Texas didn’t just dip into the transfer portal this offseason - it landed the piece that On3’s Chris Low says sits atop the SEC’s transfer class for 2026.
That player is Cam Coleman, the former Auburn wideout now in burnt orange, who checked in at No. 1 on Low’s list of the 10 most impactful SEC transfers for next season. The ranking puts Coleman ahead of a group that includes Sam Leavitt to LSU, Byrum Brown to Auburn, Jordan Seaton to LSU, and Texas additions Rasheem Biles and Hollywood Smothers.
Low pointed to how transfer-heavy the league has become, noting that a year ago 26 players earned first-team All-SEC honors from the coaches and 18 of them had transferred at some point in their careers, including 11 first-year transfers in 2025.
The portal has become a yearly roster engine, and the belief around college football is that Texas got the best player available this cycle. Sources around the sport estimated Coleman’s deal at a minimum of $3 million, with at least one school that recruited him believing the offer reached as high as $4 million.
Coleman also had a clear checklist when he entered the portal: elite quarterback play and staying in the SEC. Texas gave him both.
He arrives after two seasons at Auburn, where he caught passes from four different starters in Payton Thorne, Hank Brown, Jackson Arnold and Ashton Daniels. The production was solid - 93 catches for 1,306 yards and 13 touchdowns in 23 games - but the ceiling always felt higher for the No. 5 overall recruit in the 2024 class and ESPN’s top receiver prospect nationally.
That’s the bet Texas is making. The Longhorns are trying to fix a passing game that slipped from 14th nationally in 2024 to 44th in 2025. They also ranked 80th in drop percentage, and Manning had games where he completed 60% or less of his passes five times.
Steve Sarkisian has spent his Austin tenure searching for the kind of boundary receiver who can tilt a defense the way Jerry Jeudy, DeVonta Smith, Jaylen Waddle and Calvin Ridley did in his Alabama offenses. Coleman fits that mold in a way Texas clearly believes can change the shape of the offense.
"I think the skill set kind of speaks for itself," Sarkisian said. "But I think it's the work ethic, the demeanor, his willingness to be coachable, the effort he exudes...
When your best players are your best practice players, it sends a great message to the rest of the team. And I think Cam has done that."
Coleman’s presence matters beyond his own targets, too. Ryan Wingo led Texas in 2025 with 54 catches for 834 yards and 7 touchdowns, and he was already drawing the defense’s attention on nearly every snap. Put Coleman on the other side, and the Longhorns suddenly have two receivers who make safeties choose their poison.
Coleman has shown he can win above the rim, with 16 of 31 career contested catches, while Wingo stretches the field with a career average depth of target above 13 yards.
"Both of those guys are so accustomed to always having the safety cheating toward them," said Sarkisian. "If you're only going to play with one safety, you can only cheat so many ways."
There’s still work to do. Coleman needs to cut down on drops and broaden a route tree that has leaned heavily on vertical, contested throws.
But Texas didn’t bring him in to be ordinary. It brought him in because the Longhorns needed a difference-maker, and the SEC’s top transfer for 2026 looks like exactly that.
Texas opens the season on Sept. 5 against Texas State at 3:30 p.m. ET on ESPN, then hosts Ohio State on Sept. 12 at 7:30 p.m. ET on ABC.
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