Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/955638
In-state prospect Dotson takes
long road to University Park
W
hen Penn State fans look back on the
Class of 2018 four years from now, it's
a safe bet that they'll be happy with the
crop of wide receivers that signed this
past December. By now, Nittany Lion fans
are well-acquainted with 8ve-star wide
receiver Justin Shorter and four-star
wideout Daniel George, but it was the
sta:'s 8nal addition, four-star prospect
and Nazareth, Pa., native Jahan Dotson,
who took this group from great to elite.
A member of the Rivals250, Dotson
started as a freshman at Nazareth Area,
but it was his sophomore season, in which
he totaled just shy of 1,200 yards receiv-
ing and 16 touchdowns, that put him on
the map. The following spring, he gave
college coaches another reason to pay at-
tention, winning two gold medals in the
4x100-meter relay and the long jump at
the PIAA Class AAA Track and Field
Championships. By the time he put in
that performance, Auburn, Georgia,
Miami, Michigan, Notre Dame and Ohio
State were just a handful of the two dozen
schools that had o:ered.
Dotson's relationship with the Lions
had already taken o: at that point, as he
had attended his 8rst Penn State junior
day in February. During that visit, it
didn't take long for him to connect with
coach James Franklin and his assistants.
"It started when I was still a sopho-
more," Dotson said. "I visited for their
junior day and I hit it o: with all of their
coaches, including Coach Franklin and
Coach [Josh] Gattis. I liked all of them.
You could tell right from the start that
they were fun, but also great coaches who
had a plan."
Dotson went on to visit Alabama,
Clemson, Ohio State, Michigan and
Michigan State in the summer of 2016,
but many observers felt at the time that
the Lions were the team to beat. He also
decided to transfer that same summer,
leaving Pennsylvania to attend the Peddie
School in New Jersey.
Totaling 20 receptions for 445 yards and
three touchdowns in his 8rst three games,
Dotson could hardly have gotten o: to a
better start at Peddie. In October, he
moved to quarterback due to a team-
mate's injury, but his tenure as a signal-
caller didn't last long, as Dotson su:ered
his own season-ending injury in the 8

