USC’s Jahkeem Stewart is already making a statement before the 2026 season even gets rolling.
The sophomore defensive lineman, who arrived as a prized 2025 signing and earned All-American honors as a freshman, has been putting in work with Brandon Jordan, one of the NFL’s best-known pass rush consultants. A video of Stewart training with Jordan surfaced toward the end of June 2026, giving USC fans another look at a player who clearly isn’t satisfied with last season’s 1.5 sacks.
The clip wasn’t the first offseason sighting of Stewart with Jordan, either. This has become a notable part of Stewart’s preparation, and it makes sense given who Jordan has worked with and where he’s been.
Jordan joined the Dallas Cowboys as a pass rushing consultant in February of 2026, with the task of helping improve a rush that didn’t have anyone finish in the top 20 in pass rush win rates last season. That came after the Cowboys lost All-Pro Micah Parsons in a blockbuster preseason trade to the Green Bay Packers.
His résumé stretches well beyond Dallas. Jordan worked on Mel Tucker’s staff in 2022 and also spent time with the Denver Broncos in the 2024 season. Among the NFL players he has coached are Maxx Crosby, Nik Bonitto, Jared Verse and Josh Hines-Allen.
For USC, Stewart’s development matters even more with defensive play-calling shifting to Patterson. More exotic coverages, including a Cover 2 robber look at safety, can create confusion for quarterbacks, but only if the front can generate real pressure. That’s where Stewart’s next step becomes so important.
The Trojans didn’t have enough disruption in the middle of the defensive line last season, and the schedule won’t offer many easy answers. San Jose State’s Spread-N-Shred system gets the ball out quickly, so Stewart’s ability to penetrate inside will matter right away if USC wants to avoid a shootout.
The bigger tests are stacked up after that. Stewart will be asked to help slow Dante Moore and Oregon on Sept. 26, then deal with Washington’s Demond Williams, Ohio State’s Julian Sayin on Halloween night and Indiana transfer Josh Hoover later in the year. Those matchups put USC in front of a run of high-end quarterbacks, and they’ll put Stewart under the kind of spotlight NFL scouts notice too, with the 2028 draft in mind when he becomes eligible.
USC fans already saw enough from Stewart last season to know the talent is real. What happens next - and what he gets out of his work with Jordan - could go a long way toward deciding whether he ends up pacing the Trojans in sacks.
In Other News...
Another USC Recruiting Loss Is Raising Familiar Concerns
Another USC recruiting hit came into focus when four-star wide receiver Eli Woodard backed off his pledge, a reminder that the Trojans are still dealing with the ripple effects of modern recruiting even after stacking an early class. Miami has been especially active in that space, adding Woodard to a run of notable wins that includes other players who had previously been committed elsewhere, and the Hurricanes push is showing up in the early 2027 class rankings as well.
For USC, the concern is not just the loss of one receiver target but the pattern around it. The Trojans have enforced a no-visit policy for committed recruits, and Woodard was one of the names drawn toward seeing other options before making his final choice. Even after the flip, USC has not gone back to the board for a replacement at wide receiver, leaving another familiar question hanging over the class-building process. [Read more 🡒]
USC Is In A High-Stakes Fight For Elite In-State Tackle
Austin Attalah has already become one of the biggest early names on USCs 2028 board, and the Trojans are treating the five-star Cajon High School offensive tackle like a priority. He has spent time at USC, Texas, Texas Tech and Ohio State, then trimmed his list to eight schools, which is exactly the kind of early movement that turns a talented local recruit into a national recruiting battle before his class is even close to signing day.
USC has reason to stay heavily involved because Attalah has made clear he is listening to both sides of his recruitment, including the pull of Texas programs and the renewed message coming out of Los Angeles. He has family ties in Texas and has also been intrigued by the idea that USC is trying to reestablish itself as a national contender, so the Trojans are fighting not just for a coveted in-state tackle, but for a prospect who already sees multiple paths that could make sense. [Read more 🡒]
