NCAAF: 5-star Jermaine Bishop Jr. commits to Texas, eyes 2-way role

Date:

Share post:


Five-star prospect Jermaine Bishop Jr. committed to Texas in the Class of 2026 on Wednesday, giving the Longhorns a potential two-way player.

The 247Sports composite lists him as the No. 8 athlete in the nation, and he covets the chance to put his name in the same conversation as Travis Hunter, who played both cornerback and wide receiver at Colorado en route to the Heisman Trophy. The Jacksonville Jaguars selected him with the No. 2 pick in the NFL draft last month.

“Being able to watch Travis Hunter do that at the college level was great for me,” Bishop said, per 247Sports. “Now that people know that it’s possible to do it, they know it can be done at that level. It was an eye-opening experience for the rest of the world.”

Bishop plays for Willis High School in Texas. As a junior, he pulled in 1,565 receiving yards and 18 touchdowns and had three interceptions, two forced fumbles and six passes broken up on defense, according to 247Sports. He is 796 yards away from becoming the all-time leader in receiving yards in the Greater Houston area, per the outlet.

The 5-foot-11, 155-pound Bishop had two dozen offers, including from Houston and Texas A&M.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Georgia flips 4-star CB Caden Harris from Vanderbilt

Four-star cornerback Caden Harris flipped his commitment from home-state Vanderbilt to Georgia on Saturday. Harris, who plays at Haywood...

NCAAF: 4-star WR Marquez Daniel commits to Florida on official visit

Marquez Daniel, a four-star receiver who had offers from schools throughout the Southeastern Conference, committed to Florida's Class...

NCAAF: 4-star WR Messiah Hampton commits to Oregon

Four-star wide receiver Messiah Hampton committed to Oregon's Class of 2026. Hampton got to know the Ducks' receiver coach,...

NFL: Saints sign RB Cam Akers to 1-year contract

The New Orleans Saints signed free agent running back Cam Akers to a one-year contract. Financial terms were not...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.