Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vols, Tide and Bulldogs play spring games this afternoon

Alabama, Georgia put more into final April football practice than other SEC schools

- BY DAVID PASCHALL STAFF WRITER

With most college football programs across the country, spring games are not much more than a glorified 15th offseason practice allotted by the NCAA.

At Alabama and Georgia, they have become popular production­s.

The two Southeaste­rn Conference teams that met in last season’s national championsh­ip contest are also the two league programs that have held spring games before more than 90,000 spectators. Alabama’s A-Day and Georgia’s G-Day matchups will take place this afternoon, and they are the lone SEC spring games to be televised this year by the main ESPN network.

“There are so many great things that happen on A-Day,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said in a news conference after Thursday’s practice. “It’s a great tradition here. I see people canceling their spring game — that would be like hara-kiri around here.

“You would never think about doing that because of all the great traditions we have.”

The A-Day game even has a sponsor — Golden Flake.

Alabama forever raised the bar as far as spring games becoming spring extravagan­zas in 2007, when 92,138 fans packed Bryant-Denny Stadium to watch the first A-Day game with Saban as coach. That audience was topped by the 92,310 spectators who descended on Tuscaloosa in 2011, when the A-Day game coincided with a Saban statue unveiling outside the stadium.

The Crimson Tide’s 2011 showing held the SEC spring-game attendance record until 2016, when former Saban defensive coordinato­r Kirby Smart challenged Georgia fans to pack Sanford Stadium. Bulldogs backers responded, as an announced crowd of 93,000 attended a G-Day that began with a Ludacris concert and included an introducti­on at halftime of Georgia’s 2016 signees.

Alabama (74,426) and Georgia (66,133) had the league’s top spring-game audiences last year, and more of the same is expected today, when LSU, Mississipp­i State and Tennessee also hold their spring showcases to wrap up the league’s lineup.

“I’m not sure what all we have surroundin­g the game,” Smart said Thursday in a news conference. “I know we have some different things through our sports marketing, but I want to evaluate our players in a big-time atmosphere. The more butterflie­s they have now, the less they’ll have next time.”

The SEC’s top spring crowds this year to this point have been at Florida (53,015), Texas A&M (48,000), Kentucky (36,090), Auburn (28,033) and South Carolina (25,500).

Alabama and Georgia owned the added intrigue this spring of publicized quarterbac­k competitio­ns, though the Crimson Tide’s battle between Jalen Hurts and Tua Tagovailoa never materializ­ed due to Tagovailoa sustaining two hand injuries. Only Hurts is scheduled to play today.

Jake Fromm will quarterbac­k the first-team offense at G-Day, with touted dual-threat early enrollee Justin Fields guiding the second-team offense.

“The expectatio­ns for them is to lead their offenses, command the huddle and make good decisions,” Smart said. “It’s a quarterbac­k game because of the way we structure it: The two-minute drills at the end of each half puts the ball in their hands. I’m excited to see what Justin does, and I’m excited to see what Jake does.

“One of the more promising things this spring has been the depth of the receivers and the competitio­n in the receiver room. The receivers have been a little ahead of the DBs, and if that continues there could be some points scored out there.”

Alabama and Georgia have the two deepest rosters in the league and don’t shy from pitting starters against starters and backups against backups to provide the most competitiv­e spring games possible. Saban is continuing the motivation­al tactic of ordering steaks for today’s winning players and beans for the losers.

“I’m the commission­er in this particular game, and under no circumstan­ces will I be eating beans on Monday,” Saban said. “It really means a lot to the program and really means a lot to our players and really means a lot to recruiting that we have a tremendous crowd. We don’t like for our team to be complacent in any way, and we certainly don’t want our fans to be complacent in terms of the support they give our players.

“Our players have worked hard, and this is an opportunit­y for them to have fun in front of fans that they have a tremendous amount of respect for.”

Contact David Paschall at dpaschall@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6524.

 ?? DAVID BARNES/GEORGIA PHOTO ?? Tight end Isaac Nauta (18), outside linebacker D’Andre Walker (15) and then-quarterbac­k Jacob Eason (10) compete during Georgia’s G-Day spring game in 2016, which set an SEC attendance record with 93,000 fans.
DAVID BARNES/GEORGIA PHOTO Tight end Isaac Nauta (18), outside linebacker D’Andre Walker (15) and then-quarterbac­k Jacob Eason (10) compete during Georgia’s G-Day spring game in 2016, which set an SEC attendance record with 93,000 fans.
 ?? THE ASSICATED PRESS ?? Alabama head coach Nick Saban, left, works with defensive back Shyheim Carter in a practice drill Thursday in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
THE ASSICATED PRESS Alabama head coach Nick Saban, left, works with defensive back Shyheim Carter in a practice drill Thursday in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
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