Oregon, long a haven for five-star talent, is keeping the pipeline humming. Five-star wing Tajh Ariza committed to the Ducks over rival USC on Friday. The 6-foot-9, 200-pound forward becomes one of the five highest-rated players that Oregon has reeled in during the modern era.
The Bellflower, Calif. native is regarded as having some of the most impressive physical tools and defensive upside in the entire 2026 class. Dana Altman’s frontcourt retool is firmly underway with Ariza joining fellow four-star big man Kendre Harrison in a 2026 haul that sits just outside the top-10 nationally.
“Oregon is a winning program — Coach Altman has stacked 20+ win seasons every year he’s been there,” Ariza told 247Sports’ Eric Bossi. “I see myself as the kind of player who can help push them over the top for a deep NCAA run. I know being there will push me and hold me accountable as I work toward my NBA dream – not just to hear my name called but to be prepared as a man on and off the court.”
The Ducks have built an NCAA Tournament team in 10 of the past 13 years. With star point guard Jackson Shelstad and elite big man Nate Bittle back, the Ducks have the pieces to make it 11 out of 14 in 2025-26 before Ariza saunters into town.
“Ariza is a budding jumbo wing who has glaring two-way tools and has continued to grow late into his high school years,” wrote Adam Finkelstein, 247Sports’ Director of Scouting. “Now standing at 6-foot-9 with a better than 7-foot wingspan, he has tremendous positional size and length. He’s also a fluid mover who runs the floor beautifully, covers the court, is a high-rising vertical athlete, and even has naturally soft hands and quick reactions. Ariza needs to keep getting stronger and fill out his frame, but can already fit into a high-level game.
“Defensively, those measurables and physical traits give him glaring upside and potential versatility. Offensively, he can be an explosive transition athlete, has a fluid release on his jumper out to the three-point line, and shows some flashes as a cutter, with his footwork, left hand, and in the mid-post.”
Oregon’s Class of 2026 now ranks 12th nationally, according to 247Sports.