Texas A&M quarterback Conner Weigman, a former five-star recruit who began each of the last two seasons as the Aggies’ starting quarterback, intends to enter the transfer portal, a source briefed on the decision confirmed.
The decision, while not unexpected, closes the chapter on what was once a promising A&M career for Weigman.
As part of Texas A&M’s historic 2022 recruiting class, the highest-rated in the modern recruiting era according to 247Sports, Weigman showed early flashes of the talent that earned him his lofty recruiting ranking. He started four of the last five games of the 2022 season, then won the starting job going into the 2023 and 2024 seasons.
His 2023 campaign was cut short by a foot injury suffered in the first month of the season. At the time, Weigman was playing his best football, completing 68.9 percent of his passes for 979 yards, eight touchdowns and two interceptions.
After A&M’s coaching change from Jimbo Fisher to Mike Elko, the program entered 2024 with high hopes for Weigman. But he endured a rough debut in A&M’s 23-13 loss to Notre Dame and missed three games later in September with a shoulder injury. He returned to start the next three, including a 41-10 win over Missouri in which he looked dominant, but he was benched in an Oct. 26 win over LSU for Reed, who had started earlier in the season while Weigman was sidelined.
Weigman only saw the field once in November, playing nine snaps in the second half of a 38-3 win over New Mexico State.
In three seasons, Weigman appeared in 15 games (starting 13), throwing for 2,694 yards, 19 touchdowns and seven interceptions. He completed 60 percent of his throws.
Despite his up-and-down 2024 season, Weigman is likely to find plenty of suitors in the transfer portal. When he’s at his best, he was considered one of the nation’s top quarterbacks. Coming into the season, there was some buzz about Weigman being a potential first-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft if he had a strong season.
But he struggled to find consistency as A&M’s starter this season. After being benched in the LSU game, Elko said that Weigman was “sped up” in going through his progressions and not seeing the field as well as he had before. That led to poor decisions and inaccurate throws.
“His clock starts moving faster when he’s not having success,” Elko said on Oct. 28. “His eyes are going through the progressions a little too quick. He’s getting the ball out of his hand a little too quick. I think we saw that a couple of throws.
“Or he rushes his mechanics a little bit and the ball sails on him.”
The fact that his last two seasons were interrupted by injury also didn’t help him. Weigman never had a chance to be a full-time starter for more than four consecutive games during his A&M career. Weigman, from Cypress, Texas, near Houston, was the No. 2 quarterback in the 2022 class, according to 247Sports.
The transfer portal officially opens on Dec. 9.
(Photo: Tim Warner / Getty Images)