Indiana’s 2026 title defense is going to need more than the usual suspects. It’s going to need players who can tilt games, change protection plans and make life miserable for quarterbacks. That’s the lane Tobi Osunsanmi lives in, which is why the redshirt senior EDGE lands at No. 10 in Peegs.com’s Integral 20 countdown.
Osunsanmi arrives at Indiana with a profile that jumps off the page. He’s listed at 6-foot-2 and 251 pounds, hails from Wichita, Kansas, and played at Wichita East. In 2025, he appeared in six games and produced 20 tackles, including 14 solo stops, 6.0 tackles for loss, 4.0 sacks and one fumble recovery.
The buzz around him isn’t built only on the stat line. Earlier this offseason, Peegs.com spoke with Kansas State beat writer Cole Carmodoy of GoPowerCat for a Transfer Perspective look at Osunsanmi, and the picture that came back was of a pass rusher whose best trait is plain as day: speed.
Carmodoy said Osunsanmi was moved from linebacker to defensive end in 2023 and was used as a pass-rush specialist that season. By 2024, his burst off the edge became a real weapon.
“Tobi was moved from linebacker to defensive end in 2023 and in that season, he was a pass rush specialist. Developing more in 2024, his speed really helped him get around the edge and get to the quarterback in 2024.
He struggled against the run and was exposed in other areas of his game, but when it was 3rd and long, Osunsanmi was always a threat to disrupt the play. He took a step forward in 2025, but he still struggled when double-teamed or when teams ran right at him.
The sack numbers in '24 really did help K-State's defense, though.”
Carmodoy also pointed to the athletic background that helps explain why Osunsanmi looks the part on the edge. He said Osunsanmi ran on the 4x100 team in high school and competed at the 6A state tournament, and he described a player still learning the position after starting his career as a linebacker.
“As mentioned, his speed sets him apart. In high school, he was on the 4x100 team who competed at the 6A state tournament.
Converting from linebacker means he is a bit under sized and still learning the position, but his pass rush ability was always impressive. He needs to develop more moves as he rarely wins with power, but his speed is one of the best in college football coming around the corner.
He needs to stop the run better, but this is a guy who can play on Sundays.”
That ceiling is part of why 247Sports ranked Osunsanmi as the No. 5 EDGE transfer this offseason, though Carmodoy admitted the number caught him off guard.
“I will be honest. I was shocked.
I figured Tobi would be highly ranked, but that number shocked me. K-State worked hard to retain him and the new coaching staff felt like they had a chance, but in the end, losing the staff that recruited him made him jump into the portal.
I think he can be a really good player, but we have yet to see it over a 12 game sample size and with his size, the injury worry is always going to be there. Even in 2024, he was often banged up.
If he stays healthy, he has the opportunity to be an incredibly productive player.”
The Indiana side of the equation is even more bullish. The writer behind the Integral 20 said Osunsanmi grabbed his attention in spring camp more than any other transfer addition, and that’s not a throwaway line. After years of watching Indiana struggle to generate a pass rush, he said the last two seasons have shown what high-level EDGE play looks like, and Osunsanmi is the best of the group from a physical standpoint.
The appeal starts with the raw tools. His twitch and first step are described as rare, the kind of traits that point toward an early-round NFL future. His path from safety to linebacker to EDGE has clearly shaped the way he plays, and the belief here is that his upside is obvious even if the production still has room to grow.
The comparison point isn’t about crowning him before the season starts. It’s about believing the tools can become something bigger once Indiana gets its hands on him. The writer said there’s an “it” factor that hasn’t gone away since spring camp, and that he’s as strong a believer in Osunsanmi as anyone around the program right now.
He also drew a direct line to Indiana’s recent edge group, saying Osunsanmi has more physical gifts than Mikail Kamara, Stephen Daley or Kellen Wyatt, all of whom had terrific individual 2025 seasons. The question now is what defensive ends coach Buddha Williams and Bryant Haines can do with a more dynamic pass-rusher in the mix.
That’s the bet with Osunsanmi: the speed, the burst, the upside and the possibility that Indiana has added a player who can make an immediate impact and maybe even more than that. By December, the whole thing could look obvious.
Or it could look a little too optimistic. For now, he’s No. 10 on the Integral 20 for a reason.
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