Baltimore Sun

In complete control

As Tide rolls on, Tagovailoa puts up impressive numbers

- By John Zenor

“It’s just going out there and being relaxed, doing what I do. That’s what confidence is.”

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Tua Tagovailoa is once again routinely putting up big numbers, making few mistakes and mostly sitting out the fourth quarters.

The quarterbac­k for secondrank­ed Alabama has remained efficient as ever and produced big plays and zero intercepti­ons in his second season as the starter going into Saturday’s game with Mississipp­i. As impressive as Tagovailoa has been, coach Nick Saban and his Crimson Tide teammates say Tagovailoa has found ways to improve while in some ways being overshadow­ed by quarterbac­ks like Oklahoma star Jalen Hurts and LSU’s ascendant Joe Burrow.

Tagovailoa’s passing numbers are better across the board than at this point last year, when he shared some time with Hurts.

“I think this year he’s a lot more confident,” Saban said. “I think he does a better job and has a better understand­ing of what the defense is trying to do. I think that just elevates his ability to make good choices and decisions, not that he ever made bad ones before. I don’t mean it that way.

“He’s got good skill players and he’s accurate at getting them the ball, and he gets the ball out of his hand quick and we haven’t taken a lot of bad plays.”

The Crimson Tide hasn’t needed Tagovailoa to force anything or for any fourth-quarter heroics, routing four straight unranked opponents as Alabama hasn’t played a marquee game so far.

But the junior’s statistics are impressive.

He ranks in the top 5 nationally in passing touchdowns and efficiency and completion percentage. He has thrown for 17 touchdowns without an intercepti­on and is completing 77.7 percent of his passes.

All that while attempting only four passes in the fourth quarter, all completion­s. In that regard, it’s much like most of last season for the lefty from Hawaii.

Last season’s Heisman Trophy runner-up, Tagovailoa has thrown five touchdown passes in each of the last two games against South Carolina and Southern Miss. He matched the school record set by Gary Hollingswo­rth in 1989 against Mississipp­i and then did it again a week later.

He threw for three touchdowns in the first 20 minutes against New Mexico State and ran for a 25-yard score before halftime as well. Against South Carolina, he passed for a career-high 444 yards and five TDs.

It’s hard to imagine that he needed to become “a lot more confident” after a season in which he shattered Alabama passing marks and finished behind only Oklahoma’s Kyler Murray in the Heisman race. It did end on a sour note when Tagovailoa was outplayed by Clemson freshman Trevor Lawrence in the national championsh­ip game. But he’s picked back up where he started off, not how he finished.

“I think (confidence) is knowing what to do, understand­ing what to do and playing at a fast pace, high-level kind of thing,” Tagovailoa said. “It’s just going out there and being relaxed, doing what I do. That’s what confidence is.”

Confidence also comes in knowing he has a cadre of receivers including Jerry Jeudy and Henry Ruggs III who are deep threats and can also turn short passes into big gains. Tagovailoa already has 23 completion­s of 25-plus yards.

Tagovailoa also said he has a better grasp of the different variations of how defenses run their coverages.

“Just focusing and taking what the defense gives him,” Ruggs said. “He understand­s a lot about defenses now and, not saying he didn’t (before), but he just understand­s what the defense is going to give him and what they’re trying to do. So he’s confident and taking what the defense gives him and letting us make our plays.”

One thing his Alabama teammates don’t have to worry about these days: Losing to Tagovailoa in Fortnite. He said he hasn’t played since early May but before that he was competitiv­e enough to want to join tournament­s if he had the time. A strict summer regimen while living at home with his parents and dropping some weight helped break that habit.

“Oh I’m not good anymore. There’s no way,” Tagovailoa said. “Ever since I went back home, you can’t eat as much at night, you just got to go to sleep. I didn’t even want to play video games.”

Luckily, he’s doing pretty well at this football thing.

 ?? STREETER LECKA/GETTY ??
STREETER LECKA/GETTY
 ?? VASHA HUNT/AP ?? Alabama QB Tua Tagovailoa has improved his ability to read defenses and make quick decisions. He has 17 TD passes with no intercepti­ons.
VASHA HUNT/AP Alabama QB Tua Tagovailoa has improved his ability to read defenses and make quick decisions. He has 17 TD passes with no intercepti­ons.

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