Jan. 19, 2026, 8:01 p.m. CT
Texas A&M’s 2026 baseball season is just 24 days away, as the Aggies will host Tennessee Tech for a 3-game series in Blue Bell Park, and after missing the NCAA Tournament for the first time in nearly two decades, second-year head coach Michael Early is under plenty of pressure to get back to the postseason, especially given the amount of talent he’ll be working with.
This time last year, after former head coach Jim Schlossnagle left the program in dramatic fashion to join the Texas Longhorns, Early, who served as the program’s hitting coach, was promoted internally by Texas A&M AD Trev Alberts, who felt his closeness with the veteran roster and coaching acumen made him a perfect fit to lead a program that was coming off its first appearance in the College World Series Final.
Opening the 2025 season as the No. 1-ranked team felt like a curse for most Aggie fans, who watched the highly talented roster crumble due to injuries, including star outfielder Caden Sorrell missing a chunk of the first half schedule, while losing star third baseman Gavin Grahovac for the season.
However, the Texas A&M turned things around late in the year, winning series against Arkansas and LSU, but things took a turn for the worse after falling, at home nonetheless, to the SEC’s doormat Missouri Tigers, who swept the Aggies in one of the craziest upsets in college baseball history.
Many within the Aggie fan base felt that Earley should have been fired due to the circumstances, but Alberts opted to give the young coach at least one more year, hopefully to turn things around, starting with retaining and adding MLB-level talent from the transfer portal.
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Led by Sorrell and Groahovac, opting to return for a final season, the loss of starting pitchers Ryan Prager and Justin Lamkin gives way to Shane Sdao, Weston Moss, and ascending young arm Clayton Freshcorn to compete for the three starting jobs on the mound.
From the portal, the elite addition of Maryland SS Chris Hacopian, paried productive hitter Jake Duer and talented outfielder Wesley Jordan fill out a lineup that, on paper, is more than talented enough to compete for an NCAA Tournament spot, but given last season’s results with an equally talented roster, Texas A&M did not make Baseball America’s preseason Top 25 rankings.
On Monday, Baseball America writer Jacob Rudner revealed his reasoning for not including Texas A&M in the top 25, pointing to last season’s poor results.
“So, what’s the holdup? The decision to hold Texas A&M out is rooted entirely in last season’s outcome. A year ago, a similarly talented roster opened the season ranked No. 1 and missed the NCAA Tournament altogether. Michael Earley retooled his staff this offseason and early returns have been positive, but until the Aggies translate that talent into consistent results, the benefit of the doubt is withheld. The expectation is not whether Texas A&M belongs in the rankings, but whether or not it will prove it does.”
I have to agree with Rudner, and I can safely say that Texas A&M wants to enter the season as the underdog rather than living up to preseason expectations. Again, any baseball writer who exclusively covers the college game knows that the Aggies are extremely talented and possess the pieces get back to Omaha, but until they prove it, not being included in most preseason rankings is wholly understandable.
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