Kansas is getting an early jump on its 2027 recruiting class, and the first wave of commitments suggests Lance Leipold’s staff is moving in a better direction on the trail.
The Jayhawks have already picked up more than 10 pledges in the class, a total that puts them in a far stronger spot than they’ve been in during recent recruiting cycles. With the 2026 season still months away, Kansas is making noise well before the next fall arrives.
On the latest episode of the Sunflower Showdown podcast, the early progress was framed as a positive sign for the program.
"KU, just like you said with the Wildcats, they're really just hitting it hard on the 2027 recruiting trail," I said. "I think they're up to 10-plus commits now."
Kansas also finds itself in the middle of the Big 12 recruiting rankings, which marks a clear step forward from where the program has typically finished. The Jayhawks have spent recent years near the bottom of the conference in recruiting, so even a move into the middle tier stands out as meaningful progress.
"I think they're ranked in the middle of the Big 12, but that's really a step of improvement for Kansas," I said. "They've been consistently in the bottom of the Big 12 recruiting-wise.
Last year I think they were like 14th... I think they're ranked eighth."
The class already has one major headliner: a four-star commitment. The rest of the group, for now, is made up mostly of three-star prospects.
"They got a four-star tight end, a big hit there, and then the rest of the guys are like three-stars," I said.
That kind of profile fits the kind of roster-building Kansas has been trying to do. Three-star recruits may not always generate buzz nationally, but they can become the backbone of a program that develops talent well over time.
"K-State's always been kind of a program getting those guys and developing them," I said. "But KU, when they get a three-star, they're feeling pretty good just because of the recruiting trail and the past of Kansas football."
There’s still plenty of time for the 2027 class to change, but the early results point to a staff that is continuing to raise Kansas’ recruiting standard. The Jayhawks are climbing in the conference rankings and landing better-rated prospects than they have in previous cycles, which gives the program a stronger base as it heads toward 2026.
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