Gaming Guide

College Football 27 Fastest Players: Every 96-Plus Speed Rating

The three 99-speed sprinters and the full top 20, sorted by their speed ratings on the default rosters.

The three 99-speed sprinters and the full top 20, sorted by their speed ratings on the default rosters.

Speed is the one trait you cannot coach, and in College Football 27 it shows up as a hard number that can turn an average build into a game-breaker. The fastest players in the game cluster tightly at the top, with a handful sharing identical ratings and only their supporting stats separating them. Here is exactly who those players are and where they line up.

Quick answer: The three fastest players are Gatlin Bair (WR, Oregon), Nyck Harbor (WR, South Carolina), and Rodrick Pleasant (CB, UCLA), each with a 99 speed rating.

Fastest players in College Football 27

The 20 fastest players in College Football 27 by speed rating

The list below is sorted by the speed stat. When two players share the same speed, the higher-ranked one carries stronger secondary speed traits such as acceleration and agility, which is how the game breaks ties.

RankPlayerPositionSchoolSpeed
1Gatlin BairWROregon99
2Nyck HarborWRSouth Carolina99
3Rodrick PleasantCBUCLA99
4Julio HumphreyCBTexas A&M98
5King MackFSNC State98
6Ben MinichFSMaryland97
7Gentry WilliamsCBGeorgia97
8Jelani WatkinsWRArkansas97
9Ryan WingoWRTexas97
10Chris Johnson Jr.HBClemson96
11Brandon ArringtonCBTexas A&M96
12Dakorien MooreWROregon96
13Evan JohnsonCBBYU96
14Isaiah Satenga IIIWROklahoma96
15Jayden WarrenWRTexas A&M96
16Jaylen MbakweCBGeorgia Tech96
17Marcus MackenzieCBUtah State96
18Ondre EvansCBNC State96
19Quaron AdamsWRCalifornia96
20Rayshon LukeHBFresno State96

Two more names sit right on the 96 line and effectively tie the back of the top 20: Terhyon Nichols (CB, Kentucky) and Will Henderson III (HB, UTSA). Treat them as interchangeable with the 96-speed group above.


The three 99-speed players at the top

Gatlin Bair, Nyck Harbor, and Rodrick Pleasant all max out at 99 speed, so on a pure straight line they are essentially even. The order comes down to their acceleration and agility, which nudges Bair to the front. Bair suits up for Oregon, giving the Ducks the single fastest player in the game.

Positionally, the two receivers get more out of the rating than the corner does. Harbor and Bair can turn that speed into deep separation on offense, while Pleasant uses his to erase cushion and stay glued to routes in coverage.


Why wide receivers and defensive backs dominate the list

Nine of the top 10 fastest players are either wide receivers or cornerbacks and safeties, which lines up with where raw speed matters most on a football field. The lone exception in the top 10 is Chris Johnson Jr., Clemson’s halfback at 96 speed. He shares no relation to the former NFL running back nicknamed CJ2K.

The back half of the top 20 leans the same way, with more receivers and corners filling it out. Two additional running backs break through the pattern, Rayshon Luke at Fresno State and Will Henderson III at UTSA, both sitting at 96 speed.


How the speed rankings work when ratings tie

Sorting every player by the speed stat produces long stretches of identical numbers, especially at 96 and 97. The game still orders those players, and it does so using their other speed-related traits. If one player ranks above another despite an equal speed number, it is because their overall acceleration and agility profile is stronger.

That distinction matters in actual gameplay. A slightly higher agility rating helps a player keep top speed through cuts and change-of-direction, so two 96-speed players can feel noticeably different once you put a defender on them.

These ratings reflect the default rosters at launch, and EA adjusts player numbers over time. Expect the exact order of the top 10 and top 20 to shift as ratings updates roll out, though the fastest names will keep clustering at the top.