Did Notre Dame get robbed? Former NFL referee analyzes Texas A&M's game-winning touchdown

Douglas Santo

Did Notre Dame get robbed? Former NFL referee analyzes Texas A&M's game-winning touchdown image

MICHAEL CLUBB/SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

No. 8 Notre Dame lost in heartbreaking fashion on Saturday night to No. 16 Texas A&M to fall to 0-2 on the season.

The two teams went back a forth all night in a high scoring affair. The Aggies scored 14 unanswered points in the second quarter to take a 28-24 lead into halftime. Notre Dame and Texas A&M traded scoring drives in the second half until the Fighting Irish scored a touchdown with 2:55 left in the game to take the lead.

However, the Aggies drove down and scored a game-winning touchdown in the final minute of the game on a 4th and goal from the 11 yard line. But, after watching the play more closely, should it have counted?

Former NFL Referee Breaks Down Final Play

You never want to point at the official's at the end of a game for the cause of the outcome, and for Notre Dame of Saturday night, that certainly wasn't the case. The Fighting Irish had plenty of opportunities to win the game without leaving it in the hands of the referees.

However, former NFL referee Terry McAulay believes Texas A&M's game-winning touchdown should have been called back. That is literally a game-changing call.

Notre Dame's defensive lineman Donovan Hinish swiped past Texas A&M's center, who then wrapped up Hinish's leg and brought him to the ground as he approached Aggie's quarterback Marcel Reed.

"This was just a patently egregious missed offensive holding foul," McAulay wrote on X. "Game, time, score are all irrelevant. It should be called anytime and every time it occurs."

Then McAulay went on to explain how such an egregious call was missed by all of the officials. To put it simple, two officials were looking at the wrong place in the play and one official simply missed the blatant holding call because he was looking at a different part of the offensive line.

However, this isn't to say the referee's are the sole reason to blame for Notre Dame's loss. The Fighting Irish butchered the extra-point following their go-ahead touchdown, which allowed the Aggies' touchdown to be a game-winner rather than just tying the game.

Texas A&M's game-winning touchdown was also on a 4th and goal from the 11 yard line. The field shrinks inside the red zone, and the Fighting Irish had one play to end the game and walk away with a win, and couldn't do so.

With the loss, Notre Dame drops to 0-2 on the season, making their College Football Playoff hopes very, very slim. The Fighting Irish would need to win-out and have a lot of help from other teams losing.

Notre Dame would need to earn an at-large bid into the CFP, and it currently does not have another Top 25 matchup on its schedule.

Douglas Santo

Douglas Santo is a freelance writer with The Sporting News. As a senior at Arizona State University, he will complete his B.A. in sports journalism with a minor in business in December 2025. Before his time with Sporting News, Douglas covered the NFL and MLB for Athlon Sports and contributed as a digital reporter for Arizona PBS/Cronkite News. He is also the head of Sun Devil Daily, managing all content produced about Arizona State Sports.