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Posted on 9/1/19 at 9:43 am to Crimson Wraith
Oh.....the post I replied to had him listed as #1. Must have been a typo
Posted on 9/1/19 at 10:53 am to mistaken4193
Does anybody know why the Duke guy got ejected? Was it for stepping on Dickerson while he was down? I couldn’t tell from the footage during the game. TIA
Posted on 9/1/19 at 11:07 am to Gongora
Yes, he was ejected for stepping on Dickerson
Posted on 9/1/19 at 11:29 am to Sl0thstronautEsq
Thanks I thought something might have happened before the step.
Posted on 9/1/19 at 11:45 am to mrbroker
quote:
Did Ben see a lot of PT. I kept looking for him and don't recall him in any tackles. Maybe he saw a lot of PT on ST
Only Place I saw him was on Punt Defense... but havent watched it again
Posted on 9/1/19 at 11:48 am to Gongora
quote:
Does anybody know why the Duke guy got ejected? Was it for stepping on Dickerson while he was down? I couldn’t tell from the footage during the game. TIA
Thought Dickerson showed great restraint. and the Duke guy, well was a bit surprising for a nice ACC guy to intentionally attempt to stomp a guy who was on the ground
Posted on 9/1/19 at 11:57 am to RollTide66
quote:
a bit surprising for a nice ACC guy to intentionally attempt to stomp a guy who was on the ground
I could be wrong but didn’t they say he transferred from Miami?
Posted on 9/1/19 at 12:05 pm to TizzyT4theUofA
He is from Miami not a transfer.
This post was edited on 9/1/19 at 12:05 pm
Posted on 9/1/19 at 12:58 pm to RollTide66
Alabama Football: Grading Steve Sarkisian’s performance vs. Duke by Ronald Evans
while the play calling could be targeted (at least early); the early inconsistent Oline play was a bigger issue. I believe, nay, pray that this will work it's self out in the next few weeks. The up and down play of Neal (true freshman) and the push up the middle, let alone the inconsistent edge rusher pick up by RB/TE(HB) was problematic. imagine if Najee's long run had not been called back for Neal's holding? or Tua would not have been forced to scramble as often as he did?... well, that will most likely never happen. Just hope that Tua is ready to check down often as the competition gets better
BALANCE:
1st downs - Rushing - 14 Passing - 15 Penalties - 1
Passing - 30 - 36 - 0 (367) TD's 4
Rushing - 42 (161 - 16 (145) TD's 2
quote:
Crimson Tide fans are always ready to pounce on an Alabama football Offensive Coordinator. Steve Sarkisian went into Saturday with a history of Crimson Tide failure.
Historically, until a new Alabama football coach loses a big game, Crimson Tide fans are always ready to revere their head football coach. Assistant coaches, particularly offensive coordinators don’t get such a honeymoon. They are doubted from day one.
There is no acceptable margin of imperfection. There is no averaging out plusses versus minuses. For the current Alabama football OC, Steve Sarkisian it is even worse. He will never be forgiven for the Crimson Tide losing the 2016 National Championship game.
None of this acrimony matters to Nick Saban. In bringing Sarkisian back, Saban showed confidence in him. And it is not like Saban wants an OC to design an offense. Saban gave Lane Kiffin considerable leeway to modify the Tide offense. Late in Kiffin’s time in Tuscaloosa, Saban was weary from Lane, on the sidelines and elsewhere. Previous OCs had to work inside a Nick Saban, balanced offense system. So does Steve Sarkisian.
Balance does not mean an equal mix of running and passing plays. It does not mean yardage gained must be nearly equal for the run and the pass. What it means is efficiency. Simply stated, it is taking advantage of the offensive opportunities least prioritized by opposing defenses.
Two games into Steve Sarkisian’s Alabama football OC career, he did that well on Saturday. Finding that balance did not start Saturday afternoon in Atlanta. It started months before in reshaping the risk-taking tendencies of Tua Tagovailoa. Tua learned the Saban-Sark lessons. In his own words from a recent ESPN interview with Kirk Herbstreit, Tua learned he can “never go wrong taking a profit.”
On Saturday, Duke hoped to play defensive percentages. Defending Tua’s home run threat was given the highest priority. Tua described Sark’s response.
We had to keep it short and have our players work in field.
‘In field’ means attacking the edges, the space available on underneath routes, using quick throws and bubble screens. All those wrinkles are key components in Sarkisian’s offense. The other important feature in a Sarkisian offense is using tight ends. Tua completed two of his four touchdown passes to tight ends.
Nick Saban was more detailed in discussing the Tide’s offensive response.
We just decided, hey, the way they’re playing, we’re going to have to throw the ball on first down and get the ball to our playmakers’ hands on the perimeter and make them play on the perimeter, and when we started doing that, I think that those guys made a lot of plays
Because of repeatedly “taking a profit” the Crimson Tide finished with 512 yards of offense. The output was not balanced in terms of rushing and passing yards. A less than stellar performance by the offensive line diminished the Tide’s rushing output. Still, Sarkisian did not abandon the running game. Tua and Mac Jones threw 36 passes. Crimson Tide running backs carried the ball 33 times.
Because the Crimson Tide was not consistently effective running the ball, or because on one play, when Sarkisian called a sweep on third-and-seven, Tide fans will complain about Sark’s play-calling. For the record, that particular sweep did not work.
While those whining about Steve Sarkisian may persist, Alabama football fans might consider those same complaints are about the Nick Saban offense. Against Duke, Saban’s offensive philosophy, as articulated by Sarkisian, was effective. It was less predictable than last season’s overly dependent RPO offense. And it minimized hits on Tua.
So we ask Alabama fans – isn’t a smarter Tua and thereby a smarter Alabama football offense something Steve Sarkisian deserves some credit for? At least for one game?
Speaking of taking what the defense gives you – there will be much to take Saturday in Tuscaloosa. At halftime Saturday night, the Aggies had surrendered 366 yards and 35 points to Washington State.
while the play calling could be targeted (at least early); the early inconsistent Oline play was a bigger issue. I believe, nay, pray that this will work it's self out in the next few weeks. The up and down play of Neal (true freshman) and the push up the middle, let alone the inconsistent edge rusher pick up by RB/TE(HB) was problematic. imagine if Najee's long run had not been called back for Neal's holding? or Tua would not have been forced to scramble as often as he did?... well, that will most likely never happen. Just hope that Tua is ready to check down often as the competition gets better
BALANCE:
1st downs - Rushing - 14 Passing - 15 Penalties - 1
Passing - 30 - 36 - 0 (367) TD's 4
Rushing - 42 (161 - 16 (145) TD's 2
Posted on 9/1/19 at 4:39 pm to BamaBo7
Was he the one with glasses or the guy in the crimson shirt and close cropped hair?
Posted on 9/1/19 at 6:09 pm to Bham Bammer
Exactly almost no opportunity for that.
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