After a 17-14 victory over Texas A&M, the unranked Appalachian State basked in the glory.
Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher was asked on Monday if he would give up his playcalling duties after the team's poor offensive performance in the 17-14 loss to Appalachian State.
Fisher said he would in the future. It is possible. You always look at those things.
Texas A&M gained just nine first downs and 186 yards of total offense against a team that had given up 63 points to North Carolina the previous week.
The Aggies ranked 71st in total offense (392.4 yards per game), 88th in passing (208.6 ypg) and 56th in scoring offense (29.3 points per game) last season.
Fisher was asked if his ego would prevent him from letting go of his position as Florida State's head coach.



He denied. I'm always interested in winning. Everything is affected by winning. I assure you that.
Since he became a head coach at FSU, Fisher has been asked the same question.
Fisher faced the same questions in 2012 as he did in 2012 before Jameis Winston arrived.
Fisher told the Palm Beach Post that he wanted to call plays for three, four, five years. We have an offensive coach here who can turn it over or hire someone else. In my five-year plan, that was in it.
Fisher said at A&M that his offensive philosophy is a conglomerate of play calling. Fisher moved Darrell Dickey from quarterbacks coach to tight ends coach, James Coley from tight ends to wide receiver, and Dameyune Craig from wide receiver to quarterbacks. Fisher is the one who calls the plays.
After starter Haynes King was 13-of-20 for 97 yards on Saturday, Fisher said that he might consider a change at quarterback. There were multiple reasons for the offense's struggles, such as missed blocks or wrong routes, but he wouldn't blame King.
He said they would evaluate everything this week. Every position will be evaluated this week.