Ohio State did not recruit Devin Sanchez to merely be the next talented cornerback in line. It recruited him to become the cornerback offenses have to game plan around and the kind of boundary defender who changes route concepts, shrinks windows, and lets the rest of the defense play faster because one side of the field feels closed off.
That vision was obvious from the moment Sanchez arrived in Columbus as a five-star early enrollee in January 2025 after finishing as the No. 1 cornerback and No. 5 overall
prospect in the class according to 247Sports, with a scouting profile built on rare length, fluidity, elite speed markers and true first-round traits.
Sanchez now stands at 6-foot-2 and 198 pounds with high-level ball production in high school, including nine interceptions and 29 pass breakups as a junior, and the kind of size-speed combination programs rarely find in one player.
His freshman season in 2025 was never really about whether Sanchez was talented enough. It was about how quickly that talent could become usable at a championship program. Ohio State had veteran answers ahead of him, but it still found a role for Sanchez right away.
He played in every game, logged 321 defensive snaps as the third corner in the rotation, and started when injuries forced Jermaine Mathews Jr. inside.
Sanchez finished the season with 15 tackles, two pass breakups and a fumble recovery. More importantly, he was not hidden. He played high-leverage snaps against Illinois, Penn State, Indiana and Miami, and his 321 snaps made him one of the most highly used freshman on the roster.
For a true freshman cornerback, one of the most unforgiving and difficult jobs in the sport, that workload was both a developmental accelerator and a statement of trust.
What the freshman tape says
The raw stat line from Sanchez’s first season does not scream breakout star, but that is exactly why the deeper story matters. Freshman cornerback production is often misleading because the real evaluation lives in usage, assignments and how often a coaching staff is willing to expose a player to pressure, and Ohio State clearly was last season.
Sanchez played 321 snaps according to Pro Football Focus tracking, including 67 in his first start against Illinois and 43 in the Buckeyes’ College Football Playoff loss to Miami after Lorenzo Styles Jr. left with a shoulder injury. Across 203 coverage snaps, he was targeted 25 times, allowed 15 catches for 223 yards and one touchdown, with 96 of those yards coming after the catch.
Those are not perfect numbers, but for a freshman playing meaningful football in a defense built to compete for a national title, they are far closer to promising than problematic.
There is a more subtle clue inside those numbers as well. Sanchez was not overwhelmed by the stage, but he was also still playing a little carefully. He admitted that himself this spring, saying he was “a little timid” and “nervous” last year before adding that he feels calmer now and believes the Miami game made him realize how much more he could have done if he had played freer all season.
That kind of self-scout is revealing. Many young corners struggle because they are physically overmatched. But Sanchez’s own description suggests his issue was more mental than physical, the normal hesitation that comes when a former superstar recruit is suddenly trying not to make a mistake for a national program.
For Ohio State, that is good news. Coaching confidence and technique refinement are far easier to build than the physical tools required to travel with elite receivers, and Sanchez already had those tools before he ever took his first college snap.
Why Ohio State thinks the leap is coming now
The strongest evidence that Sanchez is trending toward a true No. 1 corner role is not just fan optimism or recruiting memory, it is the language Ohio State’s staff is using publicly. Tim Walton has not hedged the ask whatsoever.
In spring, the Buckeyes’ secondary coach said Sanchez “has to become a dominant player,” adding that the expectation is for him to be “lockdown.” Coaches do not usually talk that way about players they merely hope will be solid starters. They speak like that when they believe a player’s ceiling can alter the structure of the entire defense.
That belief is reinforced by the roster reality around him. Davison Igbinosun is gone, and the 2026 secondary is being rebuilt around Sanchez, Mathews and Jaylen McClain. Sanchez is no longer fighting just to get on the field, he is being asked to become a pillar.
Spring reports suggest he is embracing that assignment. Ryan Day described the corner room as highly competitive, while pointing to Sanchez as one of the central figures in that competition and one of the players whose growth is most essential to Ohio State’s defensive ceiling. He has also openly targeted major individual goals, including All-American recognition and awards like the Thorpe.
It also matters that Sanchez profiles as the exact prototype for what modern elite cornerback play looks like. He has been compared stylistically to Christian Gonzalez with his rare mix of frame length, sudden athleticism and comfort on an island in the vertical game, backed by elite track speed.
At 6-foot-2 and nearly 200 pounds, he already has the exact body type NFL teams covet.
What “True No. 1” actually means in 2026
Becoming a true No. 1 lockdown corner at Ohio State in 2026 will not be measured only by interceptions or highlight plays. In fact, if Sanchez becomes what the Buckeyes believe he can be, the gaudiest numbers may never come, because quarterbacks will simply throw elsewhere.
The real markers will be quieter but more impactful. Fewer targets, more flexibility in coverage, and greater freedom for the defense to pressure without hesitation.
That is the hidden value of a true CB1. He does not just win his assignment, he changes the structure of the entire defense. Ohio State’s 2025 unit led the nation in passing yards allowed per game, and while no single player can replicate the full impact of someone like Caleb Downs, a breakout from Sanchez is the clearest path to maintaining that elite standard.
And that is why his ascent feels less like projection and more like progression. The talent was obvious as a recruit. The early usage confirmed the staff’s trust. The freshman tape revealed both flashes and areas for growth. Now, the focus is on eliminating hesitation and turning potential into production.
Ohio State is not hoping Devin Sanchez becomes a starter someday. It is pushing him toward something much more demanding. Becoming the next Buckeye corner who makes elite receivers think twice before even lining up on his side of the field.
If Sanchez makes the expected sophomore leap, the label will change quickly. He will no longer be a future star. He will simply be what Ohio State recruited him to be from the start, a true No. 1 lockdown corner.












