🏈 !0 things we learned today

By Tony Tsoukalas
10 things we learned after Alabama's offense exploded against Arkansas | BamaInsider.com


TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Alabama’s offense continued to put up big numbers as it blew past Arkansas for a 65-31 victory. Here are 10 things we learned from the game.

1. Alabama’s offense keeps on rolling

Nick Saban wasn’t completely satisfied with Alabama’s blowout win. Although, when it came to the Crimson Tide’s offense, the hyper-critical head coach had no complaints.

Alabama piled up a season-high 639 yards of total offense while also reaching its highest points total of the year. The 639 yards are the eighth-best offensive tally in school history and the fourth highest in Saban’s tenure. They also mark Alabama’s second 600-yard game in as many weeks.

“I thought we did an outstanding job out there on offense,” Saban said. “We made a lot of explosive plays, made a lot of big plays, controlled the line of scrimmage pretty well. When you score 65 points, you can’t complain much.”

Alabama has scored 45 points or more in each of its first six games this season, a feat never before accomplished in school history.

2. Another fast start

Last year, Damien Harris hit Arkansas with a 75-yard touchdown on the first play from scrimmage. This year, Irv Smith Jr. did the honors. The tight end caught a short pass from Tua Tagovailoa before rumbling 76 yards for a touchdown.

“I see him catch it and I’m thinking someone is going to push him out of bounds,” Harris said. “One guy misses then another guy misses, another guy misses. It was like, ‘Well, that was quick.’ … I came over to the sideline like, ‘You’re trying to be like me because I scored on the first play last year.’ It was a pretty cool moment.”

The score was part of a prolific first half for Alabama as the Crimson Tide piled up 463 yards of total offense to head into the break leading 41-14. Alabama has recorded 340 or more total yards in the first half in five of its six games and is averaging 375.6 yards in first halves this season.

Alabama is also outscoring its opponents 238-34 in the first half. If you only counted the 39.7 points Alabama has averaged in the first half, it would still rank No. 27 nationally in scoring entering Saturday’s game.

3. Tagovailoa strengthens his Heisman case

On a day where other Heisman contenders suffered setbacks, Tagovailoa continued to strengthen his case for college football’s top individual prize.

Tagovailoa completed 10 of 13 passes for 334 yards and four touchdowns putting up all his stats in the first half. It was the first time a Power 5 QB has thrown for 300 or more yards and four scores in the first half of a conference game since Patrick Mahomes did it for Texas Tech against Baylor in 2016.

In his three SEC games this season, Tagovailoa has completed 43 of 58 passes (74 percent) for 912 yards and 10 touchdowns with no interceptions. He has now led Alabama to touchdowns on 31 of the 44 drives he has been a part of.

Heading into the day, most viewed Tagovailoa as one of three Heisman favorites, including Oklahoma quarterback Kyler Murray and West Virginia quarterback Will Grier.

Murray completed 19 of 25 passes for 304 yards and four touchdowns with an interception while adding 92 yards and a touchdown on the ground against Texas on Saturday. However, the Sooners suffered their first loss of the season in a 48-45 heartbreaker to the Longhorns.

Grier led West Virginia to a 38-22 victory over Kansas but threw three first-half interceptions in the process. He finished the day 28 of 41 for 332 yards and four touchdowns with three interceptions.

4. Damien Harris hits the century mark

Since deciding to return for his senior year, Harris has taken a team-first motto. However, the starting running back admits Alabama’s first possession of the second half was a little fun. On that drive, Harris took the ball six times capping it off by diving over the goal line on fourth-and-goal for his second touchdown of the game.

“I'm still a running back," Harris said. "Even though we're playing pretty well on offense, we still love to run the ball.”

Harris led Alabama with 111 yards and two touchdowns on 15 carries, marking his first 100-yard game of the season. Harris now has 2,555 yards on the ground for his career, moving him into 11th place on Alabama’s career rushing chart. Saturday’s performance was the eighth 100-yard rushing game of his career and his first since running for 125 yards during last season’s game against Arkansas.

5. Alabama’s defense struggles

The reason for Saban’s bittersweet mood following Saturday’s game came from his defense’s inconsistent performance. The Crimson Tide allowed a season-high 405 yards of total offense while giving up more points than it had since its national championship defeat to Clemson in 2017.

“We made a lot of mistakes on defense today,” Saban said. “We didn’t play well together as a unit. We had lots of opportunities to get off the field on third down and just didn’t do it, which allowed them to extend drives. I don’t think we really beat the other team when you give up 31 points.”

Following the game, defensive lineman Quinnen Williams said the poor performance created a “great opportunity” for a learning experience moving forward.

“We know we have to work on a lot of stuff,” he said. “We’ve got to go back to the drawing board, watch film and learn from our mistakes.”

6. More quarterbacks, more problems for defenses

Why choose when you can have both? One of the more interesting features in Alabama’s offensive explosion was the emergence of a new package featuring both Tagovailoa and backup quarterback Jalen Hurts.

During Alabama’s third possession of the game, the Crimson Tide lined up both quarterbacks on the field at the same time as Hurts took a handoff from Tagovailoa on an end around and ran it for five yards. The next play, Hurts took the snap out of the wildcat formation, and with Tagovailoa blocking on the perimeter, picked up a 27-yard gain on a quarterback keeper.

“When [Arkansas] saw that, they started screaming Jalen’s name,” receiver Jerry Jeudy said. “They didn’t really know what to do. I thought it was going to be a good play because they had a lot of distraction on how to defend that.”

Saban said he planned on running more plays out of the package but elected not to due to the nature of the game. It will be interesting to see how much Alabama uses both quarterbacks on the field at the same time moving forward. At the very least, it should give opposing defenses something else they have to plan for.

7. Jerry Jeudy back in the spotlight

Jeudy was made his way back to the end zone after a two-game hiatus. The sophomore receiver led Alabama with 135 yards and two touchdowns on four receptions, scoring from 42 yards and 60 yards out respectively.

The two-touchdown performance is Jeudy’s fourth of the season as he also accounted for a pair of receiving touchdowns in each of Alabama’s first three games. This season, Jeudy leads Alabama with 23 receptions for 558 yards and eight touchdowns.

8. Irv Smith is becoming a big weapon

Jeudy was one of two Alabama receivers with 100 or more yards as Irv Smith tallied 123 yards and a touchdown on two receptions. Following his opening 76-yard touchdown, Smith also caught a 47-yard pass from Tagovailoa which he fumbled at the 12-yard line. Fortunately for the tight end, receiver Henry Ruggs III was there to scoop the ball up and carry it into the end zone.

“I mean, Irv, you can’t ask for a better day,” fellow tight end Hale Hentges said. “Very first play he goes 70-something yards to the house. That’s the kind of plays that he makes… He does that stuff all the time in practice."

9. Another NOT

Defensive back Shyheim Carter recorded his second touchdown of the season when he returned an interception 44 yards to the end zone in the fourth quarter. The score marked Alabama’s sixth non-offensive touchdown of the season. Four of those touchdowns have come off interceptions, while Josh Jacobs returned a kickoff and Jaylen Waddle returned a punt. Alabama now has 67 non-offensive touchdowns in the Saban era.

10. Home on the road

Alabama’s two highest-scoring games have come in its only two true road games. In games against Arkansas and Ole Miss, Alabama has outscored the Razorbacks and Rebels a combined 127-38, averaging 577.5 yards of offense.

The Crimson Tide returns to Bryant-Denny Stadium this week when it takes on Missouri for its homecoming game on Saturday at 6 p.m. CT.
 
Henderson: Three Observations and Post Game Notes Following Arkansas Game
Henderson: Three Observations and Post Game Notes Following Arkansas Game | BamaInsider.com

Three Observations

Tua continues to play like the Heisman Favorite

What we are seeing from Tua Tagovailoa is something for the ages. We’re talking about a sophomore having the (maybe) greatest season at quarterback in the history of Alabama football. Today against Arkansas, Tagovailoa was 10 of 13 passing for 334-yards with 4 touchdowns and his rating was 394.3.

The first pass he threw of the game was a 76-yard touchdown strike to Irv Smith for a touchdown, he then hit Smith for a long pass and catch before Smith fumbled and Henry Ruggs III recovered the ball for what was counted as a touchdown to Ruggs III.

In the second quarter, he found Jerry Jeudy for a 42-yard strike and then counted with Jeudy again for a 60-yard touchdown pass. Tagovailoa did come out in the second half wearing a brace on his right leg and we’ll learn more about that from Nick Saban I would assume over the next few days, but it does not look too serious.

Who Else Looked Good?

Damien Harris was unleashed today against Arkansas finally. The Crimson Tide ran the senior 15 times for 111-yards, it was the first time that an Alabama running back has rushed for more than 100-yards since week two.

Harris hit the lanes hard, was tough to tackle, and ran angry. Jerry Jeudy as mentioned caught two touchdowns and when he caught the slant from Tagovailoa, that speed that he displayed was NFL type speed. He’s deceptively fast and has now caught 8 touchdowns on the season.

Irv Smith Jr. shined in the first quarter hauling in over 120-yards and despite his fumble, he has proven to be a dynamic weapon for Alabama. Jonah Williams made a few good blocks downfield, and Shyheim Carter continues to put himself in a good position to create plays on defense.

The Bad

Alabama’s quick-strike offense puts the defense right back on the field time and time again and while they could be tired, they looked like they were dragging at all positions. The defense allowed 31 points to Arkansas, think about that for a minute.

Trevon Diggs made a few good plays at corner in the first quarter, but then was eating up the rest of the game. Alabama also had trouble covering the tight end today, and to be honest, they look suspect to the big play downfield.

Alabama also allowed 102-yards to Arkansas running back Rakeen Boyd and 230 yards to Ty Storey through the air. The defensive line played undisciplined and Raekwon Davis was seen walking on the field during a few plays.

Post Game Notes from UA

GAME CAPTAINS: Alabama’s captains against Arkansas were running back Damien Harris, linebacker Anfernee Jennings and center Ross Pierschbacher.

DEFENSIVE NOTESTURNOVERS, TURNOVERS, TURNOVERS: Alabama’s three forced turnovers against Arkansas (2 fumbles, 1 interception) gives the Crimson Tide at least one forced turnover in 48 of its last 50 games dating to the start of the 2015 season. During the current run, the Crimson Tide has forced 85 turnovers (58 interceptions, 27 fumbles) and returned 20 of those miscues for touchdowns.

NON-OFFENSIVE TDs IN THE SABAN ERA: Junior Shyheim Carter’s fourth quarter 44-yard interception return for a touchdown against the Razorbacks is Alabama’s 67th non-offensive touchdown of the Nick Saban era and itssixth this season. The score was also the fourth pick-six for the Tide and the second for Carter in 2018.

POINTS OFF TURNOVERS: With its two post-turnover scoring drives and a pick-six today, Alabama has scored 80 points off 13 opponent giveaways this season, scoring on 12 of the turnovers and intercepting a pass to end the first half against Louisiana on Sept. 29. The Tide defense has directly accounted for 28 points on three interception returns, while the offense has posted 52 points on its eight post-turnover possessions.


OFFENSIVE NOTES
500 YARDS IN TOTAL OFFENSE FOR A UA-RECORD SIXTH GAME IN A ROW: Alabama’s 639 yards in total offense against Arkansas marks the sixth time the Crimson Tide has topped 500 yards this season and the 18th time in the last 50 games dating to the start of the 2015 campaign. This is Alabama’s first six-game run of 500-yard total offense performances in program history.

ALABAMA AT 600 YARDS: Today’s 639 yards in total offense is Alabama’s second 600+ total yardage game in as many weeks and is the eighth-best offensive tally in school history. It is the 13th 600-yard game of the Nick Saban era at Alabama and fourth-highest total of his tenure.

45-for-6: With its 65-31 win over Arkansas, Alabama has scored 45 or more points in six-consecutive games for the first time in school history. The 1945 Crimson Tide held the previous record with four in a row (Kentucky, 60-19; Vanderbilt, 71-0; Pensacola Naval Air Station, 55-6; Mississippi State, 55-13).

TUA VS. SEC: In three games against Southeastern Conference opponents this season, sophomore quarterback Tua Tagovailoa has thrown for 912 yards and 10 touchdowns on 43-of-58 passing (.741) and an efficiency rating of 263.12.

TUA AT THE HELM: Tua Tagovailoa has directed 44 drives as the Tide’s starting quarterback this season with 31 resulting touchdowns and two culminating in field goals. In those 44 drives, the Tide offense is 21-of-31 on third down conversions and has accounted for 2,144 yards on 219 snaps for an average of 9.8 yards per play and 220 of the 302 points scored by the UA offense.

LAST 2 FIRST HALVES FOR TUA: Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa is 18 for 20 with 462 yards passing and six touchdowns in the first half against Louisiana and Arkansas for a passing efficiency rating of 383.04.

DAMIEN HARRIS NOW 11TH ON UA CAREER RUSHING LIST: With 111 yards rushing today, senior Damien Harris has 2,555 yards on the ground for his career, moving him into 11th place on the UA career rushing chart. Harris has now run for 236 yards against Arkansas in the Tide’s last two meetings with the Razorbacks. Today’s performance is the Richmond, Ky., native’s eighth 100-yard rushing game of his career and his first since rushing for 125 in the Tide’s 2017 meeting with the Hogs.

TWO OVER 100:With the career-high 123 receiving yards from tight end Irv Smith Jr., and 135 yards from sophomore wide receiver Jerry Jeudy, Alabama had two players with more than 100 yards receiving in a single game for just the seventh time in school history and the second time in two games. Freshman Jaylen Waddle (138) and sophomore Henry Ruggs III (116) both topped the century mark against Louisiana on Sept. 29.

DRIVES UNDER A MINUTE: With three first-half scoring drives of 21, 50 and 12 seconds, 15 of the Crimson Tide’s scoring drives this season have lasted less than a minute with seven lasting less than 30 seconds. Alabama led the nation in scoring drives under a minute with 12 in its first five games.

300+ AND 4 AT THE HALF: Tua Tagovailoa’s 334 passing yards and four touchdown passes today marks the first time a Power 5 QB has thrown for 300 or more yards and four scores in the first half of a conference game since Patrick Mahomes vs. Baylor on Nov. 25, 2016.

FIRST HALF TOTAL OFFENSE: With 463 total yards in the first two quarters against Arkansas, Alabama is now averaging 375.6 yards in total offense in the first half this season. The Tide has racked up 340 or more total yards in the first half in five of six games this season. The Tide had 340 vs. Louisville, 395 vs. Arkansas State, 418 at Ole Miss, 357 vs. Louisiana prior to the Arkansas game.

FIRST HALF SCORING: Through six games this season, Alabama is outscoring its opponents, 238-34 (39.7-5.7), in the first half. That total includes a 124-21 (20.7-3.5) first quarter advantage and a 114-13 (19.0-2.2) difference in the second quarter. The Tide’s average of 39.7 points would rank 27th nationally in scoring offense entering today’s contest.

FIRST-PLAY SCORE AGAIN: Tua Tagovailoa’s 76-yard touchdown pass to Irv Smith Jr., on Alabama’s first play from scrimmage today marks the second consecutive game against the Razorbacks that UA has scored on its first offensive snap. Running back Damien Harris opened the 2017 contest at Bryant-Denny Stadium with a 75-yard touchdown run.

OPENING DRIVE TOUCHDOWNS: Tight end Irv Smith Jr.’s 76-yard touchdown reception from Tua Tagovailoa on Alabama’s first possession against the Razorbacks today was the Crimson Tide’s sixth-straight opening drive touchdown this season. Alabama has now won 21-straight games when scoring a touchdown on its first offensive possession of a game. The Tide’s last loss after finding the end zone on its first drive was to Oklahoma in the 2014 Allstate Sugar Bowl.​
Kyle Henderson
 
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