No. 1 Alabama tops No. 2 Texas

Published 8:56 am Friday, January 8, 2010

The running game wears teams down. The defense changes games.

Yes, Alabama, this season’s version of the Crimson Tide could have been your dad’s Crimson Tide, too.

Or Bear Bryant’s.

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The Alabama ‘D’ knocked Texas quarterback Colt McCoy out of the BCS title game early, then made a big play late to stop a Longhorns comeback in a 37-21 victory Thursday that brought glory back to the program Bear built.

“We back,” said Mark Ingram, the Heisman Trophy winner who ran for 116 yards and two scores.

Instead of Bear’s houndstooth hat, it’s Nick Saban in a polo shirt who walks the sidelines these days. Nobody’s complaining. In the short span of three years, Saban took a program that had drifted far from what it had been and brought it back to championship caliber.

This was Alabama’s first title since 1992, its eighth since the advent of the polls in the 1930s and its seventh Associated Press championship. The top-ranked Tide (14-0) won the AP title unanimously and was set to receive that trophy Friday morning.

“When you get 92,000 people at a spring game, I mean, that’s a lot of positive energy and a lot of positive support,” Saban said, trying, as usual, to spread the credit for his quick revival.

It was the coach, of course, who brought in most of these players, and his defense changed the tenor of the game suddenly and startlingly when Marcell Dareus hit McCoy, injuring the quarterback’s shoulder and knocking him out of the game on Texas’ fifth offensive play.

“I just heard a thump when I hit him,” Dareus said. “I did lay it down pretty hard. I didn’t try to, but it felt great.”

McCoy said he lost feeling in his right shoulder but wasn’t in pain. He asked to come back in, but coach Mack Brown didn’t want to risk it.

“I would have given anything to be out there, because it would have been different,” McCoy said.

Not to be, though, and when Dareus picked off backup quarterback Garrett Gilbert’s shovel pass and returned it 28 yards for a score right before halftime, the Tide was rolling with a 24-6 lead that looked like it would get bigger.

But something funny happened.

Gilbert, the highly recruited freshman who had only thrown 26 college passes, grew up in a hurry. He led the No. 2 Longhorns (13-1) on touchdown drives of 59 and 65 yards, capping both with scoring passes to All-American Jordan Shipley.

The lead was only 24-21 with 6:15 left and all the momentum was in Texas’ favor.

“It’s a hard learning curve but he learned fast,” Brown said. “At one point, I thought he was going to win the ballgame.”

Texas got the ball back on its 7-yard line with about 3 minutes left, trailing by three. Gilbert had a chance to complete the comeback and go down as one of the most out-of-nowhere success stories in college football history.

Instead, another unlikely star, Alabama linebacker Eryk Anders, got a blindside sack and stripped the ball. Teammate Courtney Upshaw recovered. Three plays later, Ingram scored from the 1 to give ‘Bama some breathing room. A few minutes after that, Trent Richardson scored to make a close game look more lopsided than it really was.

“We said, ‘It’s on us, the defensive line,’” said Alabama’s Terrence Cody, the 350-pound All-American. “We had to make plays to finish it off. There was no doubt in our huddle. We knew what we can do.”

The Alabama win brought a fourth consecutive title back to the Southeastern Conference.

Richardson ran for 109 yards and two touchdowns, and combined with Ingram’s effort, the Tide won despite a modest 6-for-11 passing night from Greg McElroy. Talk about getting it done on the ground: Dating to Bryant’s last title, in 1979, Alabama has thrown the ball a grand total of 32 times in its last three bowl games that led to national championships.

Ingram became the first running back to win the Heisman and the national title in the same season since Tony Dorsett in 1976.