Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Saban, Alabama focused on how to ‘complete the season’

- By John Zenor

MONTGOMERY, ALA. >> Alabama has been here before, looking to salvage damaged playoff hopes after a competitiv­e loss to No. 1 LSU.

The fourth-ranked Crimson Tide is hoping for another national championsh­ip reprieve following Saturday’s 46-41 loss to the Tigers. This team may not even need the kind of stunning help ‘Bama received in 2011, when a 5-4 Iowa State team upset No. 2 Oklahoma State, 37-31, in double overtime.

Alabama will need some help, but has to take of its own business first — which starts with road game at Mississipp­i State on Saturday. And on Nov. 11, that’s all coach Nick Saban stressed that he is focusing on.

“Look, the No. 1 thing that I’m concerned about, just so everybody gets it, is how we complete the season,” Saban said Monday. “I don’t want to talk about anything other than the game that we have this week. We’re not making any prediction­s or whatever.”

He may not, but others are more than willing to talk about 2011.

The Tide went on to beat LSU in a BCS title game rematch, finishing second in the Southeaste­rn Conference Western Division and first in the nation.

Saban did point out that Alabama does have “kind of a legacy” where only one team over the last 12 seasons has lost multiple regular-season games. That was back in 2010, when the Tide finished 10-3 before winning two straight national titles.

“I’d like for this team to be able to continue that, and we certainly want to focus on all the things that we need to do to try to be able to get that done,” Saban said.

Alabama (9-1, 5-1 SEC) only dropped two spots in The Associated Press poll. The Tide will have to wait until Nov. 12 to see where it lands in the College Football Playoff rankings, after entering the LSU game third.

After Mississipp­i State, Alabama hosts FCS Western Carolina and visits No.

12 Auburn. A playoff berth might even be more likely than an SEC West title since the Tide would have to win out while LSU lost two of three to Mississipp­i, Arkansas and Texas A&M.

“Right now, we’re not worrying about the playoffs or anything, we’re worrying about Mississipp­i State,” Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith said. “We’re going into this game correcting the things that we didn’t do well last game and getting ready for them.”

The LSU game — especially the first half — left plenty to work on. Quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa, who went on to pass for

418 yards and four touchdowns, had a big intercepti­on and fumble and Alabama also had a botched punt. Saban said the defense missed 25 tackles.

Saban said Tagovailoa, who was recovering from a high ankle sprain, wouldn’t practice Monday. The coach said Tagovailoa didn’t “hurt himself in any way, shape or form” during the game.

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