Notre Dame fans couldn’t help but watch in disgust as Miami and Texas A&M engaged in a low-scoring rock fight in the first round of the College Football Playoff.
With eight minutes left in the fourth quarter of an eventual 10-3 Miami win, the score was tied, 3-3. Through the first three quarters and change of Saturday’s game, fans saw both teams’ kickers miss 4 of 6 field-goal attempts combined, plus three total turnovers. It was the first game in CFP history — including the four-team format that existed from 2014 through 2023 and the 12-team format that replaced it in 2024 — that went into halftime in a scoreless tie.
This came in a game between two sides that had each averaged more than 34 points per game throughout the 2025 season.
One contentious point regarding Notre Dame, which was the first team left out of this year’s CFP bracket, was that two Group of 5 schools, No. 20 Tulane and No. 24 James Madison, received automatic bids and made the Playoff field over the No. 11 Fighting Irish by virtue of being among the five highest-ranked conference champions.
Media personalities from ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit to seven-time national championship head coach Nick Saban, who also works as a broadcast analyst for ESPN, criticized the Playoff’s selection criteria for creating the circumstances that made it possible to leave Notre Dame out of the bracket.
“I don’t think we need to make sure everybody gets a trophy, and make sure everybody’s included,” Herbstreit said Monday on “Nonstop,” the podcast he hosts with former NFL wide receiver Joey Galloway. “I think that’s a bunch of bulls—.”
During the Dec. 7 CFP bracket selection show, Saban expressed the opinion that the Playoff field didn’t represent the 12 best teams in college football this season.
“I think the fact of the matter is, all three of those teams should have gotten in and deserve the right to play in the College Football Playoff,” Saban said, referring to Miami and Alabama, which received at-large bids, and Notre Dame, which did not. “… You’re going to have two teams in the playoff — no disrespect to the Group of 5 — that are nowhere near ranked as highly as some other teams that are much better than them.”
But Saturday afternoon’s eyesore had nothing to do with Tulane or James Madison, the Group of 5 teams that supposedly didn’t belong in the Playoff mix. Miami versus Texas A&M was a showdown between Power 5 programs, and yet they still produced a low-scoring, mistake-ridden stalemate.
When the CFP released its end-of-season rankings along with the Playoff bracket, Miami leapfrogged Notre Dame to nab the final at-large berth even though neither team played during Week 15 of the NCAA football season. In doing so, the Playoff selection committee rewarded the Hurricanes’ 27-24 season-opening win over Notre Dame on Aug. 31, but Fighting Irish fans felt their team had done more over the course of the season to deserve that spot than Miami.
As the team that was chosen over Notre Dame played a leading role in Saturday afternoon’s battle of futility, many fans and media personalities who questioned the Fighting Irish’s exclusion from the Playoff field took to social media to say “I told you so,” in one form or another. (Which came less than 24 hours after many did the same during Alabama’s comeback win at Oklahoma in the CFP opener.)
Here are some of the reactions to Miami’s ugly win at Kyle Field … and Danny Kanell from Friday night.
What a game
Notre Dame would’ve had 30 on the scoreboard by now pic.twitter.com/nSeY8PcPTk
— Will Compton (@_willcompton) December 20, 2025
The funny thing about this Miami vs Texas A&M game is that no matter how bad both teams play, Notre Dame fans can’t say anything cause they lose to BOTH of them. I love it
— MattBeGreat (@mattbegreatyt) December 20, 2025
“Can’t believe we got left out. We would boat race these two teams.”
Sincerely,
Notre Dame fans pic.twitter.com/VzCY7MFnpJ
— Adam Hall (@Adam_Hall4) December 20, 2025
Miami vs Texas A&M might be the worst football game I’ve ever watched across any level in my entire life.
— Enyr Neslo (@TalkUncut) December 20, 2025
Notre Dame would beat both these teams.
— Notre Dame Fighting Irish (@Insidetheirish) December 20, 2025
For all those sheep who’ve been bleatin’ for Notre Dame to join a conference, sincerely hope you’re enjoying the heck out of this Ole Miss-Tulane snoozefest.
— Mark Kiszla (@markkiszla) December 20, 2025
Notre Dame is better than both these teams
— Danny Kanell (@dannykanell) December 20, 2025