Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Alabama leads Week 13 CFB Playoff Rankings

UNB! Sports Staff Report

The Week 13 College Football rankings were released Tuesday:

1. Alabama
2. Miami
3. Clemson
4. Oklahoma
5. Wisconsin
6. Auburn
7. Georgia
8. Notre Dame
9. Ohio State
10. Penn State
11. USC
12. TCU
13. Washington State
14. Mississippi State
15. UCF
16. Michigan State
17. Washington
18. LSU
19. Oklahoma State
20. Memphis
21. Stanford
22. Northwestern
23. Boise State
24. South Carolina
25. Virginia Tech

NOTES: This is Miami's highest-ever ranking in Committee’s Top 25 (previous high was No. 3 last week). ... This is Alabama's 12th all-time appearance at College Football Playoff No. 1 (6 more than any other school). ... Besides Miami and Clemson, the rest of the Top 12 CFP Rankings remained unchanged. The largest jump by any team was 2 spots. Every previous rankings release following a full slate of games (i.e. not the final rankings) has featured at least one team moving up 5 spots or more.

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

SEC's Georgia, Alabama lead CFB Playoff Rankings for 2nd straight week

UNB! Sports Staff Report

The Week 11 College Football Playoff Rankings were released Tuesday.

The rankings are below:

1. Georgia
2. Alabama
3. Notre Dame
4. Clemson
5. Oklahoma
6. TCU
7. Miami
8. Wisconsin
9. Washington
10. Auburn
11. USC
12. Michigan State
13. Ohio State
14. Penn State
15. Oklahoma State
16. Mississippi State
17. Virginia Tech
18. UCF
19. Washington State
20. Iowa
21. Iowa State
22. Memphis
23. NC State
24. LSU
25. Northwestern

NOTES: Notre Dame has a +75 scoring differential against current CFB Playoff Top-25 teams, best in the FBS. Their 3 wins wins vs teams in the current committee Top 25 are tied for the most with Clemson. ... No. 4 Clemson is 1 of 3 teams ranked in all 21 committee releases since 2014 (Alabama & Ohio State are others). ... Notre Dame is ranked No. 3 in the CFB Playoff for the 2nd straight week. They are the highest-ranked 1-loss team in the committee's Top 25. ... The Top 4 in the CFB Playoff rankings remain the same as last week. No team ranked lower than No. 14 in the 2nd release has gone on to reach playoff (2014 – No. 14 Ohio State). ... The Big Ten has 6 teams ranked in the committee's Top 25 this week, most of any conference and its most in a single week in the CFB Playoff era. ... Michigan State's 12-spot jump from No. 24 to No. 12 is the biggest 1-week jump in the 4-year history of the CFB Playoff rankings. The Previous high was an 8-spot jump, done 3 times.

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Alabama F Key to undergo knee surgery

Alabama standout forward Braxton Key is slated to undergo surgery Tuesday to repair a torn meniscus in his left knee, coach Avery Johnson said.

Johnson said a timetable for Key's return will be determined after the surgery.

Key was a member of the SEC All-Freshman team last season after averaging 12.0 points and 5.7 rebounds. He considered opting for the NBA draft before deciding to return for his sophomore season.

The Crimson Tide will also be without ballyhooed freshman point guard Collin Sexton when they open the season against Memphis on Friday. Sexton's eligibility is under scrutiny by the NCAA and he hasn't been cleared to play.

Thursday, August 3, 2017

Alabama opens season No. 1 in coaches poll

TSX / STATS

The Alabama Crimson Tide begin the college football season atop the Top 25 coaches poll for the second straight year.

The Crimson Tide were picked first by 49 of the 65 coaches on this year's panel for the poll, which was released on Thursday.

No. 2 Ohio State received five first-place votes while No. 3 Florida State garnered four. USC was ranked fourth, one spot ahead of defending champion Clemson, which received seven first-place votes.

The Crimson Tide will be put to the test out of the chute when they open the season against the Seminoles in a blockbuster on Sept. 2.

Coach Nick Saban is no stranger to seeing Alabama atop the coaches poll. Thursday's designation marks the fourth time the Crimson Tide has opened as the favorite, although they have failed to win the national title on their three previous occasions -- including last year's loss to the Tigers in the championship game.

The last preseason No. 1 in the coaches poll to win the national championship was USC in 2004.

Big Ten clubs Penn State (No. 6), Michigan (No. 9) and Wisconsin (No. 10) are joined by No. 7 Washington and No. 8 Oklahoma in the top 10.

The Southeastern Conference led the power leagues by placing six teams in the top 25, with LSU (12), Auburn (13), Georgia (15), Florida (16) and Tennessee (24) joining Alabama. It's the first time the conference has placed only one team in the top 10 of the preseason coaches poll since 1991.

The Big 12 and Atlantic Coast Conference each placed five teams in the poll. The Pac-12 joined the Big Ten with four while No. 22 South Florida of the American Athletic Conference is the lone ranked representative of the Group of Five leagues.

Monday, April 17, 2017

Matthew Owens to call Tide vs. Lady Vols for USRN

On Monday night, Matthew Owens will have the call between Alabama's Softball team vs. Tennessee's Lady Vol's Softball team for the Ultimate Sports Radio Network (USRN) on Mixlr starting at 7pm ET.

UT is ranked No. 16 in the NFCA Coaches' Poll, No. 14 the USA Softball Top 25 & No. 11 in the RPI. The Vols’ 16-game win streak is the second longest current streak in Division I behind Arizona. Tennessee has lost three straight to Alabama but has won the past two meetings in Knoxville. The Vols have swept their past three weekend series’ and earned their  rst SEC road sweep since 2015 last weekend at No. 20 Kentucky. UT is 9-3 vs. ranked foes this season with eight straight wins against ranked opponents.

Last weekend, Alabama won two out of three games against eighth-ranked LSU in Tuscaloosa before defeating UAB, 8-0, on Tuesday. Alabama is now 35-7 overall and 10-5 in SEC play. The Crimson Tide leads the SEC in strikeouts (384), is second in walks (191) and opposing batting average (.165) and third in ERA (1.46), wins (36), hits allowed (165) and  elding percentage (.976). In conference-only games, Alabama is ranked second in hits (97), batters struck out (101) and wins (10) and is third in runs scored (63), total bases (135), walks (52) and opposing batting average (.214).

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Bama keeps building and BYU adds a legacy

Erik McKinney/ESPN

As signing day moves along, the top two classes continue to get better as we catch you up on the biggest news of the past hour.

Another big get for Alabama
The Crimson Tide keep adding elite pieces to this 2017 recruiting class, as ESPN 300 defensive tackle LaBryan Ray, the nation's No. 17 overall prospect, committed to Alabama over Florida, Ole Miss and Tennessee. With Ray and Phidarian Mathis in the fold, Alabama signed two of the top four defensive tackles in the nation.

Buckeyes get better

Ohio State’s already stellar class added another four-star prospect on signing day, as offensive lineman Thayer Munford announced for the Buckeyes. That makes 17 four- or five-star prospects for Ohio State in this outstanding 2017 recruiting class.

Cougars grab a legacy

BYU added its second ESPN 300 prospect to the 2017 recruiting class, as safety Chaz Ah You announced his commitment to the Cougars over UCLA and Washington. Ah You’s commitment means the Nos. 2 and 4 prospects in the state of Utah, as well as half of the four ESPN 300 prospects in the state, are headed to BYU.

Ah You has plenty of family connections with the Cougars, as his grandfather and two uncles both played football at BYU. His father is the director of football athletic relationships for the Cougars.

Early in the process, it looked as though UCLA would be Ah You’s destination and that the nation’s No. 233 prospect would announce his commitment before taking his final visit to BYU this past weekend. But Ah You held off until signing day and the Cougars are the beneficiaries. Ah You is now the highest-ranked commitment in BYU’s class and there could be an opportunity to step in and play right away.

Ole Miss tallies another


Ole Miss continues to put together a strong signing day, as the Rebels added four-star athlete Braylon Sanders to the class. He is the second four-star prospect to select Ole Miss on Wednesday, joining safety C.J. Miller.

Pitt adds a running back

ESPN 300 running back A.J. Davis announced for Pittsburgh over offers from Louisville, Missouri, North Carolina, South Florida and others. Davis is the No. 140 overall prospect and No. 14 running back and should form a very good duo with fellow ESPN 300 prospect Todd Sibley in the Pitt backfield.

Falaniko sticks with Southern California

Heading into signing day, there was some thought that USC commit Juliano Falaniko could make his way into the Oregon class. But USC announced Falaniko’s signing and the Trojans have a very intriguing three-star safety prospect who's capable of moving to linebacker.

Kansas State lands impact linebacker

Former USC linebacker commit Daniel Green selected Kansas State over Oregon State and Utah on signing day. Green is a big get for the Wildcats as he's the only inside linebacker signee in the class thus far.

Colorado builds up front

The Buffaloes added massive offensive guard Casey Roddick to the class on signing day. The 6-foot-4, 355-pound guard builds on the huge haul along the offensive line for Colorado, as ESPN 300 offensive tackle Jake Moretti and ESPN 300 guard Grant Polley headline the group. Roddick joins Heston Paige and Will Sherman as additional interior linemen.

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Watson and Clemson dethrone top-ranked Tide, 35-31

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Deshaun Watson took the snap, rolled right and with one of the easiest throws he had to make all night, completed Clemson's journey to the top of college football.

A frantic fourth quarter and a championship rematch between Clemson and Alabama was decided with 1 second left on a 2-yard touchdown toss to Hunter Renfrow.

"I couldn't hear the crowd," Watson said. "I just felt at peace."

Watson and the Tigers dethroned the defending champs and became the first team to beat Nick Saban's Alabama dynasty in a national title game, taking down the top-ranked Crimson Tide 35-31 Monday night in the College Football Playoff.

A 35-year title drought for Clemson is over. The Tigers are national champions for the first time since 1981.

A year after Alabama won its fourth title under Saban with a classic 45-40 win in Arizona, Clemson (14-1) denied the Tide (14-1) an unprecedented fifth championship in eight seasons.

"That has to be one of the greatest games of all time," Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said.

Hard to argue.

The new champions have a process of their own that includes a loquacious coach who can turn a postgame interview into a fiery sermon, a spectacular quarterback who did not need a Heisman Trophy to show he was the best player in the country and a fun-loving team that plays with a chip on its shoulder.

"There was no upset tonight," Swinney said. "That's the last thing I told them when we left the locker room. I said, 'When we win the game tonight I don't want to hear one word about this being an upset. The only upset is going to be if we don't win the dadgum game.'"

The lead changed hands three times in the fourth quarter, but Watson got the ball last. Playing in his final college game, the junior quarterback threw for 420 yards and three touchdowns. In two games against Alabama and the most ferocious defense in college football, Watson has thrown for 825 yards and accounted for eight touchdowns. He was sacked four times Monday night and took some cringe-inducing shots from All-Americans Jonathan Allen and Reuben Foster.

"You know, I never got the sense that he was rattled," Allen said about Watson.

Swinney, the native Alabaman and former Crimson Tide walk-on receiver, has built an elite program at Clemson that was missing only one thing. Now the Tigers can check that box, too.

"Eight years ago we set out to put Clemson back on top," Swinney said. "We came up a little short last year, but today on top of the mountain, the Clemson flag is flying."

After three quarters of body slams and tight defense, Tigers-Tide II ended up looking a lot like the first meeting when the teams combined for 40 points in the fourth quarter.

Watson found Mike Williams for a 4-yard touchdown a minute into the fourth quarter to make it 24-21 Alabama.

The Tigers took their first lead, 28-24, with 4:38 left in the fourth quarter when Wayne Gallman surged in from a yard out.

The Tide's offense, which had gone dormant for most of the second half, came to life with the help of a sweet call from newly promoted offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian. Receiver ArDarius Stewart took a backward pass from Jalen Hurts and fired a strike to O.J. Howard for 24 yards.

On the next play, Hurts broke free from a collapsing pocket and weaved through defenders for a 30-yard touchdown run to make it 31-28 with 2:07 left.

More than enough time for Watson.

"I was calm," Watson said. He said he thought about Vince Young's last-second touchdown for Texas that derailed the Southern California's championship run in the 2005 championship game at the Rose Bowl. He told his team: "Let's go be great."

Watson hooked up with Williams and Jordan Leggett, who made great catches for big gains to get to first-and-goal with 14 seconds left.

A pass interference on Alabama made it first-and-goal at the 2 with six seconds left. Time for one more play to avoid a game-tying kick and overtime. Renfrow slipped away from the defense at the goal line with the help of some traffic created by Artavis Scott — or maybe it was an illegal pick? — and was alone for an easy toss.

"If you watch the ending, the slot receiver actually cut Minkah," Alabama linebacker Tim Williams said. "Usually, on a pick route, you're not supposed to chop somebody. You're supposed to pick them. The guy there just chopped Minkah down, but it's football."

For the former walk-on Renfrow, it was his second TD catch of the game. He had two last season against Alabama.

Alabama was 4-0 in national championship games under Saban. It was 106-6 in games it led at half and 96-0 when entering the fourth quarter with a double-digit lead as the Tide did Monday night. Clemson overcame all those odds.

The Tide jumped out to a 14-0 lead behind two long touchdown runs by Bo Scarbrough in the first half. The 230-pound sophomore back was pretty much Alabama's whole offense for a while, running for 93 yards on 16 carries while Hurts and the passing game struggle. Scarbrough left in the third quarter with a leg injury, but the Tide finally found some other help. Hurts hooked up with O.J. Howard, one of last year's heroes for 'Bama, for a 68-yard touchdown pass to make it 24-14 late in the third quarter.

"Look, there's not one play in the game that makes a difference in a game," Saban said. "We could have done a lot of things a lot better."

When it ended, Clemson's 315-pound defensive lineman Christian Wilkins did a split and a cartwheel and Ben Boulware, one of the toughest linebackers in the country, was in tears.

The Tigers had snapped Alabama's 26-game winning streak and beaten a No. 1 team for the first time ever.

"It's been 35 long years!" Boulware screamed. "It's coming home baby! It's coming home!"

Last season Alabama met its match in Clemson, but prevailed. This time, Clemson made sure the sequel had a different ending.

Monday, January 9, 2017

Sark lends X-factor to Bama-Clemson

Alabama-Clemson is a national championship rematch with one unique twist.

The guy calling plays for the top-ranked Crimson Tide will be doing so for the first time with Alabama.

When head coach Nick Saban and offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin parted ways last week — ostensibly because Kiffin had become distracted by his duties as new head coach at Florida Atlantic — it created the ultimate X-factor for the third College Football Playoff title game, which kicks off at 8 p.m. ET in Tampa, Fla., on Monday night.

Hello, Steve Sarkisian.

Sarkisian has been with the program almost all season as an offensive analyst, able to help with the game plan and such, but he was prohibited from offering coaching or instruction to the players until this week’s promotion.

“Sark has done this for a long time, and he’s called plays for a long time,” Saban said Saturday morning.

“He’s got a lot of experience; he’s got a lot of knowledge. I think he’s very well organized in his approach, and I’d tell him what I tell any coach; we’ve prepared to do certain things in certain situations, let’s stick with the plan.”

Sarkisian, the former head coach at Washington and USC, was fired from his job with the Trojans in October 2015 amid an alleged substance abuse problem.

Asked about that Saturday, he said, “I’m doing great. I appreciate you asking, yeah.”

Sarkisian visited Alabama in fall camp for a week, figuring he would try to do some TV work this season. But Saban found him a behind-the-scenes role that has morphed into being at the center of a white-hot spotlight.

“I’m excited,” Sarkisian said. “This is what I love to do. I’ve been doing this a long time.”

Can he find a play-calling rhythm against an attacking and stout Clemson defense? Will he know exactly the right thing to say on the sideline to true freshman quarterback Jalen Hurts?

How will he blend Alabama’s multiple threats — Hurts’ legs, running backs Bo Scarbrough and Damien Harris, receivers Calvin Ridley and ArDarius Stewart, tight end O.J. Howard?

“I’m not naive to think we’re not going to have a couple glitches,” Sarkisian said. “But how we respond to those glitches is going to be key.”

Sarkisian has been on the offensive headsets during games. He’s not a novice to the Tide or to the job. But there has never been a situation like this, with a team replacing its offensive coordinator a week before a national title game, so everyone will be on the lookout for new wrinkles, good or bad.

“It’s not like they’re going to run a different offense,” Clemson coach Dabo Swinney said. “You know, maybe he calls a couple more screens than the other guy would have called. I have no idea.”

–Dabo Swinney tried Saturday to defuse some of the controversy around the incident from the Fiesta Bowl in which defensive tackle Christian Wilkins groped at the groin of Ohio State’s Curtis Samuel, who was on the ground after being tackled.

Earlier this week, linebacker Ben Boulware gassed the fire when he said of the groping: “We’ve done it all year to mess with players. No one has done it as aggressive as Christian did. We try to be more discreet about it. He grabbed a handful.”

Swinney didn’t much care for that answer.

“Ben is a bull in a china shop, and he answered it like a bull in a china shop,” Swinney said. “It’s unacceptable, and he apologized to his teammates and to me. He knows who we are. That’s not what we’re about. We don’t teach that kind of stuff. We play the game with great passion and will to win, but it was inappropriate. It’s just not what we do.”

–Clemson QB Deshaun Watson, as a junior who has graduated, is eligible to play in this year’s Senior Bowl, although he said Saturday he is not sure if he will accept the invitation.

“My focus is on the national championship and we’ll figure all that out afterwards,” he said.

–Alabama sophomore running back Bo Scarbrough is eligible for the NFL Draft because he is three years removed from his high school graduation, but he said Saturday he will be back with the Crimson Tide next season. He ran for 180 yards against Washington.

“What’s crazy, is a lot of those plays we didn’t necessarily block them well,” left tackle Cam Robinson said. “He just made that happen. That’s just the God-given ability that he has.”

Scarbrough has 361 yards on 47 carries in the last three games, against top-flight defenses (Auburn, Florida, Washington).

–Alabama has been ranked No. 1 all season and has been No. 1 at some point for a record nine consecutive seasons. The previous record was seven, set by Miami from 1986 to 1992.

Saturday, December 31, 2016

Alabama wears down Washington 24-7, returns to title game

ATLANTA (AP) — For Nick Saban and the Alabama Crimson Tide, it would be unimaginable to end a season any other way.

Once again, they'll be playing for a national title.

Going old school on playoff newcomer Washington, top-ranked Alabama relied on a stifling defense and the bruising runs of Bo Scarbrough to wear down the Huskies for a 24-7 victory Saturday in the Peach Bowl semifinal game.

Saban isn't satisfied.

He never is.

"We've got more miles to go," said Saban, who will be seeking his fifth national title in the last eight years at Alabama, a remarkable run that has stamped him perhaps the greatest coach in college football history.

The Crimson Tide (14-0) scored 10 points off turnovers, including Ryan Anderson's interception return for a touchdown late in the first half, and Scarbrough's 68-yard TD run in the fourth quarter finished off the Huskies.

Scarbrough totaled 180 yards and two scores, garnering offensive MVP honors.

Not bad for a backup.

"Whoever's hot, that's who's going to get the ball," Saban said. "He's been hot lately and he's going to get the ball."

Seeking its second straight title, Alabama heads to Tampa, Florida, for the Jan. 9 championship game and a rematch against Clemson.

"We're 1-0," linebacker Reuben Foster said. "Now it's time to focus on the next one and leave this behind us."

No. 4 Washington (12-2) reached the College Football Playoff with a remarkable turnaround season after struggling much of the last two decades — including an 0-12 debacle in 2008.

But Jake Browning and the Huskies' high-powered offense were no match for Alabama's top-ranked defense , even after an impressive drive gave them an early 7-0 edge.

The Tide began to exert its dominance late in the first quarter when Anthony Averett stripped the ball away from John Ross on a screen pass. Jonathan Allen recovered, giving Alabama possession at the Washington 40 and setting up Adam Griffith's 41-yard field goal for a 10-7 lead.

Anderson made an even bigger defensive play with just over a minute to go in the half. With the blitzing Foster bearing down on him, Browning desperately heaved a pass into the flats for Lavon Coleman. But Anderson peeled off to make the pick, knocked Coleman over in the process and was off to the end zone on a 26-yard return that made it 17-7 at the half.

For Alabama, it was the 11th defensive touchdown of the season.

"That's as good a defense as there is out there in college football," Washington coach Chris Petersen said. "They played like it."

Any hopes of a Washington comeback were snuffed out by Scarbrough, a starter at most schools but not for the deep, talented Tide. On a simple running play to the left, he appeared to be stopped by two players just short of the line of scrimmage.

But Scarbrough somehow managed to stay on his feet and — boom! — he was gone. Streaking down the field in front of the Alabama bench, he avoided another defender with a subtle deke, cut back toward the middle of the field at the Washington 30 and outran everyone to the end zone.

Scarbrough also scored Alabama's first touchdown with a bruising, 18-yard run.

STYMIED HUSKIES

Washington was held to a season-low for points and yards, even after a 64-yard opening drive capped by Browning's 16-yard TD pass to Dante Pettis.

The Huskies finished with 194 yards, below their previous low of 276 in a 26-13 loss to Southern Cal . That was also their lowest-scoring game of the season until they ran up against the Tide.

Browning finished 20 of 38 for just 150 yards. He was sacked five times and picked off twice.

HURTS STRUGGLES

Freshman quarterback Jalen Hurts had been a big part of the Alabama offense, but he didn't have much of an impact in the Peach Bowl.

The youngster was 7 of 14 for 57 yards passing, with three sacks. He ran 19 times for 50 yards.

CHASING BEAR

Saban, who won a BCS championship at LSU, has a chance to join Bear Bryant as the only coaches to capture six national titles in the poll era.

To some, he's already tied with the Bear.

One of Bryant's titles came in 1973 when the Tide was voted No. 1 in the final coaches' poll, which came out before the bowls. Alabama lost in the Sugar Bowl to Notre Dame, handing the Fighting Irish the No. 1 spot in The Associated Press poll .

UGLY ENDING

A scuffle broke out after Minkah Fitzpatrick's interception in the closing seconds, leading to a pair of unsportsmanlike conduct penalties against Alabama.

Several Washington players were shaken up while chasing down Fitzpatrick, but they all managed to walk off the field while the officials sorted things out.

Two Alabama players — linebacker Reuben Foster and defensive back Ronnie Harrison — headed to the locker room before the game was over. But they were sent off by their coaches, not the officials.

"They were taking some cheap shots," Foster said.

UP NEXT

No matter how the Fiesta Bowl turned out, Alabama was set up to face a familiar opponent in the national championship game.

A year ago, the Tide beat Clemson 45-40 in a classic title showdown at Glendale, Arizona. Two seasons ago, Alabama was upset by Ohio State 42-35 in the Sugar Bowl semifinal, and the Buckeyes went on to capture the national championship.

Monday, December 12, 2016

Alabama OC Lane Kiffin tio head coach FAU, will stay with 'Bama throughout CFB

Alabama offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin has agreed to become FAU's next head football coach, ESPN's Chris Low and Brett McMurphy on Monday.

Low also reported that Kiffin plans to remain as Alabama's offensive coordinator throughout the College Football Playoff. Alabama was ranked No. 1 of the CFB Playoff's Bowl Game Rankings, as well as No. 1 on the Associated Press' last Top-25 Poll.

Sunday, December 4, 2016

CFB Committee sets Final 4, Top-6 set: Alabama tops the list

The College Football Playoff Committee on Sunday released its final rankings.

Final Rankings:
1. Alabama
2. Clemson
3. Ohio State
4. Washington
5. Penn State
6. Michigan

No. 1 Alabama will face No. 4 Washington in the Peach Bowl on Dec. 31, while No. 2 Clemson will face No. 3 Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl on Dec. 31 as well.

Alabama is in the playoff for the third straight season and is the top seed for the second time.

No. 2 Ohio State is making its second playoff appearance and No. 3 Clemson is in for the second consecutive season.

The rest of the New Year's Six bowls were also announced:

- Florida State (9-3) will play Michigan (10-2) in the Orange Bowl on Dec. 30.

- Southern California (9-3) will play Penn State (11-2) in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 2.

- Auburn (8-4) will play Oklahoma (10-2) in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2.


- Western Michigan (13-0) will play Wisconsin (10-3) in the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 2.

The national championship game will be Jan. 7 in Tampa.

The Associated Press on Sunday also released their updated Top-25 list.

New AP top 25:
1. Alabama
2. Ohio State
3. Clemson
4. Washington
5. Penn State
6. Michigan
7. Oklahoma
8. Wisconsin
9. USC
10. FSU
11. Colorado
12. Western Michigan
13. Oklahoma State
14. West Virginia
15. Louisville
16. Stanford
17. Auburn
18. Virginia Tech
19. LSU
20. Florida
21. Iowa
22. Pittsburgh
23. Temple
24. Nebraska
25. South Florida

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Hurts, No. 1 Alabama race past No. 16 Auburn 30-12

By John Zenor
Associated Press

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Alabama's defense still seems to have a wall erected at the goal line, and Jalen Hurts remains unflappable enough to shrug off mistakes.

The combination has been good enough every time so far.

Hurts rebounded from two early interceptions to pass for 286 yards and the top-ranked Crimson Tide's defense did the rest in a 30-12 victory Saturday over No. 16 Auburn to finish an undefeated regular season.

"We have bigger goals in mind," tight end O.J. Howard said.

The Tide (12-0, 8-0 Southeastern Conference, No. 1 CFP) led just 13-9 at halftime, dominating the stat sheet but only taking over the scoreboard in the second half. The defense pushed its string of quarters without allowing a touchdown to 14-plus and shut down the league's top running game.

Auburn (8-4, 5-3, No. 15) failed to muster much offense for the second straight SEC game. This time the Tigers were playing without injured quarterback Sean White and unable to reach the end zone despite starting several drives in Alabama territory.

"We had some really, really challenging field position situations in this game, and our players responded really well to it," Alabama coach Nick Saban said.

Hurts displayed the same poise in overcoming two first-half interceptions that has helped him lead the Tide into the SEC championship game. He completed 27-of-36 mostly short and mid-range passes and threw for two touchdowns. Alabama has won three straight Iron Bowls for the first time since 1990-92.

"At halftime, I guess everybody thought I was going to throw a fit, but I told them, 'Look guys, all we've got to do is go out there and play with some poise and confidence,'" Saban said.

Hurts also ran for 37 yards and a touchdown, leading two straight touchdown drives in the third quarter to all but put the game away after a mistake-filled first half.

He ran for a 4-yard score on a drive sparked by four Bo Scarbrough runs. On a fourth-and-4 play, he hit ArDarius Stewart, who spun away from a defender and made another move downfield en route to a 38-yard touchdown and a 27-9 lead.

Stewart gained 127 yards on 10 catches and completed a 12-yard pass. Scarbrough ran for 90 yards, including 83 after the half.

Auburn's Jeremy Johnson, who started the second straight game in White's place, completed 4 of 13 passes for 34 yards. John Franklin III connected on two downfield passes in the second half that totaled 85 yards. The Tide dominated in total yards, 501-182.

Daniel Carlson connected on four field goals for Auburn.

"Offensively, we just didn't get first downs, we just didn't get it done," Tigers coach Gus Malzahn said. "Two of 12 on third downs, I really think that caused the problem. Third downs, didn't hit explosive plays, defense was on the field too long was really the story of the day.

"Obviously we've got players in there that are hurting, coaches that are hurting, this is a tough one."

THE TAKEAWAY

Auburn didn't get a first down until nearly 25 minutes into the game and continues to have no passing game without a healthy White. Leading rusher Kamryn Pettway ran 12 times for just 17 yards after missing the past two games with a leg injury. The Tigers managed 66 rushing yards after coming in averaging a league best 298.

Alabama still has to get more offense in the downfield passing game but remains dominant on defense.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Alabama seems unlikely to drop from No. 1 in AP pollor playoff rankings, but No. 2 Ohio State could at least close ground after a double-overtime win over No. 3 Michigan. Auburn could fall from the top 20 after a second straight punchless offensive performance in SEC games.

TARGETING

Defensive back Tony Brown was ejected for targeting for a block thrown on a punt return. He'll be available against Florida.

FAREWELLS

Alabama's senior class finished its final home game with a 49-5 record so far.

UP NEXT

Auburn awaits its bowl destination.

Alabama faces No. 13 Florida in the SEC championship game for the second straight year.