39 Penn State players had at least one snap in Saturday’s heartbreaking 27-24 loss to Indiana.
NOTE: Season totals in parentheses
Offense: 66 snaps (590)
Quarterback
Ethan Grunkemeyer: 66 (225)
Running Backs
Nicholas Singleton: 36
(287) Kaytron Allen: 33 (309)
Wide Receivers
Trebor Peña: 40 (389)
Kyron Hudson: 38 (429)
Devonte Ross: 23 (275)
Koby Howard: 22 (60)
Tyseer Denmark: 1 (25)
Tight Ends
Khalil Dinkins: 47 (400)
Andrew Rappleyea: 38 (228)
Luke Reynolds: 37 (317)
Offensive Line
Drew Shelton: 66 (550)
Vega Ioane: 66 (442)
Nick Dawkins: 66 (552)
Anthony Donkoh: 66 (448)
Nolan Rucci: 66 (456)
Cooper Cousins: 14 (91)
Defense: 64 snaps (593)
Defensive Ends
Dani Dennis-Sutton: 55 (434)
Zuriah Fisher: 53 (317)
Yvan Kemajou: 19 (137)
Jaylen Harvey: 9 (110)
Defensive Tackles
Zane Durant: 50 (383)
Xavier Gilliam: 25 (295)
Alonzo Ford Jr: 25 (245)
Ty Blanding: 16 (104)
Linebackers
Amare Campbell: 63 (525)
Dominic DeLuca: 38 (376)
Alex Tatsch: 22 (59)
Keon Wylie: 9 (134)
Cornerbacks
Audavion Collins: 58 (369)
Zion Tracy: 57 (261)
AJ Harris: 51 (410)
Daryus Dixon: 20 (132)
Kenny Woseley Jr: 4 (172)
Elliot Washington II: 3 (187)
Safeties
Zakee Wheatley: 64 (482)
King Mack: 30 (327)
Dejuan Lane: 18 (167)
Antoine Belgrave-Shorter: 15 (146)
Notes & Thoughts
- The starting five on the offensive line played every snap. Cooper Cousins semi-regularly rotated in as a sixth lineman. The rotation seemed to not work too well for the first three quarters until the offense finally woke up.
- Nicholas Singleton slightly outsnapped Kaytron Allen in this game. Indiana did a great job plugging up the run game for most of the way. Singleton had a 59-yard run in the fourth quarter that finally gave us a glimpse of what he was supposed to be this year.
- Zakee Wheatley played every snap on defense, and Amare Campbell played all but one snap. They have been warriors on defense all season.
- Elliot Washington II had just three snaps in this game and has played less than one-third of the total snaps all season.
- The 2026 roster will need to raid the transfer portal to have any chance of success. A large portion of these snaps is from seniors and the depth is lacking on both sides of the ball. With the 2026 recruiting class slowly falling to pieces, the portal is Penn State’s best hope.











