Texas A&M’s Marcel Reed spent much of 2025 looking like the kind of quarterback who could carry a team anywhere. He helped push the Aggies to an 11-0 start, authored the biggest comeback in program history against South Carolina and spent real time in the Heisman Trophy conversation before the season ended on a rough note.
The final stretch changed the mood fast. Reed threw four interceptions and no touchdown passes in losses to Texas and Miami, a finish that left a sting in College Station and reopened questions about his growth as a passer heading into 2026.
Todd McShay, though, came away from Reed’s work at the 2026 Manning Passing Academy with a much different read.
On a recent appearance on The Rich Eisen Show, the NFL draft analyst said the Aggies’ redshirt junior stood out to him in Thibodaux, La., after McShay had already gone back through Reed’s tape and seen the missed chances that popped up late last season.
"Marcel Reed was frustrating at times ... after watching his tape and seeing a lot of the same missed throws and missed opportunities, and then I saw him at the Manning Passing Academy, and I'm like, 'Oh, this young man has been grinding,'" McShay said. "[Looks] thicker, looks the part, ball's coming out quicker, more accurate."
McShay also pointed to what can happen when a quarterback gets a full offseason to clean things up.
"It's amazing what one offseason of reset, refine and go repeat can do for a quarterback," McShay said. "When you've got to remember, we're talking 18- to 19-year-olds. So there's a lot of hope, but also a lot of work that has to be done."
That view lined up with what On3’s Wilson Alexander reported from the Academy, where he listed Reed among the early standouts in the throwing sessions. Alexander said Reed was sharp on vertical and post routes, hitting receivers in stride on deep throws with tight spirals.
That kind of performance matters for a quarterback whose arm strength has never really been in doubt. The bigger issue has been accuracy and ball placement, and Reed’s offseason work has been aimed directly at those areas.
He has been training with Jeff Christensen, the private quarterback coach whose client list includes Patrick Mahomes and Baker Mayfield. Per 247Sports’ Tony Catalina, Christensen was expected to spend more than 60 hours on the field with Reed this offseason, with the focus on tightening his mechanics and speeding up his release. Reed also worked with Alabama transfer wide receiver Isaiah Horton, building timing with a new target who is expected to step in as the Aggies’ primary X receiver alongside returning slot star Mario Craver.
Mike Elko offered his own blunt summary of Reed’s rise in June: "He went from a guy who you guys were asking me if he could throw a football, to a Heisman contender."
Reed, for his part, has made it clear he knows the bigger picture.
"We've been one game away from the SEC Championship two years in a row, so we should let that sink in and do something about it," he told On3.
And when it comes to how he wants to be viewed now, Reed didn’t leave much room for interpretation.
"I'm a quarterback," Reed said. "They haven't said that for a while."
In Other News...
Aggies Suddenly Face A Familiar Fear In Pivotal 5-Star Battle
Texas A&M has spent much of this summer trying to stack momentum on the recruiting trail, and the Aggies have reasons to feel better about parts of their roster-building. The wide receiver group has gotten a boost from recent commitments, and the programs pass-catching outlook has been helped by what it showed on the field last season. There is also a bit of good news on another front, with Nico Partida earning a spot on USA Baseballs Collegiate National Team for the World Collegiate Baseball Championship.
Still, the biggest recruiting battle hanging over A&M is the one it cannot afford to lose. The Aggies remain in the hunt for 5-star running back Landen Williams-Callis, a player they have actively pursued, but the chatter around his decision has started to tilt in a direction that is all too familiar for A&M fans. For a program trying to keep pace in the SEC and close the gap in elite talent, the final call on Williams-Callis could say plenty about where this race is headed. [Read more 🡒]
Aggies Transfer Suddenly Looks Like More Than Linebacker Insurance
After Texas A&Ms College Football Playoff loss, Mike Elko and his staff went to work in the transfer portal, bringing in 17 newcomers to help reshape the roster. One of the additions, Tulsa linebacker Ray Coney, looked like a straightforward depth move at the time, a piece meant to help stabilize a defense that needed bodies and experience after a busy offseason.
Coney is starting to look like more than insurance. With veteran linebacker Taurean York gone and Daymion Sanford sidelined by injury, the Aggies need immediate answers in the middle of the defense, and Coney has drawn positive reviews for both his athleticism and his play. Alongside sophomore Noah Mikhail, he is now in line to carry a much bigger load than originally expected, which makes his transition one of the more important developments to watch as the season approaches. [Read more 🡒]
Texas A&Ms Playoff Hopes May Hinge On One Unexpected Offensive Piece
Rueben Owens is positioned to become the centerpiece of Texas A&Ms ground game this fall, and that matters because the Aggies are trying to replace a lot of production around him. Under Mike Elko and newly promoted offensive coordinator Holmon Wiggins, the offense is expected to lean on the run as it reshapes itself after key departures elsewhere, and Owens already showed he can handle a meaningful workload with 639 rushing yards and five touchdowns last season.
Owens now enters the season as the back most likely to carry that burden, working alongside Marcel Reed in an offense that will need stability early. The Aggies do not need him to be flashy so much as dependable, because if the run game holds together, it gives the rest of the offense a chance to settle in while the new pieces around him sort themselves out. [Read more 🡒]
