Already listed at 6-foot-3 and 270 pounds, Eddrick Houston's size, speed and versatility will allow him to impose his will as a defensive end for Ohio State.
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Better Know A Buckeye is our look at every member of Ohio State’s 2024 recruiting class and how they became Buckeyes as they prepare to begin their OSU careers this fall.
After failing to secure commitments from three five-star defensive end targets in 2023, Larry Johnson wasn't going to let that streak continue into 2024.
While Eddrick Houston was one of just three signings along the defensive line for the Buckeyes in the class, he was certainly an impactful one. When Ohio State takes the field this fall, it will have three of the nine highest-rated defensive linemen it has signed in the modern recruiting era with J.T. Tuimoloau, Jack Sawyer and Houston all in the Buckeyes’ defensive end corps. The latter, who was the No. 7 defensive lineman (No. 26 overall) in the 2024 class, brings plenty of versatility as an elite pass rusher to Ohio State's defensive line.
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IMMEDIATE IMPACT
While he used his versatility across the defensive line in high school, Houston is expected to be a defensive end at Ohio State. With Sawyer and Tuimoloau returning as the starters and Caden Curry and Kenyatta Jackson Jr. filling out the two-deep, Houston's first season in Columbus will likely be a developmental season, even if he has the talent to contribute right away.
“I think my size and quickness might be the main thing to help me at defensive end,” Houston said. “But at the same time, I’m working on a lot of stuff that I didn’t see in high school, but now I see it up here.”
While the five-star prospect was one of the top prospects in his class, he also realizes that the level of football at Ohio State is much different than what he faced in high school and will take some getting used to.
“Right now they’ve told me to trust the process,” Houston said of the advice he’s received from older players. “Because I’ve messed up a lot of stuff because I’ve never done it. So they just say trust the process. Because they all went through it at first, too. So now it’s just about listening to coach Johnson and everything he’s telling me on how to get better.”
While Johnson has been known to give immediately playing time to his top prospects at defensive end – the Bosa brothers, Chase Young, Zach Harrison, Sawyer and Tuimoloau – as freshmen, Houston could have a tougher time given the talent that’s still in Columbus for the 2024 season.
LONG-TERM IMPACT
Houston will have a legitimate opportunity to compete for a starting job as a sophomore. While he will have to compete with Curry and Jackson, among others, the Buckeyes will be looking for new stars to emerge on the edge following the departures of Sawyer and Tuimoloau, and Houston is capable of being a wrecking ball on the edge.
He already has a college-ready skill set physically and could be the next in a long line of stars on Ohio State’s defensive line as he develops that skill set over the next three to four years.
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