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West Virginia Football

Here We Go: SEC Most Wanted WR Cam Coleman Officially Signed with West Virginia Football, Breaking SEC Trade Record…

Here We Go: SEC Most Wanted WR Cam Coleman Officially Signed with West Virginia Football, Breaking SEC Trade Record

 

The college football world stood still as the news broke—Cam Coleman, the most sought-after wide receiver in the SEC, had officially signed with West Virginia Football, shattering the conference’s trade record.

 

For weeks, speculation swirled around the former Auburn commit. Would he stay in the SEC? Would Alabama swoop in? Or would LSU pull off another last-minute recruiting heist? Yet, in a shocking turn, Coleman chose to leave the SEC altogether and join the Mountaineers in what would go down as one of the boldest moves in recent college football history.

 

West Virginia head coach Neal Brown had played the long game, working behind the scenes to secure Coleman’s commitment. With NIL deals reportedly soaring past the $10 million mark, it was the biggest trade-value signing in SEC history—except it didn’t stay in the SEC.

 

“This is a program-defining moment,” Brown told reporters. “Cam is a generational talent, and we’re thrilled to welcome him to Morgantown.”

 

Coleman, a 6’3”, 190-pound speedster, had initially been committed to Auburn but reopened his recruitment after a record-breaking season. Despite Alabama and Georgia making heavy pushes, he shocked the nation by choosing West Virginia over SEC powerhouses.

 

“I wanted to carve my own path,” Coleman said at his press conference. “The SEC will always be home, but West Virginia showed me something special. This is where I can become the best version of myself.”

 

The signing sent shockwaves across the SEC. Never before had a top-tier SEC recruit flipped in such a dramatic fashion, breaking the record for the highest trade-value deal in conference history—only to leave the conference entirely.

 

West Virginia fans erupted in celebration, knowing they had just landed the biggest signing in program history. Meanwhile, SEC powerhouses were left stunned, wondering if this was just the beginning of a new era in college football—where the biggest stars were no longer bound to the leag

ue’s dominance.

 

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