Minnesota’s highest-graded starting offensive lineman in 2025 (75.3 overall mark, per Pro Football Focus).
“Being from Minnesota, I personally didn’t have any thoughts of going elsewhere,” Johnson said. “I think Drake really set the tone for the team. This is Drake’s team. He’s our leader and it’s easy to come back and want to play for a guy like that.”
Roy stepped in as the U’s left tackle during his redshirt freshman year with aplomb, playing a team-high 702 snaps with a 69.0 grade from PFF. The Mukwanago, Wis., native will be back for his redshirt sophomore year.
Nestor transferred in from the Iowa Hawkeyes last year, and the Chicago native started 10 of 12 games as Minnesota’s most-reliable corner. He had a team-high five interceptions, adding 47 tackles in 538 total snaps. He will be a senior in 2026.
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Brown continued as a linchpin in Minnesota’s defense for second straight season. The safety and nickel back from Naples, Fla., was fourth on team with 55 tackles and added two interceptions in 579 snaps. He will return for his redshirt junior year.
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NIL
Three Mizzou staffers following Kirby Moore to Washington State
When Kirby Moore got the Washington State head coaching job, Eli Drinkwitz knew a few members of his staff would likely be headed to Pullman soon.
“Moving forward, could lose a couple more people off our staff from analyst roles, as coach Moore finalizes and puts his staff together,” Drinkwitz said on December 16. “It shouldn’t change the dynamic of what we do at all.”
Three of those moves were reported on Wednesday morning by Chris Hummer and Matt Zenitz of CBS and 247Sports.
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The first is Tiger tight ends coach Derham Cato. Cato has coached Mizzou’s tight ends for the last three seasons. He spent six years at Washington, including an overlap with Moore when Moore was a graduate assistant for the Huskies. PowerMizzou.com had alerted subscribers to this move being likely a week ago.
The second coach is assistant offensive line coach Jack Abercrombie. Hummer and Zenitz report that Abercrombie will be the full-time offensive line coach for Moore with Washington State. Prior to his time at Mizzou, Abercrombie was on staff at VMI.
The final Mizzou to Washington State move is a front office move. Brad Larrondo, who has served as the CEO of Every True Tiger Brands, which is Missouri’s third-part partner for name, image and likeness deals. In his role, Larrondo helps Mizzou athletes line up NIL deals and also negotiates NIL and revenue sharing contracts for Mizzou football and men’s basketball players. Larrondo came to Missouri as Drinkwitz’s Director of Football External Relations and Recruiting in March of 2023. Prior to that, he had been the Chief of Staff at Auburn.
Larrondo had spent the previous 28 years in the athletic administration at Boise State, which is just 300 miles from Pullman. He still has family in Boise and sources told PowerMizzou.com the move to Washington State is heavily based in family reasons.
Larrondo’s position is technically not a University or a football program hire. However, the position works very closely with both and whoever replaces him will do so with influence and blessing from both of those entities. Missouri plays Virginia in the Taxslayer Gator Bowl on Saturday night. Any personnel moves or replacements will almost certainly not come until after that game.
NIL
Missouri Damon Wilson files countersuit against Georgia in NIL case
Updated Dec. 24, 2025, 11:28 a.m. ET
Missouri football defensive end Damon Wilson has sued Georgia athletics, a move that counters a Georgia lawsuit filed against Wilson earlier this year and intensifies what was already a novel and likely first-of-its-kind case over an NIL contract dispute.
A 42-page document reviewed by the Columbia Daily Tribune was filed in Boone County on Tuesday.
Georgia is attempting to take Wilson into arbitration and is seeking $390,000 in liquidated damages from the star edge rusher, who transferred to the Tigers in January 2025, over what the university views as an unfulfilled contract with the Bulldogs’ former NIL collective, Classic City Collective.
In response, escalating what was already an attempt at a potentially precedent-setting case, Wilson’s attorneys allege his former team “falsely (told) at least three programs” unnamed Power Four teams that “Wilson would be subject to a $1.2 million buyout.”
The suit also alleges Georgia violated a confidentiality provision in Wilson’s term sheet, which was provided as part of the UGA lawsuit in a public court filing.
Wilson’s suit argues he also was urged to sign the term sheet without legal counsel, and that Georgia did not “immediately submit his name to the transfer portal” but instead “launched an all-out offensive to convince Wilson to remain at Georgia.”
Also of note: The suit argues the term sheet Wilson signed states it would “be used to create a legally binding document” and therefore is not enforceable in its current format, and that he was urged to “seek legal counsel” before the agreement was finalized.
If the document is determined not to be finalized, it is quite likely Wilson will not owe Georgia the $390,000 it seeks.
Per The Athletic, Wilson is seeking “a ‘fair and reasonable amount of damages’ for the ‘financial and reputational harm he has suffered’ along with legal fees” from Georgia.
“Georgia appears intent on making an example of someone, they just picked the wrong person,” Jeff Jensen, one of Wilson’s attorneys, said to the Columbia Daily Tribune. “Damon never had a contract with them. I don’t see how Georgia thinks intimidation and litigation will help their recruitment efforts — maybe players could bring lawyers with them to practice.”
Multiple Missouri representatives, including a team spokesperson and athletic director Laird Veatch, have declined to comment on Wilson’s lawsuit. The Georgia lawsuit is not against the University of Missouri; it is only against Wilson.
“This matter involves pending litigation, and we have no comment at this time,” Georgia spokesperson Steven Drummond told USA TODAY on Tuesday. “We refer you to our previous statement.”
The previous Georgia statement in question: “When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same.”
Georgia has argued Wilson signed a contract — a common practice in the NIL era — with what was then Georgia’s main, but now-shuttered, NIL and marketing arm, Classic City Collective, in December 2024.
That collective has since shut down, as Georgia has partnered with Learfield to negotiate and facilitate NIL deals in the revenue-sharing era.
The report, citing documents attached to Georgia’s legal filings, shows that Wilson signed a 14-month term sheet worth $500,000 with the Bulldogs. He was set to earn monthly payments of $30,000 through the end of the contract, as well as two $40,000 bonus payments.
Before announcing his intention to transfer in January, he reportedly was paid $30,000.
The contract states if Wilson left the team or transferred, as he ultimately did to Missouri, he would owe the collective that issued the payments a lump sum equal to the amount remaining on his deal.
The bonus payments seemingly were not included, which brings that total to the $390,000 that Georgia is now seeking in court.
Wilson was paid only a fraction of that sum, but the university argues he owes the full amount in damages. It’s unclear why Georgia is claiming it is owed the full amount in liquidated damages.
According to documents viewed by the Tribune through the Georgia courts records system, Georgia filed an “application to compel arbitration” on Oct. 17 in the Clarke County Superior Court, which includes Athens and the University of Georgia. Wilson was served with a summons to appear in court, according to documents, on Nov. 19, three days before the Tigers faced Oklahoma.
Wilson spent his freshman and sophomore seasons at Georgia. He transferred to Missouri ahead of spring camp in 2025 and has emerged as one of the top pass rushers in the SEC.
Per Pro Football Focus, Wilson generated 49 pressures on opposing quarterbacks this season, which was the second-most in the SEC behind only Colin Simmons at Texas. He’s listed at 6-4, 250 pounds and could declare for the 2026 NFL Draft, where he would likely be a Day 1 or 2 pick.
This case marks the first time a school has taken a player to court over an NIL buyout. It also looks likely to be the first time a player has filed suit against a school over NIL.
Missouri has multiple players on two-year contracts. Part of that is in the hope they do not move on after one season.
If Georgia’s arbitration case against Wilson is successful, that would be a groundbreaking ruling in college athletics that could give more weight to liquidated damages clauses in athlete contracts.
NIL
College Football Playoff team loses key starter to NCAA transfer portal
The first round of the College Football Playoff is in the books. Eight teams remain in the hunt to win it all, with Miami and Ohio State kicking off the quarterfinals slate in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl on December 31.
There were quite a few memorable games in the opening round of the playoffs, including Miami’s hard-fought victory against Texas A&M and Alabama’s wild comeback to secure a road win over Oklahoma.
The lone blowout came from Ole Miss over Tulane, winning 41-10 over the Green Wave. Both programs are in transition after their head coaches were hired away by other schools. The Green Wave, in particular, has seen some attrition since concluding its season last week.
Another Tulane Starter Enters Transfer Portal
On Wednesday afternoon, redshirt sophomore cornerback Jahiem Johnson announced his plans to move on after three seasons at Tulane, per On3’s Haye Fawcett.
Johnson developed into a productive defender for the Green Wave in 2025, starting in all 14 games. He totaled 42 tackles, 1 tackle for loss, 1 forced fumble, 9 pass deflections, and 4 interceptions. Johnson’s 9 pass deflections led the American Conference.
He deflected a pass in 6 different games and recorded a pick in 4 separate outings. In Tulane’s conference championship victory against North Texas, Johnson tied his season-high with 5 tackles, 1 pass deflection, and 1 interception.
The Louisiana native played the most snaps (834 snaps) of any player on Tulane’s defense. He was the third-highest-graded player on the unit (77.1 overall grade), per Pro Football Focus.
Johnson signed with Tulane as a three-star prospect in the 2023 class, joining the program under former head coach Willie Fritz. He redshirted as a true freshman, sticking with the Green Wave when Jon Sumrall took over.
In 2024, appeared in 14 games as a reserve, totaling 4 tackles and 2 pass deflections. Johnson’s rise this past season resulted in him earning honorable mention conference honors.
Johnson is the fifth starter to transfer from Tulane, joining defensive end Santana Hopper, linebacker Harvey Dyson, defensive tackle Tre’Von McAlpine, and running back Javin Gordon in the portal.
Sumrall was hired away from the Green Wave to be the next head coach of the Florida Gators. Considering Johnson’s breakout campaign, he may want to continue playing for a familiar face if that option is on the table.
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NIL
Four key Gophers will be back in 2026
PHOENIX — Four important Gopher football players were part of a unique media campaign on Tuesday.
Offensive linemen Greg Johnson and Nathan Roy, and defensive backs John Nestor and Kerry Brown allowed the Gophers’ NIL collective, Dinkytown Athletes, to share news they will play in the Rate Bowl against New Mexico on Friday, and will return to Minnesota for the 2026 season.
The social media posts were “presented by Cub Foods,” and those players will be recipients of the grocer’s NIL contribution next year. Dinkytown Athletes serves as a subcontractor.
Athletics Director Mark Coyle called Cub Foods a “foundational partner” of Gopher sports.
“That is how we take the next step, with that type of involvement with NIL side of it,” Coyle told the Pioneer Press. “We are so grateful for their support.”
A few more current Gopher players are expected to join the Cub Foods campaign after the bowl game. But if players on the current roster aren’t included in this specific rollout, that doesn’t necessarily mean they are leaving the U to go into the transfer portal.
For instance, quarterback Drake Lindsey said, independently, two weeks ago that he would return to Minnesota for his redshirt sophomore season in 2026. Other current players have shared they will be back with the Gophers next year.
Meanwhile, the futures of defensive end Anthony Smith, safety Koi Perich and running back Darius Taylor have yet to be shared. Smith and Taylor said Wednesday they have not yet made decisions on their plans for 2026; both are in line to play in the bowl game at Chase Field.
“I really haven’t thought about that stuff,” Taylor said. “I’m just worried about the game. I will figure all that out after the game.”
Smith said he hasn’t ruled out entering the transfer portal. “I don’t know,” he said.
Johnson, who started all 12 regular-season games at guard, will return for his senior season next fall. The Prior Lake native played nearly 700 snaps and was Minnesota’s highest-graded starting offensive lineman in 2025 (75.3 overall mark, per Pro Football Focus).
“Being from Minnesota, I personally didn’t have any thoughts of going elsewhere,” Johnson said. “I think Drake really set the tone for the team. This is Drake’s team. He’s our leader and it’s easy to come back and want to play for a guy like that.”
Roy stepped in as the U’s left tackle during his redshirt freshman year with aplomb, playing a team-high 702 snaps with a 69.0 grade from PFF. The Mukwanago, Wis., native will be back for his redshirt sophomore year.
Nestor transferred in from the Iowa Hawkeyes last year, and the Chicago native started 10 of 12 games as Minnesota’s most-reliable corner. He had a team-high five interceptions, adding 47 tackles in 538 total snaps. He will be a senior in 2026.

Brown continued as a linchpin in Minnesota’s defense for second straight season. The safety and nickel back from Naples, Fla., was fourth on team with 55 tackles and added two interceptions in 579 snaps. He will return for his redshirt junior year.

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