Veteran center declares for the 2026 NFL Draft after anchoring Penn State through chaos

Penn State center Nick Dawkins declares for the 2026 NFL Draft after anchoring the Longhorns through James Franklin’s firing and a chaotic 2025 season. He allowed just two sacks in 2024 and chose to stay when he could have left.

Nick Wright College Football Writer
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Sep 6, 2025; University Park, Pennsylvania, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions quarterback Drew Allar (15) lines up behind center Nick Dawkins (53) during the third quarter against the Florida International Panthers at Beaver Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matthew O'Haren-Imagn Images
Mandatory Credit: Matthew O'Haren-Imagn Images

Veteran Penn State center Nick Dawkins announced Sunday that he’s declaring for the 2026 NFL Draft, officially closing the book on one of the steadier, more consequential offensive line careers of the past decade in Happy Valley. Dawkins didn’t suit up for the Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl—a quiet but telling signal that his focus has shifted to the next level.

For Penn State, this one lands heavier than most.

Dawkins could have left a year ago

Dawkins had the option to leave after the 2024 season. He had tape. He had experience. He had momentum. Instead, he came back for one more year.

An Allentown, Pennsylvania native and former Parkland standout, Dawkins returned for another season and became the center of gravity for a program that would soon be tested far beyond football. He started every game of the last two seasons at center, appeared in 54 games overall, and provided the kind of stability that offensive lines desperately need but rarely get.

In 2024, Dawkins allowed just two sacks all season, anchoring protections and setting the tone for an offense trying to grow into itself. That level of consistency is rare at any level. It’s coveted at the next one.

Leadership when everything fell apart

Dawkins’ impact wasn’t confined to Saturdays.

He was awarded the Allstate Wuerffel Trophy, recognizing exemplary community service and leadership on and off the field. The honor fit. Dawkins has long been one of the program’s most respected voices, not because he demanded attention, but because he earned trust through action.

That leadership was tested in 2025.

After a disastrous 3-3 start that culminated in James Franklin’s firing, Penn State could have fractured. Players could have checked out. The season could have spiraled into irrelevance. Instead, Dawkins leaned in. As a team captain, he spoke openly about the guilt players felt, about accountability, and about what it meant to finish the season the right way.

The result? A three-game win streak to close the year. Not a playoff run. Not redemption in the national sense. But proof of resilience inside a shaken locker room.

Dawkins helped hold that together when it would have been easier to let it collapse.

What Penn State loses

Dawkins becomes the fifth Nittany Lion to declare for the draft, joining Zakee Wheatley, Vega Ioane, Zane Durant, and Drew Shelton. That list matters because it speaks to the scale of transition Penn State is navigating all at once.

Replacing Dawkins won’t just be about finding another center. It will be about replacing a voice, a stabilizer, and a presence who understood how to lead when circumstances turned hostile. Centers who start, stay healthy, and avoid negative plays build NFL careers. Dawkins checks all of those boxes.

The right time to go

For Dawkins, the timing is right. He’s proven durability. He’s shown leadership through chaos. He stayed when he could have left and only left after finishing what he started. That matters in NFL evaluation rooms.

Penn State will move forward. It always does. But Nick Dawkins leaves behind more than starts and accolades. He leaves behind a blueprint for what leadership still looks like in a sport that’s changing fast—steady, accountable, and present when it’s hardest to be.