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RK PLAYER POS HOMETOWN HT WT STARS GRADE SCHOOL

1 QB-PP Belleville, MI
Belleville High School 6’4” 205 92

2 OT Charlotte, NC
Providence Day School 6’6” 250 91

3 WR Saraland, AL
Saraland High School 6’1” 175 91

4 DE Miami, FL
Miami Central High School 6’4” 250 90

5 DT Savannah, GA
Savannah Christian Preparatory School 6’4” 280 90

6 CB Birmingham, AL
A. H. Parker High School 6’2” 185 90

7 DT Manchester, GA
Manchester High School 6’6” 280 90

8 OG Las Vegas, NV
Bishop Gorman High School 6’3” 285 90

9 OT Las Vegas, NV
Bishop Gorman High School 6’6” 285 90

10 WR Duncanville, TX
Duncanville High School 5’11” 180 90

11 OT Lewisville, TX
Lewisville High School 6’6” 290 90

12 CB Houston, TX
North Shore High School 6’2” 170 88

13 S Zephyrhills, FL
Zephyrhills High School 6’3” 170 88

14 OLB Ellaville, GA
Schley High School 6’3” 225 88

15 WR Jacksonville, FL
Mandarin High School 6’2” 185 87

16 S Alabaster, AL
Thompson High School 6’2” 190 87

17 WR Ackerman, MS
Choctaw County High School 6’3” 190 86

18 RB Metairie, LA
Saint Martins Episcopal School 6’0” 185 86

19 TE-H Los Alamitos, CA
Los Alamitos High School 6’5” 235 86

20 DE Edwardsville, IL
Edwardsville High School 6’4” 235 86

21 TE-Y Folkston, GA
Camden County High School 6’7” 235 86

22 OT Jacksonville, FL
Raines High School 6’5” 300 86

23 ATH Chattanooga, TN
Baylor School 6’3” 215 86

24 OT Prichard, AL
Vigor High School 6’5” 290 86

25 CB Mission Viejo, CA
Mission Viejo High School 6’4” 190 86

26 OLB San Juan Capistrano, CA
JSerra Catholic High School 6’3” 210 86

27 OT Roswell, GA
Fellowship Christian School 6’5” 255 86

28 QB-PP Brentwood, TN
Brentwood Academy 6’6” 185 86

29 ATH Selma, AL
Southside High School 6’2” 190 85

30 CB Baltimore, MD
St. Frances Academy 5’11” 185 85

31 DE Birmingham, AL
Spain Park High School 6’7” 235 85

32 CB Winter Garden, FL
West Orange High School 6’0” 175 85

33 WR Tampa, FL
Tampa Bay Tech Senior High 6’4” 190 85

34 DE Norfolk, VA
Maury High School 6’6” 235 85

35 CB Atlanta, GA
Douglass High School 6’1” 185 85

36 RB Santa Ana, CA
Mater Dei High School 6’0” 215 85

37 S Thomasville, GA
Thomas County Central High School 5’11” 175 84

38 OLB Buford, GA
Buford High School 6’4” 210 84

39 DE College Park, GA
Woodward Academy 6’3” 245 84

40 RB Bradenton, FL
IMG Academy 5’9” 190 84

41 OLB Santa Ana, CA
Mater Dei High School 6’3” 215 84

42 DE Houston, TX
Summer Creek High School 6’5” 230 84

43 S Monroe, NC
Monroe High School 6’0” 185 84

44 DE Troy, AL
Charles Henderson High School 6’4” 225 84

45 S Washington, DC
Gonzaga College High School 6’0” 190 84

46 CB New Iberia, LA
Westgate High School 6’1” 180 84

47 WR Fulshear, TX
Jordan High School 6’1” 180 84

48 QB-PP Saraland, AL
Saraland High School 6’0” 175 84

49 ATH Clayton, OH
Northmont Senior High School 6’2” 190 84

50 QB-PP Warner Robins, GA
Houston County High School 6’5” 215 84

51 RB Lynchburg, VA
Liberty Christian Academy 6’0” 195 84

52 DE Philadelphia, PA
Imhotep Institute Charter High School 6’7” 225 84

53 S Olney, MD
Our Lady of Good Counsel High School 6’3” 205 84

54 OLB La Verne, CA
Bonita High School 6’4” 215 84

55 RB Bradenton, FL
IMG Academy 6’1” 210 84

56 CB Katy, TX
Patricia E. Paetow High School 5’11” 175 84

57 RB Elba, AL
Elba High School 5’10” 195 84

58 OT Mesquite, TX
Horn High School 6’7” 280 84

59 OLB Galveston, TX
Ball High School 6’3” 210 84

60 RB Quitman, MS
Quitman High School 6’0” 205 84

61 OLB North Palm Beach, FL
The Benjamin School 6’5” 210 84

62 OT Spanish Fork, UT
Spanish Fork High School 6’8” 295 84

63 CB Santa Ana, CA
Mater Dei High School 6’1” 185 84

64 OLB McKinney, TX
McKinney High School 6’2” 205 84

65 CB Detroit, MI
Cass Technical High School 6’1” 180 83

66 WR Santa Ana, CA
Mater Dei High School 6’0” 185 83

67 OLB Jesup, GA
Wayne County High School 6’1” 200 83

68 DE Tallahassee, FL
James S. Rickards High School 6’5” 260 83

69 S Pittsburg, CA
Pittsburg High School 6’2” 185 83

70 CB Buford, GA
Buford High School 5’11” 170 83

71 RB Leesburg, GA
Lee County High School 6’2” 215 83

72 DE Greensboro, NC
Grimsley High School 6’4” 245 83

73 OT Evans, GA
Evans High School 6’6” 305 83

74 OLB Vero Beach, FL
Vero Beach Senior High School 6’3” 215 83

75 OG Lilburn, GA
Parkview High School 6’4” 280 83

76 OT Salem, VA
Salem High School 6’5” 310 83

77 ATH Oradell, NJ
Bergen Catholic High 6’3” 200 83

78 OT Atlanta, GA
Westlake High School 6’8” 330 83

79 DT Lake City, SC
South Florence High School 6’5” 295 83

80 S Enterprise, AL
Enterprise High School 6’3” 205 83

81 OT Cedar Rapids, IA
John F. Kennedy High School 6’7” 345 83

82 QB-DT San Diego, CA
Abraham Lincoln High School 6’6” 210 83

83 DT Birmingham, AL
A. H. Parker High School 6’2” 310 83

84 WR West Palm Beach, FL
Cardinal Newman High School 6’1” 175 83

85 OLB Omaha, NE
Westside High School 6’3” 215 83

86 OT Toms River, NJ
Toms River North High School 6’6” 305 83

87 WR Bradenton, FL
IMG Academy 5’10” 175 83

88 OLB Bradenton, FL
IMG Academy 6’2” 205 83

89 DE Weatherford, OK
Weatherford High School 6’5” 225 83

90 WR Pleasanton, CA
Archbishop Riordan High School 6’1” 180 83

91 QB-DT Lucedale, MS
George County High School 6’5” 200 83

92 OC Las Vegas, NV
Bishop Gorman High School 6’4” 300 83

93 DT Snow Hill, NC
Greene Central High School 6’4” 265 83

94 DE Cocoa, FL
Cocoa High School 6’5” 235 83

95 TE-H Alpharetta, GA
Alpharetta High School 6’3” 235 83

96 WR Mission Hills, CA
Bishop Alemany High School 6’2” 190 83

97 OT Denton, TX
Billy Ryan High School 6’5” 285 83

98 WR Toms River, NJ
Monsignor Donovan High School 6’0” 190 83

99 OLB Sugar Land, TX
Fort Bend Christian Academy 6’3” 210 83

100 WR Homestead, FL
Homestead Senior High School 6’1” 180 83

101 TE-H Mukilteo, WA
Kamiak High School 6’4” 225 83

102 CB Lexington, MS
Holmes County Central High School 6’1” 180 83

103 DT Hattiesburg, MS
Oak Grove High School 6’3” 275 83

104 ATH Shaker Heights, OH
Shaker Heights High School 6’0” 180 83

105 S Jacksonville, FL
Mandarin High School 6’2” 190 82

106 DT Hattiesburg, MS
Hattiesburg High School 6’2” 285 82

107 OLB Lake Cormorant, MS
Lake Cormorant High School 6’2” 210 82

108 S Little Rock, AR
Parkview Arts & Science Magnet High 6’0” 180 82

109 ATH Cleveland Heights, OH
Cleveland Heights High School 6’1” 200 82

110 RB Cleveland, OH
Villa Angela-St. Joseph High School 6’1” 215 82

111 DT Nashville, TN
The Ensworth School 6’5” 280 82

112 TE-H Washington, OK
Washington High School 6’4” 225 82

113 ATH San Antonio, TX
Alamo Heights High School 6’3” 215 82

114 RB Plantation, FL
American Heritage High School 5’11” 210 82

115 WR Ennis, TX
Ennis High School 5’10” 170 82

116 OLB Dallas, TX
Skyline High School 6’2” 220 82

117 CB Cedartown, GA
Cedartown High School 6’0” 180 82

118 DE Texarkana, TX
Pleasant Grove High School 6’5” 250 82

119 ATH Saint Louis, MO
Vashon High School 5’11” 190 82

120 OLB Jersey City, NJ
Snyder High School 6’1” 215 82

121 OG Fort Valley, GA
Peach County High School 6’4” 285 82

122 QB-DT Lawrence, MA
Central Catholic High School 6’3” 215 82

123 WR Lee’s Summit, MO
Lee’s Summit North High School 6’1” 190 82

124 OLB Philadelphia, PA
St. Joseph’s Prep School 6’4” 215 82

125 QB-PP Corona, CA
Centennial High School 6’1” 190 82

126 CB Kahuku, HI
Kahuku High School 6’0” 165 82

127 WR Allen, TX
Lovejoy High School 6’0” 175 82

128 DT Washington, DC
Friendship Collegiate Academy 6’5” 320 82

129 CB Hollywood, FL
Chaminade-Madonna College Preparatory School 6’0” 170 82

130 QB-PP Findlay, OH
Findlay High School 6’3” 210 82

131 OT Waukesha, WI
Catholic Memorial High School 6’6” 280 82

132 RB Philadelphia, PA
Imhotep Institute Charter High School 6’1” 210 82

133 DE HIghland Home, AL
Highland Home High School 6’4” 235 82

134 QB-PP Midwest City, OK
Carl Albert High School 6’1” 200 82

135 DT Lufkin, TX
Lufkin High School 6’3” 295 82

136 WR Oklahoma City, OK
Millwood High School 6’4” 190 82

137 CB Santa Ana, CA
Mater Dei High School 6’0” 185 82

138 S Jackson, TN
Jackson Christian School 6’1” 190 82

139 WR Scottsdale, AZ
Notre Dame Prepatory 6’1” 190 82

140 ILB Dallas, TX
South Oak Cliff High 6’0” 210 82

141 CB Los Alamitos, CA
Los Alamitos High School 6’2” 165 82

142 ATH Owings, MD
McDonogh School 6’2” 215 82

143 CB Chester, VA
Thomas Dale High School 6’2” 180 82

144 DT Madison, MS
Hartfield Academy 6’3” 265 82

145 CB Brownsboro, TX
Brownsboro High School 6’1” 180 82

146 RB Seminole, FL
Osceola High School 5’9” 185 82

147 CB Quartz Hill, CA
Quartz Hill High School 6’2” 170 81

148 DT Cypress, TX
Cy-Fair High School 6’2” 270 81

149 RB Humble, TX
Atascocita High School 5’11” 180 81

150 CB Pearland, TX
Shadow Creek High School 6’0” 170 81

151 OLB El Centro, CA
Central High School 6’2” 210 81

152 TE-Y West Chester, OH
Lakota West High School 6’8” 240 81

153 OLB Cincinnati, OH
Winton Woods High School 6’4” 215 81

154 CB Miami, FL
Booker T. Washington High School 6’1” 170 81

155 S Eastman, GA
Dodge High School 6’2” 205 81

156 OG Rabun Gap, GA
Rabun Gap Nacoochee School 6’5” 275 81

157 DT Port Charlotte, FL
Port Charlotte High School 6’5” 285 81

158 OLB Danville, CA
San Ramon Valley High School 6’4” 220 81

159 OT Toledo, OH
Whitmer High School 6’5” 290 81

160 S Las Vegas, NV
Faith Lutheran High School 6’3” 190 81

161 DT Philadelphia, PA
St. Joseph’s Prep School 6’4” 280 81

162 OG Fairburn, GA
Langston Hughes High School 6’3” 295 81

163 WR Sachse, TX
Sachse High School 6’2” 185 81

164 OLB Spanaway, WA
Bethel High School 6’3” 215 81

165 OT Buford, GA
Buford High School 6’8” 315 81

166 ATH Tampa, FL
Berkeley Prep 6’1” 175 81

167 DT Baltimore, MD
St. Frances Academy 6’3” 275 81

168 WR Geneva, IL
Geneva High School 6’1” 170 81

169 RB Gaithersburg, MD
Quince Orchard High School 5’11” 190 81

170 WR DeSoto, TX
DeSoto High School 5’11” 170 81

171 RB Tampa Bay, FL
Plant Senior High School 6’1” 195 81

172 OT Houston, TX
Lamar High School 6’6” 305 81

173 CB Miami, FL
Booker T. Washington High School 6’2” 180 81

174 TE-Y Pittsburgh, PA
North Catholic High School 6’7” 240 81

175 OT Boerne, TX
Boerne High School 6’6” 320 81

176 CB Montvale, NJ
Saint Joseph Regional High School 6’1” 180 81

177 WR Pearland, TX
Shadow Creek High School 5’10” 180 81

178 TE-Y Green Bay, WI
Notre Dame De La Baie Academy 6’5” 225 81

179 OG San Jose, CA
Valley Christian High School 6’4” 325 81

180 DT Bellville, TX
Bellville High School 6’3” 285 81

181 CB Washington, DC
St. John’s College High School 6’0” 180 81

182 WR Pflugerville, TX
Weiss High School 6’1” 170 81

183 QB-PP Orange, CA
Orange Lutheran High School 6’2” 190 81

184 OLB Opelousas, LA
Opelousas High School 6’3” 210 81

185 TE-H Jasper, TX
Jasper High School 6’5” 245 81

186 RB Tyler, TX
Chapel Hill High School 5’10” 185 81

187 WR Red Oak, TX
Red Oak High School 5’11” 175 81

188 OT Overland Park, KS
Blue Valley Northwest High School 6’6” 270 80

189 RB Plantation, FL
American Heritage High School 5’10” 185 80

190 TE-H El Dorado Hills, CA
Oak Ridge High School 6’6” 220 80

191 S Miami, FL
Miami Central High School 5’11” 175 80

192 QB-PP Fort Myers, FL
Bishop Verot High School 6’3” 185 80

193 RB Houma, LA
Vandebilt Catholic School 5’8” 165 80

194 OLB Baton Rouge, LA
University Laboratory School 6’2” 220 80

195 DT Oak Park, IL
Fenwick High School 6’4” 270 80

196 OLB Baltimore, MD
St. Frances Academy 6’1” 205 80

197 DE Hyattsville, MD
DeMatha Catholic High School 6’3” 210 80

198 OLB Salem, NJ
Salem High School 6’1” 195 80

199 S Chattanooga, TN
Brainerd High School 6’1” 190 80

200 RB Fort Worth, TX
North Crowley High School 5’10” 175 80

201 DE Port Arthur, TX
Memorial High School 6’3” 240 80

202 ILB Las Vegas, NV
Arbor View High School 6’2” 200 80

203 RB Covington, GA
Newton High School 5’9” 180 80

204 DE Warner Robins, GA
Warner Robins High School 6’5” 250 80

205 QB-PP Harrisburg, PA
Bishop McDevitt High School 6’1” 205 80

206 OT Beverly Hills, MI
Groves High School 6’5” 280 80

207 RB DeSoto, TX
DeSoto High School 5’11” 200 80

208 WR West Bloomfield, MI
West Bloomfield High School 5’11” 175 80

209 OG Bradenton, FL
IMG Academy 6’3” 285 80

210 DE Quebec, CAN
Cegep Garneau 6’4” 260 80

211 S Norfolk, VA
Maury High School 6’3” 190 80

212 OLB Pittsburgh, PA
Imani Christian Academy 6’3” 220 80

213 QB-DT Murrieta, CA
Murrieta Valley High School 6’2” 215 80

214 TE-H Calhoun, GA
Calhoun High School 6’2” 230 80

215 RB Shreveport, LA
Calvary Baptist Academy 5’11” 200 80

216 QB-PP Chatsworth, CA
Sierra Canyon High School 6’2” 185 80

217 ILB Culpeper, VA
Eastern View High School 6’3” 235 80

218 CB Murfreesboro, TN
Siegel High School 6’3” 180 80

219 WR Hollywood, FL
Chaminade-Madonna College Preparatory School 6’2” 185 80

220 DT Saraland, AL
Saraland High School 6’2” 270 80

221 OG Nashville, TN
David Lipscomb High School 6’4” 320 80

222 ILB Seminole, FL
Osceola High School 6’2” 225 80

223 CB Baltimore, MD
St. Frances Academy 5’11” 185 80

224 QB-PP Miami, FL
Miami Central High School 6’6” 195 80

225 WR Gautier, MS
Gautier High School 5’11” 180 80

226 CB Indianapolis, IN
Ben Davis High School 6’0” 170 80

227 WR Wayne, NJ
DePaul Catholic High School 6’0” 185 80

228 OG Dyersburg, TN
Dyersburg High School 6’4” 325 80

229 ILB Bradenton, FL
IMG Academy 6’0” 230 80

230 WR Lafayette, LA
Acadiana High School 5’8” 170 80

231 TE-Y Derby, KS
Derby Senior High School 6’5” 225 80

232 S Miami, FL
Belen Jesuit Prep 6’1” 180 80

233 OLB Princeton, NJ
The Hun School Of Princeton 6’1” 215 80

234 DE Shawnee, KS
Mill Valley High School 6’3” 220 80

235 ATH Saint Louis, MO
Cardinal Ritter College Prep 6’0” 185 80

236 QB-PP Severn, MD
Archbishop Spalding High School 6’4” 205 80

237 DE Red Oak, TX
Red Oak High School 6’4” 235 80

238 CB Midwest City, OK
Carl Albert High School 6’2” 170 80

239 DE Chicago, IL
Simeon Career Academy 6’5” 250 80

240 ILB Auburn, WA
Auburn-Riverside High School 6’0” 195 80

241 WR San Antonio, TX
Brandeis High School 6’1” 175 80

242 DE Wyncote, PA
Cheltenham High School 6’4” 230 80

243 RB The Woodlands, TX
The Woodlands High School 6’0” 185 80

244 QB-DT Little Rock, AR
Robinson High School 6’2” 190 80

245 OLB Jefferson, GA
Jefferson High School 6’3” 210 80

246 WR The Woodlands, TX
The Woodlands High School 6’0” 175 80

247 DT Overland Park, KS
Saint Thomas Aquinas High School 6’6” 270 80

248 S Wellington, FL
Palm Beach Central High School 6’1” 190 80

249 OT Phoenix, AZ
Brophy Prep 6’5” 255 79

250 WR Houston, TX
Andy Dekaney High School 6’0” 175 79

251 S Nashville, TN
David Lipscomb High School 6’3” 195 79

252 DT Palatine, IL
Palatine High School 6’6” 280 79

253 OT Honolulu, HI
Saint Louis School 6’3” 265 79

254 S Spring, TX
Legacy The School of Sport Sciences 6’0” 180 79

255 WR Checotah, OK
Checotah High School 6’1” 185 79

256 DE Concord, CA
De La Salle High School 6’6” 250 79

257 RB North Richland Hills, TX
Richland High School 6’0” 200 79

258 TE-H Orange, CA
Orange Lutheran High School 6’6” 215 79

259 WR Columbia, MS
Columbia High School 6’1” 200 79

260 RB Tampa, FL
Jesuit High School 6’0” 190 79

261 CB Rabun Gap, GA
Rabun Gap Nacoochee School 6’2” 175 79

262 S Winston-Salem, NC
Mount Tabor High School 6’4” 190 79

263 DE Indianapolis, IN
Warren Central High School 6’5” 235 79

264 TE-H Clear Lake, IA
Clear Lake High School 6’5” 210 79

265 WR Pembroke Pines, FL
West Broward High School 6’3” 210 79

266 DT Melbourne, FL
Eau Gallie High School 6’2” 275 79

267 CB Chatsworth, CA
Sierra Canyon High School 5’11” 165 79

268 ATH Winston-Salem, NC
Mount Tabor High School 6’2” 175 79

269 DE HIghland Home, AL
Highland Home High School 6’4” 230 79

270 RB Montvale, NJ
Saint Joseph Regional High School 6’0” 190 79

271 QB-DT Kernersville, NC
East Forsyth High School 6’3” 185 79

272 WR Pembroke Pines, FL
Somerset Academy 6’2” 190 79

273 ATH Hesperia, CA
Sultana High School 6’1” 180 79

274 DE Galveston, TX
Ball High School 6’4” 245 79

275 OT Riverview, FL
Jule F. Sumner High School 6’4” 260 79

276 DT Bogart, GA
Prince Avenue Christian School 6’4” 260 79

277 TE-Y Milton, GA
Milton High School 6’5” 220 79

278 OLB Sanford, FL
Seminole High School 6’2” 195 79

279 TE-H Leo, IN
Leo Junior Senior High School 6’3” 210 79

280 DT Chesterfield, VA
Matoaca High School 6’6” 260 79

281 DE Pittsburg, CA
Pittsburg High School 6’3” 235 79

282 ATH Lubbock, TX
Estacado High School 6’4” 210 79

283 DE Detroit, MI
Martin Luther King High School 6’5” 220 79

284 CB Atco, NJ
Winslow Township High School 5’11” 165 79

285 QB-PP San Juan Capistrano, CA
JSerra Catholic High School 6’1” 185 79

286 ATH Omaha, NE
Millard North High School 6’0” 190 79

287 WR Richmond, VA
Trinity Episcopal School 6’2” 185 79

288 OG Sanford, FL
Seminole High School 6’5” 285 79

289 RB Wynnewood, OK
Wynnewood High School 5’11” 190 79

290 DT Buford, GA
Buford High School 6’2” 280 79

291 QB-PP Downey, CA
Warren High School 6’3” 185 79

292 RB Greer, SC
Greer Senior High School 5’10” 180 78

293 ATH Germantown, TN
Germantown High School 5’10” 190 78

294 S East Saint Louis, IL
East St. Louis High School 6’2” 190 78

295 RB Southlake, TX
Carroll High School 5’10” 180 78

296 OT Slinger, WI
Slinger High School 6’5” 305 78

297 RB Philadelphia, PA
St. Joseph’s Prep School 6’0” 210 78

298 WR Drexel Hill, PA
Monsignor Bonner High School 6’5” 195 78

299 OLB Belleville, MI
Belleville High School 6’0” 205 78

300 ATH College Park, GA
Woodward Academy 5’11” 180 78

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CFP Bubble Watch: Texas is toast, Bama’s on the border

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CFP Bubble Watch: Texas is toast, Bama's on the border

It’s time for Texas to pack up.

The Longhorns plummeted to No. 17 on Tuesday night in the College Football Playoff selection committee’s third of six rankings, indicating that even if they run the table and punctuate their résumé with a win against No. 3 Texas A&M, they might still be locked out.

Notre Dame, though, should buy some furniture and move in. At No. 9 — ahead of No. 10 Alabama — the selection committee continued to reward the two-loss Irish for how they’re playing — not who they’re beating. No. 10 Alabama has four wins against CFP top-25 opponents, including the committee’s No. 4 team Georgia, No. 14 Vanderbilt, No. 20 Tennessee and No. 22 Mizzou, which snuck back into the ranking this week. Notre Dame’s only win against a CFP-ranked team is against No. 15 USC.

While the changes at the top were minimal, No. 24 Tulane is now the flavor of the week in the Group of 5 race after Navy knocked South Florida out of the same spot.

With only three Saturdays remaining before Selection Day, there are still games that can change the picture entirely, which leaves hope for some teams hovering on the bubble (here’s lookin’ at you, Miami).

The Bubble Watch accounts for what we have learned from the committee so far — and historical knowledge of what it means for teams clinging to hope. Teams with Would be in status below are in this week’s bracket based on the committee’s third ranking. For each Power 4 conference, we’ve also listed Last team in and First team out. These are the true bubble teams hovering around inclusion. Teams labeled Still in the mix haven’t been eliminated, but have work to do. A team that is Out will have to wait until next year.

The conferences below are listed in order of the number of bids they would receive, ranked from the most to least, based on this week’s committee ranking.

Jump to a conference:
ACC | Big 12 | Big Ten
SEC | Independent | Group of 5
Bracket

SEC

Would be in: Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Texas A&M

Last team in: Alabama. The loss to Oklahoma didn’t knock the Tide out of the committee’s top 12, but it put No. 10 Alabama in must-win mode and will keep them ranked behind the Sooners. The Tide have only one SEC loss and still have the best chance of any team to reach the conference championship game (71.6%), according to ESPN Analytics.

First team out: Vanderbilt. No. 14 Vandy jumped ahead of the three-loss Longhorns despite the head-to-head loss to Texas, but remains a long shot for the field as an at-large bid. The Commodores would need to beat Kentucky and Tennessee — plus hope there is some chaos above them. Maybe — maybe — if Bama loses to Auburn in the Iron Bowl, Miami loses to Pitt, and BYU loses to Cincinnati — it can open the door, but clearly multiple things need to work in their favor.

Still in the mix: None.

Out: Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi State, Missouri, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas


Big Ten

Would be in: Indiana, Ohio State, Oregon

Last team in: Oregon. This could change quickly if Oregon loses at home to USC on Saturday, as there are questions in the room about the Ducks’ No. 31 schedule strength. The Nov. 8 win at Iowa was impressive, but the Hawkeyes are now a four-loss team and dropped out of the top 25. The Ducks also have a double-digit home loss to Indiana, which is why their chances of reaching the Big Ten title game are only 12%.

First team out: USC. Like Oregon, USC just boosted its résumé with a gritty, close win against a talented Iowa team that fell out of the ranking with its fourth loss. The Trojans’ two losses were by a total of 12 points to Illinois and Notre Dame — and were both on the road. USC has a critical win against No. 18 Michigan, which boosts its status and gives the Trojans a tiebreaker in the Big Ten standings. If USC can win at Oregon (and avoid an embarrassing home loss to UCLA), the Trojans can unseat the Ducks as the Big Ten’s last team in. They would likely finish behind Notre Dame, though, because of the head-to-head result.

Still in the mix: Michigan. The difference between No. 18 Michigan and No. 17 Texas is that the Wolverines are still mathematically eligible to reach the Big Ten title game with a 3.6% chance, according to ESPN Analytics. The Wolverines avoided elimination Saturday with a narrow 24-22 win at Northwestern. They still have a chance to beat the committee’s No. 1 team in rival Ohio State, and nobody in the country would have a better win if that happens. If Michigan can run the table, it would have one of the best two-loss résumés in the country but would be ranked behind USC unless the Trojans lose again. If USC loses to Oregon, and Oregon loses to Washington — and Michigan runs the table — the Wolverines will have a strong case to be the Big Ten’s third team in. The Week 2 loss to Oklahoma looks better now that the Sooners are a top-10 team.

Out: Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northwestern, Penn State, Purdue, Rutgers, UCLA, Washington, Wisconsin


Big 12

Would be in: Texas Tech

Last team in: Texas Tech. At No. 5, the Red Raiders are within arm’s reach of a first-round bye and have the best chance of winning the Big 12 (69.5%), according to ESPN Analytics. Texas Tech has a bye this week but can clinch a spot in the Big 12 title game if both Cincinnati and Arizona State lose. The Oct. 18 loss to Arizona State won’t keep Texas Tech out of the CFP if it finishes as a two-loss Big 12 runner-up, given how highly the committee has regarded Texas Tech to this point. The chances of that became even better after Arizona State appeared in the ranking at No. 25, easing some of the pain of that loss. The Red Raiders end the regular season at 4-7 West Virginia.

First team out: BYU. The Cougars put it all together during Saturday’s dominant win against TCU, but they would be excluded from the playoff today in order to make room for one of the five highest ranked conference champions. BYU still has the second-best chance to reach the Big 12 title game (80.2%) behind Texas Tech (97.5%). They can clinch a spot with a win Saturday against Cincinnati and losses by both Arizona State and Houston. If BYU wins the league, it’s a CFP lock. If BYU loses, though, it would depend on how close the game is. The selection committee is unlikely to reward BYU with an at-large bid if it plays as poorly as it did against Texas Tech during the regular season.

Still in the mix: Arizona State, Cincinnati, Utah. According to ESPN Analytics, Utah still has an 11.9% chance to reach the Big 12 championship, followed by ASU (8.4%) and Cincinnati (1.9%).

Out: Arizona, Baylor, Colorado, Houston, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, UCF, West Virginia


ACC

Would be in: Miami

Last team in: Miami. The No. 13 Canes are listed here because they are the selection committee’s highest-ranked ACC team and are still mathematically eligible to reach the conference championship game. Until the participants of that game are clear, the committee’s highest-ranked ACC team will continue to appear here. With six teams still in contention, the most fair representative is the committee’s. Still, Miami’s best chance at reaching the CFP right now is through an at-large bid because the Canes only have a 7.1% chance to reach the ACC title game. To get that at-large bid, Miami still needs to beat both Virginia Tech and Pitt and hope for losses above it to move into the top 10. The ACC champion will earn the No. 11 seed and the Group of 5 champion will have the No. 12 seed, so Miami needs to jump to No. 10 by Selection Day. It’s not inconceivable if Alabama loses to Auburn, BYU loses to Cincinnati and Utah loses to either K-State or at Kansas. It will take more than one of those things — if not all three. The question will be if the committee ever revisits Miami’s head-to-head win against Notre Dame in the season opener. The Canes would likely have to creep closer to the Irish in their ranking for them to be comparable enough to use that tiebreaker. Georgia Tech can clinch a spot in the game with a win against Pitt on Saturday, and Virginia can clinch with losses by Duke, Pitt and SMU.

First team out: Georgia Tech. The Yellow Jackets beat a 1-10 Boston College team by two points in spite of themselves and are a win away from a guaranteed appearance in the ACC championship game. They’ve also got a chance to earn a top-5 win in the regular-season finale against Georgia. If Georgia Tech doesn’t beat Georgia, it would need to win the ACC to reach the playoff because a three-loss ACC runner-up is out.

Still in the mix: Duke, Pitt, SMU, Virginia. Virginia has the best chance to reach the ACC title game (77.7%); SMU is third (38%), followed by Duke (11%), Miami and Pitt (7%).

Out: Boston College, Cal, Clemson, Florida State, Louisville, North Carolina, NC State, Stanford, Syracuse, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest


Independent

Would be in: Notre Dame. At No. 9 and ahead of two-loss Alabama, Notre Dame is winning the eye test, because it is ranked behind Alabama in both Strength of Record and Strength of Schedule. Alabama has the No. 4 schedule in the country, while the Irish are No. 29. Notre Dame’s best wins are against USC, Navy and Pitt, with only No. 15 USC ranked this week. As long as the Irish end the season with wins against Syracuse and Stanford, their place in the playoff should be secure.


Group of 5

Would be in: Tulane. The Green Wave have decent wins against Northwestern, Duke and Memphis, and the best combination of eye test and résumé of the current contenders. Tulane’s No. 71 schedule strength is better than James Madison (No. 119), North Texas (No. 127) and Navy (No. 74). Tulane and North Texas are the most likely teams to play for the American Conference championship, but North Texas has the best chance to win the league (61.4%), according to ESPN Analytics.

Still in the mix: James Madison, Navy, North Texas. Of these teams, JMU has the best strength of record (No. 24) and game control (No. 40) ranks, but the worst strength of schedule (No. 119). Navy has the best win — against South Florida — and the best loss (to Notre Dame), but lost to North Texas.

Bracket

Based on the committee’s third ranking, the seeding would be:

First-round byes

No. 1 Ohio State (Big Ten champ)
No. 2 Indiana
No. 3 Texas A&M (SEC champ)
No. 4 Georgia

First-round games

On campus, Dec. 19 and 20

No. 12 Tulane (American champ) at No. 5 Texas Tech (Big 12 champ)
No. 11 Miami (ACC champ) at No. 6 Ole Miss
No. 10 Alabama at No. 7 Oregon
No. 9 Notre Dame at No. 8 Oklahoma

Quarterfinal games

At the Goodyear Cotton Bowl, Capital One Orange Bowl, Rose Bowl presented by Prudential and Allstate Sugar Bowl on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.

No. 12 Tulane/No. 5 Texas Tech winner vs. No. 4 Georgia
No. 11 Miami/No. 6 Ole Miss winner vs. No. 3 Texas A&M
No. 10 Alabama/No. 7 Oregon winner vs. No. 2 Indiana
No. 9 Notre Dame/No. 8 Oklahoma winner vs. No. 1 Ohio State

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Week 13 preview: Top breakout players, key conference matchups and more

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Week 13 preview: Top breakout players, key conference matchups and more

With two weeks left in the regular season, what was once a vague picture of the College Football Playoff is finally coming into view.

Ohio State and Indiana look like sure things from the Big Ten. Georgia, Texas A&M and Ole Miss have all but punched their playoff tickets. Notre Dame and Texas Tech feel good about their odds, but all of that depends on something critical happening these last two weeks that can be boiled down to two simple words: avoid chaos.

Ah, but chaos is certainly possible.

Is Miami a contender? Can the Canes slip into the ACC title game mix?

Is Texas Tech guaranteed a bid? What happens if BYU keeps its stellar season going?

The ACC is ground zero for chaos and everyone from 9-1 Georgia Tech to 5-5 Duke still has a shot at winning the conference.

In the Big Ten, Oregon and USC will face off in what might be a de facto play-in game for the playoff.

And remember last week when Oklahoma earned a statement win against Alabama that appeared to shore up a playoff spot for the Sooners? Well, that dance card is only good as long as Oklahoma beats Missouri this week.

It’s late November, with just enough season behind us to feel as if we’ve got a real understanding of what’s ahead and just enough left on the docket to upend the whole picture and inject a fresh dose of head-spinning into the mix. — David Hale

Jump to:
Breakout players | BYU-Cincinnati
What’s at stake? | Quotes of the week

Top five breakout players this season

Trinidad Chambliss, QB, Ole Miss: One of the great plot twists of this college football season has been a little-known transfer from Division II Ferris State stepping in and leading the Rebels to a 10-1 record. Lane Kiffin’s new dual-threat playmaker won a D-II national title last season and has shown no fear in moving up to SEC ball, ranking seventh nationally with 3,101 total yards, 20 total touchdowns and only four turnovers since taking over for injured starter Austin Simmons. The No. 6 Rebels struck gold with Chambliss as well as 1,110-yard rusher Kewan Lacy, a Missouri transfer, in their efforts to reload on offense and get into the CFP.

Arvell Reese, LB, Ohio State: Reese entered this season with only five career starts over two seasons with the Buckeyes, eager to finally become a full-time starter for the defending national champions. The 6-foot-4, 243-pound junior is quickly playing his way into projected top-10 draft pick status as one of the most versatile defensive playmakers under first-year coordinator Matt Patricia. Reese has produced a team-high 58 tackles with 18 pressures, 10 tackles for loss and 6.5 sacks as a fast, powerful off-ball linebacker who’s just as gifted at rushing off the edge for the No. 1 scoring defense in FBS.

David Bailey, OLB, Texas Tech: Bailey didn’t earn All-ACC honors last season at Stanford but was highly coveted in the transfer portal by the Red Raiders as an impact pass rusher with big-time potential. Bailey has been worth every penny, leading the country with 12.5 sacks and 61 pressures through 11 games, while playing alongside Romello Height and Lee Hunter on one of the top defensive lines in the sport. Bailey is performing like a first-round talent for a No. 5-ranked Texas Tech squad determined to win the program’s first Big 12 championship.

Cashius Howell, DE, Texas A&M: The former Bowling Green transfer had a good debut season with the Aggies in 2024, but Howell has totally raised his game in his second year in the SEC. The 6-2, 248-pound senior has been a consistently elite pass rusher for the undefeated Aggies with 11.5 sacks and 37 pressures, and could end up being a first-round pick next spring.

Ahmad Hardy, RB, Missouri: Hardy exceled during his freshman season at UL Monroe and continues to be one of the great transfer portal gets for the Tigers. He’s leading the country with 1,346 rushing yards and 15 TDs, and has forced 72 missed tackles, according to ESPN Research. Hardy just had another career-best day Saturday with a 300-yard effort against Mississippi State after already rushing for 250 yards against Louisiana, plus he has five 100-yard performances this season. — Max Olson


How could BYU-Cincinnati affect the Big 12 title race?

Texas Tech and BYU, the Big 12’s remaining one-loss teams, appear to be on course to meet again in the championship game. For them, it’s simple: win and you’re in. But as BYU learned last season when it was in the same spot through 10 games, simple doesn’t mean easy.

If the Cougars win at Cincinnati on Saturday, it would eliminate the Bearcats. Then BYU would be, at minimum, a win against UCF away from the title game. But the Cougars could also clinch a spot this weekend with two scenarios: 1) A win plus losses by Arizona State (at Colorado) and Houston (vs. TCU); or 2) A win and an Arizona State loss, plus a Utah win (Kansas State).

If BYU loses to Cincinnati, then all bets are off. Utah, Houston, Arizona State and Cincinnati are all mathematically alive. Which means that all over them can still cling to CFP hopes, as far-fetched as they might be. This is one of the obvious benefits of the playoff format. It keeps more teams relevant later in the season and ensures meaningful games across the board into the final weeks. — Kyle Bonagura


What’s at stake in each matchup?

USC-Oregon: To put it bluntly: a spot in the CFP. That’s what’s at stake in Eugene this week as the college football world sets its eyes on the one marquee matchup this week.

USC has only one Big Ten loss and should it beat the Ducks, it would qualify for not only its best win of the season but one of the best wins in the sport this year. The Trojans have the offense to keep up with the Ducks; the question is, what USC defense will show up Saturday? That will be the key to pulling off the upset and putting Lincoln Riley’s team in the driver’s seat for a CFP spot.

One-loss Oregon might have some more breathing room if it loses to USC, but it’s not a guarantee the Ducks will get in with two losses. At that point, the Ducks’ best win would be at Iowa (currently unranked) and would have to rank behind at least USC (and Michigan if it beats Ohio State) making their entry back into the field a tight one, should it happen.

Plus, not to mention the fact that Oregon finishes with a tricky game at Washington — a team that has been up-and-down this season but has plenty of talent and motivation to play spoiler against its rival. — Paolo Uggetti

Pitt-Georgia Tech: A week ago, Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi colorfully made the point that his team could give up 100 points to Notre Dame, but it wouldn’t change the fact that these next two games, starting with Georgia Tech, will define the Panthers’ postseason fate. Well, Pitt didn’t surrender 100, but Notre Dame did win easily, putting an even bigger spotlight on the Panthers’ need to win out if they want any hope of capitalizing on a wide-open ACC.

For Georgia Tech, the stakes are even clearer. This is the Yellow Jackets’ final ACC game of the season. Win, and they’re guaranteed a spot in Charlotte for the ACC championship. Lose and all bets are off. Tech’s defense has been a train wreck the past two games, and getting right against Pitt is essential to keep a magical season going a little longer. — Hale

SMU-Louisville: While much of the attention in the ACC has focused on Miami, Virginia and Georgia Tech, SMU still has a shot to make it to the ACC championship game for the second straight season. That is the biggest thing on the line Saturday. With only one conference loss, SMU sits in a four-way tie atop the ACC headed into the weekend. The easiest path to Charlotte is this one: SMU has to win out, and Pitt has to beat Georgia Tech on Saturday. There is another clinching scenario: SMU wins out, and Virginia Tech upsets Virginia next week.

Though the Mustangs do not control their destiny, the fact they are in the mix to play for a conference championship again speaks to the job coach Rhett Lashlee has done since SMU made the move to the ACC in 2024. SMU is not a one-trick pony (see what we did there), but is building a program meant to contend year after year.

“It is a little bit different than last year because we were in control of everything,” Lashlee said. “This year, it’s almost like a playoff scenario already. Nobody’s talking about us, and I’m totally cool with that.” — Andrea Adelson


Quotes of the week

“Brent Key, a great football coach who’s done an outstanding job,” Pitt’s Pat Narduzzi said of Georgia Tech’s fourth-year head coach. “They might as well just announce him as ACC Coach of the Year. He’s done an incredible job. Just give it to him early.”

“I think for us, these are all the same people that thought we were going to suck,” USC coach Lincoln Riley said on the 8-2 Trojans’ Week 13 appearance on College GameDay. “This is all the same people, you know, we were going to do this and USC was this and that. And so for us to pay attention to them now would be a little bit counterproductive. We haven’t forgotten that.”

Ole Miss’ Lane Kiffin on if he expects to be coaching in the Nov. 29 Egg Bowl: “Do you know something that I don’t know? Do I expect to coach next week? Why would I not expect to coach next week? I mean, I expected to coach against Florida, too. So I don’t even understand the question about how I would not expect to coach next week. Why would I [not] be at work?”

“I’ve had no discussions, not with my agent, not with the university, not with any other school, not with any NFL team, about ever going anywhere else,” said Texas’ Steve Sarkisian, who knocked down rumors around a potential departure this week. “I came here to win championships.”

Colorado’s Deion Sanders appealed for more time with the Buffaloes this week: “You’ve got the right man [for the job]. I promise you, you do. And I’m going to prove that to you. Just give me an opportunity and a little more time, and I’m going to prove that to you.”

“Does it look, feel, smell and operate like a big-time program?” James Franklin said of his plans for Virginia Tech in his introductory news conference with the Hokies. “All those things need to be in place. … I think the previous coaches here were in some challenging situations. That’s the truth of it. There’s some things that we’re going to have to look at, and it’s not just James Franklin. It’s the marketing office, the ticketing office. Everybody’s got to take some time and look in the mirror and say, ‘Are we operating like a big-time program?'”

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‘You don’t want to have the same drip’: How a Houston Christian receiver became a shoe artist to the stars

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'You don't want to have the same drip': How a Houston Christian receiver became a shoe artist to the stars

After Texas A&M‘s season-opening win over UTSA in August, Deacon Stanfield made his way down to a tunnel at Kyle Field. KC Concepcion met him there.

The Aggies’ new star receiver was looking to do a handoff. He passed two pairs of his team-issued Adidas cleats to Stanfield. In exchange, the artist promised he would hook him up with more of his finest work.

Custom cleats are a burgeoning business in the era of name, image and likeness, as college football players invest their own money into upgrading their in-game attire. When Concepcion and his Aggie teammates Rueben Owens II, Terry Bussey and Will Lee III are looking for something unique during their 10-0 start, they hit up their shoe guy in Houston.

“That’s the whole thing: You don’t want to look like everyone else, right?” Stanfield said. “You don’t want to have the same drip as the guy next to you.”

Stanfield has worked with Travis Hunter, Ryan Williams and Jeremiah Smith. He’s painted cleats worn by pros such as Travis Etienne Jr., Emeka Egbuka and Carlos Correa. He’s even painted custom Nikes for Caitlin Clark. He’s been customizing shoes for six years — and he just turned 20. What started as a high school hobby has evolved into a successful side hustle. When he’s not spray-painting kicks, he’s playing wide receiver and taking classes at Houston Christian. His teammates at HCU call him “The Cobbler.” Stanfield tries to slow down orders in the fall to focus on being an FCS student-athlete, but he’ll make exceptions when high-profile athletes pop up in his Instagram DMs.

He started this passion in 2019. His art teacher in junior high assigned the class to paint something on an unconventional canvas, so Stanfield tried a pair of shoes. As he watched more tutorial videos on YouTube about the customizing process, he wanted to keep learning and saved up to buy an airbrush and compressor.

“A lot of it was self-taught,” Stanfield said. “I just started, and I ruined so many shoes in the process, just messing with my own shoes.”

His father, Dusty, works in athlete marketing and helped get this hobby kick started with his connections. Deacon painted custom creations for NFL players Trayveon Williams and Case Keenum in 2020, but his first pair that garnered attention were “Duck Hunt”-themed Nike cleats for Hunter Renfrow, a pixelated tribute to the classic NES video game.

“I think with phones and devices taking up so much of their free time, it seems like kids these days are kind of delayed in finding their passion and finding what they really want to do,” Dusty Stanfield said. “So for him to figure that out, it’s something as a parent that’s very fulfilling to see.”

Deacon got opportunities to customize cleats for Etienne and several NFL players as part of the league’s “My Cause My Cleats” campaign. He has also partnered with Panini, which has flown him in for Super Bowl week each of the past three years to create custom cleats for pro athletes at their hospitality suite. Every shoe helps as Stanfield tries to grow his brand and business.

He put on a brave face in a surreal setting for a teen, joking that his “whole body was shaking” as he handed custom Nike sneakers to Eli Manning before this year’s Super Bowl in New Orleans. But nothing compared to the nerves of prepping a pair of Nike Blazer Mid ’77 for Clark to commemorate her Rookie of the Year season with the Indiana Fever.

“She is literally the definition of aura,” Stanfield said. “When she walked in, it felt like the entire room stopped talking and looked at her. When she opened them, she looked over at me and was like, ‘These are so cool. Did you make these?’ It was definitely one of the coolest experiences of my life.”

This is an enterprise that wouldn’t have been possible before the NIL era arrived and modernized college athletics in 2021. It’s run by an active college athlete and supported by athletes who finally have disposable income to spend. Stanfield’s timing couldn’t have been better. And this fall, the Aggies are keeping him busy.

Stanfield did custom sets of maroon, black and white cleats for Bussey and former A&M quarterback Conner Weigman last year and was quickly deluged with more orders. He came up with black Louis Vuitton-themed cleats for linebacker Taurean York and green camouflage cleats for Weigman.

Now he’s producing new shoes for Concepcion, the SEC’s third-leading receiver, every game this season. First it was black cleats with Chrome Hearts brand crosses and then gray Louis Vuitton cleats for the road win at Notre Dame. Stanfield got especially creative for the Aggies’ throwback uniform against Florida, painting an A-10 ‘Warthog’ shark mouth on gold cleats for Concepcion.

It’s not easy to run an airbrush-heavy business out of his Houston Christian dorm room, so Stanfield makes the 30-minute drive home to Fulshear, Texas, on Thursdays, his day off from football, to get his custom orders done out of his garage workspace.

Last Thursday, he put in another marathon session in his workshop customizing four pairs of cleats over 11 hours. Concepcion, Owens, Bussey and Lee got them back just in time to wear them for the No. 3 Aggies’ comeback win over South Carolina.

“I think it’s super cool that Coach [Mike] Elko is relaxed about that,” Stanfield said. “Some coaches won’t let their players wear anything other than black or white.”

HCU coaches have been no less supportive of Stanfield’s entrepreneurship ever since he joined the program last year. The 6-foot, 160-pound scholarship receiver is on the Huskies’ two-deep and travel squad this season and has played six games as a redshirt freshman.

He’s learned how to design mock-ups on his tablet or phone because the prep phase for customizing a shoe can be lengthy.

Stanfield starts by sanding down the shoe’s exterior and wiping it with acetone to strip the original factory finish, taping the soles and areas he won’t paint. Typically, he says, this can take up to two hours — if you’re doing it right.

Once he’s working with a clean canvas, it’s time to airbrush several layers of acrylic leather paint while often incorporating stencils. Stanfield has been doing this long enough that he can mix paint and make Aggie maroon by eyeballing it. After he’s done hand-painting and carefully detailing, the shoes get sprayed with a protective matte finish.

Stanfield can scroll through his camera roll and point to hundreds of cleats and shoes he’s customized, but nothing has gone viral such as the pair he customized for Alabama‘s Ryan Williams last season. Williams ordered a custom pair from him during his senior year of high school and asked for another with his “Hollywood” nickname painted across Nikes last season. After Williams’ breakout performance to beat Georgia, Stanfield did one more for him. Williams gave him creative license to paint whatever he liked.

Stanfield hand-painted a portrait of Williams with red braids over black Nikes. He even recreated the “SC Top 10” chain with gold and silver rhinestones. The pair took him at least 10 hours over several days to produce as he carefully painted the portrait, placed the stones and perfected the details.

Stanfield shared the shoes on his Instagram account, and Williams reposted them after Stanfield had gone to bed. Stanfield’s jaw dropped the next day when SportsCenter’s Instagram account shared his work with the world, in a post that got more than 113,000 likes.

Stanfield typically charges between $100 and $350 for these custom jobs depending on the difficulty.

Some players ship him their team-issued shoes. Others ask him to find a particular pair and add it to the bill. He’s not charging as much as many of the more established creators in this niche industry, mostly because he wants to stay affordable for high school and college athletes.

Keisean Henderson, ESPN’s No. 1 ranked quarterback recruit in the 2026 class, has ordered plenty from Stanfield, including a pair this offseason with his favorite Davy Crockett racoon-skin cap painted on the sides. The Houston commit collaborated with him again this summer on a black Louis Vuitton-style pair covered in UH emojis.

“He is one of one,” Henderson told ESPN. “He can take a thought from your mind and make it reality.”

This is how Stanfield is trying to get his foot in the door in a competitive business by connecting with the next big stars before they blow up. Stanfield did three pairs of custom cleats for Ohio State superstar Jeremiah Smith during his 7-on-7 days with South Florida Express. He would love to work with Smith again, but the Buckeyes don’t wear custom cleats during games.

Some connections endure for years and some pop up in an instant with an unexpected DM. Last summer, he was scrolling through his message requests on Instagram and spotted one from Leanna De La Fuente. She was inquiring about pricing and was looking to surprise her fiancé. When he clicked on her profile and realized she was referring to Hunter, he was astonished and immediately replied.

Stanfield shipped custom black cleats that featured Hunter’s Instagram handle. De La Fuente sent him a thank you video from the two-way star, who promised he would wear them for a game. The artist waited all season, wondering when Colorado‘s Heisman Trophy winner might break them out. Hunter saved the pair for his finale with the Buffaloes in the Alamo Bowl against BYU.

College players who can afford customs are typically wearing them for only one game to complement a specific uniform combination, while high schoolers tend to wear them all season. Henderson, the No. 4 recruit in this year’s SC Next 300, said he currently has four pairs of customs from Stanfield with more to come.

“You can stand out and express yourself without saying words,” Henderson said. “The game of football is made for you to stay in uniform. When I see the opportunity to make it my own, I try my best to showcase how I feel from my cleats.”

Back at Houston Christian, Stanfield tries his best to juggle all his responsibilities. He wore his own work, a pair of orange Louis Vuitton cleats, throughout spring and fall practice with the Huskies. Bachtel credits offensive coordinator Mike Besbitt for starting “The Cobbler” nickname in the spring, and it stuck with teammates. He’s done color swap customs for a few of them, but they know he’s already plenty busy at this time of year. The head coach would like a pair someday, too.

“I told him, ‘Look, I’m not as flashy as you. I don’t need all the Louis Vuitton and all that,'” Bachtel joked. “Just give me something we can wear in recruiting and maybe on the sidelines.”

As much as he would like to someday go full time in shoe customizing, Stanfield says he’s loving his experience in college football and not looking to fast-forward past it. Everybody tells him he’ll miss it when it’s over, so he’s trying to enjoy it. He’ll be back open for business in the offseason and eager to see what creative requests come next.

“I’ve never really thought of it as time-consuming,” Stanfield said, “because it’s a job that doesn’t feel like a job.”

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