Texas A&M’s November 14 matchup with Tennessee looks like one of the defining games on the Aggies’ 2026 regular-season schedule, and the matchup points straight to one obvious battleground: whether the Maroon and White can keep Josh Heupel’s offense from turning the night into a shootout.
The Aggies enter the season coming off an 11-2 finish in 2025 and their first-ever trip to the College Football Playoff. That kind of year raises the bar, and Texas A&M now has to prove it can stay near the top of the SEC while taking another step toward national-title contention. The stretch run will be unforgiving, and Tennessee is one of the toughest tests waiting down the line.
What makes the Volunteers such a dangerous opponent is the passing game Heupel has built. Tennessee’s attack was second in the SEC in 2025, behind only Ole Miss, and ranked sixth nationally. The numbers were loud: 3,807 passing yards, nearly 300 yards per game, more than 13 yards per completion and 26 touchdowns.
Texas A&M has its own answer on the defensive side. With Mike Elko calling the plays, the Aggies finished 2025 with the third-best passing defense, setting up a strength-on-strength matchup that could decide everything. If A&M can limit Tennessee through the air, it gives itself a real chance to control the game.
That’s the central challenge for the Aggies because Tennessee’s offense was not just efficient - it was explosive. The Volunteers led the SEC in scoring in 2025 and ranked sixth in the country, averaging close to 40 points per game while piling up 68 touchdowns in 13 games. That kind of production can bury a defense quickly if the game starts to speed up.
Texas A&M has enough firepower to stay in the fight on offense, too. The Aggies finished 2025 with the fourth-best scoring offense, putting up 33.77 points per game. But against Tennessee, the key is less about matching scores and more about making sure the game doesn’t become a track meet.
For Texas A&M, that’s what wins the game: slowing down a high-powered Volunteers offense. What loses it is letting Tennessee dictate the tempo and pile up points in bunches.
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