Dante Moore has played himself into a top pick if he comes out for the draft. (CFP/Getty Images)
President Donald Trump‘s reported efforts to reestablish the ground rules of college athletics reflect his long interest in sports and the concern among fans that the NIL changes have gone too far.
While nothing is official, Trump appears to be forming a presidential commission on college sports to establish a new set of guidelines to stabilize what has become a free-for-all model of unlimited player compensation and high roster turnover.
Arguably the most successful coach in college football history, along with a former player involved in a pro-Trump think tank, will lead the commission.
“Alabama has changed college football forever, and inscribed into the history books the names of Bear Bryant, Joe Namath, four Heisman Trophy winners, and, of course, the great Nick Saban,” Trump said in a May 1 commencement speech at the University of Alabama. “This place is truly where legends are made. It really is. It’s a special place.”
Saban, who introduced Trump before the speech and met with him during the visit, won six national championships coaching the Alabama Crimson Tide. Now retired, he wants to add to his legacy by helping reform college athletics.

According to Yahoo.com, Saban will co-chair the commission along with Cody Campbell, who played football at Texas Tech and is now a member of the school’s board of regents and a distinguished fellow at the pro-Trump America First Policy Institute.
Saban and Campbell each played college football in the era before players got paid. Alabama renamed its home field in Saban’s honor after paying him tens of millions of dollars to coach, and the Texas Tech Red Raiders now play on Cody Campbell Field after Campbell made a $25 million donation to the school.
However, for those who have cheered recent changes in the college sports landscape, what these two men have proposed could represent a regression rather than reform.
“There isn’t a crisis in college sports regarding NIL that needs fixing,” said Andy Schwarz, an economist specializing in antitrust, class actions, and damages analysis. “Schools paying more money for athletes is a sign the market is functioning more accurately than it used to.”
Historically, the National Collegiate Athletic Association barred college athletes from being paid beyond the value of a full-ride scholarship, even while their efforts generated billions of dollars in revenue for their schools.
That state of affairs changed in 2021 following the Supreme Court’s NCAA vs. Alston decision. Student-athletes are now allowed to profit from their name, image, and likeness, or NIL, and many college football and men’s basketball players are now paid millions of dollars a year.
Several other factors have also changed over the last few years.
The NCAA relaxed its transfer rules simultaneously, allowing players to switch schools between and sometimes during the athletic season. Some players now spend time at three or even four different schools across their career, and entire rosters can turn over in a single offseason.
Lawsuits have challenged yet another NCAA rule that allowed players five years of eligibility to play four seasons in a given sport, and efforts have emerged arguing that players should be designated as employees who can form labor unions, challenging the NCAA’s amateur model and very idea that players are “student-athletes” seeking a degree from the school they represent.
The NCAA did not respond to a request for comment from the Washington Examiner.
Saban, who retired following the 2023 season, argued that paying players would widen the gap between name-brand schools that can afford top salaries and those that cannot, hurting competition. Concerns have also been raised that schools will have to cut nonrevenue and Olympic sports, including female sports, leaving those athletes out in the cold.
Trump’s commission could not change any rules on its own, and Trump would be limited in what he could do via executive order, but the effort could prove impactful if Congress ratifies its recommendations.
“President Trump obviously has a lot of love and interest in sports in general, and has been involved with sports for many decades,” said John Shu, a constitutional law expert who worked for former Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush. “These issues are of national importance, and it’s appropriate for President Trump to create a commission to look into it and make suggestions and recommendations.”
Along with Saban, another Alabama-based former football coach, Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), has his sights set on reforming college sports. Tuberville has tried to get NIL legislation passed before, and flew with Trump on Air Force One to his commencement address in Tuscaloosa.
“College football is the heart and soul of America — but it’s in danger if we don’t level the playing field,” Tuberville, who spent a decade coaching the Auburn Tigers, posted on X.
A Tuberville spokesperson acknowledged his involvement but provided few details.
“In the ever-changing landscape of college athletics, both President Trump and Sen. Tuberville want to make sure that college athletes continue to get a quality education, women’s sports are protected, and the integrity of college sports remains intact,” the spokesperson said.
A White House spokesperson did not comment on the record when contacted, but according to the Yahoo report, the commission’s framework could include three main components. The first would be a limited antitrust protection for the NCAA to enforce transfer and eligibility rules, the second would be a clause clarifying that players are students and not employees, and the third would be an override of existing state-level NIL laws.
Even with Republican majorities in both chambers, getting a bill through Congress could be difficult. Previous efforts have not been fruitful, and backers of the recent changes have said that athletes are now rightfully empowered to profit off their labor and to leave when they find themselves in a bad situation.
“In the NIL era, the coaches now have to treat their athletes with respect, or they can transfer out to a better offer,” Schwarz said.
Hagens Berman, an attorney leading an NIL-related lawsuit against the NCAA, released a statement criticizing Saban’s reported involvement in the commission.
“Coach Saban and Trump’s eleventh-hour talks of executive orders and other meddling are just more unneeded self-involvement,” Berman said. “College athletes are spearheading historic changes and benefitting massively from NIL deals. They don’t need this unmerited interference from a coach only seeking to protect the system that made him tens of millions.”
This isn’t Trump’s first time trying to shake up the sports world. In the 1980s, he attempted to buy the NFL’s Baltimore Colts. When that failed, Trump bought the USFL’s New Jersey Generals, which featured high-profile players including Heisman Trophy winners Herschel Walker and Doug Flutie.
At Trump’s urging, the USFL filed and won an antitrust lawsuit against the NFL in 1986, but it was famously awarded only $3 in damages, spelling the league’s demise.

Trump is also a fan of boxing and mixed martial arts. He has attended several UFC events since last November’s election.
However, college football tends to be popular in red states, and Trump has made a habit of attending games during his political career. He attended the 2018 College Football Playoff Championship in Atlanta, attended Alabama games in Tuscaloosa in 2019 and 2024, and attended the Army-Navy game, the Iowa-Iowa State game, and the South Carolina-Clemson game, among other events.
Whether the reported commission succeeds in reforming college sports, Trump is once again throwing his weight around in matters that stray far from Washington, D.C., politics.
Trump’s austerity argument on tariffs may be ‘dangerous politically’
Tom McMillen, a former Democratic congressman and Maryland Terrapins basketball star, said the commission should have been created long ago.
“Applauding [President] Trump for considering a presidential commission on college sports—something I first called for 11 years ago,” he posted on X. “The conversation is long overdue.”
The Oregon Ducks are among the eight teams left in the College Football Playoff. Next up for the Ducks are the Texas Tech Red Raiders in the Orange Bowl.
With the college football season winding down, who are the favorites to win the national championship?

According to DraftKings Sportsbook, Oregon has the fourth best odds to win the national title at +750. Here are the odds for all of the remaining teams:
Ohio State Buckeyes +190
Indiana Hoosiers +320
Georgia Bulldogs +475
Oregon Ducks +750
Texas Tech Red Raiders +850
Alabama Crimson Tide +1800
Miami Hurricanes +2200
Ole Miss Rebels +2500
The path for the Oregon to win their first national championship in program history will begin at the Orange Bowl against Texas Tech. The Ducks are currently a 2.5-point favorite over the Red Raiders. If Oregon were to win this game, they would advance to the semi-finals against the winner of the Indiana-Alabama game. With Indiana and Ohio State being the top two teams in the rankings and betting odds, it solidifies Oregon as the Big Ten dark horse.

Oregon has seen Indiana one time already this season. They faced off in October in Autzen Stadium and the Hoosiers handed the Ducks their only loss of the season to this point. It was an impressive showing for Indiana, who put the country on notice in this game by snapping the nation’s longest active home winning streak.
The Ducks were in the quarterfinals of the playoff last season after earning the No. 1 overall ranking in the field and earning a first round bye. Their run did not last long as Ohio State beat them in the Rose Bowl.
MORE: Dan Lanning Reveals Oregon Ducks’ Christmas Plan Ahead Of Texas Tech
MORE: Tickets Surge For Oregon vs. Texas Tech In Historic Orange Bowl
MORE: Oregon Quarterback Dante Moore Becoming Biggest Question of NFL Draft
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The favorites heading into the quarterfinals is Ohio State. This comes as no surprise as the Buckeyes have been the odds on favorites to win the national title for a majority of the season. They looked as dominant as ever in the regular season, allowing just about eight points per game. The Buckeyes had a hiccup in the Big Ten championship game, where they lost to Indiana.
If Ohio State were to win the title this season, it would be their second in a row. After earning the No. 8 seed in the playoff last season, the Buckeyes ran through the rest of the field, beating Tennessee, Oregon, Texas, and Notre Dame to win their first national championship since the 2014-15 season.
Ohio State is ranked No. 2 this year and will face No. 10 Miami in the Cotton Bowl. The Buckeyes are heavy favorites with a 9.5-point spread in their favor for that quarterfinal matchup.
In the wake of the University of Georgia Athletic Association (UGAA) recently suing him for $390,000 over a breached NIL deal, Missouri defensive end Damon Wilson II—who played for the Bulldogs in 2023 and 2024—sued UGAA and others on Tuesday. Wilson insists his NIL deal wasn’t a contract and thus isn’t enforceable, and that UGAA falsely told other schools he had to pay a $1.2 million buyout to transfer.
Wilson’s complaint was filed in Boone County (Mo.) Circuit Court, a potentially friendlier forum for the Tigers star than Athens-Clarke County (Ga.) Superior Court, where UGAA sued him in October.
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As detailed by Sportico, UGAA seeks a court order to compel arbitration. On Dec. 21, 2024, Wilson signed what UGAA says was a 13-month, $500,000 NIL deal with Classic City Collective (CCC)—a Georgia-aligned former NIL collective that shut down after U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement. In that process, CCC assigned its Wilson contract to UGAA, meaning the athletic association has the legal right to enforce the contract.
Four days after he signed the original agreement—Christmas Day 2024—CCC paid Wilson $30,000. In early January, the player entered the transfer portal and then joined Missouri. UGAA contends that Wilson breached his NIL deal by entering the transfer portal and that the deal contains a $390,000 liquidated damages provision. In general, a liquidated damages provision is designed to clarify the amount of money a contracting party owes in the event of a breach.
Through Jeff Jensen, Bogdan Susan and other attorneys from Torridon Law and Holder Susan Slusher, Wilson offers a very different retelling of events.
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Wilson argues he only signed a term sheet that “contained a non-binding list of key terms” that “would be used to create a legally binding document.” The term sheet, Wilson says, went so far as to say it “precedes” a “full License and Option Agreement” that would reflect a “full legal contract.” The term sheet also allegedly directs Wilson to “seek legal counsel” before signing a “full License and Option Agreement.” Wilson says CCC didn’t present him with the full agreement and thus he wasn’t in contract with CCC.
Wilson’s complaint implies he was surprised when, four days after signing the term sheet, he was paid $30,000. When CCC later demanded he pay $390,000, Wilson says that was part of UGAA’s “coordinated effort” to “strong-arm” the player and “punish” him for entering the portal. Wilson contends that UGAA has violated confidentiality provisions in the term sheet by leaking term sheet provisions “to sympathetic news outlets and affiliates to tarnish Wilson’s reputation.”
Further, Wilson claims that UGAA has no right to compel arbitration since—he says—he never agreed to mandatory arbitration. As described by Wilson, the term sheet ambiguously references “arbitration” and omits key details including the method for appointing an arbitrator, the applicable procedure for arbitration and a specific scope of topics subject to arbitration.
Wilson describes UGAA and by extension “sophisticated and prominent universities like Georgia” as “exploiting their bargaining power” in the aftermath of the House settlement. Among other features, the settlement allows participating colleges to directly pay athletes a share of up to 22% of the average power conference athletic media, ticket and sponsorship revenue. Wilson points out this new framework means schools can “directly enter into NIL agreements” with athletes and “thus no longer rely on a collective or similar intermediary to arrange NIL deals.” He contends schools are abusing this newfound power to convince athletes “to sign NIL agreements with unconscionable and unenforceable provisions that the universities can use to threaten a student-athlete who is considering transferring and prevent the student-athlete from realizing the benefits of free and open competition for their athletic services.”
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Much of Wilson’s complaint rebukes the liquidated damages provision. Wilson claims UGAA “weaponized this provision” by “falsely representing” to coaches of at least three other schools where Wilson “actively discussed potentially transferring” that he would be liable for a $1.2 million buyout.” These alleged representations, Wilson argues, financially harmed him since it denied him a chance to realize “the benefits of free and open competition for his athletic services and his NIL licensing rights.”
The Missouri DE also attacks the structure of the liquidated damages provision. He argues it “makes no attempt” to connect what he would have to pay with a “reasonable estimate of the harm to CCC that would result from a breach.” In other words, Wilson describes the provision as imposing an excessive penalty that is more about punishing him than compensating CCC. Wilson says the provision is “masquerading” under the moniker “liquidated damages” when it should be better understood as an unconscionable “penalty provision” designed to retaliate against him for entering the transfer portal.
Wilson’s complaint seeks a judicial declaration that the term sheet is unenforceable, or if it is enforceable, the arbitration and liquidated damages provisions within it are unenforceable. Claims for tortious interference, civil conspiracy, defamation and breach of confidentiality are included, too.
“Damon never had a contract with them,” Jensen, Wilson’s attorney, said in a statement. “I don’t see how Georgia thinks intimidation and litigation will help their recruitment efforts—maybe players could bring lawyers with them to practice.”
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In the coming days and weeks, expect attorneys for UGAA to raise several counterarguments.
They will assert the dispute should be heard in Georgia, not Missouri, since UGAA filed first and the center of the controversy arguably occurred in Georgia. UGAA attorneys will also contend that Wilson and CCC signed an enforceable contract that contains the basic elements of a contract, including offer, acceptance and, with Wilson accepting the $30,000 payment, a bargained-for exchange.
Similarly, UGAA will insist the arbitration and liquidated damages provisions are reasonable in the context of NIL at a power conference school and binding. To that end, expect UGAA to note that Wilson was an adult when he signed the NIL contract/term sheet—he was 19 years old and thus not a minor—and that CCC’s recommendation he hire an attorney didn’t create an obligation on the part of CCC to stop negotiating with him if he hadn’t secured an attorney.
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Amateurism in college sports has all but disappeared. The speed at which the landscape has changed could give even the most die-hard fan whiplash.
In a new ESPN E60 special, “Paid to Play: Understanding College Sports in 2025,” Jeremy Schaap delves into how the idea of playing for school pride, tradition and the love of the game has morphed into a high-stakes name, image and likeness marketplace where athletes can play for the highest bidder — receiving direct payments from schools — and have the freedom to bolt through free agency in the form of the NCAA transfer portal.
Here are key facts about the new ESPN E60 special:
When will ‘Paid to Play: Understanding College Sports in 2025’ air?
The one-hour report debuts Sunday, Dec. 28, at 8:30 p.m. ET.
How can fans watch?
Fans can watch the debut on ESPN. The program will be available in the ESPN App immediately following the television premiere. Watch it and other reports in the E60 streaming hub.
Do you have what it takes to be an AD?
Related to the subject of the new E60 special, ESPN has an original interactive game that puts fans in the role of a college athletic director, guiding them through decisions around name, image and likeness, the transfer portal and more, and offering a dynamic and engaging look at the ever-evolving landscape of college sports.
What is ESPN E60?
Founded in 2007, E60 is ESPN’s storytelling brand that features a mix of revealing profiles, hard-hitting investigations and exclusive interviews. It has received numerous awards and accolades, including the Sports Emmy for Outstanding Hosted Edited Series for the fifth time in 2025.
How can fans access more college sports coverage from ESPN?
Check out the ESPN college football, men’s college basketball, women’s college basketball and college sports hub pages for more content.
With a spot in the College Football Playoff Semifinals on the line, No. 4 Texas Tech and No. 5 Oregon will clash in the Capital One Orange Bowl on Jan. 1. The Ducks are seeking their first appearance in the Semifinals since they made a run to the National Championship in the inaugural CFP (2014), while Texas Tech is seeking its first ever CFP victory.
Both programs are great success stories of the Transfer Portal era, as many players that will suit up for either Texas Tech or Oregon in the matchup began their careers elsewhere.
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High-level players such as Oregon quarterback Dante Moore (UCLA), Texas Tech linebacker Jacob Rodriguez (Virginia), Oregon running back Noah Whittington (Western Kentucky), and Texas Tech wide receiver Caleb Douglas (Florida) have all made their way to their respective programs by way of the Transfer Portal and have been immediate impact pieces.
This past offseason, Texas Tech hauled in 21 players from the Portal, earning the No. 1 spot in On3’s 2025 College Football Team Transfer Portal Rankings. Their class boasted an estimated $7 million in adjusted NIL value, more than almost any other program in the sport.
Prior to the Ducks’ clash with Joey McGuire‘s Texas Tech program, Oregon head coach Dan Lanning commended him on building such a great roster with their strong NIL resources.
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“He’s built a great roster,” Lanning said on Monday. “College football is about adapting. This is obviously a program that’s done an unbelievable job adapting and saying ‘let’s make our team the best it can possibly be’. They’ve done that this year. They deserve credit for how they’ve evaluated. There’s a lot of teams that take players out of the portal. There’s not a lot of those teams that necessarily have success evaluating that talent, getting them to play together, and creating a team that does that. This is a team that’s done that.”
As Lanning touched on, mastering the Portal is a very thin line. Five of the top-ten transfer classes this offseason helped their programs reach the College Football Playoff (No. 1 Texas Tech, No. 3 Ole Miss, No. 4 Oregon, No. 5 Miami, and No. 10 Ohio State), while three of the top-ten classes missed the postseason completely (No. 7 Auburn, No. 8 North Carolina, and No. 9 Rutgers).
The Orange Bowl matchup between No. 4 Texas Tech and No. 5 Oregon will surely be one of the most entertaining games in the entire College Football Playoff. Kick-off on Jan. 1 is scheduled for 12:00 PM on ESPN.
Dec. 26, 2025, 5:33 a.m. ET

BLOOMINGTON — On Sept. 14, 2024, Indiana University’s football team was scheduled to play UCLA in Pasadena. In a stadium called the Rose Bowl.
The week before, I sat at the bar in Binkley’s Kitchen in Broad Ripple and watched the Hoosiers blast Western Illinois 77-3. I pondered, should I book a flight to LAX to watch, perhaps for the only time in my life, the Hoosiers play in the Rose Bowl?
As a tormented sports fan, I had overcome dozens of forlorn seasons to witness my Chicago Bears and Indianapolis Colts win Super Bowls in 1986 and 2007, and in 2005, the seeming impossible, a World Series title for my winning ugly Chicago White Sox.
But IU’s football team? With at 715 losses the most in NCAA Division 1 history? C’mon, man.
The enduring pain of Hoosier fandom, spanning decades since IU’s only New Year’s Day Rose Bowl in 1968 when O.J. Simpson’s USC Trojans won 14-3, has been palpable. We share one of the smallest states in the Big Ten with Purdue and Notre Dame.
There were lingering ghosts. When legendary Ohio State coach Woody Hayes lost his first game to IU 32-10 in 1951, he vowed he would never lose to the Hoosiers again. He ended up going 22-0-1 since. IU didn’t defeat Ohio State again until 1987, after Hayes had died in March of that year. We watched Coach Lee Corso pose for a first half team photo with the scoreboard showing IU leading Ohio State, only to suffer yet another blow-out loss. Corso’s weekly TV show featured him rising out of a coffin, declaring to Sammy Terry vibe, “We’re not dead yet!”
There was IU’s most successful football coach, Bill Mallory, going 0-11 in his first season. There had been IU’s annual traipse through the Big Ten’s murderer’s row Eastern Division where we had to play Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State and Penn State … every year. And then came a second wave of brutality, with USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington joining what had been a Midwestern conference.
There was the year runningback Anthony Thompson was poised to win the Heisman Trophy, only to lose the Oaken Bucket game to Purdue, finishing with a 5-6 record. No Heisman.
The first time I thought I had a glimpse of an Indiana University Big Ten football title came in November 1987 when the Hoosiers invaded Michigan State with the winner destined for the Rose Bowl. I entered the packed stadium press elevator and it lurched into motion, only to come to a halt between floors. As the temperature escalated, we all glanced at the ceiling that had no escape hatch. About seven minutes later and with a hint of panic, the car began to move, and as the doors opened into the press box, we all sprang out to begin our reporting.
By dusk, Michigan State throttled the Hoosiers 27-3. A New Year’s Day Rose Bowl berth would have to wait another 38 years.
Coach Curt Cignetti was hired in November 2023, just weeks after IU’s legendary basketball coach Bob Knight died. Cignetti told fans at Assembly Hall, “Google me. I win.”
Coach Cig has created this IU phoenix with James Madison University and portal transfers, as well as NIL money, leveling the playing field with the SEC. Earlier this month, IU finally defeated Ohio State 13-10 to win its first Big 10 title since 1967. Quarterback Fernando Mendoza finally brought a Heisman Trophy back to B-ton. Cignetti unveiled his 2026 recruiting class that is studded with a half dozen four-star recruits.
Yes, IU could become a football power house.
“Great win; gutty game; hard-fought, physical football game,” Cignetti said after defeating Ohio State. “Wasn’t perfect by either team. We found a way to survive it, made the plays when we had to. And I thought, once again, when the game was on the line, you know, Fernando was throwing dimes and Charlie Becker was showing up making big plays and (Elijah) Sarratt with a big touchdown, our defense created a lot of issues.
“It’s another step we need to take as a program,” Coach Cig continued. “It’s a great win, obviously. And we’re going to go in the playoffs as the No. 1 seed. And a lot of people probably thought that wasn’t possible. But when you get the right people and you have a plan and they love one another and play for one another and they commit, anything’s possible. And I think that’s what you saw happen here.”
He added, “I’ve got three and a half weeks to get this team humbled for the playoffs.”
Yes, the playoffs, where the top-ranked Hoosiers are the No. 1 seed, scheduled to play Alabama’s Crimson Tide on New Year’s Day … in the Rose Bowl. The Hoosier Hundred Marching Band will be featured in the Tournament of Roses Parade.
It all is cascading around us like a dream, 50 years after Bob Knight led the undefeated Hoosiers basketball team to an NCAA championship.
The Hoosiers are now being mentioned in the same sentence with the words “national football title.”
IU a football national champion? Perhaps there’s as much a chance of that happening as the Chicago Bears building a stadium in northwest Indiana.
Brian A. Howey is a senior writer and columnist for Howey Politics Indiana/State Affairs.
It’s late December, and we still have nearly a month left of college football.
That means we still have a month to see which players will increase their draft stock in some incredible College Football Playoff matchups. FOX Sports Research has put together a mock for the 2026 NFL Draft ahead of the CFP quarterfinals.
The draft order below was determined by aggregating several projections for each team while still factoring in trades involving draft picks to account for teams with multiple selections.
Let’s take a look.
Note: Several players expected to declare for the 2026 NFL Draft have not because of their participation in upcoming CFP games; below is a projection of players who are expected to declare at the conclusion of their respective seasons.
This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.
1. New York Jets (from Giants): Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana
The Jets are in desperate need of a franchise quarterback, and Mendoza has exhibited all the tools you want to see in a top QB prospect: elite arm strength, the ability to throw into tight windows, and sneaky mobility for a 6-foot-5 signal caller. The Heisman winner leads all of FBS with 33 pass touchdowns this season, which is also the Indiana single-season record.
With a couple more clutch performances in the CFP, it’ll be tough for any team to pass on him with the first pick.
2. Las Vegas Raiders: Dante Moore, QB, Oregon
Geno Smith is 35 years old and hasn’t lived up to expectations in Las Vegas. Moore was the third-ranked QB in his high school class and fourth-ranked player in the country (according to 247Sports) and has shown flashes of brilliance all year.
Moore can escape the pocket, but he’s still an extremely accurate passer with a completion rate of 72.4% on the year. The Oregon Duck is one of three Power 4 quarterbacks to have completed over 70% of his passes, been responsible for 30 or more TDs, thrown for over 3,000 yards, and have less than 10 interceptions. The other two were Julian Sayin and Diego Pavia, both Heisman finalists.
Dante Moore has played himself into a top pick if he comes out for the draft. (CFP/Getty Images)
3. Cleveland Browns: Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami
While Cleveland could really use a receiver, it has two picks in the first round and can get better value at that position later in the first round. Mauigoa is a blue-chip prospect with freakish tools for an offensive lineman. According to Pro Football Focus (PFF), he’s given up just three sacks in 1,015 pass blocking snaps over the past two seasons – and in 2023, he was a freshman All-America selection. He can also move into the interior with his frame and agility.
4. New York Giants (from Jets): Spencer Fano, OT, Utah
At 6-foot-6 and 308 pounds, Fano is another new-era offensive tackle with incredible athleticism for his size. In three seasons, he’s given up just three sacks and seven QB hits, highlighted by a 2025 campaign in which he didn’t allow a single sack in 382 pass blocking snaps (according to PFF).
With Jaxon Dart under center for the future, this is a step in the right direction for New York to build around him. Fano and Mauigoa are the 1A and 1B offensive tackles in this draft.
5. Tennessee Titans: Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State
Easily the best receiver in this draft, Tate is next in the long line of pro Buckeye receivers. With a disappointing and injury-riddled season from Calvin Ridley, he would be the surefire top target for Cam Ward and the ultimate security blanket for the young QB.
At 6-foot-3, 195 pounds, he’s a big receiver who can dominate in the red zone while also serving as a deep threat. This year, he’s one of 10 Power 4 receivers to have nine receiving TDs and over 800 receiving yards.
6. Arizona Cardinals: Arvell Reese, LB, Ohio State
A big riser on draft boards over the past few months, Reese has cemented himself as the clear-cut best linebacker in this draft. Due to his elite speed for his size, he can drop back into coverage as an off-ball backer or line up on the edge and rush the passer. Reese has 6.5 sacks and two passes defended on the year, and 105 total tackles in two seasons for the Buckeyes.
Reese is an instant boost for a struggling Cardinals defense.
7. Washington Commanders: Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State
Downs might be the smartest football player in this draft, having lined up all over the field during his time at Alabama and Ohio State. This past season, he has played 34 snaps on the defensive line, 214 in the box, 134 at slot corner, nine at wide corner, and 226 at free safety. For his career, he’s totaled 248 tackles, 158 solo tackles, 10 passes defended, and six interceptions.
There is nothing Downs can’t do, and whatever team gets him is landing a perennial Pro Bowler.
8. New Orleans Saints: Rueben Bain, EDGE, Miami
Bain might have the best film of any edge player in this draft, dominating teams like Notre Dame, Florida and most recently Texas A&M. In that first round CFP game, he had a whopping three sacks against an Aggies offensive line that had given up just 12 in 12 games.
Bain is also an elite run stopper and can move inside when needed. According to PFF, he’s the only player in FBS to have over 400 pass-rushing snaps with a pass-rush grade over 90. The other five players to exceed 400 pass-rushing snaps didn’t break a grade higher than 78.9, and he also has a run defense grade of 86.7.
Bain is the perfect replacement for Cam Jordan.
9. Cincinnati Bengals: Peter Woods, DL, Clemson
While Clemson had a down year, Woods has too many tools for any team looking for a dominant defensive lineman to pass on.
At 6-foot-3, 315 pounds, he’s reported to have a lean muscle mass percentage of 77%. He’s also another player who was a freshman All-American in 2023 and posted a dominant follow-up campaign in 2024 while playing both defensive end and tackle for the Tigers. Woods finished 2025 with a career-high 30 tackles along with two sacks.
10. Kansas City Chiefs: Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame
The Chiefs rank in the bottom 11 of the league in rushing at 108 yards per game. Love has 35 rushing touchdowns since 2024, which is the most of any player in that span, and has averaged 6.9 yards per carry over the last two seasons with a whopping 2,497 rushing yards.
Love would be a massive boost for a KC team that will need to establish the run more as Patrick Mahomes returns from a torn ACL.
Jeremiyah Love will be a popular name on fantasy draft boards in 2026. (Michael Miller/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)
11. Miami Dolphins: Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU
No player in Power 4 had a higher pass coverage grade on PFF than Delane at 90.9. In 357 coverage snaps, he gave up just 13 receptions for 147 yards and no touchdowns with opposing QBs sporting a 26.7 passer rating when targeting him.
Miami needs immediate help at the position, with four cornerbacks on injured reserve at the end of the season. Delane should be an instant starter for them.
12. Los Angeles Rams: Kadyn Proctor, OT, Alabama
Matthew Stafford is the current MVP favorite with no signs of slowing down. At 37 years old, everything the Rams do from a roster construction standpoint should and will likely be with the intent of winning a Super Bowl immediately.
Proctor is a specimen at 6-foot-7, 366 pounds and has given up just five sacks in the last two seasons (according to PFF). Rob Havenstein is 33 years old and dealing with injuries, making this an ideal fit for Los Angeles.
13. Baltimore Ravens: Keldric Faulk, EDGE, Auburn
Faulk is a monster at 6-foot-6 and 288 pounds, and he displayed an incredible ability to blow past offensive tackles in the SEC over the past two seasons. He posted 11 tackles for loss, seven sacks and 45 total tackles for the Tigers in his true sophomore season in 2024.
Despite less production in 2025, he has Baltimore Raven written all over him, given his tools and athleticism.
14. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State
If it weren’t for Arvell Reese, Sonny Styles would be getting a lot more recognition as a Buckeye linebacker. In his past two seasons at Ohio State, he’s totaled 181 tackles, 94 solo tackles, eight passes defended, 6.5 sacks, and two forced fumbles. He hits like a truck and can move well in space.
Lavonte David is 35 years old and this is a good chance for Tampa to replace him.
15. Dallas Cowboys: CJ Allen, LB, Georgia
The heartbeat of Georgia’s defense this year, Allen is a tenacious tackler who thrives in the run game and can also cover receivers in the slot. Dallas has bolstered its defensive line with Kenny Clark and Quinnen Williams, but it needs an off-ball backer with a high IQ to prevent explosive plays at the second level.
In three seasons with the Bulldogs, Allen totaled 202 tackles, 115 solo tackles, 10 passes defended, 4.5 sacks, and two forced fumbles.
16. Detroit Lions: David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech
Bailey is second in all the FBS in sacks at 13.5 and leads all Power 4 players, as well. Even looking back at his three seasons at Stanford, he’s had consistent production, with totaling 28 sacks from 2022 to 2025, the third-most of any player in that span.
Bailey is a bit undersized at 6-foot-3 and 250 pounds, but there’s no denying his bend and burst off the edge. He should be a huge help to a Lions defense that has struggled all season.
17. Minnesota Vikings: Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson
The brother of All-Pro corner A.J. Terrell, Avieon has had a ton of production in three seasons at Clemson, recording 25 passes defended, 125 total tackles, eight forced fumbles, four sacks, and three interceptions in 1,860 defensive snaps played in that span.
Avieon will be a great compliment to a secondary already featuring Byron Murphy and Isaiah Rodgers.
18. New York Jets: Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee
If he didn’t tear his ACL back in January and miss the entire 2025 season, McCoy would easily be the first corner taken in this draft. He was a first-team All-American last season, finishing with four interceptions and seven passes defended while also holding opposing QBs to a 53.6 passer rating (PFF).
With the departure of Sauce Gardner, McCoy would be a huge addition to New York’s secondary.
19. Carolina Panthers: Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
Sadiq is the best tight end in the draft, and it’s not close. He can run, block well and has great hands. His eight receiving touchdowns was the most of any tight end in FBS, making him a big-time red zone threat, as well.
Carolina could go with a defensive player here, but quarterback Bryce Young has taken a huge step this year. A lot of that progress has to do with the addition of wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan in last year’s draft. Expect the Panthers to continue to give their young QB offensive weapons.
Kenyon Sadiq is likely to be the first tight end taken in the 2026 draft. (Randy Litzinger/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
20. Pittsburgh Steelers: Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama
It’s still unclear if he’ll return to school, but Simpson is the clear No. 3 QB in this draft. He’s had a mix of incredible games along with some terrible ones, but his decisiveness and accuracy are tools teams can work with. On the year, he’s thrown for 3,500 yards, 28 touchdowns and just five interceptions. He also just took down a vaunted Oklahoma defense on the road in the first round of the CFP.
Regardless of whether the Steelers re-sign Aaron Rodgers, they’ll need to draft a quarterback at some point in this draft. Simpson would be a good pick, and Pittsburgh would be a solid landing spot.
21. Dallas Cowboys: Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina
Trevon Diggs and DaRon Bland both dealt with injuries this season, and the Cowboys defense is giving up 253.6 passing yards per game, which is the worst mark in the league.
Cisse is a tough corner who isn’t afraid to tackle and has 10 passes defended over the past two seasons, and he gave up just 18 receptions and one TD in 2025 (PFF).
22. Philadelphia Eagles: Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah
Yup, Fano isn’t the only stud offensive lineman for the Utes. Lomu gave up just two sacks in 807 pass-blocking snaps over the past two seasons and is a high-ceiling prospect, having just 28 collegiate games under his belt.
Despite Lane Johnson’s dominance, he’s 35 years old and likely doesn’t have too many years left. Lomu is a more game-ready version of Jordan Mailata, who the Eagles drafted in 2018 as a project player and made First Team All-Pro last season.
23. Houston Texans: Kayden McDonald, DT, Ohio State
Sheldon Rankins has been a surprising bright spot this season, but he’s 31 years old and on a one-year deal. McDonald has been an absolute monster in the middle of Ohio State’s defensive line, which is holding opponents to 8.2 points per game and 84.5 rush yards per game.
The 6-foot-3, 326-pound defensive tackle has three sacks and two forced fumbles on the year.
24. Buffalo Bills: Makai Lemon, WR, USC
It’s amazing what Josh Allen has done despite not having a go-to deep threat in Buffalo. While Keon Coleman has shown flashes, he hasn’t been consistent or reliable enough.
Lemon won this year’s Biletnikoff Award, which is given to the best wide receiver in college football. He can also play in the slot and is tough to tackle, having also rushed for two scores on the year. In fact, he’s the only player in all of FBS to have caught 10 touchdowns and have multiple rushing scores, as well.
Makai Lemon is coming off another stellar season for USC. (Luke Hales/Getty Images)
25. Los Angeles Chargers: Matayo Uiagalelei, EDGE, Oregon
Uigagalelei is an ultra-strong player at 6-foot-5, 270 pounds, and he posted a whopping 10.5 sacks in 2024 with five so far this year. He can play both inside and out, possessing all the tools to be a dominant run stopper and pass rusher.
He has “John Harbaugh player” written all over him.
26. San Francisco 49ers: A’Mauri Washington, DL, Oregon
Washington has quickly risen up draft boards after a dominant campaign with the Ducks in his first season as a full-time starter, exhibiting elite power and quickness for someone who’s 6-foot-3, 330 pounds. If he can continue to build on his season with some dominant run-stopping play in the CFP, he could find himself in the top 20 by April.
27. Cleveland Browns: Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State
Tyson could easily go top 10 or 15 in this draft, depending on how badly teams want a receiver. Tate is the clear-cut No. 1 receiver, though, so expect Tyson to fall into the end of the first round as most teams need help in the trenches or on defense.
Tyson is a big-bodied receiver at 6-foot-2, 200 pounds, and he catches everything thrown at him, serving as just the type of explosive playmaker Cleveland so desperately needs. In two seasons with ASU, he’s caught 136 balls for 1,812 yards and a whopping 18 touchdowns.
28. Los Angeles Rams: Caleb Banks, DL, Florida
It’s not often you see an interior lineman lead your team in pressures, but that’s just what Banks did for Florida in 2024 with 29. He also added 4.5 sacks and two forced fumbles. He only played three games this season due to injury, but he has all the tools to dominate at the next level with his 6-foot-6, 330-pound frame. This would be a steal for the Rams to add to a defense that already features several young stars.
29. Chicago Bears: LT Overton, EDGE, Alabama
Overton fits the mold of all the past Alabama defensive linemen over the past decade in that he’s incredibly athletic, nasty, physical and relentless.
At 6-foot-5, 283 pounds, he can play inside and can thrive in multiple schemes. Chicago can go with an offensive player here, but Overton has the potential to be a game-wrecker for it if he’s available.
30. New England Patriots: T.J. Parker, EDGE, Clemson
Like most of Clemson’s stars this season, Parker had a less productive 2025, only finishing with five sacks and 37 tackles. His 2024 tape is undeniable, though, with 11 sacks and six forced fumbles. He’s showcased above-average bend during his time at Clemson and can also drop in coverage. Parker’s 12.5 tackles for loss in 2023 were also a school record for a true freshman.
Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel could very well fulfill all the potential scouts saw in him going into the season.
31. Seattle Seahawks: Cashius Howell, EDGE, Texas A&M
Howell ranks fourth in FBS in sacks since 2022 with 27 to his name in that span, but he’s a bit undersized at 6-foot-2, 248 pounds. Still, he has an incredible burst off the edge and would be a great supplement to 33-year-old DeMarcus Lawrence, who has two years left on his contract with Seattle.
32. Denver Broncos: Olaivavega Ioane, OG, Penn State
There isn’t much Denver needs, currently sitting at 13-3. But Ioane is easily the best guard in the draft and could be a steal for them, as Ben Powers only has one year left on his contract after 2025.
This season, Ioane was the only Big Ten guard to play 300+ pass blocking snaps, record a pass block grade of 87+ and not give up a single sack or QB hit.
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