The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

They’re back: Bama vs. Georgia in rematch of January classic Fourth quarter Unstoppabl­e force vs. immovable object

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA >> Nick Saban and Kirby Smart posed stiffly behind the trophy, forcing smiles for the cameras.

Saban whispered something in his former assistant’s ear, drawing a bit of a chuckle.

Then, a quick handshake, and off they went in opposite directions.

It was a formality that had to wait until the last day of November.

But, really, they could’ve done it months ago.

As soon as Alabama and Georgia walked off the field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium almost 11 months ago — the Crimson Tide in triumph, the Bulldogs in despair — a rematch seemed inevitable. Now, it’s here. On Saturday, at the very same place where the Tide captured the fifth national title of the Saban era, these two powerhouse­s will square off in another game with huge ramificati­ons.

A Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip is on the line, as well as a trip to the College Football Playoff.

“We certainly want to win every game that we play,” said Saban, who is trying to guide the No. 1 Crimson Tide (12-0, 8-0 SEC, No. 1 CFP) to its sixth national title in the last decade — perhaps the greatest dynasty that college football has ever seen and not far off the seemingly impossible standard he sets for his program.

Fourth-ranked Georgia (11-1, 7-1, No. 4 CFP) is eager to start a dynasty of its own.

Smart, a longtime assistant under Saban who moved to Georgia in 2016, has already shown he can go head-to-head with his exboss on the recruiting trail.

Now, Smart is eager to prevail on the field. He sure came close the last time these teams met, watching his team squander a pair of 13-point leads before Alabama won 26-23 in overtime on a 41-yard touchdown pass while facing second-and-26.

“We obviously have our challenges to try to continue to play at the standard that we’ve played at,” Saban said. “I have no doubt they’ll continue to have a very, very good program.”

Despite all the titles, all the chances to savor its laurels, Alabama never seems to waver from the singlemind­ed focus of its coach.

As soon as the Tide wins a national title, it starts looking toward the next one.

“We’ve been here before,” nose guard Quinnen Williams said. “Everybody knows when it’s time to come to work. You can be beat any day. You can be the best team in the country and get beat.”

The Bulldogs made an unexpected run to the national title game last season, but this is right where they expected to be in 2018.

Right where they expect to be for years to come.

“Last year was a shocker,” linebacker Juwan Taylor said, “but this is what it’s going to be like at Georgia from now on. Championsh­ips.”

Some things to watch for in the SEC championsh­ip game:

If this game goes down to the wire, Alabama star quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa could see significan­t action in the fourth quarter for the first time all season. He has attempted — and completed — just three passes for 56 yards in the final 15 minutes. By contrast, Tagovailoa completed seven passes for 54 yards against the Bulldogs in the fourth quarter of last season’s national title game. Georgia hasn’t faced many late challenges, either. The Bulldogs have gone to the fourth quarter with doubledigi­t leads in 10 of their 11 wins — the only exception being a victory over Florida , which they led 23-14 with one period left. games during that streak, including a 32-28 victory over Georgia in 2012.

Georgia is a ground-oriented team that has two backs closing in on 1,000 yards: D’Andre Swift and Elijah Holyfield . If things are going well, the Bulldogs will hand the ball off on roughly two-thirds of their offensive plays. But Alabama, led by linebacker­s Dylan Moses and Mack Wilson, is one of the toughest teams in the country to run against. The Tide has surrendere­d an average of just 80 yards per game against its Power Five opponents. Georgia has plenty of faith in quarterbac­k Jake Fromm, but it doesn’t want to get into a passing contest with Tagovailoa.

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