Calzada had been hit in his left knee as he released the ball on the tying touchdown, but came back in the game on Texas A&M’s next possession after briefly going into the medical tent, and he moved the Aggies into field goal position.
“He didn’t know that play was a touchdown,” Fisher said of Calzada after the game. “He smiled and went back in. He was fine. And that’s what it is. That’s what football is. You get up off the canvas. You’ve got to go play. You get the heck knocked out of you. You’ve got to go play the next play. People don’t care.”
With a second left in the game, Seth Small’s kick sneaked in through the left upright, snapping Alabama’s 19-game winning streak.
Texas A&M pressured and blitzed Alabama quarterback Bryce Young, a Heisman Trophy favorite, early and often. The Aggies’ defense sacked Young three times in the first half and intercepted him early in the second quarter.
Texas A&M used that and a first-quarter fumble by running back Brian Robinson to take a 24-10 to the half.
Early in the third quarter, it appeared, for just a few minutes, that Alabama might be on its way to storming back for a win.
After stalling a Texas A&M drive at its own 18, Alabama’s Ja’Corey Brooks blocked Nik Constantinou’s punt attempt, and linebacker King Mwikuta recovered that ball in the end zone for the touchdown, cutting the Aggies lead to one score.