Alabama
Forde-Yard Dash: Georgia-Alabama Rivalry Adds Next Chapter After Nick Saban’s Retirement
Forty names, games, teams and minutiae making news in college football, where the Pac-12 power play has not gone entirely according to plan. First Quarter: Twelve Angry Men. Second Quarter: Group of 5 Realignment Struggle. Third Quarter: Unbeaten Challenges.
Now it gets real for Kalen DeBoer (31). Now he really has to start trying to measure up to the incomparable legacy of Nick Saban, when the No. 4 Alabama Crimson Tide (32) host the No. 2 Georgia Bulldogs (33) in the biggest game of the season to date.
Saban set the Alabama bar impossibly high in an array of areas, most importantly winning six national championships between 2009–20. But not far down the list from that is his ownership of Georgia. He went 8–2 as coach of the Crimson Tide against the Bulldogs, and even more significantly was 5–1 against Kirby Smart (34).
Smart has assumed the mantle of the game’s greatest active coach. But that would have happened earlier if not for a repeated inability to beat his mentor and former boss, Saban.
Put it this way: Kelee Ringo (35) is the only thing separating Georgia from a complete nightmare existence where Alabama is involved. The defensive back’s pick-six of Bryce Young late in the 2021 College Football Playoff national championship game drove a stake through Bama, cementing a Georgia national championship and Smart’s only victory over Saban.
The Bulldogs needed that desperately. Before and after that cathartic moment, there were the following red-and-black tales of woe:
Georgia’s record from 2017 to the present is an overpowering 90–10. Exactly half of those losses were inflicted by Nick Saban (36). Which means nobody was happier to hear Saban’s retirement announcement than Smart.
And it means that DeBoer has quite the task to live up to. When beating Georgia is an expectation, not a wishful dream scenario, you’ve got a hard job.
Line: Georgia by 2, per DraftKings, the first time Alabama has been a home underdog since 2007—Saban’s first season.
Key stat: Since Carson Beck (37) lost a fumble that led to a Bama field goal in an SEC title game decided by three points, Georgia has not turned the ball over again. The Bulldogs were spotless in the Orange Bowl rout of the Florida State Seminoles last season, and they are one of three teams yet to commit a turnover this season. They haven’t lost a game in which they didn’t commit a turnover since that 2018 loss to … Alabama. (Though the fake punt was a de facto turnover.)
Dash pick: Georgia 23, Alabama 20. The hunch here is that Smart prevails upon offensive coordinator Mike Bobo to let Beck cook a bit more earlier in the game than he has so far, with positive results. The other hunch is that Smart doesn’t suffer a fainting spell without Saban on the other sideline.
Curt Cignetti (38), Indiana Hoosiers. The last time the Hoosiers looked like this was … never? They’re 4–0, which has happened a handful of times in school history, but they’ve never scored this many points (202, or 50.5 per game) in their first four games. The first-year coach arrived from the James Madison Dukes talking noise—a bold strategy at Indiana—and to date his team has backed him up. The Hoosiers haven’t played anyone good yet, but at this juncture Cignetti is the Hire of the Year in college football.
Hugh Freeze (39), Auburn Tigers. Oh, it’s getting ugly early on The Plains. Freeze threw his players under the bus after a loss to the Arkansas Razorbacks dropped the Tigers to 2–2 and ran their turnover total to a nation-leading 14: “We’ve got to find a guy that won’t throw it to the other team and we’ve got to find running backs that hold on to it,” he said. “… The scheme is what most everybody in the country is running, some sort of. But you’ve got to have a good quarterback in whatever system you’re going to choose.”
That prompted a bitter social-media broadside from one of Freeze’s best quarterbacks, Bo Wallace, who played for him at Mississippi a decade ago. He savaged Freeze for what he says is a history of throwing his players under the bus after losses. When one of your best former players is going after you like that publicly, that’s a bad sign.
The Dash stayed in town last week but that’s no excuse for not finding a high-quality regional beer. When thirsty in the Midwest/Mid-South area, grab a Hoppopotamus IPA from Indianapolis-based Metazoa Brewing Co. (40) and thank The Dash later.
Game odds refresh periodically and are subject to change.
If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.
Alabama
Tornadoes, Severe Storms Tear Through Alabama – Videos from The Weather Channel
Alabama
Former Alabama QB Ruled Out Ahead of Week 17: Roll Call, Dec. 28, 2024
Former Crimson Tide quarterback Jalen Hurts is set to miss the Philadelphia Eagles Week 17 games against the Dallas Cowboys as he’s been ruled out with a concussion. Hurts left the Eagles Week 16 game after taking a blow to the head.
The Eagles are still in the hunt for the top overall seed in the NFC but trail the Detroit Lions by a game.
Several former Alabama players are listed as questionable entering the weekend’s action. Former defensive lineman Jonathan Allen, Anfernee Jennings, A’Shan Robinson and Quinnen Williams are all in the grey area along with Miami Dolphins offensive stars Jaylen Waddle and Tua Tagovailoa.
No events scheduled
No results
Thursday night former Alabama guard Collin Sexton recorded his first double-double of the season. He scored 19 points and got 11 assists for the Utah Jazz in a 122-120 loss to the Portland Trail Blazers.
December 28, 1985: Freshman running back Gene Jelks and junior linebacker Cornelius Bennett were named game MVPs after Alabama’s 24-3 victory over Southern California in the Aloha Bowl. A 1-yard run by Craig Turner, a 24-yard pass from Mike Shula to Clay Whitehurst and a 14-yard end around by Al Bell accounted for the Crimson Tide touchdowns.
“We had great respect for Alabama, especially its defense, we knew they were a formidable opponent. But in retrospect, I think they were a lot stronger than a lot of our people thought.”
– Dennis Erickson after the 1993 Sugar Bow
Alabama
Davis Warren previews Alabama matchup: 'We plan on winning this game'
Michigan has arrived in Tampa, Florida, for its New Year’s Eve kick against the Alabama Crimson Tide in what will be a rematch of last season’s epic Rose Bowl showdown, a game the Wolverines won, 27-20, in overtime.
The Wolverines held their first practice of the trip on Friday after arriving the day after Christmas. Excitement surrounding Michigan’s borderline elite recruiting class is certainly palpable — five-star QB Bryce Underwood is leading the way in that regard — but the team is still preparing for a battle against Alabama.
Before practice began on Friday, key players of the Michigan offense met with reporters to discuss the ReliaQuest Bowl. Starting quarterback Davis Warren talked about the transition from Michigan’s 13-10 win over Ohio State to now preparing for the game against the Crimson Tide.
“You get those couple weeks between Ohio (State) and this game, and you get a chance to reflect a little bit on the season, but I think we’ve taken it in stride and taken it as a real opportunity to get better at football and thinking about things you did during the year, things you did well, things you can improve on, and how you can work on them over these next two to three weeks of practice that we’ve had. … That’s been the goal — just getting better at football and preparing for our opponent while doing it,” Warren said.
Notably, Warren began the year as the starter, but lost his job to Alex Orji after throwing three interceptions against Arkansas State in Week 3. But after experiments with Orji and Jack Tuttle failed, Warren was reinserted as a starter ahead of the Michigan State game.
Warren finished out the regular season strong, capping it off with an emphatic 13-10 win over Ohio State in Columbus.
Still, though, this season marks the first time in four years that the Wolverines are not playing for a national title, and with a star-studded recruiting class coming in, it’s hard for fans not to look ahead to 2025.
But ignoring what fans might be thinking about, Warren says the team isn’t looking past Alabama at all.
“I don’t think we’re overlooking (the game) at all. … As a group, we’re focused on winning this football game,” Warren said. “Michigan needs us to win this game, we want to win this game and we plan on winning this game. So, I know we’re going to take that approach. It’s a really good opportunity for all of us. Man, we’re going to fight tooth and nail to go get a win.”
Michigan will practice on Saturday and Sunday ahead of the 2024 ReliaQuest Bowl, which will kick off at Noon ET on Tuesday, Dec. 31.
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