ESPN Just Sent Texas A&M Fans The Same Frustrating Mike Elko Message

Despite improvements under Mike Elko, Texas A&M faces challenging odds in playoff and championship prospects according to ESPN's latest FPI rankings.

ESPN’s latest FPI numbers don’t exactly roll out the red carpet for Texas A&M.

Mike Elko’s group does show real progress in the model. The Aggies open at 20.0 in FPI’s Power Index, which is their highest finish since 2012 and a sign of how far Elko has already pushed the program.

But the rest of the picture is a lot less flattering. Texas A&M lands at No. 11 overall and fifth in the SEC, and the playoff odds attached to that ranking are far from encouraging.

The Aggies are listed behind Texas Tech, LSU, Alabama, Miami, Indiana, Georgia, Oregon, Notre Dame, Texas, and Ohio State. Texas Tech and LSU are both also at 20.0, so the gap is apparently tiny, but the placement still leaves A&M on the bottom of that group. If the ratings are truly that close, the optics are rough.

The schedule doesn’t do the Aggies any favors either. Texas A&M has three games against teams ranked ahead of it in LSU, Alabama, and Texas, and only one of those is at home. Oklahoma is also on the road, and the Sooners sit directly behind A&M in the rankings with a 17.8 Power Index.

Altogether, the Aggies are set to face seven top-25 teams in these opening FPI ratings, matching Texas for the second-most on any schedule. Florida, Georgia, and Ole Miss are tied with that total, while Oklahoma leads the way with eight.

That brutal slate is a big reason ESPN gives Texas A&M just a 39.1% chance to make the Playoff, even with the Aggies inside the top 12. In the SEC, only Texas and Georgia are projected by FPI to have better-than-even odds of reaching the 12-team field at this stage.

None of that is final, of course. The numbers will move once the season starts and the conference games begin to sort things out. But for now, FPI’s message is plain enough: Texas A&M has climbed, yet the road in front of it is still a tough one.

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