Texas A&M Aggies Tickets
Ticket Retriever sells A&M Aggies tickets for every game nationwide. Tickets for the
A&M Aggies Football can be purchased online or by calling our toll free number (877) 223-3824. We specialize in providing tickets in a wide range of locations including hard-to-find premium tickets to all major events nationwide including College Football tickets to any game.
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4. Place your ticket order for Texas A&M Aggies tickets on our secure
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Every Texas A&M Aggies fan roots for the team to do well during the NCAA College football regular season. Tickets are in high demand and getting football tickets is sometimes a hard task to accomplish. Luckily for football fans Ticket Retriever specializes in obtaining the tickets you need and making them available for purchase easily online.
Ticket Retriever is ticket broker who has a great selection of Texas
A&M Aggies tickets which can be easily purchased on our website or via telephone by calling toll free (877) 22-FETCH. We also strive to make it as easy as possible for season ticket holders who are out of town, don't wish to attend, or are looking to make some extra money to sell football tickets to us. Our expertise in this area makes TicketRetriever.com the destination for all your football needs.
About Texas A&M Aggies
Every university has its own set of traditions which help to distinguish it from other institutions. Texas A&M University is no exception. Perhaps nowhere else, though, are those traditions as interwoven into the very fabric of the university than they are at Texas A&M. As a result, Aggies have a lingo that is all their own. The following list of terms helps to define what being an Aggie is all about.
A&M
Shortened form for Texas A&M University. Originally, the letters stood for Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas; now, the letters are retained merely as part of the University?s tradition and history.
Aggies
Students, former students or supporters of Texas A&M University. Term is derived from A&M?s agricultural heritage. Aggies are sometimes also referred to as farmers.
Aggie Code of Honor
For many years, Texas A&M Aggies have followed a Code of Honor, which is stated in this very simple verse: ?Aggies do not lie, cheat, or steal, nor do they tolerate those who do.?
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Aggieland
Home of Texas A&M University.
All-U Night
All-University Night?the first Yell Practice of the semester. Event includes introductions of men?s and women?s intercollegiate athletic teams, coaching staff and yell leaders.
Association of Former Students
There is no such thing at Texas A&M as an alumni association or an Ex-Aggie; there are only former students. The Association of Former Students serves the same purpose as an alumni association, but an individual doesn?t have to graduate from Texas A&M to be a member. Once an Aggie, always an Aggie.
Corps of Cadets
Military-oriented organization, which is the oldest student group on the A&M campus. Texas A&M annually commissions more officers for the armed forces than any other ROTC source in the nation.
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Elephant Walk
Annual ceremony held the day before bonfire in which seniors gather in front of the Texas A&M Academic Building, form a single line and wander about the Texas A&M campus like old elephants seeking a secluded spot to end their days.
Fish
A freshman of Texas A&M
Fish Camp
Freshman orientation camp held just before classes begin in the fall. Provides an overall introduction to Texas A&M.
Gig ?Em
One of many Aggie yells.
Howdy!
Traditional Aggie greeting; a derivative of ?hello?. Sometimes garbled to sound like ?hahdy?. Aggies pride themselves on their friendliness and greet each other and visitors with a ?Howdy? as they walk across campus.
Hullabaloo, Caneck! Caneck!
First words to the ?Aggie War Hymn,? Texas A&M?s fight song, which was written by J.V. (Pinky) Wilson while standing guard on the Rhine during World War I.
Humping It
Position taken by Aggies when giving a yell. Bending forward from the waist with the hands placed just above the knees properly aligns the back, mouth and throat for maximum volume.
Jollie Rollie
G. Rollie White Coliseum?the place where the Texas A&M Aggies play volleyball. Before Reed Arena was built, "Jollie Rollie" was the home of Aggie Basketball and held special events like graduation, Muster and Town Hall concerts.
MSC
Memorial Student Center. No one steps on the grass surrounding the MSC, which was built in honor of Aggies who died in battle.
Ol? Army
Like it ?used to be? at Texas A&M.
Redpots
The students responsible for coordinating the building of Bonfire. There are 16 (8 seniors, 8 juniors), and they wear red hardhats or ?pots?.
Sully
Statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross, former Governor of Texas and former President of Texas A&M. It stands in front of the Academic Building.
t.u.
That ?other school? in Austin is not the ?University of Texas.? To an Aggie, it?s ?t.u.,? without capital letters.
Tea-sip
Student at t.u.
Two Percenters
Students who do not display the true Aggie Spirit.
Whoop!
Aggie expression of approval.
Yell Practice
Spirit session which builds enthusiasm for an upcoming athletic contest. Under the direction of the Yell Leaders, Texas A&M Aggies show their support for the team by shouting the yells with spirit and singing the Aggie songs with pride. Held at midnight at Kyle Field before home football games.
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Silver Taps
This is one of the most emotional of all Texas A&M Aggie traditions. The solemn ceremony is a tribute and honor to an Aggie who has died. The ceremony is held in front of the Texas A&M Academic Building on the first Tuesday of every month at 10:30 p.m., if a student died during the preceding month. Students gather around the area, the campus lights are dimmed (cars included); chimes play from the Albritton Tower; a detachment from the Ross Volunteers fires three volleys; and buglers from the Aggie band play Silver Taps three times. The Ceremony is quite moving because the only sense one witnesses it with is sound. The family members of the deceased Aggie are invited as special guests at the ceremony.
Muster
Muster was first held in 1883 when Texas A&M Aggies met June 26 to ?live over their college days.? The early meetings were parties and banquets held during the commencement exercises. Soon, a permanent date was set ? April 21 ? and it became a time to pay homage to students and former students who died during the past year. At today?s Muster, living comrades answer ?here? to the roll call at the largest ceremony before a full house in Reed Arena, for their friends who have passed on. During World War I, groups of Texas A&M Aggies held Muster in trenches in Europe. In l923, former students began holding Muster throughout Texas, the nation and numerous other parts of the world ? to let Aggies remember old days and meet old friends.
The 12th Man
The 12th Man tradition was born in 1922 at the Dixie Classic in Dallas, Texas. Today, aggies stand throughout the entire game in readiness in case they are needed to go into the game.
One of the most well-known traditions at Texas A&M is the 12th Man. The story of this colorful tradition has been told and retold to generations of Texas A&M Aggies, and is part of the cohesive substance that binds Texas A&M aggies together forever. The 12th Man is the reason A&M
Aggies stand for each entire football game. When Aggies stand during games, it is this spirit and loyalty they are remembering. Aggies stand in readiness in case they are needed to go into the game like the original 12th Man, E. King Gill.
The Late Dr. Gill of Corpus Christi related this story a few years ago:
"It was in January, 1922, following the 1921 football season. The Aggies were SWC champions and had been invited to play Centre College in what was then called the Dixie Classic in Dallas. I had played on the football team but was on the basketball team at that time and those in charge felt I was more valuable to the basketball team (Gill was an All-SWC basketball player in 1923). I was in Dallas, however, and even rode to the stadium in the same taxi with Coach Dana X. Bible. I was in civilian clothes and was not to be in uniform. Coach Bible asked me to assist in spotting players for the late Jinx Tucker (sports editor of the Waco News-Tribune) in the press box. So, I was up in the press box, helping Jinx Tucker when, near the end of the first half, I was called down to the Texas A&M bench. There had been a number of injuries but it was not until I arrived on the field that I learned that Coach Bible wanted me to put on a football uniform and be ready to play if he needed me. There were no dressing rooms at the stadium in those days. The team had dressed downtown at the hotel and traveled to the stadium in taxi cabs. Anyway, I put on the uniform of one of the injured players. We got under the stands and he put on my clothes and I put on his uniform. I was ready to play but never was sent into the game.?
Texas A&M Aggies Tickets
Ticket Retriever sells A&M Aggies tickets for every game nationwide. Tickets for the
A&M Aggies Football can be purchased online or by calling our toll free number (877) 223-3824. We specialize in providing tickets in a wide range of locations including hard-to-find premium tickets to all major events nationwide including College Football tickets to any game.
How to Find Texas A&M Aggies Tickets:
1. Browse our ticket inventory by clicking on the "Texas A&M Aggies" button.
2. Sort ticket events by price, section, or row.
3. Use the seating chart to help you find the tickets that meet
your preferences.
4. Place your ticket order for Texas A&M Aggies tickets on our secure
system.