Washington Huskies land commitment from four-star WR Tre Moore
Half a year ago, Kevin Cummings helped put a bow on Washington's highly touted 2026 recruiting class by going into Texas and signing a major wide receiver recruit.
Back in December, 2025, Cummings, UW's wide receivers coach, flipped Jordan Clay, a 247Sports composite four-star wide receiver out of San Antonio who went on to be named the Navy All-American Bowl's offensive player of the year, from Baylor. It was an important recruiting win, and the first time UW had landed a blue-chip prospect from the Lone Star State since the 2021 recruiting cycle.
Now, Cummings and the Huskies have repeated the feat.
Tre Moore, a 6-foot-3, 200-pound wide receiver from Pflugerville, Texas, announced his commitment to Washington Tuesday morning in a series of posts on his social media accounts. He's the 16th player to join UW's 2027 recruiting class and becomes Washington's second highest-rated recruit by composite ranking.
https://twitter.com/Tremoore_1/status/2061840855019684198?s=20
Moore, who plays at Weiss High in Pflugerville, is a four-star prospect, the No. 21 wide receiver, the No. 22 player in Texas and the No. 160 player nationally. Only quarterback Blake Roskopf is rated higher than Moore. He's the seventh blue-chip prospect to commit to the Huskies during the 2027 cycle.
He chose UW out of a final three that also included Ohio State and Miami. . He will officially visit UW on June 19.
Moore enjoyed a breakout campaign as a junior at Weiss in 2025. He made 85 catches for 1,443 yards receiving and 19 touchdowns in 13 games according to MaxPreps. He averaged 111 yards receiving per game and 17 yards receiving per catch. Moore surpassed 100 yards receiving in a single game eight times.
Before stepping into a larger role in 2025, Moore had totaled 39 catches, 565 yards receiving and seven touchdowns during his first two seasons of varsity football.
At Washington, Moore's physical profile fits what Cummings has preferred at their X-receiver position, where Tetairoa McMillan and Denzel Boston - both listed at 6-4 - have thrived in coach Jedd Fisch's offense.
But Moore isn't the only player who fits the physical requirements Fisch and Cummings are looking for at the position. Clay, a 6-3, 207-pound true freshman this season, will likely receive a chance to compete for the starting X-receiver role this season after his spring practice participation was disrupted by soft-tissue injuries.
UW also already holds a commitment from local prospect Braylon Pope, a 6-3, 195-pound wide receiver prospect who helped lead Sumner High to the 2025 Class 4A state championship. Pope is currently UW's third highest-rated recruit behind Roskopf and Moore according to the composite ratings.
Cummings and the Huskies may not be finished at wide receiver, either. UW signed five wide receivers - Raiden Vines-Bright, Dezmen Roebuck, Marcus Harris, Chris Lawson and Deji Ajose - during the 2025 recruiting cycle. Vines-Bright and Harris departed after just one season, but UW signed Clay, Trez Davis, Blaise LaVista and Mason James during the 2026 cycle, demonstrating a willingness to consistently sign large wide receiver classes.
The Huskies hold pledges from three wideouts in the 2027 cycle: Moore, Pope and Zerek Sidney, Roskopf's teammate at Desert Edge High in Goodyear, Ariz. And UW may land a fourth on Friday, when composite four-star receiver Dontay Tyson Jr. announces his commitment.
Tyson, a 6-1, 190-pound receiver from Peoria, Ariz., visited UW during the past weekend and subsequently moved his commitment date forward - ahead of his planned visit to Texas A&M.
Additionally, adding Clay and Moore in consecutive cycles proves Washington is finding success in Texas. And particularly in the San Antonio-Austin metroplex.
Before signing Clay during the 2026 cycle, UW's most recent four-star signee from Texas was running back Emeka Megwa during the 2021 cycle. Before Megwa, Washington hadn't landed a blue-chip player from Texas since Levi Onwuzurike in the 2016 recruiting cycle.
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