Former four-year Penn State wide receiver Harrison Wallace III officially entered the transfer portal on Tuesday. One day later, the 6-foot-1, 194-pound speedster is already planning to visit the UNC football program, 247Sports national college football reporter Matt Zenitz and others revealed on Wednesday evening.
ALSO READ: Four-Year UNC Defensive Back Enters Transfer Portal
He is also eyeing trips to Louisville, Texas A&M, and South Carolina.
Wallace was the Nittany Lions’ leading wide receiver this past season with his 46 catches for 720 yards and four touchdowns, averaging 15.7 yards per reception for a Penn State squad that finished 13-3 overall.
With 1,221 career receiving yards, the Alabama native is one of the highest-ranked undecided receivers in this year’s transfer portal. He has one year of eligibility remaining.
Interestingly, as a four-star 2021 prep at Pike Road High School (Ala.), Harrison Wallace III initially committed to UNC’s closest neighbor, the Duke Blue Devils, in October 2020 before decommitting two months later and pledging allegiance to Penn State.
As things stand, first-year UNC football head coach Bill Belichick and his cohorts boast 16 additions from the portal, including a pair of wide receivers in Jason Robinson Jr. out of Washington and Aziah Johnson out of Michigan State. The Tar Heel collection ranks No. 26 in the country, per 247Sports, and No. 5 in the ACC.
ALSO READ: Tar Heels Ascend in Transfer Rankings Once Again
Stay tuned to North Carolina Tar Heels On SI for more UNC football transfer portal news.
The Michigan Wolverines made it to the College Football Playoff for the first time in 2021 after beating Ohio State and winning the Big Ten Championship. Sin
Alabama football's WR room stagnated in the final years of the Nick Saban era in Tuscaloosa. The Crimson Tide went from a dominant run of recruiting and develop
Courtesy of UAPB Athletics PINE BLUFF, AR.– The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team has announced its 2025 HBCU football s
There's great news, and just some OK news for the Ohio State football program. The great news is that the Buckeyes made good on their "national title or bust" s