Oregon Fans Have Every Right To Be Furious Over Brandon Finney Jr

While standout performances often earn recognition, Brandon Finney Jr.'s omission from a top ball hawk list despite his superior metrics challenges the criteria used by evaluators.

Pro Football Focus’ latest preseason list of college football’s top five ball hawks left out one name that Oregon fans expected to see: Brandon Finney Jr.

PFF’s group heading into the 2026 season featured Notre Dame cornerback Leonard Moore, Miami safety Bryce Fitzgerald, Texas Tech cornerback Brice Pollock, Minnesota cornerback John Nestor and Virginia Tech cornerback Jaquez White. It’s a strong collection of experienced defensive backs, but Finney’s omission stands out after the true freshman put together one of the most dominant debut seasons in recent memory.

The numbers make the case quickly. Finney produced at a level that matched, and in several areas surpassed, multiple defensive backs who did make PFF’s list.

Neither Nestor nor White matched his ability to affect the backfield and force fumbles. Against Finney, quarterbacks completed just 40 percent of their passes, a mark better than Pollock’s 43.1 percent allowed.

Finney and Pollock were tied with only one touchdown allowed in coverage all season.

He was just as clean in space. Finney missed only four tackles on more than 40 total stops, good for an 8.7 percent missed tackle rate. That outpaced both Fitzgerald, who checked in at 11.2 percent, and Pollock at 12.5 percent.

Even when teams tried to test him late in the year, the results showed how much of a problem he had become. Over the final six games of the regular season, Finney was targeted only 2.1 times per game. That kind of production can come with a weird statistical wrinkle, though: when a defensive back takes away an entire side of the field, there are fewer chances to pile up the raw numbers.

What makes the snub even more puzzling is that PFF’s own broader rankings seem to value Finney highly. On its 2026 Preseason College 50, which ranks the best players in the country regardless of position, Finney sits at No.

  1. He is one spot behind Alabama sophomore cornerback Dijon Lee Jr., who is No.

That gap becomes harder to explain when Georgia safety KJ Bolden enters the picture. PFF has Bolden at No. 11 overall, the highest ranking of any true sophomore defensive back in the nation, but he also missed the ball hawk list.

The only underclassman defensive back who did make PFF’s top five ball hawks was Fitzgerald, and he is ranked No. 42 on the overall Preseason College 50. That puts him 16 spots behind Finney, which only sharpens the contradiction.

Still, the bigger picture is clear. Finney enters 2026 as one of the country’s top defensive backs no matter where he landed on this particular list. He already has First-Team Preseason All-America recognition from the Walter Camp Football Foundation, and ESPN has him among its top 10 defensive players entering the season.

Now he gets the chance to back all of that up on the field. With Oregon viewed as a national championship contender and Finney expected to play a major role in one of the nation’s best defenses, another big season could settle the argument about where he belongs among college football’s elite ball hawks.

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