Andre Jordan Jr. Could Be Auburns New Answer At Corner

Andre Jordan Jr.'s arrival from UCLA promises to bolster Auburn's secondary as they navigate the loss of starting cornerbacks.

When Auburn went shopping in the transfer portal for cornerbacks, Andre Jordan Jr. stood out from the pack right away.

The Tigers needed help after losing both starting corners to the portal, and Jordan arrived with the kind of résumé Auburn could trust. He came over from UCLA after earning All-Big 10 Honorable Mention honors last season, and he brought three seasons of Power Four experience with him. Auburn cornerbacks coach DeMarcus Van Dyke made it clear why that mattered.

“I like the comfort he brings to the room,” Van Dyke said. “He played a lot of games, started a lot of games, so he brings some experience to that room also.”

Jordan, listed at 6-foot-1 and 185 pounds, was never the flashy recruit coming out of Federal Way, Washington. 247Sports rated him a three-star prospect and the No. 1,055 overall player in the country. He signed with Oregon State, spent two seasons there, then moved on to UCLA, where his junior year turned into his best season yet.

Last season, Jordan started eight of his 12 games for the Bruins and emerged as one of the steadier pieces in the secondary. He finished with 19 tackles and 10 pass deflections in 2025. Pro Football Focus gave him a coverage grade of 74, a number that would have led Auburn corners with 10 or more snaps played last season.

That production is part of why Auburn sees him as a starter right away. Jordan and senior Rayshawn Pleasant are the main veterans in a cornerback room that had to be rebuilt, and Jordan has already made a strong impression this spring. His name kept coming up after scrimmages as Auburn’s secondary moved from uncertainty to something closer to a strength.

Van Dyke pointed to Jordan’s length as another major selling point. Auburn has loaded up on bigger corners, and Jordan fits that mold.

His wingspan helps him in man coverage, and he didn’t look overmatched against Auburn’s long, athletic receivers during spring practice. Van Dyke said that same trait showed up against top Big 10 competition last season.

“Just watching his game against Ohio State last year, Indiana,” Van Dyke said. “Man, he was in the guys’ face, pressing those guys and attacking those guys and that’s what stood out to me.”

With Jay Crawford and Kayin Lee no longer in the program, Auburn needs Jordan to keep stepping forward. So far, he has done exactly that.

His quiet personality hasn’t been the headline. His play has.

“When you talk to the guy, he’s kind of quiet, don’t say much,” Van Dyke said of Jordan, “but his play on the field speaks volumes.”

That’s the kind of profile Auburn wanted, and teammates are already buying in. Pleasant said Jordan has brought a veteran edge to the room and believes the best is still ahead.

“He’s gonna be really special for us,” Pleasant said of Jordan. “He’s a real scrappy guy, real veteran.

He’s played against the best guys in the country. All he’s gotta do is play his game, and he’s gonna be really good.”

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