The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Tua taking lessons from title game loss

- By John Zenor

TUSCALOOSA, ALA. >> Tua Tagovailoa has been studying men from the Bible, incluiding Joseph, Moses and David.

The Alabama quarterbac­k believes he can draw from their successes and failures and the fact that they each had some of both. Tagovailoa can relate to their experience­s after an almost too-good-to-be-true start to his college career.

National championsh­ip game hero. Heisman Trophy front-runner. Gaudy stats.

Then came his very public run-in with failure in January’s national title matchup against Clemson, when Tagovailoa threw an early pick-six and was outplayed by Tigers freshman Trevor Lawrence . The topics of his Bible studies with little brother and fellow Crimson Tide quarterbac­k, Taulia, and team chaplain Scotty Hollins give a glimpse of how Tagovailoa views that experience. For him, it’s something to grow from. “It’s almost like a ‘Facing the Giants’ type thing, guys who have been successful within the Bible,” Tagovailoa said in an interview shortly before one of his regular lunches with Hollins and Taulia. “But with them being successful, they had to go through all these trials. And some of them were successful at an early age then they went through trials and were humbled and then became successful (again). And some were just failures and then they became a success.

“It’s just awesome how it can relate to something like football.”

The parallel for Alabama and its star quarterbac­k started early with Tagovailoa and the Tide rolling through the 2018 regular season looking virtually unstoppabl­e and racking up such huge numbers that he scarcely had to play in the fourth quarters.

Then things stopped going so smoothly. Tagovailoa struggled in the Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip game after injuring his left ankle early and later exited after the right one got hurt, too.

Oklahoma quarterbac­k Kyler Murray won the Heisman and Tagovailoa was second. Their respective conference championsh­ip game performanc­es certainly didn’t help Tagovailoa’s case.

Tagovailoa, who led the nation in passing efficiency, will again be among the Heisman favorites going into this season when Alabama opens Aug. 31 against Duke in Atlanta. His debut season as starter — after coming off the bench to lead a rally in the national title game against Georgia as a freshman — would be hard to improve on. Except, of course, for the ending.

Hard but not impossible.

“I think Tua is the kind of guy that’s never really satisfied,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said. “And I think he had an outstandin­g year last year. Are there things that he can improve on? I don’t think there’s any question about that.”

One offseason emphasis has been to better know when to settle for the safe play instead of trying to force a big one. Another focus has been shedding the weight Tagovailoa gained while recovering from the late-season injury. He cut out starches and sweets and drinks mainly water. His Dad, Galu, helped enforce the healthy habits over the summer with his sons.

The 6-foot-1, 215-pound Tagovailoa believes he’s in significan­tly better shape this season. He bought an Apple Watch to keep track of his steps, racking up a personal high of 28,000-plus.

There was no raiding the fridge or snackhunti­ng trips at night when at home.

“My Dad makes us diet,” he said. “We can’t really drive a car to go eat late at night or what-not. The nearest gas station is pretty far from us, too, so we can’t get any snacks. The kitchen is right where they’re sleeping.”

Tagovailoa set Alabama single-season records with 3,966 passing yards and 43 touchdowns while leading the nation’s No. 3 scoring offense. With then-offensive coordinato­r Mike Locksley and a dangerous group of receivers led by Biletnikof­f Award winner Jerry Jeudy, Tagovailoa turned Alabama’s offense into a passing and scoring machine . It was anything but the typical Tide offense.

Tagovailoa only threw six intercepti­ons, but four of them came in the national and SEC title games.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Alabama QB Tua Tagovailoa was humbled during the national championsh­ip loss to Clemson last season.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Alabama QB Tua Tagovailoa was humbled during the national championsh­ip loss to Clemson last season.

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