Kansas’ 2026 running back room is shaping up to be one of the more intriguing parts of Lance Leipold’s roster, and the head coach’s latest comments only added to the buzz.
The Jayhawks brought in 30 transfers, including three backs in Dylan Edwards, Yasin Willis and Jalen Dupree. Edwards and Willis have drawn the most attention, and it’s easy to see why: they bring very different skill sets to the table.
Willis is the bigger, more physical option at 6-foot-1, a runner built to bang between the tackles and keep a drive moving. He arrived at KU as a former four-star prospect according to Rivals.com, and his production at Syracuse showed why he’s viewed as such a useful piece.
In 2025, Willis logged 129 carries for 558 yards and four touchdowns. Over two seasons with the Orange, he totaled 688 rushing yards on 165 carries with five scores, while also catching 17 passes for 68 yards and returning 10 kickoffs for 212 yards.
Edwards gives Kansas the opposite look. He’s the more elusive back, the kind of player who can stress a defense in space and make things uncomfortable for tacklers. In his career, Edwards has piled up 1,072 rushing yards with eight rushing touchdowns, plus six receiving touchdowns and 449 receiving yards.
Both backs arrived at Kansas rated as 88 overall and part of the nation’s 53rd overall transfer class according to 247Sports.
Leipold said earlier this week at Big 12 Media Days that Willis can bring a lot to the offense. “Yasin’s done a great job.
He's a big, physical back, downhill runner, able to move the pile a little bit. You know, Andy Kotelnicki has returned to our program as a playcaller, and I know he's really excited about what he gives us.”
Kotelnicki’s first run at Kansas produced the program’s best rushing season in years. In 2023, the Jayhawks finished with the nation’s eighth-best rushing offense at 202.8 yards per game and went 9-4, their most wins since 2007 with 12.
Leipold also pointed to the overall shape of the room, saying, “We really like, first of all, the depth of the room that we have in the running back position, Yasin being our compliment with Dylan Edwards; we think we really have two different running styles that can really give us some explosiveness as an offense, and some versatility,”
Dupree gives Kansas another option behind them after rushing for 661 yards on 127 carries with three touchdowns over two seasons at Colorado State. He missed spring practice because of an undisclosed injury that required surgery.
The hope for Kansas is that the backs can help steady an offense that didn’t always find its footing last season. With Jim Zebrowski calling plays, the Jayhawks ranked 77th nationally in total offense at 368.8 yards per game and 60th in rushing at 157.8 yards per game.
And with uncertainty still hanging over the quarterback room - Isaiah Marshall, Cole Ballard and Chase Jenkins are all in the mix - a stronger ground game could take a lot of pressure off whoever ends up as QB1.
In Other News...
Cam Pickett Just Sent A Strong Message About Kansas Footballs Future
Cam Pickett has been around long enough to know that optimism in college football has to be backed up by something real, and the Kansas wide receiver sounds convinced there is more coming in Lawrence. The redshirt senior spoke with confidence about the coaching staff and the direction of the offense, pointing to a group that already has some playmakers in place and, in his view, enough talent to keep building on what the Jayhawks have started.
Pickett also made clear that last seasons close losses still linger, which is part of why he sounds so invested in what comes next. He singled out Dylan Edwards as a versatile threat and suggested Tate Nagy could become more than just a special teams piece, while also sounding genuinely fired up about the trip to Wembley Stadium for Kansas game in London. For a program trying to turn promise into something sturdier, that kind of buy-in from an experienced receiver matters. [Read more 🡒]
Lance Leipold Just Raised More Questions About Kansas At Quarterback
Kansas is heading into camp with a very different feel at quarterback after moving on from the Jalon Daniels era, and Lance Leipold made it clear the next starter will have to earn the job the hard way. The Jayhawks are sorting through redshirt junior Cole Ballard and redshirt sophomore Isaiah Marshall, two young passers who both got limited chances last season but flashed enough in brief action to keep the competition open. Leipolds message was straightforward: the winner will be the one who is most consistent and gives the offense the best chance to win.
Ballard and Marshall each bring a different look to the race, which is part of what makes this one worth watching through camp. Marshall showed more as a runner, while Ballards cameo included a touchdown pass and some mobility of his own, but neither has separated from the other yet. With Kansas trying to settle the position before the season turns serious, the next few weeks will be about whether one of them can turn those scattered reps into something more convincing. [Read more 🡒]
Former Jayhawks Shared A Summer League Stage And One Stole It
Melvin Council Jr. got his first taste of NBA Summer League with New Orleans and held his own in a crowded Pelicans backcourt, finishing with six points in 20 minutes while adding a couple of assists and a steal. For Kansas fans, though, the bigger storyline in Vegas came from an old familiar face in the frontcourt, as former Jayhawks center Hunter Dickinson gave the Pelicans a major lift in a comeback win over Charlotte.
Dickinson paced New Orleans with 21 points and knocked down three shots from deep, the kind of outing that stood out even on a night when the Pelicans had to dig out of an early hole. Kansas presence in Summer League stretched beyond that matchup, too, with Tre White and Zeko Mayo also getting their own run with different teams, keeping the Jayhawks well represented on the July circuit. [Read more 🡒]
