Tanook Hines is the best college football player you don’t know yet

3 min read
Tanook Hines is the best college football player you don’t know yet

Tanook Hines is the best college football player you don’t know yet

There’s a moment in every great player’s career when the world stops discovering them and starts watching them. For USC wide receiver Tanook Hines, that moment is now, whether the country knows it yet or not. Most casual college football…

Tanook Hines is the best college football player you don’t know yet

There’s a moment in every great player’s career when the world stops discovering them and starts watching them. For USC wide receiver Tanook Hines, that moment is now, whether the country knows it yet or not. Most casual college football…

There's a moment in every great player's career when the world stops discovering them and starts watching them. For USC wide receiver Tanook Hines, that moment is now—whether the country knows it yet or not.

Most casual college football fans couldn't pick Hines out of a lineup. That ends in 2026. The sophomore from Houston is about to become one of the most talked-about receivers in the country, and the evidence isn't speculation. It's stacking up like yards after contact.

Let's start with what Hines already did as an 18-year-old true freshman, playing third or fourth fiddle in a loaded receiver room. He appeared in all 13 games, making 8 starts, and hauled in 34 receptions for 561 yards at a blistering 16.5-yard average, adding two touchdowns. Those numbers are impressive on their own. The context makes them extraordinary.

He was working in the shadows of Biletnikoff Award winner Makai Lemon and Ja'Kobi Lane—two players now preparing for NFL careers. The coverage tilted toward them. The safety rotations accounted for them. Hines feasted anyway.

And then came the Alamo Bowl. When the moment was biggest, Hines was at his best, closing out his freshman season with a career-high 163 yards on six catches. Lincoln Riley—a coach who has developed some of the finest receivers in college football history, including CeeDee Lamb at Oklahoma—couldn't contain his excitement afterward.

"Yeah, it was fun to see him kind of rise up in that moment and assume that role. He was pretty unguardable tonight, to be honest. The only times they really guarded him is when they tackled him. So, yeah, he did a great job. He's going to be a hell of a player here," Riley said.

A hell of a player. From the coach who shaped CeeDee Lamb. Let that sink in.

Here's the math that matters: Lemon, Lane, and tight end Lake McRee accounted for 56% of USC's receptions, 61% of receiving yards, and 73% of receiving touchdowns in 2025. That production has to go somewhere. And right now, the clearest destination is No. 16—Hines' jersey.

Hines is the Trojans' presumed No. 1 receiver and was recently ranked No. 7 among the Big Ten's most irreplaceable non-quarterbacks, joining company that includes Heisman finalist Jeremiah Smith of Ohio State. That's not a fluke ranking. Some in the college football world already see what's coming.

Among USC's top six receivers in both yards and receptions last season, Hines is the only one returning. He doesn't just have an opportunity. He has a monopoly on proven experience in this offense.

Hines isn't simply inheriting playing time. He's earned it with a skill set that's ready to take center stage. The world is about to start watching.

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