Texas A&M head coach Buzz Williams and his staff are building a strong foundation with their 2025 recruiting efforts. The Southeastern Conference school has recently landed verbal pledges from two four-star prospects.
Most recently, 2025 four-star wing/small forward Jasir Rencher verbally committed to the Aggies on Thursday. The 6-foot-5, 195-pound Rencher had a final five of Texas A&M, LSU, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Washington. However, in an interview with 247Sports national basketball director Eric Bossi, he said that his recruitment came down to the Aggies and LSU.
Rencher, a senior at Archbishop Riordan High School in San Francisco, received 20 scholarship offers throughout his recruitment, according to 247Sports. Within the 2025 class, he is rated in the top 75 overall and the top 25 at small forward, per Rivals.com.
On his decision to head to Texas A&M, Rencher told On3 national reporter Joe Tipton:
“Coach Buzz is a magnificent teacher on and off the court. He was the first high major coach to know my name and he had a belief in me since then. He also has 19 NBA players as a head coach so he knows what he’s doing and he knows what a pro looks like.”
The pledge by Rencher comes not long after Texas A&M first got on the board in the 2025 cycle. In late September, four-star combo guard Jeremiah Green, out of the AZ Compass Prep School in Chandler, Ariz., verbally committed to the Aggies over other finalists, Oklahoma, TCU, Mississippi State, and LSU.
On a national scale within the 2025 class, ESPN ranks the 6-foot-3, 175-pound Green at No. 64 overall and No. 16 at point guard.
According to Rivals.com, Texas A&M’s two-member 2025 cycle is No. 15 nationwide. Williams and his assistants, per recruiting Web sites, continue to pursue various other high school seniors, such as four-star center John Clark and four-star power forward Sebastian Williams-Adams.
On the court in the upcoming 2024-25 campaign, the Aggies are looking to build off of a 2023-24 season when they went 21-15 overall and reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament, where No. 9 seed Texas A&M lost to No. 1 seed Houston in overtime.
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