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re: Bama Football Tidings

Posted on 8/29/19 at 12:27 pm to
Posted by RollTide66
Atlanta
Member since Nov 2015
3005 posts
Posted on 8/29/19 at 12:27 pm to
Nick Saban was critical of D-line in spring. What changed since then? By Michael Casagrande | mcasagrande@al.com
quote:

Going back to the spring, it was clear Nick Saban challenged the defensive line.

Without an experienced anchor in the middle like Da’Ron Payne or Quinnen Williams, there were some growing pains in the March/April scrimmages.

"The first group played fairly well,” Saban said after March 30 after the first simulated game. “The second group was not that great.”

Move ahead five months and there’s progress entering Saturday’s season debut with Duke. Injuries haven’t helped the depth and it sounds like Raekwon Davis is stepping into the vocal role vacated when Isaiah Buggs graduated and Quinnen Williams went pro.

“They've been really good,” Saban said Wednesday. “I've been pleased with, you know Raekwon's had a great camp. He's really played well. A couple of the young guys. DJ Dale has done really well. LaBryan Ray is doing really well.”

Both Dale and Ray missed time in the preseason with injuries, though. Backups Stephon Wynn and Justin Eboigbe were also hurt in August and Eboigbe is likely out for the Duke game.

“Justin was doing really well and got his foot hurt,” Saban noted Wednesday. “But I don't think that's a long-term thing.”

Saban in the spring also mentioned the summer enrollees who would need to step in to bigger roles adding depth after the first wave of freshmen arrived in January. Only Byron Young of that defensive line group appeared on the two-deep released Monday.

Highly-touted summer enrollees Braylen Ingraham and Ishmael Sopsher were in scout-team jerseys Tuesday while five-star spring arrival Antonio Alfano works to find a role.

After the second scrimmage of the spring, Saban spoke about the issues he saw in the second- and third-string defensive linemen.

“I think when they get into competitive situations, they completely just dumb down,” Saban said after the April 6 scrimmage. “They can’t focus. They’re supposed to slant. They don’t slant. So it’s really you could see the talent, you could see the ability, but they’ve got to develop confidence when they hear a call that this is what I do and trust in that and believe in that.”

Raekwon Davis, now a senior, remembers the problems his unit faced in spring practice while noting the improvements.

“That my actions showed,” Davis said. “Doing better in practice, doing the little stuff he like, at the time we weren’t doing that. And that’s all that was. We weren’t doing the little things.”

And that’s better now?

“I hope so,” Davis said. “I mean I haven’t heard (Saban) yelling in a little minute so who knows.”


Michael Casagrande is an Alabama beat writer for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @ByCasagrande or on Facebook.
Posted by RollTide66
Atlanta
Member since Nov 2015
3005 posts
Posted on 8/29/19 at 12:33 pm to
Alabama signee Shane Lee highlights 5:56
Meet ‘The Hulk,’ the freshman set to step in for Dylan Moses at Alabama By Matt Zenitz | mzenitz@al.com
quote:

Tosh Lupoi first spotted Shane Lee during a trip to the Gilman School weight room in Maryland in early 2015.

Not realizing Lee had yet to even reach high school, the former Alabama assistant went up to one of the team’s coaches and pointed at Lee, who was already about 6-feet tall and a solid 215 pounds.

“Tosh grabbed me and says, ‘Who the heck is that kid? Why didn’t you tell me about him?’” recalled Henry Russell, who coached Lee at Gilman before also coaching him at St. Frances Academy. “I was like, ‘Tosh, he’s still in the eighth grade.’”

Four years later, Lee is up to 245 pounds and now set to be an important figure in the middle of the Crimson Tide defense as a true freshman.

Lee, known as ‘The Hulk’ among his high school teammates, is being called on to step in and start at the inside linebacker position previously occupied by preseason first-team All-American Dylan Moses, who suffered a season-ending knee injury during the Tide’s practice on Tuesday.

Alabama was already going to be depending on a true freshman at the other inside linebacker position, Christian Harris. Now, the team will be depending on another true freshman, Lee, to not only step in for Moses but also to take over as the Tide’s defensive play-caller.

“Fortunately, Shane Lee and Christian Harris — whether they were starters or backups, either one — they were both bright guys,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said Wednesday. “They’ve been very engaged in what they have to do to be able to go play. I don’t think there’s any substitute for experience. So now they’re going to get an opportunity to get some of that where they have an opportunity to apply the knowledge that they have. We just have to do a really good job as coaches to try to get them in the best situations that we know they understand what to do and they can go out there and execute it.”

Lee, whose dad is a police officer and whose mom works in cyber security, was the defensive leader last year for a St. Frances team that finished the year ranked ninth nationally by MaxPreps.

The four-star recruit had an interception during the Tide’s spring game in April and had gotten some first-team reps during the preseason even before the Moses injury.

“The good thing with Shane is he comes from a defense where he made checks and it’s not new for him,” Russell said. “We make a lot of checks on the field with our linebackers. And Shane’s a very smart kid. He works extremely hard. Physically, he’s been ready since he was a freshman in high school. He’s a brick house. He runs well. He’s strong as an ox. So physically, I don’t really worry about him too much. I think it’s more getting all the mental stuff down and the speed of the college game, but I think he’s a lot more comfortable. ... If you had asked him to come in and start at the beginning of the spring, it would have been really tough. But now, he’s got the spring under his belt, camp under his belt and now the only thing he’s got to get is some game experience.”

Fortunately for Alabama, Lee has a track of record of stepping up as a freshman.

As a freshman at Gilman, Lee was called on at a critical moment of the team’s conference title game in a matchup against their biggest rival, McDonogh.

With Gilman up 35-28, McDonogh was facing a fourth-and-5 late in the fourth quarter. Sent on a blitz off the edge, Lee got to the quarterback and delivered a big hit as the ball was being thrown. Impacted by the hit, the quarterback’s pass flew out of bounds and Gilman won the championship.

“For a freshman in that situation to make that play, I’ll never forget it and was so proud of Shane for his effort and as a freshman to come in and do that,” Russell said.

It’s part of the reason Russell sent Lee the message he did on Wednesday upon learning of the Moses injury and his former player’s new role.

“I wished him luck,” Russell said, “but I let him know that he’s ready for this.”


Matt Zenitz is an Alabama and Auburn reporter for the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @mzenitz.
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