Indiana’s cornerback room won’t look anything like it did in 2025, and that’s the biggest storyline heading into the 2026 preseason.
Last season made life simple. D’Angelo Ponds locked down one side, Jamari Sharpe handled the other receiver, and Indiana could trust the position to hold up week after week.
That formula is gone now. Ponds is off to the New York Jets after going in the second round of the NFL draft, and the Hoosiers have to rebuild around a much less proven group.
Sharpe is the one constant. The 6-foot-1, 188-pound redshirt senior is back after becoming a dependable cover man and a strong open-field tackler, and he looks like the safest bet on the roster to start. Beyond him, though, Indiana is sorting through a mix of returners, transfers and a freshman with the job of finding the next corner to pair with him.
Ponds leaves behind a massive standard. In 2025, he allowed just 18 catches, broke up six passes and finished with a 42.0 passer rating against him.
He also made one interception, and it was a big one: a pick-six on the first play from scrimmage in the Peach Bowl. He piled up first-team All-American recognition from The Sporting News, second-team All-American honors from Associated Press and unanimous first-team All-Big Ten honors.
Indiana won’t have that kind of shutdown presence again by default.
That puts a lot more attention on the rest of the room, starting with Ryland Gandy. The redshirt senior has the most game experience of the returners outside Sharpe, with 44 career games and 14 starts.
He started all 13 games for Pitt in 2024 and played in all 16 games for Indiana in 2025, though he made just one start. That lone start came at Iowa when he filled in for an injured Ponds, and while the sample was small, Indiana felt good enough about the way Sharpe and Ponds had played together earlier in the season.
Gandy has shown enough to be in the conversation for the CB2 job, but he still has to prove he can hold that spot consistently.
Jaylen Bell is another returner worth watching, though probably not as an immediate starter. Indiana burned his redshirt as a true freshman in 2025, and that kind of move usually says plenty about how a staff views a player.
Bell spent most of his time on special teams, but his early usage suggests the Hoosiers believe he can grow into a real role. A starting job would be a surprise, but a bigger special-teams role and rotational defensive snaps would not.
Zacharey Smith and Lincoln Murff are further down the depth chart. Smith, a redshirt freshman and three-star recruit in the class of 2025, did not play a snap last season and isn’t expected to factor heavily in 2026 unless he shows something unexpected. Murff, a redshirt junior walk-on, has yet to see action at Indiana and would need something unforeseen to change that.
The transfer additions are where things get interesting.
AJ Harris is the most intriguing name in the group. A former five-star Georgia commit in the class of 2023, Harris barely played as a freshman before transferring to Penn State, where he broke through in 2024.
He earned third-team All-Big Ten honors that season under Tom Allen, whose defense leaned more on zone coverage. His production dipped in 2025 under Jim Knowles, whose system asked for more man coverage.
Now Harris lands in another zone-heavy setup at Indiana, which gives him a real chance to get back to the level he showed in 2024. Indiana usually values production over upside, but Harris may be one of the rare cases where both matter.
Carson Williams arrives with a championship résumé of his own. He comes from Montana State after helping lead the Bobcats to the FCS National Championship, and Indiana lists him as the 97th-ranked cornerback in the transfer portal.
At 5-foot-11 and 181 pounds, the redshirt sophomore figures to be a backup and special-teams contributor in 2026, with more room to grow later. The jump from FCS to the Big Ten is no small thing, and there’s no need to rush him.
Then there’s Kasmir Hicks, the freshman from Decatur Central High School in Indianapolis. Indiana signed him as a four-star recruit, and 247Sports ranked him as the No. 40 cornerback in the country and the No. 3 overall recruit in Indiana. At 5-foot-11 and 197 pounds, he has the size to be interesting right away, and if he doesn’t redshirt, special teams would be the most likely place to see him early.
Indiana’s 2026 cornerback group has experience, upside and a few unknowns, but it no longer has the one thing that made the position feel settled a year ago. Ponds is gone, and now the Hoosiers have to find out who steps into that role.
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