Offensive Line Prayer Answered with First 2027 Commit
Jaylon Moore, a 6-foot-4, 290-pound lineman from Creekside, Ga., has become Auburn’s first offensive line commit for the 2027 class. Rated the 44th-best OL nationally and 57th in Georgia, Moore chose the Tigers over Alabama and Georgia. As Alex Golesh rebuilds an O-line depleted by NFL departures and transfers, Jaylon’s pledge marks a critical starting point. Auburn’s class now includes defensive lineman Donivan Moore, tight end George Lamons Jr., running back Myson Johnson-Cook, and Jaylon Moore. Golesh has signaled his intent to stabilize the trenches by combining USF transfers, portal additions, and high school commitments.
In a twist worthy of a sports-camp apocalypse, Auburn’s offensive line prayers have been answered—apparently by the same divine recruiter who stocks shoe stores during Black Friday. Jaylon Moore’s commitment is being treated like the One Ring of linemen: coveted, mystical, and likely to oxidize if exposed to too much SEC sunlight. Meanwhile, Golesh is rummaging through the transfer portal like it’s a year-round clearance sale, hoping to snag enough giants to build a human wall around Auburn’s quarterback. At this rate, the Tigers might have more linemen than actual football players by kickoff.
Four-Star Tackle Declares Auburn “Definitely Top”
Vincent Shields, a 6-foot-6, 275-pound four-star offensive tackle from Murrieta Valley, Calif., received Auburn’s offer and praised the tradition, physical style, and linemen development. Rated 22nd among 2028 tackles and 32nd in California, Shields has been in contact with O-line coaches and recruiting staff. He’s planning an official visit to experience the culture firsthand and test whether Auburn’s toughness lives up to its hype, aiming to join a program that feels like home and develops players for the next level.
Vincent Shields has officially declared Auburn “definitely” a top school, because anything less than “definitely” is practically an insult to his e-wallet. He’s been chatting up coaches like they’re the local barista—asking for extra spring visits and latte art advice. Auburn’s selling point? Weight rooms that double as medieval torture chambers and dorms overlooking baseball fields, as if future linemen need nightly reminders that they could moonlight as outfielders if this whole football thing falls through. It’s nothing less than a gladiator recruitment ritual.
WR Jeramy Laster Jr. Gives Auburn a Glowing Review
Jeramy Laster Jr., a four-star wide receiver from Beech High (Tenn.) and the 28th-rated receiver in 2028, visited Auburn and praised its culture, history, and cohesive coaching staff. He toured the weight room, indoor field, players’ lounge, locker rooms, and dorms with a baseball-field view. Laster, currently ranked ninth in Tennessee, enjoyed Jordan-Hare’s noise level after attending a night game versus Georgia. With offers from Florida, Indiana, Texas A&M, and Vanderbilt, he still ranks Auburn in his top three and plans to return for camps and games.
Turns out, Jeramy Laster Jr. is actively seeking a collegiate experience that rivals a five-star Netflix set: dorms overlooking a baseball diamond, weight rooms suspiciously resembling CIA training facilities, and a stadium so loud it could wake the fossils in the history museum. He’s visited enough campuses to know that Auburn’s catchy motto, “War Eagle and Chill,” really sells. Now he’s just waiting for Auburn to autograph his official visit papers, like he’s expecting a rock tour lineup rather than a playbook full of route trees.
Linebacker Gabriel Player Courts Auburn Attention
Gabriel Player, a four-star linebacker from Eau Gallie (Fla.) and currently rated fourth among 2028 LBs, received an offer from Auburn and appreciates its SEC tradition. With previous offers from Alabama, Florida, Ohio State, and Texas, Player plans to let his recruitment shake out this spring before narrowing his list. He models his game after Micah Parsons but emphasizes humility and leadership. Auburn’s new staff, familiar with his school through USF connections, has him in its top recruitment mix as Golesh seeks to bolster a linebacker corps already among the nation’s best.
Gabriel Player is humbly telling everyone that Auburn’s supposed “elite” tradition doesn’t go to his head—while conveniently forgetting that the term “elite tradition” was coined by Auburn’s marketing department last year. He’s name-dropping Micah Parsons like he’s auditioning for an NFL biopic and juggling offers from Alabama to Ohio State, hoping to maximize his social media engagement metrics. Meanwhile, Auburn coaches are patting themselves on the back for scouting him since middle school, in case any other programs missed the memo that he exists.

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