September 24, 2012

The Good...The Bad...& The Ugly- FAU

Ok, not going deep into this week because I haven't watched a replay to get deep in the weeds, and two, there isn't much to get into when FAU should be spelled FAIL. 
 
The Good...
 
Getting to the backups earlier. 
 
Any time you can get your starters out, healthy, and play the reserves early and often, that is a good day.  FAU wasn't going to stress anyone, but they were a better game for the backups to grow on than they were the starters to fine tune things.  Bama won't find a worse D Line this year, nor will they find a team with as slow a team speed as they saw this week, so what do the starters get from that?  Not much just more reps.  It also was good for the newer faces to see themselves get scored upon.  They perhaps were getting a little cocky and thought that they could coast.  They learned that every team wants to score.  Good lesson that will carry in film and practice. 
 
The more Drake plays the more I like
 
I preface this by saying that I would like to see him in early to see how he does against fresh defenses.  With that said, what he does when given the chance is pretty good.  He is a little more physical than Yeldon, but he has a better burst than Hart does.  He probably is about 2 weeks from being the 3rd back.  It isn't that Hart is playing bad, he's just playing better. 
 
Hart for return man
 
I'm RLB002 and I endorse this message.  Jones is ok.  However, he's starting that familiar bad habit of trying to catch in traffic without fair catching.  Remember, before he got hurt, Hart was getting a long look as a return man.  His size and moves fit that kind of role well.  It is more or less will he forget his knee and play the game he can. 
 
The Bad...
 
Redzone zip
 
Like many, I grumbled a bit about how the redzone play calling is getting a little bland and a lot like the last few years where they roll it up if they don't get in on second down.  That really falls on one person, Saban.  The problem he's going to have is that you cannot undo what you have done for weeks.  His reluctance to attack once in there has been a familiar theme.  It isn't an issue if you keep the other side from scoring like they have been, but we all said that wasn't a problem last year until LSU came to town.  It only takes one game to screw things up, and Bama won't get that lucky second chance this year if they stumble to someone.  If they do stumble, it will be a redzone issue that costs them. 
 
The Ugly...
 
none
 
 
Random Thoughts....
 
Four Weeks in and it is clear....
 
The BCS is going to have a down year.  When you look at the field, and you scan the top 15 preseason teams who are usually in the real hunt for the title, what folks thought was there isn't.   When you look at them, this is what you see:
 


1

USC (25)  Nope.  Kiffin undercoaches this time.

2

Alabama (17)  Haven't been tested yet, but they look the part.

3

LSU (16)  Got a little test from Auburn, but offensively they are vulnerable again.

4

Oklahoma (1)  Not just no, but hell no.  Stoops is running out of faithful voters. 

5

Oregon  Maybe but they didn't really blowout Arizona if you watched it. 

6

Georgia  Any team that needs phony motivation to win runs out eventually....

7

Florida State  Got a test and passed, but it wasn't with an A.  They have not improved on D.

8

Michigan (1)  I bet that 1 guy wishes he could blame it on drugs right now.

9

South Carolina  Schedule is too tough and their OL is too weak.

10

Arkansas  John L Smith could tear up a steel ball

11

West Virginia  I will be honest, I have liked what I have seen of them.  Lots of vets and a mission to win now.

12

Wisconsin  Losing their OC has unraveled the mystery of the Wis

13

Michigan State  Survey says X

14

Clemson  Same ol Clempsun....lots of talk, lots of hype, and lots of points given up in the 2nd half.

15

Texas  Blistered Ole Miss but who hasn't?  Nothing to say they are really that strong yet. 
 
This is who the nation by in large thought was the best of the best before the year.  Does that mean voters are that wrong?  No.  It just means that there are that many teams that underperformed thus far.  It is a down year because nobody outside of Alabama has separated itself from the pack or even presented itself as a legitimate contender.  To be honest, LSU has the defense to go far.  Their problem is October- FLA, USCar, aTm, and then in November Bama.  Oregon has a rough November with USCal, Stanford, and Oregon St.  UGA book ends October with USCar and Florida.  If they find a way through that, they get Bama or LSU and they have yet to show they have the defense for Bama's power game or the offense to handle either team's defense.  So the pack is ripe for an underdog this time, but it isn't like there is a greatest of all time lurking. 

All this time later, some fans still Aubsess

I get why fans who live in Alabama have a case of Aubsession.  They hear it 365.  However, you really shouldn't care.  Yes they won a title in the last 3 years.  Yes, they won once in 3 years against Bama.  Yes, they still play football....well they wear the uniforms at least.  However, the amount of time chortling about their "demise" is silly.  To me, it is more worthwhile to watch them, and smile but spend my time thinking what Bama is doing.  Some still talk about Cam.... that dog won't hunt nor will he get off the porch.  SI has yet to deliver that story that all have waited on.  The whole Aubsession ranks up there with Linus waiting for The Great Pumpkin.  The mere fact that some sites have to dedicate a thread to their message boards for Auburn discussion on ALABAMA sites says the base does not have the eye on the prize. 

Is Dee Hart really a better running back than Kenyan Drake?

Depth Charts are a tricky thing, especially when Saban is holding the pen.  Hart has practiced and been in the program longer.  He has rehabbed and is back in the flow as a 3rd string.  Does that make him better?  No.  Means he knows the plays better.  He also is probably a slightly better pass blocker than Drake is.  Keep in mind, you haven't seen him have to do that enough yet to know.  Hart has done a little more work in that area.  It isn't about stopping the rush, as much as it is slowing it and diverting it.  With that said, in about 2 weeks, Drake probably gets ahead of Hart because he's playing better and needs more snaps.  Hart is better suited in a different offense really, but he can be a return specialist.  I don't know what we would say had Hart not gotten hurt last year or how he would have done.  I do know that I would have liked that conversation and situation better. 

Is TJ Yeldon really a better running back than Kenyan Drake?

This is a trickier question on the grounds that they aren't the same type of runners.  Yeldon is probably the more complete player.  Drake is a more dynamic player.  His spark is different than Yeldon's because he changes the tone of the game with his style of play.  That's why you notice him so much.  Why is Yeldon catching your eye against Michigan but kinda drifting since?  Eddie Lacy has taken his carries.  Give Yeldon 20 carries, you are calling him the next chosen one.  Give him 8, not so much.

September 17, 2012

The Good...The Bad...& The Ugly....Arkansas

The Arkansas game is over and two things are abundantly clear after 3 weeks....

1.  Alabama is one of the elite.
2.  Arkansas isn't worth a sheet....

More on 2 later in Random Thoughts.  As to the game, it was a good game for them to have because they haven't really had a 4 quarter performance, and they finally got that this week. 

OFFENSE

The Good...

The more Bama runs, the more opponents hate playing them

The good thing about having 4 solid options to run the ball is that they all stay fresh and they all continue to break opponents.  Lacy finally looked confident and that set the tone early.  Yeldon did well in his turn.  Hart is their change of pace now that Fowler is gone.  The guy that I think may be the best of the group is Drake.  Yeldon and Drake as a one two punch is scary for the future.  They compliment each other really well.  I think we see more of him as the season wears on.  They will try to get him up on carries to keep Lacy healthy. 

When you run first, then pass, your O Line will always look better

If you are one of the many thinking that DJ Fluker and/or Cyrus Kouandjio both played better, you would be right to a point.  The reason is a long held belief that many linemen have.  If you get them going downhill early, they play better.  Establishing the run is not hard with the size Bama has.  The problem is that teams will stack the box on them.  However, if they continue to pound, typically two things happen.  One, they can establish bites on play action, and two, they wear down defenses. 

Good day for DJ McYeldon....

Verne can't help it, scotch has that effect on people.  It made grandpas confuse their wives with their barmaids for ages.  Getting serious though, McCarron had probably his best game of the year, and he really did the least at times.  The main thing to keep in mind is that the game was over by halftime.  It was because of turnovers and McCarron making passes when they had to have them.  He spread the wealth around pretty well hitting 7 receivers in the short time he played and got his chemistry down with Cooper and Jones. 

That fad called the Spread seems to be contagious....

If McCarron gets hurt, many fans will eat words over the spread because that is what Bama will have to run to compete. 

The Bad...

The more I watch Ely, the more I wonder if Avalos hit reset on his college career

I am sure I will get a little grief over that, but Ely has about the weakest arm I've seen on a Bama QB since Avalos.  He doesn't look confident or comfortable, but he probably knows the  playbook and that gets him more looks as Alex gets up to speed and grows into a serviceable QB.  While Sims is their best option, I don't feel that much better about him outside of running the option.  His arm is noticeably bigger than Ely's, but I don't know that anyone, including the staff, knows if he can read a cover 2 under pressure. 

The Ugly....

None


DEFENSE

The Good...

Making their asses quit with backups too

Bama imposed its will early and often on a mentally broken Arkansas team.  The bottom line is that they knew they could and they did early.  The game was over, and in past weeks they let up, this week they dug in and broke them some more. 

Young guys looking good in mop up

I really like the way some of the new/backup guys play.  DJ Pettaway continues to impress.  He really has a power rush that collapses his man on every play it seems.  Pagan is earning a lot of PT during meaningful minutes, and I won't be shocked if he takes over for Dial soon.  Devall looked like the Jack of the future.  I thought Hubbard finally came out of his shell after 2 weeks of meh.  I can see why Lake had his RS burned early, he's a load to move in the middle.  The more the Tide clean up on the field, the more time these guys get to play and grow in real time situations. 

Turnovers

Bama now has a net margin of 11, tied with Mississippi State for best in the nation.  They added 5 on Saturday and it was a clinic to watch the linebackers stripping the ball, the defensive backs tipping passes up to get 2nd chances, heck it was so contagious that Dee Hart caused a fumble.  Bama doesn't necessarily need a ton of turnovers to be dominant and win games, but it sure does make it easier. 

There wasn't anything really that bad or that ugly....

RANDOM THOUGHTS

John L Smith is really Joe Kines in disguise

Same wild eyes, same frontier gibberish, same really crappy teams, and same bad interviews (Joe meet John). 

I'm not sure if he was talking about his Friday night or the team in the latest in a history of bizarre moments....click John to get that one....  Regardless, Arkansas has effectively sent their program back to the foundation and all that has been built and created is gone.  Their recruiting class last year wasn't great.  This one will hit a new low as nobody of quality will go there unless they are just a true Hawg fan.  Next few will struggle even after they name a permanent replacement because the rebuilding process will not be attractive to many. 

I don't dislike the plan Arkansas had in getting a 1 year fill in on short notice.  They didn't jump the shark and hire a problem like Bama did with Shula.  However, they could have gotten someone with a better track record than Smith.  3 weeks in and Arkansas players have rolled up the tent and started thinking about next year.  Even with Wilson back in a week or two, they have a lot of issues.  The players really aren't to blame.  They went from national title aspirations to national joke with the hiring of Smith.  They don't look like a team that has any chemistry.  The old staff and Smith may not gel well.  I don't recall him ever running anything that was as advanced as Petrino's style.  Those guys are probably eyeing the door too.  I would. 

Auburn thanks Arkansas for being so lousy...

The only thing hiding Auburn's implosion from 2010 champion to 2012 doormat is Arkansas and Ole Miss.  The issue with Auburn is three fold:

  1. Their recruiting has been a miss despite the stupid star rating systems
  2. Their players are running an offense and defense that do not fit them at all.
  3. Their ability to develop players seems to be sub par to the conference. 

Take that away, they're alright...  Short of having the best player the SEC has seen in a decade or more in Cam Newton save them, they are nothing short of mediocre with no hope. 

Despite the AUBsession, it is time to get over them

Bama sits as one of 2 powerhouses in the country.  They recruit well.  They play well.  They look set for the long run.  So what do 80 percent of Bama fans talk about on message boards during the week?  Auburn.  Some are still hung up on Cam.  Some are all in on the Memphis story.  Some are all over anything Auburn and want to pick it apart.  While all of this is a choice to make, it is an unhealthy one.  Let it go.  Let them do what they do, and make sure Bama does what they do. 

That does not mean start over hyping anything Saban or Alabama does.  This is the best stretch since Stallings was the coach, and with one or two more years like the last 4, he will be on a run that only Coach Bryant has had.  However, that does not put him anywhere near Coach Bryant's stratosphere.  What he did in the 70s is the benchmark to me if you want to compare.  8 out of 10 SEC titles, 3 national titles, and a slew of legendary players that went on to the NFL.  The standard is the standard, it doesn't get lessened just because the times change.  Lower your standard for greatness, you won't be great.  I doubt Saban would like the question about him vs Bryant if you posed it to him.  He'd probably go off on a 30 minute tirade about it. 

September 9, 2012

The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly....WKU

While I would love to sit here and say that the team improved as a whole from week one to week two, I cannot.  Nor can I say that this team is not a clone of 2010 thus far.  There are so many comparisons to make that have me worried about the letdown game somewhere ahead, that I try not to think about it. 

OFFENSE

The Good....

The passing game gets going early...

In flashes, the offense was as dominating as last year's defense.  Getting the field stretched and hitting targets all over the field- namely Norwood and Jones- will have teams scouting the Tide accounting for them and should open up running lanes and other WRs. 

AJ McCarron had a growing up moment

AJ of last year probably rolls up the tent after sack 3.  AJ of this year kept plugging away and making things happen.  There are plenty of things to look at and grow from for AJ in spite of the stat line, but one thing that the staff will probably notice is that he kept his head up and didn't fear the rush this time.

Sims at QB2....Ely at Attrition Train Station 1

I don't honestly like either as a true starter.  However, if the worst event that could happen this year happened, I would prefer Sims at QB simply because he is enough of an athlete that he can make a play or two that Ely just won't.  Sims at QB will also create some consideration to a more spread option look.  While I am not anti-spread, I don't like the thought of going a complete 180 from where you were, but that is the best they can do if the situation is needed. 

The Bad...

The scouting report has leaked out....Fluker and CyKo are flat footed....

If you have read my thoughts over time, you know that DJ Fluker has that issue.  Cyrus wasn't as noticeable against Michigan, but it was pretty clear that he has no idea how to defend his inside shoulder.  For Cyrus, that's a week of intense practice.  For Fluker, he's too far gone and too damn heavy and slow to change.  I know a guy his size can move, I am watching a ton of them do it on Sundays.  What is worse, Bama could not run on Western FREAKIN Kentucky!  A week removed from thumping Michigan, they looked poorly prepared to play.  Probably why Saban was so irritated last week.  That being said, I know some will spin their bullshit til they are blue in the face out there as to why it didn't happen.   I can tell you anyone who tells you that it was the plan or that WKU is really good or that they aren't used to playing smaller players or whatever lack of testicle to brain answer you get, they are all bullshit.  They aren't as good as they think they are right now.  Period. 

With the lack of control at tackles, the number of passing options drops by 2

If Bama has to get into max protect situations just to save AJ, that will take 2 receiving options out of the play.  That will be Williams and whomever is manning H/TE to cover the flaws.  That is a really bad situation for the Tide offense because they are at their best when they are spreading the wealth to 3 WRs and the TE/H Back. 

The Ugly....

Someone abducted Saban and put Shula out there in the second half......

I know he's a genius and I'm not, but there is 0 reason for any starter to be in their role in a 28 point game.  Jalston Fowler's injury is another reminder that you sometimes are too cute for your own good.  Fowler was at fullback and got rolled up.  His status is unknown at the time that I type this.  Would he have been out there in the 4th?  Yes.  Would he have been in the spot where he got hurt?  No.  He would have been at tailback and on another assignment.  The good news, and it is a real stretch to find a good news in an injury, is that it wasn't McCarron because the depth chart is pretty deeply divided from 1 to 2.  Another worry that is starting to creep up is that they don't know how to finish off a team for good. 

Two weeks, two quick starts, two weak finishes. 


DEFENSE

The Good....

Any shutout is a good shutout

Will there be coachable moments on defense?  Yeah, but the bottom line is that they did not let WKU score nor did they really get close. 

There is depth in some spots and the talent there is good...

Guys like Pettaway, Pagan, DePriest, Stinson and Dickson playing at the level they are should give fans a good sense for what the future holds.  I really like how each of them play and disrupt the play on both run and pass.  Their stat lines may not show much at times, but the job they have done thus far has been impressive for each of them to have as little playing time as they have (minus Stinson).  I would also like to see some more of Lake to see how he performs in multiple weeks.  What I did see of him looked good.  Another player that impressed was Fulton.  I'm always going to like cover corners, and Fulton is a cover corner.  Where Milner and Belue are more zone covers, Fulton is a guy who, when allowed, can basically cut off a WR from the game.  He is physical off the line and isn't afraid to lay his shoulder in. 

Lots of Turnovers

It has been a while since Bama created 3 fumbles in a game.  One thing that has been a pleasant surprise has been that they go for the ball a little more.  In the past, they were more focused on just making a play, and that worked for the most part, but if Bama can be both stingy and a thief, that makes things hard for opposing offenses when it comes to planning and strategy. 

The Bad....

Soft Zone Issues

This continues to be an issue resulting in Bama not having a top end safety/leader in the secondary.  WKU made adjustments, none that resulted in scores, but they were able to find the gaps in the cover 2.  If Nico is going to play in space, he's going to have to get faster in his reads and move to the read faster than what he did.  Nick Perry continues to underwhelm and play out of position a lot.  I am surprised that they take risks with Lester as a pass rusher because I would think that he would be better in center field than Perry/Sunseri would?  If Wilson can play next week, and can see the film, he might be scared by 33 defenders, but once his head clears he might like how badly they play any route that breaks middle. 


The Ugly....

None


RANDOM THOUGHTS

Eddie Lacy won't be Eddie Lacy probably for about 4 games.

Not digging Lacy's game right now.  It is pretty clear from watching his body language that he's not ready to play but trying to gut it out.....yes there is a pun in there....but I don't know that I want him with the ball when the game is on the line.  Once he gets in game shape, I may change my thought on him, but right now, he looks timid and defeated at times. 

The implosion of the SEC West is on....

Texas A&M found out that even a mid-level Florida is tough when you aren't deep.  A&M and Missouri both learned that depth is what makes the SEC the best.  It isn't a one deep conference like the others are.  That is not unexpected and both will be in the 7-8 win level and probably get one win  that they shouldn't. 

Auburn's mess is much more complicated.  A team that has supposedly recruited well and has a lot of juniors and seniors should not look as bad as they did against MSU.  It is a bizarre tale that it isn't just stars and ranks, it is character and fitting the program.  They have players that are spread players trying to play power football now.  That dog won't hunt.  On defense, they have a couple of good players, but they have missed on so many players that there is a noticeable lack of depth and talent.  Of course, when your offense can't muster a touchdown, your defense can be 3 deep and it won't survive. 

Arkansas is its own doing too.  Not going out and finding a permanent replacement for Petrino is going to result in a lost season that has a 3 to 4 year impact.  Recruiting is not going to be kind to the Hawgs when they cannot say where they are going.  The players on the team are not going to buy in to a guy that may or may not be around long.  Why should they?  They can go down Smith's path and then have to make a complete switch if they go out and get another coach.  It is a poor answer to a problem that will haunt them for a while.  It has the mark of Mal Moore's Shula hire all over it. 

Congrats to Rich Rodriguez

Oklahoma State got some tough karma from Arizona in the middle of the night.  Rod's Wildcats absolutely donkey punched the Cowboys to the tune of 59-38.  I get made fun of for saying that he's actually a pretty good coach, he just took the wrong job at Michigan.  Out west, he can get more speed players from California and the rest of the region to run his spread offense.  He was never going to get that kind of talent in the rust belt.  That area produces more plodders and hog mollies.  Will he win a title there?  Nah.  Will he make Arizona relevant again?  Probably. 

UGA doesn't play Old Man Football...they play Lil Man's Football

While the UGA nation believes they are tough, let's be honest.  They are not as good as half the West.  They have an undersized defense, and an undersized QB, that wilted last year every time they got punched in the mouth.  That test comes in the back to back games with UT and USCar.  The thing that is amusing is that they think they are tough.  Do you see tough when they play?  Or do you see opportunistic?  I see the latter because they spend a lot of time feasting on the lesser thans and not much time beating the best of the best.  They may earn the title of playing old man's football, but I'd reserve that to teams that win big games and tough games. 

September 2, 2012

The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly....Michigan

So if you have been looking for this blog link on other sites, you won't see it.  The reasons are the reasons, but my weekly review of the Bama games and Random Thoughts will continue for another year and beyond.  However, if you want to get the first notice when this updates, follow the blog or follow me on twitter @rlb002gbu. 

With that little piece of house keeping done, I thought the game was two parts- the total demolition of Michigan and the letting the boot off the throat of Michigan.  With all the effort to not compare this team to 2010's team, they did the one thing that everyone always remembers about 2010....they let up when they could have kept the pressure on them.  Overall though, I thought it was a good statement for the team to make and the case is made now that they are in the top 4.  In no particular order, those are Oregon, USCal, LSU and Bama. 

OFFENSE

The Good...

4 Backs....4 ways to break a spirit.

The news story for the running backs is that for the first time since 2007, there is no clear cut number 1 back.  Instead, Bama is going to run with a 4 headed attack of Lacy, Yeldon, Fowler, and Hart.  None of which are quite ready to take 20 snaps a game, but all of which can take 35 to 40 a game.  With the focus on play action, that is going to be a necessity.  They have to establish the run with multiple backs to run waggles and play action passes with all 4. 

With a Rebel Yel(don) she cried more more more

After one game, it is easy to get over hyped about Yeldon's ability and potential.  What isn't over hyped is that when he gets the ball, he gets the most out of every carry.  The comparisons begin to all sorts of backs from Ingram and Richardson, because they are closest in fans minds, and Humphrey because he torched teams.  To be honest, he is closer to Alexander than any of those guys because like Shaun, he gets low and is more spins and jukes than power and punch.  Regardless, the upside is unlimited to him because as he gets acclimated to the SEC, he will learn and grow into the next star. 

The TE can be thrown to!!!!

Williams' playaction play was a great play because not only did he get the ball, he clubbed the guy in front of him and rubbed off to get open.  I would like to see them use him and the other TE/HBacks more to get things open and torture safeties.  Putting Williams into the passing game probably won't happen much because Fluker's pass blocking is still weak, but the chances they get to use him and roll him across the field and get him running down hill will be a good thing. 

Fowler moods

It is not a secret that I don't get all giddy about him like some do.  That said, I see his role on the team.  He isn't a starter but he has a niche role that is important.  With Yeldon being the speed back, he's gotta be the power back.  He can provide 10 or so carries a night of bruising up and down running.  Other plays he can be the fullback/h back to lead block and punish.  His blocking improved over the course of the night as his first block was a wiff, but after that he got his head up and drove linebackers around fairly well.  He ain't gonna ever run left but he will move the pile when they need it, and that's a role they desperately need. 

AJ started hot

AJ likes the playaction offense.  It fits his style and mentality.  To be honest, the playbook was pretty bland thus far, and I think they were happy to not have to go deep into the book, but I wish they had worked a little deeper to give teams more to think about in the passing game.  The stat line wasn't great, but the top 2 stats are that they did not have any broken plays and they didn't have to burn any timeouts or have any delay of game penalties to get the play going.  Saban will look at that as much as anything for him.  By the way, I can half way tolerate the tattoo, but the purple bow tie and stealing my sunglasses from 1986 aren't tolerable.....

The bad...

After a quarter and a half, it got meh in a hurry

That isn't a player fault as much as the entire playcalling mentality fault.  It was pretty clear that once up 24, they wanted to nurse it.  The problem with that is the same today as it was in 2010, that is dangerous and can bite you.  I don't think some folks realize that Bama was 1 blown coverage or turnover from being in a game again in the second half.  I thought they got a little too cute with some of the things they were trying to do in the 3rd quarter and it stalled out the offense and resulted in less than great numbers for McCarron. 

OL Pass Protection

Outside of CyKo and Jones, the pass protection was pretty sub par most of the night.  Fluker's footwork for as many games as he has played is just not acceptable.  I lost count watching the replay of how many times he lost containment or just got rushed over.  The issue is that he just doesn't get his feet off the ground.  I know it can be done, I saw Yokozuna climb the top rope and do a splash on jabroni's back in the day.  Fluker just has to get motivated to move.  When he does slide and step out, he's pretty dominating, but when he gets flat footed, he gets his hat handed to him.  Same issue really with Steen.  He hesitates and gets flat and loses his entire containment because he's not fast enough to recover.  Warmack has moments where he just forgets what to do it feels like.  From a run block perspective, all 5 do as good a job as anyone in the nation.  However, with Arkansas, Missouri, and LSU ahead, they won't be afforded the luxury of just running it to death. 

The Ugly....

AJ's shovel pass shoveled poop

It may have been the most feminine pass I have ever seen.  I know this much, he's probably getting hazed (rightfully so) for it, and will get some growling from the staff for it.  That play may be burned at the next bon fire......

DEFENSE

The Good....

Front 7 play

For the most part, I thought the success on defense wasn't individual efforts but the front 7 locking down a mobile QB and holding them to 85 yards and 2.4 per carry.  Granted their starter was out, but that number isn't changing that much.  A program that has always wanted to establish the run, was pretty dormant and ineffective.  Credit guys like Square and Dickson as well as Williams and Stinson for collapsing the pocket and run lanes all night.  Short of one lapse where Michigan beat the containment and the RB danced about 20 yards, there was 0 momentum for the Wolverines via the run. 

Hitting is contagious, I doubt Saban takes them to the doctor

It was pretty clear early that everyone was amped up and ready to pop helmets on both sides.  Short of Johnson losing his composure and going high on Robinson, they laid some really clean hits and they were all fundamentally sound.  No shoulder only shots, no heads down, no flying around and missing stuff, it was all squaring up and popping the guy with the ball. 

Secondary play early

I will say this and expect the grumbles, but I didn't like the secondary play as a whole.  The obvious breakdowns were there, but I saw at least 7 plays where the secondary was beaten and Michigan just didn't execute.  However, early on, they had to confuse Robinson and make him second guess himself.  Mission accomplished.  Between the guys up front hitting him around, and the secondary moving around and showing zone playing man and visa versa, he was rattled and struggling for a good while. 

CJ Mosley

His touchdown was a product of good pressure and him doing a good job of shadowing Robinson in the flat.  Dickson beat his man and bore down on Robinson in the end zone.  So, his timer is short anyways because he's deep in the endzone, add a blitzer bearing down on him, he's ready to get it out of his hand as fast as he can.  That means he isn't reading his progressions, he just knows that X Y Z H are in areas.  When that happens, a linebacker as good as CJ is in space sits back, reads, and cuts the pass off.  That play is a good sample of his play.  He loves to move in space and follow the play.  He's very smart and probably is going to be better than Rolo when his career ends.  I say that because he sees the game better than Rolo did at this point. 

The Bad...

Two breakdowns, two pants needing feces removed

As folks on www.crimsonchat.com will tell you, I talked about the inexperienced secondary being an issue early this year.  After game 1, that issue is still there.  If you slow down several plays, they gambled and got lucky.  However it wasn't a gamble and pick or a gamble and a swat, it was a gamble and the QB couldn't hit the guy or the WR muffed it.  There was a lot of that.  Millner was probably the most guilty of doing it.  It worked for him but there are better QBs ahead.  Belue made some rookie mistakes, and despite fans trying to fool themselves into thinking playing in Pigmuff JuCo League means he's experienced, he's a rookie and has never played this kind of speed and talent.  Neither corner worry me as much as the poor safety play. 

Both breakdowns are equal blame on corners and safeties.  The issue is that they too are not experienced in meaningful plays outside of Lester.  Lester got a stinger but before that it seemed that they were trying to use him like he was Barron.  That's not a good experiment because he's too timid and hesitates too much.  He's better in center field.  Sunseri is more that role, but he lacks the speed to react to things.  I cringe to think how they deal with Arkansas WR and Missouri's WRs with him.  HaHa looks like a hitter but seems to be slow to react to things he sees.  That is to be expected because he never played either.  Both are out there for the first time in a real game and it looked that way when they played.  I am just going to say, I hope Perry is only playing because Lester got hurt.  All I am going to say bout that.

The Ugly...

Kickoffs

Saban and Williams want to get air under the ball.  I get the theory, but if you have a guy running it out every time, you increase the odds of a bad play.  We all know Foster can donkey punch the ball out of the endzone now that the ball is up.  So what if they are at the 25?  I'd rather know they are at the 25 every time than maybe at the 15 once, and 35 the next and I'm not talking about their 35....Talking to Griffith last year, they want all their kickers to sky it and not worry about the distance.  That didn't work last year and it has potential to be a problem this year.

RANDOM THOUGHTS

Penn State- Welcome to Unhappy Valley for 30 years

The prison sentence they are going to deal with is justified.  Fans will hate it.  Boosters will hate it.  Recruits will hate it.  Nostalgic fans like me will hate it.  That doesn't lessen the need to make an example.  Socially unacceptable things like covering up child abuse so that the legacy of JoePa is preserved is not acceptable.  Penn State now embarks on the long redemption to find their new identity.  The long term penalties will be gone, and with it will be a program that has been relevant for 40 years.  The odds that they return to prominence is small.  Even smaller will be the crowds eventually.  The legacy of Paterno, as much as his estate wishes it wouldn't be, will be the empty seats from his empty moral compass. 

Savannah State take that whoopin, pay the bills

You can bitch about the score Okie State put on them, but hey, they shelled out 400,000 for that beating.  They were getting their money's worth.  Besides, would you rather them do what cross state Chokelahoma did?  Savannah gets another big payday next week with the Criminoles.  Another 475,000 for that massacre, and they pay for the entire athletics program.  That's why it is ok.  They want that whooping so that gymnastics and basketball and baseball and soccer and water basket weaving teams get theirs.  Remember, South Florida, Southern Miss, Ohio, and others used to do it, and they have all become quality mid-tier opponents to play now.  So, yes, Mike Gundy is a jerk, but the beating they put on D7 Savannah State is not a good sample of his issue.  The first time he doesn't get his way this year, and I hope it happens often, will show why he's not likeable. 

Time for LSU and Alabama to cut off the rest of the SEC....

One thing that twitter and facebook have taught me this weekend is that other schools are more than happy to trade on the foundation that LSU and Alabama have put in.  Many UGA fans point to the strength of the SEC, and I'm sure Auburn and other fans would too if they could win, but the truth is that the SEC isn't that strong as much as it is blessed to house 2 of the best teams in the last decade.  Meyer's Florida teams need consideration for the dominance of the BCS too, but the rest of the SEC has not supported that argument.  Georgia failed to stop Michigan State.  The same MSU that got plastered by Bama's 3rd string a year before.  Auburn looked soft and lacking depth vs. Clemson.  The same Clempsun that got hung a 70 by West Virginia (who I think win the Big 12 this year).  The rest are just as guilty over the last year or 3.  Auburn and Georgia fans are more guilty of talking about how great a conference they play in.  So, it isn't how good the SEC is, it is how good Bama and LSU have been for 6 years. 

July 2, 2012

10 Things You Might Not Believe Now But Will In December

Since reading the Bama Nation's message boards are about as exciting as having Brit Hume at your Cheetah bachelor party, time to think a bit......

There are 10 potential scenarios that fans may not want to believe today, but may accept in December:

1. Nick Gentry will be missed more than Upshaw
While simple thought process would say Upshaw was a near first round pick and such, the issue isn't about draft status as much as what both meant in their roles on the team.  Neither will be as missed as Hightower or Barron, but the 3rd most missed player will be Gentry.  Why?  He provided a key role on a team that had very few serviceable Defensive Tackles.  This fall without him, they are now reaching to find that interior pass rusher and nickel tackle.  Upshaw's role will be filled just as he did after Anders left.  The depth and talent at Jack is such that even as good as he was at times, the step down is not as drastic as it is at tackle.  Also, Upshaw, as good as he could be at times, went missing other times.  Week in and out, you saw Gentry make an impact. 

Another aspect that some fans seem to forget is that Williams didn't exactly take to playing the nose last year and to date has not looked truly comfortable yet.  He's a natural 4-3 tackle, and that is why he played end last year was to play the 3-5 gap or B-C gap.  He had a hard time adapting to the fact he was going to be doubled or tripled at times, something he never got in the 4-3.  Williams is a very good football player, and he is strong enough to play any of the 3 down lineman positions.  However, the mentality that it takes is different and that doesn't just happen cause you are told to play there.  Nose is a hell of a hard position to play, and probably the toughest to play on defense from a physical standpoint.  When Bama went Nickel or Dime, Gentry's rush allowed Williams to play more free.  He doesn't have that wingman this year.....yet.  Yes some of you will say this guy or that, but it is all speculative today. 

2. Hanks will be missed more than Maze
While Maze was the vertical threat of the two, Hanks was the guy that made a lot of big catches that kept AJ McCarron in rhythm.  Folks will say that they have Norwood and White and this guy and that guy.  What we are talking about though is potential and not consistent production.  We cannot say with any truth that any are proven because none have been able to crack the depth chart.  Why will Hanks be missed more though?  Simple, he was their best all round player in the Wide Receiver core.  He was their best blocker, best route runner, and best hands.  They have guys that we know can go north and south, but do they have a guy who is willing to do the dirty work?  Will any of them go in motion and put a shoulder into a LB or safety off the snap to free up a runner?  The little things that happened with Hanks were never really realized, but I think we will start to notice it with this team.  Mississippi State is happy to see him go because he p'wned them every fall. 

3. This team would not be any better or worse with Duron Carter if he had played

Before you try to tell me that he's got a chance....stop....just.....stop.  While they need a playmaker at WR, Duron's physically it, but teammate/mentally wasn't it.  The thing that folks don't get is that he's not good with the "Process" that continues on.  A guy who has the baggage and issues with authority and rules will destroy a program by eating it from the inside out.  Don't belive it?  See Shula....See Dubose....See Richt....See Fulmer and on and on.  If he had played, would they score a couple more TDs at that position?  Probably.  Would the morale and chemistry of the team be worse and result in a loss or two more than otherwise?  Yes. 

4. Alabama's secondary will not be able to win a game like it did at times last year

Much like 2010, this year's secondary is very green.  It is a little more proven with Millner and Lester's experience, but Bama replaces a lot of key parts.  I like Sunseri a lot, but let's be honest, he's learning a position.  Collins and others may beat him because they are a little more natural at the safety position.  Belue and Fulton and company are all untested and will start their first game (if they are the starters in the end of summer drills). 

Like WR, the DBs are all speculative and not quantitative.  Millner has had some good games and bad games, but the question is can he be THE guy or will he have to hang in there?  There is not a Dre or Menzie (who was the best corner last year play to play to play) there to help shore up things or take the play over or cut the field in half.  He's got to be that player and if he can, great Bama is ahead of the game in a pass happy conference.  If he cannot be that guy, Bama has a lot of scheming to do.  The 2 loss question will be:  Will Bama try to scheme and zone them to death or will they pin their ears and play like they have a veteran team?  In 2010, I thought they were too passive and played back too much under the theory that if they dropped 7 in coverage, they could shore up a young secondary.  That didn't work.  SEC teams are too good to let sit and pick their progressions.  This fall, they have to trust them and if they give up a play here or there, that's fine.  They just need to produce more turnovers and more 3 and outs to keep them off the field. 

5. Alabama will not miss Coach McElwain, but will miss Sunseri.

Surprised?  Shouldn't be.  You wanna know who the offensive and defensive coordinators are at Alabama?  Same guy it has been since he got there....Nick Saban.  They have ran the same schemes and formations on both sides practically for his entire term and will do so now.  Does that mean Mac and Smart and Steele and Nuss are not a part of the success?  No, nothing of the sorts.  Look, it gets real simple when you look at Major Applewhite's failure to grasp Saban's concept and Mac's abillity to work in the system.  You can hire any name you want, but in the end, they are gonna be asked to work through Saban's methodology.  McElwain was a good coach and developed 2 good QBs in his time there.  With that said, the drop off to Nussmeier is superficial right now.  They run and think the same gameplan basically coming in. 

That isn't the same in filling Sunseri's presence.  A coach that was well thought of and respected across the board, and earned a role he was deserving of, has been replaced by a recruiter.  While that will pay dividends in some ways, shouldn't winning recruit itself now?, his work has never been great anywhere he's ever gone.  Also, as his career proves, you still have to coach and teach to make players great not just get a 5 star name on the roster.  His work at Bama is worth merit as a recruiter, but his recruiting at UT and Georgia Tech were good, at their level, but they lacked the second and more important half- coaching.  It also is going to be an issue because Lance couldn't stay still if he wanted to.  His resume is a hop a skip and a jump over and over:

2012-PresentOutside Linebacker CoachAlabama
2011Defensive Line CoachTennessee
2009-2010Linebacker CoachTennessee
2007-2008Outside Linebacker CoachAlabama
2004-2006Defensive CoordinatorUCF
2002-2003Assistant Head Coach, Recruiting Coordinator & Tight Ends CoachLSU
2001Defensive Line Coach & Recruiting CoordinatorGeorgia Tech
1999-2000Defensive Line CoachAlabama
1995-1998Defensive Line Coach & Recruiting CoordinatorGeorgia Tech

Do I hold it over him for going to UT?  Sure do.  Can he earn trust?  Well he has Saban's and I am sure he called him and said "hey, I screwed up" (yeah there's a dig and an inside joke).  The issue with him is that he's not a great Xs and Os guy that Sunseri is.  Sunseri's experience and near coordinator like approach will not be replicated on the staff, but from the view of things as is, they are covering it from the upper end this time.  My expectation for them is low as the experience is not there.  I fear that without a Sunseri type of coach, they may not be as progressed as they would be otherwise.  Remember, in 2009, that is when Anders and Reamer came on strong, especially after Hightower's injury.  In 2008, they were trying to piecemill guys at Jack and Sam.  I try to forget from 2000 to 2007 as much as I can. 

6. Nkemdiche and Foster are going to be recruiting attention hounds all year. 

As you can read over years of posting about this, I hate where recruiting is going.  I try to avoid reading it any more than I have to until about Thanksgiving.  Why?  Well, a commitment is just a thing you do to get attention.  It no longer is something that is a bond or keeping your word because some want to be on the top of every recruiting page each week.  That's pretty pointless to me.  Foster is becoming a story where you may not want to be the team holding his LOI in the end the way this thing twists around.  Also, traditionally, players who do this whole attention scheme event usually fizzle out faster. 

I don't like seeing players doing things like what recruits do now because they feed off the reaction.  They want to go to all these places and see their name at the top and they want to see the fans cry when they jump and cheer when they say they are interested or committed.  I especially don't like the package deal scenarios that are going on either.  With 25 solid spots to fill and the attrition rate being about 20 percent, it is hard to put 2 or 3 spots for buddies of the star recruit if they are gonna transfer in a year or two.  Foster may stay with Bama, he may flip to Georgia or whatever site gives him the most press, but regardless he seems content to run this game to the finish. 

Losing both or just RN isn't the end of the world, and it would be nice to have them, but it isn't the most pressing need they have this signing class. 

7.  TJ Yeldon will get more carries than Fowler will by the end of the season.

I get why fans love Fowler, but the future is Yeldon.  Fowler's conditioning and lack of speed will catch up to him because Yeldon can compliment Lacy and give them a threat without letting off the gas.  It will be the best duo since Ingram and Richardson in 2009.  Fowler's role will continue to be the game finisher.  Getting a lot of carries on a worn down defense and capitalizing on it.  Some guys have that kinda luck.  I just don't see Fowler getting over the limitations he has by the end of summer.  If you wonder where this comes from, just go back to last year when Lacy was out.  Fowler's production vs. those teams is nothing like what it was when he was mopping up the victory.  That isn't a knock on him, but it is a fact of life in the backup RB race.  One guy has all the skills, and can block well enough, and one is a north south runner nothing more or less. 

I will say this, I'd take Fowler 7 days a week and twice on Sunday before I'd ever touch Crowell (told y'all he was a quitter/mental). 
 
8. Alabama's championship moment will not come at LSU.

Surprised?  It is more than likely Missouri.  Missouri is that South Carolina type team that will be at home and loaded for the upset.  Missouri wants to make a name for itself, but can they do it against the best?  That's the moment in itself.  Sure there is Michigan on opening night.  Yes LSU will be a big game, but I am not sure they will be the LSU of last year.  They will be good, but not undefeated and a juggernaut waiting for Bama like they were last year. 

Missouri looks like that circle game where Bama makes their mark or not.  Is Missouri a national title team?  Hell no.  However, they have the schedule and the type of team to be what USCar was in 2010 to this team.  The reason this is Bama's championship moment isn't that Mizzou is a great team, but they are that team that they failed to beat in 2010- USCar, LSU, AU- eager, offensive minded coaches (minus AU), and looking to make a statement.  They are that kind of team and for Bama to make that statement that this isn't 2010, this is the game.  Not Michigan, not Arkansas (I doubt they do much this year with rent a coach), not anyone pre October.  This is the game that looks the most like that trap game they failed to get through in 2010.  Save all the bye week whining, save all the belly aching about any excuse, winners find ways to win and when you can't find the way, you lose.  Period.  Missouri is a pass first team, and they will be the real test of the young secondary.  Failure to find the way to win will result in a lot of groans that this is 2010 again. 

9. Bama is doomed to repeat 2010 if a vocal leader doesn't emerge.

Lost in the folklore of excuses and propaganda when folks talk about 2010, the vocal leader wasn't there.  Rolando McClain had left and the voice of the team was gone.  This year, they will need to find that voice again because Hightower and Barron were the voices of the team.  Sure there are guys who can lead, but the thing about leading isn't that it just happens, it is that you don't really lead until adversity is in front of you and what you do impacts the whole team. 

In 2010, those moments came and nobody really took the team and said no more, we win it now.  Last year, that happened after LSU, that happened every day after that game.  Will that happen now and who is gonna step up and be that man?  That will be the interesting moment is when they face a moment where they could lose, or worse do lose, will a player or group of players step up the moment and challenge every player to play above themselves? 

Who do I think will be that guy?  I think Nico Johnson or Barrett Jones would be the most likely candidates, but you never know when someone sneaks up on you as a leader. 

10.  Kelly will beat out Steen by year end.

I like being wrong.  It usually means that the team is doing better.  This may be one of them, but the last 2 seasons have been the same routine for Steen.  Lots of talk, fans hype, and he plays....then he loses his starting role.  With that said, he's not going to have a senior with experience looming behind him or around him this time.  However, Steen is a guy that seems to live and die by his power alone and struggles when technique and understanding how to play lineman in space come into play.  This really is his year to either turn the corner or get left behind.  He's a Junior now, he isn't young, he isn't "learning", and there aren't any reasons why he cannot learn and succeed now. 

Kelly has been a player that the staff really likes since he signed.  Much like McCullough and others, he's just a guy who plays the position(s) well, not great, and supplies the team with a solid performance.  Now, like I said before, he's not seasoned so he hasn't been thrown to the wolves quite as much, but he scrimmages against all the 1s quite a bit and seems to show a great deal of upside in those situations.  The question is, can he step up if Steen continues to play stiff and lets AJ get plowed a few times to many? 

With Jones at center and Fluker at tackle, Steen will have the best he's ever going to have surrounding him.  Of course, Jones has about as many snaps in live games at Center as Kelly does anywhere.  If Jones has a few issues adapting to Center, will Steen or anyone be able to help shore him up?  Lots of ifs and buts going into summer drills that we still don't know, and won't know much until September. 

February 4, 2012

Random Thoughts- Recruiting

This year's recruiting class lacked a lot of drama up until the end of the day.  Really, what we are seeing now is a program that is pretty business like that takes its pipeline, manages it 24/7, and keeps the pipeline flowing and does not get stuck on one or two things.  It will kill the drama that some fans love about signing day, but I like that they get it.  The drama can cut both ways for a program and if you seal the deal in November or December, you can focus on the next year while your competition is scrambling. 

As is the usual request, I look at video from YouTube, recruiting sites, and such to give a personal opinion on each recruit.  This entry is year in and out the most debated because I don't glow when there isn't a reason to glow.  I leave that to folks trying to make a buck off you. 

Early Enrollees

Ryan Anderson- Anderson is a Jack/End that will probably redshirt just because of depth at Jack, but he is a very talented guy who moves well to the play and seems to always be at the action.  Many High School ends have deer syndrome, they shoot straight up from the snap, but Anderson's first motion is straight, staying low, and driving up and knocking linemen backwards.  When he lines up outside shoulder, he loves to jam his hand on a tackle and keep space with his strength and technique.  I saw a few cases where he was doubled or shadowed by a FB or HB, and he recognizes that well and sees the scheme and seems to be ready to address that with good technique.  He is a guy that has a real violent streak when he plays.  Loves to drive guys into the turf and deliver the shoulder with force.  The downside is that he like many HS Seniors forget to wrap trying to deliver the highlight, but that is coachable.  Physically, he's ready, mentally, I think he's ready.  Enrolling early will benefit him and if he applies himself and presses Dickson and Hubbard, he could play this fall. 

Deion Belue- The expectations for Belue are high because Bama is low on depth at DB after a mixture of early departures for the NFL and recruits not panning out.  He's a very versatile player with good speed and size.  His knowledge at WR benefits him as a DB because he knows how to move to the route and play their hip.  There isn't a lot of video from JuCo but in HS he was really good at closing and if he was beaten on a route he had the speed to catch up and correct himself.  Originally, he was more of a Star Corner than a Corner, but he probably will be asked to play the island more.  He should be less raw now than he was 2 years ago, but we will know for sure in the Spring.  I look for the staff to spend a lot of time with him so that he can be a contributor/starter where ever they need him.  He also will be asked to be a returnman with Dee Hart, if recovered.  The big question is will he be more of a player with great skills or a guy with speed that gets away with mistakes?  For Bama to be great in the secondary again, he needs to be the first one. 

Chris Black- From a physical stand point, he's more of what they have had.  I would almost call him a Darius Hanks clone.  Before you think that  is a slam, remember I liked Hanks more than I did the rest of his peers.  He has good speed, but he isn't blazing fast (at the Under Armor he ran 4.54).  His burst is more at the 2nd and 3rd level than off the snap.  He is a pure WR and has been one since a freshman.  Many will watch him and say he's fast, but he is more elusive than fast.  He stays loose at the hips and can make guys miss in space.  He understands his position well and knows how to use his body to create separation when he can't out run a player.  Has really good hands and runs routes better than a lot of college guys do.  He is very smart and knows how to read zones and sit in the gaps.  He isn't as physical as Hanks was, but he probably moves without the ball better than Hanks did.  He probably will get a serious look with the early enroll but a lot depends on players like Carter, Bell, Bowman, etc as far as how far he makes it up the chart. 

Amari Cooper- Cooper was under the radar when Bama found him because his stat lines don't jump out.  That is more of an issue of the system he played in than him.  He reminds me some of DeAndrew White in his size and ability to go up for the ball.  He has great hands and really does a great job of not fighting the ball and using his hands in extension.  Many young WRs are apt to try to catch with their body and struggle to extend and catch they want to pull it to their chest to wrap up.  Cooper extends and snares  and that keeps the drops low and allows him to turn and go better.  He has a good burst off the snap and separates well by staying in control and not telegraphing the plays.  He isn't very physical and will not break many tackles, but he's a WR not RB.  Early enrollment will benefit him because they need his size and ability in the red zone.  Like Black, he's going to get a real look at PT because the depth chart is open. 

Trill Dixon- Another Dixon with a nickname.  The thing that you see when you watch Dixon play in HS is that he has really strong football instincts.  I like him at Corner better than I do Belue because he looks natural.  He loves to press, he is a strong tackler at Corner, and he has good speed to correct to the ball.  I think when you see him, his size will work well in the SEC because he's 6-2 and really plays to the ball well so he can play corner or star and be effective.  He had 7 Interceptions as a SR, 4 last year in JuCo.  He does well against the run by staying small and not giving linemen/TE a target to block and keeps his hips loose to change directions and break to the ball.  I can see him getting in the heads of WRs and making them break down mentally.  He loves to paw and bump around, so he'll be a favorite of the staff if he can play zone. 

Dillon Lee- I have had the pleasure of watching Lee play Calhoun High the last few years in the State Championships.  He is a lot like Sunseri in that he's as good at the line as he is in space.  I can tell you from talking to players that they really respect him because he doesn't quit.  He is always on the ball and always creating plays on defense.  He can play inside or outside linebacker because he moves in space well and has great speed for his size to move to the play.  He is well coached and plays the technique right.  I doubt he is in the 230s as listed by some, probably more like 215-220.  What makes him good is how well he reads and reacts to the play and can catch as well as he does.  Lee played TE on offense, but he can snag a pick like a corner.  He needs to learn how to play with his bigger frame at the next level. Last year he did struggle at times with playing linebacker after being more of a bandit safety for most of his career.  He can play Sam or Will in the 3-4 and has the nose for either position.  I personally would put him at Sam to allow him to shadow option QBs or match up with slot WR/TEs with his speed and ability to play space as well as he does. 

Alphonse Taylor- Taylor flipped from FSU late in the process and has enrolled to play Tackle.  He has a big frame and is fairly athletic for his size.  He moves well when he is in his stance and stays down.  He has a lot of lower body power and uses it when he comes out of his stance on either side of the ball.  As a DT, he is a natural double team target.  Reminds me a lot of Cody in those regards.  His conditioning needs a little work, but Scott will cure that or kill him this spring.  Getting him into the program will benefit him in his transition because he's got a lil baby fat he needs to shape. 

TJ Yeldon- The thing you see with TJ when he plays is that he has near NFL level vision and feel for the game.  He does an exceptional job of knowing what kind of player he is and using those strengths to his advantage.  He isn't a bruiser or a pounder, he is more like Shaun Alexander and knows how to square up and get small to make him harder to tackle.  He is a lot like Percy Harvin in that you can line him up in various areas and exploit matchup issues.  He has a great 2nd burst that separates him from defenders.  Yeldon is very patient and lets his blocks setup and that is something that is rare with HS runners.  He can be the total package as a change of pace to a bruiser like Lacy.  He will need to bulk up to take the SEC beatings and avoid getting high in his stride at times because the speed of the SEC will be a quick adaption for him or he could find a few injuries early on.  He won't redshirt and could be 2nd string with a strong showing this spring. 

The February 18

Dakota Ball- I have had the pleasure of watching Dakota play.  He is a blue collar worker.  He might remind you of Gentry with a little more natural talent.  He probably is going to be an End in the 3-4 and play inside at the 2 or 3 gap.  He will benefit from a redshirt to learn his role as most of his fellow D Linemen recruits do.  Ball is a mauler by trade and just likes to go north and south and wear out people with his power than swim and move.  However, when he is playing run, he moves through the gaps and gets to the ball well.  He has good hands but forgets to use them at times.  He likes to waller around too much and gets high at times.  He was well respected by his opponents and they speak about how tough he is and how they know they have their hands full with him each time they play because he won't quit despite the score.  Ball is a redshirt candidate but in time with some coaching and learning time under him, I can see him playing at end next to the jack to help create lanes for the linebackers and playing tackle in the nickel like Gentry did.  You won't be disappointed with Dakota when it is his turn, but some will not like him over the flashier names on the roster because he's not fancy, but ass kickings aren't fancy they are tough.  That's Dakota in a nutshell.

Landon Collins- As long as bat shit crazy doesn't ooze out during his years in college, there is nothing to stop Landon from being great.  On a similar note, I doubt the U gives his mama a ticket to the games because she's a walking recruiting problem.  There isn't a lot to not like about Collins as a safety.  He is able to play up on the line, he plays well in space, he is fast, and tackles well with good form.  Landon has shown the ability to play in zone coverage which is a rare trait that will probably earn him a longer look this summer.  He has the skill set to play star or money and is more of a strong safety than a free safety.  He isn't afraid to get in the box and make a hit or engage bigger linemen to get to the ball.  I like that he sees the field well and has a great instinct for the ball.  From a stat line recruiting perspective, he hits it all and won the SPARQ title because he hits all the measurements.  He was the 2nd fastest player at DB at the Under Armor game.  The weak points to Landon are more about his overconfidence.  He over pursues at times because he knows he's fast.  He has to develop a little more discipline when playing the run and man coverage.  He struggles in man at times because he plays tight and lets quick players juke him off enough to create the gap to make a play.  He corrects and makes the tackle, but when it is 3rd down, that is the small difference between punt and 3 more downs.  Landon won't redshirt, the recruiting battle won't allow that.  He probably will get some ST time and mop up unless he just beats the pants off Sunseri/Dix. 

Denzel Devall- Devall is a lot like Hightower coming out of school.  He wasn't a big name but he is a versatile player who can play standing up or hand down.  He is very physical and has a great understanding of how to play MLB.  He knows how to attack the gaps and not the linemen.  Devall is a big time tackler and loves to hit.  He looks faster than he is because he stays loose and moves well from side to side. He understands angles and how to time his attack from them.  For example, Prince Hall would just run straight into traffic trying to get to the ball and he either did or didn't get there.  Devall, like McClain and Hightower, sits back in position and moves to the opening and then attacks- keeping the linemen off him as long as possible and keeping him in the play.  Has great hands and uses them to jam linemen and keep them from engaging him.  Plays well with his hand down and can bull rush.  He needs coaching if they want to play him on the line because he is more raw and rough as a rusher.  Depth is the only thing keeping him from playing in rotation at Mike or Will this fall.  With DePriest, Patrick, Mosley*, and Johnson all available, he might sit a year and learn the schemes. 

Kenyan Drake- Drake played in the highest level of GA HS Football.  Drake is a bit of a tweener in that he can be a RB but he might have to be a WR-slot guy because of how he naturally plays. He kinda plays like an oversized scatback.  He is at his best in space playing in one on one situations.  At RB, he needs more patience and to get more compact in between the tackles.  He is fast, very fast, but he runs very stiff and lacks a 2nd move to break away.  He is a stronger runner once he gets beyond the box and is at the 2nd level.  Drake has the ability to play between the tackles but is at his best on sweeps, counters, and any run outside the tackles.  All the areas of work for him are not issues if he lines up as a WR.  At WR, his one move and go style is more appropriate and he has the speed and power to separate from the line against the bump.  Has really good hands and can sky up and get the ball.  Drake may not redshirt because he's got speed and they need it, but his potential is going to depend on where they place him for the long term.  He could be the 4th back behind Lacy, Hart, Yeldon or 5th behind Fowler. 

Kurt Freitag- Dillon Lee's teammate and another guy I have been able to watch over the years.  He is a winner and plays to win.  He won't get talked about a lot because he's a TE, but he's a very good receiver from the line and has been well coached.  He is a big body and blocks well and comes off the block to peel and catch well.  Buford liked to have him chip and peel into the flat so that the defense lost him in motion.  He is more of a receiving tight end than a blocker, but Bama has enough blockers.  He is a lot like Dial in that he can play H or TE and is devastating when in motion.  He has good hands and is a great short to middle threat like Dial was.  I would be surprised if he plays this fall just because the depth chart needs to stagger out, but if he plays, he can at ST and as a 2nd H Back. 

Brandon Greene- I think Greene is the best lineman they signed this year.  I like him because he's like Barrett Jones and can play every position.  He has really good footwork and plays zone blocking well.  I am surprised they aren't looking at him as a center, but they may think he will outgrow it.  Greene is a little light for an SEC lineman currently, but that's what redshirting works on.  I like that Greene can move and is a great pull guard candidate.  He displays a lot of vision and finds his 2nd block when in counter.  While he lacks mass, he doesn't lack a mean streak.  He can bury a defender and open a gap rather well.  I think he's a pure redshirt and plays guard or center at the next level because he is too short for tackle.

Adam Griffith- I remember when my brother was telling me I needed to see this guy kick.  I was skeptical like some on the Internets are.  I will say that I have never witnessed a high school kicker who can just kick over and over like a machine the way he does.  He is consistent and absolutely kills the football.  The thud is louder than the screaming fans, much like Janikowski's kicks thud off the tee.  He has a 60 yard leg without a tee, but is a solid 40+ yard FG kicker.  Gets good height on the ball and is a great kickoff kicker.  It is rare that the ball sails short of 65 yards on kickoffs.  He damaged the roof of the concession stand over time with his kicks. For what it is worth, the stand is a good 75 yards from the 40 on both sides.  Don't compare him to Smith or Foster or any other kicker Bama has had in the last 5 or 6 years, he's mentally and physically a better player than any of them.  He will play this fall in a minimum of kickoff and deep FG roles as Foster has all but lost his spot on the team. 

Caleb Gulledge- Caleb is a project that has been committed to Bama for what seems like an eternity.  He has played more defense than offense in his career, so to project him as a lineman, he is a project because he lacks the coaching and training to be an instant impact at OL right now.  He comes from a power program, so he knows how to win at a high level, and that is a key that many recruits can't say they have.  His OL footage is pretty limited and what little I have gotten to watch of him is pretty raw.  He is a guy who knows how to be bigger and maul over smaller players, but when he hits a guy of equal size, he lacks the footwork both in movement and placement to drive them far.  He needs a redshirt and probably one or two more years of coaching and discipline as a guard or tackle before he's ready. 

Tyler Hayes- Hayes is an OLB that is almost a Bandit/Safety type.  Has great instincts to the ball and wraps up on the tackle.  Tyler has corner speed and a great burst to separate as a running back.  Hayes plays linebacker from the right angles and pursuits that keep him in position to tackle clean and not get chewed up.  He is a potential ST player this fall, but he needs to bulk up because he lacks the size to play at the SEC level right now.  I think if he can get up to 235, he can be a real force at Sam or Will.  If he stays at this weight, he may get a look at SS.  He would excel in either role with his speed and vision. 

Brandon Hill- Another big project.  Hill has the size and power to be a great tackle.  He is fairly athletic for his size, but he is very raw from an understanding and technique perspective.  If you put him in a game early, he will probably be ruined, but in 2 or 3 years of coaching and training with Stoutland, he has all the skills to be an All SEC type.  He has a quick stride and good hands when in motion, but he doesn't know how to play the position.  He knows how to be bigger than the guy across the way.  He struggles with how to knock defenders out of the play or engage them and drive them down.  Much of that is technique issues that are common with guys like him, he often just fails to keep his pad level down and has a bad case of deer syndrome.  If he gets it, he'll be great.  If he doesn't, he is an easy attrition candidate.  How's that for a standard deviation?

Cyrus Jones- Cyrus has more talent than most players in this class.  He is as good at RB as he is at WR, or DB.  The issue there is where can he play that maxes out his potential and do you avoid making a BJ Scott error?  Honestly, I think he's gonna benefit from being a cornerback and they need more depth there than at WR or RB.  He has the game changing capacity to take any pass he gets and make it a TD.  He has great burst off the snap and keeps his hips loose to make quick cuts and break away for big plays.  As a corner, he can jam and press and has the speed to correct quickly.  He does a real good job of driving WRs off their routes and uses the sideline as his ally.  Has a good vertical and is probably the 2nd best return man in the class behind Belue.  His running style is smooth and gliding and will remind some of Julio where he doesn't look fast but he's burning past everyone with ease.  On either side of the ball, he reads the plays well and adjusts to make plays.  As a WR, he breaks route and helps the QB out, on D he plays back and reads the play and gets in position to make a tackle or INT.  He is a descent tackler for a corner, won't whip someone, but won't miss or shirk it either.  I can't see how he redshirts unless there is just too much depth at returner and/or corner. 

Korren Kirven- Kirven is probably a DE at the next level.  Reminds me some of Deaderick but probably a little more athletic than Brandon was.  Kirven is rough around the edges, and needs some conditioning work to be an every down player, but he has a good motor and is disruptive when he plays down and drives through.  Unlike some of his classmates, he does keep his pads under the opponent and has strong legs, but he sometimes forgets to use his hands to disengage.  Kirven with a RS will probably be a contender to replace Williams or Square next season.  He has the mentality and ability, he just needs coaching and conditioning and he'll be good to go. 

Darren Lake- Lots of potential with Lake, but he can be inconsistent.  For a guy tipping 330, he runs very well and has a lot of power coming out of his stance.  His issue is a common one, he shoots up too high (deer syndrome).  He has gotten away with being the bigger than the crowd player, but he uses his size and mass well and creates the need for double teams like Cody and Taylor do, but if he would get lower, he has the power to drive the pile back to the ball carrier.  Despite being raw, he brings his lunch pail to work and plays to the end every down.  Unlike Cody and others, he is a better pass rusher than they are and has a good swim move.  Lake can play end or tackle much like Jessie Williams can.  He just needs some fine tuning and he will be a good contributor if he does what he's taught.  The measurable stats are definately there. 

Alec Morris- This is either Jimmy Barnes 2.0 or Greg McElroy minus 50 pounds.  I am kidding to a point.  He has a million times better mobility and footwork than Barnes.  Jimmy couldn't lift his leg to put his pants on I don't think.  Morris is very mobile for his size and has an adequate arm much like McCarron and McElroy.  He stands tall in the pocket and makes tough throws under pressure.  He isn't afraid to waggle and be exposed to the defense.  Does a good job of setting his feet on the move to deliver strong passes across the middle.  His mechanics are a little unsteady and has a bad habit of delivering too low.  Fans will try to hype him up because Bama wiffed on the big name QBs for the 2nd straight year.  That is going to happen when you have McCarron as a rising JR and Sims as a rising SO.  Morris will give them depth and with some work will be another solid game manager.  That is really what he is when it gets down to it.  He will need to redshirt and work on taking snaps under center and working on his mechanics to keep the ball delivery high and not dip so much. 

Reggie Ragland- Ain't nothing like having another legacy linebacker.  Reminds me a lot of many of the great linebackers from Bama's history.  Had a chance to see him at a 7 on 7 and he's legit.  Has Hightower's ability to play in space and pass coverage (pre knee injury Hightower), and the pass disruption abilities of Upshaw.  The thing I noticed most last year was that he is very light on his feet and he moves well to the ball.  Not a lot of wasted motion or hesitation in his action.  He plays the angles the way an MLB should and really likes to hit.  Lots of chatter about him at TE or Jack.  He can play them all, but with Anderson in this class being a more natural Jack, and being enrolled early, Ragland's potential to me is Mike.  He has great instincts and does a great job of disrupting plays both in the rush and pass coverage from the middle.  That is a rare thing, well everywhere except Alabama who seems to have had those guys for 5 years now.   I think he may play some, but if he RS it isn't a disrespect thing it is a depth thing. 

Geno Smith- Nobody will ever accuse Geno of lacking confidence.  He comes from a power program too, St Pius X, that churns out D-1/NFL prospects annually.  Smith isn't a lockdown type corner that loves to play up and disrupt the WR off the snap, he is more of a play off and react type.  He isn't fast but he knows how to play with his skill set and apply them against faster players.  He grades high because he is smart and sees the play more than he just out atheltes the guy across from him.  Has a good back peddle and doesn't get locked up or slow down when he turns and goes into stride with receivers.  He is stronger in zone coverage than man which is unique because he plays the run and tackles well.  The only question mark with him is his speed at the next level.  If he can take the 4.6 he ran at UA combines and skinny it down to 4.57 or 55, he's fine.  If he slows any further, he might have to play safety, which isn't a demotion with his skills. 

Dalvin Tomlinson- Tomlinson is a big guy that is a workout freak.  Henry County plays 3-4 so he won't have to learn much as to how to play end again.  He is a little lean to play end today, really if he plays day 1, it might be more like Jack given his physique.  He could easily play at 300 though and not be too heavy.  Good motor and his wrestling background helps him stay low and drive off the snap, much like wresting requires, but he needs some time to understand how to put it all together.  He hesitates off the initial move sometimes and that costs him or gets him doubled.  He is a redshirt and with a year or two of work will be a starter contender. 

Eddie Williams-  I don't think I have ever seen a 5 star talent forgotten so much.  The question with Eddie is where can he make the impact quickest?  Before Collins committed, he was a sure fire safety.  Now, he may be a WR or Sam.  I think he's probably going to start out in the WR Core because they lack size and range.  Williams is not a blazer like Julio, but he has good hands and vertical like him.  He can go over the middle and isn't afraid to hit or get hit, so that will benefit him and the team.  Like Julio, he is deceptively fast.  He likes to make a corner think he's going full speed and then finds another burst.  He loves to maul on both sides of the ball, but as a WR this will make corners play off and give him more space to make a cut or move to throw them off.  If he plays safety, he is a free safety by nature.  He plays zone 2, but his coaches let him just kinda do what he wanted in the backfield.  Not sure how that plays in the world of Saban, well I do but let's watch for fun.  Williams is a natural player with more skill than a lot of players around him.  His PT is dictated by where he plays, if at WR, I could see him starting especially if Carter never gets it together. 


Philons Hurt

I have to admit, this issue with the grayshirt and Philon is a bit hard on both sides of the coin.  It has PR issues regardless of spin from either side.  It is true that he still had an offer for a scholarship from Alabama, but he was going to have to wait it out while Arkansas and other schools were ready today.  He had dropped an offer at Auburn to go to Alabama.  He was not offered it as a grayshirt at that time, and that is where the PR issue is.  The issue isn't what a grayshirt means, it is about how it was done and when it was done.  If he had been a GS from day 1 and then flipped, that's his choice.  However, as some close to the story have said, it came 2 weeks before signing day.  Now, Saban is about as business executive as anyone I have ever seen, but that was a failure of planning.  I get that he has an knee injury, but that didn't stop Bama from signing others.  The issue was that 3 or 4 weeks before they didn't think they had Tomlinson or Kirven (more likely).  The surprising thing is that if you are going to weed numbers, why not gray one of the linemen that need more time anyways?  Vigor is a good and fertile ground for prospects, it will be interesting to see how this issue plays out next year. 

Does this have any long term brush back?  No.  Does this diminish the class?  No.  Is it a blip and a black eye?  Yeah, but like black eyes, they go away and life moves on.  The lesson for the staff is to not get too wrapped up in the race and make sure they keep their 25-27 intact.  Philon was a good prospect with a bad knee, I get why they didn't want him on the 2012 list and wanted to push him to 2013.  I question the timing a bit as it is being told.

Just a reminder about Stars and Recruiting....

Credit Bruce Feldman for pointing this article out:  http://footballrecruiting.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1327387  It is a great reminder that it is still about filling needs in a system over stars.