2025 Composite four-star receiver Bryson Jones announced his commitment to Texas Tech on Monday following his official visit to campus over the weekend.

The 6-foot-1, 175-pound receiver out of Frisco (TX) Lone Star chose the Red Raiders over other reported offers from Arkansas, Arkansas State, Baylor, Boston College, California, Colorado State, Houston, Illinois, Kansas, Michigan State, Oklahoma State, Ole Miss, Penn State, Pittsburgh, SMU, TCU, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Teas State, Tulane, Tulsa, Utah, UTSA and Wisconsin.

According to 247Sports, Jones holds a three-star rating, positioning him as the 43rd receiver nationally and the 54th overall prospect in Texas for the 2025 recruiting cycle. However, the 247Sports Composite, which consolidates rankings from various recruiting services, elevates Jones to a four-star recruit, ranking him 378th overall in the U.S., 58th among receivers nationwide, and 60th overall in Texas.

Last season, as a junior at Frisco Lone Star High School, he showcased his skills with 64 receptions, 1,092 receiving yards, and 15 touchdowns. Additionally, Jones demonstrated his athleticism by recording track times of 11.56 seconds in the 100-meter dash and 23.11 seconds in the 200-meter dash in February 2024, as reported by MileSplit.

Jones is the 14th commitment of Texas Tech’s 2025 recruiting class, which currently ranks 19th in the country and third in the Big 12.

 

2025 WR Bryson Jones reflects on receiving offer from Texas A&M | TexAgs

 

“We’ll go somewhere between 18 and 20 high school guys,” said Texas Tech head coach Joey McGuire when asked by Inside the Red Raiders how many high school recruits he expects to take in the 2025 recruiting class. “When you look at our roster, when we first got here, it was really split.

t was not a lot of middle, like redshirt sophomores and redshirt juniors, so we’re transitioning more and more with the recruiting classes that we brought in to having more of what I call the meat and potatoes of your roster. Guys that are in their third or fourth year in college, especially on the 0-line and d-line that should be playing because they’ve grown.
“So we’re getting closer but we’ll still be somewhere between 18 and 20 just because we still have a young roster with signing the class that’s here right now that played for us this year and the class that’s coming in–half your roster is still gonna be really young.”

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