ALABAMA WAKES UP IN SECOND HALF
Former starting quarterback comes off the bench after Tagovailoa is injured and leads comeback for SEC championship victory.
Jerry Jeudy catches a fourth-quarter touchdown pass over Tyrique McGhee of Georgia in the Southeastern Conference title game won by Alabama 35-28.
NO. 1 ALABAMA 35 NO. 4 GEORGIA 28
ATLANTA — In a dramatic twist on last season’s national championship game, Jalen Hurts came off the bench to pass for one touchdown and run for another in the fourth quarter, rallying No. 1 Alabama to a 35-28 win over No. 4 Georgia for the Southeastern Conference title Saturday.
Heisman Trophy favorite Tua Tagovailoa had to be helped off the field with just over 11 minutes remaining after one of his own linemen stepped on the quarterback’s right ankle as he attempted to throw.
Enter Hurts, who led Alabama to the national title game as a freshman but lost the starting job to Tagovailoa. Hurts calmly guided the Crimson Tide (13-0) to a game-tying touchdown with a 10-yard pass to Jerry Jeudy, capping a 16-play, 80-yard drive that consumed more than seven minutes.
After Georgia (11-2) was stuffed on a fake punt near midfield, Hurts took matters into his own hands for the winning score. Spotting an opening up the middle, he took off on a 15-yard touchdown run with 1:04 remaining.
“All year, I’ve kind of been waiting on my opportunity,” Hurts said. “My opportunity came today. I worked so hard this week with my teammates. We found a way to get it done today.”
This was a reversal of the story line from last season’s national title game, when Tagovailoa replaced an ineffective Hurts at the start of the second half with Alabama trailing Georgia 13-0. The replacement threw three touchdown passes, including a 41yarder in overtime that gave the Tide a stunning 26-23 victory.
Tagovailoa won the starting job in preseason practice and performed brilliantly during the regular season, throwing 36 touchdown passes with only two interceptions.
The SEC title game took a different path. Georgia put quite a beating on Tagovailoa, who was picked off twice, spent much of his spare time in the medical tent and was largely ineffective as the Bulldogs built a pair of two-touchdown leads.
This time, it was Hurts who bailed out the Crimson Tide. When he trotted off the field after the winning touchdown, Tagovailoa was one of the first ones to greet him on the sideline. Afterward, they stood side by side on the podium in the middle of the field while Alabama received its SEC championship trophy.
Alabama coach Nick Saban summed it up best: “Wow.”
Now, the Crimson Tide is headed back to the College Football Playoff, looking for its second straight national title.