GAME NOTES: One of the most anticipated matchups of the 2009 season takes
place this weekend in Atlanta, as top-10 foes Alabama and Virginia Tech meet
in a key non-conference matchup from the Georgia Dome.
The fifth-ranked Crimson Tide are coming off a 2008 season in which they ran
the table in the regular season and climbed to the number one spot in the
national rankings as a result. A 31-20 loss to Florida in the SEC title game,
ended Alabama and Nick Saban's hopes of a national title. A deflated Alabama
squad was relegated to the Sugar Bowl, where the team fell to a strong Utah
squad, 31-17.
Alabama's quick return to national prominence under Saban has paid immediate
dividends, as Saban recently signed a contract extension with the university
that will keep him in Tuscaloosa through the 2017 season.
"Coach Saban has impressively led the Alabama football program back to
national prominence in a short period of time," said UA Director of Athletics
Mal Moore. "That success has been evident in all facets - on-field results,
his embrace of Alabama's athletics and academic culture, recruiting, and
community service. In every way, Coach Saban has positioned our program among
college football's elite."
Saban will get a chance right out of the gate to repay the university for its
confidence in him, as Virginia Tech poses a real threat.
The seventh-ranked Hokies come into the 2009 campaign with the ACC title in
their sights. Frank Beamer's squad was able to win the conference a year ago,
although it didn't come easy. Still, with nine wins on the year and the ACC
crown in tow, Tech earned a BCS bowl bid and bested Cincinnati in the Orange
Bowl, 20-7.
This game marks the 12th all-time meeting between these two teams on the
gridiron. Alabama won the first 10 matchups, but Virginia Tech finally earned
a victory in this series in the inaugural Music City Bowl in 1998.
With the departure of John Parker Wilson under center, Greg McElroy steps into
the void. With the job securely in place McElroy has to now go out and prove
he is the man for the job, something Coach Saban certainly believes.
"I think Greg has done a lot to gain the respect of his teammates and has done
a good job of effectively executing what we want to do," says Saban. "How he
responds to a game-like situation is why we have to play him. I'm not really
concerned about it, we're just going to do everything we can to support him
and help him and develop so that he can manage it the best he can."
McElroy will have the luxury of throwing to one of the nation's premier
wideouts in Julio Jones, who finished with 58 catches for 924 yards and four
touchdowns as a freshman last season. Also, Marquis Maze will be a guy to
watch on the outside.
The ground game will be spearheaded by Mark Ingram and Roy Upchurch, who are
more than capable of carrying the load. Ingram rushed for 728 yards and 12
touchdowns as a freshman last season, and although the offensive line has
suffered some major losses, the rushing attack is still viewed as one of
Alabama's strengths.
There is much more stability on the defensive side of the ball, as nine
starters are back from one of the best defensive units in the nation. It all
starts up front, with mammoth defensive tackle Terrence Cody. The 365-pound
beast may prove to be the nation's elite interior defensive lineman by
season's end. He will be flanked by veteran ends Brandon Deaderick and Lorenzo
Washington. However, Deaderick was recently involved in a robbery attempt and
suffered a gunshot wound to the arm. It is not known how much time he will
miss.
The linebacking corps has star power as well in standout junior Rolando
McClain, who posted 95 tackles and three sacks a year ago.
The guy to watch in the secondary is safety Justin Woodall. He posted 47
tackles and four picks last season. With the departure of standout Rashad
Johnson, Woodall has a chance to shine as one of the true defensive leaders
for Alabama.
The 2009 offense for Virginia Tech will look much different than Coach Beamer
envisioned even a few weeks ago, as sophomore star Darren Evans has been lost
for the season with an ACL tear. Evans set an ACC record for rushing yards as
a freshman, with 1,265 yards and 11 TDs in 2008. A few of the youngsters in
the backfield will be asked to fill the void and the hope is that players like
redshirt freshman Ryan Williams, true freshman David Wilson and redshirt
sophomore Josh Oglesby can help assuage the loss.
There is much more stability under center, as duel threat Tyrod Taylor returns
for his junior season. Taylor was hampered by injuries in 2008 and split time
with now departed Sean Glennon, but still managed to rush for 738 yards and
seven TDs, while throwing for over 1,000 yards.
Beamer has all the confidence in the world in his signal-caller.
"I think Tyrod is going to have a heck of a year. I think his throwing is
going to be better, his decision-making is going to be better and I think he
works very hard at it. He's a smart kid and very competitive."
The team's top five receivers return to Blacksburg and although this is a run-
first team, it will certainly help to have some experience on the outside.
Sophomore Jarrett Boykin had a solid freshman season in 2008, as the 6-2, 215-
pounder led the team in receptions (30) and receiving yards (441), with two
TDs. Tight end Greg Boone is a reliable relief valve with All-ACC type of
talent.
Three starters return along the offensive line, including bookends Ed Wang
(6-5, 310) and Blake DeChristopher (6-5, 303).
The Hokie defense has been one of the premiere stop units in the entire
country for awhile and 2008 was no different, as Tech was stingy in just
about every facet of the game, including limiting opponents to just 175.0
passing yards per game. The defense returns seven starters from that squad, so
expect more of the same in 2009.
Getting after the quarterback is something this defense did well last year,
amassing 35 sacks in all. Gone is Orion Martin (13.0 TFLs and 7.5 sacks), but
plenty returns up front, including All-American candidate Jason Worilds (6-2,
240) on the outside. The junior end led the team in 2008 in TFLs (18.5) and
sacks (8.0). Senior tackle Cordarrow Thompson (6-2, 308) is disruptive in the
middle, racking up 6.5 TFLs and three sacks a year ago.
The linebacking corps is loaded as well, with players like seniors Cody Grimm
(71 tackles, 7.5 sacks and two INTs) and Cam Martin (51 tackles, two sacks)
headlining the group.
The secondary returns three of the four starters from a year ago, but the one
glaring departure is All-American Victor Harris, who was tied for the team
lead with six interceptions in 2008. This is still one of the best secondaries
in the country, with playmakers like senior cornerback Stephan Virgil (43
tackles, six INTs) and senior safety Kam Chancellor (52 tackles, two INTs)
roaming the defensive backfield.
The Crimson Tide deflated the ACC faithful in last season's season-opener,
destroying what was supposed to be a great Clemson program. Virginia Tech is
too good to allow that to happen again. This game pits two of the nation's top
defensive units, so don't expect a shootout. How well McElroy handles the
pressure, will determine this one. The Hokies will bring it from all angles
and will try to limit Jones down the field. In the end however, one or two big
plays could be the difference and simply put, Alabama has more playmakers.