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Cornerback draft prospect that could solve Cowboys slot corner needs

We continue our 2026 NFL Draft preview of draft prospects that could interest the Dallas Cowboys. Today we are looking at Indiana cornerback D’Angelo Ponds.

D’Angelo Ponds

CB

Indiana Hoosiers

Junior

3-star recruit

5’9”

182 lbs

As a freshman in 2023 at James Madison, Ponds played all 13 games and made 10 starts, putting up 51 tackles, two tackles for loss, two interceptions, 13 pass breakups, two fumble recoveries and ranking among Sun Belt leaders in passes defended. His early moments were tied to takeaways and special teams chaos when he recovered a blocked punt in the end zone for a touchdown at Virginia, and later stuffed the stat sheet against Appalachian State with seven tackles, one INT, one PBU, and one fumble recovery. He also stacked legitimate freshman recognition earning FWAA Freshman All-American and second-team All–Sun Belt.

In 2024, Ponds transferred to Indiana, following Curt Cignetti’s staff and immediately became a defensive cornerstone. He appeared in all 13 games with 12 starts, registering 57 tackles, five TFL, three INT’s, nine PBU’s, and one pick-six, earning first-team All–Big Ten honors. His standout performance was the two-interception game against Washington that triggered a stack of weekly awards, including a 67-yard pick-six to open the scoring. He also had a signature special-teams impact game at Michigan State with a blocked punt that resulted in a safety, and added a postseason interception at Notre Dame.

In 2025, he elevated from all-conference corner to national name, earning first-team All-American, and first-team All–Big Ten again, plus multiple other All-America teams. The biggest moments were in the postseason, winning Defensive MVP of both the Rose Bowl and the Peach Bowl, and a defining play in the CFP game against Oregon when he picked off Dante Moore on the game’s first offensive snap and returned it 25 yards for a touchdown. His season was incredible with 61 tackles, four TFL, two INT’s, one pick-six, and led the Big Ten with 11 PBU’s.

Interesting facts to note on Ponds is he’s a true special-teams scoring threat. He’s made multiple punt-return touchdowns off blocked punts, and he’s credited with four non-offensive touchdowns, two INT returns, two punt-block return scores. He also recorded a reception for six yards in the CFP against Oregon, which is rare for a corner.

2025 Statistics

778 Defensive Snaps

61 Total Tackles

4 TFL

11 Pass Breakups

2 Interceptions

1 INT TD

1 Forced Fumble

2 Missed Tackles

50% Reception Percentage Allowed

0 TD Allowed

55.4 Passer Rating Allowed

1 Penalty

Snap by Position

Box- 12%

Slot- 1%

Wide- 85%

NFL Combine/Pro Day

2023: Second-Team All–Sun Belt

Freshman All-American

2024: First-Team All–Big Ten

2025: First-Team All–Big Ten

First-Team All-American

Overall- 82.7

Speed- 94

Acceleration- 94

Agility- 96

Strength- 59

Tackling- 86

Run Defense- 85

Man Coverage- 89

Zone Coverage- 90

Press Man- 96

Discipline- 96

Elite short-area quickness and closing burst to drive on underneath throws and finish plays on the ball

Instincts and route recognition are outstanding

Playmaking production with consistent INT and PBU output year-to-year

Arrives in big moments

Competitive toughness despite size

Plays bigger than he measures, challenges catches, and fights through contact

High-end tackling for a small corner

Nickel versatility and can cover slots, match tight ends, and handle outside snaps in match-zone

Special teams impact player

Ball skills at the catch point with good timing, hands, and confidence playing through the receiver

Size and length limitations

Bigger NFL receivers can box him out at the catch point, and the lack of length shows up most in contested situations

He can compete, but if asked to live in true press-man against bigger wideouts will be betting against the measurables

Play strength versus the run is an issue and can be walled off by bigger bodies

Aggressive, gambling tendencies

Instincts create splash plays, but mistimed jumps can get punished more consistently by NFL route timing

He can get exploited on comebacks and breaking routes

Role projection sees him as an NFL slot only which is an issue having spent very little time in the slot during college (28 slot reps in his three years at the collegiate level)

Ponds’ best NFL fit is as a nickel or slot corner in a zone-match system that lets him play with vision, trigger downhill, and use his instincts and short-area explosiveness to drive on throws. He can handle select man-match reps on slots and tight ends, and he adds value as a run-supporting, low-miss tackling slot, but his size and length profile is best protected by keeping him inside in the NFL.

D’Angelo Ponds’ scouting report is an undersized, ultra-competitive cover man with legit nickel starter traits and real playmaking production, but teams have to be comfortable living outside the prototype size box with him. He wins with quick feet, short-area burst, and excellent instincts in zone-match concepts, which shows up in the way he drives on routes, stays glued through breaks, and consistently gets hands on the ball.

The main NFL translation questions are physical. He measured 5’9”, 182 lbs with short arms at the combine, so bigger X receivers can present matchup issues outside. The clean projection is a starting slot who adds value with toughness and tackling, and can be a tone-setter in a defense that plays with vision and asks its nickel to trigger and compete.

PRO COMPARISON

BTB OVERALL RANKING

CONSENSUS OVERALL RANKING

52nd

(Consensus ranking based on the average ranking from 90 major scoring services, including BTB)

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