LSU and Texas A&M have been battling on the gridiron since 1906 in a rivalry that was one of the most heated long before the Aggies joined the SEC back in 2012. The teams do not like each other and never have, so taking the other behind the woodshed is especially sweet. And over the course of 59 games, each has had its share of blowout victories.

Here are the 10 biggest blowouts in the LSU vs. Texas A&M rivalry.

10. Texas A&M 28, LSU 0

After 4 straight victories to open the 1923 season, Texas A&M hit the road for the first time and blanked LSU at Tiger Stadium for the Aggies’ 5th consecutive shutout of the season. Things went south after that, though, with the Texas A&M offense scoring just 6 points over the final 4 games. The Aggies limped to the finish line with a 5-3-1 record.

9. Texas A&M 28, LSU 0

The Aggies rebounded from a 21-0 loss to No. 1 UCLA in their 1955 season-opener with a 28-point shutout victory over No. 16 LSU. It started a string of 8 consecutive games in which the Aggies went without a loss in the 2nd season under head coach Paul “Bear” Bryant. The 7-1-1 Aggies rose to No. 8 in the polls before a 21-6 season-ending loss to Texas.

8. LSU 35, Texas A&M 6

LSU opened a highly successful, yet highly controversial, 1969 season with a convincing victory over Texas A&M at Tiger Stadium. LSU would go on to post a 9-1 record and rise to No. 10 in the polls by the end of the season. It was understood that the Tigers would receive a Cotton Bowl berth to face the winner of the Texas-Arkansas game and a chance at a national championship. But at the 11th hour, Notre Dame stepped forward and set aside a 45-year self-imposed bowl ban to take on No. 1 Texas in the Cotton Bowl, leaving LSU without a spot in the postseason.

7. Texas A&M 39, LSU 8

The No. 11 Aggies opened the 1975 season with a pair of victories over SEC teams. After taking care of Ole Miss 7-0 in the season opener, they rolled into Tiger Stadium and shut down LSU for the 2nd of what would become 10 consecutive victories and a No. 2 national ranking. But the Aggies lost their chance at a national championship, losing their final 2 games of the season to No. 18 Arkansas (31-6) and USC (20-0) in the Liberty Bowl and finished the season ranked No. 11.

6. LSU 34, Texas A&M 0

On Oct. 8, 1949, LSU rolled to a 34-point victory over a hapless Texas A&M squad at Tiger Stadium. It was the second-most points scored by the Tigers that season, behind a 48-point outburst against Southeastern Louisiana. While the Aggies limped to a 1-8-1 season, No. 9 LSU finished 8-2 before being pounded 35-0 in the Sugar Bowl by No. 2 Oklahoma.

5. LSU 37, Texas A&M 0

The Tigers rebounded from a disappointing 1971 season-opening loss to Colorado with a resounding victory over Texas A&M on Sept. 18 at Tiger Stadium. It put LSU on track to 5 straight victories in a campaign that also included a late-season 28-8 win over No. 7 Notre Dame. The Tigers went 8-3 and earned a berth in the Sun Bowl, defeating Iowa State 33-15.

4. Texas A&M 45, LSU 7

On Sept. 14, 1991, at Kyle Field, No. 20 Texas A&M opened the season with a big victory over LSU. Though they would lose the following week by 1 point at Tulsa, the Aggies and quarterback Bucky Richardson went on to a 10-1 regular-season finish and rose to No. 9 in the AP poll, before falling 10-2 to No. 5 Florida State in the Cotton Bowl.

3. LSU 50, Texas A&M 7

The 2019 contest was the Tigers’ most lopsided victory over the Aggies in the series and with good reason: It was one of the all-time greatest seasons in college football. With the victory, in front of the home crowd at Tiger Stadium, No. 1 LSU completed a perfect 12-0 regular season on its way to a 15-0 finish and a national championship led by quarterback Joe Burrow, the eventual Heisman Trophy winner.

2. Texas A&M 46, LSU 0

The Aggies improved to 4-1-1 against LSU in College Station with a 46-0 blanking of the Tigers on Oct. 20, 1922. On a rare Friday game, the Aggies had everything go their way in an otherwise mediocre 5-4 season.

1. Texas A&M 63, LSU 9

Way back on Halloween 1914, in just the 5th meeting between the 2 teams, Texas A&M scored the biggest blowout of the series, a 59-point bludgeoning of the Tigers at Kyle Field that still stands today – more than 100 years later – as the most lopsided score in the series.