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Ku Football's big outgoing senior class, which is well represented on the Big 12 Pro Day








AP Photo/Michael Conroy


Kansas runs Devin Neal back at the NFL Football Scouting Combine in Indianapolis, Saturday, March 1, 2025.



The current iteration of the BIG 12 shows 16 teams, which comes from the Kansas football program at the Liga-Wide Big 12 Pro Day event, which begins at the Ford Center on Tuesday in the Star in Frisco, Texas on Tuesday.

This is proof of the sheer size of the outgoing senior class of the Jayhawks and the share of players who try to take this opportunity to realize their professional football dreams.

The event offers these NFL hopefuls the opportunity to take part in workouts and interviews with Pro -Scouts and at the same time to use the “robust programming in dynamic leadership, branding and mental health to prepare these future NFL athletes on life and outside the field,” said a press release from Big 12.

The group of 29 former Jayhawks comprises all four who took part in the centralized, higher version of this event. Combined the NFL scouting, which at the beginning of this month in Indianapolis: Cornerback Cobee Bryant and Mello Dotson, offensive lineman Logan Brown and Running Back Devin Neal. Each has a solid recording to hear its name in the NFL design of 2025, which is determined from April 24th to 26th in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

As shown last season, it was hardly a prerequisite for achieving an NFL opportunity. Both Jayhawks, who were invited to the combine, Austin Booker and Dominick Puni, were selected in the design, but some received no chances as non -dragged freelance agents and some of them – Quarterback Jason Bean (from Indianapolis Colts), Center Mike Novitsky (Seattle Seahawks) and LINEback with the LINEBACK -craigs (Cracinati) – Assible Unrugs.

In addition to the four most important design prospects of this year's Big 12 Pro-Day, which took part in college-all-star games: offensive lineman Bryce Cabeldue, which took part in the east-west shrine Bowl and the safety of Burroughs from the tropical bowl.

The Rest of the Group Includes, from the 2024 Season, Five of Ku's Top Wide Recevers (Lawrence Arnold, Luke Grimm, Quentin Skinner, Trevor Wilson and Torry Locklin), Its Top Three Tight Ends (Jared Casey, Trevor Kardell and Tevita Ahoafi-Noa), Its Top Three Strong-Side Defensive Ends Ends (Jereme Robinson, Dylan Wudke and Ronald McGee) and the three most important LineBackers (Cornell Wheeler, JB Brown and Taiwan Berryhill Jr.) as well as other former Jayhawks: Defensive Tackle Caleb Taylor, Michael Ford Jr. and Darrell Simmons Jr., Linbacker Dylan Downing and Alex Raich and Safety Marvin Grant, Plus Kicker Tabor Allen and Long and Loga, Luk to Laken, Luk.

This is the second year in which the BIG 12 organizes a professional day event that includes all teams in the league, in contrast to schools, carry out the individual events at their different locations. The event is open to the public from Wednesday to Friday, as Linemen and Line backers work on Wednesday. Quarterbacks, defensive back, running backs and Tight ends the field on Thursday. And specialists train on Friday.

Article pictureAP Photo/Michael Conroy

Kansa's defensive Back Cobee Bryant heads the 40-Yard dash at the NFL Football Scouting Combine on Friday, February 28, 2025, in Indianapolis.

Article pictureAP Photo/George Walker IV

The Kansas Defensive Back Mello Dotson operates a drill at the NFL Football Scouting Combine in Indianapolis on Friday, February 28, 2025.

Article pictureAP Photo/George Walker IV

Kansa's offensive -Lineman Logan Brown lifts weights at the NFL Football Scouting on Monday, March 3, 2025, in Indianapolis.






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Ku Football's big outgoing senior class, which is well represented on the Big 12 Pro Day








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Written by Henry Greenstein

Henry is a sports editor at Lawrence Journal-World and Kusports.com and acts as KU Beat Writer, while managing daily sports reporting. Previously, he worked as a sports reporter at the Bakersfield California and completed the Washington University in St. Louis (BA, Linguistics) and Arizona State University (MA, Sport Journalism). Although he comes from Los Angeles, he was often told that he does not give up “California Vibes”, whatever that means.