default image
Status:
Uncommitted
HIGH SCHOOL

George Toia

Defensive Tackle
6′2″ / 305 lbs
Trophy Club, TX
Byron Nelson
Class of 2027
Rating: 88
?

National Avg
Rating: 90.3
?

School Preferences

School
Interest
Offer
Official Visit
Texas A&M
Medium
Arizona
Medium
Arizona State
Medium
Auburn
Medium
California
Medium
Colorado State
Medium
Kansas
Medium
Miami
Medium
Michigan
Medium
Michigan State
Medium
Missouri
Medium
Nebraska
Medium
Ohio State
Medium
Oklahoma
Medium
Ole Miss
Medium
Oregon
Medium
Oregon State
Medium
Sacramento State
Medium
San Diego State
Medium
San Jose State
Medium
Tennessee
Medium
Texas
Medium
Texas Tech
Medium
UCLA
Medium
UNLV
Medium
USC
Medium
Utah
Medium
Utah State
Medium
Washington
Medium
+ 24 More

Updates

Ryan Brauninger
3 days ago by Ryan Brauninger
TexAgs Recruiting Rankings Update - December 2025
Our recruiting team recently got together to pour over and update our state rankings for the classes of 2026 and 2027. We also expanded our alphabetized watchlist for the class of 2028. In an attempt to be succinct, here are a few of the highlights and biggest movers.Class of 2026SummaryWe landed on just two five-stars within the class, but there are a handful of others that fell just outside of that esteemed title. Senior tape still very much matters despite everyone's rush to fit these kids into boxes early in their high school careers. The wide receiver group is tough to separate. To me, it was the deepest position to situate because there were a lot of prospects that all fell relatively close to each other in their evaluations. Highlights- Keisean Henderson takes over the top spot after a sensationally good senior season at Houston Legacy. - Jermaine Bishop drops a spot to #2, but he's been other-worldly in the last few weeks of the season/playoffs.- KJ Edwards moves into the Top 5 at #4- Do-it-all standout Legend Bey gets a nice bump into the Top 10 at #7- Recent A&M commit Jayden Warren continues his move forward as he's now up to #15.- Carthage LB Carson Crawford goes from unranked to #28 - our biggest mover in the state.- Record-setting RB John Hebert makes his debut at #61 following a ridiculous senior season.A quick look at the Texas A&M commits (soon to be signees):#4 - KJ Edwards#10 - Zaden Krempin #15 - Jayden Warren#21 - Kaeden Johnson #22 - Tank King #25 - Mike Brown #30 - Avery Morcho #38 - DaQuives Beck #42 - Chance Collins Class of 2027SummaryThis is a deeper class that featured some really tough decisions and longer discussions. For a lot of these kids, they're ranking is just going to depend on the eye that is evaluating them because the margins are that fine. It's deep on the offensive line but also shows impressive balance. If anything, quarterback might be a touch down which is unusual for the state of Texas.Highlights- The top 3 remain the same after some real debate on Ismael Camara taking over at the top. - A&M safety commit JayQuan Snell deservedly moves into the Top 10 at #7 - EDGE rusher Kaden McCarty got a nice bump up to #12 due to his elite ability to rush the passer- WR Benny Easter Jr. was our biggest mover in this class - from unranked to #17 in the state- Houston Kinkaid RB Wayne Shanks Jr is now only behind Landen Williams-Callis in terms of ball-carriers- Manvel's Karnell James made a move up as he starts being evaluated more as a nickel/safety.- DT George Toia is in at #31 after moving into the state this season.- Recent Texas A&M LB offer Aston Whiteside is also debuting in this update. He's at #47- Columbus OL Keyon Hemphill-Woods got some deserved love and is up to #56.- A couple more debuts: WR Julian Cromartie at #62 and QB Andre Phillip at #100A quick look at the Texas A&M commits:#7 - JayQuan Snell#43 - DeMarrion Johnson Class of 2028SummaryThe only note I have here is another reminder that this is a Watchlist that is listed alphabetically. We expanded that group from 75 players highlighted to 80. In our opinion, it's far too early to accurately put that group into any sort of order based on ability.
×

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.
×

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.
×

Staff Predictions

The predictions represent which school each staff member believes will ultimately sign the recruit, and the confidence meter represents his level of certainty in that outcome.

Example #1

If the predicted school is Texas A&M and confidence is set to “High”, then the staff member is saying “I believe that this recruit will ultimately sign with Texas A&M and I feel very certain about that.”

Example #2

If the predicted school is “Alabama” and confidence is set to “Low,” then the staff member is saying “I believe that this recruit will ultimately sign with Alabama, but I’m not very certain about that.”
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.