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Texas A&M penalized for injury-timeout violation after Arkansas game

The Texas A&M Aggies have been formally cited for an injury-timeout violation by the National Collegiate Athletic Association after a review of its recent game against Arkansas.

According to a notice from the Southeastern Conference, the determination was made by the national coordinator of football officiating following the team’s matchup with the Razorbacks last Saturday.

Under the rule change that took effect this season, if a player appears injured after the ball has been spotted for the next play, the player’s team is charged a timeout. If no timeouts remain, a 5-yard delay-of-game penalty is assessed.

The SEC statement said simply, “The Texas A&M University football team has been found in violation of the NCAA playing rule governing feigned injuries. This determination was made after review by the national coordinator of football officiating of game video…”

While the conference did not identify the specific play or the player involved, the ruling confirms the program was deemed to have violated the new injury-timeout statute. The NCAA, in approving the change earlier this year, noted the rule is intended to deter teams from using purported injuries to interrupt momentum or preserve timeouts.

In November 2024, the SEC issued a memo under Commissioner Greg Sankey admonishing programs to halt “any and all activity related to faking injuries to create time-outs.”

In that memo he wrote, “Play football and stop the feigned injury nonsense.”

The memo also laid out disciplinary measures: first offence triggers a $50,000 fine and public reprimand, second offence $100,000 and another reprimand, and a third offence could mean a head coach suspension.

The Texas A&M violation is notable because it appears to be among the first publicly announced enforcement actions under the new rule.

Officials expect increased scrutiny of time-stops that occur under suspicious circumstances, particularly late in halves or during hurry-up offense sequences.

The NCAA’s change noted that teams had increasingly used purported injuries as a de facto timeout, interrupting offensive rhythm without consuming an allotted timeout.

For Texas A&M and head coach Mike Elko, the citation raises questions about game-management procedures and whether additional internal review or oversight will follow.

The SEC’s statement does not indicate any additional penalty beyond the notation of violation, but precedent suggests a future finding could trigger steep coach-level penalties.

The conference’s prior guidance to teams said that offenses would be tracked and could accumulate toward significant financial or competitive sanctions.

From the officiating side, the ruling reinforces the role of post-game video review.

The NCAA-approved rule shift added an in-game mechanism where if a player presents as injured after the snap is readied for next play, the team is charged accordingly, eliminating the need to rely solely on post-game review. Still, the national coordinator’s review remains key for final determinations.

In the broader scope of college football, the enforcement push by the SEC and NCAA underscores a tension between game-flow management and strategic tactics.

Up-tempo offenses, near-end-of-half situations, and sideline stoppages are all under increased regulatory focus.

Coaches across the league are now adapting their substitutions, timeout usage and on-field signals to avoid unintended infractions.

Texas A&M has not commented publicly after the announcement. Considering that’s tip money to a lot of the Aggies, they may just pay up and move along.

RAZORBACK FOOTBALL

Sat, Aug 30vs Alabama A&MW, 52-7
Sat, Sep 6Arkansas State (LR)W, 56-14
Sat, Sep 13@ Ole MissL, 41-35
Sat, Sep 20@ MemphisL, 32-31
Sat, Sep 27vs Notre DameL, 56-13
Sat, Oct 11@ 12 TennesseeL, 34-31
Sat, Oct 18vs 5 Texas A&ML, 45-42
Sat, Oct 25vs AuburnL, 33-24
Sat, Nov 1vs Mississippi StateL, 38-35
Sat, Nov 15@ LSUL, 23-22
Sat, Nov 22@ TexasL, 52-37
Sat, Nov 29vs Missouri2:30 pm
SECN