College Football
All Sports | Scoreboard | Standings | Teams | Leaders | Polls/BCS

Texas A&M-Alabama Preview

Texas A&M Aggies at Alabama Crimson Tide

  1. This will be the fifth meeting between the Crimson Tide and Aggies and the first since 1988. Overall, Alabama leads the series 3-1. The two teams played in the 1942 and 1968 Cotton Bowls, splitting those two games. The Tide then swept a home-and-home series, winning 23-10 in Birmingham in 1985 and 30-10 in College Station in 1988.
  2. The Tide, one win shy of yet another 10-win season, has 31 10-win seasons in 117 seasons, two back of Oklahoma (33) for the most 10-win seasons in college football.
  3. Over Alabama's last nine games against ranked competition, none of their opponents have scored more than 17 points. The Crimson Tide have allowed an average of just 9.9 points in those contests, while outscoring them 279-89.
  4. The Aggies' matchup with top-ranked Alabama will be their 12th all-time meeting against the No. 1 team in the Associated Press Top 25. The Aggies are 1-10 in the previous games against No. 1 teams, with the lone victory being a 30-26 win over Oklahoma in 2002.
  5. Alabama and Louisiana Tech are the only two teams in college football that have not thrown an interception this season. It has been 12½ games since a Crimson Tide quarterback threw an interception, the longest streak in the nation by three games.
  6. At 559.6 yards per game, Texas A&M's 2012 offense is on pace to break the SEC's total offense per game average of 534.4, which was set by the 1995 Florida Gators.
  7. Aggies quarterback Johnny Manziel is one of just two FBS quarterbacks (Jordan Lynch of Northern Illinois the other) with at least 15 passing touchdowns and 15 rushing touchdowns this season.
  8. Alabama kicker Jeremy Shelley is the only kicker in the nation yet to miss an extra point or a field goal in 2012. Thus far, Shelley has hit all 43 of his extra point attempts and all nine of his field goals.

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) - Nick Saban doesn't waive his 24-hour celebration rule even after dramatic, last-minute wins that rescue No. 1 Alabama's hopes for a national title.

Maybe especially after them.

The Crimson Tide coach quickly cautioned his players not to let the emotions of last Saturday's 21-17 victory at then-No. 5 LSU overshadow the next big challenge. There's little time to celebrate when No. 15 Texas A&M's high-flying offense is coming to town Saturday.

"We've got to forget about this last game," Saban said on Monday. "We've got to move on. I told the players that right after the game. I think they have a lot of respect for this team. It'd be pretty difficult not to respect this team based on their body of work and what they've accomplished this season."

The Aggies (7-2, 4-2 SEC), who average 44.7 points and 559.6 yards, appear to represent the last real obstacle between the Tide and a perfect regular season, barring a gargantuan upset. A win sends Alabama (9-0, 6-0) into the SEC championship game against either No. 5 Georgia or No. 7 Florida.

After this one, Bama faces FCS Western Carolina (1-9) and struggling rival Auburn (2-7). To win the West, Saban's team needs only to win one more SEC game. To compete for the national title, it probably needs to win out.

The Tide offense was sputtering badly until AJ McCarron led the team down the field before lofting a screen pass that T.J. Yeldon turned into a 28-yard touchdown with 51 seconds left. And Alabama had survived its first significant threat of the season.

Saban said games like that LSU "can bring out either the best in you or the worst in you. It's all your choice."

Linebacker C.J. Mosley said sticking to the rule of one day to savor a wins before moving on was no big deal.

"It wasn't hard at all," Mosley said. "We have a goal, we have a mission that we have to do every week and it's our job to get past that game and move on to the next team."

Saban makes it easier to refocus by pointedly declaring it "by far" the team's worst defensive performance of the season. Alabama allowed 475 yards, the most since Saban's first season in 2007.

The Tide also pulled out a game that seemed to be slipping away during the 2009 national title run.

Massive nose tackle Terrence Cody blocked two low fourth-quarter field goal attempts to preserve a 12-10 win over Tennessee and keep the perfect season going. Last season, the Tide won every game by at least 16 points except for a 9-6 overtime loss to LSU.

Defensive end Damion Square was asked if Alabama needed such a test after trailing for all of 15 seconds in the first eight games.

"I don't think you ever need a game like that, but you know they come," Square said. "I've been playing college football for a while and every year we have one like that. You never know when it's going to show up, but coach always says to practice your best so when your best is needed, you can bring it out. And our best was needed and we brought it out."

The challenge is far different this week. Texas A&M brings quarterback Johnny Manziel and a no-huddle offense of the sort that Saban wondered aloud in October: "Is this what we want football to be?"

That came after the Tide had played Mississippi, which also employs a fast-paced style. Saban's reasoning was that it limited substitution by a defense and created potential safety issues for players.

Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin later retorted that he was just playing by the rules.

Asked about the comments Monday, Saban bristled.

"I think everybody misinterpreted what I said about no-huddle," he said. "I don't mind playing against no-huddle. We don't mind that at all. That wasn't what I said, it's what you all interpreted it to be. I just asked the question, Is this what we want the game to become? That's for you to answer. But that doesn't mean we don't like playing against it. We don't mind playing against it. It is what it is."

The Aggies' quick-tempo offense ran 97 plays and amassed 693 yards, gaining 361 on the ground and 332 through the air, in last Saturday's 38-13 win over then-No. 15 Mississippi State. It was the fifth time this season Texas A&M racked up at least 600 yards.

Manziel completed 30 of 36 passes for 311 yards and ran for 129 yards and two touchdowns for the Aggies, who improved to 5-0 on the road. The freshman has now totaled 31 touchdowns and is averaging 383.2 yards of total offense, better than 47 FBS teams.

"We're lucky to have him," running back Ben Malena said. "The play is never over. You've got to stay in the play and try to help him out any way you can."

The Tide appear healthy going into their first meeting with Texas A&M since 1988, though Saban said tailback Eddie Lacy would miss a day of practice to rest an ankle injury sustained against LSU.

He said leading wide receiver Amari Cooper didn't re-injure an ankle in the game but was "just a little sore" and shouldn't miss practice. Cooper didn't play in the second half.

"He's going to be able to practice and be ready to go this week," Saban said.

Updated November 6, 2012

w3 © 2013 by STATS LLC and Associated Press.
Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.