Connect with us

Alabama

Giving Away Money Special: Ole Miss at Alabama point spread pick

Published

on

Giving Away Money Special: Ole Miss at Alabama point spread pick


The No. 15 Ole Miss Rebels travel to Bryant Denny to face the No. 14 Alabama Crimson Tide, with many people predicting that this is finally the year that Lane Kiffin gets off the skids and unearths the man who helped give him back his career.

It won’t be easy, however. Despite being wounded and very mortal, the Tide are still a touchdown favorite for this 2:30 tilt. And, in many ways, it feels like only now has the season truly begun in Tuscaloosa.

Ole Miss at Alabama -6.5

Ignore the rankings and narratives swirling this week. And ignore the close ranking between the two. Where there are differences here, they are generally stark, and they are almost all under the hood, on an efficiency basis.

Both have been able to shut down the run, limit scores on the ground, and track under 3.5 YPA. But, the Tide’s defense has been so much better. And their ground defense has been done so against more menacing rushing attacks, not least of all USF — who’s 17th in the country on the ground. The Tide’s defensive showing in Tampa looks a lot better the more removed you are from it.

Advertisement

All of the games do.

In fact, the Tide’s defense as a whole is in the Top 20 across the board: 5th overall, 6th in per-play efficiency, 10th in per-drive efficiency, 5th in pass efficiency, 17th in rushing efficiency, 3rd in limiting explosive plays, and 18th in per-rush efficiency. It’s been very hard to drive the ball on the Tide…or to get big gainers for that matter. Omit two busts vs. Texas, and two early chunk plays vs. MTSU, and Alabama would be in the top three in every defensive category in the country.

It’s not illusory. The defense really has been playing that well.

Ole Miss’s defense has made some strides under Pete, with no real glaring weaknesses — it is aggressively average across the board. But that’s what he was paid to do: improve this ghastly unit. And, to his credit, Golding has done so. The Rebels are in the 50s and 60s in almost every defensive category, except per-play defense, where the Rebs are 22nd. And, where you’re really seeing Pete’s impact: The Rebels are giving up a full touchdown less per game. Will those numbers continue? Likely not, and the Rebs will face better teams. But for limited talent, is a solid unit.

Across the board, it’s much the same just about everywhere you look. Alabama is just thissss much better than the Rebels. And even where there’s an advantage for Ole Miss, it plays right into one of the Tide’s strengths or is offset by one.

Advertisement
  • Opponent-adjusted turnovers? Tide by a nose.
  • Third Down conversions? Thissssss much better for the Tide.
  • Third Downs allowed? Tide again.
  • Explosive plays gained for the Rebels? How about the devastatingly few allowed by the Tide — just 24 plays over 10 yards.
  • Ole Miss’s 5th-ranked passing game? Meet ‘Bama’s 3rd ranked per-play passing defense.
  • Even Alabama’s ghastly passing game (73rd) runs into a very malleable Ole Miss secondary (66th) — by far the most generous group since the Tide squared off versus MTSU.
  • Ole Miss’s great kicking game (18th)? Alabama’s is better — 2nd in the country, and topped only by the Texas Longhorns.
  • Alabama is even permitting fewer penalties per game!

The biggest intangible is be one that isn’t captured by the data: Ole Miss has been able to coast through three taffy-soft home games, and spend an entire offseason scheming for this one. You know Pete and LMFK want nothing more than to upend Ole’ Man Nick.

Still, we can’t quantify motivation. So, on paper the biggest mismatch of the game is a huge one, and it militates in favor of the Tide: Alabama’s rushing offense (3rd) vs. the 49th-ranked Rebel ground defense. If Alabama is going to win this one, it’s going to be with old school football: solid special teams, great defense, and winning the rushing game. It’s a new-look game, but at its heart, Ole Miss-Alabama really is going to be a throwback contest. That may make Saban and company feel a little more at ease. This is what Alabama was allegedly built for. Time to prove it.

Is all that enough for the touchdown at home?

We like to say that the data don’t lie (they’re often wildly inaccurate)…but they’re often wildly inaccurate. And, for a program that has traditionally used Alabama as its measuring stick, Ole Miss is a few inches short again at almost every position and in nearly every metric.

Don’t look for much scoring…it’s going to be scarce, as this game devolves into trench warfare and a battle of two rushing quarterbacks. Alabama looks to have just a little bit more in the tank, however, and a cumulative enough in the tank to get the touchdown at home.

It won’t be easy though.

Advertisement

Alabama -8.73

Alabama 23 — Ole Miss 14

Poll

Tide wins by a touchdown-plus

  • 0%
    Yup. This is the kind of game Nick Saban wanted this team to win

    (0 votes)

  • 0%
    Nope. Whether it was built to win these or not, Alabama is still a work in progress.

    (0 votes)



0 votes total

Vote Now



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Alabama

Letter: Mr. Lyman’s wish list for Alabama’s Legislature

Published

on

Letter: Mr. Lyman’s wish list for Alabama’s Legislature


Kudos to Mr. Lyman.  It takes chutzpah to ask our legislators to consider his 2025 wish list after having called them soul-less barbarians for years.  Yet, legislators would agree wholeheartedly with his final wish, under his “DEI” label: for our teachers “to share the true history of the state, without any vague and mealy language intended to scare people from basic principles of truth and respect.”

Amen to that.  Mr. Lyman being a woke advocate, let’s take a snapshot of that history as it relates to Blacks, the largest class of victims in woke theology.  The 1960s and before was the era of invidious discrimination.  Blacks were like the Israelites in Egypt.  Merit didn’t count.  Black welders, for example, with decades of talent and families to feed, some fresh from two wars welding tanks and airplanes, had to watch less qualified white apprentices walking through factory gates throughout America, taking the jobs the Blacks desperately needed and could perform better.  

Then came Dr. Martin Luther King.  Their Moses, who led them from bondage.  Followed by brave white Alabamians like our legislators in the 1960s who (in several cases had to ignore death threats) changed Birmingham’s form of government to remove its racist Police Commissioner Bull Connor.  Since then, white-majority governments have passed all sorts of laws, spent trillions of dollars, and seen millions of white people help blacks all over, even here in Alabama.  Merit started counting and Blacks began flourishing in this Promised Land of ours–climbing ladders everywhere, heading Top Ten lists, from actors and athletes to scholars and entrepreneurs.  There’s been magic in that rise of Blacks, and in all fairness, those of us Baby Boomers who’ve served in the trenches to end employment discrimination and know what a Bull Connor Billy Club can do to a man’s skull and emotions, can feel that magic far better than younger generations like Mr. Lyman’s.   

Advertisement

But, then came wokeism, which has become the established faith in the legal and regulatory framework of the American political system, elite corporate culture and academia.  Central to its creed is CRT, which tells precious black children they’ll be fighting an uphill battle against a society controlled by white people who hate them.  CRT pollinated DEI, which tells those children that merit doesn’t count: without DEI’s brand of preferential treatment, they’ll be denied opportunities.  As a result, children become poisoned with hate and fear.  Thinking, don’t fight the system.  Forget studying hard to follow your dreams.  Many opt for rebellion and crime.    

So yes, we need true history.  To demonstrate that while our society has certainly not reached the ideal of being color-blind, we are light years better than yesteryear.  We’d have never elected a black president and vice president if we were white supremacists.  Our children need the confidence that came over with the Mayflower that, with hard work and ambition, the American dream is theirs.  So long as they don’t drink the poisoned Kool-aide of CRT and DEI.

Guy V. Martin Jr., Montgomery



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Alabama

WATCH: ALABAMA SHAKE's Brittany Howard perform w/ Kumite, her hardcore band, live for the first time

Published

on

WATCH: ALABAMA SHAKE's Brittany Howard perform w/ Kumite, her hardcore band, live for the first time


Back in November, we covered the announcement of Kumite, the hardcore side project led by Grammy-winning Alabama Shakes frontwoman Brittany Howard. Tonight, Kumite made their live debut at Basement East in Nashville, TN. Sharing the bill were Snooper, Inner Peace, and Second Spirit.

Check out the following footage captured by @bmenchthurlow

 

 

Advertisement

As part of the set, Kumite also covered “AM/PM” by American Nightmare, which you can watch below.





Source link

Continue Reading

Alabama

Alabama A&M University names construction adviser for new science, student amenities buildings

Published

on

Alabama A&M University names construction adviser for new science, student amenities buildings


Alabama A&M University is preparing for construction of two major buildings on campus with a combined value exceeding $140 million. The university recently selected Freedom Real Estate and Capital, a frequent partner for A&M in such projects, to provide advisory services for construction of its new science building and student amenities building. The



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending