Texas A&M joined the SEC in 2012. Over a decade later, let us assess how the move has played out.
The early promise (2012-2013):
- Johnny Manziel won the Heisman Trophy as a freshman in 2012. First freshman to ever win it. Source: Heisman Trust.
- Beat Alabama in Tuscaloosa in Manziel's debut season. The SEC took notice.
- Finished 11-2 in year one. The move looked brilliant.
The plateau (2014-2021):
- 8-9 win seasons became the norm.
- Never won the SEC West division.
- Coaching instability: Kevin Sumlin fired after 2017, Jimbo Fisher hired.
- Fisher's tenure peaked with a 2020 Orange Bowl win and a 2021 recruiting class ranked number 1 nationally (Source: 247Sports composite).
- The 2022 collapse: 5-7 record despite the top-ranked recruiting class. Fisher fired in 2023.
The current era:
- New coaching staff bringing renewed energy to College Station.
- The NIL landscape has changed recruiting dynamics.
- A&M's built-in advantages remain: passionate fanbase (Kyle Field holds 102,733, 3rd largest in the country), strong alumni network, Texas recruiting territory.
The honest assessment: The SEC move has been a mixed bag. A&M gained national exposure and recruiting cache but has not translated those advantages into SEC Championships or College Football Playoff success. The resources are there. The results are not, yet.
Sources:
- 247Sports — recruiting rankings
- Sports Reference College Football — game results
- SEC official records
- Texas A&M Athletics — program history