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Washington flips 5-star OT Kodi Greene from Oregon

hunterby:Hunter Sheltonabout 10 hours

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Kodi Greene copy 1.jpg

Santa Ana (Calif.) Mater Dei five-star offensive tackle Kodi Greene has flipped his commitment from Oregon to Washington, according to 247Sports’ Brandon Huffman and Greg Biggins.

The elite 6-foot-6, 310-pounder was pledged to the Ducks since Aug. 12 last summer, but is now switching gears and is set to head to Seattle to play for the Huskies in a major recruiting win for head coach Jedd Fisch and UW.

Greene originally hails from Washington and began his high school career at Eastside Catholic in Sammamish, Wash. He took an unofficial visit to the Big Ten program earlier this month. His Mater Dei teammate, three-star safety CJ Lavender, committed to UW in March.

Greene is the No. 23 overall prospect and No. 4 OT in the 2026 cycle, according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies. He’s also the No. 5 player in California.

On3 ranks him as the No. 10 overall recruit in the On300. Greene was the second highest-ranked recruit in Oregon’s 2026 class.

He now vaults Washington’s 2026 recruiting class up to No. 23 in the nation, according to the On3 Industry Team Recruiting Rankings. Greene is the lone blue-chipper in the class to date.

Kodi Greene Scouting Summary

On3 writes this of the elite tackle prospect:

“Nimble offensive tackle who brings a translatable skill set with size and projectable movement skills. Measured around 6-foot-6, and north of 300 pounds before his senior season. Touts average to solid length for his height. Transferred to SoCal powerhouse Mater Dei for his junior season, primarily lining up at right tackle for the Monarchs. A high-level mover. Fluid and balanced. Works to the second level effortlessly. Dangerous as a puller. Shows good pop in his hands and plays with encouraging power. Has a solid understanding of body positioning, walling off defensive linemen. More advanced as a run blocker, but has the skill set to develop into a reliable pass protector over time. Battle-tested and fared well against top competition as a junior. Can continue to improve his hand placement and overall technique.”