Blue-White practice will offer first glimpse of new version of Penn State
The 2026 Blue White football “practice” will be more of a public unveiling than the traditional scrimmage that preceded it for a generation as Penn State football and Beaver Stadium continue their massive reconstruction.
The April 25 event marks the initial time the Nittany Lion faithful will meet their new head coach, Matt Campbell, and his staff that has spent the winter rebuilding the roster, the culture and the very architecture of Penn State football.
Campbell’s arrival from Iowa State triggered a wholesale reorganization of the program. The staff directory reads like a cross-section of his Iowa State years who have all transplanted themselves into the Big Ten’s eastern frontier.
Saturday’s glorified practice is the first chance to see how these pieces fit together, not in the abstract of the athletic communication office’s press releases and video clips but in the detailed choreography of a football program trying to prove itself worthy of championship contention.
The most consequential hire other than Campbell is 35-year-old offensive coordinator Taylor Mouser, who served as Campbell’s longtime assistant and has been credited with Iowa State’s 2024 offensive resurgence.
Mouser and Campbell have been together for over a decade. Mouser’s offense went 11-3 in 2024 and capped that season by a 42-41 bowl win over the Miami Hurricanes. Mouser’s resume is compelling with his offensive schemes rooted in timing, layered reads and discipline that requires a steadiness Penn State offense has struggled to consistently achieve.
Defensively, Deon Broomfield may be the most intriguing coaching addition. His work at Iowa State turned the Cyclones’ secondary into one of the nation’s best, finishing first nationally in passing defense and producing NFL caliber defensive backs like T.J. Tampa. Broomfield brings a technician’s eye and a developer’s patience — two qualities Penn State could use after years of uneven secondary play.
Ryan Clanton’s arrival as offensive line coach suggests Campbell is intent on fixing Penn State’s soft underbelly that has been exposed in every heavyweight Big Ten matchup. In Clayton, the offensive line has a new coach known for physicality and fundamentals.
Behind the scenes, Campbell added general manager Derek Hoodjer, chief of staff Skip Brabenec and a restructured performance and recruiting apparatus.
These hires reflect a modern, NFL style organizational model that separates coaching, personnel and operations into specialized verticals.
It is a structure Campbell used effectively at Iowa State, and one that Penn State hopes will stabilize the program.
The Nittany Lions entered December with only two signed recruits due to their head coaching transition that brought on an aggressive portal strategy and a re-recruitment of existing players.
Next Saturday will be the first time this patchwork roster will operate in front of fans and Campbell has been clear that the format must reflect the team’s developmental stage.
The staff’s overhaul mirrors the roster reset: Deliberate, expansive and unmistakably intentional.
Of the 103 players expected to participate in the final spring practice, only 52 return from the 2025 team. Two dozen players departed Iowa State to follow Campbell to Happy Valley and more than 40 transfers arrived from across the country. The Blue-White practice is therefore less a celebration of continuity and more a diagnostic session for a team that has been stitched together in record time.
Penn State’s 2026 schedule blends a forgiving non-conference slate with a very manageable Big Ten one that will allow the program to build on anticipated early successes and contend.
Greg Maresca is a freelance writer who occasionally contributes to the Mirror. He resides in Sunbury.





