Four defenders. Top eleven picks. One coordinator. One season.
That’s the line Matt Patricia can lead with on every recruiting visit from now through the foreseeable future. Arvell Reese fifth overall. Sonny Styles is seventh. Caleb Downs eleventh. Kayden McDonald thirty-sixth. None of this requires a sales pitch. It requires only a television and a DVR from last Thursday night.
The 2026 NFL Draft may have done more for Ohio State’s defensive recruiting than any single game, press conference, or coaching hire in recent memory. Patricia, back in Columbus on a new contract for the 2026 season, is positioned to make the most of it.
The Pitch That Sells Itself
Recruiting has always involved a version of the same conversation: come here, develop, reach your professional goals. Every program makes that argument. The difference is the evidence behind it.
Ohio State has long had strong evidence. The program leads all schools in first-round draft picks and has produced defensive talent at a rate no other program can match. But Patricia’s first season added something more specific than a historical track record. He turned players who weren’t projected first-rounders into first-round picks through coaching, not through program prestige alone. Reese wasn’t a first-round prospect entering 2025. McDonald wasn’t either. Styles was borderline at best.
Patricia’s scheme maximized each player’s strengths while his teaching gave them the football intelligence NFL teams valued most in the interview process. The draft results reflect that, and every defensive recruit in the country can see it.
What Patricia Can Offer That Others Can’t
The recruiting pitch for a coordinator with Patricia’s background is not abstract. He can sit across from a high school defensive end or linebacker and describe exactly what NFL evaluators are looking for, because he was one of those evaluators for nearly two decades. He can walk a recruit through what the pre-draft process looks like, what questions teams ask, and what separates players who stick from those who don’t.
Caden Curry summed it up at the combine: “Coach Patricia is one of the best defensive coordinators in college football, in my opinion. He’s just a guy that everybody wants to play for.”
That kind of endorsement, from a player who just heard his name called on draft day, lands differently in a recruit’s living room than anything a coaching staff can script.
The Rebuild Already in Progress
Patricia enters his second season replacing seven starters from a defense that led the nation in scoring and total defense. He’s done this before. The 2026 spring game gave early signals about who’s stepping into those roles: Kenyatta Jackson Jr. leading the defensive line, Payton Pierce anchoring the linebacker room, Devin Sanchez and Jermaine Mathews Jr. heading the cornerback group, and Earl Little Jr. taking ownership of the safety position Caleb Downs vacated.
The players Patricia is now developing watched what happened to Reese, Styles, Downs, and McDonald. They saw firsthand what Patricia’s system and preparation can do for a player’s draft stock. That internal motivation carries into the locker room in ways no outside pitch can manufacture.
Ryan Day called Patricia “the head coach of the defense” during the 2025 season. It was an acknowledgment of how completely Patricia owned his side of the ball. For recruits evaluating where to play, that clarity of ownership matters. They know exactly who’s running the defense, what his track record looks like, and what he’s done for the players who came before them.
The Next Class is Already Watching
Ohio State’s 2027 and 2028 defensive recruiting classes are being built in the months after the most productive single-coordinator draft performance in recent college football history. The program has never had a cleaner argument for why a defensive prospect should choose Columbus over any other destination.
Matt Patricia doesn’t need to say much. He can point to Pittsburgh, where four of his defenders heard their names called in the first two rounds, and let the record speak for him.
It usually does.
Also read: He’s Been Everything’: Ohio State Players Can’t Stop Praising Matt Patricia at the NFL Combine




