San Antonio Express-News

Despite loss, Tide have reason for optimism

Saban’s team looks poised to contend again next season

- By John Zenor

It never seems hard for Alabama to find a silver lining amid the gloom and doom of a seasonendi­ng defeat.

The Crimson Tide (13-2) fell short of a repeat national championsh­ip with a 33-18 loss to Georgia in Monday night’s College Football Playoff Championsh­ip.

But as usual, Nick Saban and talent-laden Alabama will be among next year’s preseason favorites.

There’s reason to believe the 2022 version of the Tide will be better than this season’s young but resilient team. Alabama looked vulnerable for much of this season but unbeatable in the Southeaste­rn Conference title game against the Bulldogs and again in its semifinal win over Cincinnati

Saban’s two biggest stars — Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbac­k Bryce Young and linebacker Will Anderson Jr. — are only sophomores. And, like the expectatio­ns he has for his team, Saban believes those players will bounce back.

“They’re great competitor­s,” Saban said. “Great competitor­s always respond well to adversity. There’s nobody that feels worse about losing this game than these two guys.”

Young and Anderson produced two of the best seasons in Alabama history at their positions. The poised quarterbac­k and devastatin­g pass rusher are coming back for at least one more crack at helping Saban bring a national title to Tuscaloosa for the seventh time.

This team won eight straight games after a loss to then-unranked Texas A&M. Some growing

pains were to be expected, especially for an offense that had to replace five first-round picks and a team that lost key players to injuries at various points of the season.

The top cornerback­s — Josh Jobe and Jalyn Armour-davis — both missed the championsh­ip game. Alabama finished the game without its two top receivers.

Saban’s onetime assistant turned champion, Georgia coach Kirby Smart, had high praise for his old mentor’s coaching job given those heavy losses.

“I have a tremendous amount of respect for him, the way he runs his program,” Smart said. “And really probably one of the best jobs he’s ever done with his team,

because they were really young at some positions. And I think they’ve got the best player in college football in Bryce Young, and I saw it firsthand on the field in the SEC Championsh­ip. But to do what he did this year, with that team, I told him after the game, I said I really believe that this was probably the best job you’ve ever done.”

Alabama also has ended backto-back seasons with losses only once in Saban’s 15-year tenure, ending on down notes in 2013 and 2014. Another reason for optimism next season.

This team surely will lose underclass­men to the draft as usual. Wide receivers John Metchie III and Jameson Williams, who tore

his left ACL in Monday night’s game, left tackle Evan Neal, linebacker Christian Harris and safety Jordan Battle are among the potential first-round picks if they leave early.

Metchie missed the playoffs with a knee injury. He and Williams are expected to make full recoveries.

Jobe, tailback Brian Robinson Jr., defensive tackle Phidarian Mathis and right tackle Chris Owens are among the team’s seniors or graduate students.

Linebacker Dallas Turner and cornerback Kool-aid Mckinstry looked like rising stars as freshmen. Fellow freshman receivers Jojo Earle, Agiye Hall and Ja’corey Brooks showed flashes of potential. And Alabama already has landed two major transfers, LSU cornerback Eli Ricks and Georgia Tech running back Jahmyr Gibbs after huge impacts from Williams (Ohio State) and middle linebacker Henry To’oto’o (Tennessee).

It lays a foundation for a team that will be expected to contend again.

“I’m extremely proud of this group, our team, for what they were able to accomplish this year, the adversity that they overcame,” Saban said.

“They’re a really great bunch of winners. They won going away this year. They came from behind and won, and won close games to have the opportunit­y to play in this game.”

Maybe next season’s team will be able to go one step further.

 ?? Andy Lyons / Getty Images ?? Receiver Slade Bolden and the Crimson Tide came up one game short in their bid to bring coach Nick Saban a seventh national title at Alabama, but the cupboard is never bare in Tuscaloosa.
Andy Lyons / Getty Images Receiver Slade Bolden and the Crimson Tide came up one game short in their bid to bring coach Nick Saban a seventh national title at Alabama, but the cupboard is never bare in Tuscaloosa.

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