The Capital

Where there’s a Will ...

Alabama LB learned way thanks to 5 older sisters

- By John Zenor

Will Anderson Jr. has muscled past or blown by blockers with enough regularity to become a unanimous All-America. His five older sisters were tougher to dominate.

“I always tell people, they terrorized me every day,” Alabama’s sophomore linebacker said, laughing. “Every day of my life, they terrorized me.” “But,” he added, “it’s all fun.” It’s all good-natured fun in the Anderson family, as close-knit as ever since those days packing into a three-bedroom house in suburban Atlanta, where baby brother shared a room with two of his sisters.

Anderson has emerged from that female-dominated family full of volleyball, basketball and track athletes as one of college football’s most dominant players heading into the top-ranked Crimson Tide’s playoff semifinal against No. 4 Cincinnati on Dec. 31.

Anderson leads the nation with 15 ½ sacks and 32 ½ tackles for loss, ranking third and second in the school’s single-season list, respective­ly. He won the Bronko Nagurski Award as the nation’s top defensive player and was fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting won by Alabama quarterbac­k Bryce Young.

The player nicknamed The Terminator is the most dominant pass rusher at Alabama since the late Hall of Famer Derrick Thomas. Intense-looking and businessli­ke when he’s in the football building — just like his coach, Nick Saban — he does have a lighter side.

Around the locker room, teammates call him “one of the nicest, meanest guys.” He tries to greet neighbors and others with a smile, not the demeanor he calls “football Will.” Quarterbac­ks, not so much. He relaxes by fishing at Lake Nicol when in Tuscaloosa with teammates like Drew Sanders.

At home in Georgia, the Andersons gather and often watch comedies. He figures he has seen Lavell Crawford’s Netflix special “Can A Brother Get Some Love?” at least five times.

“And it’s funny every time,” Anderson said.

Anderson is, in fact, “a silly person,” sister Shanice said.

“Who you see is who you get but he does laugh a lot,” Shanice said.

But one who had the benefits and challenges of all those older sisters.

“It had its pros and cons,” Anderson said. “The pros were, they took great care of you. As long as you were on their good side, they took care of you. But then when they were in momma mode and forced you to do stuff, that was the cons.”

Then there’s “football Will,” the ultra-serious one, who even surprises his teammates on occasion with how locked in he gets even a few weeks before a game.

Saban thinks it’s the intangible­s that make players great, regardless of their physical tools. The focus. The mindset. The desire to keep improving.

“And Will’s A-plus in all those intangible areas,” Saban said.

The Heisman Trust only invited the top four to this year’s ceremony, so Anderson was the odd man out, sitting fifth. Only Young and Michigan defensive end Aidan Hutchinson got more first-place votes than Anderson’s 31. He feels he should have been at the Heisman gathering in New York. Sister Shanice thinks Anderson will use that omission as motivation on the field.

“He just always uses that as fuel to go even harder,” she said. “So I’m very excited to see him play these next two games because I already know he’s going to go out there and put on a show.”

 ?? VASHA HUNT/AP ?? Alabama linebacker Will Anderson Jr. (31) became the player he is today thanks to five older sisters.
VASHA HUNT/AP Alabama linebacker Will Anderson Jr. (31) became the player he is today thanks to five older sisters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States