They say that pressure is a privilege. If that's the case, then no one in college football is more privileged than Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher. Currently working with a 10-year, $95 million contract, Fisher is coming off of a 5-7 season, doesn't have a 10-win campaign under his belt in College Station, Texas, and aside from the COVID-shortened 2020 season has only finished above .500 in SEC play once since taking over the program in 2018. 

Simply put, that won't cut it. The massive check Texas A&M committed to Fisher after the 9-1 season in 2020 demands a national championship. Nothing less. Remember, this is the man who received a blank plaque celebrating a soon-to-be national championship during his introductory press conference. 

The Aggies have finished in the bottom half of the SEC in scoring offense in three of the last four seasons, and only averaged 22.8 points per game last season. That was next-to-last in the league. As a fix, he went out and hired former Arkansas and Louisville coach Bobby Petrino to kick-start the offense. Petrino, of course, was unceremoniously dismissed by the Razorbacks in April 2012 after personal issues came to light in the wake of a motorcycle accident.