Texas A&M’s recruiting machine is already making noise in a class that’s still years away from taking shape, and one of the biggest names on the 2029 board is paying attention.
Quarterback Ty Snell, widely viewed as one of the top passers in the 2029 group, has already picked up offers from a long list of major programs, Texas A&M included. He’s still unranked for now, like plenty of prospects in that cycle, but the expectation is that he’ll end up as a five-star talent before his college career begins.
For the Aggies, the early interest matters. Snell is a product of Allen High School in Texas, so the chance to stay home could carry real weight, especially with Texas A&M’s new offensive coordinator Holmon Wiggins in the mix. Snell has noticed the momentum in College Station, too.
"They're going to keep on stacking and stacking as they keep going," Snell said of Texas A&M, per TexAgs.
Snell’s offer list already stretches across the country, with Ohio State, LSU, Indiana, Alabama, Georgia, Oregon, Texas Tech, Florida State, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, North Carolina, Auburn, Louisville, South Carolina, Pitt, Houston, Arkansas, TCU, Mississippi State and more all in the mix.
Texas A&M hasn’t made the 2029 class its main priority yet, but it has already dipped into that pool with a few notable offers. Along with Snell, the Aggies have offered quarterbacks Ryder Flugence and Logan Lucero, plus wide receiver Jairus Ingram, Zach Williams, Maddox Porter, Rush Williams and SMU commit Sukora Cooper Jr., among others.
The bigger focus right now is still the 2027 class, where Texas A&M is on pace for the No. 1 group in the cycle and has already landed commitments from some of the country’s top players. The Aggies have also started laying groundwork in 2028 with three-star edge rusher Chance Archangel in the fold.
Once the 2027 class is wrapped up, Texas A&M will turn more of its attention to 2028. But even with that shift coming, the Aggies look positioned to stay aggressive with Snell all the way.
In Other News...
Mike Elko Heads Into Fall Camp With 5 Huge Aggies Questions
Fall camp is arriving with a few of Texas A&Ms biggest decisions still hanging over Mike Elkos roster, and the clearest one might be at cornerback. Dezz Ricks looks settled in as a starter, but the spot opposite him is still up for grabs, with Julio Humphrey, Rickey Gibson and Brandon Arrington all in the mix as the Aggies try to sort out who best fits into the secondary before the 2026 season.
The uncertainty does not stop there, either. Tight end has opened up after departures, leaving Richie Anderson, Houston Thomas and Kiotti Armstrong to sort through the next wave of snaps, while offensive tackle is another spot where the competition is wide open with several transfers and returners pushing for starting jobs. For Elko, the challenge in camp is less about finding bodies than figuring out which of these crowded position groups can turn potential into a dependable answer. [Read more 🡒]
Texas A&M Freshman Receiver Suddenly Has A Real Path To Early Snaps
Texas A&M has already shown it will let true freshmen earn real work when theyre ready, and that history matters again as the Aggies head into a season with a highly regarded 2026 recruiting class. Freshman wide receiver Aaron Gregory has been one of the names drawing the most attention after a strong spring, and with Holmon Wiggins taking over as offensive coordinator, there is a real opening for young receivers to push into the mix while the offense still leans on its run-first identity.
Gregorys path is especially interesting because the Aggies need more from the passing game without abandoning what they do best. If he keeps building on what he showed in the spring, he could put himself in position for meaningful snaps early, particularly in a receiver room where the staff is looking for reliable options who can help stretch the field and fit into multiple looks. [Read more 🡒]
Aggies Just Missed On An Elite Tackle That Felt Within Reach
Texas A&M has already done plenty of work up front for its 2026 class, landing commitments from four offensive linemen and building a group that includes five-star names Mark Matthews and Kennedy Brown along with four-star tackles DeMarrion Johnson and Kaeden Kent. That haul gives the Aggies a real foundation to point to, especially on a roster-building front where tackle talent is always at a premium.
Still, there was a stretch when another elite blocker looked like a realistic possibility in College Station. Texas A&M had been out front early in the recruitment of five-star offensive tackle Ismael Camara before the race shifted elsewhere, a reminder of how quickly these battles can turn when the biggest programs push in late. For the Aggies, the focus now is less on what slipped away and more on keeping the current class intact as signing day approaches. [Read more 🡒]
