No, I mean '15 in the playoffs. You know the other section of Saban's tenure you're talking about here...that was an offensive and defensive showcase. Remember, out of those 38 points only six came by way of a NOT.
We've reached a point now where we have to ask our QB to supplement our weak running attack
Weak running attack? I'm sorry, but what? In Saban's tenure there's only been one year where the team finished with a higher average per game rushing than what they are averaging now--245 per game in '16. The '12 team was close with 227 and this team still has over 10 games left on the schedule.
You've asked for facts, not feelings, and right now this team is averaging more per game than the teams you're referenced.
Bama has a quarterback who is averaging almost nine yards per carry, a running back averaging over six per carry, another over four ... and it's a weak running attack because no one can stop the QB from running?
Seriously, a weapon like Jalen is being used sparingly when you consider he's only running about 12 times per game. I know he's ran somewhere around 35 times this season...out of what, 190 or so plays?
What gets me is if it was a guy like Ridley getting 12 carries a game this offense would be labeled as one using its playmakers. But, if it's the quarterback rushing ... it's a weak running attack?
Add to this is my memory of negative plays on offense, false starts, and holding penalties creeping in toward the latter half of Yeldon's career (that whiff by our TE on the late 4th & 1 against Auburn in '13 jumps out to me as one of the noticeable OL failures that began our trend of run blocking inconsistencies) and all during Henry's tenure (Henry would get stopped behind the line half the time, the other half he would rip off amazing runs).
Now you're jumping to '13, talking about the offensive line failures, despite a Bama team that averaged almost 250 yards per game against SEC opponents? Facts, not feelings.
I'm willing to concede that we were fortunate with Saban's early bowls:
- we injured the Texas QB early, and didn't really do much offensively the whole second half
- Michigan St was co-Big Ten champ during a down year for the Big Ten (plus Bama was finally healthy for that game after struggling with injuries all season)
- we should have easily beaten LSU during the regular season but missed like 3 or 4 field goals; plus Saban had a month to prepare for a mediocre LSU offense.
- and everyone admitted Notre Dame was one of the most overrated teams to play for a national title in recent memory.
1) You sure you're not a Texas fan? :devil: You really aren't going with "If Colt hadn't been hurt, are you?" How many games has Bama lost in Saban's tenure when the Tide has rushed for over 150 yards on the ground? OK, let's try 200? Or, how many games has Bama been beaten when the opponent didn't rush for 100 yards? Oops, we've found another example of consistency and quality play.
2) I suppose you're talking about '10 here? That was a year decimated by injuries, remember? Bama wasn't fortunate to beat Michigan State the way they did--they were finally healthy. Ingram and Upshaw hurt pre-season. Upshaw hurt again against Florida. Dareus, Julio, Nico, Barrett. Carpenter, Fluker, and a host of others hurt that season. Damn, look at those names there.
3) Easily? No. Every team LSU played that season had trouble with Jordan that season. (Why Miles started with Lee I'll never figure out.) In #1 I mentioned "how many games has Bama been beaten when the opponent didn't rush for 100 yards?" LSU put 150 on Bama that day. And, it was the defensive adjustments--specifically with Jerrell Harris--which bottled up their dual threat attack in New Orleans.
4) Yah, I believe I pointed to that daily here...specifically, poor tacking from their front seven.