Well, howdy there folks! Welcome back to another season of college football and the first 18 Stripes game preview of 2024. This is my 17th season covering the Fighting Irish and for the first time in a while, I’m ready to change things up. Today, I’ll start a different layout for the game preview articles that I write. But like the last few years, our 18 Stripes team will be mixing up the previews so I won’t write one every week.

Notre Dame (+2.5) at Texas A&M

Kyle Field
College Station, Texas
Date: Saturday, August 31, 2024
Time: 7:30 PM ET
TV: ABC

It’s time to look at the Aggies. What is an Aggie? It’s a nickname for a farmer. Formerly known as the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, this was the first public university in the state of Texas. Yee-haw! Today, it’s the 2nd largest university campus by enrollment with almost enough students to fill every seat inside Notre Dame Stadium.

But we’re not at the House That Rock Built, instead we are in a cross-section between Austin, Waco, and Houston only a few miles from Route 6 in central southeast Texas.  You’d think this school would’ve re-named their home to Caterpillar Inc. Stadium but they’ve settled for the quite funny and simple Kyle Field, named after a man who first advocated for agricultural teaching in Texas and whose family the suburb outside of Austin is named after, as well.

Vegas Corner

This game had been holding steady at Notre Dame (+1) or (+1.5) all summer but in mid-August the line started moving further away from the Irish. As we head towards Saturday, the most common line at the books is (+2.5) although some places are showing (+3.0) keeping Notre Dame even bigger road dogs.

The over/under has fallen 2 points to 46.5 since the early summer and was closer to 49 and 50 many months ago. Vegas is expecting a rock fight.

Weather Report

Not long ago, the weather for the game was looking dry and toasty. Recently, the threat of thunderstorms has been popping up in the forecast. It’s expected to be in the high 80’s throughout Saturday and dropping down to the low 80’s and high 70’s for kickoff with humidity around 85% or so. Light 7 mph winds are expected from the east northeast which would provide a small cross-wind on Kyle Field’s slightly northwest configuration. Thunderstorms may hamper tailgating throughout the day, then possibly stop for kickoff, and maybe come back again.

Series History

This will be only the 6th meeting against Texas A&M. The series basically breaks down to a trio of Cotton Bowls (New Years Day in 1988, 1993, and 1994) where the Aggies saw the humble beginnings of the Holtz era and the dominant end, plus a couple of Bob Davie Bowls where each side defended home turf in 2000-01.

Fun Fact

Many traditions at Texas A&M are weird. The story of the 12th Man is no exception. The basics boil down to an injury-riddled Aggies team during 1922 playing a school called the Centre College Praying Colonels in the Dixie Classic (a bowl game held only 3 times in the 1920’s) and going on to win 22-14. Except, with the injuries they called a former football player from the stands and had him use one of the injured players’ uniforms. This guy never actually played in the game, but stood on the sidelines, just in case. From that story the 12th Man was born.

The old sign.

In recent years, A&M has upgraded their 12th Man sign inside Kyle Field. The old version is what you see above and the new sign, built in 2018, is the main header photo and changed the font to match the rest of the script used around the field with access to back lightning, as well.

Coaching Staff

Texas A&M dropped bags and bags to go through yet another coaching staff makeover. After a 45-25 record (and only 6 games over .500 in SEC play) the Jimbo Fisher experiment was ended after writing a $77.5 million check for a buyout this past fall. The Aggies turned to Mike Elko who was coming off a successful 2-year stint at Duke and had spent 4 years as A&M’s defensive coordinator in the Fisher era (famously bolting from Notre Dame after one season to do so).

Elko from back when he was DC.

In addition, Elko brought Trooper Taylor with him from Duke as associate head coach, poached talented offensive coordinator Collin Klein from Kansas State, and signed former Army and North Carolina defensive coordinator Jay Bateman to run the Aggies defense after he spent 2022-23 as Florida’s linebackers coach.

Mascot

Say hello to the First Lady of Aggieland, Reveille X. The school has a Corp of Cadets organization on campus and this dog is the highest-ranking member of the group. Texas A&M first introduced this mascot back in 1931 and have been using rough collies since 1966 when Reveille III made her debut.

I’ve always thought the rough collie was the dumbest looking dog breed (someone has to have the honor!), but that’s just my opinion. ALF looking dog. The current mascot Reveille X has been in place since the start of the 2021 season and is taken care of by Company E-2 in the Corp of Cadets.

Portal

Texas A&M has been a top 5 portal drama team in recent years and was especially in the thick of a makeover this off-season with an unofficial 23 transfers out of the program with 28 new players coming into College Station for 2024. This should’ve been their historic 2022 recruiting class, which finished #1 in the nation, coming into their junior year, but that collection has since been blown up.

For 2024, the Aggies do have 7 players set to start in key roles from that 2022 class which isn’t terrible for an average class (Notre Dame has 5 projected starters and 4 quality backups from their 2022 class in comparison). It’s just not a type of class that was ever going to succeed at a historical level given its poor cultural beginnings. Here’s a list of all the 2023 A&M starters or impact players who have moved on from the team:

WR Ainias Smith – 5th round pick Philadelphia Eagles
WR Evan Stewart – transfer to Oregon
TE Max Wright – undrafted
TE Jake Johnson – transfer to North Carolina
OC Bryce Foster – transfer to Kansas
RG Layden Robinson – 4th round pick New England Patriots

DT McKinnley Jackson – 3rd round pick Cincinnati Bengals
DT LT Overton – transfer to Alabama
DT Walter Nolen – transfer to Ole Miss
DE Fadil Diggs – transfer to Syracuse
DE Isaiah Raikes – transfer to USC then Auburn
LB Edgerrin Cooper – 2nd round pick Green Bay Packers
LB Chris Russell – undrafted
LB Sam Mathews – undrafted
CB Josh DeBerry – undrafted free agent Dallas Cowboys
CB Deuce Harmon – transfer to SMU
S Jardin Gilbert – transfer to LSU
S Demani Richardson – undrafted free agent Carolina Panthers
S Jacoby Mathews – transfer to TBD
S Sam McCall – transfer to Georgia State

Texas A&M has brought in a handful of transfers this off-season that are set to start against the Irish include right guard Ar’maj Reed-Adams (Kansas), center Kolinu’u Faaiu (Utah), wideout Cyrus Allen (Louisiana Tech), defensive end Nic Scourton (Purdue), defensive lineman Cashius Howell (Bowling Green), linebacker Solomon DeShields (Pitt), corner Will Lee (Kansas State), and safety Trey Jones (Central Michigan).

Top Men

QB Conner Weigman – The former 5-star (pronounced WIG-min) is heading into his redshirt sophomore season after being one of the gems of that vaunted 2022 class and is both lacking a ton of experience but also someone who has flashed plenty of hype. He won the job last year but a foot injury limited him to just 4 games played in 2023.

Prognosticators are sniffing 1st round potential for Weigman. 

In 9 total games with the Aggies, he’s thrown for 1,875 yards and 16 touchdowns with just 2 interceptions. He’s a dangerous weapon to use in the new Klein offense.

RB Le’Veon Moss – A&M was rotating a deep cast of running backs last year but looked to be turning to former 5-star sophomore Rueben Owens this year until a knee injury shelved him for 2024. We can expect former top 100 recruit, and another 2022 recruit who stuck around, Le’Veon Moss to step up coming off 5 yards a carry and 5 touchdowns last year.

WR Jahdae Walker – A couple key losses at receiver hurt A&M this off-season but 3 out of their top 5 pass catchers did return, including senior Jahdae Walker who transferred in from Grand Valley State prior to 2023. He’s a big body who finished last year on a hot run with at least 80 receiving yards in 4 out of the Aggies’ last 5 games.

TE Donovan Green – Another star 2022 recruit who is still on campus. Green was a freshman All-American a couple years ago finishing 4th on the team in receptions (22) but tore his ACL in fall camp prior to 2023. He’s back and healthy now with some believing he’ll be a big weapon in the new Klein offense.

DE Nic Scourton – Texas A&M’s deep defensive line got deeper this off-season with the transfer of Purdue’s Nic Scourton. His 10 sacks led the Big Ten and he’s slid in as a starter for the Aggies against the Irish.

DT Shemar Turner – Many expected the rising senior Turner to turn pro this off-season but he decided to come back for a final campaign in College Station. He’s a big presence in the middle at 6’4″ and 300 pounds with 17 career tackles for loss.

LB Taurean York – Here’s a pretty cool story of a lightly recruited 3-star who came in last season as a true freshman and unseated a returning starter for the entire year. With 74 tackles and 8.5 tackles for loss, York was a freshman All-American in 2023.

Bad Matchup

Texas A&M DL vs. Notre Dame OL

This was looking like a very tough matchup for Notre Dame and that was before the injury to Charles Jagusah. Not only did A&M bring in Scourton from Purdue, they also added Bowling Green’s Cashius Howell who was the co-leader in the MAC last year with 9.5 sacks. In a combined team draft, Irish star Howard Cross might be the top pick but I think it’s possible the next 3 or 4 along the defensive line would all come from the Aggies.

A quiet game from Shemar Turner would be a huge win for the Irish.

Texas A&M is hoping end Shemar Stewart (rising junior, formerly the no. 9 overall Composite player) begins to reach his ceiling, too. There’s no two ways about it, this is potentially a game-deciding bad matchup for Notre Dame.

Good Matchup

Notre Dame DL vs. Texas A&M OL

On the flip side, the Irish will enjoy their own advantage against the Aggies offensive line. They haven’t been very good up front in recent seasons (30 sacks allowed and 95th in yards per carry in 2023), although left tackle Trey Zuhn (3rd-team pre-season All-SEC) is well regarded, left guard Chase Bisontis is coming off a freshman All-American season, and Kansas transfer Ar’maj Reed-Adams hopes to stabilize their right guard position.

Look for Cross and Rylie Mills, plus blitzers from the second level, to target A&M’s center and right tackle combination as their line is the clear weak spot. Notre Dame has to win this matchup in a big, big way.

Special Teams

Both teams will be breaking in a new punter. Redshirt freshman Tyler White was the no. 1 punter in the 2023 class according to 247 and the first special teams player to receive a 4-star grade. That’ll be a fun juxtaposition with Australian James Rendell making his collegiate debut, too.

Redshirt junior kicker Randy Bond returns for the Aggies and he missed 9 field goals in 2023. That may seem like a lot, but he tied for the national lead with 35 attempts last year.

Prediction

I haven’t felt great about this game for a while. I can’t get over the talking point thrown out this off-season that this is the most talented Notre Dame team in 30 years. The Irish open the season as underdogs against a talented but flawed Texas A&M! The offensive line situation is potentially really, really bad and something the team might not be able to overcome in College Station. We’ve seen very well-regarded and veteran offenses and offensive lines from Notre Dame drop stinkers in matchups like this, but with a super inexperienced line it’s frightening.

However, 3 areas for hope:

1) Notre Dame should be very stout against the run and that should negate some of the advantage of Collin Klein’s tricky scheme that brought him success at Kansas State. This has to be a phenomenal run defense performance for Notre Dame.

Local news: Hold on to your butts. 

Connor Weigman’s got a big arm with a baseball background. The Irish have to confuse him because he has a quick release, looks confident with his first read, and let’s hope it leads to some bad decisions and really poor reads that cost the Aggies. Perhaps a Christian Gray pick six because he’s staying away from Benjamin Morrison?

2) This has to be a more desperate Notre Dame team–it just has to be a must-win situation with so much more on the line. Elko’s just getting started at A&M and this is year 3 with Marcus Freeman in South Bend. I like this mental edge for the Irish, a lot.

3) I’m looking for 3 or 4 big plays from Riley Leonard. Big chunk plays. Maybe a couple with his feet and another couple through the air. Notre Dame has to take advantage of Leonard’s mobility and athleticism as a matchup problem for A&M. Also, while it may be asking a lot for the Irish passing game to be a well-oiled machine in Leonard’s first start with a golden helmet, this is one of those games where completions of something like 38 yards and 53 yards could be the difference, even if they only throw for 180 total yards all night.

Maybe down the road the offense will be really spread out but for this opener I think we’ll see plenty of two tight end sets with some interesting misdirection wrinkles thrown in to get Leonard the ball on the ground, or a cheeky play-action hitter down the seam to someone like Eli Raridon.

FEI 2024 PRE-SEASON RANKINGS

STAT IRISH AGGIES
FEI Overall 6 15
FEI Offense 17 24
FEI Defense 7 15

It’s difficult to assess Texas A&M to start the season. A talented roster? Sure looks like it. Some high quality transfers? It looks like they picked up several. An improved and more serious coaching staff trying to put an underwhelming era behind them? Plenty of people love the Elko/Klein duo in College Station.

The media voted the Aggies as the 9th best team in the pre-season, sandwiched in between Oklahoma and Auburn, and I know these new super conferences are deep but the Irish being an underdog against a program that far down in their own league in perception is weird.

I’ve always said the difference between a B offensive line and an A offensive line isn’t that great when compared to players with those differences at quarterback, or more increasingly in the modern game, wide receiver. However, the difference between a C- and B- offensive line is potentially massive–and that’s probably what is driving the bulk of the line favoring Texas A&M. If Notre Dame’s offensive line is the worst unit on the field, and it’s not debatable, this is probably a loss and A&M covers easily.

The decision to roll with a combined 6 career starts on the offensive line against this Texas A&M defensive line is so bold and so daring, hell it might just work! I probably would feel worse overall with Tosh Baker at left tackle but I don’t see how the Irish get through this game without several hiccups on offense and an overall frustrating day. Mike Denbrock should be able to throw a couple haymakers and break a few big plays, which could be the difference. Although, I would be surprised if Notre Dame ends up averaging more than 5 yards per play in this contest.

I’m thinking it’s ugly to the end, and a decisive turnover from Notre Dame’s defense seals things.

Notre Dame 20

Texas A&M 17