Virginia Lands A Commitment From Michigan Transfer EDGE Devon Baxter

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Virginia is getting more help along the defensive line via the tranfer portal.
On Saturday night, Michigan transfer Devon Baxter announced his commitment to Virginia, becoming the 12th player to announce their commitment to UVA during this transfer portal cycle.
BREAKING: Michigan transfer EDGE Devon Baxter has signed with Virginia, @PeteNakos reportshttps://t.co/kSYG7dZ8sR pic.twitter.com/Tzp8gwimAv
— Transfer Portal (@TransferPortal) January 11, 2026
While light on playing experience, Baxter has talent and was a highly-rated recruit coming out of high school. As a prospect in the 2024 class, Baxter was the No. 338 player in the country, the No. 27 edge in the country, and the No. 11 player in the state of Maryland. The 6'6 225 LBS EDGE played at Gwynn Park High School in Brandywine, MD.
Other players that Virginia has committed along the defensive line include UTSA EDGE Nnanna Anyanwu, Yale EDGE Ezekiel Larry, and Baylor EDGE Matthew Fobbs-White. Virginia had one of the best defenses in the ACC last season and if they can hit on their portal talent again, they could have another very good unit.
UVA's Approach to the Portal
Virginia was a portal heavy team last offseason and it should be the case again this time around.
At his national signing day press conference, UVA head coach Tony Elliott talked about his approach to the portal compared to high school:
"Yeah, so if I'm putting a number on it like I did when I first got here, I don't know if I have the number. I'd say I'm probably now more 50 -50 with just the philosophy. And I will say that this group of young men have really helped me make the transition, just because at first you were a little bit leery, not about the ability to increase the numbers. on your roster, but just the chemistry the buy-in being able to create team and this team has been able to show that you can you can do that. However, I think if we look through college football, we can see that You got to get it right and it's not as easy to get it right as people think. So in order and what we learned that the reason that we were able to make the transition as a team is because we had a really, really good nucleus of guys that were fully bought into the program, understood what the core values are, understood how we were going to do things, and they were able to help the new guys make the transition.So I think in order to do that, you're going to have to have high school guys.
And then you may have to take some, some portal guys with multiple years so that they become embedded in your culture to help you make that transition. But I don't know what the, what the mix is. And to be honest with you, it's going to change from year to year, right? It may be a situation where you see that a, the high school route is, is heavy. this year, less portal, and it could be vice versa.So I don't want to pigeonhole myself. That's what I've learned. Don't put myself in a corner from that standpoint. But I will say that this team and the group of guys that we brought in have helped me to say, you know what? OK, it can be done. But they've also kind of showed me what it looks like and what you've got to have in place in order to have a chance to make it work with so many new guys coming in the door. "
Elliott and his staff have a lot of work to do if this program is going to be back in the mix in the ACC in 2026.
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Jackson Caudell has been covering Georgia Tech Athletics For On SI since March 2022 and the Atlanta Hawks for On SI since October 2023. Jackson is also the co-host of the Bleav in Georgia Tech podcast and he loves to bring thoughtful analysis and comprehensive coverage to everything that he does. Find him on X @jacksoncaudell
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