Georgia lands massive piece to 2025 class in 4-star WR CJ Wiley
Georgia has landed another play-making wideout in the 2025 class. Milton (Milton, Ga.) CJ Wiley. The one-time Florida State commitment chose the Bulldogs over the likes of Texas A&M, LSU, Auburn, Georgia Tech, and a number of others.
Wiley seemed to be a Bulldog lean over the summer but surprised everyone when he chose the Seminoles on June 25. At that time he made it clear that he wouldn’t be shutting down his recruitment and that he was open to visiting Georgia again.
He did exactly that in October when Georgia hosted Auburn. He took a visit to Texas A&M a few weeks later and soon after he returned home from that trip, he decided to re-open his recruitment. Wiley put his name back on the market on October 27 and he’s on the Bulldogs’ commitment list less than a week and a half later.
CJ Wiley the prospect + the rest of Georgia’s class
At 6-foot-4 210 pounds, Wiley is the nation’s No. 81 overall prospect and No. 12 wideout per the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average of the four websites that publish recruiting rankings. He’s the No. 11 player in Georgia. Wiley joins four-star wideouts Talyn Taylor (Geneva; Geneva, Ill.), Tyler Williams (Armwood; Seffner, Fla.), and Thomas Blackshear (Calvary Day; Savannah, Ga.) in UGA’s 2025 class. Three-star speedster Landon Roldan (North Oconee; Bogart, Ga.) is also committed to the Bulldogs.
Top 10
- 1New
DJ Lagway injury
Florida QB practices Wednesday
- 2
Tyrell Ward
LSU guard steps away from team
- 3
NIL concerns
Mark Stoops says player would 'give the money back'
- 4Hot
CFP Top 25
First College Football Playoff rankings
- 5
Heisman campaign
Travis Hunter makes case to lift Heisman Trophy
Taylor is the only one of that pass-catching crew who ranks higher than Wiley in this class. Taylor is on the cusp of five-star status as the nation’s No. 34 overall prospect per the On3 Industry Ranking. He’s the nation’s No. 7 wideout and the No. 1 player in Illinois.
Georgia now has 25 commitments in the 2025 class and it seems to be far from done. With the NCAA moving the scholarship and roster limit to 105, almost every team in the country will try and take larger classes either via recruiting or the transfer portal.