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The Power Five => Publisher => Topic started by: Drew4UTk on September 24, 2018, 03:46:17 PM

Title: Invincible Bama
Post by: Drew4UTk on September 24, 2018, 03:46:17 PM
They will soil the sheets against Mizzou when they encounter a fierce team who plays with absolutely nothing to lose.  It's just the beginning of their issue with cats.  LSU will be the next team that facilitates Bama beating themselves.  Why? Arrogance. Then, there will be those damn War Eagle Tigers off the Plains.  All the while, Bama will possibly and 'rightfully so' retain consideration as the best team in the nation and GOAT- a team that beat itself three times in one season.
Y'all think I'm playin', huh?  I ain't.
Mizzou will lay the blueprint much like one DeNardo did while unraveling the Run-n-Gun of Spurrier fame- and that team will be reveled for the effort- coaches the nation wide sending offerings to Odem(who cleverly altered the last two letters of his true name 'Odin' before arriving a mere mortal with one specific task: take down Saban- who, curiously and likely in arrogance, changed only one letter in his own name) .
The formula is yet to be revealed, but it will certainly consist of full out effort and focus of force on a Bama team that is overly confident.  The surprise will be complete as Mizzou applies lesson's learned from the destructive force they faced in week four, known as UGA.  Pressure will be applied where needed- which isn't on the Bama front but instead on the play makers- the skilled positions- not where the ball is, but where it's going...
Mizzou has the speed to make this happen- which is to punch in and disrupt at the precise time required to stall an otherwise irresistible force.  Bama will run- they will push Mizzou off the lines, but they will not break free often enough either through, around, over, or under with the consistency required to rack the board with points.  One little trick Odin er, uh, Odem has no doubt relieved that coaching Smart guy of is "break receivers spirits by stripping the ball right out of their hands and carrying it for six".
Satan won't know what happened as you simply can't coach for that- and that little guy won't even know what to say in absence of his master DC Pruitt who escaped north at the conclusion of last season.  The discombobulation and chaos created when a confident- NO- an ARROGANT team has a pig skin sack of air removed from their clutches and taken for points will reverberate, trembling into a harmonic destruction and alteration of the game as we know it... And as we watch the first loss of the invincible giant Bama in the '18 season, we'll collectively know- they lost their moxy because a coaching Smart guy left an expensive lesson on the ground on Faurot Field which was noticed by Odim passing as Odem, unsolved without Pruitt, and played against Satan in Saban's demise.....
It's the little rhythms that disrupt, causing reverberations, translating into harmonics that tremble far and wide, and that reach the giant before he falls in a thud capable of crashing everything we know about the game.  Punching an unsettled rock in receivers hands will become a skill noted on recruiting and combine scorecards, and because of all the above fitted between a coaching Smart guy and a devil's fall from grace.  Go figure.
Bama of course won't learn their lesson from the lessor god Odin.  They will instead plow forward marking their mistakes and doubling down on their strengths- unaware either wholly or through similar tactics opossums or ostrich's employ that the game has changed.  Though Satan may argue the point and inquire about rules being altered immediately, it will be at least two seasons more before he joins in on the tactic.  Teams led by wily Cajuns, who have been totally ignored by gods of any stature due to not only location and because they're considered crazy even by gods- but because nobody in the upper (to them) 48 can understand them.  Insofar as 'takeaways' are concerned, here is one for you: "though you can't understand crazed Cajun's it doesn't under any circumstances mean they can't understand you".  You may want to take that to heart.   DatBawlCoa fom der bayou dun gotta looksee at Smart co-chin and stwippin dem bama bo's of de wok righ wen dey catch de wok. You see, Bama will be so focused on mistakes made during their loss to Mizzou Tigers that LSU Tigers sneak right up and not only do the same thing, but beat Bama at what Bama is supposed to be best at- pushing people off the line for 60 minutes and wearing them down for a third and fourth quarter whoopin.  LSU is a solid team to begin with.  As Bama is slow to learn that their sneaky game of hiding clever tactics inside seemingly strictly fundamental ball is disrupted- LSU will attack not where Bama is, but where they're going.  This is the "DeNardo Moment" revisited and likely to be renamed "Orgeron Task".  The tactic is as simple as it is brilliant: use speed to attack the intended location of the play, not the origination.  The concept is "Bama's power derives not through supernatural means of being led by the Fallen, but instead by superior 'set up' of the play".  So... Ignore the set up. Study film.  Learn the mechanisms weakest link- which is not the origin of the play while playing Bama, but instead the intended location of the lanes.  Disruption at the intended ends instead of attempting to disrupt the origin is how Saban falls.  His players are robots who expect to have all 'fall into place' if the preparation is done.  And, they're right.  They have to collect themselves and execute, as always, but instead to see clear blue skies leading into crimson painted end zones, they need to see traffic ahead.
Auburn's Malzahn thinks he's clever.  He too has a name alteration, but instead of gods of old, he is a new god- akin to others in the Starz network original "American Gods".  Ol' Gus is Malazan, with little doubt.  A god of innovation, rock solid tactician, and trickery.   He's also observant and innovative with the tools he has at hand.  The dismantling of the once feared will be complete once Malazan is finished.  All the former mentioned, with the twist Malzahn can only create plays heavily in this one- but with a final humiliating twist in the final quarter of just pushing Bama around- 'old fashioned hard nosed three yards and a cloud of dust' style.
God Bless them All.  Tigers.
Rat Poison.
Title: Re: Invincible Bama
Post by: bamajoe on September 24, 2018, 06:25:49 PM
Drew, I wouldn't bet my house on Missouri or LSU beating or even competing with Alabama. The same is true of Auburn if they played today. Auburn has two months to develop some offense which it doesn't have now to go along with their terrific defense. Maybe they will be a threat by late November.

Missouri has no defense. How are they going to hold Tua to less than 50 points? It aint gonna happen. LSU, on the other hand, doesn't have enough offense to challenge Alabama. A stationary qb throwing 50% has no chance. 20 points aren't enough as Alabama will score into the 30's.

I am not one anointing Alabama as a great team as I see and saw problems with the team unlike the anointers. I still think the d-line is thin which is a potential problem and I have not liked the run blocking so far this year. I just don't think Missouri or LSU are strong enough to compete with Bama and the Auburn game is too far away for me to gauge,
Title: Re: Invincible Bama
Post by: Drew4UTk on September 24, 2018, 06:30:53 PM
Hehehehehee... Rat poison, @bamajoe (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=29) ... 

This is primarily click bait, sir.  I wouldn't pay a lot of attention to word salad with that sole intent in mind. 
Title: Re: Invincible Bama
Post by: MikeDeTiger on September 27, 2018, 05:53:03 PM
Burrow is not stationary.

Bama is in for a dogfight in Baton Rouge.  Again.  Just like the last 4 times they played there.  
Title: Re: Invincible Bama
Post by: fezzador on October 02, 2018, 08:28:44 AM
I never thought I'd see the day when potent offenses replaced potent defenses in the SEC.

Bama is one tough out.  I know it's early, but they have the makings to be the finest team in the Saban tenure.  I have no reason to believe they can't hang 50 on some of Saban's past teams, but from what I gather so far, while the offense is phenomenal, the defense doesn't appear to the killer of seasons past.  It's good, don't get me wrong, but they seem to be slightly more susceptible to the big play.  A team with a lot of offensive weaponry can put some points on the board.  A&M did this to some extent.  Mizzou might be able to hang 30 (but also give up 55).

But no, there's no keeping pace with the Bama O.  It's just too much for just about any defense to handle.  And pretty much every team with an elite defense (i.e. Clemson, LSU) doesn't have the offense to answer.  While they play the games on the field and not on paper, there isn't a team out there (minus the Philadelphia Eagles of course) whom Bama can't beat by 10+.
Title: Re: Invincible Bama
Post by: gymvol on October 25, 2018, 12:13:25 PM

LSU maybe the game will be a toss up but neither Mizzou nor Auburn has the defense to stop their passing game unless Tua gets hurt and Hurd plays QB.

Then you could be right.