Wednesday, November 28, 2012

SEC Championship Game Preview


With a status as a probable BCS title game play-in , its array of ramifications and intangibles, and with most of the nation's eyes focused on it this weekend, Saturday's Southeastern Conference Championship Game between No. 2 Alabama and No. 3 Georgia is shaping up as an epic battle in the Georgia Dome. It is also a game that is difficult  to pick, as I have been going back and forth on a possible winner ever since the matchup between Nick Saban's Crimson Tide and Mark Richt's Bulldogs was officially set in stone. 




 

The Bulldogs appear to be playing their best football of the year at the current time, and have one of the most impressive wins of the season, with a win over the Florida Gators under their belts. This was a particularly noteworthy win for the Bulldogs as Richt's teams have often in the past been described as "soft," or at least not built for overly physical games or opponents.  The Bulldogs will have to prove that they can engage in that type of battle once again against the Crimson Tide, while also trying to gain the SEC crown which eluded them last season when they fell short in the championship tilt against the LSU Tigers. 



 

That will be a formidable test for Georgia, as Alabama seems to have regained a swagger that went into hiding during struggles against LSU and Texas A & M.  Of course neither of Bama's last two opponents, Western Carolina and Auburn, proved to be much of a test for the Crimson Tide, both falling 49-0, but the inexplicable upsets of Kansas State and Oregon that paved the way for the Crimson Tide to get squarely back into the national championship picture seems to have breathed new life into this Alabama team.  Although Alabama lost yet another key weapon to injury against Auburn in Kenny Bell, the Tide still seems to be playing with a quicker step and a greater energy level over the course of the past two games and will have most of its main playmakers on offense and defense healthy and focused for this SEC showdown.

 



This game is shaping up to perhaps be one of the most memorable in the history of the SEC title game, as both teams have their sights intensely focused on a possible meeting with No. 1 Notre Dame in the BCS National Championship Game in Miami. 

Athough it has talented playmakers all over the field defensively, Georgia's fortunes often are dictated by the play of talented but sometimes erratic quarterback Aaron Murray. Although blessed with a great arm and an impressive field presence generally, Murray has also been known to self-destruct with key turnovers at times, and typically against tougher SEC competition. This would prove to be a recipe for disaster against an Alabama defense which has been vulnerable at times this season, but has also had much more success this season in taking the ball away.  The Bulldogs also have a very solid running attack led by a pair of young talents in Todd Gurley and Keith Marshall, but I don't think it is an attack that can simply run at will against the Bama defense or wear it out.  Murray will have to make a lot of plays and he must show poise and not wilt against what will likely be a confusing defensive scheme concocted by Saban and defensive coordinator Kirby Smart. 
 
Defensively Georgia will likely have to bring more pressure than usual to try to slow down a Bama offense that has been crisp and balanced during its past couple of games and keep that offense off the field as much as possible early to prevent the Tide from perhaps later wearing it down with the running tandem of Eddie Lacy and T.J. Yeldon.
 
Both teams will likely start the game with a few jitters and missteps due to the enormity of the contest and what is at stake for both teams. But unlike the Bulldogs, the Crimson Tide has been pretty much accustomed to such atmospheres and ramifications ever since Saban began his tenure at the Capstone, and the value of that fact cannot be measured. 
 
Games such as this also often come down to turnovers, and although Georgia is playing at a very high and confident level right now, I have a bit more confidence in the Crimson Tide's ability to limit mistakes, penalties and that sort of thing.
 
Ultimately I feel that will be the difference between these two fine teams, as although I have been greatly tempted to pick Georgia to pull off the upset, Alabama's experience in pressure situations will lift it just enough to gain the conference crown and the BCS title game shot at the Fighting Irish.
 

Alabama 20, Georgia 17

Chizik Had To Go

Of course it was not a matter of if it was going to happen, but when.

Following Auburn's abysmal 49-0 loss to arch-rival Alabama on Saturday in Bryant-Denny Stadium, many speculated that it would only be a matter of days at the most, or a matter of hours at the least, before the reign of Gene Chizik as the Tiger head football coach would be ended.  That answer came Sunday as Chizik was informed that he will not return to lead the Tiger program in 2013.

While it is still somewhat stunning how far the Tiger program has fallen since Cam Newton and Guz Malzahn led Auburn to a 14-0 record in 2010 and the program's second national championship, there can be no argument that the move to oust Chizik had to be made, especially after the Tigers showed absolutely no fight in a 49-0 loss to a No. 2 Alabama squad that can have even been much more humiliating had Tide coach Nick Saban not shown a tremendous amount of class and mercy...Seriously, the Tide could have probably reached the 70-point plateau against the woeful Tigers.

I will be the first to say that Chizik seems to be a total class act, a nice person and a person who no doubt felt in his mind that he could restore a Tiger machine which had totally reached the malfunction stage, but I also felt he was overwhelmed as a head coach, especially in the SEC, where the Tiger program was beginning to fall further behind programs such as Alabama, LSU, Georgia and Florida.

In this state, where Saban's Crimson Tide is playing for a shot at its third national title in four years, and second in a row, the divide between the Crimson Tide and Tigers has grown so wide that there was little choice but to stop the bleeding and begin immediately searching for a coach who can at least hope to compete with Saban's Bama juggernaut.

Chizik seemed to have lost touch with how far his program had fallen, and I have little doubt that Tiger fans had grown weary of his robotic postgame speeches where he continued to spout off the same tired and generic statements to explain yet another demoralizing Auburn defeat.  Speculation had already begun about Chizik's possible replacement and names such as Jimbo Fisher of Florida State have begun to surface.  One name the Tiger program should avoid at all cost is Bobby Petrino.  Despite his prowess as an offensive mind and the success he has enjoyed before the turbulent turn of events which ended his reign as Arkansas coach, the Auburn program does not need the negativity which a Petrino hire would invariably cause.

Auburn is in desperate need of all the positivity it can find at this point.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

The Return of The Sports Connection

Long time friends and sports buddies Stan and Darren return to bring you the once famous Sports Connection made famous in the halls of West End Christian High School back in the day.  As usual Stan handles the writing and I handle the IT computer stuff and graphics.  I also like to throw in the irritating comedy relief just to annoy the King of Sports himself.

We will be getting the bugs out and some changes will occur from time to time but without further obnoxious introductions, Stan the Man himself will introduce his new computer blog version of our new Sports Connection and Prognosticator!!  Thanks in advance for all the wonderful support I'm sure we will get.   Besides, what a great time to get started.  Roll Tide!

Regards,
Darren