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Texas–Texas A&M football rivalry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football rivalry

For the all sports rivalry, seeLone Star Showdown.
Lone Star Showdown
SportFootball
First meetingOctober 19, 1894
Texas 38, Texas A&M 0
Latest meetingNovember 28, 2025
Texas 27, Texas A&M 17
Next meetingNovember 27, 2026
in College Station, Texas
Statistics
Meetings total120
All-time seriesTexas leads, 78–37–5[1]
Largest victoryTexas, 48–0 (1898)
Longest win streakTexas, 10 (1957–1966)
Current win streakTexas, 3 (2011, 2024–present)
Map
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250km
155miles
Texas
Texas A&M
Locations of Texas A&M and Texas

TheTexas–Texas A&M football rivalry is an Americancollege footballrivalry between the Texas Longhorns and the Texas A&M Aggies.[2] The rivalry was played every year between 1915 and 2011, until A&M left theBig 12 Conference to join theSoutheastern Conference[3] during the2010–12 Southeastern Conference realignment as a part of the wider2010–2014 NCAA conference realignment. Texas currently leads the series 78–37–5.[4] The rivalry resumed in 2024 when Texas joined the Southeastern Conference, and it is now played annually under the trademarked moniker "Lone Star Showdown" as part of the SEC's rivalry week at the end of the regular season.

History

[edit]

The first meeting was in 1894. By 1911, Texas led the series 15–4–2. The series went back and forth until 1939, with games overwhelmingly won by the home team, but Texas still led 27–15–4. UT Dominated the rivalry over the next 4 decades with a 36–7–1 record. A&M enjoyed their greatest success in the series thereafter from 1984–1994 with a 10–1 run. From there on Texas won 12 of the last 17 between the two programs.

In July 2011, A&M elected to join theSoutheastern Conference beginning in 2012.[5] The move to switch conferences resulted in the ending of the annual rivalry. On November 24, 2011, UT faced A&M in College Station in the final scheduled annual meeting. Texas won 27–25 on a field goal byJustin Tucker as time expired. In January 2013, a Texas state legislator filed a bill that would require them to play each other every year.[6] The bill was referred to the House Committee on Higher Education on February 18, 2013.[7]

Attempts to revive the series

[edit]

In June 2017, A&M's former athletic director, Bill Byrne, was quoted in an article saying, "Their AD (DeLoss Dodds) at the time came out and said we will never play Texas A&M again, and they worked along with Baylor and the conference to have no one in the (Big 12) schedule us...there were other forces at work to make sure we didn't play."[8] Byrne's comments refer to his last year as athletic director in 2012, during which A&M was in the midst of transitioning to theSoutheastern Conference.

In September 2017, UT students were polled in a university-wide referendum in which 96.71 percent said "Yes" when asked if they were in favor of bringing the game back or not. Later, in February 2019, during Texas A&M's spring student body elections, 88.71 percent (13,359) of 15,060 voters said "Yes" when asked if they were in favor of reintroducing the rivalry as a non-conference matchup.[9] Both polls were organized by student representatives from both schools in a movement entitled, "Reinstate the Rivalry."

In December 2017, Chris Del Conte was named athletic director of the University of Texas.[10] Shortly thereafter, Del Conte contacted Texas A&M athletic director Scott Woodward with a proposition to schedule a home-and-home series in 2022–23, but Woodward declined, as Texas A&M's non-conference schedule was already filled for those seasons.[11][12] Again in 2019 during a panel at the 2019 Texas Tribune Festival, Del Conte stated his support for a resumption of the series.[13]

In November 2018, GOP San Antonio Rep. Lyle Larson proposed and filed a bill that would require Texas and Texas A&M to play every year on or around Thanksgiving day.[14] In February 2019, the bill gained the support of Texas GovernorGreg Abbott who also voiced support for the resumption of the rivalry.[15] The bill never gained wide support and died in committee,[16] but later in June 2019, Gov. Abbott stated that he had been working with leadership of both universities to schedule a two-game matchup at some future point.[17]

In July 2019, coaches of both schools' football teams reaffirmed their desire to resume the rivalry game.[18]

Resumption of the rivalry

[edit]

In 2024, Texas left theBig 12 Conference to join theSoutheastern Conference, which meant the rivalry would resume as a conference game.[19] Texas traveled to Texas A&M during the 2024 season to play the first game between the two teams in 13 years,[20] winning the game 17-7.[21]

The following year the 16th ranked Longhorns beat the 3rd ranked Aggies 27-17 in the first game in Austin since 2010. The loss spoiled a perfect season for A&M and knocked them out of what would be their first SEC title game appearance.[22]

Fight songs

[edit]

Each school mentions the other in its fight song or similar:

  • Texas Fight includes"and it's goodbye to A&M". The song's author, Col. Walter S. Hunnicutt, originally wrote "Texas Fight" as a retort to A&M taunts, songs and yells that he claimed ridiculed "The Eyes of Texas".[23]
  • World War I Marine and A&M studentJ.V. "Pinky" Wilson originally wrote theAggie War Hymn as "Goodbye to Texas University". This is mentioned twice in the second verse, and the second verse also says,"So long to the orange and white" and"'The Eyes of Texas are upon you' / That is the song they sing so well", sometimes followed by"Sounds like hell!". After the second verse – the original song – is sung twice, Aggie fans link their arms and legs and sway left and right to replicate the motion of a saw blade and "saw Varsity's horns off" in reference to the Texas football team simply being known as Varsity before adopting the Longhorn as their mascot.[24]

1999 Bonfire game

[edit]

The 1999 game at Kyle Field between the 5th-ranked Longhorns and the 17th-ranked Aggies took place just eight days after the annualAggie Bonfirecollapsed during its construction, killing 12 people – 11 current students and one former student – and injuring 27. Texas A&M players helped clear some of the fallen logs. In addition, theTexas Exes student chapter canceled the Hex Rally in favor of a "Unity Gathering" at theUT Tower and extended an invitation to all Aggies and their friends. The tower was darkened out of respect for those who had died in the collapse or been affected by it, and participants lit white candles instead of the usual red in memory of the fallen Aggies.[25]

The game began with a flyover ofF-16 jets, all piloted by former A&M students, in themissing man formation. US SenatorPhil Gramm, who taught economics at A&M from 1967 to 1978, donated the flyover he was entitled to upon his death as an elected official, asking instead that it be given in the honor of the 12 Aggies who died. 12 doves were also released before the game, one for each Aggie who had perished. Former US PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush attended, as did his son, Texas Governor and future US PresidentGeorge W. Bush.

Athalf-time, theTexas Longhorn Band dedicated their performance to the students lost and injured in the collapse, and ended by playing "Amazing Grace" and "Taps", then removing their white hats in a show of respect as they walked off the field. TheFightin' Texas Aggie Band also played a tribute to the victims and, contrary to the usual tradition, marched off the field in a silent cadence. Aggie students, who normally sit only when the opposing band plays, stood throughout both performances and gave bothstanding ovations. Texas A&M upset Texas 20–16 after scoring a go-ahead touchdown with 5:03 remaining and then forcing and recovering a fumble with 23 seconds to play.[26][27]

Game results

[edit]
Texas victoriesTexas A&M victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinning teamLosing team
1 October 19, 1894 Austin Texas38 Texas A&M0
2 October 22, 1898 Austin Texas48 Texas A&M0
3 November 4, 1899 San Antonio Texas6 Texas A&M0
4 October 27, 1900 San Antonio Texas5 Texas A&M0
5 November 29, 1900[t] Austin Texas11 Texas A&M0
6 October 26, 1901 San Antonio Texas17 Texas A&M0
7 November 28, 1901[t] Austin Texas32 Texas A&M0
8 October 25, 1902 San AntonioTie0Tie0
9 November 27, 1902[t] Austin Texas A&M11 Texas0
10 November 29, 1903 Austin Texas29 Texas A&M6
11 November 24, 1904[t] Austin Texas34 Texas A&M6
12 November 30, 1905[t] Austin Texas27 Texas A&M0
13 November 29, 1906[t] Austin Texas24 Texas A&M0
14 October 12, 1907 DallasTie0Tie0
15 November 28, 1907[t] Austin Texas11 Texas A&M6
16 November 9, 1908 Houston Texas24 Texas A&M8
17 November 29, 1908 Austin Texas28 Texas A&M12
18 November 8, 1909Houston Texas A&M23 Texas0
19 November 25, 1909[t] Austin Texas A&M5 Texas0
20 November 14, 1910 Houston Texas A&M14 Texas8
21 November 13, 1911 Houston Texas6 Texas A&M0
22 November 19, 1915 College Station Texas A&M13 Texas0
23 November 30, 1916[t] Austin Texas21 Texas A&M7
24 November 20, 1917 College Station Texas A&M7 Texas0
25 November 28, 1918[t] Austin Texas7 Texas A&M0
26 November 27, 1919[t] College Station Texas A&M7 Texas0
27 November 25, 1920[t] Austin Texas7 Texas A&M3
28 November 24, 1921[t] College StationTie0Tie0
29 November 30, 1922[t] Austin Texas A&M14 Texas7
30 November 29, 1923[t] College Station Texas6 Texas A&M0
31 November 27, 1924[t] Austin Texas7 Texas A&M0
32 November 26, 1925[t] College Station Texas A&M28 Texas0
33 November 25, 1926[t] Austin Texas14 Texas A&M5
34 November 24, 1927[t] College Station Texas A&M28 Texas7
35 November 29, 1928[t] Austin Texas19 Texas A&M0
36 November 28, 1929[t] College Station Texas A&M13 Texas0
37 November 27, 1930[t] Austin Texas26 Texas A&M0
38 November 26, 1931[t] College Station Texas A&M7 Texas6
39 November 24, 1932[t] Austin Texas21 Texas A&M0
40 November 30, 1933[t] College StationTie10Tie10
41 November 29, 1934[t] Austin Texas13 Texas A&M0
42 November 28, 1935[t] College Station Texas A&M20 Texas6
43 November 26, 1936[t] Austin Texas7 Texas A&M0
44 November 25, 1937[t] College Station Texas A&M7 Texas0
45 November 24, 1938[t] Austin Texas7 Texas A&M6
46 November 30, 1939 College Station#1 Texas A&M20 Texas0
47 November 28, 1940 Austin Texas7 Texas A&M0
48 November 27, 1941[t] College Station#10 Texas23#2 Texas A&M0
49 November 26, 1942[t] Austin#18 Texas12 Texas A&M6
50 November 25, 1943[t] College Station#12 Texas27#16 Texas A&M13
51 November 30, 1944 Austin Texas6 Texas A&M0
52 November 29, 1945 College Station#10 Texas20 Texas A&M10
53 November 28, 1946[t] Austin#20 Texas24 Texas A&M7
54 November 27, 1947[t] College Station#7 Texas32 Texas A&M13
55 November 25, 1948[t] AustinTie14Tie14
56 November 24, 1949[t] College Station Texas42 Texas A&M14
57 November 30, 1950 Austin#3 Texas17 Texas A&M0
58 November 29, 1951 College Station Texas A&M22#16 Texas21
59 November 27, 1952[t] Austin#10 Texas32 Texas A&M12
60 November 26, 1953[t] College Station#7 Texas21 Texas A&M12
61 November 25, 1954[t] Austin Texas22 Texas A&M13
No.DateLocationWinning teamLosing team
62 November 24, 1955[t] College Station Texas21#8 Texas A&M6
63 November 29, 1956 Austin#5 Texas A&M34 Texas21
64 November 28, 1957[t] College Station Texas9#4 Texas A&M7
65 November 27, 1958[t] Austin Texas27 Texas A&M0
66 November 26, 1959[t] College Station#4 Texas20 Texas A&M17
67 November 24, 1960[t] Austin Texas21 Texas A&M14
68 November 23, 1961[t] College Station#5 Texas25 Texas A&M0
69 November 22, 1962[t] Austin#4 Texas13 Texas A&M3
70 November 28, 1963[t] College Station#1 Texas15 Texas A&M13
71 November 26, 1964[t] Austin#5 Texas26 Texas A&M7
72 November 25, 1965[t] College Station Texas21 Texas A&M17
73 November 24, 1966[t] Austin Texas22 Texas A&M14
74 November 23, 1967[t] College Station Texas A&M10 Texas7
75 November 28, 1968[t] Austin#6 Texas35 Texas A&M14
76 November 27, 1969[t] College Station#1 Texas49 Texas A&M12
77 November 26, 1970[t] Austin#1 Texas52 Texas A&M14
78 November 25, 1971[t] College Station#12 Texas34 Texas A&M14
79 November 23, 1972[t] Austin#7 Texas38 Texas A&M3
80 November 22, 1973[t] College Station#11 Texas42 Texas A&M13
81 November 29, 1974 Austin#17 Texas32#8 Texas A&M3
82 November 28, 1975 College Station#2 Texas A&M20#5 Texas10
83 November 25, 1976[t] Austin#11 Texas A&M27 Texas3
84 November 26, 1977 College Station#1 Texas57#12 Texas A&M28
85 December 2, 1978 Austin#14 Texas22 Texas A&M7
86 December 1, 1979 College Station Texas A&M13#6 Texas7
87 November 29, 1980 Austin Texas A&M24 Texas14
88 November 26, 1981[t] College Station#7 Texas21 Texas A&M13
89 November 25, 1982[t] Austin#14 Texas53 Texas A&M16
90 November 26, 1983 College Station#2 Texas45 Texas A&M13
91 December 1, 1984 Austin Texas A&M37#13 Texas12
92 November 28, 1985[t] College Station#15 Texas A&M42#18 Texas10
93 November 27, 1986[t] Austin#10 Texas A&M16 Texas3
94 November 26, 1987[t] College Station#15 Texas A&M20 Texas13
95 November 24, 1988[t] Austin Texas A&M28 Texas24
96 December 2, 1989 College Station#16 Texas A&M21 Texas10
97 December 1, 1990 Austin#5 Texas28 Texas A&M27
98 November 28, 1991[t] College Station#10 Texas A&M31 Texas14
99 November 26, 1992[t] Austin#4 Texas A&M34 Texas13
100 November 25, 1993[t] College Station#8 Texas A&M18 Texas9
101 November 5, 1994 Austin#11 Texas A&M34 Texas10
102 December 2, 1995 College Station#9 Texas16#16 Texas A&M6
103 November 29, 1996 Austin Texas51 Texas A&M15
104 November 28, 1997 College Station#15 Texas A&M27 Texas16
105 November 27, 1998 Austin Texas26#6 Texas A&M24
106 November 26, 1999 College Station#24 Texas A&M20#7 Texas16
107 November 24, 2000 Austin#12 Texas43#22 Texas A&M17
108 November 23, 2001 College Station#5 Texas21 Texas A&M7
109 November 29, 2002 Austin#10 Texas50 Texas A&M20
110 November 28, 2003 College Station#6 Texas46 Texas A&M15
111 November 26, 2004 Austin#5 Texas26#22 Texas A&M13
112 November 25, 2005 College Station#2 Texas40 Texas A&M29
113 November 24, 2006 Austin Texas A&M12#11 Texas7
114 November 23, 2007 College Station Texas A&M38#14 Texas30
115 November 27, 2008[t] Austin#4 Texas49 Texas A&M9
116 November 26, 2009[t] College Station#3 Texas49 Texas A&M39
117 November 25, 2010[t] Austin#17 Texas A&M24 Texas17
118 November 24, 2011[t] College Station#25 Texas27 Texas A&M25
119 November 30, 2024 College Station#3 Texas17#20 Texas A&M7
120 November 28, 2025 Austin#16 Texas27#3 Texas A&M17
Series: Texas leads 78–37–5[1]
[t] Thanksgiving Day game

Results by location

[edit]

As of November 28, 2025

CityGamesTexas victoriesTexas A&M victoriesTiesYears played
Austin61471311894–2010, 2025–present
College Station50262221915–2011, 2024–present
Houston42201908–1911
San Antonio43011899–1902
Dallas10011907

In popular culture

[edit]

In October 2006,General Mills announced they would honor the then third-longest running college football rivalry with a special editionWheaties box. The box featured the helmets of Texas and Texas A&M and their respective home stadiums,Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium andKyle Field, on either side. Although several individual college basketball and football teams had been featured previously on special edition boxes, this was the first time Wheaties had honored a rivalry series.[28]

The game's tradition figures into the plot of the 1978 stage musicalThe Best Little Whorehouse in Texas andits film adaptation; in the show, each year the game's winners (in the story, the Aggies) would celebrate at the "Chicken Ranch," until an overzealous news reporter (a character based onMarvin Zindler) endeavors to close the legendary brothel.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Winsipedia – Texas Longhorns vs. Texas A&M Aggies football series history".Winsipedia.
  2. ^Hamm, Timm (July 9, 2021)."Texas A&M Aggies vs. Texas Longhorns: A Rivalry Renewed?".SI.com. RetrievedJune 23, 2025.
  3. ^"Texas A&M officially joins SEC".The Texas Tribune. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  4. ^mcubed.net (2011)."Legislator files bill requiring Texas-Texas A&M to renew rivalry". mcubed.net. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  5. ^"Texas A&M officially gets accepted into the SEC".ESPN.com. RetrievedJuly 23, 2018.
  6. ^Paul Myerberg, USA TODAY Sports (January 29, 2013)."Legislator files bill requiring UT-Texas A&M to renew rivalry". Usatoday.com. RetrievedOctober 10, 2015.
  7. ^"TX HB778 | 2013–2014 | 83rd Legislature". LegiScan. RetrievedOctober 10, 2015.
  8. ^John Talty, AL.com (June 28, 2017)."Treasured rivalries still on indefinite hiatus since the SEC's big expansion". AL.com. RetrievedNovember 20, 2018.
  9. ^"Student polls show overwhelming support to bring back Texas A&M-Texas football game".The Dallas Morning News. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  10. ^"TCU Athletic Director Chris Del Conte hired by Texas".Frogs O' War. RetrievedAugust 23, 2018.
  11. ^"Texas A&M declined UT series renewal proposal".ESPN.com. RetrievedAugust 23, 2018.
  12. ^Tavarez, Chris (August 22, 2018)."Texas A&M refuses Texas' offer to renew football rivalry".KXAN. RetrievedAugust 23, 2018.
  13. ^"UT athletic director says Longhorn-Aggie rivalry football game should happen".The Texas Tribune. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  14. ^"Lawmaker proposes bill to force Aggies-Longhorns game after 7 years without it".KTRK-TV ABC 13. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  15. ^"Texas Gov. Greg Abbott pushes revival of the Longhorns vs. Aggies football rivalry".The Dallas Morning News. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  16. ^"Bill to reinstate Texas A&M and UT football game never gained ground".The Texas Tribune. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  17. ^"Gov. Abbott hopes to schedule two-game football matchup between A&M and Texas".The Eagle. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  18. ^"Texas A&M, Texas coaches reaffirm their desire to play rivalry game".KSLA 12 News. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  19. ^"Source: Oklahoma Sooners, Texas Longhorns on the verge of making SEC move play".ESPN. RetrievedJuly 23, 2021.
  20. ^"Storied Rivalry Returns As Texas A&M Hosts Texas At Kyle Field".Texas A&M Today. November 6, 2024.
  21. ^"Texas 17-7 Texas A&M (Nov 30, 2024) Box Score".ESPN. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2025.
  22. ^"No. 16 Texas spoils No. 3 Texas A&M's perfect season 27-17, knocks Aggies out of SEC title game".AP. RetrievedNovember 28, 2025.
  23. ^University of Texas at Austin (July 28, 2013)."Traditions: 'Texas Fight'".Texas Longhorns (Texas Athletics). RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  24. ^Texas A&M University (2020)."Aggie Songs". tamu.edu. RetrievedFebruary 6, 2020.
  25. ^"UT Cancels Hex Rally; Will Hold Unity Gathering". November 22, 1999. Archived fromthe original on March 16, 2005. RetrievedJanuary 20, 2006.
  26. ^Lebas, John (November 27, 1999),"Aggies Conquer 'Horns and Heartache",The Bryan-College Station Eagle, retrievedFebruary 28, 2007{{citation}}:|archive-url= is malformed: timestamp (help)
  27. ^More Than a Game (VHS video). Texas A&M University. RetrievedAugust 17, 2024 – viaYouTube.
  28. ^"Wheaties Honors Historic Collegiate Football Rivalry" (Press release).General Mills. October 18, 2006. Archived fromthe original on December 25, 2007. RetrievedApril 18, 2007.
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