Penn State Just Took Another Painful Recruiting Hit

Penn State football faces challenges as top recruits reconsider their commitments amidst recent coaching changes.

Penn State’s 2027 recruiting class took another hit this week, and this one stings because of where the loss came from on the board.

Running back Aiden Gibson, one of the Nittany Lions’ highest-rated commitments, has flipped to Rutgers. That came a day after Pittsburgh-area receiver Khalil Taylor, another former Penn State pledge, announced he was headed to Nebraska on Monday, July 6. The back-to-back defections leave Penn State with two more Big Ten rivals added to the list of teams pulling talent away from the class.

Gibson had been the third highest-rated recruit in Penn State’s class and was ranked behind only Ohio cornerback Kei-Shjuan Telfair and Philadelphia defensive lineman Stanley Montgomery. The 6-foot-1, 212-pound athlete from Woodruff, S.C., is the nation’s No. 6 running back and No. 103 overall, according to 247Sports. He’s a 4-star prospect, and his departure drops the Nittany Lions’ class to 21 members.

There’s also a timing wrinkle here: Gibson reportedly will reclassify to the 2026 recruiting class and join Rutgers this summer. Last fall, he piled up 1,611 rushing yards at 7.9 per carry and scored 21 touchdowns. He also added 24 catches for 387 yards, averaging 16.1 yards per reception.

Taylor’s move was another blow. He had originally committed to Penn State and head coach James Franklin last year before leaving the class a day after Franklin’s October firing. According to the 247Sports Composite, Taylor was the highest-rated uncommitted prospect in Pennsylvania’s 2027 class before choosing Nebraska.

The losses also show up in the rankings. With Gibson gone, Penn State sits 20th nationally in the 247Sports team recruiting rankings, 22nd in Rivals, and was 24th by ESPN before the latest departure.

For Matt Campbell, the early stretch of his first full recruiting class in State College has been a grind. Penn State has landed only one of the state’s top 20 prospects so far, with Montgomery the lone in-state headliner committed to the Lions according to 247Sports.

Gibson is now the fourth player to leave Penn State’s recruiting class in recent months. He joins receiver Jamir Dean, who flipped to Georgia, and cornerbacks Semajay Robinson, who went to Virginia, and Zachary Gleason, who chose West Virginia.

In Other News...

Penn State Just Made Its Punter Battle A Lot More Interesting

Penn States special teams picture got a little more crowded with the official addition of a punter from the 2026 recruiting class, a move that gives the Nittany Lions another name to sort through before training camp opens. The roster now sits at 107 players, and the program expects to be at least 110 by the time camp begins, so this is part of a larger late-summer reshaping as the staff fills out the depth chart.

The addition also adds a fresh layer to a position that rarely settles quietly, especially when a newcomer arrives after originally signing elsewhere. Penn State will let the competition play out in camp, and the outcome could hinge on how quickly the staff trusts the new arrival alongside the other options already in the mix. For now, the only certainty is that the punter battle is no longer a simple one. [Read more 🡒]

Matt Campbell Just Hit A Troubling Penn State Recruiting Reality

Penn States 2027 recruiting class has given the program an early look at how hard the road can be in a bigger, deeper Big Ten. The group sits 20th nationally and seventh in the league, with only two top-100 commitments, a reminder that the Nittany Lions are still trying to stack up against programs that have turned recruiting into a year-round arms race. For a staff led by Matt Campbell, the challenge is not just identifying talent, but doing it fast enough to keep pace in an increasingly crowded Northeast and Mid-Atlantic market.

Campbell has long carried a reputation as a developer more than a splashy recruiter, and that matters when the margins are this thin. Penn State can still win plenty of battles on coaching and fit, but the conference landscape has changed around it, with Oregon, USC and a better-funded UCLA all raising the bar for what it takes to stay near the top. The bigger question now is whether the Nittany Lions can turn that reality into a stronger in-state and regional pitch before the class starts to harden. [Read more 🡒]

Penn States Quarterback Situation Suddenly Feels Bigger Than Ever

Rocco Bechts offseason has become about more than simply getting ready for a new chapter at Penn State. After playing through shoulder issues last season at Iowa State, he is now in a specialized training program designed to improve durability and help keep him on the field, the kind of behind-the-scenes work that can matter just as much as anything he does in a huddle. Strength coach Reid Kagy and head coach Matt Campbell have both pointed to Bechts toughness and leadership, traits that helped him keep going even when he was not at full strength.

For Penn State, the appeal is obvious. Becht is expected to lead the offense, and the Nittany Lions are counting on him to bring both steadiness and production to a position where health can change everything in a hurry. The programs attention to his body tells you how much is riding on his availability, and why every step of this offseason matters as the team tries to avoid a situation where the depth chart suddenly becomes part of the story. [Read more 🡒]