Arik Armstead may be wearing Jacksonville Jaguars colors now, but the former Oregon standout is still showing up in the middle of the college football conversation.
At Sack Summit in Las Vegas, Armstead linked up with USC sophomore defensive lineman Jahkeem Stewart, giving the rising Trojan a chance to work alongside one of the NFL’s most accomplished pass rushers. The event is built around the idea of “iron sharpening iron,” bringing together top college and pro players to trade techniques and mental approaches.
Armstead posted photos from the clinic with Stewart, and the USC defender wasn’t the only familiar face in the mix. Current Oregon defensive lineman Bear Alexander was also there, appearing in a few of the images as well.
The summit is hosted by NFL veterans Maxx Crosby, Cameron Jordan and Von Miller, and it has the same kind of cross-position, cross-level feel as Tight End University, the annual gathering run by George Kittle, Travis Kelce and former tight end Greg Olsen.
For Stewart, the chance to learn from Armstead matters. He’s entering his sophomore season and is eligible for the 2028 NFL Draft, while Alexander is already on the radar for the 2027 NFL Draft. Both are still early in their careers, and both are trying to absorb as much as they can from players who’ve already made the jump.
Stewart backed up the buzz in 2025, when he was named a PFF Freshman All-American. He made a quick imprint on USC’s defensive front with 18 tackles, 7.5 tackles for loss totaling 27 yards, 1.5 sacks, one interception, one fumble recovery and one quarterback hurry.
Alexander, meanwhile, came to Oregon in 2025 after previously being a Trojan, and he wasted little time making himself useful for the Ducks. He finished that season with a career-best 50 total tackles, including 18 solo stops, matched a career high with 6.5 tackles for loss and added a sack, two fumble recoveries and a pass breakup.
Oregon and USC will be back on the same field in 2026, with the Ducks opening Big Ten play by heading to the L.A. Memorial Coliseum to face the Trojans on Sept. 26 in Los Angeles.
Armstead, for his part, is still very much in the middle of his own NFL story. He worked through a hand injury late in the 2025-26 season and still produced at a high level, finishing with 41 quarterback pressures in 12 games, the third-highest total among defensive tackles during that span.
Ducks fans have plenty to point to when they look back at Armstead’s career. He was named the 2025 Walter Payton Man of the Year at NFL Honors, becoming the first Duck ever to win the award. The honor recognizes both on-field performance and community impact, and it’s widely viewed as one of the league’s most prestigious.
A Sacramento native, Armstead spent nine seasons with the 49ers and started 97 of 116 regular-season games. He also started all 12 of his playoff games in San Francisco, including Super Bowl LIV against the Kansas City Chiefs.
He signed a three-year, $43.5 million deal with the Jaguars in 2024, closing the book on his West Coast run.
Before the NFL, Armstead played three seasons at Oregon from 2012 to 2014, with his college resume highlighted by a career-high nine tackles in the College Football Playoff National Championship against Ohio State. San Francisco selected him No. 17 overall in the 2015 draft.
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