| Team Stat Comparison |
| |
 |
 |
| 1st Downs |
22 |
11 |
| Total Yards |
498 |
155 |
| Passing |
230 |
91 |
| Rushing |
268 |
64 |
| Penalties |
10-83 |
6-45 |
| 3rd Down
Conversions |
6-17 |
2-12 |
| 4th Down
Conversions |
0-0 |
0-1 |
| Turnovers |
2 |
2 |
| Possession |
37:02 |
22:58 |
|
|
| Alabama
Passing |
| |
C/ATT |
YDS |
TD |
INT |
|
McElroy |
15/30 |
230 |
1 |
1 |
|
| Virginia
Tech Passing |
| |
C/ATT |
YDS |
TD |
INT |
|
Taylor |
9/20 |
91 |
0 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
| Alabama
Receiving |
| |
REC |
YDS |
TD |
LG |
|
Maze |
2 |
57 |
0 |
48 |
|
Hanks |
3 |
55 |
0 |
35 |
|
| Virginia
Tech Receiving |
| |
REC |
YDS |
TD |
LG |
|
Williams |
2 |
42 |
0 |
43 |
|
Boykin |
3 |
19 |
0 |
10 |
|
| Scoring Summary |
| FIRST
QUARTER |
ALA |
VT |
 |
FG |
09:56 |
Leigh Tiffin 49 Yd |
3 |
0 |
 |
FG |
06:47 |
Leigh Tiffin 34 Yd |
6 |
0 |
 |
TD |
06:35 |
Dyrell Roberts 98 Yd Kickoff Return
(Matt Waldron Kick) |
6 |
7 |
 |
FG |
03:05 |
Leigh Tiffin 32 Yd |
9 |
7 |
| SECOND
QUARTER |
ALA |
VT |
 |
FG |
08:39 |
Matt Waldron 28 Yd |
9 |
10 |
 |
TD |
03:09 |
Roy Upchurch 19 Yd Run (Leigh Tiffin
Kick) |
16 |
10 |
 |
TD |
01:02 |
Ryan Williams 1 Yd Run (Matt Waldron
Kick) |
16 |
17 |
| FOURTH
QUARTER |
ALA |
VT |
 |
TD |
12:23 |
Mark Ingram 6 Yd Run (Greg Mcelroy
Pass To Colin Peek For Two-Point
Conversion) |
24 |
17 |
 |
FG |
10:29 |
Leigh Tiffin 20 Yd |
27 |
17 |
 |
TD |
09:22 |
Ryan Williams 32 Yd Run (Matt
Waldron Kick) |
27 |
24 |
 |
TD |
06:35 |
Mark Ingram 18 Yd Pass From Greg
McElroy (Leigh Tiffin Kick) |
34 |
24 |
Alabama
shakes off kick return, turnovers to overcome Virginia Tech
Associated Press
ATLANTA -- "Sweet Home Alabama" blared
from the speakers at the Georgia Dome.
The Crimson Tide felt right at home.
Getting off to another rousing start in
Atlanta, No. 5 Alabama overcame a 98-yard kickoff return,
costly turnovers and silly penalties to wear down No. 7
Virginia Tech for a 34-24 victory Saturday night.
Fast Facts
• Mark Ingram ran for a career-high 150
yards and a touchdown and also had a receiving score to lead
the Crimson Tide.
• Alabama improved to 11-1 all-time
against Virginia Tech.
• Despite giving up 24 points, Alabama
outgained Virginia Tech 498-155 in total yards.
• Alabama ran its record to 3-0 in
season-opening top-10 matchups.
• The win was Alabama's 800th, making
it the seventh school in history to achieve the feat.
-- ESPN Stats & Information
Mark Ingram rushed for a career-high
150 yards and finished off Virginia Tech with two
fourth-quarter touchdowns. Greg McElroy threw for 230 yards
in his debut as Alabama's starting quarterback, taking quite
a beating but standing tall at the end.
The Crimson Tide began a national title
run in Atlanta last season by thumping Clemson, and this
sure looks like a team that will be in the thick of things
again this year. Alabama held a 498-155 edge in total yards,
even though it had to rally in the final quarter.
"We actually played better than the
score is. We made a lot of mistakes," said Nick Saban,
beginning his third year as coach. "But we responded better
to adversity than maybe we ever have."
Saban wouldn't mind starting off every
year at the Georgia Dome, playing on a neutral field in a
bowl-like atmosphere. The Tide opened last season with a
34-10 rout of favored Clemson, sparking a 12-0 start that
took Alabama to No. 1 in the rankings before a loss to
Florida in the Southeastern Conference championship game
ended any national title hopes.
Schlabach: Slow Starters
For three quarters, Alabama looked like
a distracted team. In the fourth quarter, however, the Tide
played like one of the best teams in the country, writes
Mark Schlabach. Story
Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer saw
nothing to indicate the Tide will slip back in the pack this
year.
"They've got the defense. They've got
veteran kickers. Their quarterback played well for them
tonight. Their running back played well. They got some great
receivers," Beamer said. "They've got it. We played one of
the great teams in the country and just didn't play well
enough to match 'em."
Ingram put Alabama ahead to stay with a
6-yard touchdown run, set up by McElroy's 48-yard pass to
Marquis Maze. McElroy was 15-of-30, a perfect complement to
Saban's always-punishing ground game. Roy Upchurch rushed
for 90 yards and a touchdown as the Tide finished with 268
yards on the ground.
Virginia Tech hung around following the
mantra of Beamer Ball, which calls for all three phases of
the game to contribute to the scoring. Dyrell Roberts had
the special teams touchdown. An interception led to a field
goal. Three costly Alabama penalties handed the Hokies
another TD, and a long kickoff return and personal foul set
up a late TD that gave the Hokies a chance. The Tide
squandered another scoring chance when Upchurch was stripped
of the ball after a run deep into Virginia Tech territory.
"We kept punching them," Saban moaned.
"But we were also punching ourselves."
Even so, Alabama would not be denied.
After Ryan Williams' spectacular 32-yard touchdown run made
it 27-24 -- he was given the score after a replay showed he
stayed inbounds long enough to stick the ball inside the
pylon while flying through the air face up -- the Tide
calmly responded with a lightning-quick 74-yard drive to
clinch it with a McElroy-to-Ingram 18-yard touchdown.
"Everyone talks about our defense, but
our offense can do it too," Ingram said. "We just want to
prove that to people."
McElroy got off to a shaky start.
Alabama took some of the pressure off its new starter by
going frequently to the Wildcat formation, with Ingram
taking the direct snaps. As the game went on, McElroy looked
more and more like a worthy successor to three-year starter
John Parker Wilson.
"At halftime, Shaun Alexander pulled me
aside and told me to take it easy, that it will come to me,"
McElroy said, referring to the former Alabama star who was
on hand to deliver a ceremonial game ball during the pregame
festivities. "He knows about as much about it as anybody."
Virginia Tech came into this season
hoping to do more than just repeat as Atlantic Coast
Conference champions -- the Hokies think this might be the
group that can contend for its first national title.
One loss doesn't doom those chances,
especially this early in the season. But Virginia Tech
clearly has some work to do on offense. And its defense took
an uncharacteristic beating, too.
Taylor, who shared playing time with
Sean Glennon the last two years, was only 9 of 20 for 91
yards passing and didn't show much of the running ability
that had been his hallmark. Williams, taking over after star
running back Darren Evans went down with a season-ending
knee injury during the preseason, rushed for 71 yards.
"We can get there," Beamer said. "We're
just a little bit too young right now, but we're going to be
a little bit older next week."
Leigh Tiffin kicked four field goals
for the Tide. After the second one, Roberts took the ensuing
kickoff at the 2, burst through a seem, exploded down the
left sideline and shook off Marquis Johnson's futile attempt
to force him out off bounds with a stiff arm at the 10. It
was the 121st touchdown scored by the defense or special
teams in Beamer's 23 years as head coach.
Alabama regained the lead in first half
but gave it right back with a series of sloppy plays that
are most unlike a Saban-coached team. On the kickoff return,
Tyrone King was penalized 15 yards for dragging down Roberts
by the facemask. Taylor threw three straight incompletions,
but Johnson was called for pass interference of the last of
those throws to keep the drive going.
On the next play, Williams slipped past
a blown coverage and was all alone when Taylor hit him with
a 43-yard pass. Taylor's errant pitch resulted in a 14-yard
loss, but it didn't matter when Alabama star Rolando McClain
doled out an unnecessary shot on a Virginia Tech player at
the goal line.
McClain drew a personal foul, and an
unsportsmanlike conduct penalty was tacked on when he bumped
one of the officials stepping in. Williams scored on a
1-yard run to make it 17-16.
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