David D.J. Jacobs, Jr. may already be committed to Ohio State, but the race to keep him there is still very much alive.
The consensus No. 1 edge rusher in the 2027 class has been tied to the Buckeyes for months, yet two other national powers are still working hard to pry him loose before signing day. Miami is one of them, and Georgia could end up making this a three-team fight before it’s done.
Jacobs first gave his verbal pledge to Ohio State near the end of the 2025 calendar year, and he has not backed off since. He also had another strong official visit to Columbus and is scheduled to be back for a couple games this fall.
Defensive line coach Larry Johnson played a major role in landing the commitment, which came just before Ohio State’s College Football Playoff matchup with Miami. Jacobs pointed to the program’s stability and its development track record as part of the appeal.
Still, the Hurricanes have never really gone away. In fact, they were viewed as the front-runner earlier in the process before Ohio State surged late and landed his commitment in December. Now Miami is trying to remind him why it was in the lead in the first place.
“They are going to push like hell,” Rivals recruiting insider Steve Wiltfong said of the Hurricanes’ effort to flip Jacobs from the Buckeyes.
Miami has already shown it can pull off high-end flips this cycle, too. The Hurricanes have landed No. 2 cornerback Donte Wright from Georgia, No. 5 edge rusher Jaiden Bryant from LSU, and No. 12 cornerback Ai’King Hall from Oregon.
Georgia is also in the mix, and the Bulldogs bring a different kind of pressure to the table. Jacobs is a double legacy prospect with deep family ties to Athens.
His father, David Jacobs, played defensive tackle at Georgia from 1999 to 2001 under Mark Richt, who is also Jacobs’ godfather. His mother, Desiree, played basketball at UGA.
Those connections matter, especially with Georgia’s recent reputation for developing defensive linemen and edge talent into NFL-ready players under Smart’s leadership. That gives the Bulldogs a real case as the summer evaluation period ramps up.
For now, though, Ohio State still has the commitment. The question is whether it can keep it. Jacobs remains the No. 1 edge rusher in the country, according to Rivals, ESPN, and 247Sports analysts, and he has made it clear his recruitment is not finished yet.
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