The Oregon Ducks didn’t just land one defensive back on the recruiting trail - they stacked two of them in rapid-fire fashion, and the latest addition is Hayden Stepp.
Stepp, a blue-chip corner from Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas, announced his commitment to Oregon over Alabama and Cal. Rivals lists him as the No. 44 recruit nationally, a four-star prospect and the top player in Nevada in the 2027 class, while ESPN gives him a five-star grade.
“(I'm) somebody that's ready to work,” Stepp said after his commitment. “I'm always going to compete, and I'm excited to be there .. I'm excited to work and make plays for the Oregon family.
For Oregon, this one had been building for a while. Stepp had long been linked to the Ducks, and his official visit on June 12 gave the staff a major boost. A reunion with Oregon freshman safety Jett Washington, his former teammate at Bishop Gorman, only added to the momentum.
Dan Lanning’s program has been especially hot on the defensive side lately, and Stepp arrived on the heels of another cornerback pickup. Just moments before his announcement, Oregon added four-star corner Tae Walden Jr. to the class.
Stepp said Walden even gave him a heads-up.
"At The Opening, he kind of told me to slide to Oregon," Stepp said of his conversation with Walden. "So I had some idea of where he was going."
At 6-foot-4, Stepp brings size that stands out immediately. He’s long, physical at the line and not easy to move around in man coverage. There’s also a chance he could eventually slide to safety, but his competitiveness at corner is already clear.
He won’t need much of an adjustment to the college game, either. Stepp has been starting as a freshman at one of the country’s premier high school programs, and he’s viewed as a strong tackler in space with the kind of traits that could make him an early contributor for Oregon, much like Brandon Finney Jr.
The back-to-back commitments gave Oregon’s class another jolt. The Ducks started the day at No. 9 in the Rivals team rankings, then climbed to No. 4 after the additions, leaving them with the top class in the Big Ten.
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