Auburn Faces A Tense Finish For Coveted Athlete Tae Walden Jr

The Oregon Ducks are making a strong push to land four-star athlete Tae Walden Jr. in what has become a heated contest against several top SEC programs.

Oregon’s push for four-star athlete Tae Walden Jr. reaches a decision point on Wednesday, July 1, when he announces his commitment live on the Rivals YouTube channel.

Walden, a standout from Collierville, Tennessee, is choosing among Auburn, LSU, Georgia, Ole Miss and Oregon. The Ducks got the last official visit, with Walden in Eugene to see Dan Lanning and the staff on June 19. According to 247Sports, he also made trips to his finalists, along with Clemson and Missouri, between May and June.

The 2027 prospect brings a rare two-way resume. Per 247Sports, Walden is the No. 4 athlete in the country and the No. 56 overall recruit in the class.

On the field, he produced across the board as a junior, piling up 42 catches for 912 yards and 10 touchdowns at wide receiver. He also made noise on defense with 5 interceptions, 17 pass breakups and 28 total tackles, according to MaxPreps.

Oregon’s interest appears tied to that versatility. Defensive coordinator Chris Hampton visited Walden in the spring, a sign the Ducks may see him fitting best as a defensive back. Even so, his offensive background gives him another layer of danger if he ends up making plays with the ball in his hands on defense.

Walden’s athletic profile also shows up on special teams. He has the burst to turn short touches into scores, the instincts to bring interceptions back for touchdowns, and the kind of open-field juice that shows up on kickoff and punt returns as well.

Oregon is in the middle of another loaded recruiting cycle under Lanning. The Ducks already have 21 commitments in the 2027 class, which ranks No. 6 nationally and No. 1 in the Big Ten, according to 247Sports. That group includes Dakota Guerrant, Rashad Streets, Semaj Stanford, Will Mencl, Toa Satele, Cameron Pritchett, Zane Rowe, CaDarius McMiller, Josiah Molden, Cameron Wagner, Gus Corsair, Avery Michael, Malakai Taufoou, Brandon Lockley, Anthony Cartwright III, Achilles Reyna, Josh Christensen, Lex Mailangi, Sam Ngata, George VanSandt and Malachi Garlington.

The Ducks’ recent recruiting momentum has already shown up on the field. Freshmen Jordon Davison, Dierre Hill Jr., Dakorien Moore and Brandon Finney Jr. made an immediate impact for Oregon in 2025, and the 2026 class was ranked No. 2 in the nation by 247Sports.

Oregon still has more July business ahead. Four-star offensive lineman Gecova Doyal and four-star cornerback Hayden Stepp remain on the board, while five-star receiver Xavier Sabb is set to commit on July 3, according to Rivals. Five-star offensive lineman Ismael Camara is also still uncommitted.

In Other News...

Auburn Just Sent A Loud Recruiting Message Across Alabama

Auburns early work in the 2027 cycle is already turning heads, and not just on the Plains. Under first-year coach Alex Golesh, the Tigers have landed three commitments from the top 10 prospects in Alabama, a haul that stands out nationally and points to a more aggressive in-state approach than Auburn has shown in recent cycles. It is the kind of start that can change how the rest of the state views the program, especially when those commitments come while the class is still taking shape.

For Auburn, the bigger takeaway is the message behind the names. Golesh and his staff are casting a wide net, and the Tigers are making real progress in the kind of recruiting battles that usually decide who owns Alabama talent in the long run. There is still a long way to go in this class, but Auburn has already put itself in position to make noise with more of the states best prospects as the cycle develops. [Read more 🡒]

Jackson Arnold's Next Chapter Could Put Hugh Freeze On Trial

Jackson Arnolds path at Auburn has already become part of a bigger argument about quarterback development under Hugh Freeze, and the latest version of that debate comes from Ryan Brown of Next Round Live. Brown pointed to Arnolds stretches of frustration at both Auburn and Oklahoma, where the quarterback never seemed to settle in cleanly, and framed the conversation around whether his next stop could finally give him a better chance to look like the player people expected.

Dan Mullen at UNLV is the name now being attached to that possibility, which naturally shifts the spotlight back onto Freeze. Arnolds issues with sacks and his struggles in clutch moments are already part of the evaluation, and if he looks more comfortable elsewhere, the conversation around what went wrong in Auburn only gets louder. For Freeze, it is the kind of storyline that does not go away quickly, because it asks whether the problem was ever just the quarterback. [Read more 🡒]