Texarkana Gazette

After 65 years, Kentucky, A&M resume series

- By Gary B. Graves

Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher and Kentucky counterpar­t Mark Stoops have history. One with closer ties than the football series between the schools.

The Aggies and Wildcats have met just twice on the gridiron— the last time was 65 years ago.

The series resumes Saturday night in College Station, Texas, the football programs’ first meeting since 1953.

The No. 13 Wildcats (5-0, 3-0 Southeaste­rn Conference) will try to remain unbeaten when they renew acquaintan­ces; the Aggies (3-2, 1-1) are looking for their second consecutiv­e victory after holding off Arkansas 24-17 .

Kentucky has been dominant in many phases of the game, especially on defense; the Wildcats have allowed just 33 points in SEC play and rank third with 286.8 yards per contest. Fisher certainly isn’t surprised the Wildcats defense is thriving under Stoops, his former defensive coordinato­r at Florida State from 2010-12.

Fisher believes Stoops’ philosophy has expanded since leaving Tallahasse­e. The trick for the Aggies will be solving Kentucky’s different looks installed by coordinato­r Matt House.

“From the 3-4 look, they’ll bring the edge guys, they’ll bring the inside guys,” Fisher said, noting Kentucky linebacker Josh Allen (six sacks) in particular.

“Even if they only bring four guys on a play, you have to account for seven and eight constantly. … They do a fantastic job in how they isolate guys when they rush them and the things they do.”

Kentucky is coming off a 24-10 victory over South Carolina featuring three intercepti­ons and four sacks. The Wildcats also held Carolina to 128 yards rushing, stinginess they’ll need for perhaps their toughest defensive challenge to date.

Texas A&M is averaging 511.3 yards per game on offense and boasts running back Trayveon Williams, whose 582 yards rushing are just 57 behind SEC leader and Kentucky counterpar­t Benny Snell Jr. Quarterbac­k Kellen Mond—who’s fourth in SEC passing—has completed 60 percent of his passes for 1,221 yards and seven touchdowns.

The Aggies’ progress under first-year coach Fisher reminds Stoops of his good times at FSU. That should make things interestin­g when the schools and coaches get reacquaint­ed.

“He has a rhyme and a reason for everything he does, and you’d better hold on because he’s going to attack you and set you up to take his shots,” Stoops said of Fisher.

POSSESSION MASTERS

Opponents have found getting the ball tough against Texas A&M, which averages 35:52 in time of possession. That leads the SEC and is the best among Power 5 conference schools.

PUNTER MATCHUP

The game pits the SEC’s top two teams in punting. Texas A&M is averaging 53.6 yards per kick behind junior Braden Mann with Kentucky next at 45.67 thanks to sophomore Max Duffy 45.67.

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