Unable to catch or create breaks, Aggies disappoint in 26-22 loss to Bulldogs
Early in the first quarter, Jalen Wydermyer got behind the Mississippi State defense to reel in his 13th career touchdown catch.
That set a Texas A&M record for tight ends.
It was the first of two broken records on Saturday night. The second came in the post-game press conference following a 26-22 loss at Kyle Field.
“We’ve got to play better in those games where every possession matters, every play matters, every situation matters,” A&M coach Jimbo Fisher said. “We’ve got to play better, execute better and we’ve got to coach better and find a way to help them find those plays. I know it sounds like…”
A broken record? Absolutely.
The Aggies’ need to play better, to execute better and to value each possession is a critique that’s been consistently repeated. Just like a broken record.
That’s not all that’s broken in Aggieland.
The dreams of a championship campaign: Broken.
The promise of a great team: Broken.
The hearts of 87,973 assembled at Kyle Field: Broken.
And with No. 1 ranked Alabama visiting next week, one must question if the Aggies’ spirit is next.
The Aggies opened the season ranked sixth. They have fallen to 15th. The Tide likely will eject them from the Top 25. That is if A&M somehow manages to stay in the polls this week. Don’t count on it.
The Aggies (3-2, 0-2) must face the reality of what little they’ve accomplished. Mississippi State (3-2, 1-1) has lost to Memphis and needed three fourth-quarter touchdowns to edge Louisiana Tech, 35-34.
A&M’s loss to No. 8 Arkansas didn’t seem so bad until the Razorbacks were destroyed by Georgia, 37-0.
Even A&M’s “marquee” 10-7 victory over Colorado is polluted. The Buffaloes have lost four straight and have managed just 34 points against four FBS opponents.
This once-promising season is now teetering on the edge of disaster. Unless the Aggies quickly right the ship that Mike “The Pirate” Leach sank on Saturday night, the Texas Bowl may beckon.
Of course, optimistic Aggies — those who maintain A&M never loses but only runs out of time —will seek rays of light shining through the smog.
Silver linings? Well, there was the grounded bird — John David Crow? — that drew a raucous cheer from the crowd when it stepped into the end zone.
Other than that, well…
• Quarterback Zach Calzada showed signs of progress. He passed for a touchdown and ran for another. His lone interception wasn’t exactly his fault. Receiver Demond Demas failed to catch a fairly accurate throw and instead deflected the football to Mississippi State safety Fred Peters.
“He’s getting better and better each time,” Fisher said. “It’s his third game he’s played. We’ve got to continue to play better around him, too. The interception hits a guy perfect with the ball and gives up three points. If they catch that ball, what does it do for his confidence going the other way?”
But Calzada only completed 12 passes for 135 yards and took a decisive sack for a safety with the game on the line.
• The A&M running game produced 161 yards with an average of 5.1 yards per attempt. Perhaps it was boosted by junior Kenyon Green shifting from tackle back to left guard where he earned All-American honors last season.
“Hopefully, that’s what we can stay with,” Fisher said. “I liked that group. I thought we did a solid job.”
Well, except for three sacks the line allowed.
• The constant speculation that Defensive Coordinator Mike Elko will soon be leaving for a head coaching gig may subside. The Aggies surrendered 438 yards of offense.
Yeah, that’s what this season is becoming. Allowing 438 yards can qualify as a bright spot.
Mississippi State quarterback Will Rogers routinely threw underneath A&M’s soft coverage for short to medium gains. He completed 46 of 59 passes for 408 yards.
Rogers could be patient because he was rarely harassed by the Aggies three-man rush.
“We were only sending three (rushers) for the most part,” sophomore safety Antonio Johnson said. “We knew we were going to have to cover longer. We knew they (A&M defensive linemen) were going to do their best to get to the quarterback and rush him and get him off his timing with the receivers and stuff. They did a good job. We just had to do it on the back end.”
Despite all these issues, A&M still had an opportunity to pull out a victory.
Trailing 24-19 midway through the fourth quarter, Devon Achane ripped off a 41-yard run to the Mississippi State 28-yard line.
The drive reached the State 18, but on first down Calzada missed Demas, who appeared open near the right corner of the south end zone.
Achane lost four yards on second down. Calzada overthrew an open Ainias Smith in the left corner on third down. The Aggies instead settled for Seth Small’s third field goal to pull within two points, 24-22, with 5:39 to play.
A&M regained the football on its own 11-yard line, but there would be no clutch game-winning drive. On third down, Calzada appeared to hold the ball too long and was dropped for the safety.
That was just one of several self-inflicted wounds the Aggies were left lamenting:
There was a pass that was misplayed into a costly interception.
A face mask penalty in coverage on third-and-goal from the 2-yard nullified a Mississippi State incompletion. The Bulldogs scored a touchdown two plays later.
A bad snap resulted in a 16-yard loss and squashed a drive.
A pass interference penalty on third-and-16 resulted in a Mississippi State first down.
The Aggies just can’t seem to get any breaks.
Except, of course, for those in the dreams, promises, hearts and records.