Texas A&M now has a face on the College Football Playoff Selection Committee as former Aggie coach R.C. Slocum has been appointed to the committee. Arkansas State AD Terry Mohajir and General Ray Odierno of the U.S. Army were also appointed to the committee.

Spots on the CFP committee are three-year terms, with members rotating in and out on an annual basis. The CFP has also decided to keep Oregon AD Rob Mullens as the chairman of the committee for a second season.

“Terry, Ray and R.C. each bring a wealth of experience and expertise to the committee,” CFP Executive Director Bill Hancock said in a statement. “All three have built esteemed careers based on character and diligence, which will continue the CFP tradition of committee members who are football experts and also people of high integrity.

The College Football Playoff committee offered up the following bio for Slocum:

R.C. Slocum was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2012. The winningest head coach in Texas A&M history, he led the Aggies to a record of 123-47-2 from 1989-2002. Slocum earned both bachelor’s and master’s degrees from McNeese State, where he played football from 1963-67. Upon graduation, he began his career as a football coach at Lake Charles High School in Louisiana, before transitioning to the college ranks at Kansas State from 1970-71. Slocum then was hired by Texas A&M as an assistant coach, where he spent the 1972-80 seasons prior to becoming the defensive coordinator at the University of Southern California in 1981.

He returned to College Station in 1982 as the defensive coordinator, until assuming the head coaching position in December 1988. In his 14-year head coaching career, Slocum never had a losing season and won four conference championships, including the Big 12 title in 1998. Under Slocum, the Aggies became the first program in Southwest Conference (SWC) history to post three consecutive perfect conference seasons, including four years without losing a SWC game and the highest winning percentage in SWC history (.865).

Slocum is a member of the Texas Sports Hall of Fame, Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans and served on the board of the American Football Coaches Association.