The Aggies moved the ball at times but couldn't stop shooting themselves in the foot.
In what has become commonplace for the Texas A&M offense lately, the Aggies had another frustrating day Saturday, managing just 10 points against an Auburn defense that was not exactly dominant prior to visiting Kyle Field. Here's what I saw.
For the most part, Auburn couldn't stop A&M. A&M stopped themselves.
Here's what I mean by that. First of all, looking at Kyler Murray's drives, A&M had a very high success rate. 56% overall (A&M's two best games in this category have come in Kyler Murray's two starts).