5-star WR Quincy Porter signs with Ohio State Buckeyes
Oradell (N.J.) Bergen Catholic On3 five-star wide receiver Quincy Porter has signed with Ohio State.
Porter is the nation’s No. 41 overall prospect in the 2025 cycle according to the On3 Industry Ranking — a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies. He is the No. 8 wide receiver in the class and the No. 1 recruit from the state of New Jersey.
On3 is the highest on Porter of the four major recruiting services. He ranks as a five-star prospect and No. 17 overall in the latest release of the On300.
The 6-foot-3.5, 200-pound Porter has been committed to the Buckeyes since June 14.
“The wide receiver play that they have at Ohio State,” Porter told On3. “Ohio State is Wide Receiver U.”
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Quincy Porter Scouting Summary
On3’s scouting and rankings team writes this about Porter as a prospect.
“Technician with translatable size and one of the largest catch radiuses among 2025 wide receiver prospects. Savvy receiver who excels as a ball-winner and in contested situations and is tough after the catch. Measured in at over 6-foot-3, 200 pounds with 33.5-inch arms and 9.5-inch hands prior to his senior season. Grew over half an inch and added around 15 pounds as a junior. The top target and a very productive receiver for Bergen Catholic, one of the top high school programs in New Jersey. Has high-end ball skills that combine with his length to manifest in a large catch radius. Made some remarkable contested catches as a junior. Capable of extending to make one-handed grabs. Strong at the catch point and easily tracks the ball over his shoulder.
“Can work in every area of the field. Very crafty after the catch. Sets up blocks and has very good field vision. Fights hard when the ball is in his hands. Uses lateral agility to make defenders miss in space and shows strong balance in breaking tackles. Finished his junior season with 969 yards and 16 touchdowns on just 41 catches (23.6 yards per catch). Turned in three straight double-digit touchdown seasons to end his varsity career. Ran track for the first time in three years as a junior and posted a very good 11.12 second mark in the 100 meters. Can continue adding to his burst and crispness in his routes, but looks to be one of the cycle’s top outside receivers with considerable high-end potential in college football and beyond.”