Coveted local 2024 defensive lineman to visit the Swamp on Saturday

This Gainesville native will be visiting campus on Saturday.

Florida football’s recruiting efforts are back in full swing as the program prepares to welcome top recruits from around both the state and the nation to the Swamp. While the Gators left a lot to be desired on the field last season, [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag] and Co. have surged forward when it comes to courting prep prospects.

One high school junior who will be visiting campus — and he will not have to travel far — is three-star defensive lineman [autotag]Kendall Jackson[/autotag] out of Gainesville (Florida) Buchholz in the 2024 recruiting cycle, who is set to swing by on Saturday, Jan. 14. The 6-foot-4-inch, 250-pound trench warrior will be among three visitors to get a gander at what the Orange and Blue can do for them.

The coveted prospect offered the following on how Florida has pursued him, according to Swamp247.

“They tell me they want me to stay home really bad and put on for my state and my city. They also make sure to let me know I am not an option, but a priority. They said they are going to be staying on me heavy and how they want me to stay home and be a Gator. They are definitely doing that though. I get a text from them every day and it’s from more than one coach. I hear on the regular from Coach [Sean] Spencer, Coach [Kali] James, Coach [Kareem] Reid, and Coach [Jay] Bateman. They are the four on me the hardest and I get a text from at least two of them every day if not all four of them.”

Jackson is ranked No. 460 overall and No. 41 at his position nationally according to the 247Sports composite while the On3 consensus has him at Nos. 486 and 42, respectively. The Gainesville native currently has one crystal ball prediction from 247Sports to the Gators along with a 99.3% chance of signing with Florida according to On3’s Recruiting Prediction Machine.

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2024 DL recruit set return visit after being wowed by new facility

This 2024 defensive lineman target got an early gander at Florida’s new facility and came away impressed.

The newly unveiled James W. Heavener Football Training Center has already begun to make a big impression on both the staff and the players of Florida football’s program, even extending to prospective prep prospects.

Among those in the latter group who recently came away impressed with the new edifice was 2024 three-star defensive lineman [autotag]Kendall Jackson[/autotag] out of nearby Buchholz High in Gainesville, who attended Florida’s Friday Night Lights event at the end of July, which included a tour of the facility prior to its official opening.

“Before the camp started, I took a little visit around the new facility before it was finished to see where the Gators are going to be living pretty much,” he told Gators Online. “The new facility is amazing; I’m not going to lie. Just walking through there and seeing the different rooms and things they got for the players was impressive.”

The impression the new digs made on the 6-foot-4-inch, 250-pound rising junior was clearly positive. He now plans on joining the myriad of recruits in attendance for Florida’s season opener against the Utah Utes, which is his only scheduled visit set for the fall so far.

Jackson also has a connection to the program through his late uncle Aubrey Hill, who was a major player during the [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag] era, as well as his mother who is a UF alumna.

If the in-state target signs with the Gators, he would join Buchholz teammates wide receiver [autotag]Creed Whittemore[/autotag] and defensive lineman [autotag]Gavin Hill[/autotag] — who committed in the 2023 class — in wearing the beloved Orange and Blue.

Jackson is ranked No. 407 overall and No. 37 at his position in his class nationally according to the 247Sports composite, while the On3 consensus has him at Nos. 376 and 34, respectively. The Gators hold the lone crystal ball prediction from 247Sports while On3’s Recruiting Prediction Machine has Florida an overwhelming favorite for the young athlete’s talents with a 99.3% chance of signing him.

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Gators pushing hard for local defensive lineman in class of 2024

Billy Napier has done well to keep local talent at home, and now he’s looking at another recruit in the Gainesville area.

If there is one thing Billy Napier has made clear since taking over the Florida Gators football team it’s that he wants to make UF the most desirable university in the state.

Napier has done well to bring in local talent, with 14 of the 16 recruits committed to the Gators in the class of 2023 coming out of Florida while the other two are Georgia kids. Two of those 14 are from Gainesville: four-star defensive lineman [autotag]Gavin Hill[/autotag] and three-star athlete [autotag]Creed Whittemore[/autotag]. Both are rising seniors at F.W. Bucholz High, but there’s also a rising junior that Napier has his eye on, three-star defensive lineman [autotag]Kendall Jackson[/autotag], according to 247Sports.

UF offered Jackson back in June after an impressive showing at one of the team’s Day One camps. Since then, the coaching staff has kept in touch with them and their message to Jackson is a familiar one: stay in Florida and be great at home.

“Their message to me is all the same. It’s they want me to stay home,” Jackson said. “That is pretty much the message every coach I talked to had. They said they want me to stay home. I talk with Coach (Kali) James from time to time when I call him … Coach James wants to make sure he keeps you close and let you know he is going to love you and that he wants you to be a Gator.”

At the time of the offer, Jackson wasn’t as well known in the recruiting space as he is now. He now holds the No. 388 overall spot on the 247Sports composite and is No. 33 among defensive linemen in the class. The service has him listed at No. 26 among those at his position in the site’s standalone rankings as well.

Those numbers could improve with a strong senior year, and Jackson is already receiving interest from some other Power Five programs. Miami is the other main school he’s gotten to know well over the summer, and he hopes to stop by both programs as well as Georgia and UCF over the course of the season.

There’s still plenty of time until he needs to make a decision, but Jackson says Florida is playing its cards the right way.

“Florida definitely is a top school for me,” he said. “I don’t necessarily have a number for anything right now. I am just keeping it open.”

Being a local talent, missing out on Jackson could look bad for the Gators, especially if it’s to the likes of another in-state program. Expect the UF staff to keep pushing for him until a decision is made.

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Gators offer 2024 DL after solid camp performance

2024 defensive lineman Kendall Jackson impressed enough Wednesday to pick up an offer from his hometown Gators.

Florida’s One-Day Camp was Wednesday and F. W. Buchholz (Gainesville, Florida) defensive lineman [autotag]Kendall Jackson[/autotag] made his presence known enough to pick up an offer from the Gators.

It’s unclear if Billy Napier’s staff was looking at him prior to the camp, but Jackson came into things on Wednesday with a plan to get noticed. It worked and Billy Napier pulled him and four-star teammate Gavin Hill aside for an unofficial visit around the facilities. That’s when the offer came in.

“I was out there working my tail off,” Jackson said to Corey Bender of Gators Online. “Doing every drill to the best of my ability and whenever I didn’t do something right, I took the coaches coaching and used it in the next rep. I got to 1-on-1s and I used everything I learned in the camp like my get-off, hips, hands because I knew I wanted the offer.”

Although his only rating comes from On3 and is at three stars, Jackson believes getting looks from Florida will boost his stock. Miami is also showing interest, so that should help as well. He has plans to visit Alabama over the weekend and Miami over the summer and has recently picked up offers from the Hurricanes, Nebraska, Lousiville and Iowa State.

While Florida appears to be high on Jackson’s list, the recruit didn’t give any direct insight as to who is on top of things. It’s too early to tell, and who knows which other schools could enter the mix after this surge in his recruitment. There’s still well over a year until he needs to near a decision, so taking it slow is smart for the 33rd-ranked defensive lineman in the class of 2024, per the On3 consensus.

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Two 4-star recruits plus a 2024 prospect to visit Florida on Tuesday

Napier and Co. are getting a head start on the new open season for recruiting.

After nearly a month-long dead period in February, recruits are able to head out again to see different colleges like Florida and others across the country. Most will opt to wait for this weekend to visit the Swamp, but not 4-stars Eugene Wilson III and Gavin Hill and 2024 defensive lineman Kendall Jackson. They made the trek to Gainesville on Tuesday to visit coach Billy Napier and Co.

Wilson is the only prospect who currently holds a scholarship offer from the Gators. Napier and wide receiver coach Keary Colbert extended an offer to the Tampa-based recruit and called Florida his “dream school” after a strong showing at Under Armour Miami camp last month.

So far, Colbert and area recruiter and defensive line coach Sean Spencer have led the charge for Wilson.

“I think they are great guys, and it’s easy to converse with them from the times I have talked to them,” he told Swamp247. “We laugh and stuff, and it never seems like there is any tension in the conversation at all. You can tell when they talk ball, they know what they are talking about. It’s been really good. I can just tell they are easy to build a relationship with.”

He added that coach Colbert is the one he has spoken to the most. Wilson said he’s laid back and reminds him of his receiving coach at his high school.

Hill and Jackson are the other two prospects coming to see the Swamp and are a bit more local than Wilson. They play football up the road at Buchholz in north Gainesville.

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Vols’ target Kendall Jackson announces college destination

Vols’ 2022 target Kendall Jackson announces college destination.

2022 running back prospect Kendall Jackson announced his college destination Wednesday.

The 5-foot-11, 183-pound running back announced he will attend Chattanooga. His final schools to choose from were Chattanooga, Tennessee and Kentucky.

Jackson is from Oak Ridge High School in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

Tennessee offered Jackson on June 18, 2020.

Tennessee and second-year head coach Josh Heupel signed 20 players during the early signing period in December.

2022 early signing period: Tracker for Vols’ signees

Tennessee’s 2022 football commitment tracker

Big board: Tennessee’s 2022 football recruiting class by position

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Vols’ target 2022 running back Kendall Jackson announces signing time

2022 running back prospect Kendall Jackson announces signing time on national signing day.

2022 running back prospect Kendall Jackson has announced a signing time.

Jackson will sign with his college destination Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. EST. His signing ceremony will take place in the library at Oak Ridge High School in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

The 5-foot-11, 183-pound running back will sign between Tennessee, Kentucky and Memphis.

Tennessee offered Jackson on June 18, 2020.

Tennessee and second-year head coach Josh Heupel signed 20 players during the early signing period in December.

2022 early signing period: Tracker for Vols’ signees

Tennessee’s 2022 football commitment tracker

Big board: Tennessee’s 2022 football recruiting class by position

Follow us at @VolsWire on Twitter and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of University of Tennessee athletics.

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2022 running back Kendall Jackson announces commitment, signing date

2022 running back Kendall Jackson announces commitment and signing date.

2022 running back prospect Kendall Jackson has announced a commitment and signing date.

Jackson will announce his commitment and sign between Tennessee, Kentucky and Memphis on national signing day Feb. 2.

The 5-foot-11, 183-pound running back is from Oak Ridge High School in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

Tennessee offered Jackson on June 18, 2020.

Tennessee and second-year head coach Josh Heupel signed 20 players during the early signing period in December.

2022 early signing period: Tracker for Vols’ signees

Tennessee’s 2022 football commitment tracker

Big board: Tennessee’s 2022 football recruiting class by position

Follow us at @VolsWire on Twitter and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of University of Tennessee athletics.

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A U.S. Girls’ Junior start is serving as Kendall Jackson’s intro to Washington, D.C. ahead of her Howard debut

Meet Kendall Jackson, who is making her first USGA championship start in her new home of Washington D.C. before starting at Howard.

In a matter of weeks, Washington D.C. will be Kendall Jackson’s new home. The 18-year-old from Houston is picking up first impressions this week in nearby Chevy Chase, Maryland, where she can’t believe the severity of the terrain beneath her feet. Columbia Country Club represents a crash course in downhill and sidehill lies.

Then again, when you grow up in South Texas, as Jackson did, everything feels hilly.

“Everywhere in South Texas is flat,” she said, “this area is not flat at all, oh my goodness.”

In the fall, Jackson joins the inaugural women’s golf class at Howard University. Thanks to COVID-19, she hasn’t even seen the campus yet, but she hopes to check that box across town later this week. Her first USGA championship start, this week’s U.S. Girls’ Junior, already brought a memento for her dorm wall. Every competitor received a signed letter from former president Barack Obama, a member at Columbia Country Club.

Embedded in his uplifting message was some sage advice: Keep it below the hole on No. 13.

“As soon as we get home, it’s going to be framed on the wall,” Jackson said, before thinking better of the placement. It belongs with her at Howard.

At first, Jackson thought this golf stuff was way too slow. She was 6 years old when she started with the First Tee of Greater Houston. Eleven years later, as a First Tee member she received various tee gifts from the U.S. Women’s Open staged at Champions Golf Club in Houston in December 2020. She wasn’t able to attend, but she perched a visor with the Champions logo on her head during her U.S. Girls’ Junior qualifier in Lafayette, Louisiana, last month.

Jackson fired a 73 at Oakbourne Country Club to take the only qualifying spot. Now that visor might just be good luck.

In those in-between years, Jackson slowly learned to love the game. Karate and martial arts initially competed for her attention, but then she saw the opportunities that golf could bring.

“At first, I’m going to be honest, I did not like golf at all,” she said. “First Tee itself was great, golf itself, I did not like it. It was boring, it was slow and I would rather be at home watching TV.”

In the transition from 8th to 9th grade, Jackson started going to the golf course every week. She was playing in a junior league and moving up through the levels. She kept playing tournament after tournament.

“Each time you get to the next level, more and more doors and more and more opportunities opened up,” she said. “When I got into high school, I was 100 percent focused. I knew I eventually wanted to go into golf wanted to go to college on a golf scholarship.”

Howard wasn’t always the school, though. Jackson fell in an awkward recruiting class. Many coaches weren’t sure how much room they’d have for Class of 2021 players like her because their schedule had taken COVID hits and older players were lingering with extra eligibility. The NCAA’s in-person recruiting ban also made it impossible for coaches to watch her in person.

“I knew I was a good player and had the ability and opportunity play Division 1 but it seemed like every time I reached out to somebody they either were full or they didn’t know how their schedule was going to look like because of 2020 or seniors coming back,” she said.

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Once she learned about Howard, and that the university was reviving its golf programs in the fall of 2020 with funding from NBA star Steph Curry, it seemed like all she heard about was Howard.

“Either a friend went there, somebody had a family member that just graduated, it was – we were hearing it very consistently,” she said.

Jackson liked head coach Sam Puryear’s thinking of recruiting talented but overlooked players. She didn’t get to meet him in person until he came to watch her compete in Dallas on June 1, but by then she had already read his book, “Diamonds in the Rough.”

“That allowed me to view him not only as a coach but as a person as well,” she said.

Jackson loves to conduct an interview or be interviewed. Family friends say she’s just got to write a children’s book someday based on her love of creative writing – everything from short stories to poems. So far she hasn’t been published, it’s just something she enjoys in her free time.

The plan for now, however, is to study business finance at Howard. She’s interested in learning about money and how to manage it.

Jackson goes back to two ladies she plays with locally, who are 78 and 80 years old. They’re proof you can play golf your whole life, and that’s one thing that inspired Jackson not only to stick with the game but draw others in – particularly young Black women. Tiffany Mack Fitzgerald, founder of Black Girls Golf, was another source of inspiration for Jackson. She had the opportunity to meet Fitzgerald two summers ago and has since taken it upon herself to mentor younger girls in the game – whether they’re just a few years behind her or as little as 5 or 6 years old.

“There’s not that many of us so I want to be able to show people and inspire people that you don’t have to just take this volleyball or basketball,” Jackson said, “that you can play golf as well.”

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Knoxville area running back, Vols’ target receives offer from Missouri

Oak Ridge running back and UT target receives an offer from Missouri.

A University of Tennessee football recruiting target has been offered by another Southeastern Conference school.

Oak Ridge High School junior Kendall Jackson has received an offer from Missouri.

Jackson, a running back in the 2022 recruiting class, has received multiple NCAA Division I scholarship offers since April.

He and the Wildcats are currently in the midst of a TSSAA Class 5A state playoff run.

Jackson missed time due to an injury earlier this season, but helped lead Oak Ridge to an upset win over West High School in Knoxville, 31-28, at Bill Wilson Field Friday night.

The Wildcats have won eight consecutive games, and in most of those victories, Jackson has rushed for at least 100 yards and scored at least one touchdown.

Against the Rebels, however, Jackson had just 36 yards on 10 carries. The Wildcats were able to avenge its early-season Region 3-5A loss to the Rebels, the last team to beat Oak Ridge in 2020.

Jackson also has offers from Tennessee, Tulane, Duke, Eastern Kentucky and Arizona.

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