Ohio State’s secondary conversation naturally starts with replacing Caleb Downs, but one of the most important answers might actually come from a different spot on the field. Earl Little Jr., the Florida State transfer, gives the Buckeyes a veteran defensive back with real production, real versatility, and the kind of experience that can stabilize a room during a transition year.
A former Florida State safety, Little is listed at 6-foot-1, 199 pounds, and started all 12 games in 2025, finishing with 76 tackles, four interceptions, two forced fumbles, and second-team All-ACC honors. He also led the Seminoles in tackles and interceptions.
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What makes Little especially important for Ohio State is not just that he is productive, but also where he can line up. Ohio State’s defensive structure has leaned heavily on the nickel spot in recent years, and that role has become less of a pure corner job and more of a hybrid assignment that has to handle coverage, run support, and post-snap movement.
Ohio State’s 2026 defensive outlook has consistently pointed to Little as a likely nickel option, with the Buckeyes expected to move back toward more true three-safety looks with Jaylen McClain and Terry Moore also in the mix. That matters because the nickel is often the stress point in modern college defenses. It is the position offenses attack with slot receivers, tight ends, quick game, motion, and run fit conflicts. If Ohio State gets high-level play there, it raises the ceiling of the entire unit.
Little’s background fits that job well. He has the ability to play multiple spots in the secondary, along with quick processing, physicality, and the cover skills to handle corner, nickel, or safety responsibilities. That kind of skill set is exactly what Ohio State needs from a nickel defender in a defense that wants disguise and flexibility on the back end. He is not just a body filling a depth chart spot. He is a player who can help Ohio State stay multiple without sacrificing toughness.
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The biggest thing Little brings to Ohio State is reliability. Replacing a star like Downs is never about one player doing the same job. It is about distributing value across the secondary and making sure the structure still works. Little helps do that.
If he settles in at nickel the way many expect, Ohio State gets an experienced, productive defender in one of the most demanding positions on the field, and that could end up being one of the most important moves of the Buckeyes offseason.





















