FRISCO — Texas and Texas A&M football players participated Sunday in the fourth practice of the 2026 Shrine Bowl, an opportunity to show scouts from all 32 NFL teams why they should be drafted. Athletes have the chance to compete with and against the best of the best while talking to up-and-coming coaches from NFL teams.

They’ll have one more day of practice Monday before taking each other on Tuesday in the East-West Shrine Bowl game.

Here have been the standouts over the last few days of practice:

Ethan Burke has arguably been the best edge rusher over the past weekend at the Shrine Bowl. Although he didn’t display great bend, his explosive strength was on full display during one-on-ones. One of his best reps Sunday came when he bull-rushed Florida State tackle Micah Pettis five yards back, clearly winning the rep.

Burke’s 6-foot-6, 269-pound frame was on clear display during live run throughs as well. As shown throughout multiple clutch run stops in his career, the former Longhorn can hold the edge and was stout against the West team offense. Draft analysts have differing opinions of Burke, but continued strong play might raise his stock.

Tyler Onyedim’s quick get-off and play strength proved a problem for opposing offensive linemen. He’s light (6-foot-3, 290) for an interior defensive lineman and had moments where he looked lost in the run game. But in turn, he excelled when pass rushing the quarterbacks. In one instance, he he hit a spin move that left Wake Forest offensive lineman Fa’alili Fa’amoe grasping for air. And when he paired with Burke in drills, the two wreaked havoc.

Although Jack Endries suffered an ankle injury that’ll keep him out for the rest of the Shrine Bowl, the tight end was repeatedly discussed as one of the more impressive prospects by scouts and reporters alike.

Endries didn’t make any huge splash plays during his time at practice, which is exactly why he stood out. All he did was consistently get open, box out defenders and show solid hands at the catch point. Although his reps as a blocker didn’t blow anyone away, he looked incredibly smooth and natural as a pass catcher.

• Oregon CB Jadon Canady and Toledo CB Avery Smith were two of the most consistent performers. Canady in particular was incredibly sticky in coverage.

• Iowa WR Kaden Wetjen only had 151 receiving yards this past season, but the shiftiness he showed as a kick returner made him one of the West quarterbacks’ favorite targets.

• USC LB Eric Gentry (6-foot-6, 221) looks like he should be preparing for the NBA draft. He uses his length to disrupt passing lanes and still plays with physicality despite his low weight.