Alabama Crimson Tide Beats Oklahoma Sooners In First Round Of College Football Playoff
For about 20 minutes on Friday night, the sky wasn’t just falling in Tuscaloosa; it had crashed into the Earth’s core. Alabama looked lost, listless, and seemingly ready to hand Kalen DeBoer a very uncomfortable offseason. Trailing 17-0 in Norman, with an offense that had managed a measly 12 yards, the Crimson Tide appeared to be sleepwalking right out of the College Football Playoff.
But as anyone who watches this sport knows, momentum is a fickle beast. In a game that swung wildly from “blowout” to “nail-biter,” Alabama woke up just in time to secure a 34-24 victory over Oklahoma, punching its ticket to the Rose Bowl.
A Tale Of Two Halves For Alabama
If you turned the game off in the first quarter, you probably assumed Alabama was getting run out of the building. Oklahoma Quarterback John Mateer was carving up the defense, and the Sooners’ crowd was electric. But the second quarter brought a twist that felt less like football strategy and more like divine intervention.
It started with a special teams gaffe, a dropped punt by Oklahoma, that gave Alabama life. Minutes later, Mateer threw a pass that can only be described as a generous donation to the Zabien Brown foundation. Brown took the interception 50 yards to the house, and suddenly, despite being outplayed for nearly a half hour, Alabama went into the locker room tied at 17. You could practically hear the collective sigh of relief from the entire state of Alabama.
Ty Simpson and Lotzeir Brooks Take Over
While the defense and special teams stopped the bleeding, it was the connection between Quarterback Ty Simpson and freshman sensation Lotzeir Brooks that actually won the fight. Simpson, who looked rattled early, settled in to throw for 232 yards. He found Brooks for two crucial touchdowns, including a 30-yard beauty that gave Alabama a lead they wouldn’t relinquish.
It wasn’t just the passing game, though. When Alabama needed to close the door in the fourth quarter, Running Back Daniel Hill delivered. His six-yard touchdown run capped a drive that finally broke Oklahomaโs spirit. It was the kind of complementary football DeBoer has been preaching all year, finally showing up when the lights were brightest.
Special Teams Chaos In Norman
You have to feel for Oklahomaโs Tate Sandell. The kid wins the Lou Groza Award for being the nation’s best kicker, hasn’t missed since the season opener, and then proceeds to miss two kicks in the fourth quarter that could have changed the game. It is a brutal reminder that playoff pressure hits different. Between the missed field goals and the botched punt, Alabama was the beneficiary of a full-blown special teams meltdown by the Sooners.
Next Stop: The Rose Bowl
So, what does this mean? It means the panic in Tuscaloosa can subsideโfor now. Alabama earned the first road victory in the history of the 12-team playoff era. They exorcised the demons of their regular-season loss to the Sooners and proved they can take a punch to the mouth and keep standing.
Now, the reward is a date with the No. 1 seed Indiana Hoosiers in Pasadena. If Friday night was any indication, Alabama is far from a perfect team, but it is a resilient one. And in December, resiliency is the only stat that matters.
