Notre Dame Suddenly Needs Jaylen Sneed To Deliver On His Promise

Can Jaylen Sneed transform into a dominant force for Notre Dame's defense in his final year?

Notre Dame’s linebacker room is crowded with talent, but Jaylen Sneed still stands out.

A former five-star recruit and the No. 2 linebacker in the country in the 2022 class by On3, Sneed is heading into his fifth and final season in South Bend with a chance to make his biggest imprint yet. The South Carolina native has spent years flashing as a pass rusher. Now the challenge is bigger: become an every-down linebacker and finish his college run the way his talent always suggested he could.

Sneed’s career line tells part of the story: 107 tackles, 12.5 TFL, 6.5 sacks and 4 FF. The bigger development came in 2025, when he played in all 12 games and started the first two, at Miami and against Texas A&M in the home opener. He logged 313 snaps, with his heaviest workload coming against Syracuse (40), Stanford (39), Miami (35) and USC (31).

His best outing of the season came against the Trojans, when he posted six total tackles, three pressures and two run stops. He also turned in a strong performance at Pitt, finishing with six total tackles and one pressure.

More importantly, last season showed a shift in how Notre Dame used him. From 2022 through 2024, Sneed was largely deployed as a pass-rush specialist - explosive, but not always steady.

In 2025, he started to look like a true off-ball linebacker who could help on first and second down instead of only showing up in obvious passing situations.

That progression carried into spring. The 6-2, 227-pound linebacker took exclusive reps as the starting Will linebacker with the No. 1 defense because of injuries elsewhere in the room, and it was described as the best spring he has had since arriving on campus.

He was disciplined, assignment-sound and allowed his athleticism to show through. Sneed started alongside Jaiden Ausberry, and his work from March through April suggested he can handle a larger, more consistent role.

Now comes the next test: carrying that spring momentum into summer workouts and fall camp. This is his last ride with the Irish, and the stakes around the defense are high. Sneed is one of the few players on the roster who has played in multiple playoff games and the national championship game in 2024, and that experience matters.

The expectations for 2026 are straightforward. Notre Dame has plenty of talent in the linebacker room, but Sneed still hasn’t fully matched the recruiting hype that has already started to show up for Drayk Bowen, Kyngstonn Viliamu-Asa and Jaiden Ausberry.

The flashes have been there. When he’s locked in, he looks like the explosive player Notre Dame hoped it was getting.

The difference now is consistency.

With Viliamu-Asa working back from the ACL injury he suffered in November of 2025, Sneed should be one of the main third-down pass rush options. Outside of Viliamu-Asa, he brings the most experience in that role.

Ausberry is likely to start at Will, and Bowen appears set at Mike, but the bigger picture is that Sneed should be on the field a lot. The expectation is that he plays well over 350 snaps this season, especially if Notre Dame plays a 15 to 16 game schedule.

A good season for Sneed would be the one where everything finally clicks. He has already shown he can pressure quarterbacks.

He has also flashed as an off-ball linebacker, including dating back to the 2024 playoffs. Last season, that combination started to come together.

In 2026, the goal is to make it complete and become an impact player on all three downs.

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