BYU Suddenly Has A Secondary Concern Fans Were Hoping To Avoid

Despite depth concerns and a key player's injury, BYU's defensive coordinator Kelly Poppinga remains optimistic about the team's robust lineup as they prepare for the upcoming season.

BYU’s defense took a hit when projected starting safety Faletau Satuala injured his right foot, but Kelly Poppinga isn’t sounding the alarm.

The Cougars’ new defensive coordinator still sees a unit built on experience and versatility, even with the secondary in flux. Satuala has been spotted around campus in a hard cast on his right foot and using crutches, though a BYU football spokesperson said the program would not comment because it is not a “long-term type of injury.” Sources familiar with the setback say there is no indication the injury and surgery will keep him out beyond the eight weeks originally diagnosed.

If Satuala isn’t ready when camp opens Aug. 5, BYU has options.

Redshirt sophomore Tommy Prassas could shift from nickel back to either field safety or boundary safety alongside returning starter Raider Damuni. Cannon DeVries, who played mostly corner last season, is another candidate to move back to safety.

Four-star freshman Kennan Pula and redshirt sophomore Jarinn Kalama are also in the mix.

That flexibility matters because BYU’s only real question mark on defense has been corner depth. The Cougars are trying to replace Mory Bamba, who signed a free agent contract with the New York Jets after going undrafted in April, and they can’t afford many more hits at the position.

Even so, Poppinga likes what he has coming back. Junior Tre Alexander and senior Evan Johnson give BYU two established starters, and Johnson is a candidate for the all-Big 12 preseason team, which is due out soon. Behind them, Mississippi State transfer Jayven Williams, seniors and juniors Kevin Doe and Jonathan Kabeya, sophomore Matthias Leach and freshman Jordyn Criss are all waiting for chances.

Leach, Poppinga said, was moved from safety to corner during spring ball.

On April 2, when asked how settled the defense’s two-deep and three-deep charts were, Poppinga pointed to corner as the one spot still needing development.

“The one position where I think we gotta continue to develop some depth is at the corner position,” Poppinga said. “I think we have some really good young guys there that can play. Jordyn Criss, Kevin Doe, some of those guys that haven’t played a lot, I thought had really solid (spring camps).

“That would be the one position where I think we gotta … get us a fourth and fifth corner,” Poppinga continued. “But other than that, I feel really good about all the other positions.”

Williams could be an important piece if BYU needs more help. The 6-foot-2, 185-pound defensive back from Mobile, Alabama, played in 13 games at Mississippi State in 2025 and finished with 18 tackles, one interception and two pass breakups. Before that, he spent three seasons at Kennesaw State and appeared in 24 games.

Poppinga’s confidence extends well beyond the secondary. He describes the defense he inherited from new Michigan DC Jay Hill - and reinforced with transfer linebackers Jake Clifton and Cade Uluave - as experienced enough to help BYU chase a return to the Big 12 championship game.

“It’s not like we are dealing with a bunch of freshmen coming in, or new starters,” Poppinga said. “We got a ton of returning starters. I am excited about where we are at right now.”

He also singled out Alexander, rush end Hunter Clegg and Uluave for the impact they’ve made.

“I am really glad that Cade Uluave (a Cal transfer) is here,” he said. “That dude’s a really good player. … I just think we have a really good football team, and we have a chance (to contend for a Big 12 title).”

Poppinga said expectations around the program are higher than he has ever seen, and he believes BYU’s defensive front is a major reason why. Keanu Tanuvasa and Justin Kirkland anchor the interior, while Bodie Schoonover, Nusi Taumoepeau, Viliami Po’uha and Tausili Akana give the Cougars options on the edge.

He said BYU has recruited that group “probably better” than any other position on the roster.

“I think we have strengths everywhere,” Poppinga said on March 27. “That’s what I told them after practice today.

But we can talk about it all we want. People can tell us how great we’re going to be.

It doesn’t matter. None of that matters.

We still have to put all the work in on the field and off, take all the right steps and go through the process. That’s what it is going to take for us to be great.”

In Other News...

BYU Faces A Defining Recruiting Stretch After Quieter Than Expected June

BYUs June recruiting run has had a different feel than the rest of the Big 12, with the Cougars stacking some quality commitments but not nearly the volume some of their league peers have put together. The quiet stretch has put a bigger spotlight on the 2027 class, where the staff is still chasing several high-end targets who could shape the next cycle on both sides of the ball, especially along the defensive front and in the offensive line group.

A handful of those top names are moving toward decisions, which gives this stretch a little more urgency than a typical summer evaluation period. Official visits have already helped define some of the races, and BYU remains in the mix for multiple linemen and a top edge rusher, while others are still sorting through their final options before they choose. For a program that wants its recruiting class to finish stronger than it started, the next few days and weeks could tell a lot about how this cycle is ultimately judged. [Read more 🡒]