USA TODAY Sports Weekly

❚ Will anyone stop Alabama?

- Paul Myerberg

In beating Georgia 41-24 last weekend, Alabama proved that not even the best college football defense can slow down the most potent example of the Southeaste­rn Conference’s offensive revolution.

While Georgia continued to reveal flaws in Alabama’s defense, the Crimson Tide gained 564 yards, had nine plays of 15 or more yards and had two scoring plays of 40 or more yards against a defense that entered the weekend leading the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n in yards allowed per carry, per play and per game.

After initially pushing back against these offensive concepts, Nick Saban’s full-on embrace of an up-tempo and fastpaced style, combined with an unstoppabl­e collection of talent at the skill positions, has allowed Alabama to paper over any defensive deficiencies and remain the team to beat in the SEC.

Saban’s first championsh­ip team, which went unbeaten in 2009, ran the ball 63% of the time. The 2011 and 2012 teams ran 59% and 63%, respective­ly. The totals have dropped across the past three years: to 56% in 2018, 52% in 2019 and 53% through the first three games of this season.

Against Georgia, Alabama threw the ball 33 times for 417 yards and had 147 rushing yards on 43 carries, with 18 carries and just two pass attempts in the fourth quarter. The game’s biggest plays came via the passing game, including the 90-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter from Mac Jones to receiver Jaylen Waddle, which allowed Alabama to reclaim a 2724 lead.

Once the other quarterbac­k in Alabama’s 2017 recruiting class behind former starter Tua Tagovailoa, Jones has developed into the nation’s most efficient passer and one of the top contenders for the Heisman Trophy.

Georgia quarterbac­k Stetson

Bennett struggled after a hot start. Bennett led the Bulldogs on four consecutiv­e scoring drives in the first and second quarters, one featuring an 82yard TD pass, to put Georgia ahead 24-20 at halftime. But he threw intercepti­ons on back-toback drives in the third quarter, and Alabama capitalize­d.

If not close to the traditiona­l standard of defensive excellence set by the early teams of this dynasty, Alabama’s defense is opportunis­tic. And in a setting where the opposing offense has to become one-dimensiona­l to keep pace, this defense has the athletes on the edge and in the secondary to quickly turn field position and the complexion of a close game.

The game showed two national powers in contrast: Alabama with the unstoppabl­e offense and the good-enough defense, and Georgia with the defense that set the tone for the offense.

The win showed that Alabama’s offense is simply better than Georgia’s defense – and likely too good for any team in the SEC to handle.

Georgia will very likely get another shot. Given how other preseason contenders in the SEC have either flopped (LSU), shown a potentiall­y fatal flaw (Florida) or already been eliminated from the College Football Playoff picture (Auburn and Tennessee), the Bulldogs and Crimson Tide are the heavy favorites to meet again in December in the SEC championsh­ip game.

And given the implosion in the Big 12, where Oklahoma already has two losses, and with the Big Ten and Pac-12 playing even more abbreviate­d schedules with no added weeks as buffers against cancellati­ons, the SEC can again imagine a scenario in which two conference teams – the champion and the runner-up – reach the na

tional semifinals.

If so, the game might only be the first of multiple matchups this season. It might also tell us what’s coming: Unless Georgia can find an answer for the Alabama offense, the next meeting should resemble the first.

 ?? GARY COSBY JR./THE TUSCALOOSA NEWS ?? Alabama’s John Metchie III and DeVonta Smith (6) celebrate Metchie’s TD against Georgia. Smith had two TDs.
GARY COSBY JR./THE TUSCALOOSA NEWS Alabama’s John Metchie III and DeVonta Smith (6) celebrate Metchie’s TD against Georgia. Smith had two TDs.

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