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Home » JaCobian Morgan: From Canton to Jackson to HBCU Champion, Now the NFL Draft
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JaCobian Morgan: From Canton to Jackson to HBCU Champion, Now the NFL Draft

Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldApril 14, 202611 Mins Read
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JaCobian Morgan: From Canton to Jackson to HBCU Champion, Now the NFL Draft
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Game On: Sports News, Highlights & Commentary

Key takeaways
  • JaCobian Morgan returned from Syracuse to his Canton roots, embracing leadership at Jackson State and defining team culture.
  • JaCobian Morgan led Jackson State to its first HBCU National Championship, earning Celebration Bowl Offensive MVP and showcasing efficient, dual-threat production in 2024.
  • Suffered a leg injury at the HBCU Classic, battled back, impressed NFL scouts at pro day and HBCU Showcase with arm strength and mobility.

HOUSTON — JaCobian Morgan exudes quiet confidence. Known as “Thee General,” Morgan is a hometown hero, championship quarterback, and legitimate prospect for the 2026 NFL Draft.

In an interview with HBCU Legends, Morgan reflected on his path from Canton, Mississippi, to the national stage. Even painful moments, he explained, fit within his larger plan.

Jackson State Tigers’ quarterback Jacobian Morgan (15) waits for the next play during the game against the Hampton Pirates at Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson, Miss., on Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025. | Lauren Witte/Clarion Ledger / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

From Canton to Syracuse to Coming Home

JaCobian Montreal Morgan is a Mississippi boy from Canton,  just a short drive from Jackson. He grew up a Jackson State die-hard fan, attending games since he was a toddler, absorbing the culture and everything that made JSU a cornerstone of HBCU football in Mississippi.

“As a kid, just going to the games since I was in a stroller,” Morgan said, “making that decision to go to Syracuse, I knew if anything went wrong and I wanted to transfer, I was going to come back home to Jackson State regardless.”

That is exactly what happened. After starring at Canton High School, where, as a senior, he threw for 2,487 yards and accounted for 30 touchdowns, Morgan earned national recruiting attention, rated the No. 77 pro-style quarterback in the Class of 2020 by 247Sports. He enrolled at Syracuse University, where he became one of the few true freshmen to start at quarterback at a Power Four program, even earning a spot on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll.

Yet even as Morgan found new opportunities, the pull of home remained constant.

Morgan’s transfer to Jackson State became a purposeful homecoming.

JaCobian Morga

Dec 14, 2024; Atlanta, GA, USA; Jackson State Tigers quarterback Jacobian Morgan (15) celebrates after a victory over the South Carolina State Bulldogs in the Celebration Bowl at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images
| Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Making of a ‘Thee General’

The nickname “General” did not come from a press release or a social media campaign. It came from a high school loudspeaker.

“Coach Gillum, he was over our intercom of our football games in high school,” Morgan recalled with a laugh. “One day, I think it was 10th or 11th grade, he just called me ‘The General.’ And my receiver, he named him ‘The Megatron.’ So it was always the General and the Megatron.”

At Jackson State, Morgan kept the nickname, adding a personal mark: the “Thee” in “Thee General” on social media honors JSU pride.

“I knew I was Jackson State die-hard as a kid,” he said, “so I’m going to put ‘Thee’ in front of it.”

“Thee General” lived up to his name during three seasons at Jackson State.

The Stats: A Champion’s Resume

Morgan’s production at Jackson State tells the story of a quarterback who grew into a complete player under the guidance of head coach T.C. Taylor.

2023 (Sophomore): In six games during his second season at Jackson State, Morgan completed 83-of-123 passes for 842 yards, 10 touchdowns, and just one interception. He also added 150 rushing yards and six touchdowns on the ground, flashing the dual-threat ability that would define his game.

2024 (Junior — Championship Season): In his junior year, Morgan completed 150-of-234 passes for over 2,000 yards, threw 19 touchdown passes against just eight interceptions, and finished with a 64.1 completion percentage, second-best in the entire SWAC. He also added 225 rushing yards and four touchdowns. His record as a starter was 10-1.

The lone loss came in the season opener, after which he led ten consecutive wins. The final win was in the Celebration Bowl, where he threw for 233 yards and two touchdowns, earning Offensive MVP honors and helping Jackson State defeat South Carolina State 28-7 to claim the program’s first HBCU National Championship.

Career Totals at Jackson State: Over 26 games, Morgan threw for 4,480 yards, 40 touchdowns, and 11 interceptions, while rushing for 668 yards and 13 touchdowns — numbers that speak to his consistency and football IQ.

The 2025 season began with enormous expectations. Named the SWAC Preseason Offensive Player of the Year, Morgan entered his senior season as JSU’s unquestioned leader. The Tigers started 4-1 through their first five games, and Morgan delivered standout moments, including a five-touchdown performance against Alabama State. However, the season then took a turn due to injury.

But the triumphs of the championship season would soon be tempered by adversity during one critical moment: the Las Vegas HBCU Classic.

JaCobian Morgan

Jacobian Morgan participates in the 40-yard dash during pro day at Jackson State University in Jackson, Miss., on Thursday, March 26, 2026. | Lauren Witte/Clarion Ledger / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Overcoming the Injury

Morgan led Jackson State on a 10-play, 86-yard opening touchdown drive against Grambling State at the Las Vegas HBCU Classic, but then re-injured his lower leg during the same game. He was helped off the sideline, eventually emerging from the locker room on crutches in a walking boot.

Without their General, the Tigers lost 26-24.

After learning of his diagnosis, Morgan paused before responding, showing the calm that defines his approach to adversity.

“I just told them to leave the room,” he said. “And I just thanked God. Anytime you’re up, you want to praise God. Anytime you’re down, that’s the opportunity to get back up and praise God. I knew it was one of my low moments. But I knew God was beside me, and I knew I was gonna be all right.”

He admitted to shedding tears. To lean on his mother. To feel the weight of the moment fully before choosing to rise from it.

“It’s just a part of the testimony,” he said. “What’s life without adversity? It’s just another opportunity to praise the Lord.”

Despite not being fully healthy after the leg injury in Las Vegas, Morgan attempted to return before the end of the 2025 season to compete alongside his teammates. His choice to play through discomfort for the benefit of his team became part of his NFL Draft narrative.

JaCobian Morgan and TC Taylor

Jackson State Tigers’ quarterback Jacobian Morgan talks to Jackson State Tigers’ head coach T.C. Taylor during the game against the ULM Warhawks. | Lauren Witte/Clarion Ledger / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Coach T.C. Taylor: The Biggest Blessing

One name kept coming up in our conversation with JaCobian.  His north star: Head Coach T.C. Taylor.

Taylor, a former Jackson State quarterback, receiver, and legend, recruited Morgan out of high school. That shared history — playing the same position, navigating the same program — gave their relationship a depth that went well beyond X’s and O’s.

“Learning from a guy that was in my shoes, it meant the world to me,” Morgan said. “He knew exactly what I was going through. Certain bad games, he’d come talk to me: ‘Okay, this is how you deal with it. Don’t get caught up in X, Y, and Z.’ Good games: ‘Just stay humble. Stay the course.'”

Taylor recognized early on that Morgan’s natural temperament was to lead by example rather than be the loudest voice in the room. Rather than try to change him, he helped Morgan find his voice — calibrated, deliberate, and powerful precisely because it is used with intention.

“I’m kind of a laid back cat that just wants to lead by example,” Morgan explained. “I don’t like to just chat a lot of the time. So he allowed me to open myself up, be more of me to the team.”

As Morgan put it simply: “T.C. Taylor is one of the biggest blessings in my life.”

JaCobian Morga

JaCobian Morgan participates in the broad jump during pro day at Jackson State University in Jackson, Miss., on Thursday, March 26, 2026. | Lauren Witte/Clarion Ledger / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

‘Be Still’: The Advice That Carries Him

When asked for the best piece of advice he has received during the draft process, Morgan did not reach for a quote from a position coach or an agent. He went to his grandfather.

“It was advice my Paw Paw, that’s my granddad, gave me during the 2024 season, and it’s still carrying me to this day,” he said. “Just be still. When God just wants you to be still. In times where you worry, you don’t know what’s next — just be still, man. Let God do his work. You do what you do every day. You put in your work, you put your hard head on every day, and then you let God do the rest.”

It is a philosophy that has served him well at every stage, from the winning highs of the Celebration Bowl to the painful lows of a walking boot in Las Vegas.

The NFL Draft: Turning Heads on the Big Stage

The HBCU Showcase at Commanders Park in Ashburn, Virginia, became Morgan’s introduction to a wider audience of decision-makers. He missed the HBCU Legacy Bowl while recovering from his injury, making the Showcase his first real opportunity to compete in front of scouts.

He made the most of it.

“I was still able to go to the commander’s facility and work out in front of all these teams — with all the top HBCU players,” Morgan reflected. “And to have myself there, man, it’s just a testament to what life is. You just keep going, and you let God literally do the rest.”

His arm strength and pocket mobility have drawn the most attention from evaluators — qualities that, as Morgan noted, have been part of his game for years.

“I never wanted to have a weakness when I was coming to the table,” he said. “Not in accuracy, not in arm strength, not in decision-making. So I always worked on those things.”

The championship pedigree has been a consistent conversation starter in those NFL rooms.

“That’s part of the resume,” he said. “When you go into a new job, they want to see what’s on the resume. For me to have a championship — a winning background — is very big. That’s something I hang my hat on. And they understand the power of HBCU football.”

Earlier in the draft cycle, we heard Morgan’s name mentioned on SiriusXM’s Opening Drive one morning — prime time, national audience, turning heads. He was featured as one of the HBCU prospects most likely to be drafted in a few weeks.  It was a full-circle moment for a young man who had been doing the work quietly for years.

The General, the Man

Beneath the nickname, the stats, and the championship ring is something equally important: a genuinely good person.

“I’m just a chill guy that likes to have fun, joke around, and take real life from things,” Morgan said. “You don’t want to get too high, you don’t want to get too low. All the goofy moments with your brothers — those are the real times of college. Those are the moments you really enjoy.”

He carries himself with the same humility you observe from Coach T.C. Taylor; passionate, grounded, accountable to something larger than himself. When I mentioned that resemblance, Morgan did not push back.

“Yes, sir. That’s my coach, man. I will vouch for him every day.”

He also took a moment to pay respects to one of the great trailblazers in HBCU quarterback history — Doug Williams, the Super Bowl MVP and living legend who was present at the Showcase.

“I shook his hand, took a picture with him,” Morgan said with a grin. “That’s a legend right there.”

What Comes Next

The 2026 NFL Draft is only the next chapter for a player who has already written a remarkable story. JaCobian Morgan has nothing left to prove at the HBCU level. He won the conference. He won the national championship. He won the Celebration Bowl’s MVP. And he fought back from injury to stand in rooms most people doubted he would reach.

The Jackson State faithful, as will the HBCU community, will be watching during the 2026 NFL Draft weekend. And increasingly, so will the National Football League and its decision-makers.

“I always wanted to do my best and get a good representation of HBCU football,” Morgan told me. “It’s not for myself. It’s for the culture as a whole.”

That is ‘Thee General.’ Always leading. Always for something bigger than himself.

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