No. 7: Adam Griffith/JK Scott/whomever else could be Alabama's kicker
The uneasiness went away midway through the 2012 season
It was at that point when it was clear
Jeremy Shelley had figured it out and
Cade Foster was consistent enough from long distances for fans to feel confident when Alabama lined up a field goal. The unassuming, 5-foot-10, 165-pound Shelley didn't miss any of his 11 field-goal attempts and none of his extra points while Foster connected on three 50-yarders. The memories of 2011 LSU appeared to be fading.
The 2013 Iron Bowl, of course, eliminated all of that confidence in Alabama's kickers. A-Day didn't help, either, as sophomore
Adam Griffith missed more kicks than he made. On top of that, a backup quarterback was handling punts.
Nick Saban didn't sugarcoat the situation in his post A-Day press conference. Griffith, who was one of the nation's top kicker recruits in the class of 2012, wouldn't be handed the job(s) by default.
"
Adam Griffith is a really talented guy," Saban said. "Obviously, we would like for him to
be a little more consistent. We recruited a guy that is a very good kicker as well as a punter, and there will be competition in the fall to play the guy who has the most consistency in terms of kicking."
Saban never mentioned the name of the "guy," but freshman
JK Scott certainly qualifies. Scott, who hails from Denver, was labeled a punter on National Signing Day, as many presumed he would simply be tasked with replacing the ultra-reliable
Cody Mandell. But Scott could be dangerous enough to put some pressure on Griffith at kicker when Alabama opens camp in August.
Preferred walk-on
Gunner Raborn is
another possibility. As Mandell showed in his battle with
Jay Williams four years ago, Saban has no problem picking a non-scholarship player for the job if he proves to be better.
Spain Park's
John Pizzitola and
Adrian Lamothe, who hails from Monterrey, Mexico, also worked with the team this spring.
Winning these respective competitions is only half the battle. Handling the pressure and anxiety that comes with being a specialist and Alabama doesn't truly kick in until the game is on the line.
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