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Aggies v. MSU Key Game Stats.

1. MSU first half total yards, 273. Second half total yards, 94. The Aggie defense played as expected in the second half. MSU might have been held scoreless but for Weigman throwing an poorly timed and stupid interception.

2. Van Buren 12/17 in the first half. 10/24 in the second half. We won this game because the Aggie defense played the second half as we expected them to play the whole game.

3. Tackles for loss. 11 to 1 in A&M's favor. We disrupted them, but kudos to MSU's Fish QB who played a helluva gutsy game to overcome a lot of them.

4. A&M 137 yards rushing. While not totally shut down, MSU's defense largely containing our rushing offense, to include Moss, kept this game close.

Overall: Aggies lose in total yardage 242 to 217 and lose in turnover margin 2 to 1, but escape the Starkville curse to a gritty MSU team. Offense made the plays it had to, defense made the stands it had to, when it mattered. Aggies advance to 4-0 in conference play and remain in playoff contention. But we will need to do better than we showed today to get there.

Aggies vs State DRUNK THOUGHTS & Drink of Choice

I’m not drunk yet despite the time not quite 7 am in Texas.

However, today is a day I shall work on the ulcer. I’ll post a pic of whatever it is gets me there.

The rules here are simple. There are none. And no judgment shall be made. You’re drunk or on the way. Shout for a coaches head. Scream at a referee. Bemoan a play or a team.

Maybe you broke your TV and we need to see that. It’s all good.

Post it here.

Did An AY Member Die?

I mean, he has to be one of ours.

Robert Adolph Boehm, in accordance with his lifelong dedication to his own personal brand of decorum, muttered his last unintelligible and likely unnecessary curse on October 6, 2024, shortly before tripping backward over "some stupid mother****ing thing" and hitting his head on the floor.

Robert was born in Winters, TX, to the late Walter Boehm and Betty Smith on May 6, 1950, after which God immediately and thankfully broke the mold and attempted to cover up the evidence. Raised Catholic, Robert managed to get his wife Dianne pregnant (three times) fast enough to just barely miss getting drafted into the Vietnam War by fathering Michelle, John, and Charlotte between 1967 and 1972. Much later, with Robert possibly concerned about the brewing conflict in Grenada, Charles was born in 1983.

This lack of military service was probably for the best, as when taking up shooting as a hobby in his later years, he managed to blow not one, but two holes in the dash of his own car on two separate occasions, which unfortunately did not even startle, let alone surprise, his dear wife Dianne, who was much accustomed to such happenings in his presence and may have actually been safer in the jungles of Vietnam the entire time.

While the world was in conflict elsewhere, Robert made due by learning to roof, maintain traffic signs with the City of Amarillo, and eventually becoming a semi-professional truck driver—not to be confused with a professional semi-truck driver.

With peace on the horizon, Robert's attention somewhat counterintuitively drifted to weapons of war, spanning the historical and geographical spectrum from the atlatl of 19,000 BC France, to the sjambok of 1830s Africa, to the Mosin-Nagant M1891 of WWII-era Soviet Union. So many examples of these mainstream hobbyist items litter his small Clarendon, Texas, apartment that one of them may very well have been the item referenced in his aforementioned eloquent final epitaph.

A man of many interests, Robert was not to be entranced by historical weapons alone, but also had a penchant for fashion, frequently seen about town wearing the latest trend in homemade leather moccasins, a wide collection of unconventional hats, and boldly mismatched shirts and pants.

Robert also kept a wide selection of harmonicas on hand—not to play personally, but to prompt his beloved dogs to howl continuously at odd hours of the night to entertain his many neighbors, and occasionally to give to his many, many, many grandchildren and great-grandchildren to play loudly during long road trips with their parents.

Earlier this year, in February, God finally showed mercy upon Dianne, getting her the hell out of there for some well-earned peace and quiet. Without Dianne to gleefully entertain, Robert shifted his creative focus to the entertainment of you, the fine townspeople of Clarendon, Texas. Over the last eight months, if you have not met Robert or seen his road show yet, you probably would have soon.

We have all done our best to enjoy/weather Robert's antics up to this point, but he is God's problem now.

Robert's farewell tour will be held Monday, October 14th, at 10 a.m. at Memorial Park Funeral Home, 6969 E Interstate 40 Hwy, Amarillo, TX 79118. The family encourages you to dust off whatever outdated or inappropriate combination of clothing you have available to attend. A tip jar will be available in the front; flowers are also acceptable.

Donations can be made to: https://www.gofundme.com/f/honoring...8_t3&utm_medium=customer&utm_source=copy_link

A&M v. Ole Miss Key Halftime Stats.

1. Total Yards: Texas A&M 180, Ole Mis nearly 100 more with 273. Folks, we are lucky to be ahead in this game.

2. Rushing Yards: Texas A&M averaging 3.7 per attempt, Ole Miss with 4.3. Folks, we are lucky to be ahead in this game.

3. Ole Miss QB Van Buren 12/17 for 173 yards. Weigman doing okay, but not as good, with 7/11 for 121. Folks, we are lucky to be ahead in this game.

4. Time of Possession: Basically 18 to 12 (cue up 1812 overture cannons) as MSU has basically controlled the ball. Folks, we are lucky to be ahead in this game.

5. Tackles for Loss: The Aggie defense has 6, MSU has 0. That's one reason we have managed squeak out a lead. Our defense has been disruptive, and has pressured Van Buren consistently, but he has remained poised to make some spectacular plays when it mattered.

General thoughts: Couple of story lines in this half must include A&M's failure to get a consistent running game going against a defense among the worst in running defense in the nation. Another one has to be the inability of the Aggie defense to make the key third (and sometimes 4th) down plays to get off the field. Finally, Aggies get a two score lead with little time left in the half. We go in with to halftime, score again on the first possession of the half, and suddenly things are very comfortable. Instead the defense still manages to gack up a TD and this game is definitely going to the end. The Stakesville Curse remains a real threat.
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