The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
In unusual SEC season, defense is becoming a punchline
Six teams rank worse than 50th in points allowed per game.
LSU coach Ed Orgeron has lost patience with blown assignments, missed tackles and poor pursuit angles by Tigers defenders.
And when Orgeron says, “All these explosive plays have to stop,” he might aswell be speaking on behalf of a host of coaches across the Southeastern Conference.
Six SEC teams—LS U, Vanderbilt, Florida, Texas A& M, Missouri and Mississippi — rank worse than 50th in the nation in points allowed per game, with all of them allowing an average of 32 points or more.
Alabama isn’t doing much better. The Crimson Tide ranks outside the top 40, allowing more than 30 points pergame after outlasting Ole Miss 63- 48 in a game that saw Alabama give up the most yards ( 647) in school history.
“We had missed assignments and tackling — probably the two things thatwere the biggest detriment for us in the last game,” coach Nick Sabans aid. “Those are fundamental things that you have to fix.”
Orgeron’s frustration is evident in the extreme remedy he suggested this week after a 45- 41 loss at Missouri, which bounced defending national champion LSU out of the AP Top 25.
“We’ve got to simplify,” Orgeron said. “I don’t care if we have to play one defense and one coverage. Play it. Play it right.
“I know there’s not a lot of great defense being played in the SEC right now. That’s no excuse. I don’t want to hear that,” Orgeron added. “Iwant to play great defense at LSU, and we’re going to play great defense one way or another.”
The SEC has long been renowned for fielding fast, physical defenses that rank among the nation’s best and send numerous players onto the NFL. Six defensive players from LSU and five from Alabama were drafted by NFL teams last spring.
So it’s understandably jarring for coaches like Orgeron see his team lose a game in which his offense scores more than 40 points.
First-year Mississippi coach Lane Kiffin said he’s noticed defenses across the country struggling and wonders if lost practice time due to the coronavirus pandemic is a factor.
The Rebels currently rank last in the nation, allowing 51.7 points per game — too much even for Kiffin’s wideopen offense to keep up.
“I don’t know if that’s a product of missing spring ball and that’s more important for defense than offense,” Kiffin said. “But I’ve heard a lot of defensive coaches saying they’re struggling and just read something about howmany SEC teams are in the bottomhalf of defensive rankings. Usually, the SEC is extremely hard to move the ball, especially to run the ball.”
Saban, too, saw something to the suggestion that the pandemic had been harder on defenses than offenses.
“It’s much easier to practice offense on air than it is defense on air, because ( on defense) you’re reacting to something all the time,” Saban explained. “Maybe that contributes to it.”