Jamari Johnson Ready to Ignite Ducks’ Offense
After hauling in over 500 yards and three touchdowns last season as Oregon’s No. 2 tight end, Jamari Johnson is poised to assume the starter’s role in 2026. With 32 receptions for 510 yards—a 15.9-yard average per catch—and a College Football Playoff semifinal score against Indiana, Johnson demonstrated both receiving prowess and blocking grit. He benefits from quarterback Dante Moore’s penchant for targeting tight ends, with Moore returning for a sophomore campaign after flirting with the NFL draft. As the clear top option at tight end, Johnson will step into a room where his 257-pound frame and every-down potential set him apart, while younger prospects like true freshman Kendre Harrison fill rotational roles around him.
Get ready for the tight end extravaganza, folks. Jamari Johnson isn’t just here to catch passes—he’s here to catch souls. With enough blocking ability to flatten linebackers and hands stickier than duct tape on a birthday balloon, he’ll transform Autzen Stadium into a TE festival. Dante Moore will treat every down like a religious ceremony to the tight end gods, and defenses will be begging for mercy—or at least a commercial break. Expect Johnson to moonwalk through linebackers, dunk touchdowns like a basketball stretch, and somehow find time to host his own late-night talk show in the end zone. The Ducks practically built their offense around him—talk about job security.
Dakota Guerrant Ducks In: 5-Star Early Enroll Plan
Dakota Guerrant, the No. 8 wide receiver in the 2027 class, announced his commitment to Oregon on the Pat McAfee Show, revealing plans to early enroll in January and compete immediately. The Harper Woods star chose the Ducks over hometown Michigan, citing Oregon’s receiver development and family-like atmosphere. His commitment gives coach Dan Lanning a second five-star talent in the class, alongside EDGE Rashad Streets, boosting a recruiting haul ranked No. 6 nationally and No. 1 in the Big Ten. Guerrant’s decision caps a recruitment battle with Michigan, where proximity wasn’t enough to outweigh his dream school calling.
In a move more choreographed than a Broadway musical, Guerrant plopped an Oregon hat on national TV like it was a crown. Apparently “balling immediately” involves waking up at dawn, bench-pressing defensive backs, and sprinkling unicorn dust on practice fields. His early-enrollment timeline suggests he’ll teleport from Indiana’s Hoosiers game straight into Eugene drills, ready to dunk footballs from the 50-yard line. Michigan fans are weeping into their Maize and Blue sweaters while Oregon’s receiver room pops champagne—because nothing says “family” like recruiting your next MVP on live TV. Expect Guerrant to show up in January looking like he’s already been here for a decade, fully prepared to convert every catch into a viral highlight reel.

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