OFFENSE: B
What went right: A&M dominated the line of scrimmage, which allowed Christine Michael, Cyrus Gray and Jerrod Johnson to average 7.5 yards per carry.
What went wrong: A&M came up empty on two red-zone trips with Michael fumbling and Randy Bullock missing a field goal.
Bottom line: A&M set the tone by scoring on three of its first four possessions for a 21-3 lead en route to a season-high 375 yards on the ground.
DEFENSE: B
What went right: A&M allowed only 2 of 13 third-down conversions and 1 of 3 on fourth down as the Aggies put the clamps on the Bears' playmakers, especially elusive receiver Kendall Wright. A&M kept Baylor in unmanageable down-and-distances, which led to a season-high three interceptions.
What went wrong: The unit was hit with six major penalties.
Bottom line: Baylor was only 1-of-5 scoring in the red zone as A&M had a season-high Wrecking Crew moments.
SPECIAL TEAMS: C-
What went right: A&M covered kickoffs as if someone's job was on the line. Jordan Pugh had a 4-yard punt return and made a fair catch in traffic; both were a welcome relief considering recent woes.
What went wrong: A partially blocked punt led to Baylor's field goal, and Bullock's got to make that 37-yarder.
Bottom line: The partially blocked punt and missed field goal didn't matter in this one, but A&M can't make those kinds of mistakes against Texas and stay close, let alone pull off the upset.
COACHING: B
What went right: A&M had to win this one, and it was never in doubt. A&M's offensive play-calling kept Baylor on its heels. A&M's defense was well prepared for BU's gadget plays. A&M forced quarterback Nick Florence into true freshman mistakes as the Bears could muster only 297 yards.
What went wrong: The crowd loved A&M's aggressiveness, but nine major penalties are unacceptable, even in a 35-point blowout.
Bottom line: This season's low points have been lower than expected, but A&M achieved it's season-long goal of playing in a bowl game, a sign the program is moving forward.
OVERALL: A-
What went right: A season-high crowd of 82,106 showed up on what started out as a wet, overcast day for a team coming off a 65-10 loss. As the Aggies dominated, the sun came out in the first half with a rainbow appearing over Kyle Field.
What went wrong: No Gatorade bath for head coach Mike Sherman?
Bottom line: That great fan support was part of what many are hopeful will be a step toward greatness. The effort earns a trip to Houston for the Texas Bowl or Shreveport, La., for the Independence Bowl, which will be a whole lot more enjoyable than last year's 90-mile trip back from Waco.
Notice about comments:
Theeagle.com is pleased to offer readers the ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. theeagle.com cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not theeagle.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website. Full terms and conditions can be read here.
Aggiesports.com is proud to offer our users enhanced commenting features. You can now build user-to-user connections, follow friends’ recent posts, add an avatar that fits your personality and more. If you have posted here before you’ll need to sign up again, and if you’ve never posted start now by signing up! If you've already registered for the new comments on www.theeagle.com then just use your Eagle username to log in and start commenting.


