In a 41-38 upset on Saturday, Texas A&M pulled off some of the
late-game magic that the third-ranked Tigers have made their trademark.
Freshman Kyle Allen
threw four touchdown passes in the first half and the Aggies recovered
two late fumbles in a game that likely ended the Tigers' playoff hopes.
'It hurts. It hurts our team,'' Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said. ''We had goals and dreams and we didn't get it done.''
The Aggies (7-3, 3-3 Southeastern Conference), who came in as 23-point
underdogs, wound up dancing on the sideline - and on Auburn's postseason
hopes.
''These past two weeks, no one really believed in us, but I feel like we
always do our best when no one believes in us,'' Texas A&M
offensive lineman Mike Matthews said.
The Tigers (7-2, 4-2, No. 3 CFP) twice appeared to be driving toward a
go-ahead touchdown before coughing it up on plays that never really got
going. First, Julien Obioha won a scramble for the ball at the 2 after Nick Marshall and Cameron Artis-Payne got tangled up in the backfield.
''It was a poor exchange, it's
something that never really happens,'' said Artis-Payne, who rushed for
221 yards and two touchdowns.
Marshall said Artis-Payne had come up with the ball first. Obioha was more concerned with who had it last.
''A
lot of stuff happens at the bottom of a pile. I'm not going to say
exactly who had possession of it,'' he said. ''But when it is all said
and done I ended up with the ball and we had possession, so yes I did
get the fumble.''
The Aggies couldn't get away from their goal line before punting, and Trey Williams just managed to push the ball out of the end zone to avoid a safety on third down.
Then, the Tigers drove inside the 30 for one more shot. Marshall appeared to
be still checking to a different play when center Reese Dismukes snapped
it on first down from the 28.
''It was just a miscommunication,'' Dismukes said.
Alonzo
Williams recovered with 54 seconds left, setting off a celebratory
dance for players on the Aggies' sideline and leaving most of the
Jordan-Hare Stadium crowd in stunned silence.
Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin
said stoppages to review several key plays late - all upheld by replay
officials - were nerve-racking.
''That's going to happen in big games and close games,'' Sumlin said. ''The ball bounced our way.''
It tied the most points Auburn
had scored in a regulation loss, which also happened against Florida in
1995 and Wake Forest in 1979.
Texas A&M had dropped three straight SEC games before toppling a contender.

Allen
was poised and steady in his second career start and first on the road.
He completed 19 of 29 passes for 277 yards with an interception, mostly
avoiding miscues against a beleaguered Auburn defense.
''He
definitely had a little swagger to him,'' Matthews said. ''He came in
this game and he didn't seem like a freshman at all, he seemed like he
has started four years at this university.''

It was a turnaround
from the highly touted freshman quarterback's first start, a shaky 21-16
win over Louisiana-Monroe. But Allen's play stepped up along with the
competition and he outdueled Marshall.
''He was a lot more relaxed tonight than a week ago, believe it or not,''
Sumlin said. ''I think that showed.''
It
might not have come down to the wire, but Myles Garrett blocked a field
goal and Deshazor Everett returned it 65 yards down the Auburn sideline
for a touchdown on the final play of the first half, a rapid-fire
10-point turnaround. Auburn spent the rest of the game trying to peck
away at that 35-17 deficit. Josh Lambo kicked field goals of 22 and 27
yards in the second half.
Marshall
completed 15 of 21 passes for 219 yards and a touchdown while running
18 times for 67 yards. He had only 80 passing yards going into the
fourth quarter before finally heating up, with leading receiver
D'haquille Williams sidelined for most of the game with a right knee
injury.
''We're going to get
everyone's best shot,'' Tigers defensive tackle Angelo Blackson said.
''No one's just going to roll over and take a butt whipping.''
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