Showing posts with label alabama crimson tide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alabama crimson tide. Show all posts

Sunday, November 04, 2012

ALMOST - LSU 17 - BAMA 21

Moments after LSU's four point loss in the last minute to No. 1 Alabama, the Tigers' defensive leader told reporters the tale of the tape.
 “We let this get away,” LSU defensive end Sam Montgomery said. “We had tons of opportunities to maximize in the game. But we couldn’t put them away. Sometimes, it’s not the best team, but it’s the most disciplined team. It’s tough. It was slow death.”
 At least it seemed that way for Bama, which had mustered barely a pulse in the second half, until the unflappable AJ McCarron took the Crimson Tide 72 yards and lofted a screen pass that went for a 28-yard touchdown pass with 51 seconds left. The Tigers had blitzed on the play, sending the crowd of Tiger Stadium-record crowd of 93,374 into a hush.

LSU's much criticized quarterback finally played like LSU's coaches thought he could, finishing with nearly 300 yards and showing a dazzling display of nice throws. “The receivers and the rest of the offense have known what we were fully capable of all year,” Zach Mettenberger said.
 “We were finally clicking tonight. But as well as I played, I would trade 150 yards and three interceptions if we had won. It hurts; it definitely hurts.

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

Is Alabama Beatable?


Nick Satan, er, Saban has honed the 2009 edition of the Crimson Tide into a sleek, powerful gridiron machine. Led by running backs Mark Ingram and Trent Richardson, they run well; led by quarterback Greg McElroy they pass well. And let's not even talk about the defense, who limits oppenents to around 15 points a game, with arguably the fastest front four in the SEC.
Is Bama, who has yet to even trail this season, even beatable?
The Tide has shown signs of waywardness but not weakness.
Ingram, the featured back season after Glen Coffee bolted to the League, is the cog that makes the offensive engine go: He churned out 150 yards against a stout Virginia Tech defense in the season opener and has been one tackle from glory several times.
Junior quarterback McElroy has thrown only one pick this season and is in the game-manager mode rather than gunslinger. But when he has to go deep he has, arguably, the best receiver in the SEC at his disposal, Julio Jones.
Jones, who has been slowed by injury this season -- he has just one touchdown and 9 receptions -- has drew a constant doubleteam from opposing defenses after lofty expectations from 2008.
If the Tide has a weakness it will probably be their inability to get the ball to Jones. The flip side of that issue is that they seldom have needed to, especially with the emergence of tight end Colin Peek.
Bama still faces the teeth of their schedule with this week's showdown with Ole Miss, but they look better than No. 2 Texas and No. 1 Florida (who still hasn't played anybody [sorry Vols)]. Also awaiting are the Auburn Tigers and LSU Tigers.
Will the Tide trip up along the way? Time will tell.
But, make no mistake about it, LSU will not doubleteam Jones (Look how they played Georgia's A.J. Green). If they can play Jones straight up, then McElroy will have to beat the Tigers with his arm.
If Ingram doesn't with his feet.






Monday, October 27, 2008

UT's Fulmer Sure Knows How to Keep a Job


"Whether it's administrative support or friends that are in crucial positions, I appreciate how everyone has handled this and has been supportive," Tennessee coach Philip Fulmer said days before his Volunteers got smashed by No. 2 Alabama 29 -9. "That's been a real positive for us. I look forward to rewarding that support."
Ah, in Tennessee support seems to be eternal: To say that Fulmer, with 17 years at the helm, is in the proverbial hot seat is an understatement. There are UT fans that loathe him. Despite this, his squad was in the SEC Championship Game a year ago, losing to LSU, the eventual national champion. But the fall this season hit everyone blindly. Not that they've lost but how bad they've looked. Against Alabama on Saturday, the Vols looked like a PAC 10 team. Of course, many say this is all just what-goes-around-style getback for a coach that hasn't been livin' right, but that's besides the point. I've never rooted for the Vols, but this free-fall has been painful to watch. The perennial 9-3 season is soooo last year. Still, Fulmer amazes me how he can keep his job. That, is truly, amazing. UT's administration must really hate going through the motions of a national hiring search, because the job ... quite literally ... is Fulmer's to lose. Forever. Of course, we all know the Volunteers program has been on a slow descent for several years. Meanwhile Alabama, Florida and Georgia, LSU have been talking about how to win championships. Maybe he peaked 10 years ago, when Spurrier's Gators were king: Then Fulmer won back-to-back SEC championships (1997 and 1998). Back then UT took a backseat to nobody, but the Gators. UT fans say the loss of David Cutcliffe, Fulmer's longtime offensive coordinator, who is now the head coach at Duke, made a huge impact. But teams lose assistants all the time. Was Cutcliffe that good?






Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Alabama DOES Have A Weakness: The Second Half



The Crimson Tide has rolled early and often this season in grinding out a 7-0 record. The feature a power back, Glen Coffee (760 yards this season, averaging 7 yards a pop), that compares favorably with the conference's best (Knowshon Moreno, who has 762 yards at 6 yards a pop). They've got a steady quarterback, John Parker Wilson (8 TDs) that can manage a game. A more than serviceable defense. So, what's their weakness, you say?
It's the second half of games.
If the second half of the Georgia game (one in which Bama raced to a 31-0 lead) didn't raise an alarm - final score Tide 41, UGA 30 - then last week's near debacle against Ole Miss did. Bama held a commanding 24-3 in the first half, then was outscored 17-0 in a second-half drop-off that was not unlike the stock market the same week. In fact in the last 3 games, Bama has not showed a willingness or aptitude to finish those games.
In those three first halves, Alabama has outscored opponents 69-3. In the second half, the combined count is an alarming 61-13 in favor of the opponents.
For Bama opponents, that's a startling silver lining: Stay in the game in the first half, and you can pound them out in the 2nd. A second-half slide is usually a result of conditioning. Maybe Nick Saban's workout programs don't emphasis staying power or energy retainment, whatever. With games against Tennessee (this Saturday), LSU and Auburn remaining, Bama is sure to stumble at least once (could it be LSU)? The loss of Terrance Cody is a big one, but it won't matter much in the big scheme. Bama's that good.








Saturday, September 27, 2008

It's Official: Bama is the Scariest Team in the SEC


The Bear is back.
Ask Georgia, who got shellacked 41-30 on Saturday night to a too fast, too hungry Alabama team.
Bama raced to a 31-point lead that all but the most insane UGA fan knew was too much to overcome.
With Florida's loss to Ole Miss, that makes the Tide and LSU the only undefeated teams in the SEC.
Who's the best? We'll know shortly, but what's not up to debate is that Alabama looks scary-good.
UGA made John Parker Wilson hook up with sensational freshman Julio Jones on a 31-yard pass and Glen Coffee churned out 82 yards on a good UGA defense.
If Alabama can do this to UGA (the game was not as close as the final score indicated) then LSU, with its vanilla secondary, looks like easy pickings.






Tuesday, November 20, 2007

As Speculation Swirls, Less Smiles at LSU


An emotional Les Miles said Monday, “I want to stay just where I’m at,” but he did not say definitively he will return as LSU football coach next season. And that's okay, being as how he says mad love for Michigan.
Oddly enough, the biggest decision in Les Mile's life comes down, not to what the other school offers, or even what LSU offers, no, it ironically comes down to Nick Saban.
See, Miles has heard the full gamut of emotions from LSU faithful for 3 plus years now, on why Saban is a dirty lowlife. He built his program and cred on the premise that he was not Nick Saban, that he was not that kind of coach, nor that kind of man. So, it's stomach-twistingly mad that he would find himself, in just 3 years, thrust in the same position as Saban was after 5 years.
Should he stay, or should he go?
“I love this place,” Miles said. “It’s a place that I’m very comfortable. My family’s very comfortable. It’s not to suppose that Michigan will call; they’ve not called. It’s unfair to Michigan to say that they should.
But Miles knows what's at stake.
“It’s unfair to me and my team, and so I promise you this: What I’m doing is what you should do — let it rest."
Miles, in his third season in Baton Rouge, said his focus is on LSU’s game Friday against Arkansas and the Dec. 1 SEC Championship Game.
“I’m playing football for LSU,” Miles said. “I’m preparing for Arkansas. I’m preparing for the next game and the next game after that.”
The Tigers (10-1) are ranked No. 1 in the major national polls and in the BCS standings. They are all but guaranteed a spot in the BCS national championship game Jan. 7 if they win their next two games.
“I love this team,” he said, pausing to clear his throat as his eyes welled up, “and I’ll not do anything to hurt it.”

Louisiana Gets Some Serious Getback At Saban


Revenge (n): Action taken in return for an injury or offense.
karma (n): The total effect of a person's actions and conduct during the successive phases of the person's existence.
Getback (n): What Louisiana-Monroe did to Nick Saban and the Alabama Crimson Tide last Saturday.
Did you think I was gonna not post about this one, Nicklaus????
I mean, losing to Louisiana-Monroe ON SENIOR DAY?? Can you say App State? Whew! That felt good.
Not only did Louisiana get the satisfaction of seeing LSU put a lump on your temple, but our smaller brethren even got in on the act. Now, THAT's getback. (I fully expect, that if, the Tide played Southern University, they'd lose also, hell, Redemptorist and Catholic High could beat 'em.)
And, to be sure, some Alabama faithful will say "it wasn't that bad," or "it's okay". Noooo. It's not okay, see, Louisiana-Monroe has such a small profile that, if it wasn't for the word "Monroe" in the school's name, WE WOULDN'T EVEN KNOW WHERE THE SCHOOL IS LOCATED!
Saban even went to calling the loss a "catastrophic event." Why? Because he knows that the school he lost to wasn't even in existence 9 years ago.
"Changes in history usually occur after some kind of catastrophic event," Saban said during the opening remarks of his weekly news conference. "It may be 9-11, which sort of changed the spirit of America relative to catastrophic events. Pearl Harbor kind of got us ready for World War II, or whatever, and that was a catastrophic event."
Short of being a catastrophic event, Louisiana-Monroe used to be called Northeast until it changed names in 1999. So, see, Nick, you really lost to Northeast. And being a former Louisiana resident, that's got to sting!
But ... seriously, life is funny like that.
Now the Crimson Tide prepares for the famed Iron Bowl against the Auburn Tigers. I won't pick a winner, because I respect Tuberville an awfully lot, and I think he's got a lot more to lose, so i'll just say ... Go Tigers!

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Why Georgia is the SEC's Most Dangerous Team


The Georgia Bulldogs are the most dangerous team in the SEC,
gimmicks or no gimmicks.
UGA is rocking between the Hedges and have celebrated, "blacked out" and Soulja-Boy'd themselves to an 8-2 record against the formidable opponents of their schedule including wins over Florida, Auburn (they lost to South Carolina and Tennessee). They didn't just win against these teams, no last-second ballsy calls or plays, no they demoralized the Auburn Tigers, they made Tim Tebow throw in the towel. And any self-respecting football fan can't help but be envious. They've injected a feel-good vibe into their team and the fans have caught on. Now, the Bulldogs are the most dangerous team in the SEC, which is what the 2-loss LSU Tigers were last year after getting bruised by Auburn and Florida.
Let's be honest, here: As good and fortunate as the LSU Tigers are this year they don't want no part of dem Georgia boys right about now. They are the feel-good story of the SEC this year, not Kentucky, not Alabama. The Bulldogs are headed for an SEC Championship showdown with my LSU Tigers if they can win out, and if that happens, the Georgia Dome will be rockin' "dat Soulja Boy" just like Athens was last week, and Coach Mark Richt has called for a
"Red-Out"
this week vs. Kentucky. Talk about home field advantage.
Below, witness the Bulldogs rockin' the crowd last week, "crankin' dat Soulja Boy" against Auburn.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Miss St. loss threatens to make Saban's 1st season at Alabama a footnote


Oh, Nicklaus.
Baton Rouge favorite son and Alabama offensive coordinator Major Applewhite probably thought he'd gamble his future like LSU's Les Miles has done this season.
In the final moments of the second quarter on Saturday, Alabama's two-minute offense moved the ball down inside the Mississippi State 10-yard line of nice calls by Applewhite.
Alabama had a 9-3 lead, all the momentum, and were poised to take a 13-point lead into the locker room at halftime.
The momentum-killing play occurred with 21 seconds left and the ball inside the MSU 2-yard line. After two running plays had netted a yard, Alabama called its final timeout of the half.
Applewhite elected to call for a naked bootleg, a play that had worked for a TD against Tennessee three weeks ago. The plan is for the quarterback to roll to his right and if he has daylight he can run it in, if he can't run it simply toss it to the receiver or running back who should be in the end zone pretty open.
Instead, the ill-advised pass from John Parker Wilson was intercepted by Bulldogs' Anthony Johnson and returned 100-yards for a touchdown at Scott Field and the game was on.
“In three hours, we changed the way people look at this program across the nation.”
That was Sylvester Croom, the former assistant coach and player at Alabama, after coaching his Mississippi State Bulldogs to its second straight win over Alabama with a bruising 17-12 upset on Saturday.
“We’ve got bragging rights now,” Croom, the Tuscaloosa, Ala., native said. “I don’t have to say anything, but if I want to I can.”
Wilson threw for a season-low 121 yards and two interceptions. He rarely found receivers open and often had to throw the ball away under pressure in the second half, completing 16 of 34 passes.
None of his passes were bigger than the interception before the half. After the game Parker tried to rationalize. "We're taught to get deep after the fake," Wilson said of the role a quarterback plays in the naked bootleg, "but their guy got through on the blitz. You've got to get rid of it then. You can't take a sack because the clock would run out. You've just got to throw it away."
Nick Saban didn't take up for Wilson as he did in earlier losses this season, instead ridiculing the quarterback.
"When you tell a guy he's got to throw the ball away, you don't necessarily think he's going to throw it to them," Saban said. "There is nobody that feels worse about that than the quarterback."
What made his comments stand out? Saban, a man of few, well-crafted words, suddenly got diarhea of the mouth about his quarterback's feelings.
"You think he doesn't know it's a bad play?" Saban asked. "You think he doesn't feel bad about it? I'll bet you he feels worse about it than anybody who roots for Alabama, anybody who writes for Alabama, anybody that coaches for Alabama. I'll bet you he feels worse about it than anybody.
"He knows he shouldn't have done that. He needed to throw the ball away. Get sacked there and we don't have any more timeouts so we may not get the field goal off. But on the play before, if we had blocked it right, we would've scored on it. So we wouldn't have even been in that situation."
The "situation" is that two weeks after being looked at as the Second Coming of the Bear, ole St. Nick's first season at Alabama is in danger of becoming a footnote. Two straight losses will do that to you in the SEC.
Meanwhile, the Mississippi State Bulldogs (6-4, 3-3 Southeastern Conference) are bowl eligible for the first time since 2000.
The resurgent Bulldogs, who were 9-25 in Croom’s first three seasons, have won six games in a season for the first time since 2000.
Saban's group, on the other hand, must learn to lick its wounds and forget the past.
"We came here to compete for 60 minutes," Saban said, "and I told the players at halftime that when you get adverse circumstances and adverse conditions, everyone's going to judge you by how you respond to it. So forget about it, it's over, look forward to the next play. We need to make adjustments in terms of what we need to execute in the second half and I thought they were OK. I didn't see anybody hang-doggin'."
Mississippi State beat then-No. 14 Kentucky two weeks ago, and the win over No. 21 Alabama made the Bulldogs 2-2 during a streak of four consecutive games against ranked opponents.
Alabama (6-4, 4-3) and first-year coach Nick Saban have lost two straight. The Bulldogs limited Alabama to four field goals by Leigh Tiffin.
Croom was hired by Mississippi State four years ago, making him the first black head coach in SEC history, but he inherited a team on N.C.A.A. probation.

Monday, November 05, 2007

LSU's comeback vs. Alabama 11/3/07 (video)


Les Miles gambles on 4th down. Again. And gets it. Touchdown, LSU! Alabama quarterback John Parker Wilson drops back to pass, LSU safety Chad Jones blitzes up the middle, it's a ... FUM-BOL! LSU gets it! Jacob Hester goes over the top, TOUCHDOWN LSU!

Sunday, November 04, 2007

I 'm an LSU fan, but I respect Alabama, Saban, seriously


"Great game. Good luck to ya."
That was the quick soundbite that TV cameras allowed as LSU coach Les Miles and Alabama coach Nick Saban shook hands after Saturday night's 41-34 LSU win. It was a short and sweet comment by Saban, and it was emotionally genuine. For 60 minutes, he got to see the people and fans he influenced work against him. He's got to appreciate this redemption of theirs. And he does, even more than Les Miles can understand. Well, it's been about 10 hours since the game ended. I've had time to relect now, and put this LSU victory over Alabama in perspective. It was a hard-fought game by both teams, and, ya know, we respect Alabama (12 national championships? Are you kiddin' me?). Actually we love Alabama, and I don't know any team that doesn't want the rich heritage and tradition that the Crimson Tide has. I've talked to several LSU fans that made the trip to Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa and they said the Bama fans were some of the nicest fans they've been around. this quote from the Advocate sums it up: Stephen Hardy of St. Martinville, La. said he was impressed both by the game atmosphere and the home fans, who filled the stadium to its 92,128 capacity.
“These Alabama fans are the nicest, most gracious fans you ever did see,” he said. “Where we were sitting, when the game turned at the end, everybody congratulated us and told us good luck in the SEC championship game.”
See, LSU-Alabama is not really a rivalry to Alabama faithful, no, they've got Tennessee and Auburn for that. LSU? We've got nobody. Instate rival? Who, Tulane? Nobody in Mississippi gives us a good game anymore, so, (gulp) we come to you, Alabama. Every year we're searching for a fight, for somebody to knock this purple-and-gold chip off our shoulder. A couple of years ago we were begging Georgia to do it, when it looked like they were going to be a perennial power, then they lost to Vanderbilt. A few years before that we thought we had some animosity with Tennessee, even beating them in the SEC championship game, but the Schedule Gods don't make us play them every year. And Florida? They've got their hands full with Tennessee, Georgia and Florida State. So, see, us Tigers need, no, crave a legitimate rivalry game, and Alabama is the closest thing we got, especially since the Tommy Hodson "Earthquake game". You can make a case for Auburn, but the truth is Auburn is preoccupied with beating the Tide, not LSU. And so, we eye the Tide. Plus, Alabama took Saban, OUR CHAMPIONSHIP COACH, that's got to count for something!!! LSU doesn't have an Iron Bowl, no Third Saturday in October, but we doooo have a Saban Bowl! So, we salute, the Crimson Tide for a game well done. No hard feelings. kinda like Nick Saban said after the game. "I know their families. I know their mommas," Saban said. "It was a little bit like my initial feeling was like 'you're playing against somebody who is in your family'."
Nick's got it right. He's still a part of the Tiger family, just wearing a maroon sweater now. "I love our players here more. I'm going to work with them every day to try to help them be successful," Saban said. "But I can't just throw away the feelings I have for those players, the ones I have a relationship with. That just doesn't go away." Great game. Good luck to ya.

Saturday, November 03, 2007

5 Reasons Why LSU beat Alabama


1. DEFENSIVE LINE: Glenn Dorsey, Marlon Favorite and Al Woods plugged the middle for the Tigers more than any game this season in the SEC. Alabama couldn't run the ball very effectively and, with a 10-point lead, it meant John Parker Wilson had to pass to stay competitive (7 sacks, including one big one at the end). Tyson Jackson and Kirston Pittman on the ends both ate the lunches of their counterparts on the other end of the ball.

2. RECEIVERS: Early Doucet and the LSU receiving corps is back, which is what they haven't been since the 2nd game of the season (Virginia Tech). There has always been talent all over the unit, but it struggled without Doucet, and the emergence of Demetrius Byrd, who caught a go-route for a touchdown in the 3rd quarter, made Alabama pay dearly. Alabama's D.J. Hall, who leads the SEC and is 16th nationally with 95.5 yards receiving a game, had a relatively quiet night after a school-record 13 receptions for 185 yards and two touchdowns in the win over Tennessee two weeks ago. Tide senior Matt Caddell also had a big game, but frequently disappointing Ray Brown had the game of his life with 2 TD catches against the Tigers. But Alabama got increasingly one dimensional as the game wore on.

3. INSTANT REPLAY: Never has a team dominated the replay booth like LSU did, going 3-1 on crucial calls in the game. None were bigger than a 3rd down reception for more than 30 yards on 3rd down that Wilson through in the fourth quarter. LSU also got a very fortunate, and close call when a fumble was overturned late in the 3rd quarter. If any of those plays would have went the other way, LSU would have most likely lost the game, especially being down by 10 points at the time. "We should have won, and I'm really angry right now," Alabama linebacker Darren Mustin said. "I feel like we had that game won, but we just let them take it away from us."

4. 'BAMA COULDN'T RUN: Tide tailback Terry Grant, who led Alabama 667 yards for the season before the game, had 10 yards on 10 carries with under 10 minutes left in the 3rd quarter. Grant had been running behind a thin and young offensive line for most of the season, and it did him in as Nick Saban tried to slow the LSU pass rush by running it. LSU was not really effective on the ground as well as Jacob Hester turned in a demure performance outside of his two touchdowns, which were huge. But in the end LSU's defensive line was simply too much for Alabama's O-line.

5. NICK SABAN WAS OUTCOACHED: Les has got Balls of steel. And can we coach better than Saban? Well, he beat him. Why? Because Saban played a straight game. Saban saw in the first half that his team was not physical enough for the Tigers, not mano-o-mano, but he didn't go into his bag of tricks. "We don't play with enough discipline," he said. "It drives me nuts. My hands are bruised from smacking them together when we made mistakes, when we did the wrong things." Les, on the other hand, reached down into his bag and had quarterback Matt Flynn catch a nifty pass from the receiver Doucet. Even late in the game, knowing he didn't have a running game, he did no counters, no misdirections. It cost him. Big time. He got outcoached. "We kept hanging in there, kept fighting," Miles said. "We found a way to win. I've never seen that many mistakes in a game. We'll never play that poorly again."

Thursday, November 01, 2007

LSU vs. Alabama (Nicklaus vs. Lester), why it matters


The refs may have to get in between the coaches in this one.
LSU may go for it on 4-and-8 at their 40 in this one.
It's that intense.
Saturday's game is LSU vs. Alabama, but everyone knows it's even more about Nick Saban and Les Miles. No matter what the coaches say, it's Nicklaus vs. Lester. The LSU faithful will hate Les if he loses to Alabama, especially with the LSU West crown at stake (even though bettors well know 'Bama will lose to Auburn) Alas, it is what it is. The comparisons are plenty, including the fact that Saban won the SEC in his second year at LSU, but something has to be said about the competition each faced in the SEC. When Saban was at LSU he profited from a weak Alabama team for about 5 years, feasting on them to a 4-1 record (the one loss? LSU was thrashed 31-0). Auburn wasn't nearly as weak though. They always gave one year and tooketh the next (and that trend has continued under Lester Miles), but the Florida squads, coached by Steve Spurrier in the first two years of Saban's tenure, blew out LSU and only when Ron Zook took command did LSU make a game and victory out it as Saban went 2-1 down the stretch. In fairness to Saban, Tennessee was what LSU is now in the SEC, an up-and-coming monster perennial No. 2 power (Florida 's No.1, sorry, usurping 'Bama's throne), but if we look at Saban and Miles' records against the big four, you'll clearly see that there's not alot of slippage. Even in 2003, when LSU won it all it was a "gravy year" (when all the tough games are at home). And 2007? Yep, you guessed it. It's a gravy year.

Records against the BIG FOUR: ALABAMA, AUBURN, FLORIDA, TENNESSEE

SABAN'S TENURE
2000 (2-2)
17-24 Auburn L
9-41 @Florida L
30-28 ALABAMA W
38-31 TENN W

2001 (2-2)
15-44 FLORIDA L
18-26TENN L
35-21 @ALABAMA W
27-14 @AUBURN W

2002 (1-2)
36-7 @FLORIDA W
31-7@ AUBURN L
31-0 ALABAMA L

2003 (2-1)
7-19 FLORIDA L
31-7 AUBURN W
27-3 @ALABAMA W

2004 (2-1)
10-9 @AUBURN L
24-21 @FLORIDA W
26-10 ALABAMA W

MILES' TENURE
2005 (3-1)
30-27 TENN L
16-13@ ALABAMA W
20-17 AUBURN W
21-17 FLORIDA W

2006 (2-2)
3-7@ AUBURN L
23-10 @FLORIDA L
28-24 @TENN W
28-14 ALABAMA W


Miles is

2007
28-24 FLORIDA W
30-24 AUBURN W
??? ALABAMA

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Did Saban bring magic back to LSU? I say DiNardo did. Here's why


Let's get this straight, because people always think that Nick Saban brought LSU to prominence, and I've said this before, but Jerry DiNardo actually brought the magic back for LSU, not Saban. Saban won a national championship, true, (and there's always a rightful influx of blue chippers when that happens) but the talent pool that has fed the Tigers ever since was in place a few years before him and put there by DiNardo. For instance, if you look at the talent of signal callers from DiNardo's tenure:
Josh Booty (who was first-team All-SEC as a sophomore).
Craig Nall (who rotted on the bench under Saban, and transferred to Northwestern State, where he became the first quarterback in school history to surpass 2,000 yards passing in a season.)
and Herb Tyler Who beat out senior Jamie Howard late in his freshman season, and, over his next 31 games as a starter, LSU went 26-5.
I don't know how anyone could say Saban brought the talent. Under Saban, the signal callers were:
Rohan Davey (who didn't get the starting job until the 4th game of Saban's LSU career after Booty got hurt)
Rick Clausen (who later transferred to Tennessee because he couldn't start)
Matt Mauck (who didn't see P.T. until Davey got injured. Threw for 28 TDs in championship season of 2003)
Marcus Randall (who split time with:)
JaMarcus Russell (heavily recruited out of Mobile, and No. 1 draft pick).
I remember in a slugfest with Auburn in 1997, when Tigers wonderback Cecil Collins ran for 232 yards on 27 carries, and Rondell Mealey added 129 yards on just 12 touches (Auburn qb Dameyune Craig torched us for 342 yards in the air, but my point stands). Now, LSU lost, but that's what Saban brought to the table: coaching. But he didn't bring the horses (talent), the horses were already there. The talent DiNardo had stacks up pretty well with Saban's quarterbacks Marcus Randall, the mighty Matt Mauck and even JaMarcus Russell (who left 14 points on the field in every game), but his main man was a Jamaican cat by the name of Rohan Davey. Truth be told, DiNardo didn't like Davey (famous Davey quote:"Nick Saban gave me an opportunity, a chance for a fresh start, and I thank him for that."), but he got him on the squad never the less. And it was Saban who actually gave Davey his shot, but Ole St. Nick didn't recruit Davey, DiNardo did! This same Davey, as a senior in 2001, was the first QB in LSU history to pass for over 3,000 yards in a season (eclipsing Peyton Manning's best-year yardage at Tennessee in 1996).
That same year he threw for 528 yards against Alabama. At Alabama!
Dinardo lasted at LSU from 1994 to 1999, and it was HE, not Satan, that brought LSU back to prominence.
Dinardo did a number of things that Saban didn't have to:
* took over a program that had six straight losing seasons and that hadn't been ranked in the AP Top 25 since 1989.
* revived LSU football; bringing back the tradition of wearing white jerseys during home games
* restored LSU's reputation as an SEC powerhouse, (forcibly moving Tennessee out of the way as second-to-Florida in SEC perennial powerhouses. Florida, by the way, had unseated Alabama a decade earlier).
Saban did have something DiNardo didn't have though: Saban could coach, he could motivate, and he actually adjusted at halftime, something NiNardo never thought to do. So, all in all, Saban is the better coach and has the record and championship to prove it, but pleeeease don't say he brought the talent back to LSU. Saban's most valuable recruit, Matt Mauck, actually followed him from Michigan State. The running back-by-committee around that time: LaBrandon Toefield, Joseph Addai, Justin Vincent, Shyrone Carey were all Sabanites. (Dominick Davis was recruited by DiNardo).
Never the less, it ended badly for DiNardo, who was never largely appreciated in Tigerland, in the midst of a three-win season: On November 15, 1999, two days after LSU lost to unranked Houston in Tiger Stadium, LSU chancellor Mark Emmert canned DiNardo with one game remaining in the season. DiNardo was given the option to coach the game against Arkansas (the Battle for the Golden Boot), but DiNardo declined. Instead, offensive line coach Hal Hunter was named interim coach, leading LSU to a 35-10 victory over the Razorbacks. Nick Saban was named as DiNardo's replacement on November 30, 1999, and guided the Tigers to the 2001 SEC championship with many of DiNardo's recruits in the starting lineup. The rest, as they say, is his story.

Monday, October 29, 2007

LSU's quarterback 'beat up' in fight; Clean this up, Les. Pronto.


Nick Sab, uh, Satan obviously learned some voodoo during his brief stint in the bayou.
On the eve of the biggest game of the season for both teams, LSU backup quarterback Ryan Perrilloux was "beat up" in a bar fight near the LSU campus last night. Baton Rouge Police confirmPerrilloux and LSU linebacker Derrick Odom were involved, as well as All-American defensive lineman Glenn Dorsey. Perrilloux called his lawyer early Saturday and asked if he should sue; his lawyer said, no, just get outta there.
I've got three words for you, Les: CLEAN THIS UP!
Y'all going to Alabama and can't stay focused for one bye week? Com' on!
According to THIS REPORT, and THIS STORY, a witness inside the bar said that members of the football team were asked to take the stage and rap or something. That witness confirmed that Perrilloux and Odom were in the group.
The trouble allegedly started when bouncers at the Varsity started clearing everyone out, and that the football players refused to get off of the stage. The witness says that is when one of the players punched a bouncer and that is when upwards of forty players and bouncers started fighting.
We are told the fight spilled out into the parking lot behind the Chimes, that LSU defensive tackle Glenn Dorsey was there and that Dorsey did not throw a single punch. Instead, he tried to break up the fight and get his teammates to leave.
I've got four MORE words for you, Les: CLEAN THIS UP, NOW!
The Tiger nation is in the longest uninterrupted run of quality QBs we've had in a long time (Davey, Mauck, JaMarcus, Flynn, etc.); but our quarterback situation is more precarious than people realize, 'specially with the newfound revelation that Matt Flynn almost transferred last year. We're bone-thin at QB without that guy, even though Perrilloux thinks he's ready for primetime.
Ah, and Satan is sooo enjoying this.

Nick Satan is prolly in his fire-red satin one-piece (complete with devil horns hood) snickering with his remote control in one hand, and some Killians in the other. GEEZ. Can't we make it through the season without anymore trouble from Perrilloux? He's the starting quarterback for the future, (well, maybe this guy is)for crying out loud, can't he grow up?
Les? Clean this up, Les. Clean this up!
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