Four-star wide receiver Christian Leary will announce his commitment on June, 6, the Orlando (Fla.) Edgewater product announced on Friday.

Leary is down to six programs -- Alabama, Arizona State, Auburn, Florida, Oklahoma, and West Virginia.

The Tide offered Leary earlier this spring.

“Their program definitely sticks out as a whole, what they can do with their receivers,” Leary told BamaOnLine. “I feel Alabama can get me to the next level.”

247Sports' Steve Wiltfong caught up with Leary this spring as well. He told Wiltfong that Alabama and Oklahoma were the two programs in contact most.

“He don’t tell me what I want to hear,” Leary told Wiltfong of Nick Saban. “He keeps it real and that’s what I love about Coach Saban. I’ve talked to him on FaceTime twice. He’s a fun guy to talk to. Real fun guy to talk to. He tells me about the culture and how they do stuff and I can see myself playing there. He told me I resemble Jaylen Waddle’s playing style and I’m definitely keeping that in mind as he’s about to leave.”

At 5-foot-9, 180 pounds, Leary is rated the No. 41 wide receiver and the No. 237 overall player in the country, per the industry-generated 247Sports Composite Rankings.247Sports is higher on the talented slot, ranking him the No. 18 wide receiver and the No. 128 overall player.

Here's Leary's scouting report:

"Shorter in stature with a thick, developed lower body. Has added around ten pounds of mass from his sophomore to junior years of high school One of the faster wide receivers on the track in the 2021 cycle and posted some sensational times in the 100 meters early in the spring prior to his senior season. Helped Edgewater to a state title berth as a junior. Productive as a receiver and direct-snap run threat. Transfers his high-level top-end speed to the football field. Pulls away from defenders with ease once in the open field with a long, explosive stride. Dangerous in several facets and a threat to score whenever he touches the ball. Skilled in the open field, whether it's in catch and run situations, as a rusher or return man. Also has the play strength to run with some power. Shows ability to locate and track the ball as a downfield target. Looks like a multi-purpose, versatile offensive weapon at the next level. Will need to continue adding to his skill set as a route-runner as he runs a fairly limited route tree to this point- even more important for a shorter wide receiver. Projects as a Power Five starter with the upside to develop into a NFL Draft selection."

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