Texas Suddenly Has A Real Fight For An Elite In-State Receiver

Two legendary college football programs are battling fiercely for the promising wide receiver Jaylen Addai, as recruiting for the 2028 class intensifies in Texas.

The race for Jaylen Addai is already shaping up like one of the biggest recruiting battles in the 2028 cycle, and Texas is right in the middle of it.

Addai, a 6-foot, 167-pound wide receiver at Shadow Creek High School in Pearland, has put himself squarely on the national radar. As a sophomore, he hauled in 37 catches for 779 yards and 14 touchdowns, production that matches the kind of profile that tends to draw every heavyweight in the country.

Rivals has him pegged as a four-star recruit, the No. 3 wide receiver nationally, the No. 1 player in Texas and the No. 11 overall prospect in the country. His offer list already reads like a who’s who of college football: Texas, Ohio State, Texas A&M, Alabama, Notre Dame, LSU, Michigan, Miami, Houston and Nebraska.

The biggest wrinkle in his recruitment is LSU, and it starts with family.

Asked whether Addai is a threat to leave Texas, Spiegelman didn’t leave much room for doubt.

"Absolutely. LSU is on the short list of contenders swinging away at Jaylen Addai. Of course, a legacy, Joseph Addai played at LSU, won a Super Bowl with Peyton Manning and the Colts."

That connection matters because the elder Addai played running back at LSU before the Indianapolis Colts drafted him in the first round of the 2026 draft. For the Tigers, that gives them a selling point no other school can duplicate.

Still, Texas is very much in the hunt. Spiegelman made clear the Longhorns are not fading from the picture.

"Ohio State is another big -name program in the mix as far as out-of-state contenders, but he visited Texas A&M again this summer. Texas continues to stand in a great spot with the state's number one prospect for next year. Again, a blue-chip wide receiver for Steve Sarkisian to try to keep inside the state, but our focus right now would be on LSU and Texas battling for Jaylen Addai."

Addai himself has spoken about that Texas pull.

"Texas has a good culture and a lot of great athletes," Addai said. "Coach Jackson and Sark are great coaches.

I'm building relationships with and talking a lot recently. Getting to possibly stay home is great."

That relationship is only part of the appeal for the Longhorns. Sarkisian’s staff has already sent first-round receivers into the league in recent draft classes, and landing the state’s top wideout would keep that pipeline rolling under receivers coach Chris Jackson.

Texas A&M has stayed in the mix as well after hosting Addai on campus again this summer, while Ohio State remains a major out-of-state contender. LSU, though, has continued to push with both the offer and the family tie, and Addai has kept that relationship with Cortez Hankton moving forward since the Tigers offered him in January.

For now, Texas has no commitments from any of the state’s top 50 prospects in the 2028 class, and the board is expected to start moving once junior seasons end this fall. Addai sits near the center of that picture, and his decision could help set the tone for how other elite Texas recruits view staying home versus heading elsewhere.

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