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#1 Alabama, 2009 BCS National Football Champions!
- Eddie Pells, AP National Writer
January 8, 2010
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The Alabama Crimson Tide celebrate with the BCS Championship trophy
after winning the Citi BCS National Championship game.
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PASADENA, CA. -- This was the end.
This was the end of 17 years University of Alabama football fans
wondered if the rollercoaster would ever stop. The end of a lot of
mediocrity, two years removed from playing in back-to-back
Independence Bowls. The end of doubt whether one of the most storied
programs in history would ever be able to reclaim its proud status.
What a fitting setting for it to happen, the Rose Bowl, even though
the Crimson Tide’s 13th national championship did end up being rather
anti-climactic on some levels Thursday night.
“We back,” said sophomore Mark Ingram, with the 37-21 victory over
Texas leaving no doubt.
With four turnovers created by the defense, which also knocked
Longhorns senior quarterback Colt McCoy out of the game with a
shoulder injury, and both Ingram and freshman running back Trent
Richardson tallying more than 100 rushing yards, the Tide celebrated
in the same place where it won its first title 84 years ago in similar
fashion against Washington.
But never before had an Alabama or Southeastern Conference team gone
14-0 to win the championship, much less beat the last three national
champions along the way and land the Heisman Trophy.
“I’ll tell you what I told the team, that I’ve never been prouder of
a group of guys for their resiliency, their buy-in, their hard work,
the blood, sweat and tears that they put worth to accomplish what
they accomplished this season,” said Nick Saban, who became the first
coach in modern college football history to win national titles at two
different schools. “I think most of us don’t realize how difficult it
is, the togetherness that it takes, the discipline and execution that
it takes, and certainly the hard work that these guys did.”
For that, they were handed the crystal football. They’ll also be
measured for large rings and one person might soon get a statue
alongside the Alabama’s other championship coaches despite the fight
he’s expected to put up.
“I’ll talk to him,” athletics director Mal Moore said with a wide
grin.
Alabama also did so while sticking to what it does best, play
physically, only the Tide didn’t come out that way and essentially
handed the Longhorns six points before the fireworks smoke from the
pregame festivities cleared. After winning the coin toss and taking
the ball, Alabama inexplicably tried to execute a fake punt at its
own 20, with senior P.J. Fitzgerald’s toss intercepted by Blake Gideon.
The subsequent goal-line stand helped set the defensive tone for the
Tide, but after making a short field goal Texas pooch-kicked for the
second time in freshman Michael Williams’ direction, only there was
no one there to field it. The recovery led to another field goal.
But even though Texas led 6-0 after the first quarter what appeared
to be the death blow had already been struck. It came on the
Longhorns’ fifth offensive snap, when McCoy was hit by sophomore end
Marcell Dareus and sustained a pinched nerve.
“I’m not in pain, but my arm’s dead,” McCoy said. “Feels like I slept
on my arm.”
Without the NCAA’s all-time winningest quarterback, who had never
missed a game with an injury, the Longhorns had to turn to true
freshman Garrett Gilbert, who had seen spot duty in nine games but
attempted just 26 passes.
That’s when the pounding began. Ingram and Richardson gashed and
grinded the nation’s No. 1 defense against the run, with Alabama
more than doubling in the first half what Texas allowed per game
(62.2 yards). Ingram got it going with carries of 8, 9 and 9 yards
to set up his first touchdown, a 2-yard plunge when ran into open
space behind part-time fullback Terrence Cody.
Richardson didn’t mess around with any of that, bursting through the
left side on a counter and outraced everyone in white 49 yards to the
end zone midway through the second quarter.
Yet Alabama wasn’t done. A Leigh Tiffin 26-yard field goal later,
Texas surprisingly took a time out with 15 second remaining so
Gilbert could attempt a shovel pass.
“That chance was about as safe as we got,” Texas coach Mack Brown
said.
Instead, the ball bobbled, Dareus snared it and ran over the
quarterback en route to the end zone, getting there for the 28-yard
score with just three seconds on the clock.
“My first reaction was grab the ball, and then after that I blanked
out,” Dareus said. “All I was thinking about is Mark Ingram and Javier
Arenas and just doing moves I didn’t think I could do.”
Having scored 24 unanswered points, the Tide appeared to have stuck a
fork in the Longhorns … or had it?
“At halftime with that lead, I think we got a little too high,” senior
linebacker Cory Reamer said. “We came out the second half real flat.”
With Alabama playing conservatively, Texas kept attacking and Gilbert
finally started getting into a rhythm, particularly with All-American
wide receiver Jordan Shipley. A 28-yard touchdown closed the gap and
their 44-yard strike suddenly made it a three-point game in the fourth
quarter. The Longhorns even found themselves with first down at their
own 7 with 3:14 remaining.
“There were times he was a little bit shaky, but for the most part to
step in, in a situation like that, he did awesome,” Arenas said about
Gilbert, who as a high-profile recruit was named both the Gatorade and
Parade national player of the year in 2008.
Alabama finally got to him while faking a blitz on the other side,
when Texas squeezed its protection and essentially leaving senior
Eryk Anders unblocked. When he caught Gilbert from the blindside the
ball flew loose, with sophomore linebacker Courtney Upshaw recovering
at the Texas 3.
“The hit Eryk Anders made to cause the fumble at the end of the game
was really the difference in the game,” Saban said.
Ingram punched in another touchdown and following a last-minute Arenas
interception, his second, Richardson did likewise. While the passing
game mustered only 58 yards, with sophomore receiver Julio Jones
making only one catch and senior tight end Colin Peek shut out, Ingram
had 116 touchdowns on 22 carries despite cramping and playing with a
foot injury, and Richardson accumulated 109 yards on 19 carries.
Texas outgained Alabama 276-263 yards, was more successful on third
downs and notched five sacks against a unit that had yielded only 15
all season.
None of that mattered. Ingram was named the game’s offensive MVP and
Dareus took home the defensive award despite having just the one
tackle. They along with senior guard Mike Johnson kissed and cradled
the crystal football when it was handed to them on the victory
platform.
The era of an era was over, and possibly a new one begun.
“I feel like I’ve played an entire career, it’s been one heck of a
season,” McElroy said. “This team is just so special. I’ve been a
part of a lot of great things. I’ve been a lot of football locker
rooms, a lot of hockey locker rooms and things like that, but this
team has the heart.
“That’s what it is, willingness to go the extra mile.”
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