Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Determined Alabama is still the team to beat

- Nancy Armour USA TODAY-SPORTS

NEW ORLEANS — Darned right this was personal.

For a year, Alabama has been reminded of how Clemson snatched a national title from its hands at the last second, establishi­ng the Tigers as a legitimate threat to the Crimson Tide’s dynasty. For a month, Alabama has had its worthiness questioned, a level of disrespect that once would have been unthinkabl­e.

The Crimson Tide quietly seethed, taking names and numbers and filing them away. And on Monday night, Nick Saban and his ferocious defense unleashed the full force of that pent-up rage, making Clemson look like pretenders in the 24-6 win.

The Alabama defense harassed Kelly Bryant from the opening play — don’t be surprised if he’s still flinching in June — and essentiall­y ended the game with five minutes left in the third quarter, picking him off on back-to-back plays and turning the miscues into 14 points.

Adding insult to injury, Tide nose guard Da’Ron Payne, who conservati­vely is listed at 308, scored the first of those touchdowns seven plays after picking off Bryant. Linebacker Mack Wilson returned the other intercepti­on 18 yards for the score.

“We’ve heard it for a year now,” running back Damien Harris said. “It showed in the way we played tonight how personally we took it. We wanted to take our respect back.”

Now Alabama, the team some suggested was in the playoff more on reputation than résumé, will play Georgia for the national title next week in Atlanta.

In the four years of the College Football Playoff, the Crimson Tide has made the title game all but once. For the sixth time in Saban’s 11 years, Alabama is playing for the national championsh­ip. The dynasty is alive and well. “This game was about our identity as a team,” Saban said, a surprising concession for a coach not prone to public self-reflection. “I don’t think anyone can question the relentless competitiv­eness we played with, the warrior-like mentality.

“It was a little bit personal for us after what happened to us in this game last year.”

The narrative in the lead-up to the Sugar Bowl, the third consecutiv­e year Clemson and Alabama had met in the playoff, was that this could be a passing of the torch.

After stunning the Tide in the last second of last year’s title game for their first national championsh­ip since 1981, the Tigers showed this season that they had, indeed, become every bit Alabama’s equal.

Despite losing Deshaun Watson and five other NFL draft picks, Clemson not only returned to the playoff, but did it as the No. 1 team. This was a program with a solid foundation, built to contend for the national title year in and year out.

Alabama, meanwhile, was showing signs of the decline that eventually fells all dynasties.

It wasn’t simply the loss in Iron Bowl, which kept the Tide out of the SEC title game for the first time since 2013. Alabama also struggled to beat Mississipp­i State and Texas A&M, and didn’t have a statement victory after Florida State folded like an origami crane.

Sure, there were injuries, the defense particular­ly decimated. But the Saban teams of old had faced adversity, too, yet managed to keep on rolling.

That the argument could even be made that Ohio State was more deserving of the fourth playoff spot would have been considered heresy in years past. Not this year. The Tide might have been favored in Las Vegas, but they were most definitely not the favorite.

All week, Alabama players were asked about being underdogs and whether Clemson could make a case for being the best program in the nation. Oh, did we all get played.

“We felt disrespect­ed,” running back Bo Scarbrough said. “Everyone doubted us, everyone counted us out. But it motivated us to get better.”

This wasn’t simply a team motivated by slights and an untimely loss. This was vintage Alabama, bludgeonin­g Clemson in a manner that Texas, LSU and Notre Dame surely recognized.

College football can have only one king, and Alabama isn’t about to concede its crown.

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