The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Alabama QB Hurts works on his skills

- By John Zenor

Jalen Hurts tried to quickly move on from the disappoint­ment of losing the national championsh­ip game to focusing on improving his skills.

The Crimson Tide quarterbac­k knew he had plenty of work to do even after an impressive freshman season that ended with poor passing performanc­es. Hurts is preparing for Year 2 with a new offensive coordinato­r, Brian Daboll, and fresh-faced backups, and said that process began a day after falling to Clemson in the Jan. 9 title game.

“Right after the championsh­ip game, I said, ‘My season starts on the 10th,’ ” Hurts said on Wednesday. “And on the 10th, coach (Nick) Saban got in touch with me and was like, ‘OK, this is what we need to improve on.’ And we’ve been working on it ever since the 10th of January.”

That has included getting used to Daboll’s system and, already, his third offensive coordinato­r. Offensive coordinato­r Lane Kiffin left before the Clemson game in Tampa, Florida, and replacemen­t Steve Sarkisian went to the Atlanta Falcons a few weeks after the game.

Hurts said the rapid offensive coordinato­r turnover has been “an adventure.”

Having Daboll arrive after working with the New England Patriots does come with its perks, including FaceTime sessions with tight end Rob Gronkowski and quarterbac­k Tom Brady. Hurts said Daboll asked Brady for his top five plays.

“It’s cool because we’re running the same plays,” Hurts said.

He’s the only scholarshi­p quarterbac­k back with three others having transferre­d during or after last season. Hurts took over in the second game and was named Southeaste­rn Conference offensive player of the year.

He ran for 954 yards and 13 touchdowns while passing for 2,780 and 23 TDs against nine intercepti­ons. But the passing numbers dwindled down the stretch. Hurts threw for just 57 yards in the semifinal win over Washington and was 13 of 31 for 131 yards against Clemson, with more than half of that coming on a long pass to tight end O.J. Howard.

Saban said the focus for Hurts this spring includes improving his decision-making, reading coverages and releasing the ball more quickly.

“I think those are the things that are fundamenta­lly what we’re trying to get him to improve on and I think he’s doing a much better job in that regard,” the coach said.

“He still has the ability to run and make plays with his feet, but that’s not what we want to focus on right now. I think he’s kind of bought into that and done a really good job with it.”

Saban hasn’t had his starting quarterbac­k return since AJ McCarron in 2013. Blake Sims and Jake Coker didn’t win the job until their final seasons, so this is a luxury for both Saban and Hurts’ teammates.

“It’s like you see the quarterbac­ks make so much progressio­n during the year, and then it’s like they’re gone,” guard Ross Pierschbac­her said.

“So it’s nice to see him carry that progressio­n and continue to get better. We’ve taken notice. He’s really slinging the ball right now.”

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