Alabama vs. Texas A&M prediction: SEC Tournament odds, pick

Two NCAA tournament contenders match up for the SEC Tournament final on Sunday.

The controversial Brandon Miller will lead the Alabama Crimson Tide into a raucous environment in Nashville, Tennessee, to face the Texas A&M Aggies.

SEC Tournament: Alabama vs. Texas A&M

How to watch

Game time: 1 p.m. ET

TV: ESPN

Live Stream: ESPN+, fuboTV, Sling, YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV


Betting on March Madness 2023?


Alabama vs. Texas A&M prediction

Alabama (-3.5) over Texas A&M: The Aggies have quietly become one of the nation’s most dangerous teams entering the NCAA Tournament.

Buzz Williams’ crew has lost just once since the start of February and knocked off five tournament teams, including a six-point win over Alabama last weekend.

However, that win came in College Station, where the Tide had their second-lowest scoring output of the season after shooting less than 34 percent from the field and 7-of-36 from deep.

In a matchup of two of the best teams in the nation at getting to the line, the Aggies shouldn’t expect to attempt 18 more free throws again.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Jalen Hurts unselfish at Alabama was glimpse into soul

Five years later, it remains the gold-standard good-teammate moment.

Five years later, even with all Jalen Hurts has accomplished, even as he stands a week away from leading the Eagles into Super Bowl 2023 against the Chiefs, it is still a defining glimpse into his soul, and perhaps explains why he has been able to develop, so rapidly, into one of the NFL’s most electric quarterbacks.

This was the night of Monday, Jan. 8, 2018. Jalen Hurts began that night owning one of the best spots in all of college football: quarterback of the mighty Alabama Crimson Tide, ranked No. 1, 12-1 on the season. Hurts had won the QB1 gig the year before as a true freshman, the first time that had happened in Tuscaloosa in 32 years.

His record heading into that College Football Playoff national championship against Georgia was 23-2. He could run. He could throw. There were Saturdays when he looked like the best quarterback in America. Life was good. Life was perfect.

And then he got benched.

The Crimson Tide trailed 13-0 at the half. The offense was stagnant. You figured that head coach Nick Saban was cooking up something in the halftime locker room, but it was stunning when Alabama’s offense came on the field and a freshman named Tua Tagovailoa came trotting on. And he was brilliant, leading ’Bama to a 26-23 win, including a 41-yard touchdown strike to DeVonta Smith that won the game in overtime.


Tua Tagovailoa (l.) celebrates a touchdown pass with Jalen Hurts of the Alabama Crimson in the 2018 CFP title game.
Getty Images

And all across the second half, the TV cameras went searching for Jalen Hurts. That was what they had to do. A star quarterback gets sent to the bench? Surely, at the least, there would be a few shots of eyerolls. Maybe, if they got lucky, they’d see Hurts actually pouting on the sidelines, or yelling, making a prima-donna nuisance of himself.

What the cameras found was remarkable.

But for different reasons.

For all the right reasons.

When Tagovailoa threw his first TD pass and gave the Tide life, it was Hurts who was first to greet him, pounding on his shoulder pads. When the kid had his second scoring throw, again it was Hurts who ran onto the field and hugged his erstwhile backup. And at game’s end, after his replacement had made one of the forever throws in college football history, Hurts ran around in spastic glee just like every other one of his teammates.

If you didn’t know he’d been benched, you wouldn’t know he’d been benched.

And it got even better.


Tua Tagovailoa #13 of the Alabama Crimson Tide celebrates with Jalen Hurts #2 after beating the Georgia Bulldogs in the CFP title game in 2018.
Getty Images

“It was important for me to stay true to myself and be the person I am, and the leader I am, regardless of the circumstances,” Hurts said in the locker room later on, as reporters replaced the cameramen fruitlessly looking for signs of bitterness or envy. “It’s my duty to do things like that, and to do all those things genuinely.”

That was an OG reaction from a 19-year-old kid, and immediately the reaction was palpable and visceral. I wrote about Hurts and the replies flooded in, folks taken by a strong picture of sportsmanship and selflessness at a time, especially in college sports, when both seemed in such short supply.

It was assumed that Hurts would transfer within a few days. He didn’t. He stuck around Alabama for another year, competed with Tua, but served as a backup. He did get one moment of glory, relieving an injured Tagovailoa during the 2018 SEC Championship game, guiding ’Bama into the CFP. He graduated that December, but still had a year of eligibility.


Jalen Hurts has the Eagles in Super Bowl 2023.
AP

At first he thought about Maryland, where he could’ve put up some absurd numbers. But Saban — perhaps touched by Hurts’ own unselfishness — suggested Oklahoma would be a better fit, with better receivers and an offense-minded coach, Lincoln Riley. Saban did that knowing Oklahoma would be far more of a potential threat to him than Maryland ever could be. Hurts went to Oklahoma, had a great year, led the Sooners to the playoff. And now he sits one game away from a Super Bowl.

Sometimes, it turns out, Leo Durocher was dead wrong. Sometimes nice guys finish first.

Vac’s Whacks

Was on the FAN with Joe Benigno Saturday and he mentioned something that hadn’t occurred to me and is a little bit sobering. We used to treat the Rangers’ 54-year drought like a Biblical plague around here. The Jets last won the Super Bowl — yep — 54 years ago. Good thing “1969!” isn’t as rhythmic as “1940!” was.


Davey Johnson turned 80 this week, and it says here that if David Wright hadn’t commandeered No. 5 and made it his own eternally, it would soon be hanging in honor of the other Davey.


Former Mets manager Davey Johnson is 2016.
Paul J. Bereswill

It isn’t often you can call a movie both “delightful” and “disturbing” but I would say “The Menu” qualifies.


Think it might be time we all started taking a harder look at Fordham, which is making a whole lot of noise in the Atlantic 10 this year thanks to Keith Urgo and a batch of scrappy and fun players.

Whack Back at Vac

John Visconti: So Kyrie Irving wants to be traded, eh? I have been a die-hard fan of this hard-luck franchise for 55 years and I say, good. Let this pathologically self-centered, emotional train wreck, with his insatiable desire for attention and his childlike grasp of world affairs, take his nonsense elsewhere.

Vac: I suspect when this happens, Nets fans will feel like they can breathe for the first time in forever.


Alan Hirschberg: Monday, LeBron James had “serious” soreness, so he (and Anthony Davis) didn’t play in Brooklyn. But on Tuesday, there they were on the Garden court. Two miraculous recoveries! When did the East River acquire the healing power of the Grotto of Lourdes?

Vac: I believe it also shows that the distance between MSG and Barclays Center remains far greater than the 8 miles as the crow flies.


LeBron James at Madison Square Garden last week.
Getty Images

@DigiElon: The Empire State Building has a good chance of being here 100 years after every single one of its critics are gone. I got the building -110.

@MikeVacc: Let’s hope so. And let’s hope the next time it goes green and white it’s to celebrate the Jets (speaking of 100 years) …


Frank Giordano: If the Jets get Aaron Rodgers (I hope not!), despite what the great Joe Namath has said … the Jets cannot give him number 12, can they?

Vac: It was a nice gesture, but I think the Jets would sooner open the gates at MetLife missing a goalpost than Joe Willie’s number off the wall.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Georgia’s Kirby Smart matches Nick Saban’s elusive Alabama feat

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — A year ago, Kirby Smart became just the second of Nick Saban’s assistant coaches to beat him. On Monday, Smart became perhaps the first coach since Saban re-entered college football back in 2007 who can lay claim to owning the sport in the way he has for so long. 

Each and every time someone has looked likely to put a halt to Alabama’s year-over-year dominance, Saban endured and his opposition faded. There was Dabo Swinney’s Clemson, which twice beat Alabama in national title games, but sans-Trevor Lawrence hasn’t made it back to the playoff. There was Jimbo Fisher’s Florida State and Urban Meyer’s Ohio State. Ever so briefly, there was Ed Orgeron’s LSU. All success stories. None relevant for nearly as long as Saban’s Alabama. 

Now? Smart has done what no one could since Saban all the way back in 2011 and ’12. He’s won two straight national titles, the second of those coming on Monday night at SoFi Stadium with a 65-7 mauling of TCU. Alabama’s season finished all the way back on New Year’s Day with a victory in the Cotton Bowl, the sort of game long rendered irrelevant by the standard Saban has set in Tuscaloosa. 

Kirby Smart celebrates after Georgia’s national championship win.
Charles Baus/CSM/Shutterstock
Nick Saban was the last coach to win two straight national titles.
Getty Images

Alabama will be back, of course. Saban hauled in the No. 2 recruiting class in the nation last month, and no one in their right mind expects the Tide to go down easy. But at least as of Tuesday morning, it’s Smart whose program sets college football’s standard. 

“The disease that creeps into your program is called entitlement. I’ve seen it firsthand,” Smart said, not an hour after reaching the mountaintop. “If you can stomp it out with leadership, then you can stay hungry. And we have a saying around our place: We eat off the floor. And if you’re willing to eat off the floor, then you can be special.” 

That might as well be the Saban of yesteryear talking. 

“He gets everything out of us,” receiver Kearis Jackson said of Smart. “We’re all on scholarship and he’s gonna get that scholarship out of us.” 

This national championship game domination looked remarkably like Saban’s 42-14 shellacking of Notre Dame in 2012, another decimation that delivered a back-to-back title. 

That one saw Alabama cement itself as the center of the sport. This one saw Georgia take up the Crimson Tide’s mantle, with Saban relegated to sitting and watching as an ESPN analyst. Right down to players citing imaginary doubters postgame, though, this was a work of art out of Saban’s book. 

“Really just instilling in us that we’re not gonna be hunted here at the University of Georgia,” right tackle Warren McClendon told The Post about Smart’s impact. “We’re gonna be the ones doing the hunting. And we’re gonna be the aggressors and we’re gonna come at our opponents every week.” 

At Smart’s Georgia, that’s the right mindset to have against anyone. Sonny Dykes’ TCU, certainly. And yes, even Saban’s Alabama.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Odds, CFB picks, Bryce Young injury update

Our college football betting expert offers his best betting picks and predictions for the SEC matchup between Alabama vs. Tennessee scheduled for Saturday at Knoxville, Tennessee., at 3:30 p.m. ET on CBS.

No. 3 Alabama faces an extreme test with the visit to No. 6 Tennessee, which will be looking to post a signature win that elevates the program back into the national elite.

Alabama vs. Tennessee predictions

• Tennessee to cover +7 spread @ -119 via Caesars Sportsbook
• Over 65 total points @ -117 via Caesars Sportsbook
• Jahmyr Gibbs over 109.5 rushing yards @ -117 via Caesars Sportsbook


Claim a Risk-Free First Bet up to $1,000

New customers only. Must be 21+. AZ, CO, IA, IL, IN, LA, MI, NJ, NY, PA, TN, VA, WV, WY only. (Welcome Offer not available in NY & PA) Full T&C apply.


First bet up To $1,250 On Caesars

New users only, 21 or older. NY, CO, DC, IA, IN, IL, MI, NV, NJ, PA, TN, VA, WV only. Full T&Cs apply.


Bet $5, Get $150 + 3 Month NBA League Pass Sub

21+. New customers only. AZ, CT, IA, IL, LA, MI, NJ, NY, PA, TN, WV, WY only. T&C apply

Alabama vs. Tennessee picks and analysis

The Crimson Tide are hoping quarterback Bryce Young’s throwing shoulder will heal enough for him to play, while the Volunteers’ upset chances will increase substantially if he misses a second straight game.

Tennessee to cover +7

Alabama (6-0, 3-0 SEC) is a different team without Young as redshirt freshman Jalen Milroe isn’t a sufficient passing threat. Crimson Tide coach Nick Saban said Milroe played with a lot of anxiety in last week’s 24-20 win over Texas A&M, so it’s hard to see him calmer this week if he plays.

Young, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner, has passed for 1,202 yards, 14 touchdowns and three interceptions. His presence would bring confidence to the Alabama offense as well as big-time production.

The Crimson Tide have gone run-heavy without Young by gaining 317 against Arkansas on Oct. 1 and 293 versus Texas A&M. That would again be the plan against Tennessee if Young is unable to play.

The Volunteers would benefit greatly if Young can’t play as his absence would pump up their upset chances.

Our Pick: Tennessee to cover +7

Jabari Small #2 of the Tennessee Volunteers celebrates a touchdown
Getty Images

Over 65 points

Tennessee (5-0, 2-0) has already beaten three ranked teams this season and is 5-0 for the first time since 2016. The Volunteers have 500-plus yards of offense in four of their five games.

Quarterback Hendon Hooker has gone a program-record 239 passes without an interception and has completed 70 percent of his passes for 1,432 yards and 10 touchdowns this season. He has been a difference-maker for a club that ranks second nationally in scoring offense (46.8 points per game) and leads the nation in total offense (547.8 yards per outing).

Alabama’s defense ranks sixth in both scoring defense (12.5) and total defense (250.8) as it looks to slow down the Vols. Tennessee also had a big game on the ground last weekend with a season-best 263 rushing yards in a 40-13 trouncing of host LSU.

The Crimson Tide are fifth in scoring offense (44.3) and seventh in total offense (503.7) while Tennessee is a big shaky with a ranking of 87th in total defense (396.6) despite being 22nd in scoring defense (17.8).

Our Pick: Over 65 points

Head coach Nick Saban of the Alabama Crimson Tide
Getty Images

Betting on College Football?

Jahmyr Gibbs over 109.5 rushing yards

Alabama running back Jahmyr Gibbs is averaging 8.3 yards per carry while rushing for 532 yards and two touchdowns. He has been especially potent the last two games with 360 yards on 39 carries.

If Young misses the game, you can expect Gibbs to get another heavy workload with part of the goal being to keep the Tennessee offense off the field. The cautionary part is he had 36 or fewer yards in three straight games before breaking out pick.

But taking the pressure off Milroe will be crucial for the Crimson Tide so we see Gibbs continuing his recent production.

Our Pick: Jahmyr Gibbs over 109.5 rushing yards

Alabama vs. Tennessee odds

Odds courtesy of Caesars Sportsbook. Correct at time of publishing and subject to change.

Total Points 65.5 Team Spread Moneyline
Over -117 Alabama (-7)  -115 -292
Under -117 Tennessee (+7) -119 +235

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

‘Shoot it up’ and return

Drew Brees has weighed in on Quinn Ewers’ shoulder injury.

Posting a video of the Texas quarterback getting drilled by Alabama linebacker Dallas Turner, Brees encouraged Ewers to take a painkilling shot or other treatment and return to the game.

“If it’s an AC joint separation…locker room, shoot it up, put on a harness, and shot gun snaps only the rest of the game. You got this young buck!” Brees wrote in an Instagram caption.

Quinn Ewers left Saturday’s game against Alabama with a shoulder injury.
Getty Images
Drew Brees
Getty Images

ESPN’s Pete Thamel reports that Ewers had an X-Ray and will not return to the game.

Hudson Card, a sophomore who appeared in seven games last season, came in for Ewers in the second quarter.

Texas hung with Alabama in the first half, going into the locker room tied at 10-10 in a game where the Crimson Tide entered as three-touchdown favorites. The Longhorns could’ve had the lead if not for a botched 20-yard field goal as time expired in the second quarter.



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Rat poison worse than ever as Alabama opens season

Alabama is a double-digit favorite in every game this season. But don’t tell that to Nick Saban.

“I think the rat poison this year, not to bring up a sore subject, it’s worse than ever,” Saban said on his radio show this week. “I’ve had more people ask me how we’re going to do against Texas this week than how we are going to do against Utah State. I mean, I’m like, ‘We don’t play Texas this week.’”

The Aggies come to Bryant-Denny Stadium on Saturday night before Alabama goes to Texas in a marquee Week 2 matchup.

Saban, who has derided “rat poison” frequently in the past, connected his hatred of media hype to the Bible, reciting Matthew 23:12.

“Then I go to church on Sunday,” Saban said, “and the sermon is, ‘He who exalts himself will be humbled. He who humbles himself will be exalted.’ So it’s almost like, you put rat poison in that same thing, it almost fits perfectly.”

Nick Saban and Alabama open their season against Utah State on Saturday.
AP

That wasn’t the last Saban — whose team is considered the favorite to win the national championship — had to say on a subject that has brought passion out of him before.

“We’ve got to play one game at a time,” he said. “‘How can Alabama lose to this team? How can this team beat Alabama, three months from now?’ Who gives a s–t? How about this game? How about the church of what’s happening now? Now. Can we focus on what’s happening now? How come no one is interested in now?”

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version