Pasadena (AP)—The houndstooth hat is a memory—the Snake, Joe
Willie and Bart Starr replaced by guys named Julio, Javier and Mount Cody.
Alabama football, though, is alive and well, thanks to a defense that would
have made the Bear smile.
That defense knocked Texas quarterback Colt McCoy out of the BCS title game
early Thursday night, then made a big play to save the win late and restore
glory to Bear Bryant’s football factory with a 37-21 victory for the Crimson
Tide’s first national title since 1992.
The Tide was the unanimous No. 1 in The Associated Press poll.
“We back,” said Heisman Trophy winner Mark Ingram, the offensive MVP.
Hanging onto a three-point lead and with momentum on the other side,
linebacker Eryk Anders preserved the victory, forcing a fumble on his blindside
sack of Texas backup quarterback Garrett Gilbert with 3:02 left.
Ingram scored three plays later to give the top-ranked Tide (14-0) breathing
room, then Trent Richardson added a late touchdown to make it look like a
blowout it really wasn’t.
McCoy, injured on the Texas offense’s fifth play, watched most of it from
the sideline with an injured throwing shoulder.
“I would have given anything to be out there, because it would have been
different,” he said.
It wasn’t, though, and Nick Saban, in just his third year at Tuscaloosa,
helped Alabama earn its eighth title since the polls began in the 1930s, and its
seventh AP title.
Tide quarterback Greg McElroy took a knee to end the game, popped up to his
feet, raised the ball high in one hand and hugged a teammate. The celebration on
the floor of the Rose Bowl—not normally the Tide’s territory—was on.
“It feels good going down in history,” Terrence Cody said. “It’s hard to
do, but we won.”
It was a tough game dominated by big-play defense.
Marcell Dareus will join Ingram, Cody, receiver Julio Jones, defensive back
Javier Arenas and the rest in Crimson Tide lore after knocking McCoy down and
out, 4:06 into the game.
“I just heard a thump when I hit him,” Dareus said. “I did lay it down
pretty hard. I didn’t try to, but it felt great.”
A bit later, Dareus picked off Gilbert’s shovel pass and returned it 28
yards for a TD and a 24-6 lead late in the second quarter.
But this game was far from over.
“It was like we’d won the game at halftime,” Saban said. “But you can’t
accept being average. You’re playing a team in the national championship game
that knows how to win.”
The second half turned out to be anything but a laugher with Gilbert in the
game—a highly recruited freshman who was Texas’ “quarterback of the future”
but had thrown only 26 college passes coming into this game.
He threw two touchdown passes to All-American Jordan Shipley to trim the
deficit to 24-21 with 6:15 left, and after an Alabama punt, he had the ball at
the 7-yard line, 93 yards away from one of the most improbable comeback stories
in the history of the game.
But after an Alabama holding penalty moved the ball to the 17, Gilbert
dropped back to pass and got rocked by Anders, a senior who plays in the shadow
of Cody and fellow All-American Rolando McClain. The ball went flying and
Courtney Upshaw recovered.
Three plays later, Ingram surged into the end zone from the 1 for a 10-point
lead. A few minutes later, after Gilbert’s third interception of the night,
Richardson scored his second touchdown to make it 37-21.
Ingram finished with 116 yards rushing and two touchdowns, and Richardson
had 109 yards and two scores as Alabama beat Texas for the first time in nine
meetings between two of college football’s most successful teams. It also was
the fourth straight national title for the Southeastern Conference.
Before Ingram brought the first Heisman back to Alabama, the Tide used to
point to all its championships and say those were better than winning Heismans
(Remember, Auburn?).
Now, Alabama has both.
“I don’t think anybody in the country worked harder than us,” Ingram said.
“We played a great game today.”
Dareus finished with one tackle, one interception and one touchdown, but all
were game-changers.
Seeking its second national title in five years, second-ranked Texas (13-1)
got to the game on the back of McCoy, its All-America quarterback, who often
looked like a one-man show in leading the Longhorns to 13 straight wins.
After the injury, McCoy was asking to go back in to finish his last college
game. His dad, interviewed on ABC, said the injury wasn’t that bad.
But Texas coach Mack Brown decided to err on the side of caution, and McCoy
spent the second half wearing a headset on the sideline, trying to encourage his
teammates.
The Longhorns defense, ranked third in the country in yards allowed, kept
things close while Gilbert got his feet underneath him.
And, boy, did he.
He led the Longhorns on a five-play, 59-yard drive to make it 24-13, then 60
yards for the second score, and suddenly, the Tide was falling apart, not
rolling. The 2-point conversion made it 24-21.
“It’s a hard learning curve but he learned fast,” Brown said. “At one
point, I thought he was going to win the ballgame.”
The Tide, however, hung on and Saban became the first coach since the polls
began in 1936 to win national titles with two schools. He won the 2003 BCS
championship with LSU.
The program was grounded, of course, in the hardscrabble work-ethic brought
to Tuscaloosa in the 1960s by The Bear, who roamed the sideline in his
houndstooth hat and painted the quintessential portrait of a football coach in
those days.
His legacy still permeates almost everything at Alabama. But it was Saban,
who took over a program decimated by scandals, bad decisions and NCAA troubles
over the past decade, who convinced the Tide faithful they had to let go of the
past if they were ever going to enjoy the present.
It took him just three short years, and now ‘Bama is back.
“Everybody has made a great team and that’s why this team is good,” Saban
said. “It’s not just because of me. I’m proud of the team and proud of the way
they played today and I’m really proud of the state of Alabama.”