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Texas A&M guard Jaelyn Lee enters NCAA transfer portal

FaceProfileby:Thomas Goldkamp03/31/25
Jaelyn Lee
Photo by Chris Day / USA TODAY Sports

Texas A&M guard Jaelyn Lee has entered the NCAA transfer portal, On3 has learned. He does so after spending two seasons in College Station.

Lee played very sparingly in both of his campaigns with the Aggies. He appeared in nine games as a freshman, before appearing in just six as a sophomore.

He averaged 1.0 points and 0.8 rebounds per game. He did so while seeing 4.8 minutes per game this season.

Jaelyn Lee will have to prove to teams he can play at a high level, and it’s likely he’ll look for an opportunity at a smaller school. He has yet to hit a 3-point attempt in college, going 0-of-7 from downtown in two seasons.

He has, however, been good at the free throw line. He went 4-of-5 as a freshman before not seeing any attempts as a sophomore.

The high-water mark for Lee came in a game against Houston Christian this season. Lee played a career-high 15 minutes and scored four points while grabbing three rebounds.

Another Texas A&M guard enters transfer portal

Jaelyn Lee isn’t the only guard from Texas A&M who has entered the transfer portal. Rob Dockery has also entered. He spent two seasons with the Aggies but redshirted during his true freshman season.

Dockery only appeared in one game this season. He recorded an assist but no points or rebounds in Texas A&M’s 64-61 loss to UCF. On Nov. 22, just over two weeks into the season, a team spokesperson confirmed Dockery was no longer with the program.

Rob Dockery played high school basketball at Jackson-Reed, where he was a three-star prospect. He was the No. 163 overall player and No. 35 small forward in the 2023 recruiting cycle, according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.

Dockery averaged 14.0 points, 6.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game in his senior season to lead Jackson-Reed to its second-straight appearance in the DCIAA championship game. For his efforts, he was named an all-city and all-state selection.

On3’s Grant Grubbs also contributed to this report.