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2026 Watch List

A nice list of interesting prospects from Ian Cummings of PFN:


Lots of folks already discussed in detail, plus some others of potential interest:

- Drew Azzopardi, OT, Washington: "According to PFSN College Insights, Drew Azzopardi is the sixth-highest graded OT in CFB through three weeks – and it’s easy to see why on film. The 6’7”, 315-pound blocker moves incredibly well for his size, and is rangy and assignment-sound in the run game.Meanwhile, in the passing phase, he can use his lateral quickness and range to wall off stunts, and he excels at playing square 1-on-1. I’m comfortable going on the record saying he has first-round tools in this weak OT class – if he can prove it in Big Ten play."

- Alex Harkey, OT, Oregon: "The entire Oregon offensive line is worth watching – Isaiah World has early-round upside, Iapani Laloulu is a potential NFL starter at the fulcrum, and Emmanuel Pregnon has been exceptional in the early weeks – but Texas State transfer addition Alex Harkey might have the most riser potential. At around 6’6”, 330 pounds, Harkey boasts overwhelming size and mass, and yet, he’s arguably the line’s most rangy and nimble mover on pulls and second-level climbs. Big Ten play will be key, but his athletic tools pop off the film."

- Febechi Nwaiwu, OG, Oklahoma: "The Oklahoma offensive line has been one of the best in CFB through three weeks, with a 90.26 OL+ grade good for eighth in the nation. Perhaps the biggest part of that success has been guard Febechi Nwaiwu. At 6’4”, 325 pounds, Nwaiwu has the size, strength, and leverage to hold strong in a phone booth, and he proved his mettle against Michigan’s Rayshaun Benny. Nwaiwu’s ability to match laterally, anchor, and provide help in pass protection is superb, but he also shows off imposing range and power as a puller in the run game. I have a mid-round grade on Nwaiwu, but could see him crack the Top 100."

- Anez Cooper / Samson Okunlola, OG, Miami: "The Hurricanes’ offensive line has been terrific to start the year, and has been a prime reason for the renewed success of Carson Beck. Francis Mauigoa has been as advertised outside, and Markel Bell has been respectable on the other side – but the interior guard duo of Anez Cooper and Samson Okunlola has been particularly eye-catching. Cooper is a long-term starter with overwhelming size and hand power, weaponized by keen precision and anchor footwork, while Okunlola is a former five-star with an elite blend of mass, mobility, and displacement force."

- Mateen Ibirogba, DT, Wake Forest: "Mateen Ibirogba had modest stats on the box score versus NC State, but he was a certified game-wrecker on the All-22 film. The 6’3”, 296-pound defender did it all: Penetrated 1-on-1 as a pass rusher with his explosiveness and prying strength, walked back multiple NC State linemen with his raw power, forcing the QB out of the pocket, and resisted combo blocks in the run game with knee drop technique. A former Georgetown EDGE, Ibirogba has bulked up and looks right at home as a versatile 3-tech. With his instant explosiveness, proportional length, power, leverage game, and alignment versatility, early-round upside is visible."

- Hezekiah Masses, CB, Cal: "The 6’1”, 185-pound Hezekiah Masses leads the nation in forced incompletions through three weeks with seven, and is looking like a true early-round riser on the Golden Bears’ squad. While he’s a little light, it rarely shows in his press coverage tape. He has the combined quickness and length to dictate releases with discipline, and he’s a high-level playmaker at the catch."

Cumming's assessments of many players already discussed seem pretty spot-on, so interested to look closer at some of these prospects.
Masses has 4 picks in 5 games.
 
Dane Brugler names six risers that didn't appear on his original top 50 but that will appear in his mid-season one.

Dante Moore, QB, Oregon​

There were four quarterbacks in the top 25 of my preseason rankings. Two of those QBs — LaNorris Sellers and Fernando Mendoza — are still in that mix. The other two — Arch Manning and Garrett Nussmeier — haven’t lived up to that high billing, for different reasons.

Based on the first month of the season, Moore deserves to join the top tier.

A year removed from his disastrous freshman season at UCLA, Moore wasn’t in the first-round conversation over the summer. However, after spending the 2024 season behind Dillon Gabriel and developing in key areas, Moore has emerged as one of the top passers in college football.

His poise in the pocket, accuracy downfield and ability to extend plays have all been exciting parts of his success through five games. There is a growing consensus among NFL scouts that Moore will be part of the 2026 NFL Draft class.

We’re still dealing with a small sample size and a very young player, so there is plenty more to learn before stamping Moore with a final draft grade. Based on his current trajectory, however, NFL teams expected to be picking high in the draft and in search of a young quarterback have to be excited about Moore’s potential. It would be ironic if he went from backing up Gabriel in Eugene to starting in front of him in Cleveland.

Arvell Reese, LB, Ohio State​

Whether he is spying, blitzing, dropping or mirroring the run, Reese’s impact shows up on every drive of every game, which is why he has been my favorite prospect to study so far in 2025. Some linebackers possess length and power, while others have agility and closing speed. Few have it all in one package, like Reese.

I put this out on social media last week, but I wouldn’t be surprised at all if Reese is the first Buckeye drafted in April. As expected, the pushback was strong from those presuming Caleb Downs is a lock for that billing, but keep an open mind. Downs is awesome. Still, even though he will be universally liked by anyone who watches him play, a lot of NFL teams won’t use a top-15 pick on a safety with his profile (average size and ball production, better near the line of scrimmage).

As an off-ball linebacker, Reese also plays a position that isn’t typically drafted super high. Still, his versatility to do just about anything you want in the front seven increases his value. With his talent and upside, Reese should land somewhere in the top half of Round 1.

A’Mauri Washington, DT, Oregon​

With 13 tackles, two tackles for loss and zero sacks through five games, the stats don’t necessarily support Washington as a top-50 prospect. However, the tape and talent absolutely do.

Listed at 6 foot 3 and 330 pounds, Washington has remarkable explosion for a player that size, which allows him to burst off the ball and give blockers the slip. However, he also has the power and play strength expected of someone with his build.

After barely playing as a freshman and seeing rotation time last year as a backup, Washington still has a lot to clean up before fully unlocking all of his talent. NFL teams will gladly bet on his traits and potential, though, likely somewhere in the first round.

Olaivavega Ioane, G, Penn State

The Penn State offensive line has been up and down this season, but Ioane (Yo-wahn-ay; he also goes by “Vega”) has been the one constant, both as a run blocker and in pass protection.

A fourth-year junior, Ioane had a third-round grade over the summer, and that projection has only improved a month into the season. He was stout and alert in pass protection against Oregon, and he put reps on tape that show him mauling in the run game and pulling near the goal line. Ioane projects as an NFL starter and has put himself in the mix to be the first guard drafted.

Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU​

A riser we have been talking about since the season kicked off, Delane has been on the early-round radar for a few years (he made my top 50 going into the 2024 season). However, the Virginia Tech transfer is playing his best ball now as a senior.

With short arms and average speed by NFL standards, Delane won’t be loved by everyone, especially those teams that would rather bet on high-upside athletes at the position. What separates him is his coverage intelligence (in both man and zone) and competitive temperament, which makes it challenging to target him. Delane has allowed just six receptions on 20 targets so far this season.

Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo​

McNeil-Warren (6-3 1/2, 210) has rare size for a backend defender, with quality athleticism and ball skills to make plays. Primarily asked to line up in the boundary, he will also handle man-to-man duties in the nickel and play some free safety.

The Toledo coaches say McNeil-Warren improves daily as his football IQ continues to develop, and they are excited about where he will be in a few years when his anticipation catches up with his physical traits.

McNeil-Warren entered the season with a third-round grade, but he continues to move up with his strong start.

 
My hope is that playing LB will keep Arvell Reese within range.

My other hope is that playing S could drop Caleb Downs within range.
 
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Rich for me, too. But I really value people who do their own assessments and are willing to go out on a limb, as opposed to those that mostly parrot the general consensus.

Everyone can be wrong. Sometimes spectacularly. I recently came across this from Ian Cummings, posted 18 months ago:



Sadly, he was only 50% right.
 
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Good stuff from Todd McShay:



He goes into the OSU-Washington game at length around the 58' mark. Talks about the BB defenses changing up the gameplay every week, and how the OSU game plan for Washington was almost the opposite as for Texas. Good to hear someone in the getting excited about "gap discipline".

McShay calls Jonah Coleman and Denzel Boston "dudes". He calls Arvell Reese the best LB in college football, and raves about the Reese/Styles combo.

Hell, Sonny Styles is Jamie frickin Collins II, and Reese relegates him to 2nd LB.
 
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Good stuff from Todd McShay:



He goes into the OSU-Washington game at length around the 58' mark. Talks about the BB defenses changing up the gameplay every week, and how the OSU game plan for Washington was almost the opposite as for Texas. Good to hear someone in the getting excited about "gap discipline".

McSgay calls Jonah Coleman and Denzel Boston "dudes". He calls Arvell Reese the best LB in college football, and raves about the Reese/Styles combo.

Hell, Sonny Styles is Jamie frickin Collins II, and Reese drelegates him to 2nd LB.

To be fair, Jamie Collins was LB2 here too. Ah! The glorious Hightower years.
 
Carnell Tate ... Arvell Reese ... Austin Siereveld?


Has started at LG, RT, and now LT.

Could he be a sleeper LG or RT prospect?

Is it even possible to be a "sleeper" as a starter for Ohio St.?
 

Good stuff:

1. “THEY ARE SUFFOCATINGLY GOOD.” The Ohio State defense is the elite unit in the sport, period. They are great at the line of scrimmage. Caden Curry has become a real factor at defensive end. They have the best tandem of linebackers in the country in Sonny Styles and Arvell Reese. And they have the single best defender behind all that in Caleb Downs. It is the best defense and single best unit in the country. And here’s what is scary about that, is that a lot of these guys are really smart players and Matt Patricia has taken them to another level.

I can’t believe I’m about to say this because they were No. 1 in the country, they won the national championship and they were the best defense in the country a year ago — Ohio State’s defense is better this year. They’re faster and more intricate, and then they can execute those intricate systems and schematics. The scary part is that Matt Patricia has elevated this defense. They are prepared, they execute, they are fundamentally better than they were early last year. That’s a scary proposition."

2. Jaxon Smith-Njigba says that Jeremiah Smith will take the OSU NFL WR success to another level.

3. On why Arvell Reese is not a top-15 pick: "Because he's top 10."
 
Too-50 big board from Mike Renner at CBS Sports:


Some interesting ones:

14. Arvell Reese, LB, Ohio St.
15. Chris Brazzell, WR, Tennessee
17. Olaivavega Ioane, IOL, Penn St.
18. Makai Lemon, WR, USC
19. David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech
22. Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati
31. Quincy Rhodes, EDGE, Arkansas
33. Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
34. Chris Bell, WR, Louisville
40. Kade Pieper, IOL, Iowa
45. Michael Trigg, TE, Baylor
46. Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU
 
Too-50 big board from Mike Renner at CBS Sports:


Some interesting ones:

14. Arvell Reese, LB, Ohio St.
15. Chris Brazzell, WR, Tennessee
17. Olaivavega Ioane, IOL, Penn St.
18. Makai Lemon, WR, USC
19. David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech
22. Jake Golday, LB, Cincinnati
31. Quincy Rhodes, EDGE, Arkansas
33. Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
34. Chris Bell, WR, Louisville
40. Kade Pieper, IOL, Iowa
45. Michael Trigg, TE, Baylor
46. Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU
Dane Brugler says that Trigg is an older prospect and will need to answer questions about maturity issues in the past. Worth noting.
 
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Mark Morse
2 weeks ago
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