Ohio State has landed one of the biggest names in the 2027 recruiting cycle.
Marcus Fakatou, the No. 2 defensive lineman in the country and the No. 4 overall football player in California, announced Monday that he intends to play for the Buckeyes. His commitment gives Ohio State another major addition in a class that is continuing to gain momentum.
Fakatou’s choice came after a recruiting battle that had narrowed to three programs. Georgia and Texas were both in the mix late, but the Buckeyes had been viewed as the team making the strongest push as his decision approached.
The move gives Ohio State a lift in the national recruiting rankings, with the Buckeyes climbing to No. 5.
They now hold 18 known verbal commitments, including 14 blue chip prospects. Fakatou is listed as Ohio State’s third-best commit in the class.
The Buckeyes’ 2027 group is still headlined by consensus No. 1 edge rusher David Jacobs, while No. 3 wide receiver Jamier Brown remains the top-ranked prospect in the class from Ohio regardless of position.
Georgia stayed on Fakatou throughout the process after offering him in early August of last year, and the Bulldogs were considered a natural fit. His visit to Athens in late May and early June was a strong one, and that kept Georgia firmly in the hunt.
Texas also made the final cut. Steve Sarkisian offered Fakatou last January, and he visited campus when the Longhorns beat undefeated rival Texas A&M in an emotional regular-season finale in 2025.
Recruiting analysts have consistently rated Fakatou highly. The industry weighted average places him as the No. 2 defensive lineman nationally and the fourth-best prospect in California at any position.
He spends most of his impactful snaps on the edge, but he can slide inside to tackle as well. Fakatou brings size and length, uses his frame well to hold his ground, and can help shut down the run, even against double teams. He also shows real explosion at the snap and keeps chasing as a pass rusher, giving Ohio State a defensive lineman with room to grow into a rotational force.
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