By the time the 2026 season is over, Oklahoma is almost certain to be dealing with portal departures. That’s just the reality now. Some exits will catch people off guard, but a few are already easy to see coming if nothing changes between now and December.
There are five Sooners who already look like transfer-watch candidates, and last year’s version of this exercise proved the point: four of the five players on that list eventually entered the portal after the season.
Daniel Akinkunmi is one of the clearest names to watch. He redshirted in 2024 and played in only six games last season, with most of that work coming on special teams. He could have a slightly larger role this year as depth, but it still looks like backup duty, and that path doesn’t appear to be opening up anytime soon.
Three sophomore starters on the offensive line got on the field before him as freshmen, and by the time they’re gone at the earliest, Akinkunmi will already be a senior. On top of that, Bill Bedenbaugh has a loaded 2027 class coming together, including a pair of five-star prospects who are expected to contribute right away.
Oklahoma’s building serious depth up front, which is great for the program and bad news for anyone stuck behind it. Akinkunmi feels like the kind of player who could start elsewhere, and that makes a transfer look likely.
Ivan Carreon already flirted with leaving once. He entered the portal this past offseason, then reversed course and signed a new deal to stay at Oklahoma.
Even so, his outlook hasn’t really improved. He has only 12 catches in two seasons with the Sooners, and just two of those receptions came in 2025 during his first year in Ben Arbuckle’s system.
His situation also lines up with a familiar pattern for wide receivers coach Emmett Jones. Carreon is the final receiver left from OU’s 2024 signing class, and he’s the first high school receiver Jones recruited to Oklahoma to last more than two years, aside from Jacob Jordan, who arrived as a walk-on. At this point, Carreon sticking around would be the surprise.
Whitt Newbauer’s path looks just as narrow. He started his college career at Mercer in 2024, then transferred to Oklahoma late in the spring last year when the Sooners needed quarterback depth. In 2025, he appeared in three games - once against Kent State when Michael Hawkins Jr. was starting for the injured John Mateer, and twice more while Oklahoma was trying to preserve Hawkins’ redshirt late in the season.
Newbauer was never going to be the long-term answer in Norman, and his role may shrink even more in 2026. Freshman Bowe Bentley looks like the future, and with the new 5-in-5 rule, Oklahoma doesn’t have to worry about burning a redshirt, which means Bentley can serve as a backup and get experience.
Then in 2027, commit Jamison Roberts is expected to back him up. If Newbauer wants real playing time, he’ll probably have to find it somewhere else.
Elijah Thomas might be the most painful potential loss of the group. Still, it wouldn’t be a shock if he moved on after the season if his role doesn’t change in a major way.
He signed in the 2025 class as a four-star recruit from Checotah High School and generated immediate buzz. Last offseason brought plenty of hype, and Emmett Jones even compared him to New York Giants star Malik Nabers.
But last year, Thomas barely played, mostly contributing on special teams and catching just one five-yard pass.
There is still a chance he breaks out in 2026, but the receiver room is crowded. Isaiah Sategna III is back as the top option, and Oklahoma added Trell Harris, Parker Livingstone and Mackenzie Alleyne through the portal.
Jer’Michael Carter also returns, and spring signs pointed to freshman Jahsiear Rogers getting early opportunities as Arbuckle is likely to lean toward the players he brought in. Thomas has obvious talent, but if the Sooners don’t carve out a bigger role for him, he could be gone before that potential fully shows up.
DeZephen Walker rounds out the list. He has said he trusts Oklahoma as a program, but he signed with the Sooners because of his relationship with former running backs coach DeMarco Murray, who left for the Kansas City Chiefs just before Walker arrived on campus as a 2026 addition. That alone puts his situation on shaky ground.
And if Jonathan Hatton Jr. has a breakout season, while Xavier Robinson and Tory Blaylock are already ahead of Walker and top-10 recruit Keldrid Ben is on the way next year, the case for a transfer only gets stronger. Walker has plenty of reasons to start thinking about his next move if the depth chart keeps breaking the wrong way.
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