2025-12-20 Hurricanes at Aggies
College Football Playoffs
Miami Hurricanes at Texas A&M
11AM local kick-off time

Astrology analysis
With Neptune/Saturn dominating in the 1st house, this one screams big-stage pressure + weirdness: momentum swings, confusing sequences, and one “Uranus flip” moment that changes the game’s texture. The Moon–Mars conjunction in Capricorn points to a physical, sideline-fueled fight where toughness and composure beat style points, while Mercury riding the MC puts the spotlight on play-calling, communication, and crucial decision-making. The Sun is exact to both horizons, so whichever team’s leaders stay calm in the chaos — especially in those 10th-house spotlight drives — is the team most likely to walk out of College Station with it.
Kickoff (stadium local): Saturday, Dec 20 • 11:00 AM CT • College Station, TX (Kyle Field)
(ASC = home/Aggies • DSC = away/Hurricanes)
Dominant planets (Modern)
- Neptune (19.42%) — Pisces 29° in 1st (chart boss: fog, weird bounces, “how did that happen?” moments)
- Saturn (14.56%) — Pisces 25° in 1st (structure, pressure, field-position football, “earn it”)
- Uranus (13.59%) — Taurus 28° Rx in 3rd (sudden flips, surprise calls, chaos spikes)
Runner-up: Jupiter (11.65%) — Cancer 22° Rx in 5th (big-play luck + scoring “swells,” but not steady)
Elements + modality
- Elemental split: Earth 29.63% / Water 29.63% (tied) → grind + emotion + momentum swings
- Fire 25.93% (enough spark for splash plays) • Air 14.81% (less “clean logic,” more feel/physical)
- Modality: Mutable is heaviest (5x) → game flow can change fast (adjustments matter; nothing “locked” early)
Moon story (pace + emotion)
- Moon in Capricorn 6° (11th house) conjunct Mars in Capricorn 4° (orb ~2°)
Crowd/bench energy (11th) feeds physical execution (Cap/Mars). Expect surge runs, hard hits, “statement” drives, and momentum that spreads through the sideline.
Angular hits / “weirdness indicators”
- ASC sextile Sun (orb 0°08) + DSC trine Sun (orb 0°08) → the Sun is wired into both teams: leadership/QB poise and “who controls the spotlight” is decisive.
- ASC square Uranus (orb 0°37) and DSC square Uranus (orb 0°37) → one major swing event is strongly indicated (sudden turnover, busted coverage TD, fake, weird snap, officiating reversal).
- MC conjunct Mercury (orb 2°00) → game narrative turns on play-calls, communication, tempo, audibles, and reviews.
Team rulers (matchup engine)
Home (Aggies) — Aquarius ASC
- ASC ruler Uranus in Taurus (3rd) square ASC/DSC → home side can create disruption, but also receive it.
- Traditional co-ruler Saturn in 1st (very strong): discipline, “do your job,” win-by-structure if they stay clean.
Away (Hurricanes) — Leo DSC
- DSC ruler Sun in Sagittarius 10th (high visibility, “big stage” confidence).
- But: Sun square Neptune (orb 0°20 applying) + Sun square Saturn (orb 3°27 separating) → the away side can look brilliant or get dragged into confusion/pressure depending on who handles the moment-to-moment details.
Predictive house notes (old-book style, applied)
- 1st house loaded (Saturn/Neptune/Node/Fortune in Pisces): home-field “identity” is huge — but it’s a Pisces 1st: emotion + atmosphere + nerves. If the Aggies steady the ship, they can own the tone; if they get sloppy, this chart punishes fast.
- 10th house stacked (Sun/Mercury/Venus in Sagittarius): the outcome hinges on execution in high-leverage moments (red zone choices, 4th downs, end-of-half sequencing).
- 12th house Pluto in Aquarius: hidden errors/mental lapses matter — one misread can swing the whole script.
Hurricanes @ Aggies — postgame astrology recap
This game played almost exactly like the kickoff chart warned it might: Neptune + Saturn running the show, Uranus lurking on the angles, and Mercury on the MC turning the whole afternoon into a weird, review-heavy, field-position chess match that stayed scoreless forever… until one late “flip” decided it.
Miami wins 10–3 in College Station, advancing in the CFP.
The chart’s headline, in hindsight
Neptune (dominant) + Saturn (dominant) in the 1st house was the loudest possible signal for:
- Stalled offense, muted rhythm, “nothing is clean” football
- Execution problems (especially finishing drives)
- Weird single-play distortions (bounces, blocks, muffed/awkward sequences)
- A game where discipline (Saturn) would decide who survives the fog (Neptune)
And that’s what you got: a defensive slugfest with a scoreless first half and both teams repeatedly failing to convert opportunities.
1st quarter: Saturn sets the tone, Neptune starts poisoning drives
A&M’s opening 12-play march: “Capricorn effort, Neptune finish”
The Aggies come out in a no-huddle/shotgun rhythm and chew clock, stringing together short passes and tough inside runs. That’s Moon–Mars in Capricorn energy: physical, methodical, “earn every yard.”
But the drive ends in the most Saturn/Neptune way possible:
- False start (Saturn penalty: structure breaks)
- Punt, after A&M crosses midfield but can’t complete the sequence
The feel was established immediately: both offenses could move, but not land punches.
Miami’s early series: conservative, boxed-in, field-position mode
Miami starts pinned deep and stays cautious—short throws, runs, and then punts. That’s Saturn’s restraint and “live to fight the next series.”
The first “Neptune event” that matters: turnover that doesn’t fully materialize (yet)
A&M’s second possession is where the chart’s fog starts biting:
- Reed gets them into Miami territory again
- Then strip-sack fumble lost at the Miami 31 (4:11 left in the 1st)
That’s Neptune’s signature: one moment of disorientation/pressure and suddenly the drive evaporates.
The “Uranus on the angles” foreshadow: a muffed punt that almost becomes disaster
Later, Miami’s punt is muffed by A&M’s returner—a classic Uranus jolt (unexpected chaos on a routine play). A&M recovers it themselves, but the game’s volatility is officially on the table: one weird bounce can rewrite the script.
2nd quarter: Mercury on the MC = reviews + tempo, Neptune = special teams distortion
This quarter was the purest expression of the chart’s “why is this game like this?” vibe.
Miami coughs it up, survives, and keeps playing tight
Early 2nd: Miami has a bad sack/fumble sequence but falls on it. Again: Neptune threatens, but doesn’t always cash in immediately—just keeps smearing the edges of execution.
A&M produces the biggest “clean” offensive moment… and still comes away with nothing
The Aggies hit a 59-yard pass to flip the field and get a first-and-goal look. This is where you’d expect the 10th-house Sagittarius pileup (Sun/Mercury/Venus) to deliver the “spotlight finish.”
Instead, Neptune takes over the red zone:
- The drive ends with a blocked field goal (and Miami return)
Blocked kicks are textbook Neptune/Uranus crossover: timing disruption + “how did that get through?” distortion. And it preserved the chart’s main prophecy: no clean scoring.
The missed-kick theme spreads to both sidelines
Miami later misses from 47, then from 40 to end the half. A&M misses/botches chances too. This game was absolutely loaded with Neptune “points left on the field” energy.
Mercury on the MC shows up in game texture
Even inside your log: frequent shotgun looks, no-huddle spurts, timing-based calls, and that late-half review/overturn sequence. Mercury on the MC doesn’t guarantee points—it guarantees storyline driven by decision-making, communication, and officiating/verification.
3rd quarter: Miami finally forces the first crack… but Neptune keeps it from becoming a breakaway
Miami opens the half with its best passing rhythm and pushes to the red zone.
Then the exact pattern continues:
- Big chunk plays to move
- Messy finish
- Field goal for the first points (3–0)
Even the moment of “Miami control” still doesn’t resolve into touchdowns. That’s Saturn: take the sure points. And Neptune: prevent “closure.”
A&M’s offense hits the worst possible version of the chart
Right after Miami scores, A&M responds with:
- a brutal sack / intentional grounding situation
- then Reed throws an interception, returned deep into Aggie territory
That’s the chart’s pressure axis:
- Saturn = collapsing structure (negative plays)
- Neptune = judgment fog (the throw that shouldn’t happen)
- Uranus = sudden swing and field-flip
And even with the short field, Miami still misses another field goal, keeping the door open.
4th quarter: the “Uranus flip” finally cashes… twice
The 4th quarter was basically the chart saying: “Okay, now I’ll pick one sequence to decide everything.”
A&M ties it with a long, grinding Saturn drive
A&M finally strings together a 16-play drive and kicks a field goal to make it 3–3. That’s Saturn football: persistence, field position, slow pressure.
The exact Neptune warning becomes literal: ball security failure at the worst moment
Miami immediately answers with:
- a nice run
- then a fumble by Malachi Toney after a completion, forced and recovered by A&M
That’s Neptune’s “hands” theme: slippery, costly, emotionally brutal timing.
And here’s where the chart gets cruel: Neptune doesn’t care who it punishes—it cares when.
Miami’s winning sequence = Uranus explosion powered by Mars/Moon brutality
After getting the ball back, Miami produces the signature play of the game:
- Mark Fletcher Jr. breaks a 56-yard run to flip the entire field and change the emotional temperature instantly
That’s Uranus (sudden) expressed through Moon–Mars Capricorn (physical force). It wasn’t finesse—it was violence-through-a-lane.
Then the “10th house spotlight” finally arrives:
- Carson Beck to Malachi Toney for the 11-yard TD with under two minutes left
And in perfect Neptune irony, the player who earlier coughed it up becomes the hero. That’s Neptune narrative: redemption, reversal, the fog lifting at the last possible second.
The seal: end-zone interception = Saturn outcome, Neptune misread
A&M gets one last red-zone chance, and then it ends the most Saturn way possible:
- End-zone interception by freshman Bryce Fitzgerald to close the game
That’s Saturn’s final word: “You don’t get to finish if you don’t execute.” Neptune’s final word: “You thought you had the window; you didn’t.”
Why the game stayed 10–3 instead of turning into 17–13 or 24–20
From an astrology lens, the reason this never became a “normal” low-scoring game is the Neptune dominance combined with Saturn dominance:
- Saturn created the trench war: sacks, negative plays, disciplined defense, and drives that required perfection.
- Neptune destroyed perfection: blocked kicks, missed kicks, fumbles, red-zone confusion, and late “why did he throw that?” decisions.
- Uranus waited and then delivered the two decisive jolts: the explosive Fletcher run + the end-zone pick sequence.
The result was the exact vibe your chart read hinted at pregame: not just low scoring—low scoring with weirdness and one late swing that decides the whole story.
Legacy note (what this win “means” in the story)
Miami advances after the upset and is set for a CFP quarterfinal vs Ohio State on Dec. 31.
And the game itself will be remembered as a “how did both teams leave so many points out there?” classic—exactly the kind of thing you get when Neptune is the loudest voice at kickoff.