
It may be the heart of the offseason for college football, but recruiting never stops. And starting Friday, things are about to get fun.
Welcome to June official visits.
Outside of December, June is the most chaotic, exciting month of the year for recruiting as prospects across the country head off to official visits and start to narrow down their lists. Commitments are coming. Dominoes are falling. And the drama is just getting started.
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With that in mind, some recruiting thoughts as we head into Friday and kick off the summer.
Note: All rankings are from the 247Sports Composite.
1. It’s a big year for USC coach Lincoln Riley as the Trojans look to bounce back from a 7-6 record in 2024 and prove that they can still be relevant on the national stage. Riley has been recruiting like someone who knows what’s at stake. The Trojans currently have the nation’s No. 1 class, with 16 four-stars among their 26 commitments.
They have their quarterback in place after flipping four-star Jonas Williams from Oregon in February and have found some early success with top prospects on defense — by far their biggest need. Of USC’s six top-100 commits, four play defense — corners Elbert Hill and Brandon Lockhart and defensive linemen Jaimeon Winfield and Simote Katoanga. Now it’s Riley’s job to hang onto them. Hill and Winfield are from Ohio and Texas, respectively.
2. The dominoes have started to fall at quarterback, with seven of the nation’s top 10 QBs already committed. Five-star California native Ryder Lyons and four-star Alabama native Landon Duckworth are the highest uncommitted prospects at the position. Lyons has kept a low profile but is expected to officially visit USC, Oregon and BYU this month. Duckworth has a top five consisting of Auburn, Florida State, Ole Miss, South Carolina and North Carolina.
3. Speaking of North Carolina, it was fascinating to see Tar Heels coach Bill Belichick go on his inaugural tour of high schools across the state at the beginning of the year as he got acclimated to recruiting for the first time. But since then, UNC has had almost no traction with in-state prospects. Of the Tar Heels’ 15 commits, only two are from North Carolina. Three are from California.
One high-level in-state coach said Belichick and UNC came through his high school in the spring, but otherwise, it has been “radio silent on their end, honestly.” Maybe it’s too early to question arguably the greatest football coach of all time. And if UNC wins games, Belichick can recruit however he wants. But the Tar Heel state has a decent amount of talent this year, and UNC does not appear to be in position to take advantage of it.
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4. One team that has resonated with talent in North Carolina? Notre Dame. Marcus Freeman and the Fighting Irish have landed commitments from three of the top 11 prospects in North Carolina, more than any other program.
“It definitely is a trend that I’ve noticed,” said four-star linebacker Thomas Davis Jr., a Matthews, N.C., native and the son of former Carolina Panthers legend Thomas Davis. “It really just goes to show what kind of program (Notre Dame) is and when you can just truly show a kid what you want to bring to the table and why you think they’re a fit for your school and they get the opportunity to choose that on their own, Notre Dame is a special place. So a lot of these kids, I think, see that and want to be a part of it.”
5. Davis, who committed to Notre Dame in November, recently landed an offer from Georgia — where his father starred in the early 2000s. The younger Davis is heading to Athens on Friday for an official visit with the Bulldogs — the only other school he plans to visit outside of Notre Dame — and knows how much that will mean to his dad.
“I know (Georgia) has been coming after me,” he said. “But I still feel pretty locked in with Notre Dame.”
Blessed to receive a scholarship to Georgia.🐶 Thank you @CoachSchuUGA !@andycapone_whs @BigDubFootball @RivalsFriedman @Rivals @samspiegs @ChadSimmons_ @On3Recruits @247Sports @247recruiting @AnnaH247 pic.twitter.com/HXrJEqrSJu
— Thomas Davis Jr (@ThomasDavisJr14) May 8, 2025
6. Clemson is hot again, both on the field — the Tigers are viewed as a likely College Football Playoff team — and on the recruiting trail. Dabo Swinney currently has 15 commits in the Class of 2026, including 10 blue-chippers, for an average player rating of 90.65. The Tigers have five top-200 prospects and two quarterbacks already committed in four-star Tait Reynolds and three-star Brock Bradley. Don’t be surprised if there are more fireworks in the coming days. Clemson’s only official visit weekend of the summer begins today.
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7. Looking for an interesting prospect to follow? How about four-star wide receiver Messiah Hampton? Hampton is the nation’s No. 100 recruit, No. 11 receiver and the highest-rated prospect out of New York since 2019. He is committing on June 13 and is down to seven schools: Ohio State, Penn State, Oregon, Michigan, Miami, Syracuse and Georgia. Fran Brown and the in-state Orange may be fighting an uphill battle considering the rest of Hampton’s contenders, but kudos to Brown for making the final cut for a rare top-100 in-state prospect.
8. What’s going on with LSU and Alabama? The two SEC powers lead the nation in average player rating at 95.18 and 94.28, respectively, but LSU has just nine commits in its class and Alabama has just five. Neither has a quarterback, either. Expect Brian Kelly and Kalen DeBoer to change that, but the pressure is especially on for Kelly, who lost out on five-star quarterback Bryce Underwood at the last minute a year ago and didn’t sign a quarterback in the 2025 recruiting cycle. The Tigers are in good shape this year with Garrett Nussmeier, but Kelly knows he’ll need to start looking ahead soon.
9. Ohio State, the reigning national champ, also doesn’t yet have a quarterback in its 2026 class. The Buckeyes are in good shape for the foreseeable future with former five-stars Julian Sayin and Tavien St. Clair both on the roster, but most programs like to take a quarterback every year. The Buckeyes have the nation’s No. 3 class with 13 commits, 11 of whom are blue-chippers.
10. It has long been presumed that Billy Napier’s recruiting has helped the Florida coach keep his job, especially after he signed five-star quarterback DJ Lagway in the Class of 2024 and finished the 2025 cycle with five top-100 prospects. Coaches can always sell hope. But the Gators have been largely nonexistent in this 2026 cycle so far. Florida has more decommits (three) than it does commits (two). The class right now consists of four-star quarterback Will Griffin from Tampa, Fla., and three-star defensive lineman Jamir Perez from Cleveland.
11. Only two of the top 20 players in Florida are currently committed to an in-state program: four-star linebacker Jordan Campbell and four-star cornerback Jaelen Waters have both given Miami a verbal pledge. Florida State has three of the state’s top 50 players, but only one in the top 30, four-star athlete Efrem White.
12. Arizona State appears to be receiving a nice little bump from its College Football Playoff appearance a season ago. Coach Kenny Dillingham’s 2026 class has an average player rating of 87.75, which is on pace to be the program’s highest since the Class of 2021. Four-star quarterback Jake Fette, the No. 107 prospect overall and No. 10 quarterback, threw for nearly 2,500 yards and 32 touchdowns against just one interception as a high school junior in El Paso, Texas. He also rushed for 589 yards and 11 touchdowns on a 7.6-yard average.
13. Typically, the earlier a recruit issues a commitment, the harder it is for a school to hang onto him. But that doesn’t seem to be the case with Texas and five-star quarterback Dia Bell, who has taken on the role of helping recruit talent to Austin around him. Bell, from South Florida, is likely the heir apparent to Arch Manning and committed to the Longhorns almost a year ago. He hasn’t wavered in that commitment and is expected to take just one official visit, to Austin in three weeks.
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14. Five-star offensive lineman Immanuel Iheanacho, at No. 6 overall, is the nation’s highest-rated uncommitted prospect. Iheanacho plays high school football at Georgetown Preparatory School in Baltimore and is down to seven schools: Maryland, Oregon, Penn State, LSU, Alabama, Texas A&M and Auburn. He has most recently teased Oregon and LSU on social media, but he isn’t announcing a decision until August. Just how good is he? The 6-foot-6 1/2, 345-pounder casually squatted 600 pounds a month ago.
600lb Squat PR @EOLiddy pic.twitter.com/hObVAZVkva
— Immanuel Iheanacho ✭ (@immanueli24) April 30, 2025
15. For those of us who love to follow recruiting, welcome to one of the most fun months on the recruiting calendar. But good luck to all the recruiting, personnel and coaching staffers who, starting Friday, will be consumed by visit itineraries, photo shoots and campus tours. They probably won’t sleep until July. As one staffer put it after the chaos of last June: “I was a tired dude.”
(Photo of Dabo Swinney: Ken Ruinard / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)
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