Dametrious Crownover is on track to be Texas A&M’s next player off the board in the 2026 NFL Draft, a rise built on size, patience and steady work in the SEC. The Aggies offensive lineman, six-foot-seven and well over 300 pounds, has become the kind of reliable front-line presence NFL teams keep coming back for.
Crownover did not start his college career as an offensive lineman. He played tight end in high school before Texas A&M shifted him to the line, where he settled in as a stable veteran presence and quality starter. That transition has turned him into a buddy on the Maroon Goons and one of the clearest draft candidates in College Station.
What makes the climb notable is not just the frame. Crownover has produced in one of the most difficult and competitive conferences in college football, while fitting the blue-collar mentality head coach Mike Elko has hammered into the program. Texas A&M’s offensive line also delivered a Jacobs Blocking Trophy in 2025, a marker of how much the unit improved and how much it leaned on consistency up front.
That matters because Crownover is being framed as the successor to Chase Bisontis among Texas A&M linemen headed for the NFL, and Bisontis is already off to the league. The Aggies were one of the Southeastern Conference’s most efficient lines a season ago, and Crownover’s role inside that group has only strengthened his case as the next Texas A&M blocker likely to hear his name called in 2026.
The size is obvious. The development is the story. Crownover’s path from high school tight end to SEC starter gives Texas A&M another draftable lineman, and it leaves the Aggies looking again at how quickly their front can keep feeding the next level.