Alabama vs. Clemson: Only fitting, only family for the national title
Former Tide walk-on Dabo Swinney got the Clemson job in part because Nick Saban whacked Tommy Bowden. Can Dabo now put a stop to Saban? Should be some reunion.
Hey, Dabo Swinney. Mama's calling.
No, it's not that call. Not yet. She simply wants to get together in the Arizona desert for a family reunion with a little football game thrown in.
Oh, and she has one teeny, tiny request.
Please, by all means, bring your own guts.
She knows you've got 'em, plenty of 'em, and that makes her awfully proud. She's also pretty sure you'll need 'em.
Swinney's dream national title matchup came together on the final day of 2015 in two emphatic demonstrations of championship football. First, his undefeated No. 1 Clemson team left 37-17 cleat marks on Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. Then, No. 2 Alabama was even more dominant in a 38-0 Cotton Bowl beatdown of Michigan State.
It's only fitting that the two best teams in college football will meet Jan. 11 in the national championship game in Glendale, Ariz. It's only family with Swinney trying to win Clemson's first national title since 1981 against his alma mater.
Lucky for Dabo he's a protege of Gene Stallings. Nick Saban's pupils tend to get embarrassed when they meet their mentor. It got so bad for Mark Dantonio, he might've preferred to meet his maker.
This was the first time one of his Michigan State teams got shut out. It was the first shutout in a postseason game since Alabama 21, LSU 0 in the 2012 BCS Championship Game. It was the first Cotton Bowl shutout since 1963.
The Spartans were lit up by crimson fireworks, and it was hard to pick a favorite.
Offensive MVP Jake Coker throwing a laser over a defender to Calvin Ridley from half a field away for a touchdown? Or Ridley climbing over a defender to cradle a Coker dart to his chest while tap-dancing for another score?
Defensive MVP Cyrus Jones doing the hesitation hop while taking a punt return to the house? Or Jones refusing to let Alabama playoff history repeat itself when he picked off a pass in the end zone just before halftime to snuff out Michigan State's last hope?
That pick got lost in the second-half onslaught, but it was the perfect example that this Alabama team - the defense especially - isn't last year's Alabama team. That team let Ohio State score late in the half to cut the lead to one, and it wouldn't go well from there. This team took its 10-0 lead to the half and then took the Spartans to the woodshed.
The defining moment may have been Derrick Henry flattening a 250-pound defensive end with a Mike Tyson right cross of a stiff arm for the final touchdown. Alabama was so good, Henry was more of a decoy, and Connor Cook and company were mostly sitting ducks.
Coker was supposed to be the Crimson Tide's weak link, but he was the best quarterback on the field. Lane Kiffin figured Michigan State had spent a month steeling itself to stop Henry so he put the game in Coker's hands, and he delivered the game of his life.
Coker completed 25 of his 30 throws for 286 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions. Let that be a lesson to anyone who's already declared that Clemson will have a decided advantage at that position in the dangerous Deshaun Watson.
Don't misunderstand. Watson's a terrific player and the leader of a terrific team. Neither Clemson nor Alabama should be able to do to the other what they did to Oklahoma and Michigan State.
Clemson cornerback Mackensie Alexander on Ridley will be NFL good on good. Clemson's defensive line, especially if Shaq Lawson's knee is OK, may be the only front in the nation that won't take a back seat to Alabama's.
Then there's the Heisman winner in Henry against the second runner-up in Watson, two men capable of taking over a game.
Swinney against Alabama is the icing. All he does is knock off national championship coaches, and now he gets a shot at the alpha dog of that breed in Saban in the actual national championship game.
The pride of Pelham went from assistant to interim guy to head coach at Clemson in large part because Alabama humbled Tommy Bowden and the Tigers in the 2008 opener. That was the beginning of the Saban dynasty and the beginning of the end for Bowden.
Can Swinney now put a stop to Saban? It should be some reunion. Mama may have to cover her eyes either way.
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