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Kansas State just lost out on a huge quarterback prospect.

Jake Nawrot, the No. 2 quarterback recruit in the 2027 class, committed to Kentucky on Sunday. He visited Manhattan, KS, on Apr. 9, after touring the school a few months ago. The four-star signal-caller attended John Hersey High School in Arlington Heights, IL. He also had interest from Iowa, Duke, and Florida State.

Last season, Nawrot had 3,078 passing yards and 41 touchdowns with just two interceptions. He completed 71.1 percent of his passes, while rushing for 124 yards and eight additional scores.

Now, Kansas State must go back to the drawing board to find its next Avery Johnson replacement.

ESPN LAUDS INDIANA FOR ITS ADDITION OF FORMER KANSAS STARS

Kansas State's transfer portal season was interesting to say the least.

The program made some promising additions, but the overwhelming star losses had many concerned about its rebound. Two of the star transfers were among the highlighted players in the transfer market. ESPN did a story on the major football additions across the country, listing defensive ends Chiddi Obiazor and Tobi Osunsanmi as significant acquisitions for the reigning national champions.

The article wrote:

"The top three defensive ends are gone, so here come Chiddi Obiazor (Kansas State), Tobi Osunsanmi (Kansas State), and Josh Burnham (Notre Dame). Three starters are gone from the secondary, and here come four veteran transfers. The bar is ridiculously high, of course, and there's nothing saying Cignetti and his staff won't whiff on an evaluation or two at some point. But this all makes so much damn sense."

Osunsanmi was the Wildcats' game-wrecker until his mid-season injury. He led the team in sacks and tackles for loss up to that point, so his absence was huge for a defense that needed all the star power it could get to bounce back from a miserable start. Osunsanmi ended 2025 with 20 total tackles, six of which were for losses, with four sacks and two quarterback hits in just six games.

Obiazor had 26 total tackles, four tackles for loss, and a team-leading seven quarterback hits. His presence on the edge helped a Kansas State defensive line that held relatively strong in the Big 12.

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