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Best College Football Player Props Today – Top NCAAF Plays

Kyle Krogstad

Kyle Krogstad

Last updated: September 13, 2025

Ryan Williams CFB

There’s a sizable edge when picking college football player props. With so many NCAAF teams to cover, sportsbooks are more likely to offer exploitable numbers compared to popular markets like NFL player props.

Making matters even better, the demand for college football player props is growing. More sportsbooks carry these wagers, and you can also make your NCAAF picks at DFS sites like Underdog, which is legal in 40+ states.

Below, we’ll dive into our favorite college football player props for the week and let you know where these projections are available.

Top DFS Sites in All States

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College Football Player Props: Week 3 (2025)

There’s no time for rest when the season starts, and we’ll dive into some of the best plays for Week 3!

Nate Frazier > 51.5 rush yards

Play #1 of the week is in the game of the week, a SEC showdown between the Georgia Bulldogs and Tennessee Vols.

Nate Frazier has gone over this projection in just one of the two games so far, but in two blowouts, Georgia was able to rotate backs consistently. When Frazier gets 13+ carries, he is over this line in five out of five in his career. I’m expecting him to be the featured guy in what should be a very close matchup. 

Tennessee prides itself on the defensive side of the ball. The Vols have given up less than three yards per carry this season and are a very good unit, but in Week 1, they allowed 91 yards to Willis (Syracuse). Though it was on 23 touches, he was still able to average four yards per carry.

Georgia has won eight straight vs Tennessee, and in every single one of those games, the team has had a running back cash this number, including Frazier last year (68 yards). Tennessee severely struggled to stop the Georgia run game, and there’s nothing to make me think that won’t be the case again this year. If Frazier can get 13+ carries, I think he can average four yards per carry and cash this number for us. 

Ryan Williams > 59.5 Receiving Yards

Alabama gets its star wide receiver back from injury in Week 3 against Wisconsin.

Ryan Williams had 11 targets but only produced five catches for 30 yards in Week 1, but it was a weird game. Nobody expected Bama to lose, and the weather was also brutal. The one takeaway from that game I like is the 11 targets, as he is clearly Ty Simpson’s #1 target.

Alabama has no room for error anymore, as another upset loss and the CFP is gone. After the Week 1 noise, the Crimson Tide are going to start flooring teams, and UL Monroe was the first one to see that. I’m not expecting 73-0 again, but I think they blow out this Wisconsin team on Saturday. If that’s the case, I can safely assume Simpson and Williams connect on at least one or two long ones. 

With this being the last game before they head to Georgia in two weeks (bye next week), I think Deboer will want to get Williams up to game speed and in sync with Ty Simpson.

Considering how dynamic Williams is, I can see him getting to this number in two catches. I have him more in that 5-6 catch range on what should be a strong target load again.

Marcel Reed > 14.5 Longest Rush

In the other game of the week, Texas A&M heads into South Bend to take on the Fighting Irish.

We’re backing Marcel Reed. I think he finds a way to break a 15-yard run in this one. He’s over this number in both games this year and was over in eight of nine last season (as a starter). Reed is a very good athlete and will have many opportunities to get home here, either on a designed run or through scrambling. 

Notre Dame has only played one game this season, a Week 1 loss at Miami. The Fighting Irish play a TON of man coverage, which allows for space in the dropback pass game. This game should be a close one, and the game script doesn’t matter. If Texas A&M is up and running the football well, Reed is always dangerous in the run game. If the Aggies are down and passing, he is always dangerous to scramble as well. 

If this game stays close, which I fully expect it to, I think Reed just has so many paths to success. It only takes one play, but I think he gets home easily. 

Lewis Bond > 67.5 Receiving Yards

For play #4, we are heading out west to the after-dark game as Boston College takes on Stanford.

Lewis Bond has quietly been one of the best wide receivers in college football through the first two weeks of the season. He soared over this number in both games so far, getting targeted 12 and 15 times while recording 90 and 138 yards in those games. He has been dominant. 

The matchup is not worrying at all, as Stanford is awful. Although the numbers don’t look that bad, this Boston College team is about to air the Cardinal out. Former four-star Alabama transfer Dylan Lonergan is a gunslinger, and he has found his #1 receiver in Bond. Stanford has nobody to slow him down, so he should have a lot of success again. 

In a small sample size, Bond has also proved he seems to be “script-proof”, meaning either a blowout or close game, he should produce. They won 66-10 in Week 1 and he had 12 targets, and last week they were in a close game and he had 15 targets. It doesn’t seem to matter the type of game BC finds itself in.

Makai Lemon > 85.5 Receiving Yards

In our last play of Week 3, we are backing another one of the nation’s top receivers through the first two weeks, Makai Lemon.

Lemon might actually be one of the nation’s best receivers, but he also has had two monster stat lines so far, producing 90 and 158 yards. His target share is a bit lower, but USC hasn’t really had to throw the ball much through the first two games (42 attempts total). 

This weekend, USC takes on Purdue, and hopefully the Trojans can get closer to 30 pass attempts in this one (only 18 & 24 first two games). That would be great news for Lemon, who has a 31% target share (13/42), which is insanely high.

USC is a 20-point favorite, meaning this could be the team’s closest game so far and could keep Lemon on the field more. And with his insane target share, I’m hoping USC will be passing a bit more this week.

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Where Can I Place College Football Player Props?

As mentioned earlier, college football player props are growing in popularity. However, NCAAF props are still limited to only a few operators.

Here are the best places to find college football prop bets and DFS projections:

Top CFB DFS Pick’Em Apps

We love the CFB DFS pick’em projections available at top-flight daily fantasy sites like Underdog, PrizePicks, DraftKings Pick6 and Sleeper. They offer a very similar experience to player props.

You’ll often find a lot of value and strong payouts available at legal DFS sites. These apps are also available in many states that don’t yet have legal online sports betting.

Top Sportsbooks For MLB Props & Bets

The sportsbooks and daily fantasy sites featured in this article offer more than enough options to satisfy your CFB player props needs.

You can’t go wrong with BetMGM, Caesars, and FanDuel Sportsbook when it comes to any kind of sports bet. Take a look at the following guides to see if these sportsbooks are legal in your state:

Types Of College Football Props

Let’s take a closer look at the different NCAAF prop bets that you can make. You might find some additional options at different sportsbooks, but these are pretty common.

College Football Player Prop Bet

A player prop bet is one of the most common college football betting options that you will see for each game throughout the season. The bigger games will have more markets available, while some of the smaller games might not have any at all.

NCAAF player prop bets focus on one specific player in a college football game and also on one statistical category. College football bettors will usually be betting on whether a certain player will reach a statistical milestone, or by how much.

Here are some examples:

  • Will Player X record at least 100 receiving yards in the game?
  • First player to score a touchdown: (List of all players)
  • Will Player X throw more than 2 passing touchdowns?

NCAA Football Team Prop Bet

A team college football prop bet is another option that you will commonly see offered in most college football games. This is a bet that is similar to a player prop bet, but it will involve looking at one specific team in a game.

There are times with a team prop bet that sportsbooks will put each team up against one another. Again, the bigger the game, the more team prop betting options you will see listed.

Here are some examples:

  • Will any team score at least 35 points in this college football game?
  • Team with more rushing yards: Alabama or LSU?
  • Will Ohio State record at least five sacks in the game at Michigan?

Season Long Prop Bets

A season-long prop bet is not like the first two options at all, as you won’t be focusing on just one individual college football game. Instead, you will be making a wager at the beginning of the season, and that result won’t be known until the year wraps up.

If you are a bettor that is familiar with making a “futures” bet, then this is a good NCAA football prop bet to focus on.

Some examples of a season-long prop bet might include:

  • Will any team from the “Group of Five” make it to the College Football Playoff?
  • Will two teams from the same conference reach the College Football Playoff?
  • Will a running back win the Heisman Trophy Award?

NCAA Football Prop Betting Tips

Even though betting on NCAA football props isn’t extremely difficult to do, it still isn’t one of the easiest betting types to cash in. There are some NCAA football prop betting tips that can help you be more successful, and three of those are outlined and discussed below.

Check For Injuries

One of the first things you will want to look at is the injury report. You want to look for players that might be sidelined by an injury, as that could affect how the prop bet plays out. Betting sites will be looking for this information as well, and this is where you could see some movement in the NCAA football prop betting odds.

Find The Value

As discussed above, sportsbooks continue to find and offer new college football prop betting markets. Betting sites want your action, and they will entice you to make a play by adding new props to the site.

While you should always be looking for prop bets that you can win, you also need to be looking for NCAA football prop bets that have some value. This means that you should be trying to identify a prop bet that has a good chance to cash, not necessarily just browsing for the “big games” or your favorite team.

You might have to dig deep and look really hard to find the most valuable NCAA football prop bet to make, but there will be some that are available to you. If you don’t think that a bet is valuable enough to make, then you simply need to wait for the next weekend and make a wager at that time.

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