

Texas A&M basketball has found its tone-setter, and Rashaun Agee is a huge reason the Aggies head into the SEC Tournament with real momentum.
The Texas A&M forward earned All-SEC Third Team honors after putting together the best season of his college career, giving Bucky McMillan’s first Aggies team a physical, reliable force in the paint.
At 6-8 and 231 pounds, Agee has been the kind of player every winning team needs. He brings production, edge, and nonstop energy.
He is averaging 14.7 points and 8.8 rebounds per game, and in SEC play, those numbers climbed to 16.1 points and 9.1 rebounds, showing just how much his game rose when the competition got tougher.
That is not empty production, either. Agee has stacked up 12 double-doubles this season and turned into the centerpiece of Texas A&M’s interior attack.
His rebounding has been especially massive. He enters postseason play ranked second in the SEC with 274 total rebounds, a number that tells the story of how consistently he controls the glass.
And when the lights got bright, Agee got louder. His 26-point outburst against LSU in a triple-overtime win was the clearest reminder yet that he can carry the Aggies when they need a bucket and a grown-man play in the half-court.
He does the dirty work, but he is far more than just a grinder. He can score, finish through contact, and shift the emotional tone of a game.
That presence has helped define the early identity of “Bucky Ball” in College Station.
Agee’s journey makes the breakout even better. He started at Casper College, where he posted a double-double average, then moved to Bowling Green, later spent his senior year at USC, and finally arrived at Texas A&M ready to leave a mark. That mark is all over this season.
The Aggies have already put themselves in strong shape for March Madness, and Agee is one of the biggest reasons why.
If Texas A&M is going to make noise in March, it will start with the veteran forward who has become the heartbeat of this team.