West Virginia and coach Rich Rodriguez secured a massive commitment in the 2026 class Tuesday from four-star offensive tackle Kevin Brown, who will land as the Mountaineers' highest-ranked signee in at least 15 years. Brown, No. 78 in the 2026 SCNEXT 300, is a 6-foot-5, 265-pound prospect from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He previously spent more than a year committed to Penn State's incoming recruiting class before reopening his process following the firing of coach James Franklin last month.
Bryce Williams, a 6-foot-8, 270-pound center for Harvard-Westlake's basketball team, had a talk with coach David Rebibo. He hadn't played football since seventh grade and wanted to give it a try as a senior. "Coach Rebibo and I talked about it, and he thought it would be good for me," Williams said. With Rebibo's blessing, Williams joined the football team and now could become a very good football prospect the way he is using his body and agility at offensive tackle this season.
Draft observers will recall all the hullabaloo about Campbell's arms being a whopping 3/8s" shorter than the so-called NFL minimum for an NFL tackle, never mind a left tackle who plays on an island much of the time. Fortunately, Mike Vrabel ignored all that foolishness, stood pat, and used that fourth pick on Campbell, who was instantly installed as his starting left tackle.
With that being said, Morris is a more valuable player than it might seem. He was better at right tackle than he was at left tackle, and the 2023 third-round pick will make $2.6 million over the next two seasons. In a market in which Dan Moore and current Chiefs lineman Jaylon Moore received $15 million or more per season in free agency, Morris would have meaningful value if he were on the open market.