If Texas A&M is going to push back toward the College Football Playoff in 2026-27, the Aggies will need a lot of things to break right. But the name that keeps rising to the top is not the obvious one.
It’s Rueben Owens.
With Mike Elko entering Year 3 and Texas A&M expecting the kind of depth it has carried in the SEC for years, the roster has plenty of pieces that can matter. Still, the offense has a clear pressure point, and it sits in the backfield. Owens is projected to be the No. 1 running back alongside quarterback Marcel Reed, and the Aggies will be counting on him to steady a room that has real competition behind him for snaps.
That need is sharper because of what Texas A&M lost. The Maroon and White are without their best starting wide receiver and starting running back, and almost the entire offensive line is gone too, with only one starter returning. That puts even more weight on the ground game to carry its share every week, especially with the level of opponents on the schedule.
Owens already proved he could handle a meaningful role. He was part of the 2025 College Football Playoff team that faced Miami at Kyle Field last season, and he earned that spot. Even with Le'Veon Moss back from injury, Owens stepped in when the team needed him and stayed ready.
Last season, he logged 119 carries for 639 yards and five touchdowns. The production came from more than just opportunity.
He showed good vision to find space, then burst through it, and he wasn’t shy about running through contact. He also handled the ball with control and played with enough elusiveness to make defenders miss.
Now the spotlight gets bigger. The 12th Man will lean on him with the position opening up, and he’ll have to get comfortable fast in a new system under newly promoted offensive coordinator Holmon Wiggins.
What makes Owens such a central figure is the way he can create yards in tight spaces. He can bounce, accelerate and use his footwork and power to escape traffic, making him tough to finish off once he gets moving. And the stakes for the run game are obvious when you look at the numbers from last year.
Texas A&M ran for 2,597 yards, averaging 4.8 yards per carry and 184.7 yards per game. The passing game produced 3,378 yards, with averages of 8.3 yards per pass and 259.8 yards per game.
That gap explains why Owens matters so much. If he can help bring balance to the offense and get the run game rolling, it changes everything for Texas A&M. The playbook opens up, the offense gains rhythm, and the Aggies can start to look the way they want to in December.
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 🡒]
