The Hits and Misses of Penn State's Aggressive June Recruiting Run (2024)

Months of visits and years of consistent communication between recruits and coaches paid off for Penn State football in June. The Nittany Lions began the month struggling to keep up with conference foes such as Ohio State, Oregon and even Rutgers. But they entered July with a reassuring 20 commitments and one of the nation’s top-ranked recruiting classes for the 2025 cycle.

Even with a pair of decommitments, head coach James Franklin earned nine commitments to nearly double what was once a 12-player class in mere weeks while also adding a verbal pledge from a key prospect of next year’s cycle. In doing so, the Nittany Lions jumped to No. 8 in the 247Sports Composite team rankings. Here’s an extensive breakdown of Penn State’s scorching hot June on the recruiting trail.

Who were Penn State's biggest gets of the month?

The Nittany Lions entered the month with question marks surrounding the future of multiple position groups, specifically wide receiver, quarterback and defensive line. But with six months until National Signing Day, Franklin mostly has quieted those concerns.

Franklin used his pipeline with Maryland’s McDonogh School to land 4-star wide receiver Jeff Exinor Jr. Exinor is a key addition for position coach Marques Hagans, who seeks to turn around a unit that struggled throughout the 2023 season.

Four-star defensive ends Jayden Woods, Max Granville and Cortez Harris — who committed just four days apart — provide stability on the edge for defensive line coach Deion Barnes, who has backed up a stellar first season as position coach with some major recruiting wins.

Penn State dipped into California to land its current top-ranked commitment for 2025, 4-star cornerback Daryus Dixson, and its quarterback of the future in 4-star 2026 prospect Troy Huhn.

Were there any misses?

The team’s former top linebacker recruit, 4-star DJ McClary, flipped his commitment to Rutgers on June 23, the same day Franklin earned pledges from Harris and 3-star safety Braswell Thomas. McClary had been committed since September.

Alvin Henderson appeared poised to lead Penn State’s future rushing attack but flipped his commitment to Auburn on June 21. The Nittany Lions quickly recuperated, though, replacing Henderson with 4-star Philadelphia running back Jabree Wallace-Coleman the next day.

Penn State was viewed as the favorite to land 4-star cornerback Brandon Finney, another McDonogh product, and 3-star safety Josh Johnson, but both players committed elsewhere. Finney made a verbal pledge to Oregon, while Johnson chose Louisville. The Nittany Lions also lost 4-star safety Kainoa Winston — the cousin of star defensive back Kevin Winston Jr. — to Michigan.

What were the most intriguing storylines of the commitment streak?

Franklin had earned just one commitment from a California prospect, Koa Farmer, since becoming Penn State’s head coach in 2014. He doubled that tally in June, landing Huhn and Dixson to expand the Nittany Lions’ recruiting reach to the West Coast amid the Big Ten arrival of former Pac-12 teams USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington.

Penn State’s geographic recruiting expansion didn’t end there. Woods hails from Kansas, typically uncharted territory before the Nittany Lions hired former Kansas Jayhawks’ offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki in December. Franklin coached Woods’ father, Justin, in 2007 while he was Kansas State’s offensive coordinator.

Penn State also dipped into Texas for the first time in three recruiting cycles to land Granville, a native of Sugar Land who became the program's highest-rated recruit from the Lone Star State.

What's left for Penn State recruiting?

The Nittany Lions could add several pieces before Signing Day arrives in December. Exinor and fellow blue-chip receiver Lyrick Samuel provide a good boost for Hagans and Kotelnicki, but Penn State likely wouldn’t mind adding 4-star receivers Lex Cyrus and/or Taz Williams Jr. to continue building a confident room.

The Nittany Lions bolstered their edge with Woods, Granville and Harris; all that’s left is to add some viable defensive tackles to round out Barnes’ line. Three-star lineman Randy Adiriki, a teammate of quarterback commit Bekkem Kritza, has been heavily tied to Penn State and could help address the issue.

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Seth Engle has covered Penn State football and men’s basketball for the past four years, most recently serving as the football editor of the Daily Collegian. His work has appeared in the Associated Press, Philadelphia Inquirer, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PennLive, Centre Daily Times and more. Follow him on X (or Twitter) @bigsengtweets.

The Hits and Misses of Penn State's Aggressive June Recruiting Run (2024)

FAQs

Where did the We Are Penn State chant come from? ›

On September 11, 1976, the words “We Are Penn State” were cheered for the first time in Beaver Stadium by University cheerleaders who were determined to fire up fans. While the phrase took some time to catch on, by 1981 the cheer had become a permanent part of the language of every Penn Stater.

Who are Penn State's rivals? ›

Penn State Nittany Lions football
Division titles2 (2011, 2016)
RivalriesMaryland (rivalry) Michigan (rivalry) Michigan State (rivalry) Minnesota (rivalry) Ohio State (rivalry) Pitt (rivalry) Syracuse (rivalry) West Virginia (rivalry)
Heisman winnersJohn Cappelletti – 1973
Consensus All-Americans43
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What is the record for the Penn State crowd? ›

During Franklin's 10 seasons, Penn State has recorded the four largest crowds in Beaver Stadium history and six of the top seven. Three of those games were on the 2023 schedule: 110,889: Ohio State 27, Penn State 26 (2018) 110,856: Michigan 24, Penn State 15 (2023)

What is the famous chant at Penn State? ›

While "We Are ... Penn State" has been a common chant and spoken phrase among Penn Staters for decades, it became a physical permanent fixture in 2015 when the "We Are" Sculpture, the gift of Penn State's class of 2013, was installed on the University Park campus.

What do Penn State students call themselves? ›

From the origins of cheering "We Are Penn State" to being crowned the world's best student section, generations of Penn Staters have established traditions that connect our community.

What is the largest crowd in Penn State history? ›

All-time Beaver Stadium records
RankAttendanceGame result
1110,889Penn State 26, Ohio State 27
2110,856Penn State 15, Michigan 24
3110,830Penn State 31, Iowa 0
4110,823Penn State 42, Michigan 13
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How many Penn State players are in the NFL Hall of Fame? ›

Hall of Famers by School * denotes player went to multiple schools
Akron(1)Jason Taylor
Ouachita Baptist(1)Cliff Harris
Penn State(6)Jack Ham , Franco Harris , Mike Michalske , Lenny Moore , Mike Munchak , Dave Robinson
Pennsylvania(2)Chuck Bednarik , Bert Bell
Phillips University(1)Steve Owen
153 more rows

Where are most Penn State students from? ›

58% of students are Pennsylvania residents.

Where did the We Are Marshall chant come from? ›

Marshall” Chant. “We Are… Marshall” has been around since football games in the 1980s at the university's old Fairfield Stadium, where the stadium scoreboard would light up with alternating arrows to indicate which side of the crowd should lead the cheer.

Who used "We Are First Penn State or Marshall"? ›

The real source of the phrase and cheer was told first in 1999, by noted Penn State historian, Lou Prato in the publication Town and Gown. In that article, since reposted at statecollege.com, Prato details how the Penn State cheerleaders in the mid 1970s and early 1980s created the cheer.

Who started We Are? ›

Later in the 1970s, Penn State cheerleaders began to cheer “We are Penn State,” and the chant finally caught on almost two decades after its genesis in 1948.

Who started the O chant? ›

The tradition began in 1979, in section 34 of Baltimore's lost Memorial Stadium, with a group of fans called known as the Rowdies.

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