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What's at stake in Texas-Texas A&M? Bragging rights, obviously, but also legitimacy for the Aggies

2025-11-26 23:57
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What's at stake in Texas-Texas A&M? Bragging rights, obviously, but also legitimacy for the Aggies

The Aggies may be undefeated, but there's a feeling of fragility after a number of close calls. A win over the Longhorns on Friday would leave no doubt as to their standing in the CFP picture.

What's at stake in Texas-Texas A&M? Bragging rights, obviously, but also legitimacy for the AggiesStory byVideo Player CoverDan WolkenSenior writerWed, November 26, 2025 at 11:57 PM UTC·6 min read

Texas A&M is 11-0, ranked No. 3 and on a glide path to the College Football Playoff. In the modern era, only the 1992 season — when the Aggies finished the regular season 12-0 — comes close to matching what they’ve accomplished so far.

These are the best of times in College Station.

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And yet, as the Aggies approach the final week of the regular season, their standing among the national championship contenders feels fragile. They’ve had to grind out close games, even against teams like Auburn and Arkansas that shouldn’t be in their stratosphere. They fell behind South Carolina by 27 points before storming back in the second half for an improbable victory. And in the SEC, they drew a schedule this year that allowed them to dodge heavy hitters like Georgia, Alabama, Oklahoma and Ole Miss.

That all changes Friday night in Austin, when Texas A&M and Texas play for just the second time since the Aggies left the Big 12 in 2011, temporarily ending a rivalry that had been played uninterrupted since 1915.

“When you watch the speed of the game relative to the speed of other games,” Aggies coach Mike Elko told reporters this week, “everybody seems to be running a step or two faster in this game because of how much it means.”

It’s an interesting question where this one ranks in significance among their 119 previous meetings. Only eight times have they met when both teams were ranked in the top 20, which automatically makes this among the best matchups in the rivalry’s history. At the same time, how can you define the stakes when Texas A&M is playoff-bound regardless of result while Texas — currently 8-3 and ranked No. 16 by the CFP committee — is probably too far back to get into the bracket even if they win?

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“I like that we get an opportunity to stand alone on the Friday after Thanksgiving,” Texas coach Steve Sarkisian told reporters this week. “The fact that we're playing on Friday night with all the eyes of college football on it, and really the football world on this game, I think this game deserves that.”

But this time, the eyes of the football world are only partly going to be on the Longhorns.

Friday night is mostly about Texas A&M. How good are the Aggies really? We’re about to find out.

“We're 11-0; that shows maturity,” Elko said. “We found a way to be successful each week; that shows maturity. We'll see how it plays out Friday.”

COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS - NOVEMBER 30: Arch Manning #16 of the Texas Longhorns dives into the end zone for a touchdown against Dalton Brooks #25 of the Texas A&M Aggies in the first half against the Texas A&M Aggies at Kyle Field on November 30, 2024 in College Station, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images)Texas got the better of Texas A&M in last year's rivalry game as the Longhorns won 17-7 and Arch Manning had a rushing TD. (Tim Warner/Getty Images) (Tim Warner via Getty Images)

It’s hard to say an 11-0 SEC team is still a bit of a mystery box, but if you stripped the logos off their uniforms, critics might detect a whiff of fraudulence. Are the Aggies just extremely good at winning close games, or have they gotten to 11-0 by playing like an 8-3 team that’s due for a regression at the business end of the season?

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Just consider:

- In their 41-40 win at Notre Dame back on Sept. 13, Texas A&M needed an 11-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Marcel Reed on fourth-and-goal with just 13 seconds left.

- Texas A&M held Auburn to just 177 yards but was on a knife’s edge for the entire fourth quarter, unable to put the game away until the final minute.

- The Aggies basically traded Arkansas score-for-score before holding on for a 45-42 win.

- And in the South Carolina game, Texas A&M needed the biggest comeback in school history to avoid a loss at home against a 4-7 team.

While every championship team is going to have some moments of uncertainty, the Aggies are truly just a few plays away from having three or four losses. Should we interpret that as a credit or a red flag?

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None of this is a criticism of what the Aggies have accomplished. They won the games. They put themselves in a remarkable position. Ranked No. 19 in the preseason, nobody could have expected them to get this far.

But without having matched up against the SEC’s elite this season, it’s impossible to say whether they’re really the best team in the league.

Now they come to Austin, playing an underperforming Texas team ranked preseason No. 1 that would love nothing more than to ruin the Aggies’ perfect season and almost certainly knock them out of the SEC championship game.

Will the Aggies keep breaking new ground, or will a loss foreshadow a postseason unraveling?

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“The biggest challenge in this game, and rivalry games in general, the emotions are going to be high,” Elko said. “The energy is going to be high. Through all of that, you've got to find a laser-focus to do the things that you have to do to go out and be successful play-in and play-out. Sometimes you can want something so bad, it almost blinds you. You have to be really careful of that.”

As much as Texas A&M wants to win this game, it doesn’t have to. You could even argue their national championship chances would be better served by losing, missing the SEC title game and potentially knocking them out of a first-round playoff bye where instead they’d host a first-round game in College Station.

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But that’s only true if they’re good enough. Right now, we just don’t know enough about Texas A&M to say how they’d stack up against an Ohio State or even an Indiana.

The good news? It isn’t 1992 anymore. That season, the Aggies ran through a weak Southwest Conference to get to 12-0. Their only win over a ranked opponent was Week 1 against Stanford, which went on to win the Pac-12.

As a result, the Aggies were stuck at No. 4 in the polls behind unbeaten Alabama and Miami as well as Florida State, which suffered their only loss to the Hurricanes by a field goal. On New Year’s Day, it really didn’t matter what happened in the Cotton Bowl against Notre Dame because, with Alabama and Miami facing off in the Sugar Bowl, there was no path to a national title. The Aggies weren’t competitive against Notre Dame in a 28-3 loss, so there was no real talk of a snub.

Now, thanks to the CFP, we’ll find out whether Texas A&M is a schedule-fueled mirage or the realest of deals.

It’s going to be a month-long process of discovery for the Aggies. Friday night’s rivalry game in Austin is just the beginning.

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