After a 16-yard reception, Jake Butt takes a hit, suffers a leg injury and has to leave the game. (0:29)

Michigan tight end Jake Butt tore his ACL during Friday night's Orange Bowl and will need to undergo surgery, a source close to the school told ESPN's Adam Schefter.

Butt injured his right knee at the end of a 16-yard reception in the second quarter of Florida State's 33-32 victory.

Jake Butt required surgery on his right ACL after being injured in the Orange Bowl. The former Michigan tight end said Friday that he's an example of why college players should be paid. Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

Butt, a senior, won the Mackey Award as the nation's best tight end this season and was considered one of the top NFL prospects at the position heading into Friday's game. ESPN NFL draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. ranks Butt as the third-best draft-eligible tight end for the 2017 class.

Sources told ESPN's Darren Rovell that Butt has $4 million in total disability insurance, which will pay out if he can't play football again. He also has $2 million in loss of value insurance, which will start paying out if he slips past the second round of the 2017 NFL draft.

Butt's injury comes after Stanford's Christian McCaffrey and LSU's Leonard Fournette chose to sit out their bowl games to avoid potential injury and prepare for the NFL draft. Butt's teammate Jabrill Peppers, another first-round prospect, missed the Orange Bowl after tweaking his left hamstring in practice earlier in the week.

Butt tweeted an hour after the Orange Bowl that it "never once crossed my mind to sit this game out and I would never change that mindset. I play this game [because] I love it."