by Arnaldo
It's the "Rematch" of the "Game of the Century"! What more could you want out of a National Championship?Funny to ask since a large minority of pundits and fans would rather see Les Miles' old team, Oklahoma State, try their best against his new team, LSU, but that's behind us so let's focus on the match-up at hand: Nick Saban's old team, LSU, against his new team, Alabama (see what I did there?). We haven't seen a rematch in the title game since 1996 when Florida beat Florida State, who had previously lost to FSU at the end of the regular season. That game should inspire hope, in the days before the big game, that we should see the best game college football has to offer, and that anything can happen. As for the coaches, there's plenty of talent on both sides. Nick Saban has won two titles with LSU and Alabama, and Les Miles was here four years ago with LSU.
"Umm . . . Awkward?" |
Round I: FIGHT!
So how should this game play out? Well luckily we already saw these teams duke it out. First of all, let me just say, that game was not boring. I mean, you may have been bored watching it, but there's nothing boring about a stalemate, the culmination of solid, mistake-free, perfectly coached football. For most teams, there's a looseness about calling and executing plays when a team usually has a go-to play with a high rate of success. This wasn't that. This was 60 minutes of high tension and insurmountable anxiety. Neither coach could call the wrong play; neither group of players could make a single mistake, the other team would capitalize. When you have two teams with great offenses but phenomenal defenses, this is the type of game you're gonna see.
Round II: FIGHT!
On the opposite side of the coin, each coaching staff knows what the other team is studying, and know what didn't work the first time around. As a result, expect plays, coverages, and especially blitzes you've never seen from each team before.
Keys to Victory
For LSU, it's one word: consistency. Les Miles prides himself on consistency, but something is getting lost in translation. LSU is undefeated because of three things: near-perfect defense, near-perfect special teams, and a stellar offensive line, but LSU is not a perfect team. There is a severe lack of consistency in the offense, namely the skill positions. They're quick fix has been their depth. Two quarterbacks (though expect much more, if not all Jordan Jefferson over Jarret Lee), five runningbacks, constantly in rotation. When one guy drops the ball (both literally and metaphorically) Miles just sends in his replacement. It's like covering holes with duct tape; it's not a real fix.
CB Tyrann Mathieu |
For Alabama, it all goes back to Nick Saban. Love him or hate him, there's no smarter coach in football, and with him comes a big strategic advantage: his team didn't have to play on championship week and LSU's offensive holes were severely exposed against Georgia's defense in the first half. You can bet Nick was licking his lips watching the golden footage while his team gets an extra week to rest. Alabama needs to limit Jordan Jefferson to either the pass or run game. Alabama's defense is first in every major category so it should be pretty easy to stop the weak passer. With LSU focusing on their powerful run game, they'll need to use their outside option game to widen the box to set up good interior runs. Alabama's only weakness is outside linebacker speed and defending the option (they allowed 307 run yards against the triple-option FCS Georgia Southern). In their last meeting, LSU was very capable of moving the ball on outside speed options. Look for Saban to keep his linebackers a little more spread out and prepared for outside options. There may also be less use of a true Buck (hybrid linebacker/defensive end). Either way, Saban will be out to turn LSU into a one-dimensional offense. One-dimensional teams do not win against Nick Saban.
RB Trent Richardson |
Alabama beats LSU 20-10