What exactly did you expect? Richt never really attacks these sisters of the poor and the efforts are always a little sloppy and unfocused. We had some particularly sloppy plays in the first half that made the game a little closer than it should’ve been for a little longer than it should’ve been, but the game was never really in doubt. We got the win, we had no major injuries, we move on.
About
the WC game
I’m not even going to bother here…any attempts at reading into
anything into that performance would be just wasted time and considering I’m
on vacation right now, frankly I don’t want to. Let’s just say it
wasn’t quite as polished as what we were looking for against such an overmatched
opponent. Giving up 3 first half field goals wasn’t good although one
came off a deep fumble.
Bama Offense
This is a balanced Bama attack that has had success at various times this season
on the ground and through the air. Against the best defense they’ve faced
so far (Arkansas) they put up over 40 points, a week after managing only 24
against Vandy, with 7 of those coming from a punt return for TD. It’s
still early, so it’s tough to say whether last week’s performance
was more Bama being good on offense or Arkansas being bad on defense.
At QB, Jr. John Parker Wilson has really established himself as a capable passer
after going through an on-again off-again sophomore season where he replaced
Sr. Brodie Croyle. Coming into this season, he had a respectable 19/10 TD/INT
ratio, but he’s already thrown 3 INTs this season. His season completion
percentage of 56% is pretty much right in line with his career numbers. He’s
somewhat mobile, but at times can become too deliberate, getting sacked in each
game this season despite playing behind a solid OL. Last season he was sacked
27 times. I think he’d prefer to play Arkansas every week, as his two
starts against them have arguably been his two best. He’s not the kind
of QB that’s going to wow you. He’s steady and does a good job of
getting the ball to his playmakers.
At RB, the Tide rolls out redshirt Freshman Terry Grant. At 5-10, 188, Grant
isn’t huge, but he’s shown a knack for toting the rock early and
often. He’s averaged over 20 carries per game for more than 130 ypg so
far with a nice little 6.5 ypc average. He has 5 TDs through two games and has
the speed to take it the distance every time he touches the ball. How explosive
is he? He’s had a carry of 35 yards or more in each game this season.
He’s just a good solid SEC RB…the kind that Bama seems to always
have (Alexander, Darby, etc.). He caught 5 passes in his first two games but
none last week. His backup Glen Coffee is a solid backup, averaging nearly 6
ypc with 2 TDs so far and on pace to gain over 600 yards rushing so they are
in good hands when he’s on the field.
At WR, Bama has some solid options although their go-to guy is banged up some.
DJ Hall is having a tremendous season so far but got beat up some last week.
The senior is a big-play threat, with 13 catches and nearly 300 yards through
3 games, including 172 yards and 2 TDs against Arkansas last week. He’s
averaging over 22 ypc this year. Matt Caddell, Mike McCoy, and Earl Alexander
all provide excellent depth. TE Nick Walker has 2 TDs on the year out of 8 grabs.
He’s averaging under 7 ypc, but when you couple that with the fact that
a quarter of your catches are going for TDs, you’re an obvious redzone
threat.
The Bama OL is the best we’ve seen this season. So. LT Andre Smith is
living up to his billing as the #1 OL recruit in the country 2 years ago after
starting every game at LT since he’s set foot on campus. At 6-4, 340,
he’s a mountain that’s surprisingly agile. His backup is a senior
with 25 career starts. That must be nice. The left side of the line is particularly
steady, with Smith, Jr. Justin Britt (20 starts) and So. Antoine Caldwell (28
starts). RT Mike Johnson is the only newcomer, as RG Marlon Davis started several
games to end the 2006 season. This is a solid, veteran OL that’s played
well this season.
Bottom Line: Bama brings the balance you want in an offense.
They have a solid passing attack with a true downfield threat, a steady QB,
explosive RB and best of all, a proven OL. Our defense has played pretty well
this season, but I don’t think we know yet what we’ve been up against
this year. Given the strength of their OL (and the success that SC had at times),
I’d expect them to run it at us and try to wear us down. We’re pretty
strong up the middle and we’re light at DE and have gotten some suspect
OLB play this season, so I’d look for them to go there, taking a shot
downfield regularly to keep our safeties back.
Key Matchup to watch when they have the ball: We need Ellerbe
and Washington to have big days. If Bama gets Grant rolling early, that will
open them up more for the play-action stuff up top to Hall. If we can put them
in 3rd and long, I like our chances, as we’ve had some success there this
year (it was the 1st two downs we struggled on against SC).
Bama Defense
Normally here I’d tell you about Bama’s national rankings in pass
defense, run defense, etc. but that won’t be the case this week for a
couple of reasons. One, it’s too early in the season to get a good feel
for how good a team is because of too varied a competition level. Two, Bama
played Arkansas, a team that has the ability to make your run defense appear
porous (McFadden has that effect on lots of folks), while making your pass defense
appear incredibly strong. And three, this is their first year under Saban, so
looking at last year’s stats won’t do much good either. Basically,
Bama has a defense that I would say is comparable to ours. Solid, not spectacular.
They play a nominal 3-4, which would be a bit of an oddity in the SEC, but apparently
it’s by name only, as one of the “LBs” plays with his hand
down, a lot like we did a few years back when Antonio Cochran was listed as
a LB for us the whole year and I don’t think ever logged a down standing
up.
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