Skip to main content

No. 1 junior college CB Keshawn Davila names his top 7 schools

Wg0vf-nP_400x400by:Keegan Pope10/29/24

bykeeganpope

Keshawn Davila
Junior college cornerback Keshawn Davila. (Photo by Dennis Scheidt, HawkeyeReport.com)

After a strong season at the junior college level, Northwest Mississippi Community College cornerback Keshawn Davila has seen his recruitment blow up in recent months.

Earlier this month, he named a top schools list of Arizona State, Boise State, Illinois, Michigan State, SMU, Utah, Virginia Tech and Washington State. But a few new programs have entered the picture, and he has shuffled that group a bit.

Davila tells On3 that his top group now consists of Florida, Arkansas, Iowa, Michigan State, Utah, Arizona State and Virginia Tech.

The 6-foot-1, 165 pounder is the No. 6 overall junior college prospect and No. 1 CB this cycle, according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.

Top 10

  1. 1

    Alabama AD

    Greg Byrne fires back at chatter

    Trending
  2. 2

    Projecting CFP Top 25

    Controversy is coming

    Hot
  3. 3

    5 for Georgia transfer

    Contenders for Julian Humphrey

  4. 4

    ACC commish call out

    Jim Phillips challenges CFP committee

  5. 5

    Kentucky coach on the move

    Nebraska to hire UK asst.

    New
View All

The Hawkeyes hosted him an on official visit over the weekend, and he is looking to add trips to Florida and Arkansas in the coming weeks, he told On3’s Keith Niebuhr on Tuesday. Both the Gators and Razorbacks extended him scholarship offers in the past 48 hours.

He has two interceptions this season — both pick-sixes. During his first season at NWCC, Davila played in nine games for the Rangers, totaling 35 tackles (21 solo), 14 assists, six TFLs, two interceptions, two pass breakups, one fumble recovery and a sack.

Originally a native of Florida, he played at Hillsborough High, collecting 40 tackles, four sacks, and four tackles for loss as a senior in 2021. He was a Class of 2022 high school recruit and will have two years of eligibility left at the college level.