Matt Campbell ignites Penn State’s 2026 rebuild as QB Kase Evans headlines four-commitment surge

Matt Campbell jumpstarts Penn State’s 2026 recruiting class as quarterback Kase Evans leads a four-commitment weekend that signals early momentum and a relationship-driven rebuild.

Nick Wright College Football Writer
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Dec 8, 2025; University Park, PA, USA; Matt Campbell answers questions from the media after being announced as the Penn State Nittany Lions new head coach during a press conference at the Beaver Stadium Press Room. Mandatory Credit: Matthew O'Haren-Imagn Images
© Matthew O'Haren-Imagn Images

Head coach Matt Campbell’s first significant recruiting wave has arrived in Happy Valley. On Sunday afternoon, quarterback Kase Evans committed to Penn State, reuniting with the coach who originally secured his pledge at Iowa State. Now, Evans has become the most important addition of a weekend that could reshape Penn State’s 2026 recruiting class.

Penn State 2026 recruiting class: four commitments in two days

Saturday brought significant commitments from three-star safety Bryson Williams, defensive back Tyrell Chatman, punter Lucas Tenbrock, and quarterback Kase Evans. Four commitments in two days. Three in one afternoon. For a class that had been stuck in neutral, that represents significant momentum.

Kase Evans: profile and background

Evans is not a headline recruit in the traditional sense. He carries a three-star rating and ranks outside the top 50 quarterbacks nationally. He’s not walking in with five-star expectations or viral tape. But his profile fits exactly what Campbell values, prioritizing developmental philosophy over star ratings.

Evans’s production at Lexington High School

At Lexington High School in Texas, Evans compiled impressive numbers, demonstrating both sustained productivity and durability. He threw for more than 11,000 yards and 120 touchdowns during his high school career, establishing himself as a steady, reliable signal-caller who produced consistently over multiple seasons.

Recruiting journey to Penn State

Evans’s path to Penn State reflects Matt Campbell’s skill for building strong relationships. He was originally committed to Oklahoma State before finding his way to Campbell’s Iowa State staff. Now he’s followed that relationship to State College after Campbell’s hiring. Quarterbacks don’t follow systems. They follow people. Evans’s commitment demonstrates how Campbell’s recruiting pull and relationship-building approach transcends program affiliations.

Penn State 2026 quarterback room

With Evans in the fold, Penn State now has two quarterbacks committed in the 2026 cycle. Kase Evans brings volume production while Peyton Falzone, a four-star prospect from Nazareth, Pennsylvania, brings higher recruiting profile recognition and in-state momentum.

This pairing reflects Campbell’s philosophy: stacking the quarterback room with complementary skill sets rather than chasing a single savior. Together, Evans and Falzone give Penn State options, a competitive edge, and insulation against roster volatility.

Penn State’s recruiting class before and after Campbell

Before Campbell’s arrival, Penn State had just two commits in the 2026 class: four-star quarterback Peyton Falzone and defensive end Jackson Ford. These were the only pledges Penn State secured under the previous staff. The class, now standing at six total commitments, tripled in size within one week of Campbell’s arrival.

However, their 247Sports composite ranking is buried deep nationally (ranging from 139th to 150th depending on the outlet). Although the class has a long way to go, this weekend wasn’t about rankings—it was about restarting the recruiting engine that had stalled during their coaching transition.

Matt Campbell’s recruiting blueprint at Penn State

This weekend revealed how Campbell’s staff intends to build the program—prioritizing familiar relationships, developmental bets, and complementary skill sets.

Penn State’s recruiting was stuck in neutral before Campbell arrived. This past weekend’s surge has demonstrated the stabilizing impact that he’s having on the program.

Although Evans isn’t the final answer to Penn State’s rebuild, he’s the first signal that Matt Campbell’s recruiting approach is taking root in Happy Valley. For a program facing massive roster turnover with 17 of 22 starters possibly departing, establishing recruiting momentum is essential. Evans’s commitment, along with the weekend’s other additions, shows that Penn State can attract talent even while managing uncertainty.