I understand the thinking behind the side to side screen plays to try and wear down the defense. But todays athletes are well conditioned and fast, defensive as well as offensive. But with way too many TV TIMEOUTS, the defensive players get a lot of extra time to catch their breath and rest a bit which made many of our sideways passes ineffective. I believe you can wear down DB's by running at least one or two deep routes on every passing play whether you throw it deep or not. And on running plays, instead of our receiver running up to the DB to block him or get in his way, hell, just run deep, some body has to chase you, If they don't, then it's time to play action.
The difference between the first half and second was night and day and it was simply getting back to our identity. Asking Hurt to literally do it all was startling and confusing and dam near got him killed. When we finally ran the football, there was nothing ole miss could do about it. If you want to exhaust your opponent make them tackle running backs, not wide receivers. We have 4 running backs and a QB that are a mismatch. Run the football, get ole miss out of their two-deep coverage and let Hurts run and throw off that. That first half offensive attack was terrible and it helped dig a hole that no mere mortal SEC team could come out of. When we play ole miss we lose our mind.
Engram being wide open as much as he was was more concerning to me.. knowing he was their first option.
TGHT right there, my friends (The Gods Honest Truth).On an island? All the pressure?
You do realize we've hardly blitzed at all this year, and most of our pressure is with the front 4, right?
Our secondary got torched by a 1st round QB yesterday, plain and simple.
IN MY OPINION
and no matter what his game plan was it was not bright to continue down that path when Ole Miss was committed to keeping two safeties deep and daring Alabama to run
TGHT right there, my friends (The Gods Honest Truth).![]()
Now you're yelling about ****?!?![]()
I know I'm getting into semantics when I point to things like "his game plan," but I don't know any other way to say this. I won't pretend to know what he's looking at during a game. I do know we've seen—countless times—an explosive play where we could point back several series and see where it was beginning to be set up. (If I'm not mistaken, we've seen three plays—in three separate games—where the receiver dropped the ball or Jalen just missed: routes to Dieter, Howard maybe, and this past week with Hentges.)
I do find it interesting that it was the plan to run their defense sideline to sideline because they felt it would open up the middle. In the end, going sideline to sideline opened up the middle.
I'm left thinking there's a hell of a lot of attention being paid to a really weird ball game.
"hey, we're okay with losing 5 yards here and 8 yards here so we can open up the inside game that's already open."
Saban just said this
A lot of the stuff we did in the first half (jet sweeps, bubble screens) were to set up things we did in the second half. We thought we could have success running those plays. But we didn’t always have the best execution and attention to detail. We wanted to wear them down, and get them tired.
Here's another TGHT moment. Our secondary has a few 1st round picks as well. Some of those critical passes were to receivers who looked like they were out to practice early. We need to be able to keep their pass catchers in front of us and this bump and run, man on man isn't a fair fight. Unless you want to chalk up a career-high 421 yards passing as just one of those things. That's career high. That's like, no one has ever given up more passing yards to Chad Kelly, in his entire college career, than the university of Alabama this Saturday. There's another TGHT moment.
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No. I'm not going to bitch about play calling if a CB/S/LB reads and blows up that play once, twice, or maybe three times a game ... when we're seeing the same receiving corps being productive on the same calls.
