Texas A&M Football

Texas A&M 56, Ball State 23: Offense in review

When it came to Texas A&M's offensive performance on Saturday, the quality of the opponent mattered little. What the Aggies managed to display in a systematic picking-apart of Ball State was something it will transition to the remainder of the season.
September 14, 2015
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Photo by Brandon Jones, TexAgs
Facing an overmatched Ball State squad, the Texas A&M offense performed about as well as Kevin Sumlin and Jake Spavital could have hoped.

The Aggies avoided suffering any sort of letdown following a big game victory over Arizona State in Houston a week earlier by coming out and absolutely hammering the Cardinals early and often.

Against a defense that routinely rushed only three and dropped eight, Kyle Allen and the first-team offense produced touchdowns on five of the Aggies' first six possessions. Kyler Murray entered the game for the final drive of the half and also guided A&M into the endzone, meaning the home team put up seven points on six of seven drives to start the game, rolling up 360 first-half yards in the process.
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