INDIANAPOLIS — The stopwatches at Lucas Oil Stadium might need a recalibration. The 2026 NFL Combine was expected to be a wide-open evaluation period for hundreds of prospects. Instead, Ohio State turned the most crucial weekend of the pre-draft process into a scarlet and gray track meet. Forget the polite golf claps from the stands; scouts audibly gasped on Friday night when safety Lorenzo Styles Jr. crossed the finish line in a blistering 4.27 seconds.
That is the fastest time by a safety in over two decades. The Ohio State NFL Combine dominance is not just a storyline; it is the reality gripping front offices across the league right now. Sitting in the media box on Friday night, the tension was palpable. You could feel the collective hold of breath right before Lorenzo burst off the line, and the immediate eruption of chatter from general managers the second his time flashed on the stadium monitors.
Monsters of the Midway
While Lorenzo burned the turf on Friday, his brother Sonny Styles demolished gravity on Thursday. At 6-foot-5 and 244 pounds, Sonny is built like a traditional edge rusher but moves like a slot receiver. He registered a staggering 43.5-inch vertical jump—the highest ever recorded for a player over 240 pounds.
He backed that up with an 11-foot-2 broad jump and a 4.46-second 40-yard dash. Those numbers do not just push him into the first round. They launch him directly into the top-10 conversation. Linebacker Arvell Reese matched Sonny with a 4.46 of his own, proving the Buckeyes’ defense bred speed at every level. NFL front offices are actively ripping up and rearranging their draft boards this morning.
More Than Just Speed
The defensive backs kept the momentum rolling. Cornerback Davison Igbinosun clocked a smooth 4.45 in the 40 while leaping 34 inches in the vertical and hitting 10 feet on the broad jump. Even the tight ends got in on the action. Will Kacmarek flashed solid athleticism for a 261-pound blocker, logging a 4.74 40-yard dash and a 36-inch vertical.
Watching these athletes attack the drills reveals the subtle strategies at play. Players like Igbinosun did not just rely on raw power; his start mechanics featured a perfectly low pad level, maximizing his drive phase before opening up his stride. That is the exact technical refinement NFL coaches demand.
“I told him before he ran, ‘Don’t hold back. Just fly.’ Seeing that 4.27 pop up on the screen… I just started screaming. We put the work in, and now everyone sees it.”
— Sonny Styles, Ohio State Linebacker, on his brother Lorenzo’s historic run
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
As we head into Saturday’s prime-time session, all eyes shift to the offensive skill players. Wide receiver Carnell Tate and running back CJ Donaldson take the field today. Tate arrives with a massive opportunity. With the receiver class still unsettled at the top, a 40 time in the low 4.4 range could easily cement him as the first pass-catcher off the board in April. The draft order remains fluid, but teams desperate for defensive versatility—like the Cardinals and Titans—are completely re-evaluating their top-five draft strategies after watching the Ohio State defensive unit dominate the first two days.

