| NEWS Alabama football needs a cold, hard slap in the face - Joseph Goodman, AL.com

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Too many people were looking ahead to what’s next.

That’s what Nick Saban said on Wednesday at SEC Media Days. That was his roundabout explanation for Alabama’s shocking, 28-point loss to Clemson in the national championship.

It wasn’t Clemson. It was Alabama.

Alabama didn’t prepare for the game properly.

The offensive coordinator had already checked out, and so had the defensive backs. There were too many people thinking about themselves, and not about the team.

There wasn’t a commitment to “the process.”

The “Alabama Factor” didn’t make the trip to Northern California.

“I think the most important thing for us, you know, in this offseason and going into this season is sort of re-establish the standard that we'd like to play to, standard of discipline, also, players that are going to be responsible and accountable to do their job at a high level on a consistent basis and also put the team first,” Saban said.

It wasn’t my fault. It was the players. They were too selfish. Not enough buy in.

Hopefully Saban doesn’t actually believe that nonsense. No one works harder inside Alabama’s building than those players.

“A lot of our players have benefited from their great performance, and the team success in terms of the awards that they've been able to get and the recognition that they've got, and you know, leadership on every team is also an important part of being successful because once you establish these principles and values and standards that you'd like to have in the program, you have to have people in the organization who reinforce those, and I think sometimes peer to peer is very effective,” Saban went on. “And, you know, that's something that I think is important on every team and certainly something that we challenge the leadership on our team to do a great job of this year to help our young players understand the culture and the standard that we'd like to do things to.”

There weren’t any leaders last year, in other words. Excuse me, but was Jalen Hurts a figment of my imagination last year?

Dylan Moses, a returning linebacker, went so far as to say on Wednesday that Georgia was the toughest team Alabama faced last season, and not Clemson.

Stop it, Dylan. Just stop. Enough.

Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa blamed all the blowouts. Alabama didn’t know how to compete in a close game.

Guess what, Tua? Maybe the SEC was just trash last year.

Are Saban and his players arrogant or just delusional? Whatever they are, they’re not ready to start this season. Not yet.

Before this preseason begins, before anyone reports to fall camp, before the first whistle is blown, Alabama needs a cold, hard slap in the face. A reality check. A come to Jesus.

Repeat after me, Alabama. Say it really slowly so it sticks.

Clemson. Was. Better.

Clemson is still better.

Clemson is the new superpower in college football.

Like that clueless attempt at a fake field goal in the second half of the national championship, Alabama apparently can’t see what everyone in the world already knows. The San Jose Smackdown was the coronation of a new king.

Don’t let the bright lights of SEC Media Days fool you, Dylan Moses. You’re not that good.

Don’t think for a second, Tua, that all those reporters crowding around you inside a ballroom in Hoover, Ala., means the SEC is home to the best football in the country. It’s not. Not anymore. Not until someone from this conference beats Clemson, which went undefeated (3-0) against SEC teams last season.

Tua is a great quarterback. He might even be the best quarterback in the history of Alabama football. Is he even half as good as Trevor Lawrence, though?

Lawrence took a blowtorch to a defense that shut out LSU in Death Valley. The SEC should be embarrassed.

Alabama returns a quarterback who can’t stay healthy, and some defenders who allowed 44 points in their last game. That’s reality.

Alabama didn’t score a single point in the second half of the College Football Playoff national championship. We thought it was the best offense in the history of Alabama football. That’s how good Clemson was.

Saban’s big message at SEC Media Days? He wants Tua to be smarter in the pocket, and he wants his assistant coaches to be better prepared for the second half of the season.

How about start with this, and accept the cold hard truth. Dabo Swinney is just a better coach right now.
 
Ok. Clemson better in that game. Few deny it.
The new superpower. What about bamas blowout of Clemson the year before. Wasnt 4 tds but 24-7 or something and wasnt that close.
Really 1 real bad game in 10 years? Clemson is really a building program As is uga and Oklahoma, ohio state, etc. but it was fsu, AU, lsu, Michigan, penn state, etc a few years back. Could they sustain it.... nope.
Bama aint done and still at top.
 
F Goodman and al.com (liberal fishwrapper owned by Advanced Publications).

JMO...Bama players and fans need to forget Clemson and make that happened today if you haven't already. That shit show ended for me the night of the game just as the 1971 NC game vs NewBraska. When you get beat that bad then just get on the bus and go home and get better. All the talking just looks bad.
 
Must be getting close to football season. All the haters are starting to live vicariously through the accomplishments of whoever gets the better of Bama.

That said, Bama needed to congratulate Clemson at media days and move on. The old coaches are gone and the players need to concentrate on the 14 games that come before the rematch.
 
There's another side to this story that's not being told; the ACC media days.

Here we have another set of instructions from Goodman on how to be a Bama fan and what's good for the program. OK, let's set that aside and look at what may have brought this article to his mind.

Is it, as @TUSKtimes suggest, Bama fans need to move on? Or, is this a bit of deflection from the local media considering the main questions given to Dabo have been Saban related, their players have been talking about Dylan Moses, and the ol' "Golden Boy" is caught up with what Finebaum has been saying on the SECN.

Wait.

Caught up in what Finebaum has been saying on the Southeastern Conference Network? Players talking about Dylan? Dabo, and the ACC media, discussing Saban and Bama?

We can all agree Goodman has little clue as to whats going on with Bama. Based on this little bit he's penned, he knows less about what's going on at Clemson.
 
There's another side to this story that's not being told; the ACC media days.

Here we have another set of instructions from Goodman on how to be a Bama fan and what's good for the program. OK, let's set that aside and look at what may have brought this article to his mind.

Is it, as @TUSKtimes suggest, Bama fans need to move on? Or, is this a bit of deflection from the local media considering the main questions given to Dabo have been Saban related, their players have been talking about Dylan Moses, and the ol' "Golden Boy" is caught up with what Finebaum has been saying on the SECN.

Wait.

Caught up in what Finebaum has been saying on the Southeastern Conference Network? Players talking about Dylan? Dabo, and the ACC media, discussing Saban and Bama?

We can all agree Goodman has little clue as to whats going on with Bama. Based on this little bit he's penned, he knows less about what's going on at Clemson.


All things can have a feel about it. It feels like we are deflecting a little too much. It doesn't have anything to do with Goodman. I don't read his stuff and unless it was brought over here I would have missed this latest episode altogether. Finebaum is just as much a mystery to me and I haven't watched a minute of the ACC media days.

I would rather not watch our coach continue to publically explain what went wrong. Besides, I watched the game and I believe.

Coach Bryant would simply blame himself and say I did a bad job, I didn't have them ready. We just got beat by the better team. Some would say, wow, he sure is humble. I'm not saying he wasn't but I always thought coach Bryant was using the perfect strategy. It disarms distractors, and it was always gracious. Then he might have his team out Sunday morning with a come to Jesus practice. Correcting things you know. Point being he left the details on the practice field and integrated his players and assistant coaches accordingly.
 
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they won.....we lost.....time to move on.....

a new season is fast approaching and the guys have better to think about than "what might've been". and i can guarantee you that Coach Saban is making sure it happens.
 
"I want my cake, and eat it too."

I would rather not watch our coach continue to publically explain what went wrong. Besides, I watched the game and I believe.
And how do you stop that? He's repeatedly asked the questions, do you want him to say, "I've already answered that?"

All things can have a feel about it. It feels like we are deflecting a little too much


I can't see how someone has difficulty seeing this for what it is. He's asked a question. He answered the question. His answer mirrors, to the word, what's been said about last season when we've discussed it here and that's deflecting? No.

You may not realize it but you're an ingredient in that pot that's being stirred.
 
And how do you stop that?

I gave you an example. Take full responsibility. It's on me. I did a lousy job getting my team ready to play. I let them down. We just got outcoached. They were the better team.

Instead, I hear, it was "internal distractions" for his players and coaches. That "the players need to focus on the team and not their personal numbers."
Saban made it clear a number of times that he felt his coaches were "prioritizing finding new jobs" instead of the task at hand. In my neighborhood that's throwing folks under the bus.

That's deflecting and it sounds like everything but owning it. He made the hires, he prepared his team and somewhere Clemson beat us, bad. We own the great, great wins that no other college team in America can come close to matching. OWN the losses. Stuff like this goes away quickly and we get praised for being gracious in defeat. And by the way, that's the hard part, that's where humility comes in, being gracious in defeat and victory.

Now, what happens? The players start getting asked the same questions and instead of parroting the coach with, we just got beat by the better team. They just took it to us. We got beat, no excuses, we're ready to move on. We instead heard stuff like Dylan Moses at media days saying:

"The team "didn't prepare as much" for Clemson as they did other teams. Moses doesn't believe Clemson was a better team "because we both have great athletes on both sides of the ball."

No wonder Clemson fans and the media keep rolling their eyes at us.
 
I gave you an example. Take full responsibility. It's on me. I did a lousy job getting my team ready to play. I let them down. We just got outcoached. They were the better team.
Did you watch any of the coverage after the game? Any, at all? Clemson was given their due.

My Crimson brother, you certainly seem far to caught up with the media's Cliff Notes without regard to the story itself.

Clemson: How often have you heard them lauded by media members for maintaining continuity on their staff?
Alabama: When the coaching staff is mentioned, these same media members refer to it as an excuse?

One is a reason, the other an excuse, and yet we're still on the subject.
 
Did you watch any of the coverage after the game? Any, at all? Clemson was given their due.

My Crimson brother, you certainly seem far to caught up with the media's Cliff Notes without regard to the story itself.

Clemson: How often have you heard them lauded by media members for maintaining continuity on their staff?
Alabama: When the coaching staff is mentioned, these same media members refer to it as an excuse?

One is a reason, the other an excuse, and yet we're still on the subject.


I'm trying to explain what the narrative sounds like to me. I think many of your Crimson brothers over here are trying to tell you the same thing. This stuff ends up being a tight rope dance across Nigeria Falls. Don't send mixed messages. Just keep repeating the gracious side of the message and then behind the scenes get the gates of hell ready for these guys for the next rematch. We know that's what's going to happen anyway. The rest is just semantics, coach-speak, or whatever else you want to call it anyway.
 
I'm trying to explain what the narrative sounds like to me
When the narrative doesn't fit the facts, what does it matter how it sounds or makes one feel? When the narrative implodes on itself what does that say? It today's vernacular, #fakenews. And, you're not the only one buying in.

The issue I see is you knowing better than to buy in, yet here you are.
 
When the narrative doesn't fit the facts, what does it matter how it sounds or makes one feel? When the narrative implodes on itself what does that say? It today's vernacular, #fakenews. And, you're not the only one buying in.

The issue I see is you knowing better than to buy in, yet here you are.

@TerryP still deflecting about coach Saban as he makes his football rounds deflecting about the tiger loss. Whatever gets you through the off-season.
 
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