Rueben Owens Has One Last Chance To Become An Aggie Star

With a spotlight on Rueben Owens II, the Aggies gear up for a pivotal 2026 season that could redefine their standing in the SEC and beyond.

Rueben Owens II enters 2026 with a real chance to change the way Texas A&M remembers him.

The Aggies are trying to stay near the top of the SEC and push past the point where momentum turns into trophies, whether that ends up meaning an SEC title or a national championship. With the 2025 season building some of that momentum, Texas A&M heads into 2026 with enough talent and the right structure around it to remain one of the conference’s top teams and keep chasing the postseason.

That puts a lot on the shoulders of the program’s best players, and Owens II stands out as the one who could most dramatically reshape his place in College Station.

A redshirt junior, Owens II has spent his first three seasons as an important part of the Aggies’ backfield. Injury limited him for most of the 2024 season, but in 2025 he handled the biggest workload of his Texas A&M career, finishing with 119 carries for 639 yards and five touchdowns.

Now he heads into his fourth year in College Station as the clear projected starter at running back after the departures of Le'Veon Moss and EJ Smith Jr.

Texas A&M still has depth in the room, but Owens II is the one expected to set the tone and take on the heaviest load. He’s the most experienced back on the roster, and the Aggies will lean on him as their go-to option.

His game gives Texas A&M plenty to like. Owens II brings short-area quickness, high end spend and the ability to catch the ball out of the backfield, traits that make him one of the top running backs in the SEC and beyond. The biggest question is health, after injuries have followed him over the last two seasons.

If the Aggies are going to be one of the two teams in the mix for a national championship in early 2027, they’ll need a major season from Owens II. And if he delivers it, he could leave College Station as the next great Texas A&M running back.

In Other News...

Texas A&Ms No. 1 Class Just Got Even More Dangerous

Texas A&Ms 2027 class keeps looking less like a hot streak and more like a full-on recruiting avalanche. The Aggies already sat atop the national rankings, and the addition of another blue-chip defender only deepens a group that now features six five-star commitments and a steady climb for several prospects in the Rivals300. It is the kind of class that gives a program real margin for error, especially when the talent is spread across premium spots and the momentum keeps building.

Mike Elkos staff changes have only added to the sense that this run is being built to last, with Holmon Wiggins taking over as offensive coordinator and Lyle Hemphil stepping in as defensive coordinator after recent departures. Behind the scenes, the Aggies recruiting machine has been humming too, with key staffers helping land more than half the class and others tied to some of the biggest names still shaping the board. The bigger question now is how high this group can climb before signing day, because the way Texas A&M is stacking commitments, the ceiling still feels very much in play. [Read more 🡒]

Why Texas A&M Fans Should Watch Mike Elkos Sanford Decision Closely

Texas A&Ms footprint at SEC Media Days is starting to come into focus, and the Aggies will send a familiar mix of leadership and intrigue to Tampa. Quarterback Marcel Reed, safety Marcus Ratcliffe and linebacker Daymion Sanford will represent the program, while Mike Elko and the 2026 team captains are also scheduled to speak as the leagues preseason spotlight turns toward College Station.

Sanfords presence on the list is the one that stands out most for Aggie fans, given the uncertainty around his availability entering the season. Reed gives Texas A&M a chance to put its young quarterback on a big stage, and Ratcliffe offers another veteran voice, but Sanfords appearance could be the first meaningful update fans get on where he stands as the program heads into fall camp. [Read more 🡒]