Why Duke Watson Could Change UCF's Backfield Ceiling In 2026

Can Duke Watsons explosive versatility fuel UCF's ambitious 2026 season, as head coach Scott Frost predicts game-changing potential with each play?

UCF’s rebuilt backfield has a new name drawing plenty of attention, and Scott Frost isn’t hiding how he sees Duke Watson fitting into the picture.

With Myles Montgomery off to the NFL, the Knights went shopping in the portal and came away with multiple additions, including Landen Chambers and Watson. Chambers brings the size and the look of a workhorse. Watson, though, is the one who can change a game in a blink.

At Big 12 Media Day on Tuesday, Frost put it plainly: "He's a potential home run every time," Frost said.

That kind of label makes sense when you look at Watson’s track record. In his freshman season at Louisville, he averaged 8.9 yards per carry, which led the nation. Injuries limited him this past year, but the burst and versatility that showed up early in his career are still very much part of the package.

Watson arrived in Orlando as a 3-star transfer and was ranked among the top-25 transfer backs in the country by 247 Sports. Before the move, he said Frost played a major role in his decision.

"[Coach] Frost and Bill, they made it seem like home," Watson said. "As soon as I stepped on campus, it just felt like football.

I loved it, though. The plan they had for me, and I just felt like that I can do great things at UCF."

There was another familiar face in the mix, too. Frost and General Manager Trent Mossbrucker both said Watson had been on their radar since high school, and Mossbrucker already knew him from their time together at Louisville.

That connection mattered to Watson.

"I mean, I was very excited really," Watson said. "Especially because I used to work with Trent at Louisville, so him coming down here, it really just worked out perfectly for me and they already know my playing style. How I like to work, and it just felt perfect."

On the field, Watson should give UCF a different kind of threat alongside Chambers. He can handle late-down work, catch the ball out of the backfield, and bring the kind of speed that forces defenses to stay honest.

Still, Watson isn’t boxing himself into one role.

"Fast, physical, and downhill. Really, I'm more of a team player, too," Watson said.

"I love to protect the quarterback, love to pass block, you know. I'm more of an all-around player."

In Other News...

UCF Hit With Another Costly Setback From Its Coaching Fallout

A court ruling this week added another expensive chapter to UCFs coaching fallout, with an Orange County judge siding with former defensive coordinator Ted Roof in a dispute over his termination compensation. The decision leaves the Knights on the hook for Roofs damages, along with attorneys fees and costs, after the university tried to limit what it owed following the coaching change.

The case now shifts to the next step in the legal process, with UCF holding a 30-day window to appeal the final judgment. For a program still dealing with the aftermath of its coaching turnover, the ruling is another reminder that the costs of that transition are not finished showing up on the ledger. [Read more 🡒]

UCF Fans Will Have Strong Opinions On This All-Time Receiver List

A new all-time UCF football list is bound to stir debate, and the latest one from the Daytona News-Journal gives Knights fans plenty to argue about. The 105-man roster is built around program greats, with the receiver group drawing especially close attention thanks to the number of pass-catchers who earned All-FBS recognition since UCF moved up 30 years ago.

The list reaches across eras and even includes players whose time in Orlando was only part of their college journey, which only adds to the conversation. Names like Brandon Marshall, Mike Sims-Walker and Tre'Quan Smith give the group real weight, but the deeper cut is where the opinions start to split, especially with a few of the most productive and impactful receivers in program history all fighting for their place. [Read more 🡒]