Alabama finished the regular season with an 8–1–1 record. The Crimson Tide were ranked second to start the season, but tied visiting Florida State in their opener and lost to eventual conference champion Tennessee a month later, also in Birmingham.[4] Following their victory over South Carolina, Alabama accepted an invitation to the Cotton Bowl on November 20.[5] The appearance marked the third for Alabama in the Cotton Bowl, and their 21st overall bowl game.[5]
Texas A&M finished the regular season with a 6–4 record, winning six straight after opening the season with consecutive losses to SMU, Purdue, LSU, and Florida State.[6] With a 10–7 victory over rivalTexas in the regular season finale, the Aggies secured their position in the Cotton Bowl as SWC champions.[6]
Third-year head coach Gene Stallings, age 32, was a former Aggie player (under head coach Bear Bryant).[1] The appearance marked the third for the Aggies in the Cotton Bowl, and their eighth overall bowl game.
Game summary
Alabama opened the game with a ten-play, 80-yard drive with quarterback Ken Stabler scoring on a three-yard run.[7] The Aggies responded with a 13-yard Edd Hargett touchdown pass to Larry Stegent to tie the game at 7–7 at the end of the first quarter.[7] After Steve Davis hit a 36-yard field goal on the first play of the second quarter for Alabama, A&M responded late in the quarter with a 7-yard Tommy Maxwell touchdown reception from Hargett. After the ensuing extra point failed, the Aggies took a 13–10 lead at the half.[7]
A&M extended their lead to 20–10 early in the third after Wendell Housley scored on a 20-yard touchdown run. The final points of the game came later in the third when Stabler scored his second touchdown of the game, and with a failed two-point conversion attempt and a scoreless fourth, the Aggies won 20–16.[7] For his performance, Texas A&M quarterback Edd Hargett was named the Most Valuable Player of the game.[7] As A&M head coach Stallings was both a former player and assistant coach under him, Bryant carried him off the field to celebrate the victory.[2][7]
Curley Hallman, a native of the Tuscaloosa suburb of Northport, Alabama, intercepted Stabler twice. Hallman later served as an assistant coach under Bryant from 1973 to 1976, an assistant at his alma mater from 1982 to 1987, and then head coach at Southern Mississippi (1988–90) and LSU (1991-94).
There was a Cotton Bowl Classic in January and December in 1966, 2015, 2017, 2023, 2025.
The 2015 (December), 2018, 2021, and 2025 (January) editions were College Football Playoff semifinals.