Monday, October 11, 2010
A Much Needed Loss
Sitting in the South Carolina student section amid the reverberations of sandstorm and the many unnecessary cock references, I experienced a long lost feeling. It was that odd feeling in the pit of my stomach that is the midway point between anger, depression, and disgust. It was a feeling that I had known to mask during the Dubose, Franchione, and Shula eras as well as Saban’s first year.
As the fans swarmed the hedges, booing the announcements to not storm the field while chanting ‘You can’t stop us’, I soaked in the unthinkable Alabama loss. I had not experienced that feeling since the ’08 SEC Championship game, and I had forgotten how bad it hurt. I believe the players had as well.
If the saying ‘what does not kill you only makes you stronger’ is true, the Crimson Tide national championship hopes are far from dead. In fact, I believe that a loss betters our championship chances. Actually, it gives Alabama the opportunity to grow into the championship team it can be. South Carolina uncovered the flaws that lost Alabama the game, commitment and complacency. Alabama, as Nick Saban pressed after the game, needs to be committed to this program and no longer be complacent as the seemingly dominant Alabama team.
From the stands, one could tell that the Alabama team, and even the fans, possessed no real sense of urgency. It was as though everyone believed the football gods would come down from the heavens to right what was wrong. Instead, Garcia received the blessings by playing uncharacteristically good and utilizing two of the best skill players in the conference in Marcus Lattimore and Alshon Jeffery while the Gamecock defense rebounded after allowing Cam Newton 400 plus yards to holding the best running back tandem in the country, Ingram and Richardson, to 64 yards.
Dissecting Alabama’s schedule at the beginning of the year, the loss seemed inevitable. Alabama played the toughest three week stretch of any team in the nation that included two top twenty teams, one top ten team, and two games on the road. Only Lou Holtz’s 1990 Notre Dame Fighting Irish have fought through a similar scenario without a blemish.
They will go on to play five SEC schools with bye weeks after South Carolina, including two that will possibly remain in the top ten. Disturbingly, one saw what Spurrier could do with an added week’s time so any of those games look more dangerous.
To make it through this schedule, the team needed a wake-up call. Say what you want about the SEC. It is not as weak as I, and many others, had thought. This week showed that this is the SEC of the early 2000s that would beat each other out of the national championship game.
The public is not used to that evenly matched SEC. They are accustomed to the perennial powerhouse conference that would always end with two teams battling in Atlanta for the bid to greater glory. Alabama is hands down more talented and better coached than any other team in the conference, but passion, desire, and execution trump complacency any day of the week.
McElroy made a vow after the game that he will not allow this team to lose another game. As much as I hate to say it, his statements sounded Tebow-esque in reference to his vow after the Ole Miss loss, only without the tears. The situations are similar as well. Both teams were favorites. Both teams were outplayed. Florida went on to win the national championship. May Alabama do the same. Of course, the football gods will need to do some work to the top six, but Alabama is far from out of the race. One thing is certain. I would hate to be the Ole Miss team that comes into Bryant-Denny stadium on Saturday.
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