Houston Chronicle

‘Ferocious’ defense puts Alabama in position to claim another national championsh­ip.

Despite injuries throughout year, Tide are playing as well as ever

- By John Zenor

Alabama’s defense not only delivered some payback to Clemson but a strong statement entering the national championsh­ip game.

For all the injuries and departed stars, the fourthrank­ed Crimson Tide’s defense still is tops in college football.

They certainly looked the part in Monday night’s 24-6 Sugar Bowl throttling of No. 1 Clemson, which had been Alabama’s Kryptonite the past two years with quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson running the show.

All-time performanc­e

Alabama coach Nick Saban said the only comparable defensive effort he can remember in his nearly 11-year tenure came in the 2011 national championsh­ip game against LSU, a 21-0 win.

“I thought the defense played with sort of a ferocious, relentless, ‘I won’t be denied’ kind of attitude in the way they competed in the game,” Saban said. “I’d say those two probably rank up there with the best of them.”

This injury-riddled group powered the Tide to a national championsh­ip matchup with fellow Southeaste­rn Conference power No. 3 Georgia in Atlanta with Monday night’s 24-6 victory. The next big challenge will be contending with Georgia’s dual 1,000-yard rushers Nick Chubb and Sony Michel next Monday at MercedesBe­nz Stadium.

That Sugar Bowl performanc­e wasn’t just payback, but an emphatic reminder that this Alabama defense is still awfully formidable even if it has been far from full-strength since a string of injuries that began in the opener against Florida State.

“We had wanted to prove ourselves to the world, because I think we felt a little disrespect­ed,” said defensive tackle Da’Ron Payne, one of the main contributo­rs in that performanc­e.

The game turned on three huge plays by Payne and linebacker Mack Wilson in a whirlwind span during the third quarter. Payne made an intercepti­on and then caught a touchdown pass after coming in for the goal-line package. Wilson, who had been out with a foot injury late in the regular season, then scored on a pick-six 13 seconds later to give the Tide a 23-6 lead.

Plus, the defense racked up five sacks of Kelly Bryant. Saban said the defensive line played as well as it had all year.

“During the week, coach (Saban) put emphasis on just being destructiv­e in our pass rushing and just keeping in our pass rushing lanes and making sure that we get after them,” Payne said. “And I think we did a good job of locking in during the practice and just getting after them as a whole defense.”

Injury issues

The defense is still far from 100 percent. Linebacker Shaun Dion Hamilton and safety Hootie Jones remain out. Linebacker Anfernee Jennings’ status is uncertain with a sprained left knee sustained in the Sugar Bowl, and Saban said he and guard Lester Cotton (right knee) were being evaluated Tuesday in Birmingham.

Despite seven of last season’s stars having moved on to the NFL and defensive coordinato­r Jeremy Pruitt’s impending departure as Tennessee’s new head coach, Alabama still leads the nation in run, scoring and total defense and ranks third against the pass.

The Tide exorcised some demons against Bryant and the Tigers. A Watson-less offense that had abused Alabama for 1,000plus yards combined in the past two national championsh­ip games produced just 188 total yards and 64 on the ground.

“It was awesome,” said linebacker Christian Miller, who missed most of the season with a bicep injury. “From outside in, everybody played tremendous. Our goal was to come out and play fast, physical and relentless and get back to how we started the season off.”

The next challenge: A top-10 rushing offense that ran wild in a 54-48 overtime victory over No. 2 Oklahoma in the Rose Bowl.

 ?? Butch Dill / Associated Press ?? Lineman Raekwon Davis and the Alabama defense silenced Clemson, holding the Tigers to 188 total yards Monday night.
Butch Dill / Associated Press Lineman Raekwon Davis and the Alabama defense silenced Clemson, holding the Tigers to 188 total yards Monday night.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States