The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

The intersection of Bizzell Street and College Avenue on Monday, Jan. 22, 2024.
Farmers fight Hurricane Beryl
Aggies across South Texas left reeling in wake of unexpectedly dangerous storm
J. M. Wise, News Reporter • July 20, 2024
Duke forward Cooper Flagg during a visit at a Duke game in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Flagg is one fo the top recruits in Dukes 2025 class. (Photo courtesy of Morgan Chu/The Chronicle)
From high school competition to the best in the world
Roman Arteaga, Sports Writer • July 24, 2024

Coming out of high school, Cooper Flagg has been deemed a surefire future NBA talent and has been compared to superstars such as Paul George...

Bob Rogers, holding a special edition of The Battalion.
Lyle Lovett, other past students remember Bob Rogers
Shalina SabihJuly 15, 2024

In his various positions, Professor Emeritus Bob Rogers laid down the stepping stones that student journalists at Texas A&M walk today, carving...

The referees and starting lineups of the Brazilian and Mexican national teams walk onto Kyle Field before the MexTour match on Saturday, June 8, 2024. (Kyle Heise/The Battalion)
Opinion: Bring the USWNT to Kyle Field
Ian Curtis, Sports Reporter • July 24, 2024

As I wandered somewhere in between the Brazilian carnival dancers and luchador masks that surrounded Kyle Field in the hours before the June...

Forging rivals

Rivalries matter in college football. A&M is no stranger to that. We still sing about the Longhorns every week and I cant help but wonder what fans of the opposition must be thinking when we do. So far it hasnt mattered, because when the players and fans have sawed varsitys horns off, opposing stadiums have already been emptied or shamed into submission by head coach Kevin Sumlins bottled lightning of an offense.
We still care about Texas and they still care about us, no matter how hard both sides try to pretend otherwise. I was walking to my car after the 29-24 win over No. 1 Alabama in Tuscaloosa when I was stopped by an Aggie fan. The man was everything a too-drunk football fan should be, complete with a half-smoked victory cigar in his mouth. We were in Alabama the taste of the biggest win in modern program history still sweet and all this guy could talk about was Mack Brown and the Longhorns. He wasnt interested in Nick Saban, the Crimson Tide, BCS standings or any of the other things that are supposed to matter in those moments. He said things in what was honestly the most epic cinematic voice Ive heard in a while about how A&M is stealing everything Texas lives for, everything they had. This was a watershed moment in the age-old (and previously one-sided) power struggle between the two state powers and this man knew it. The Aggies have the phenom freshman, the hotshot offensive coordinator, the top-flight head coach, the fresh uniforms, the newly painted SEC seal at midfield. What does Texas have?
A&M and Texas will play each other sooner than many fans think. Athletic director DeLoss Dodds will get the boot and well pick up right where we left off. Until then, who are we supposed to hate? At least half of college football is having someone to hate. For A&M in the SEC, the answer isnt so obvious.
Its not Missouri, even if they entered the SEC at the same time as A&M. Its not Alabama because there is too much mutual respect between the teams, too much history. Gene Stallings and Bear Bryant helmed both schools as head coach, and Alabama fans care about that kind of thing.
If there is a rivalry ready to be stoked into anything resembling the bonfire that was A&M and Texas, its going to be found among the dormant feuds between A&M and LSU or Arkansas. Theres history with those programs and if A&M cares about anything, its history.
But what Im suggesting is maybe there isnt the bitter brand of rivalry in this new conference home, and maybe thats a good thing. I hated most schools in the Big 12. The first time I supported a Big 12 team, ever, was last Saturday as Baylor took a match to Collin Kleins Heisman chances. Thats it. I always thought the argument that we should root for other conference or Texas teams was ridiculous. But havent you noticed something different about the SEC?
When Oregon and Kansas State lost, I was thrilled first and foremost for the Heisman chances of Johnny Manziel. But it was a good night for another reason: the SEC was going to be back in the BCS National Championship Game. When have I ever cared about something like that? Theres a level of conference pride in the SEC that Aggie fans have never experienced in the Big 12. The SEC sits on a pedestal in the college football world, the unquestioned king of the hill. The schools have a vested interest in that position the cash flow in a conference with revenue sharing and six straight national championships is considerable but the fans dont care about the dollars and cents, at least not from what Ive seen. The SEC cares about the SEC as a brand and as an institution.
The obvious counter to this argument is that were in the middle of some kind of honeymoon stage. Incoming students think every campus conversation will be an intellectual one and every passerby will give a Howdy. They couldnt be more wrong. Maybe the novelty of the switch is lending the better part of the unity and cohesiveness we feel in the SEC. The Aggies are the new kids and theyve had more success than any talking head predicted. The University will print the SEC logo on anything it can get its hands on (Whats the over/under on SEC scantrons and blue books for the spring?) and will hang the flags of every conference member around campus on game day. Which, by the way, LSU fans thought was absurd. That could speak to A&M as the naive freshman or LSU as the self-centered scrooge. I dont know the answer.
Im suggesting A&M has two rivals: the Texas Longhorns and everyone outside the SEC. As Aggies, we bite and scratch at the Longhorns. As members of the SEC, we tussle with fans and pollsters that try to convince us were overrated, or try to keep us us the SEC, not us the Aggies out of the national championship just because were so good that we cannibalize ourselves. In a few years, maybe the freshness will wear off and the togetherness we feel will devolve into something reminiscent of what we had in the Big 12.
No matter what, well still be able to hiss at any burnt orange we can find.
And that will always be enough.

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