2:30 p.m.
SEPT. 24, 2011
Arkansas
TV: CBS
AMEDAY G
ALL ON THE LINE The Alabama Offensive line is constantly changing. Will players get lost in the shuffle?
INSIDE: Reliving the Tradition with former Crimson Tide tackle Jerry Duncan PAGE 10
It’s about friends. It’s about classes. It’s about roommates. It’s about memories.
INSIDE The Blocking Bunch The Alabama offensive line looks to stand strong through recent shifts as SEC play begins. Page 6
GameDay
CW | John Michael Simpson
PAGE 4 INSIDE THE GAME: THE SPREAD OFFENSE
PAGE 5 TONY’S TASTE OF THE TOWN: FIG
PAGE 11 COLUMN: THE DECIDING GAME
Gameday goes inside the spread offense to take a look at one of college football’s hottest trends
Tony tries out FIG’s gourmet cuisine and uncovers one of Tuscaloosa’s hidden gems
Alabama vs. Arkansas will be a key game in deciding whether the Tide’s season ends in success or failure
By Marquavius Burnett
By Tony Tsoukalas
By Laura Owens
DO YOU THINK ARKANSAS’ OFFENSE IS GOOD ENOUGH TO SCORE ON ALABAMA’S DEFENSE? SEBASTIAN MEDINA
LANDON LOVELL
senior economics, finance and Spanish
senior accounting
“Not too well. It’s going to be a struggle. I’m thinking 17 to 21 points. Offense wise any game will be a struggle, I think.”
“I think Trent’s going to run it down their throat.”
freshman business
“So far, it just depends on how AJ McCarron is able to manage the game. If he can throw the ball we should be fine.” Compiled by Drew Hoover
ALABAMA 2011 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE W, 48-7
Oct. 15
at Ole Miss
Sept. 10 at Penn State W, 27-11
Oct. 22
Tennessee
Sept. 17 North Texas W, 41-0
Nov. 5
LSU
Sept. 24 Arkansas
Nov. 12 at Mississippi State
Oct. 1
at Florida
Nov. 19 Georgia Southern
Oct. 8
Vanderbilt
Nov. 26 at Auburn
Sept. 3
Kent State
• Tony Tsoukalas, GameDay editor • Marquavius Burnett, assistant GameDay editor • Victor Luckerson, editor-in-chief • Jonathan Reed, managing editor • Sarah Massey, magazine art director • Jessie Hancock, assistant design editor • Adam Greene, chief copy editor Cover photo: CW | Drew Hoover
AP POLL (WEEK 4)
student SECTION what you’re saying... TAYLOR WINKLER
GAMEDAY STAFF
1. Oklahoma (36) 2. LSU 3. Alabama (17) 4. Boise State 5. Stanford 6. Wisconsin 7. Oklahoma State 8. Texas A&M 9. Nebraska 10. Oregon 11. Florida State 12. South Carolina 13. Virginia Tech 14. Arkansas 15. Florida 16. West Virginia 17. Baylor 18. South Florida 19. Texas 20. TCU 21. Clemson 22. Michigan 23. USC 24. Illinois 25. Georgia Tech September 23, 2011 GAMEDAY
1
GAMEDAY PICK ‘EM Results from Week 3 Top Season Leaders
1 Joe Hendricks 54/60 90 %
2 Charley Irons 54/60 90 %
Cole Kelley 53/60 88.33 %
Week 3 Winner
3
Nathan Procter John McWilliams Coleman Richards 52/60 53/60 52/60 86.67 % 88.33 % 86.67 %
GAMEDAY Staff & 2010 Winner Results
Josh Russell 20/22 Season Record: 37/60 61.67 %
Tony Tsoukalas
Marquavius Burnett
John McWilliams
Gameday Editor
Assistant Gameday Editor
2010 Pick ‘Em Winner
49/60 81.67 %
47/60 78.33 %
52/60 86.67 %
Visit gameday.ua.edu to play in The Crimson White’s college football pick ‘em league. Leaders will get their names published each week.
Weekly winners will be given two free movie tickets. The season winner will be awarded with a $100 gift card to the SUPe Store.
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2
GAMEDAY
September 23, 2011
Ar und THE
SEC
GAME OF THE WEEK
LSU vs. WEST VIRGINIA LSU will face West Virginia in their third away game. Both quarterbacks have only thrown one interception so far this season, but the test will be if LSU’s QB Jarrett Lee can handle the pressure from the No. 16-ranked Mountaineers. West Virginia is averaging 42 points a game, more than LSU’s average of 36 points. The LSU’s defense may prove to be too much for first-year head coach of the Mountaineers. LSU will be without home field advantage as the Tigers head to Morgantown.
FLORIDA KENTUCKY
GEORGIA OLE MISS
Will Muschamp and the Gators are looking to beat Kentucky in their first road game, which could be the 26th consecutive win against the Wildcats.
Both teams will try for their first SEC win, with Ole Miss trying to come back from a tough loss to Vanderbilt, where QB Zack Stoudt threw five interceptions.
CW Jerrod Seaton
FLORIDA ATLANTIC VANDERBILT AUBURN SOUTH CAROLINA
Michael Dyer and the reigning national champions look to rebound from their loss last weekend to Clemson and defeat Florida Atlantic at home.
Heisman contender Marcus Lattimore and the South Carolina offense look to stop head coach James Franklin and the undefeated Commodores.
September 23, 2011 GAMEDAY
3
INSIDE THE GAME:
“They probably have the best four wide receivers – I haven’t seen all the wide receivers in the country, so it wouldn’t be fair for me to say the best group in the country, but I guess I would like to see the group that’s better than these four guys, even to match their previous performance and production, in terms of what BY MARQUAVIUS BURNETT they’ve been able to do for their team,” Saban ASSISTANT GAMEDAY EDITOR said. msburnett1@crimson.ua.edu When facing a prolific offense like Arkansas, @Marq_Burnett it is always a challenge for your entire team. Saban said Petrino and his offensive style of s the world and technology continue than head coach Bobby Petrino and the play is a lot like pro football. to evolve, so does the game of football. Arkansas Razorbacks. The Razorbacks rank “This is what you get ready for every week, In the olden days, there were leather in the nation’s top 10 of three major offensive because that’s how most [pro] teams are helmets and offensive lineman categories – passing yards per game, total built,” Saban said. “This is certainly a pro-style that weighed the same as wide receivers. In yards and points per game. offense. They have some really good players, “They are probably as good a passing team as and they do a really good job of starting fast. today’s game, the mental and physical strain of preparing for opponents creates a frenzy for there is in the country,” head coach Nick Saban They try to challenge you vertical downfield, said. “They certainly have the right players to as well as getting everybody running downfield coaches who try noting things. That creativity has given birth to innovative be. They are very well-coached, and they have and send someone crossing. Every mistake offensive and defensive schemes, forcing a very good system and scheme.” you make in pass defense, you’ll have an issue Arkansas features four big play receivers – getting them covered.” coaches to push their teams to be the best. One of the more notable creations during seniors Greg Childs, Joe Adams, Jarius Wright If there were a unit that shouldn’t have an this new era is the spread offense. The spread and junior Cobi Hamilton – who all have the issue slowing down Arkansas’ high powered begins with a no-huddle offense approach, with ability to go the distance on any given play. attack, it would be the Crimson Tide’s defense. the quarterback in the shotgun formation much Saban said he couldn’t imagine a group of The matchup between the Tide’s secondary of the time. With this scheme, offenses spread college receivers better than Arkansas. and the Razorback’s receivers features the field horizontally arguably the two best using three, four and units at their respective SS FS even five-receiver sets positions. Safety Robert FS (also features wider Lester said the Tide splits between the would not shy away from LB LB LB LB offensive linemen). the challenge. DB DB SS There is no one “We like a challenge, DB DB RE DT LE DB DB DB RE DT LE DB in the Southeastern and we like competition,” WR LT LG C RG RT WR WR WR WR WR LT LG C RG RT WR WR Conference who Lester said. “We came RB runs the spread to Alabama to compete QB RB QB more effectively against the best.”
THE SPREAD OFFENSE
A
EMPTY SET - 5 WIDE
CW | Evan Szczpański
FOUR RECEIVER SET
West Alabama State Fair & Expo September 29th 5-11p.m. Singer/Songwriter Night featuring: Dustin Parker, Josh Hawkins, Tariq Azam, Tom Wescott & Jon Kilgore former guitarist for Mother Pandora. September 30th 5-12a.m. Country Bands Crossfire & Induced Haze will perform October 1st-Noon 12a.m. West Alabama Miss Fair Queen Contest & performing on stage is Disco Tabauco, Stages of Seccession & headlining is Southland Band! 12p.m.-4p.m. Fair entrance is free with a canned food item
October 2nd 2p.m.-10p.m. Horseshoe Throwing Contest with Cash Prizes! Call Steve Anderson for info 205292-4724 Capstone Quartet & Blank Page featuring Catrina Kidd October 3rd UCPWA Guest Day Any individual that receives services from an agency, program, school or is Home schooled with an intellectual or physical disability rides free from 10:00 a.m.- 1:00 p.m. Lunch is not provided. Call Dr. La Monica Herron McCoy @ 345-3031 for more info. Regular Hours 5:00 p.m.- 11p.m. Teen Band Night featuring Screaming Prophet, DC Road, & Alice in Thunderland October 4th 5-11p.m. Spirit Night! Local High School cheerleaders compete for $300 prize & Admission $1 from 5p.m.-close for STUDENTS!!! Alabama Blues Project will perform
4
GAMEDAY
September 23, 2011
October 5th 5-11p.m. Magician Curt Anderson performs a Magic Show and Death Defying Stunt! October 6th 5-11p.m. Spirit Night! Local High School cheerleaders compete for $300 prize & Admission $1 from 5p.m.-close for STUDENTS!!! Acoustic Music performed by McCay & Mike that evening October 7th 5-12a.m. Hazardous Wasteland performs and headlining is Rydin’ Durty Band October 8th Noon-12a.m. FREE Admission from 12noon4p.m. for everyone who brings a canned good item. Black Oak Cemetary and Koldera & FAIR ENDS
TONY’S TASTE OF THE TOWN
FIG PROVIDES WORLDWIDE FLAVOR GameDay Editor Tony Tsoukalas dines on some of T-town’s finer foods
A
s the Crimson Tide enters the SEC season, it will have to prepare for different styles of play. Diversity, however, is not only the field. For fans looking to sample some of the South’s best recipes, FIG is a perfect place to kick off the SEC season. FIG, which stands for Food Is Good, offers patrons not only its own traditional southern dishes, but also items from all around the world. “I’ve got over 1,000 recipes from five-star restaurants in the world,” said David Snyder, owner of the restaurant. Snyder said that he likes to keep most of his recipes southern, but said that what he cooks primarily depends on what customers request. “We feature something different. If we get a lot of the same requests, I might do the same thing again. But I try to give people one or two things from different regions so they can experience it.” Most fans do not have the time or money to travel with the Tide. However, FIG makes sure that fans do not miss out on getting a taste of the South’s best dishes. “Unless you have been to the Buckhead Diner and tried their bread pudding, they would have
FIG FAST FACTS WHERE: 1351 McFarland Blvd NE #112 WHAT KIND OF FOOD: Gourmet cuisine WHAT TONY ORDERED: Salmon burger with grilled veggies and potatoes to go to Atlanta to try it,” Snyder said. “The only place to get it locally is here. I got their recipes.” At FIG, you will find food that you cannot find anywhere else in Tuscaloosa. From macaroni made with a northern Italian béchamel sauce,
to southern-style turnip greens, FIG doesn’t cheat a thing. “Everything that we serve here is the best that we can get,” Snyder said. “We don’t open cans. I mean, I had salmon burgers the other day. I tell you what, if you like salmon, you would love this. That is the kind of thing we are doing over here, and I think that we are exceptional in that way.” If he had to pick one dish to feature at FIG, it would be the creole fish and shrimp, which is topped with flavorful New Orleans-style sauce. “One of the best things I’ve ever put in my mouth – creole fish and shrimp here,” Snyder said. “It is just remarkable. When you eat it, it all blends together. The shrimp gets real sweet when you cook it – it is just remarkable. It is what I would order.” FIG provides the perfect opportunity for visitors to have their own taste of variety. “ We want people to have an experience when they come here,” Snyder said. “And that is what we do for them.”
@ cw.ua.edu
Watch Tony enjoy a delicious salmon burger during his visit to FIG at gameday.ua.edu.
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Alabama lines up in goal line formation against Kent State on Sept. 3, 2011. CW | Drew Hoover
6
GAMEDAY
September 23, 2011
TH BLOC
HE CKING BUNCH BY BRETT HUDSON
September 23, 2011 GAMEDAY
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F
or skilled players coming out of high school, the ability to play more than one position makes you a hot commodity. If you can throw a good 15-yard pass on one play, then catch a pass on the next play, college head coaches will be busting down your door with scholarship offers and promises of glory. But on the offensive line, that special talent is almost an expectation, rather than a luxury. This is becoming such a commonplace occurrence that many fans don’t even notice or care when their team makes a change in the trenches. Coaches do this for differing reasons, whether to exploit mismatches on an opponent-by-opponent basis or to give players rest. Head coach Nick Saban did this last week against North Texas for development reasons. “No one did anything bad,” Saban said. “It doesn’t have to be the result of a negative. It was an opportunity that we wanted to take advantage of to get Cyrus [Kouandjio], who we think is very talented but needs development, to play left tackle.” To the untrained eye, a revolving door on the offensive line may not seem chaotic, but each position on the line has different responsibilities and requires a different mindset and skillset. The center, often called the quarterback of the offensive line, is responsible for reading the
defense and making the necessary adjustments at the line of scrimmage. “It’s so different from the other positions because you’re making all the calls, and you have to prepare a whole lot more for that position mentally than you might for other positions,” Jones said. In the running game, the center has to make a quick read for the defensive alignment and set up the blocks accordingly. Against the 4-3, the center is often the only offensive lineman without a defender lined up across from him, making him responsible for making a second-level block on a linebacker or a blitzing safety. In the 3-4, the center often has a nosetackle in front of him, meaning he has to handle the nosetackle and make sure the guards are blocking the correct linebackers. The center is even more important in the passing game because he has to adjust the protection to the defense’s blitz, often forced to guess where the pressure is coming from. Barrett Jones plays both center and guard. He said the transition is not as easy as it looks. “It’s so different in preparation and footwork,” Jones said. “You really have to think about everything going on instead of just reacting.” The guard, often the most athletic of the offensive linemen, is required to make pull blocks in counter and toss sweep run plays. A pull block is when the guard leaves his gap at the
snap and runs around the tackle to the outside to create a seam for the running back to run through. A more difficult version of the pull block comes through on counter plays, where the guard on the opposite side of the line will run behind the center and serve as a lead blocker for the play, being forced to flip his position on the line before the ball gets to the running back. In pass protection, the guard is often forced to cover both the A gap (the gap between the center and the guard) and the B gap (the gap between the guard and tackle) simultaneously. The tackle also has a unique set of responsibilities. In the running game, the tackle has the most important block on the stretch play Alabama uses so much. The running back often runs right at the tackle while receiving the hand-off and cuts away at the last second, which makes the tackle’s ability to hold the block crucial. In pass protection, the tackle has to deal with a much faster defensive end that will try to run around the tackle by taking the edge. With so many different techniques and talents required for each position, the possibility of moving around can have an effect on an offensive line, especially in pregame preparations. “I practice a little bit everywhere,” Jones said. Jones knows the rigors of the position change all too well. Having started at right guard for
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GAMEDAY
September 23, 2011
The Alabama offensive line prepares as quarterback AJ McCarron calls a play vs. North Texas on Sept. 17. CW | Drew Hoover
25 of the Tide’s 27 games in the 2009 and 2010 seasons (he was injured for the 2010 Iron Bowl and the Capital One Bowl that followed), he has started at left tackle every game thus far in the 2011 season. “Once you learn the offense, you can play any spot up front. I mean, I have been here for four years, and I know the offense really well, so I can play anywhere. But at the same time, it looks a little different. It’s hard to describe it. It’s getting your eyes accustomed to seeing things that way.” Jones is not the first to endure these changes. In Saban’s first year at Alabama in 2007, the Crimson Tide used seven different combina-
tions of starting offensive linemen, using nine different players and having several start at more than one position. While the Tide has yet to change the starting rotation this season, the possibility is always there, as the rigors of a Southeastern Conference schedule can help one player separate himself as the clear-cut starter. One good possibility is that true freshman Cyrus Kouandjio could develop and take over the starting left tackle position, which would move Jones to either left guard or right guard, thus taking Warmack or Anthony Steen out of their starting spot. “He [Kouandjio] is coming along really well,”
Jones said. “He’s working really hard and is continuing to study the offense. I’m really proud of how hungry he is and his willingness to learn. There’s no doubt that he has the skills necessary, as you all can see.” Even with all the difficulties that come with a position change in the offensive line, the right type of athlete can handle it. “It just benefits me having him out there,” running back Trent Richardson said. “Most of the time, I tell coach to run the ball to Barrett’s side.” As SEC play begins this week against the Razorbacks, the offensive line’s performance as a unit will become more important.
September 23, 2011 GAMEDAY
9
Q&A
RELIVING THE TRADITION
with JERRY DUNCAN
Jerry Duncan, a 165-pound halfback coming out of North Carolina’s Sparta High school, played multiple positions for the Tide and eventually settled at weak side tackle. Duncan helped make the tackle eligible play famous at Alabama, a play where the quarterback would throw to an eligible tackle and burn unsuspecting defenses. He helped Alabama to the 1964 and ’65 national championships and an undefeated, untied season in 1966. Afterward, he was a sideline reporter at UA for 24 years and is now a financial advisor with UBS. - ZAC AL-KHATEEB
Gameday: Talk about your recruitment to Alabama. Jerry Duncan: This is an eye-opening experience for you. The University of Alabama was the only school that offered me a scholarship...I didn’t sign until May or June of my senior year of high school. I was probably going to go to a smaller school... and then my high school coach was at a coaching clinic, and Coach Bryant happened to be a keynote speaker and somehow convinced him to take a shot on me. And he took me without reviewing any tape or anything. He probably sat him down at a bar and kept going on about
GD: Are there any games that stuck out in your mind at Bama? JD: [In 1965], we play Georgia, get beat, and five or six games later we play Tennessee, play a close game, but then we go on a roll, we started getting better and play Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. We were third, and Nebraska was fourth. And that year, the Orange Bowl was a night game. So, the No. 1 and No. 2 teams get beat earlier in the day, so here it comes on the P.A., they lost, so me and [Bryant] probably got tired of hearing here we are basically playing for the national championship. We had a good team, they had a about me and said, “We’ll take him.” great team, and we beat them. It was coaching. GD: What was it like for you, a high school Coach Bryant outcoached them. So we got the national championship. running back, moving to tackle? JD: Well, I wasn’t really excited about it, I GD: Go over the tackle eligible play. can tell you that. Back in those days, Coach Bryant made decisions at the drop of a hat. He JD: That was another thing Coach Bryant came up with. It wasn’t that Coach Bryant told me, “You’re not working out at halfback, you’re not working out at blocking back, you’re invented it, but he took it to the highest level not working out at rover, and if you don’t work with it. We burned some people bad with it. He loved to run the play, and we just loved it. out at tackle, we’ll move you back to North It made it fun for an old halfback to get his Carolina.” Most conversations with Coach hands on the ball. Bryant were like that; they were very short.
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GAMEDAY
September 23, 2011
GD: So apart from his short conversations, what was it like playing for the Bear? JD: It was the thrill of a lifetime. Timing is everything. I just think timing is so important, especially for someone like me.
COLUMN / BY LAURA OWENS / SENIOR STAFF REPORTER
ARKANSAS GAME HAS BIG IMPLICATIONS Tide faces season’s first challenge against the Hogs
W
eek four of college football has come to mean that Alabama is about to face Arkansas in its SEC opener. Over the past ten years, there have been a few exceptions to this, but six out of the past seven years, it’s been Alabama against Arkansas in week four. Even when Arkansas wasn’t considered a contender for the SEC West division, this game has always had a direct impact on the rest of Alabama’s season. Lately, it’s become even more crucial for the Crimson Tide to win because both teams have risen to the top of the SEC. Alabama’s all-time record against Arkansas is 14-7. Since 2002, Alabama has gone 6-3 against the Razorbacks, coinciding with six winning seasons, two losing and one tied. Last year’s game was the Tide’s first big challenge of the season. Not only was it a road game and the SEC opener, but Arkansas was ranked No. 10 going into the game. The last time Alabama lost to Arkansas was in 2006. After a 10-2 season in 2005, Tide fans were hopeful that 2006 could be another step towards glory. However, in a disappointing 2423 overtime loss, those hopes were squashed at the end of September. That year also happened to be Mike Shula’s last year as head coach. Not to be dramatic,
but after that particular loss to Arkansas, I expected Shula’s time at Alabama would soon come to a close. For those of you who remember, it was the game that Alabama missed three
ALABAMA vs ARKANSAS RESULTS FOR PAST NINE YEARS YEAR
SCORE
OVERALL RECORD
2002
W 30-12
10-3, 6-2
2003
L 34-31 2OT
4-9, 2-6
2004
L 27-10
6-6, 3-5
2005
W 24-13
10-2, 6-2
2006
L 24-23 OT
6-7, 2-6
2007
W 41-38
7-6, 4-4,
2008
W 49-14
12-2, 8-0
2009
W 35-7
14-0, 8-0
2010
W 24-20
10-5, 5-3
field goals and the extra point in overtime. That Shula kept going for field goals when the kicker consistently missed showcased his conservative nature, which eventually resulted in him being fired. Taking the importance of this series just one step further, in Nick Saban’s time at Alabama, it seems the closer the score in the Arkansas game, the worse a season the Tide has. In 2007, Saban’s first year, the final score was 41-38, and Alabama’s record that season was 7-6 overall, 4-4 in the SEC. In 2008 and 2009, Alabama defeated the Hogs soundly and had two undefeated regular seasons, plus a national championship. Then after a close game last year, the Tide lost three crucial games later in the season. The 2011 game between the two has been hyped because Arkansas is yet again an offensive machine.. The Hogs are averaging 517 yards per game, with most of it coming from the passing game. Alabama’s passing defense is currently No. 5 in the country and No. 1 in the SEC, holding its opponents to 115 passing yards a game. Alabama is the higher ranked team, and the Tide has the home advantage. The team has the talent and the drive to overcome any and every opponent this year. Alabama is expected by many to win Saturday’s game, but that doesn’t mean it will.
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11
NEXTUP
ALABAMA vs FLORIDA at Florida Saturday, Oct. 1
CW Drew Hoover
12
GAMEDAY
September 23, 2011
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