Final Sep 26
ARMY 42 -11.5 o46.5
TEM 14 11.5 u46.5
Final Sep 27
VT 34 17.5 o55.5
MIA 38 -17.5 u55.5
Final Sep 27
WASH 18 1.0 o45.0
RUTG 21 -1.0 u45.0
Final Sep 28
NIU 17 7.5 o46.5
NCST 24 -7.5 u46.5
Final Sep 28
NAVY 41 -4.5 o56.5
UAB 18 4.5 u56.5
Final Sep 28
BUFF 3 6.0 o44.5
CONN 47 -6.0 u44.5
Final Sep 28
OKST 20 6.0 o58.0
KSU 42 -6.0 u58.0
Final Sep 28
MD 28 7.5 o50.0
IU 42 -7.5 u50.0
Final Sep 28
NEB 28 -10.0 o47.0
PUR 10 10.0 u47.0
Final Sep 28
UK 20 15.5 o51.5
MISS 17 -15.5 u51.5
Final Sep 28
WKU 20 7.5 o48.0
BC 21 -7.5 u48.0
Final Sep 28
USF 10 4.0 o60.5
TULN 45 -4.0 u60.5
Final Sep 28
MINN 24 10.5 o34.5
MICH 27 -10.5 u34.5
Final Sep 28
HC 14 30.5 o59.5
SYR 42 -30.5 u59.5
Final Sep 28
BYU 34 3.0 o47.0
BAY 28 -3.0 u47.0
Final Sep 28
BALL 7 22.0 o56.0
JMU 63 -22.0 u56.0
Final Sep 28
TXST 39 -11.5 o55.5
SHSU 40 11.5 u55.5
Final Sep 28
ULL 41 3.0 o59.5
WAKE 38 -3.0 u59.5
Final Sep 28
GASO 38 3.5 o57.5
GSU 21 -3.5 u57.5
Final Sep 28
AKR 10 8.0 o46.5
OHIO 30 -8.0 u46.5
Final Sep 28
WIS 21 13.5 o50.5
USC 38 -13.5 u50.5
Final Sep 28
LOU 24 6.5 o45.0
ND 31 -6.5 u45.0
Final Sep 28
TCU 38 1.0 o59.0
KU 27 -1.0 u59.0
Final 5OT Sep 28
MASS 20 15.5 o44.0
M-OH 23 -15.5 u44.0
Final Sep 28
ARK 17 6.5 o50.5
TAM 21 -6.5 u50.5
Final Sep 28
WMU 20 3.5 o54.0
MRSH 27 -3.5 u54.0
Final Sep 28
SDSU 21 2.5 o47.0
CMU 22 -2.5 u47.0
Final Sep 28
COLO 48 11.5 o60.0
UCF 21 -11.5 u60.0
Final Sep 28
OKLA 27 2.0 o43.0
AUB 21 -2.0 u43.0
Final Sep 28
EMU 52 -14.0 o46.0
KENT 33 14.0 u46.0
Final Sep 28
FRES 14 2.5 o51.0
UNLV 59 -2.5 u51.0
Final Sep 28
UNC 20 -1.5 o55.5
DUKE 21 1.5 u55.5
Final Sep 28
UTSA 20 2.0 o54.0
ECU 30 -2.0 u54.0
Final Sep 28
MSST 13 37.0 o59.0
TEX 35 -37.0 u59.0
Final Sep 28
ODU 30 11.0 o51.0
BGSU 27 -11.0 u51.0
Final Sep 28
UTM 24 -2.5 o45.5
KENN 13 2.5 u45.5
Final Sep 28
WAG 10 35.0 o52.0
FAU 41 -35.0 u52.0
Final Sep 28
LT 10 -2.5 o48.5
FIU 17 2.5 u48.5
Final Sep 28
ISU 20 -16.0 o42.5
HOU 0 16.0 u42.5
Final Sep 28
CHAR 21 4.5 o47.5
RICE 20 -4.5 u47.5
Final Sep 28
TLSA 20 7.0 o66.5
UNT 52 -7.0 u66.5
Final Sep 28
STAN 14 24.0 o58.0
CLEM 40 -24.0 u58.0
Final Sep 28
ULM 13 6.5 o45.5
TROY 9 -6.5 u45.5
Final Sep 28
MTU 7 27.0 o61.0
MEM 24 -27.0 u61.0
Final Sep 28
OSU 38 -23.5 o48.5
MSU 7 23.5 u48.5
Final Sep 28
UGA 34 -2.0 o50.0
ALA 41 2.0 u50.0
Final Sep 28
ILL 7 19.0 o48.0
PSU 21 -19.0 u48.0
Final Sep 28
USA 10 21.0 o64.5
LSU 42 -21.0 u64.5
Final Sep 28
FSU 16 6.0 o46.5
SMU 42 -6.0 u46.5
Final Sep 28
UNM 50 -9.0 o54.0
NMSU 40 9.0 u54.0
Final Sep 28
AFA 19 -4.0 o33.0
WYO 31 4.0 u33.0
Final Sep 28
CIN 41 3.0 o60.5
TTU 44 -3.0 u60.5
Final Sep 28
WSU 24 6.5 o66.0
BSU 45 -6.5 u66.0
Final Sep 28
ARIZ 23 7.5 o47.0
UTAH 10 -7.5 u47.0
Final Sep 28
ORE 34 -23.5 o54.5
UCLA 13 23.5 u54.5
Texas A&M 2nd Southeastern9-1
South Carolina 13th Southeastern2-8

Texas A&M @ South Carolina preview

Williams-Brice Stadium

Last Meeting ( Nov 16, 2019 ) South Carolina 6, Texas A&M 30

Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher has a simple piece of advice for his No. 7 Aggies ahead of their Saturday night visit to South Carolina.

"Don't listen to the poison," he said.

Aside from a 52-24 loss at Alabama last month, Texas A&M (4-1, 4-1 Southeastern Conference) has mostly avoided the poison. Three consecutive wins, coupled with a schedule in which the Aggies should be favored in the last five games, have some speculating that they could finish 9-1 and perhaps earn a spot in the College Football Playoff.

Asked how his team is handling that kind of discussion, Fisher used a whole lot of verbiage to say they're crazy if they listen to anyone besides the coaching staff or teammates.

"I ask them why they are having success? Because you block out the clutter," he said. "You play one game at a time. You live one day at a time. You do what you can today, go to bed, get up, get ready to play the game this weekend, and that process puts you in position to have success.

"Doesn't mean you have success; you still have to go out and play. And that's what you keep reminding them each and every day, because human nature is to have complacency. Human nature is not to grind things out."

Human nature certainly didn't take over last week when Texas A&M thumped Arkansas 42-31 in College Station. Quarterback Kellen Mond threw for 260 yards in an efficient 21-of-26 performance that included three touchdown passes as the Aggies took a 42-17 lead into the fourth quarter and cruised.

While A&M rolled, the Gamecocks (2-3, 2-3) sat and stewed. They last played two weeks ago, taking a 52-24 loss at LSU in their worst performance of the season. That came on the heels of a 30-22 upset win over then-No. 15 Auburn.

Basically nothing went right for South Carolina against LSU, aside from a 19-tackle performance by Ernest Jones. The defense gave up 541 total yards to an offense that bore no resemblance to the one that torched the college football world a year ago with Joe Burrow and Clyde Edwards-Helaire leading the way.

"We didn't get off blocks, we didn't tackle, we didn't play the run well at all," Gamecocks coach Will Muschamp said. "That created some things in the throwing game because we had to bring an extra guy into the box to slow the running game, and they hit some big throws on us."

If South Carolina is to pull off an upset, it will need big games from leading rusher Kevin Harris and top receiver Shi Smith. Harris has 535 yards on the ground through five games, putting him on pace for 1,000-plus yards, impressive in a 10-game season. Smith has 36 catches for 415 yards; no other teammate has more than 14 grabs.

This will be the seventh straight year the schools have met since becoming permanent cross-divisional rivals in the SEC. The Aggies have won the first six, including a 30-6 decision last November at home.

--Field Level Media

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