bamatommy
Member
It happened in 2008. It happened again in 2011 and 2012. Is it going to happen again in less than two weeks?
Is Alabama going to get revenge for a close loss to Auburn by administering another Iron Bowl beatdown?
All signs are pointing in that direction.
Alabama continues to gain strength and should be ranked No. 1 by the College Football Playoff committee after its 25-20 win over previous No. 1 Mississippi State. The final score wasn't that close.
Alabama rolled out to a 19-0 lead, and Mississippi State, despite showing some toughness in not getting blown out from there, never had the ball in the second half with a chance to tie or take the lead.
Auburn has lost all the momentum it built after rising to No. 3 in the playoff rankings by giving away a game to Texas A&M and responding with the most thorough defeat of the Gus Malzahn era at Georgia.
Malzahn's offense was at least as bad as Ellis Johnson's defense in that 34-7 embarrassment in Athens, and the special teams may have been worst of all, but this is Malzahn's team, and this two-week collapse is his responsibility.
After disposing of Samford this weekend, is he capable of getting his team ready to knock Alabama out of the playoff picture Nov. 29 in Tuscaloosa? Can the Tigers even push the Tide for four quarters?
That's how bad this slide has become. Auburn has gone from contender to potential spoiler in two weeks.
Recent history suggests Alabama will roll because when Nick Saban's Crimson Tide has won the Iron Bowl - especially as a revenge game - it's usually done so in dominating fashion. See 36-0 in 2008, 42-14 in 2011 and 49-0 in 2012. Meanwhile, Auburn has needed historic performances to come from behind to win the game. See 28-27 in 2010 and 34-28 last year.
The only exception of late: Alabama's 2009 national champions needed a late touchdown drive to escape Auburn's upset bid 26-21.
This one smells a lot more like 2008, 2011 and 2012 than it does 2009, 2010 or 2013.
Unlike 2008 with Tommy Tuberville and 2012 with Gene Chizik, Malzahn will not walk into Bryant-Denny Stadium 60 minutes away from getting fired, but the next two weeks will tell us something about this Auburn coach.
How will he and his team respond to the greatest adversity of his young head coaching career? The answer will be found on the scoreboard. It's the only salvation Auburn has left in this season gone terribly wrong.
Is Alabama going to get revenge for a close loss to Auburn by administering another Iron Bowl beatdown?
All signs are pointing in that direction.
Alabama continues to gain strength and should be ranked No. 1 by the College Football Playoff committee after its 25-20 win over previous No. 1 Mississippi State. The final score wasn't that close.
Alabama rolled out to a 19-0 lead, and Mississippi State, despite showing some toughness in not getting blown out from there, never had the ball in the second half with a chance to tie or take the lead.
Auburn has lost all the momentum it built after rising to No. 3 in the playoff rankings by giving away a game to Texas A&M and responding with the most thorough defeat of the Gus Malzahn era at Georgia.
Malzahn's offense was at least as bad as Ellis Johnson's defense in that 34-7 embarrassment in Athens, and the special teams may have been worst of all, but this is Malzahn's team, and this two-week collapse is his responsibility.
After disposing of Samford this weekend, is he capable of getting his team ready to knock Alabama out of the playoff picture Nov. 29 in Tuscaloosa? Can the Tigers even push the Tide for four quarters?
That's how bad this slide has become. Auburn has gone from contender to potential spoiler in two weeks.
Recent history suggests Alabama will roll because when Nick Saban's Crimson Tide has won the Iron Bowl - especially as a revenge game - it's usually done so in dominating fashion. See 36-0 in 2008, 42-14 in 2011 and 49-0 in 2012. Meanwhile, Auburn has needed historic performances to come from behind to win the game. See 28-27 in 2010 and 34-28 last year.
The only exception of late: Alabama's 2009 national champions needed a late touchdown drive to escape Auburn's upset bid 26-21.
This one smells a lot more like 2008, 2011 and 2012 than it does 2009, 2010 or 2013.
Unlike 2008 with Tommy Tuberville and 2012 with Gene Chizik, Malzahn will not walk into Bryant-Denny Stadium 60 minutes away from getting fired, but the next two weeks will tell us something about this Auburn coach.
How will he and his team respond to the greatest adversity of his young head coaching career? The answer will be found on the scoreboard. It's the only salvation Auburn has left in this season gone terribly wrong.
