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Xs and Oats: LSU will try to ball screen Alabama to death and control the offensive glass

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Xs and Oats: LSU will try to ball screen Alabama to death and control the offensive glass


When Nate Oats landed in Tuscaloosa almost six years ago, he found a roster that was middling on talent, but had some high-ceiling coachable players who wanted to win. You need those John Pettys, of course. And no one really could foresee what Herb Jones would blossom into. But you also need star power in basketball. Even the best group of team-first average players typically falls short of cutting down the nets (quick: name a single player on Beard’s 2018-2019 Texas Tech starting roster. Bet you can’t without Google — and, nope, Nimari Burnett isn’t one of them).

Coach Oats was behind the eight-ball, but there was one intriguing undeclared player just up the road in Mountain Brook: All-everything, No. 1 recruit Trendon Watford. Now that is the type of transformative star power that the Tide needed. Unfortunately, Nate was also introduced in his first month to how things are done at some places in the SEC…particularly LSU. Will Wade, the Tigers’ criminally-corrupt, sweat hog with a pocketbook, had already bought and paid for Watford. And along the way, some bad blood was born. As a result, it was neither Tennessee nor Auburn that became Public Enemy No. 1 to the new ‘Bammer coach — it was the LSU Tigers.

Since that early spring day six years ago, there have been few (if any) teams Oats has loved punishing quite like LSU. He gets up for these games, and consequently, it should come as little surprise that it is the Coonass Kitties that he has enjoyed his most success against: 10-2 and counting, including a head-to-head title matchup.

Will Wade is gone. And in his place the far more likable, respectable Matt McMahon (nee Murray State) has arrived. But Nate only sees purple and gold. And when he sees purple and gold, he also sees red.

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Guess who’s coming to dinner tonight, folks?

Indeed. GTFO.


Tale of the Tape: No. 68 LSU (12-6, 1-4) vs No. 4 Alabama (15-3, 5-1)

Spread: Alabama -17 (167.0)

Opponent KenPom: 68 (102 offense, 53 defense, 130 tempo)
Opponent Evan Miya: 73 (96 offense, 61 defense, 90 tempo)
Opponent Bart Torvik: 79 (128 offense, 57 defense, 123 tempo)
Opponent NET: 69 (0-5 Q1); Q2 opponent for the Tide
Opponent RPI: 107
Opponent Best Win: vs Arkansas (54)
Opponent Worst Loss: SMU (51)

UA Ken Pom: 8th (2 Off, 45 Defense, 1 Tempo)
UA Evan Miya: 5th (3 Off, 27 Defense, 1 Tempo)
UA Bart Torvik: 5th (2 Off, 37 Defense, 1 Tempo)
UA NET Ranking: 7 (11-3 Q1/2)
UA RPI: 2
UA Best Win: No. 3 (N) Houston
UA Worst Loss: No. 23 (N) Oregon

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We’ve seen quite a few types of systems so far this season, with most opponents preferring to let action unfold on the floor in today’s almost-positionless, backcourt-driven four- and five-out systems. We’ve seen hybrid eclectic motion from teams like Ole Miss and Vanderbilt. But, aside from the truly anal retentive Matt Painter and Buzz Williams types, Alabama rarely sees opponents so wedded to an offensive philosophy like the one Matt McMahon brings into Tuscaloosa tonight.

McMahon (another former guard-cum-coach), earned his national credibility as the skipper of those Murray State teams (and, yes, he was the coach when Alabama fans were treated to that outstanding Young Bull vs. Ja shootout in Coleman). At MSU, his Racers cultivated a well-earned reputation for exceptional offensive efficiency, albeit at a pace that is a bit more deliberative than you’d expect. In five of his six seasons, the Racers were in the Top Third nationally in floor shooting, effective field goal percent, and scoring. And while the league has changed, and the tempo is up a bit, expect no surprises tonight: LSU plays every bit the same scheme that MSU did.

LSU runs a pure motion offense, although it is not one that eschews the dribble (like Vandy or Ole Miss), rather it lets the point guard put the ball on the floor. Indeed, in this system, the trigger man has the green light to iso his defender and dart to the basket off the dribble. We’ll be using a few football similes today, because it makes the most sense. Think of the point guard dribble-drive as the keeper option on the RPO: if it’s there, and the LSU PG sees something he likes, he’s expected to take off to the basket for a higher percentage play.

But, more often than not, defenders won’t be so lax as to give up early possession lanes to the basket, and that is where the second part of this system comes into play: Like UNC, the Tigers will absolutely ball-screen you to death. Unlike other screen-dependent teams, however, LSU doesn’t run many pick-and-rolls, or high-screen looks. They don’t even run rolling three-man sets that follow ball movement (a la Vandy). Instead, it is pure motion, so at least three players are moving at almost all times, and the preferred way to do that is with cross-court screens (two guys moving across the baseline at the same time, while another man gets loose in traffic), or rub-and-replace screens (same concept, but from to the rim to the top of the key.)

Another tool in the screening arsenal is adding a fourth player to the mix for a butt-bump, which is exactly what it sounds like. Think of it like a hockey hip-check. Rather than getting set, and losing motion and momentum, the butt-bumper sticks that gyatt out and hip-checks his man: not enough for a moving pick, but certainly not a static face-up screen with the shoulder either. It’s borderline on every play so officials rarely call it.

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Shot selection is the name of the game. And all of the three-and-four man screening motion frees up a variety of looks at the basket: from backside layups, to iso penetration, to open jumpers. And, as we saw with Vanderbilt, this deliberative style of constant screening means that the Tigers are not a tempo team, but they do move their offense at a decent pace — and certainly faster than what McMahon has traditionally relied on.

The final part of the offensive system, and one that he emphasizes constantly, is five-man offensive rebounding: hammer that glass to chase misses and score easy put-backs. Of course, the downside is that it opens up LSU to fast breaks the other way. But, he’s playing a percentage game: layups are going to be made more often than LSU will give up a breakout. There’s a reason that LSU is one of the better teams in the conference in offensive rebounding and among the nation’s best in two-point floor shooting (17th), despite not being a great overall field-goal shooting team. This is also why the three LSU starting guards average almost 40 points a night, and they all flirt with five boards-per. That’s a huge contribution near the rim for a backcourt-led system.

Here’s what it all looks like when it’s put together:

Despite aiming for efficiency, as we noted earlier, it’s not a great shooting offense (the worst perimeter scoring team in the SEC, in fact), so the Tigers reach into the defensive side of their toolkit. And it is here where LSU has enjoyed its most success: LSU is a hard team to really explode on if you get stuck playing the half-court game with them. The backcourt are very good defenders. Like Vanderbilt, they play a very aggressive face-up man-defense that contests passes, entries, and forces defenders to either beat them inside with crisp entry passes, beat them off the dribble, or beat them with contested perimeter shots. But, since LSU also doesn’t collapse to deny the middle a la A&M or Ole Miss, good passing can find open men for post scoring, and it also means that they are not a great defensive rebounding team.

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The confluence of offensive and defensive play-style, with the lack of an impact big man, means that the Tigers have been beaten on the glass and break points and PitP in all five of their SEC contests — even their sole victory over Arkansas. There’s a reason this team is 1-4 in SEC play.


Key Personnel

LSU is a very deep team, comparatively speaking in this day and age: Nine Tigers see 15 or more minutes a night. But, that depth is almost all coming from the guards — seven of their nine top contributors are in the backcourt. If there is any true strength as a whole to this roster it is that they are an unselfish team of rebounders and ball distributors. They all move well without the ball. They all penetrate to the basket. They all pass up contested shots to find the open man. It’s team basketball. And though there is a star player, they all chip in.

For defensive purposes though, there’s one name to know and thus one player that has to be stopped: point guard Cam Carter. The 6’3” senior leads the Tigers in scoring (17.3 PPG), assists (4.4), 3PT shooting (40.7%), minutes, effective floor shooting — you name it. Outside of USC’s Collin Murray-Boyles, he’s the closest thing to a one-man wrecking crew ‘Bama has played this year (7th in SEC scoring, 2nd in FT shooting, 3rd in 3PT shooting). Nate Oats is “concerned” about Carter — particularly after the defensive slop Alabama sharted out in the second half versus Vandy — and he should be. Like Koby Brea, Carter is a game-changer.

The other guards are serviceable, and each does something to add to LSU’s success. In particular, take a look at second-leading scorer, Gardner-Webb transfer SG Jordan Sears. Sure, he’s got the points (15 per night). But as we have seen from a lot of low-major transfers, that has not translated to being a good shooter vs. major opponents. He’s getting his points on volume and living at the line. He’s a slippery 5’11”, but I suspect he’s actually a bit smaller than that. He’s not a good shooter — he’s a volume guy, but he still heaves them up and he’s second on the team in assists. But he’s got a sloppy handle (all of the Tigers do), and he also leads the team in TOs per night. Defensively, he’s the best player to exploit in the backcourt. Sears TO rate per-touch is appalling, and Alabama can have a lot of success when the ball is in his hands.

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The front court has good size, with 6’10” PF Dji Bailey being the better scorer, and 6’10” Corey Chest being a limited offensive threat, but the better rim protector and rebounder.

Alabama will probably look to bottle up Carter. Though, as we have seen on many other nights, Nate Oats can live with the opponent’s star player having a great game so long as the supporting cast is kept in check. That means targeting players like Sears and minimizing the damage they do. In fact, I would expect that — the Tide’s bigs to win their share of battles in the paint, play solid assignment defense on the other starters, and dare Cam Carter to outscore Alabama single-handedly. A few teams have come close to pulling it off with this formula, but no one has nailed yet. This LSU team doesn’t seem equipped to do so either, especially not if Alabama is mindful on the defensive glass and takes away all of those cheap put-backs LSU lives and dies by.

How To Watch

Saturday 25 January, 7:30 CST, SEC Network

Prediction

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LSU is 1-4 in SEC play, and all four of those losses were by double-digits. No real routs, but solid losses nonetheless. That said, it’s a team that is playing exactly where they should be given their roster and their stats — there’s a reason LSU is dead-even in expected win rate. On paper, it looks like a Top 50-60is, solid T2 team. And that’s what they’ve put out. They’ve not beaten a team above 51, but they’ve not lost to bad ones either. In short, it’s a squad that is playing exactly to its full potential. That also makes this one a bit easier to spitball (or should, at least).

Schematically, it’s just a bad matchup for the Tigers. The style of play they have on offense feeds into some real deficiencies on the other end that the Tide is uniquely situated to exploit: Tempo, perimeter blitzkrieg, fast breaks off turnovers, penetration to the glass. There’s a reason Alabama has dominated this series of late, and why McMahon has yet to beat the Tide.

So rarely in basketball do you see a game where scheme is outcome-determinative, but this is one: those stylistic mismatches, bad LSU floor shooting, too little firepower, and too many Tiger turnovers is how you get a thumping.

Predictive modeling: Alabama -17.2 to 21.8. Alabama is now also riding an 8-2 ATS streak since Christmas. No need to upend the apple cart when the data tell you not to.

Alabama 90
LSU 72

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Hope for the best.
Roll Tide.


Poll

Alabama -17 vs. the Tigers?

  • 66%
    Yup. It’s gonna be another thumping

    (16 votes)

  • 25%
    Nope. LSU is going to try so slow this one down a bit, play smart basketball, and keep it manageable / respectable.

    (6 votes)

  • 8%
    Push. Vegas still gets paid.

    (2 votes)



24 votes total

Vote Now

Here’s your game thread. Sound off below



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4 Takeaways From Alabama’s Comeback, Oklahoma’s Collapse in CFP First-Round Game

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4 Takeaways From Alabama’s Comeback, Oklahoma’s Collapse in CFP First-Round Game


NORMAN, Oklahoma — The stage was set for Oklahoma. Heck, the Sooners earned the right to set it. This was supposed to be the ushering in of a new era of postseason football for the No. 8 team in the country that had won 10 games in what was one of the toughest schedules this year.

No. 9 Alabama was even one of those teams that Oklahoma beat on its way to earning this spot. And Saturday night, all was going well for the Sooners. It was going so well, in fact, that after the first quarter, some Oklahoma fans might’ve peeked at flights and hotel rates for the Rose Bowl from inside Memorial Stadium.

And then the Alabama Crimson Tide curled and rolled the Sooners, 34-24, and are headed to Pasadena. After opening with 17 unanswered points, Oklahoma collapsed under the weight of that wave, becoming the only team in College Football Playoff history to blow a 17-point lead. And now, the Sooners have done it twice — before Saturday, in 2018 against Georgia.

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[Best Teams in the College Football Playoff Era: Creating the Ultimate 12-team CFP]

Here are my takeaways from Alabama’s College Football Playoff first-round victory against Oklahoma on Saturday:

1. Alabama is the most resilient team in the CFP

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: Zabien Brown #2 of the Alabama Crimson Tide stiff-arms John Mateer #10 of the Oklahoma Sooners during the second quarter during the 2025 College Football Playoff first-round game on December 19, 2025. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

Crimson Tide quarterback Ty Simpson is an avid reader and listener of college football news. Following the largest comeback win in Alabama postseason history, Simpson took a moment to facetiously thank media members for choosing Oklahoma to win on Saturday night. 

“I guess we can thank you guys for that,” an emboldened Simpson said. “You guys kind of wrote us off in a sort of way. So I appreciate that.”

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After building a three-score lead, the Sooners watched the Crimson Tide recover a fumbled punt, pick off Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer and return it 50 yards to the end zone — all before their First Team All-American kicker Tate Sandell missed not one but two field goals in the final minutes to solidify the worst collapse in College Football Playoff history.

Meanwhile, the Alabama Crimson Tide will prepare to take on No. 1 Indiana in the Rose Bowl for the CFP quarterfinal game. This team that punches back and played its best football with its back against the wall is one that the Hoosiers must prepare for on New Year’s Day.

[College Football Playoff Predictions: First-Round Winners to The National Champion]

2. You can’t be this up-and-down and contend for the national championship

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: John Mateer #10 of the Oklahoma Sooners is hit by Deontae Lawson #0 of the Alabama Crimson Tide during the first quarter during the College Football Playoff first-round game on December 19, 2025. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

The Crimson Tide began down — just like they did against Georgia in the SEC championship game. But the last three quarters of Saturday’s game demonstrated Alabama to be just who it says it is: the kind of team that can open with a loss to a bad Florida State and also be the first team in six years to walk into Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia, and come out with a win.

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DeBoer’s task now is to find a way to make certain that the team that showed up at Georgia earlier this season and at Oklahoma in the first round is the same one against the Hoosiers. Linebacker Deontae Lawson said that’s his job too. But Bama’s best trait isn’t one that shows itself until it’s in a fight for its life.

“Man, I just think we’re a resilient team,” Lawson said. “And even though we were down 17-0, we didn’t really look at the scoreboard. Coach DeBoer always says, ‘Keep playing the game. The game will come back to you.’ … We just keep fighting.”

3. Oklahoma’s cartoonish errors 

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: Head coach Brent Venables of the Oklahoma Sooners speaks to an official during the fourth quarter against the Alabama Crimson Tide on December 19, 2025. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

Let’s look at the bigger ones:

  • Mateer’s air-mailed pass intended for receiver JaVonnie Gibson in the first half that would’ve gone for six
  • Mateer’s pick-six with barely a minute left in the second quarter
  • Punter Grayson Miller’s fumble/blocked punt
  • Sandell’s two missed field goals — one from 36 yards, then from 51 yards, despite hitting a 51-yarder in the first quarter — to bring the game to one-score with not five minutes left to play

These are blunders. Errors that aren’t forced but self-inflicted. It’s difficult to win any game with those kinds of mistakes on your drive chart. It’s nearly impossible in a game of this magnitude, against a team as talented and as resilient as the Crimson Tide.

4. A (brief) live concert

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: Keon Keeley #31 of the Alabama Crimson Tide celebrates after defeating the Oklahoma Sooners in the College Football Playoff first-round game. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

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Oklahoma usually plays 50 Cent’s “Many Men” before the start of the fourth quarter. In an attempt to make a statement for its first CFP game at Owen Field, the Sooners brought the rapper himself out onto the field to perform the song for fans in a Hard to Kill Hoodie.

“I didn’t know it was live,” DeBoer said.

“I didn’t know who 50 Cent was,” Simpson said, “but I know that song.”

“We play that song at practice on Fridays,” Lawson said.

RJ Young is a national college football writer and analyst for FOX Sports. Follow him @RJ_Young.

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Alabama vs. Oklahoma live updates: College Football Playoff game score, predictions, latest

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Alabama vs. Oklahoma live updates: College Football Playoff game score, predictions, latest


Hello college football fans, and welcome to The Athletic’s live coverage of the 2025 College Football Playoff!

Yes, after a 2025 season full of an incredible amount of twists, turns, controversy and pure chaos, the second edition of the 12-team College Football Playoff gets underway tonight. Our opening matchup is a battle of blue-bloods whose first meeting this season contributed to that chaos, as No. 9 Alabama takes on No. 8 Oklahoma in Norman.

Follow along for live pregame build-up and the latest news, play-by-play updates and real-time analysis from The Athletic’s college football staff!



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Michael Wilbon claims Kalen DeBoer will leave Alabama for Michigan with loss in CFP opener

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Michael Wilbon claims Kalen DeBoer will leave Alabama for Michigan with loss in CFP opener


The College Football Playoff gets underway Friday night as Alabama heads to Norman to take on Oklahoma. But to ESPN’s Michael Wilbon, there’s even more at stake for Crimson Tide coach Kalen DeBoer.

DeBoer’s name has been the subject of rumors throughout the offseason in the coaching carousel. Most recently, he received questions about the opening at Michigan following Sherrone Moore’s firing for cause, though he made it clear he intends to be at Alabama in 2026.

However, Wilbon didn’t sound as convinced. He predicted Alabama would not only lose to Oklahoma on Friday night, but DeBoer would also be on a flight to Ann Arbor to take the Michigan job afterward.

“Let me tell you about … two schools that could be in the coaching carousel after [Friday night],” Wilbon said Thursday on Pardon The Interruption. “Because when Alabama loses to Oklahoma – let me say it again, when Alabama loses to Oklahoma – the coach of Alabama, half the people in the state will want to run him out. And he’ll be on the carousel – oh, wait, that’s a G5 being flown to Ann Arbor, Mich., where he has said, ‘Oh, no. I ain’t got no interest in that.’ He’ll have interest [Friday night].

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“And then, Alabama will be in the coaching carousel because they’ll be looking for a coach. … The Alabama coach is going to have a job-on-the-line situation in 24 hours and then, headed to Michigan once he loses. And then, Alabama’s looking. Then, what are you going to say?”

During a press conference this week ahead of the College Football Playoff opener, Kalen DeBoer was directly asked if he intended to be Alabama’s head coach next season. He responded, “Yes.”

Earlier in that press conference, DeBoer received a question about the rumors surrounding him. He again spoke highly of his tenure at Alabama so far and made it clear he’s happy in Tuscaloosa.

“A lot of the same things I said before, a couple weeks ago, when asked really the same question, just feel completely supported,” DeBoer said. “My family loves living here. Just all the things that we continue to build on, love the progress. Haven’t talked with anyone, no plans of talking with anyone. So just, I think that’s a lot of what I said a couple weeks ago, and continues to be the same thing. 

“Feel strong about it. And our guys, if there’s been any distraction, I haven’t seen it, haven’t felt it. I’m really proud of the way they’ve handled whatever noise is out there. And again, we probably all season long, have dealt with enough noise to where it wouldn’t surprise me on how they handle this.”

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