Los Angeles Times

SABAN WORSHIP

College football’s best coach has another great ’Bama team, and a gifted acolyte in Kiffin

- By Zach Helfand

Alabama knew it had broken Michigan State by the third quarter of January’s College Football Playoff semifinal.

Michigan State hadn’t scored yet — and wouldn’t at all in a 38-0 drubbing. After Alabama swarmed another screen pass, Spartans quarterbac­k Connor Cook stomped to the sideline and vented.

“They’re everywhere!” Cook said, injecting an unprintabl­e adjective in between.

This is what it’s like to be steamrolle­red by the Alabama football machine. USC, which opens its season on Saturday against the Crimson Tide, is the latest team in their path.

Several big names have decamped to the NFL from Alabama’s latest national championsh­ip team. But 14 starters remain, Alabama has a roster that reloads yearly and it is still led by Nick Saban, the most successful coach of this era. Plus, they have Lane Kiffin, the former USC coach who is considered one of the best offensive coordinato­rs in the nation.

Taken together, Alabama might be even better than last season.

Saban has won three other national titles at Alabama, plus one at Louisiana State. But, arguably, he has never had a defense like this team’s.

Pro Football Focus graded six Alabama defensive players among the top 64 players in the nation. For comparison, USC, a team not wanting for talent, boasted three players on the list — on offense and defense combined.

Phil Savage, an Alabama radio analyst and the former general manager of the Cleveland Browns, visited Alabama practice last week and was awed.

“This defense will be the fastest and most athletic Nick Saban has had in his 10 seasons,” Savage tweeted afterward.

USC Coach Clay Helton said he was “so impressed by their speed on tape.”

“This is a faster unit, in my opinion, than they had last year on defense,” he said.

Saban has prioritize­d swiftness over brawn to adapt to the proliferat­ion of up-tempo offenses. USC could try to attack Alabama with

power, but that, too, could encounter resistance. Three Crimson Tide linebacker­s are expected to receive AllAmerica considerat­ion: Tim Williams, Reuben Foster and Ryan Anderson.

On the line, Jonathan Allen, a first-team AllSouthea­stern Conference selection last season, recorded 14.5 tackles for loss in 2015, including 12 sacks — all 12 against power-five conference teams.

And the secondary includes two more All-America candidates, cornerback Marlon Humphrey and safety Eddie Jackson.

The question, then, will be how Kiffin assembles an offense that lost its Heisman Trophy-winning running back, Derrick Henry, a quarterbac­k who didn’t lose a game as a starter, Jake Coker, and its Rimington Trophy-winning center, Ryan Kelly.

USC expects Kiffin to pound the ball inside against the Trojans’ thin defensive line. The Crimson Tide return three starters on the line, including first-team All-SEC left tackle Cam Robinson, who was arrested in May but had charges dropped in June.

Helton has indicated he’ll stack the box often, but that just shifts the burden onto USC’s secondary to stop one of the best tight ends in the nation, O.J. Howard, and one of the best receivers, Calvin Ridley.

Helton compared Ridley to former USC receiver Marqise Lee.

“You hold your breath every time he touches it,” Helton said.

Cornerback Adoree’ Jackson has lobbied the coaching staff to allow him to shadow Ridley wherever he lines up.

“I'm not scared,” Jackson said. “I'm not backing down from anybody.”

The quarterbac­k position remains a two-way race between Cooper Bateman and Blake Barnett. Both lack experience, but Saban usually navigates that well — three of his four championsh­ip teams had to break in an inexperien­ced quarterbac­k.

USC expects Alabama to run a familiar offense.

Trojans offensive coordinato­r Tee Martin, in an interview with a radio station in Mobile, Ala., last week, said Kiffin took USC’s offense and installed it at Alabama. The appeal is clear. Hampered by sanctions and prone to unflatteri­ng utterances, Kiffin’s tenure at USC was rocky. But his offensive mind was never in question.

“It’s like a gift,” USC running back Justin Davis said. “He sees so much stuff that the average eye doesn’t see.”

Special teams coach John Baxter said Kiffin “sees the game in slow motion.”

Baxter is one of five USC coaches to serve on Kiffin’s staff. None expressed any animosity. Kiffin, most said, treated them well.

“I don’t know how he’s become the villain of all of college football,” Baxter said.

Alabama tightly restricts its assistant coaches’ media availabili­ty, but before the playoff last season, Kiffin explained why his first three head coaching stints fizzled, despite his aptitude for the game.

“When you become a head coach so early, so young and so fast, you don't really know why you're doing things,” he said.

For the 19 current Trojans who played for Kiffin, the relationsh­ip is more complicate­d. His tenure marked the beginning of a volatile stretch that spanned most of their time at USC.

Offensive lineman Zach Banner said he hadn’t thought much about Kiffin coaching at Alabama. He said he wished Kiffin well.

But, when asked if he took anything positive from Kiffin’s time at USC, his reply was curt.

“He had good visors,” Banner said, then walked away, ending the interview. Edoga to start

Chuma Edoga will start at left offensive tackle for the Trojans against Alabama, Helton announced Monday on the Trojans Live radio show.

The announceme­nt means quarterbac­k Max Browne’s blindside will be protected by a sophomore with just two career starts. Chad Wheeler, USC’s most experience­d lineman, has been hobbled by plantar fasciitis and is unlikely to play significan­t time against the Crimson Tide.

“We're going to evaluate Chad throughout the week to see if he can progress into helping us with a couple series,” Helton said.

Helton also announced that reserve linebacker Osa Masina has been suspended for the season opener because of a violation of team rules.

‘It’s like a gift. He sees so much stuff that the average eye doesn’t see.’ — Justin Davis, USC running back, on Lane Kiffin, Alabama’s offensive coordinato­r and formerly USC’s head coach

 ?? Brynn Anderson Associated Press ?? FOUR NATIONAL CHAMPIONSH­IPS in nine seasons at Alabama have qualified Nick Saban, left, for sainthood in Tuscaloosa, where the program has become a virtual NFL farm system. His 2016 team might be even more talented than last year’s title winner.
Brynn Anderson Associated Press FOUR NATIONAL CHAMPIONSH­IPS in nine seasons at Alabama have qualified Nick Saban, left, for sainthood in Tuscaloosa, where the program has become a virtual NFL farm system. His 2016 team might be even more talented than last year’s title winner.

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