Penn State’s wide receiver room is in a spot where the names at the top are getting more attention than the depth behind them, and that’s exactly why Amarion Jackson is worth knowing now.
With Matt Campbell taking over, the Nittany Lions are leaning on a wave of Iowa State transfers to help shape the first season of the new era. At receiver, that group includes senior Chase Sowell and junior Brett Eskildsen, plus redshirt freshmen Zay Robinson and Karon Brookins. Koby Howard is another returning name in the mix, but Jackson is the freshman drawing the kind of buzz that makes him impossible to ignore.
CBS Sports recently put together its “Big Ten freshmen to watch in 2026” list, and Jackson made the cut.
“A spring riser for the Nittany Lions, Jackson's pushing to crack the rotation at wide receiver in Happy Valley ahead of Matt Campbell's first campaign,” Brad Crawford wrote.
“Assuming Penn State's starters are Iowa State transfers [Sowell and Eskildsen] and sophomore [Howard], Jackson hopes to crack that next tier of potential targets for new quarterback Rocco Becht, who was the Cyclones' previous starter for multiple seasons. Jackson, a three-star signee out of Omaha, Nebraska, arrived as a defensive back before quickly converting to a wideout.”
That position switch is part of what made Jackson such an interesting spring story. He got a look at safety, too, and Campbell liked the versatility enough to explore it. But by the end of spring, the verdict was clear: Jackson belonged on offense.
“I don't know if there's a true freshman that's had a bigger spring than what he has,” Campbell told reporters in the spring. “He's a guy that's certainly on track right now that'll push to play as a true freshman.
He's been impressive. Just how he's approached it and his mannerisms and he knows what to do.
He plays really fast for a young football player and plays really confident.”
Jackson entered as a consensus three-star recruit in the 2026 class, ranked No. 922 nationally and No. 128 at wide receiver by Rivals Industry Ratings. He was also ranked No. 6 among prospects from Nebraska. Originally committed to the Cyclones, Jackson de-committed and followed Campbell to Happy Valley.
There’s still plenty of uncertainty in Penn State’s receiver room beyond Sowell and Eskildsen. The difference now is that the uncertainty doesn’t feel nearly as heavy as it has in past seasons. The starting trio brings some stability, and the real question becomes who steps up behind them.
That’s where Jackson comes in. If Penn State’s wideout group is going to take shape in 2026, his development could be a big part of it.
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