Offensive Lineman
6′4″
/
320 lbs
Denville, NJ
Senior (RS)
Josh Henson and the Aggies on the way to stockpiling elite O-Line talent
With Reuben Fatheree becoming the third offensive lineman to join the Aggies' 2021 class, A&M is beginning to see an upswing in their recruiting on the offensive front. The trend must continue for the Ags to have the success they want in the SEC.
Recruiting Battles: Texas A&M Aggies vs. Arkansas Razorbacks
Texas A&M and Arkansas have been going toe-to-toe on the recruiting trail for ages. Jason Howell takes a look at some of the recruiting battles that color the teams' current rosters and high-profile struggles of the past.
7:15
Worth the Wait: The Jermaine Eluemunor draft story
Every NFL draft prospect goes through it: the anxiety of waiting for "the call." TexAgs Production Group joins Texas A&M offensive lineman Jermaine Eluemunor and his family as they hear one name after another called in the draft, waiting eagerly for big London's phone to ring. Watch as Jermaine endures those tense few days on the way to starting his dream of playing in the NFL.
NFL Draft Rewind: Aggie stars find professional landing spots
Over the last three days, Texas A&M's NFL-hopefuls have listened with bated breath, hoping to hear their names called and to join the League. While some had longer to wait than others, quite a few Aggies fulfilled their lifelong dream. Find out how it all shook out inside.
Baltimore Ravens select Jermaine Eluemunor in fifth round of NFL draft
Texas A&M offensive lineman Jermaine Eluemunor was taken with the 15th pick in the fifth round of the 2017 NFL draft by the Baltimore Ravens on Saturday. While at A&M, Eluemunor protected multiple Aggie quarterbacks and proved a solid run blocker.
All Updates
5/5/2017
Worth the Wait: The Jermaine Eluemunor draft story
1/13/2017
Jermaine Eluemunor talks NFL Draft prep, A&M underclassmen & more
9/8/2016
One-on-One: Jermaine Eluemunor on patience, the Aggie offensive line
8/18/2016
Fall Camp Shuffle: Kevin Sumlin talks possible Aggie position changes
7/22/2015
30 Players in 30 Days: #28 - Jermaine Eluemunor
4/25/2014
Exclusive: B.J. Anderson breaks down O-line prospects
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TexAgs National Average Rating
The TexAgs National Average Rating is a proprietary formula that calculates an
industry-wide aggregate rating for each recruiting prospect. The formula includes
publicly listed grades, scores, ratings and rankings by national recruiting services,
along with a TexAgs rating. Combining the data provides a rating for each prospect,
which is then normalized to fit the TexAgs Rating 100-point scale.
The intent of this rating is to provide TexAgs readers with a comprehensive snapshot of
how individual prospects rank nationally.
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TexAgs Rating
The TexAgs Recruiting team of Billy Liucci, David Sandhop, Jason Howell, Ryan Brauninger
and a host of recruiting interns attends more than 75 games each fall and observes and
evaluates every major Texas A&M target, as well as most of the top 150 prospects in the State of Texas.
From this evaluation the team draws a rating for each prospect on a scale between 70 and 100.
99-100: Elite national prospect (Five-star)
Considered one of the best prospects in the nation and a likely difference-maker
at the collegiate level. Displays all of the physical skills to be a future All-American
with potential to be an early-round NFL draft pick.
90-98: Elite state prospect (Four-star)
Considered one of the best 30-40 prospects in the state and a top 250
national prospect. Displays the physical skills to be a major early contributor
at the collegiate level with high professional potential.
80-89: Quality prospect (Three-star)
Considered one of the best 100 prospects in the state and a top 500 national prospect.
Displays the physical skills to develop into a contributor over the course of his college career.
Has the ability to become a professional prospect over time with development.
70-79: Solid prospect (Two-star)
Considered one of the top 250 prospects in the state. Has the physical skills to be a potential
contributor at a D-1 program over the course of his collegiate career with significant development.
Professional potential is low.