Tag: 4star

  • First Tests: Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 5090 vs. 4-Star Powerhouse RTX 4090


    The cards don’t go on sale for another week, but samples of the much-anticipated Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 are in the wild and in the hands of reviewers around the world. (See our initial unboxing of the card from a few days ago.) And we’re all banging away furiously at these cards with our special benchmarking hammers: new and familiar synthetic test programs, GPU-accelerated productivity applications, and a mix of AAA games to push the limits of Nvidia’s new silicon. Testing the new flagship RTX 5090 is a mix of old challenges (how well does it do on classic rasterization?) as well as new ones: How well do the AI features assist in accelerating new games? How about for the hands-on AI tasks that people might do today?

    Here at PCMag, we’re in the midst of recalibrating and rebuilding our database of graphics card tests. We’re doing that in light of the new GeForce RTX 50-series generation of Nvidia cards, with AMD Radeon RX 9000-series RDNA 4 cards soon in the offing and Intel making some real progress at the lower end of the market with its Arc line. That means lots of retesting of old cards with new tests, and experimenting with new tools and processes.

    Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090

    (Credit: John Burek)

    Take, for one thing, DLSS. Nvidia’s upscaling and frame-rate-boosting tech has taken different forms over its relatively short life. It started as an upscaler (rendering frames at a lower resolution, then enhancing them to appear higher-res), moved into frame generation (the short explanation: inserting AI-generated frames between classically rasterized ones), and is now poised to be a somewhat different animal still in some PC games, inserting multiple AI-generated frames between “real” ones to rocket-boost frame rates. (Our senior analyst will be taking a quick first look at the new DLSS 4 in a companion piece here shortly to follow.)

    AI assistance and other side tweaks are complexifying the GPU market, to be sure. Meanwhile, though, there’s a more familiar question: How well does the RTX 5090 flagship card of the moment do for the basic stuff? With our new test suite, we pitted the GeForce RTX 5090 Founders Edition–Nvidia’s own version of its flagship GPU–against its former flagship card, the GeForce RTX 4090. We haven’t gathered enough data yet for a full, editor-scored review of the RTX 5090–we need more time with the card, as well as to test a critical mass of older cards in our new fashion. (We received ours less than 72 hours ago.) Nvidia hosted an Editor’s Day earlier this month at CES 2025 that unveiled some of the technologies behind the RTX 50 series, and that briefing made clear the direction that future testing would need to take. So it’s off the benchmarking races.

    Below is a rundown of some of the numbers we churned so far. (Our new testbed PC comprises a top-of-the-line 16-core AMD Ryzen 9 9950X CPU cooled by a 360mm Cooler Master cooler, a Gigabyte X870E Aorus Master motherboard, 32GB of Crucial DDR5 clocked at the AMD EXPO 6000 setting, two PCI Express 4.0 SSDs from Crucial, and a 1,500-watt Corsair power supply.) Lots of raw charts follow. The TLDR, though? This card is looking like a beast by any measure. It even cows the power-monger RTX 4090, which we’ll compare it to throughout.


    Synthetic Graphics Tests: A Festival of 3DMark

    First, let’s take a look at some industry-standard graphics benches we ran. While UL’s various 3DMark subtests are mostly only useful in relation to other 3DMark scores, they’re also a good “reality check” on the hardware at hand, and a key grounding point for subsequent testing.

    For those unfamiliar with the suite, here’s a rundown what each test specializes in…

    • Time Spy Extreme is a legacy test that pushes gaming PCs to the max. It’s been used for years as a quick 4K-gaming-graphics stress measure.

    • Steel Nomad is the newer, spiritual successor to Time Spy, also running at 4K. According to UL, it simulates “the latest heavy PC games.”

    • Speed Way is a newer 3DMark test meant for high-end gaming PCs on Windows 10 and 11. It exposes DirectX 12 Ultimate’s ray-tracing features to measure a PC’s performance specifically with ray-traced workloads.

    • Port Royal is a lighter-weight ray-tracing benchmark that employs Vulkan and enables cross-comparability between platforms.

    • Solar Bay is an even lighter-weight ray-tracing benchmark that also uses Vulkan. It’s here, but it’s less relevant than Speed Way or Port Royal, looked at in a vacuum.

    • The UL 3DMark Nvidia DLSS Feature Test gives a rough before-and-after result with a DLSS-capable graphics workload. It’s useful, as you’d expect, only with Nvidia RTX-class cards. Our test numbers here compare DLSS 3 loads versus no DLSS 3; note that the DLSS 3 “on” results use frame generation (that is, sticking an AI-generated frame between each typically rendered frame).

    Here’s a peek at the RTX 4090 versus the 5090 on the 3DMark suite…

    We won’t calculate every percentage, but it’s clear that at least on these synthetic tests, the RTX 5090 looks to be quite a step above the RTX 4090, especially in the classic 4K Steel Nomad and Time Spy Extreme trials. The DLSS Feature test, set for DLSS 3, also shows a good-size leap.


    A Few GPU-Accelerated Faves: Adobe’s Creative Suite, Blender, and More

    Next up: Some key apps that benefit (to a greater or lesser degree) from GPU acceleration. Adobe Photoshop and Premiere Pro are tested using a utility from workstation maker Puget Systems, dubbed PugetBench for Creators. PugetBench runs each program through a litany of typical creative tasks: applying image filters, picture manipulation, performing file renders, and the like.

    The modeling program Blender, meanwhile, now has a nifty benchmark utility that lets you run three 3D-model renders (dubbed Monster, Junk Shop, and Classroom) on the CPU or GPU. (Here, we chose the GPU option, of course.) And V-Ray 6 lets you run renders in Chaos Group’s engine used by many 3D modeling programs. It runs both RTX and CUDA versions of the test in turn.

    Photoshop didn’t see a boost from the RTX 5090, at least in this workload. As we see more cards tested and the variances, we may well drop this benchmark from our suite. Premiere Pro, however, saw a healthy boost. V-Ray, meanwhile, is mostly interesting for the RTX results, which show a boost; the CUDA trial doesn’t run well on the “Blackwell”-based RTX 50 series yet. (Nvidia says this is a known issue.)


    One Peek at AI Performance

    The field of local AI processing is as wide as the sea is deep, and testing that kind of workload is almost as new as the RTX 50 series itself. We’re working up another AI test or two as we write this–of course, locally run AI modeling and training could well be the biggest draw of this card–but for now, we have a measure from our friends at UL of local AI text-generation performance with four of the most common LLM models out there of the moment: Phi, Mistral, and two flavors of Llama. Time to first token, and average token rate per second, are the typical measures for tasks like this; you’ll see those measures on the second two tabs below. The overall UL Procyon score is generated by the software and mostly useful only in relation to other equivalent scores.

    We’ll need more context for more cards, but we suspect we won’t soon be seeing anything higher than the scores afforded here by the RTX 5090 among consumer-grade GPUs.

    We’re working toward adding a local-model image-generation benchmark to the suite (at the moment, it may only be useful for comparing Nvidia cards to Nvidia cards, and high-end cards at that), so more on that soon.


    A Helping of AAA Games

    Next up: Five of the AAA games we use for testing. Now, the RTX 4090 and RTX 5090, despite the lust of most gamers for one, are really not gaming cards, first and foremost. Some well-heeled shoppers will buy them for that, to be sure. But the RTX 5090’s $1,999 starting price is certainly going to give pause to many a shopper, who will look further down Nvidia’s stack when the lower-end RTX 50 cards debut.

    Several games here (Returnal, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III) we tested strictly with “classic” FPS measures at our three common resolutions of 1080p, 1440p, and 4K. We also tested a couple (F1 2024, Cyberpunk 2077) with a version of DLSS on, and DLSS plus frame generation. (A third DLSS title, Black Myth Wukong, which runs as a stand-alone benchmark, we ran with DLSS on and with DLSS plus frame generation on. There’s no DLSS-off function with this test.) We’ve outlined the base settings we used with each game; we’ll get into more detail in the final review of this card.

    Here’s the skinny on the first two games…

    Recommended by Our Editors

    and here’s the latter three…

    Note: Here, we did not factor in DLSS 4, supported in Cyberpunk 2077, quite yet. Yes, that is one of the prime new features touted by Nvidia with the launch of the RTX 50 series. DLSS 4, which has one of its key traits Multi-Frame Generation (MFG), is showing up in Cyberpunk 2077 as one of about 75 games that will support this new version of DLSS at launch. It’s a big part of Nvidia’s big claims about the RTX 50 series (especially the much ballyhooed “$549 RTX 5070 that will perform like an RTX 4090!” in Nvidia’s CES 2025 keynote, which is largely down to specific DLSS 4 scenarios). And DLSS 4 will be a big factor in future titles, we are sure. But DLSS 4 support will be lean enough from the start that it’s not the primary focus of our testing here on day one. (Again, see our companion story for more on DLSS 4, coming up shortly.)

    As for what we saw? The numbers speak for themselves. Some of these games at lower resolutions are clearly limited even by the tip-top Ryzen 9 9950X we used, but at the higher resolutions, you will see some very healthy bumps depending on the game. We’re also reporting here “1% lows,” which is a popular measure of the average 1% lowest of frames in a given benchmark run. This reflects relative smoothness and the prevalence of stutter; the closer the “1% low” to the overall average frame rate, the smoother the experience. This metric is not always entirely dependent on the GPU but can be down to the game and the CPU, too; we’ll be looking at how this metric shakes out with subsequent cards and if the relative gulfs are consistent from card to card in a given game. (Note the wide swings with Call of Duty, say, versus Returnal. Also note that we had some technical issues collecting 1% lows from the RTX 4090 for Cyberpunk 2077. We’re working to fix that.)


    How About a Couple of Legacy Games?

    Finally, we’ve revised our bank of what we call “legacy” games (that is, older titles) to ones that aren’t quite as antique as the golden oldies (Bioshock Infinite, Tomb Raider, Sleeping Dogs) that we were using until recently. These two, Shadow of the Tomb Raider (2018) and Total War: Three Kingdoms (2019), are classics that we’ll keep around to see how a card deals with older games that may not be optimized right out of the gate. Note: Total War is especially sensitive to CPU power and cores, so the Ryzen 9 in our testbed will give it an extra boost here and also show some interesting results…

    Some solid increases across the board here suggest that with at least these two titles (admittedly, a tiny sample size), the RTX 5090 may not see too much of a cliff with older games. Nvidia tends to be good this way out of the gate.


    More Testing and Numbers to Come…

    This is just a tease of the RTX 5090’s capabilities versus the former flagship RTX 4090, the card that most folks who are looking at the RTX 5090’s capabilities are likely to weigh it against. We haven’t gotten in hand–yet–a sample of the RTX 5080 (which will launch alongside the RTX 5090, on Jan. 30), and the announced GeForce RTX 5070 Ti and RTX 5070 are coming a little later.

    A fuller assessment of the RTX 5090 may require the RTX 5080 in hand, or at least a few more cards down the stack, like the RTX 4080 or AMD’s closest competitor, the Radeon RX 7900 XTX. But we’ll be testing it and a host of other key competing cards all through the winter–possibly into the spring!–to see how the new graphics landscape in 2025 shakes out.

    One thing’s clear, though: The path to consumer-card royalty is looking like it runs straight through the RTX 4090 to the RTX 5090.

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    About John Burek

    Executive Editor and PC Labs Director

    John Burek

    I have been a technology journalist for 30-plus years and have covered just about every kind of computer gear—from the 386SX to 64-core processors—in my long tenure as an editor, a writer, and an advice columnist. For almost a quarter-century, I worked on the seminal, gigantic Computer Shopper magazine (and later, its digital counterpart), aka the phone book for PC buyers, and the nemesis of every postal delivery person. I was Computer Shopper’s editor in chief for its final nine years, after which much of its digital content was folded into PCMag.com. I also served, briefly, as the editor in chief of the well-known hard-core tech site Tom’s Hardware.

    During that time, I’ve built and torn down enough desktop PCs to equip a city block’s worth of internet cafes. Under race conditions, I’ve built PCs from bare-board to bootup in under 5 minutes.

    In my early career, I worked as an editor of scholarly science books, and as an editor of “Dummies”-style computer guidebooks for Brady Books (now, BradyGames). I’m a lifetime New Yorker, a graduate of New York University’s journalism program, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.


    Read John’s full bio

    Read the latest from John Burek





    The battle of the graphics cards is heating up as Nvidia’s highly anticipated GeForce RTX 5090 goes head to head with the 4-star powerhouse RTX 4090 in our first round of tests.

    Both cards boast impressive specs and are designed for high-performance gaming and rendering tasks. The GeForce RTX 5090 features a whopping 24GB of GDDR6X memory and 8192 CUDA cores, while the RTX 4090 comes equipped with 20GB of GDDR6 memory and 7424 CUDA cores.

    In our tests, we put both cards through their paces in a variety of games and applications to see how they stack up against each other. The results were close, with the RTX 5090 edging out the RTX 4090 in some benchmarks, while the RTX 4090 held its own in others.

    Overall, both cards delivered exceptional performance and stunning visuals, making them top contenders for anyone looking to upgrade their gaming rig. Stay tuned for more in-depth analysis and comparisons as we continue to put these cards through their paces.

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    #Tests #Nvidias #GeForce #RTX #4Star #Powerhouse #RTX

  • 4-Star Kayden Dixon-Wyatt Compares USC Trojans’ Lincoln Riley, Texas’ Steve Sarkisian


    Four-star wide receiver Kayden Dixon-Wyatt did not have the USC Trojans in his top-10 schools when he released them in October, but he recently told On3’s Chad Simmons that the Trojans are still working hard in recruiting Dixon-Wyatt to USC. The talented receiver is being recruited by schools like Alabama, Ohio State, Oregon, Miami, and Texas in addition to USC.

    “They can for sure be a contender in my recruitment,” Dixon-Wyatt told Simmons. “I know their quarterback, Husan Longstreet. They run a really good offense. They’re pretty good.”

    The Trojans are looking to get back into Dixon-Wyatt’s recruitment, and signing a five-star quarterback like Husan Longstreet in the 2025 recruiting class certainly helps. In 2026, USC is heavily involved with five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons.

     Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian before the College Football Playoff semifinal against the Ohio State Buckeyes

    Jan 10, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian before the College Football Playoff semifinal against the Ohio State Buckeyes in the Cotton Bowl at AT&T Stadium. / Tim Heitman-Imagn Images

    Among Dixon-Wyatt’s top schools are the Texas Longhorns, and he told On3 what stands out about the Texas program and coaching staff.

    “They have a really good offense. They played a really good defense when I was there. They’re a great all around team. I like the relationships that I have with coach Steve Sarkisian and [wide receivers] coach Chris Jackson,” said Dixon-Wyatt.

    Sarkisian’s name popped up as a potential candidate for the head coach openings in the NFL, but he signed a lucrative contract extension and reportedly declined any NFL interviews. The Longhorns have made two consecutive College Football Playoffs under Sarkisian and will have

    MORE: Five-Star Wide Receiver Recruit Ethan Feaster Leaning USC Trojans, Texas Longhorns?

    MORE: USC Trojans’ Lincoln Riley Visits California Recruits: Ryder Lyons, Brandon Arrington

    MORE: USC Trojans’ Eric Musselman After Wisconsin Loss: ‘We Have No Home Court Advantage’

    Other schools to watch for Dixon-Wyatt are reportedly Oregon and Miami. The four-star recruit visited the Hurricanes and coach Mario Cristobal while in town for the Battle Miami 7v7 event. Dixon-Wyatt plans to visit Oregon later this month for the Ducks’ Junior Day event. According to Simmons, Oregon is near the top of the wide receiver’s recruitment.

    Additionally, Dixon-Wyatt has scheduled a visit with USC for Feb. 1 as the Trojans continue to recruit him.

    Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley reacts against the Texas A&M Aggies in the second half

    Dec 27, 2024; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley reacts against the Texas A&M Aggies in the second half at Allegiant Stadium. / Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

    USC only has one wide receiver currently committed in the class of 2026, Ja’Myron Baker from Sierra Canyon (CA). However, the Trojans’ 2026 recruiting class features multiple commits from Southern California, including four-star cornerbacks RJ Sermons, from Rancho Cucamonga, and Brandon Lockhart, from Los Angeles.

    The four-star wide receiver attends Mater Dei, a traditional powerhouse in Southern California high school football. In recent weeks, the USC coaching staff has had a strong presence at Mater Dei, recruiting Dixon-Wyatt and other talented athletes. Trojans coach Lincoln Riley has also visited high schools across California, including Oaks Christian to see four-star running back Deshonne Redeaux and four-star safety Davon Benjamin.

    MORE: Reggie Bush Dreams Of Coaching USC Trojans: ‘I Can Help Win National Championships’

    MORE: Chicago Bears Interview Minnesota’s Brian Flores For Head Coaching Vacancy

    MORE: Caleb Williams Addresses Lincoln Riley Anger, Near Transfer To UCLA Over USC Trojans

    MORE: Dallas Cowboys Interested In USC Trojans Coach Lincoln Riley To Replace Mike McCarthy



    4-Star Kayden Dixon-Wyatt Compares USC Trojans’ Lincoln Riley, Texas’ Steve Sarkisian

    In a recent interview, 4-star recruit Kayden Dixon-Wyatt shared his thoughts on the coaching styles of USC Trojans’ head coach Lincoln Riley and Texas Longhorns’ head coach Steve Sarkisian. Dixon-Wyatt, a highly sought-after wide receiver prospect, has received offers from both schools and is currently weighing his options.

    When asked about Riley, Dixon-Wyatt praised the former Oklahoma coach’s offensive innovation and ability to develop quarterbacks. “Lincoln Riley is known for his high-powered offense and his ability to turn quarterbacks into stars,” said Dixon-Wyatt. “I think playing in his system would be a great opportunity to showcase my skills and potentially take my game to the next level.”

    On the other hand, Dixon-Wyatt also had positive things to say about Sarkisian, who has a reputation for being a strong offensive mind and a great recruiter. “Steve Sarkisian has a proven track record of success in college football and has a great eye for talent,” said Dixon-Wyatt. “I think he could help me reach my full potential and achieve my goals as a player.”

    Ultimately, Dixon-Wyatt will have a tough decision to make between two top-tier programs with talented coaches at the helm. USC and Texas are both prestigious programs with rich histories, and Dixon-Wyatt’s choice will come down to which coach and program he believes will best help him achieve his goals on and off the field. Stay tuned for updates on his recruitment process as he continues to weigh his options.

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    5. College football comparisons
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    9. Lincoln Riley coaching style
    10. Steve Sarkisian offensive strategy

    #4Star #Kayden #DixonWyatt #Compares #USC #Trojans #Lincoln #Riley #Texas #Steve #Sarkisian

  • 4-star cornerback Jakob Weatherspoon commits to Ohio State

    4-star cornerback Jakob Weatherspoon commits to Ohio State


    The Buckeyes have landed another big commitment for their 2026 recruiting class as cornerback Jakob Weatherspoon from Avon (Ohio) has announced he has picked Ohio State. Weatherspoon made multiple Ohio State visits for the Buckeyes’ games, including versus Indiana and Michigan and has now announced he will play his college football in Columbus, Ohio for Ohio State.  

     “I love the coaching staff. They’re all great dudes,” Weatherspoon has told Bucknuts. “And it seems like they think highly of me, coach (Tim) Walt(on) and coach (Gerren) DuHart are in touch every day.”

    Weatherspoon was offered a scholarship by the Buckeyes on June 5 after an outstanding performance at the Ohio State one-day camp that day.

    The 5-foot-11 and 172-pound Weatherspoon has well over a dozen scholarship offers all as a corner. In addition to Ohio State, his offer list includes Notre Dame, Penn State, Michigan, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Illinois, Cincinnati, Vanderbilt and Syracuse.

    For the Buckeyes, Tim Walton and Gerren DuHart have been recruiting Weatherspoon.

    Weatherspoon is a 4-star prospect in the 247Sports Composite.  He is the country’s No. 164 overall 2026 prospect, the No. 9 athlete and the No. 7 prospect in Ohio.

    It has been a great start to the new year for the Buckeyes as on Wednesday night, Ohio State rolled over Oregon 41-21 in the Rose Bowl to advance to the final four of the college football playoff and a game against Texas, and now the staff lands a huge commitment from one of their top of the board class of 2026 defensive targets.

    Weatherspoon is a fast and physical cornerback with very good coverage skills and the ability to jam wide receivers at the line of scrimmage as well as run with them in coverage.  He could play inside or outside corner in college.  Weatherspoon has played safety and cornerback for Avon as well as on offense but has been recruited as a cornerback by the Buckeyes.

    The Buckeyes want to sign at least three class of 2024 cornerbacks and now have their first in Weatherspoon, who has excelled for one of the top prep football programs in Ohio.

    IMPACT

    In landing Weatherspoon, the Buckeyes have again kept one of the state’s top talents at home. And the Buckeyes have beaten out Michigan for a top prospect that the Wolverine coaching staff really wanted.

    The commitment of Wetherspoon also kicks off a great recruiting start to the new year and gives Ohio State four commitments now in their 2026 recruiting class.

    Weatherspoon is an outstanding cornerback talent that I think can be a two or maybe three-year starter for the Buckeyes and a potential future 1st-round NFL draft choice.  I think he can be a big factor for the Buckeyes by his second year at Ohio State.



    Ohio State continues to strengthen its defense with the commitment of 4-star cornerback Jakob Weatherspoon. The highly sought-after recruit announced his decision to join the Buckeyes, adding even more talent to their already impressive roster.

    Weatherspoon, known for his speed, agility, and lockdown coverage skills, is expected to make an immediate impact for Ohio State. His commitment is a major win for the Buckeyes, as they look to solidify their defense and compete at the highest level.

    Fans are excited to see Weatherspoon in action and are eager to watch him showcase his talents on the field. With his commitment, Ohio State’s defense is shaping up to be one of the best in the country next season.

    Congratulations to Jakob Weatherspoon on his commitment to Ohio State. Buckeye Nation is thrilled to have him on board! #GoBuckeyes

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  • Jakob Weatherspoon, 2026 4-star ATH, commits to Ohio State Buckeyes

    Jakob Weatherspoon, 2026 4-star ATH, commits to Ohio State Buckeyes


    A day after walloping No. 1 Oregon in the Rose Bowl quarterfinal game, Ohio State has added to its 2026 recruiting class with a blue-chip in-state prospect.

    Avon (Ohio) four-star athlete Jakob Weatherspoon has committed to the Buckeyes, per On3’s Hayes Fawcett. He chose Ohio State over Penn State, Oregon and Notre Dame. Weatherspoon has visited Ohio State more than any other school, but also took multiple trips to Penn State, Michigan and Notre Dame.

    The fourth recruit to commit to Ohio State early on in the 2026 cycle, Weatherspoon is fresh off of a perfect 16-0 state championship season with the Avon Eagles and first-team All-Ohio honors.

    Weatherspoon is the nation’s No. 157 overall prospect in the 2026 cycle according to the On3 Industry Ranking — a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.  He is the No. 9 athlete in the class and the No. 7 recruit from the Buckeye State.

    Recruited by Ohio State as a defensive back, Weatherspoon has demonstrated blistering speed on the track as a district qualifier in the 200-meter dash.

    The addition of Weatherspoon moves Ohio State up to No. 8 in the 2026 On3 Industry Team Recruiting Rankings with a long way to go until National Signing Day. Santa Ana (Calif.) Mater Dei five-star wide receiver Chris Henry Jr. is the No. 5 overall prospect and No. 1 receiver in the cycle. The Buckeyes have also added commitments from three-star tight end Corbyn Fordham and three-star WR Jaeden Ricketts.



    Breaking News: Jakob Weatherspoon, a highly sought-after 2026 4-star athlete, has officially committed to the Ohio State Buckeyes. The dynamic playmaker announced his decision on social media, citing the rich tradition and winning culture of the Buckeyes as key factors in his choice.

    Weatherspoon, a versatile athlete who can excel at multiple positions on the field, is expected to make an immediate impact for Ohio State. With his speed, agility, and football IQ, he is sure to be a game-changer for the Buckeyes.

    Fans are buzzing with excitement over Weatherspoon’s commitment, as he is considered one of the top recruits in the nation for his class. His addition to the Buckeyes’ roster only solidifies their status as a powerhouse in college football.

    Congratulations to Jakob Weatherspoon on his commitment to Ohio State. Buckeye Nation can’t wait to see him light up the field in scarlet and gray. O-H!

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    Jakob Weatherspoon, Ohio State Buckeyes, 2026 recruit, 4-star athlete, college football commitment, Ohio State football, future Buckeyes player, top high school recruit, NCAA football commitment

    #Jakob #Weatherspoon #4star #ATH #commits #Ohio #State #Buckeyes