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After Texas beats Texas A&M, CFP committee must debate Longhorns vs. Notre Dame

2025-11-29 05:05
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After Texas beats Texas A&M, CFP committee must debate Longhorns vs. Notre Dame

Texas gutting Texas A&M's SEC championship hopes will force the College Football Playoff committee to view the Longhorns with fresh eyes.

After Texas beats Texas A&M, CFP committee must debate Longhorns vs. Notre DameStory byVideo Player CoverBlake Toppmeyer, USA TODAYSat, November 29, 2025 at 5:05 AM UTC·4 min read

The College Football Playoff committee just got a tummy ache, and not from eating too many Thanksgiving leftovers. No. 16 Texas strained the committee's bracket by gobbling up No. 3 Texas A&M, 27-17.

The crowded bubble just gained another team.

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Texas' second-half dominance of the Aggies should force the committee to look at the Longhorns with fresh eyes.

"We were physical. We were tough," Sarkisian said on ABC afterward.

On this night, Texas (9-3) resembled a playoff-caliber team.

Texas defensive back Kobe Black (6) makes an interception on a pass intended for Texas A&M wide receiver Mario Craver (1) during the second half at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium.Texas defensive back Kobe Black (6) makes an interception on a pass intended for Texas A&M wide receiver Mario Craver (1) during the second half at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium.

Arch Manning makes enough big plays, Marcel Reed struggles

Boy, imagine the retraction the New York Times must consider if Arch Manning and Texas qualify for the playoff. Weeks ago, the Gray Lady questioned whether Manning is the first flop in college football history. Holy hyperbole!

Manning didn't play great in this one, but he outplayed Texas A&M's Marcel Reed, whose longshot Heisman Trophy hopes went poof. Reed threw two interceptions. Manning supplied two touchdowns.

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Jekyll-and-Hyde Texas remains good at home, and vulnerable on the road.

I’m not convinced Texas is a top-10 team, and it will need to be ranked among the committee's 10-best teams to earn an at-large bid.

Minnesota vs. Wisconsin: 134 meetings, first met in 1890, play for Paul Bunyan's Axe.Auburn vs. Georgia: 130 meetings, first played in 1892, called "Deep South's Oldest Rivalry."Virginia vs. North Carolina: 130 meetings, first played in 1892, called "South's Oldest Rivalry."Oregon vs, Oregon State: 129 meetings, first played in 1894, called "The Civil War."Cincinnati vs. Miami (Ohio): 128 meetings, first played in 1888, they play for the "Victory Bell" in the "Battle for the Bell."Cal vs. Stanford: 128 meetings, first met in 1892, in what's called the "Big Game", and they play for The Axe.Indiana vs. Purdue: 126 meetings, first played in 1891, called the "Old Oaken Bucket", which they play for.Army vs. Navy: 125 meetings, first played in 1890, simply called "The Army-Navy" game.Kansas vs. Kansas State: 123 meetings, first played in 1902, called the "Sunflower Showdown" and they play for the Governor's Cup.TCU vs. Baylor: 121 meetings, first played in 1899, called the "Bluebonnet Battle" and they play for the Bluebonnet Shield.Kansas vs. Missouri. 121 meetings, first met in 1891, called the "Border War" and they play for the Indian War Drum.Ole Miss vs. Mississippi: 121 meetings, first met in 1901, called the "Egg Bowl" and they play for the Golden Egg Trophy.Kentucky vs. Tennessee: 121 meetings, first met in 1893, no cool name or trophy just good, old-fashion border disdain.Clemson vs. South Carolina: 121 meetings, first met in 1896, game is called the "Palmetto Bowl."Texas vs. Oklahoma: 121 meetings, first met in 1900, game is called "Red River Rivalry" and they play for the Golden Hat.1 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Minnesota vs. Wisconsin: 134 meetings, first met in 1890, play for Paul Bunyan's Axe.1 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Minnesota vs. Wisconsin: 134 meetings, first met in 1890, play for Paul Bunyan's Axe.2 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Auburn vs. Georgia: 130 meetings, first played in 1892, called "Deep South's Oldest Rivalry."3 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Virginia vs. North Carolina: 130 meetings, first played in 1892, called "South's Oldest Rivalry."4 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Oregon vs, Oregon State: 129 meetings, first played in 1894, called "The Civil War."5 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Cincinnati vs. Miami (Ohio): 128 meetings, first played in 1888, they play for the "Victory Bell" in the "Battle for the Bell."6 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Cal vs. Stanford: 128 meetings, first met in 1892, in what's called the "Big Game", and they play for The Axe.7 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Indiana vs. Purdue: 126 meetings, first played in 1891, called the "Old Oaken Bucket", which they play for.8 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Army vs. Navy: 125 meetings, first played in 1890, simply called "The Army-Navy" game.9 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Kansas vs. Kansas State: 123 meetings, first played in 1902, called the "Sunflower Showdown" and they play for the Governor's Cup.10 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

TCU vs. Baylor: 121 meetings, first played in 1899, called the "Bluebonnet Battle" and they play for the Bluebonnet Shield.11 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Kansas vs. Missouri. 121 meetings, first met in 1891, called the "Border War" and they play for the Indian War Drum.12 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Ole Miss vs. Mississippi: 121 meetings, first met in 1901, called the "Egg Bowl" and they play for the Golden Egg Trophy.13 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Kentucky vs. Tennessee: 121 meetings, first met in 1893, no cool name or trophy just good, old-fashion border disdain.14 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Clemson vs. South Carolina: 121 meetings, first met in 1896, game is called the "Palmetto Bowl."15 / 15

Golden Egg, few axes and a bucket. See college football's longest running FBS rivalries

Texas vs. Oklahoma: 121 meetings, first met in 1900, game is called "Red River Rivalry" and they play for the Golden Hat.

I am convinced that if Texas had scheduled a home game against Slappy University in Week 1 instead of a road game against defending national champion Ohio State, the committee would believe Texas is a top-10 team.

Because, with a win against Slappy U. replacing a 14-7 loss against the Buckeyes, Texas would be 10-2.

And a 10-2 record that culminated with a win against previously undefeated Texas A&M would equal a playoff bid.

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"It would be a disservice to our sport if this team’s not a playoff team, when we went and scheduled that non-conference game (at Ohio State)," Sarkisian said. "Because, if we’re a 10-2 team, that’s not a question."

Therein lies the pitfall in the committee rejecting Texas.

Rejecting the Longhorns because of their record would warn teams against scheduling tough non-conference opponents. Unless the committee changes its ways, the juice of scheduling tough non-conference opponents simply isn’t worth the squeeze, unfortunately.

Does Texas win strain Notre Dame for CFP bracket?

If Texas isn’t a playoff team, then what’s Texas A&M? The Aggies have a better record than Texas, but an inferior schedule.

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Texas A&M is in no real danger of missing the playoff, though. The Aggies (11-1) beat committee darling Notre Dame, and although their schedule doesn’t grade as tough as Texas’ compilation, it’s no joke.

The playoff committee has spoken on the great Notre Dame-Miami debate, but now it needs to consider a Notre Dame-Texas debate. The Irish don’t match Texas’ number of quality wins. The Irish failed to beat Texas A&M. The Irish, though, have a better record than Texas, and they didn’t lose to eight-loss Florida.

And that’s where Texas gets tripped up. Qualifying for the playoff revolves around a three-step process.

1. Never lose.

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2. If you must lose, don’t lose to bad teams.

3. If you must lose to good teams, don’t get blown out.

Texas lost to a team with a 3-8 record. It lost one too many times. And it got blown out by Georgia, even if the game was close for three quarters.

The Longhorns wouldn’t win a beauty pageant, and, at 9-3, they’d be the first three-loss at-large qualifier in playoff history. Those are a pair of warts, considering the committee usually defaults to record in the rankings, and a team’s subjective “eye test” wields big influence on the committee.

Texas aces neither the eye test nor the record test.

"Is that what college football is about, to not play anybody and just have a good record?” Sarkisian said.

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Unfortunately for Sarkisian and Texas, that's usually what college football is about: Win the beauty pageant and build a premier record, no matter how meek the schedule.

But, if the playoff is to become an exercise of rewarding teams that can beat other top teams, then Texas should be in the field. The Longhorns own wins against three teams that are ranked in the top 15 of the most recent CFP rankings. If it’s to be about valuing strength of record and strength of schedule, Texas fares well in that conversation, too.

If it’s mostly an exercise of win-loss record, then Slappy U. is going to stay awfully busy with scheduling requests.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him at [email protected] and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: If Texas misses CFP bracket, why should anyone schedule Ohio State?

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