Texas A&M’s football team has withdrawn from the Gator Bowl following a bout of Flu Manchu.
News broke on Tuesday that A&M’s football team had not practiced since last Saturday as a number of athletes had tested positive prior to the Aggies hitting the practice field on Sunday and then again during the next two days. The team was supposed to be released to go home on Tuesday until Dec. 26 when players were to make their way to Jacksonville for final bowl preparations. People both within the program and the highest levels of the administration were pessimistic as early as Tuesday night due to practical considerations arising from numbers via NCAA protocols that the game would take place.
The Aggies were already down quite a few players going into bowl game workouts last week given their status due to injuries and opt outs even before news of possible problems with COVID tests had emerged. There are as many as ten upperclassmen who are draft eligible who could or already have opted out of the game. In addition, two more (Zach Calzada and Dreyden Norwood) have entered the NCAA transfer portal since the regular season ended. Finally, by our count, there are as many as 12 players who are done for the season and won’t play in the game due to injury. Those items push the Aggies down towards approximately 60 scholarship players being available for the game including just one quarterback in Haynes King (who missed most of the season himself due to a broken ankle and has just returned to workouts).
Wait, 60 players? That’s seven more than an NFL roster. You need 11 players each side, for a total of 22. (And prior to 1941, the same players played both offense and defense.) You’ve got enough to play, even if a few players have to learn new positions in a hurry. It’s the postseason, the only postseason your team gets this year, and you’re wimping out.
Also note: “Scholarship” players. Whatever happened to the much-vaunted “12th Man” tradition at A&M, about to turn a century old? One of the features of the 12th Man was a willingness to play walk-ons. A bet dozens (if not hundreds) of ex-high school football playing Aggies would be happy to volunteer to join the football team in their hour of need. And I bet the NCAA would approve it.
But no, we can’t have that. Better to cancel it because someone might get an ouchie.
Evidently the Aggies of 2021 just aren’t made of the stern stuff of the Aggies of 1922. Or even 1983.
Tags: college, coronavirus, Florida, Football, Texas, Texas A&M
The Entertainment and Sports Programming Network quotes A&M’s athletic director as saying they were down to “38 scholarship position players, of which 20 were offensive and defensive linemen”. So what are the other 18, special teams? They can’t suit up and play offense and/or defense?
And apparently, the leading candidate to replace A&M is…Rutgers, who went 5-7 and hasn’t played since November 27th.
Apparently Texas Football is as weak as Texas BBQ and neither can stand up to North Carolina.
I wasn’t surprised that Boston wimped out on a basketball game against Wake Forest because of Covid but I expected more from Texas.
This is an Aggie Joke, right? Right?
One of the Houston area TV newscasts mentioned that between Covid and injuries, A&M was down to something like 14 defensive players. Sure, they could play 22 former high school players that hadn’t ever played together and only practiced for a week and a half, but they’d lose the game, possibly by triple digits. Nobody trying to build a national program would do something like that.
They aren’t filling a spot or two, they need 15 to 20 players with less than 2 weeks notice.
I’m an Ag, and disgusted by this. I’d *much* rather see us field a team and play, even if we got outscored by triple digits, than to cower in fear.
I say outscored because the Texas Aggies have never lost a game. And, yeah, the 12th Man tradition is that we’ll play anyone on hand to be in the fight.
Well, that was the old Texas Aggies. The new ones are woke, and have turned to shit, like everything else. I knew no good would come of that ridiculous NCAA Supreme Court decision. Maybe we can hire Sir Robin’s minstrels to write a yell about how they ran away and refused to play!
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