Florida State’s offseason countdown to its 40 most important players has reached the top three, and the latest name on the list is one that points straight to the Seminoles’ defensive bet: EDGE Rylan Kennedy.
The Texas A&M transfer sits at No. 3 after FSU spent the offseason looking for more juice in its pass rush, especially the kind that comes from a different skill set than what the Seminoles already had in place. Tony White did a strong job manufacturing pressure last season with stunts and blitzes, and Florida State finished 11th nationally in Sack Rate at 8.7 percent.
But the defense still needed a faster, more natural edge presence. Kennedy is the swing for that upside.
Kennedy brings a background that fits the kind of athlete FSU wants to deploy in space. He was a strong high school athlete with experience in basketball and track, where he posted a high jump of 6'6" and a long jump of 20'1". He stepped away from football early in high school, then returned later in his prep career and quickly drew P4 interest.
At Texas A&M, Kennedy settled into a sub-package role and was used as both an edge rusher and a mug linebacker on passing downs. Over his last three seasons there, he totaled 40 tackles, 5.5 tackles for loss, 3.5 sacks and four passes defended.
His pressure numbers jump off the page. Earlier this offseason, Kennedy was documented as pressuring the quarterback at a 19.5% clip, which ranked 12th nationally among P4 defenders.
His Win Rate, though, sat in the 100s. That’s the split that defines him: a player who can create problems, but one whose impact is tied closely to how he’s used.
That’s also why Florida State’s belief in him matters so much. White showed last season that he can build pressure without having a player with Kennedy’s exact athletic profile. Now the Seminoles are betting that Kennedy can do even more in a larger role.
The question isn’t just whether he can pile up more sacks or pressures. It’s whether there’s another level of disruption still waiting to come out. FSU is clearly wagering that there is, and it’s a meaningful gamble from both a roster-building and financial standpoint.
That’s what makes Kennedy such a critical outlier on this defense. Florida State doesn’t really have another body type or skill set like his.
If he gets close to the player the Seminoles think he can become, the whole defense changes. The front gets speed to go with the bigger bodies, and White gets more freedom to hunt matchups the way he wants.
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Sanders remains one of the most electric players the school has ever produced, Ward paired rare poise with championship-level leadership, and Boulware became a defining force on defense with the kind of honors that follow a dominant career. Put together, they form a neat snapshot of Florida State excellence across eras, the sort of company that still shapes how the program measures greatness today. [Read more 🡒]
