Where Texas Portal Departures Are Suddenly Getting Another Shot

Discover where Texas' ex-defensive stars and a special teams ace are taking their talents after the 2026 transfer shuffle.

Texas’ offseason portal losses on defense and special teams didn’t just disappear into the college football shuffle. Every one of the seven players who left has already landed somewhere else, and several are walking into jobs that could put them right in the middle of the action this fall.

That kind of movement says plenty about the kind of talent Texas has been stockpiling. The Longhorns lost six defensive players, including one starter, plus one specialist, and the new homes for those players are spread across the sport.

One of the most notable departures is linebacker Liona Lefau, who is headed to Colorado and is projected to start at middle linebacker. The 6-foot-1, 227-pound native of Laie, Hawaii, played 42 games with 21 starts at Texas while lining up next to Anthony Hill Jr., who was taken in the second round by the Tennessee Titans in April.

Lefau’s strongest season came in 2024, when he finished with 63 tackles, five tackles for loss, two sacks, an interception, three pass breakups and a forced fumble. His top performance came in Texas’ 17-7 win at Texas A&M, when he had six tackles, a forced fumble and a pass breakup.

His 2025 season was less productive. Lefau totaled 69 tackles, three tackles for loss, one sack, three pass breakups and one fumble recovery, and opposing quarterbacks completed 21 of 27 passes against him in coverage for 298 yards and two touchdowns.

Both touchdowns came against Mississippi State. Colorado, meanwhile, is handing him a very different setup: no returning starters on defense, the top 19 tacklers gone from a 3-9 team, and a full defensive overhaul under new coordinator Chris Marve, who spent last season at Virginia Tech.

Elijah Barnes is moving to Kentucky after redshirting as a freshman at Texas. The Dallas Skyline product played in four games last season, and his most memorable snap came in the Citrus Bowl against Michigan, when he closed fast on quarterback Bryce Underwood for an 8-yard sack.

Barnes is battling two returning juniors for a starting spot, but he looks settled into the two-deep for first-year coach Will Stein, a former Texas quality control coach. Kentucky’s defense will be run by Jay Bateman, who was the defensive coordinator at Texas A&M the last two seasons.

Lavon Johnson is back at Maryland after one season with Texas. The 6-foot-2, 310-pound defensive tackle from Allentown, Pa., was one of five transfer defensive tackles to sign with the Longhorns last offseason, but a high ankle sprain slowed him in spring and he never fully caught up.

Johnson played 63 snaps across seven games in 2025 and recorded five tackles, including a tackle for loss against Sam Houston. He is projected as a starter for a Maryland team that went 4-8 last season.

Cornerback Santana Wilson has also found a new stop, heading to Louisville after redshirting in 2024 and playing just six snaps against Sam Houston last season, when he made one tackle. The son of Adrian Wilson, a five-time Pro Bowl defensive back with the Arizona Cardinals, Santana is still working his way through the depth chart with the Cardinals, who went 9-4 last season under fourth-year coach Jeff Brohm.

The final Texas specialist in the group, kicker Will Stone, is now at UCF. Stone played in 47 games for the Longhorns as a kickoff specialist over the last four seasons, and he left after his fourth game of the 2025 season so he could preserve a redshirt in order transfer.

His kickoff numbers at Texas were steady: 86 kicks in 2022 with a 62.4-yard average and 26 touchbacks, 96 in 2023 at 63.9 yards per kick with 49 touchbacks, 98 in 2024 at 63.6 yards per kick with 56 touchbacks, and 20 in 2025 at 62.0 yards per kick with eight touchbacks. At UCF, under second-year coach Scott Frost, the left-footed Stone is projected to be the Knights’ starting field goal kicker.

He was 2-for-2 on extra points at Texas.

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