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LSU-Alabama Preview

LSU Tigers at Alabama Crimson Tide

  1. LSU and Alabama meet for the 75th time overall on Saturday with the Crimson Tide leading the series, 45-24-5. LSU won last year in Baton Rouge, 24-21, snapping an Alabama 2-game winning streak in the series. Since 1996, the home team in the series has won just six times in 15 tries.
  2. Saturday's game marks the first 1 vs. 2 regular season matchup in SEC history. It's also the first during the regular season in college football since Michigan-Ohio State in November of 2006.
  3. At 8-0, LSU is off to its best start since winning its first nine games in 1973. LSU beat Auburn, 45-10, in its last contest on Oct. 22 stretching its school-record of consecutive wins by double-figures to start a season to eight and to overall double-figure wins to nine.
  4. Alabama is currently leading the Southeastern Conference in total offense and total defense as well as scoring offense and scoring defense. The Crimson Tide averages 457.6 yards per game, while limiting opponents to 180.5 yards per outing. Additionally, Alabama scores nearly 40 points per game at 39.4, and at the same time, holds teams to a league, and nation, low of 6.9 points per game.
  5. LSU brings one of the top defenses in the nation into the Alabama game as the Tigers are ranked in the top 10 nationally in four major categories -- scoring defense (3rd at 11.5), rush defense (3rd at 76.6), pass efficiency defense (5th with 96.48 rating), and total defense (4th at 251.4).
  6. The Crimson Tide has outscored its opponents 243-25 in the final three quarters of games this season after holding just a 72-30 edge in the first quarter. The disparity has grown even wider over the past six games where Alabama owns a 44-27 scoring edge in the first quarter and a 196-10 edge in the final three quarters.
  7. LSU went the entire month of October without a turnover. LSU has turned the ball over just three times this year (two fumbles, one interception) with its last turnover coming in the fourth quarter against Mississippi State in Week 3. LSU has gone 336 offensive snaps, 59 possessions and 174 minutes and 52 seconds of possession time since its last turnover.
  8. Junior running back Trent Richardson has had a solid season running the ball in the 2011 collecting 989 yards on the ground through eight games. Through eight games during Mark Ingram's Heisman Trophy winning season in 2009, he had 1,004 rushing yards. In addition, Richardson has had 149 carries for 17 touchdowns, while Ingram had 153 carries and eight rushing touchdowns after eight games.
  9. Jarrett Lee has thrown at least one TD pass in all eight games this year. He's the first LSU QB to throw at least one TD pass in the first 8 games of a season since 1998 when Herb Tyler did it in the first 10 games.

By JOHN ZENOR

AP Sports Writer

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) It was hard to escape the hype around the LSU-Alabama game when both squads were off last week. Now, it's downright impossible.

Alabama linebacker Dont'a Hightower had just finished celebrating a win over Tennessee two weeks ago when he saw the first ad for the LSU game. When Barrett Jones chatted with family and friends back home in suburban Memphis, they didn't want to talk about the Vols game.

Like everybody else, they wanted to talk No. 1 LSU versus No. 2 Alabama.

"Everyone I saw pretty much was like, `You've got a pretty big game this week,'" said Jones, the Crimson Tide's left tackle. "I was like, `Yeah, we do. That's an underestimation.'"

After a nearly two-month buildup, Judgment Day - SEC style - is now just days away.

The Tide and Tigers collide Saturday night in Bryant-Denny Stadium in a game that's gotten weeks of hype as a potential national title elimination contest.

The winner certainly does have the inside track to play for both the Southeastern Conference and national titles, with no guarantees beyond that. The game is so big that even Alabama's all-business coach, Nick Saban, didn't try to downplay its magnitude Monday before a room packed with close to double the normal media contingent on his 60th birthday.

LSU coach Les Miles as usual wants his players to embrace the big-game trappings. He said he doesn't want the Tigers coaching or playing like normal for a game that's anything but.

"I want the players to enjoy the glare and the light of the big stage," Miles said. "I want them to enjoy the opportunity to play for a big victory. Once I've prepared the team and after I feel I've done a quality job, I want the players to play with freedom.

"If there is a chance to make a dominant play, I want them to make that play."

This isn't altogether uncharted territory for either SEC power. The veterans have played in big games like this. In January. Or even December.

It's the November part that's new. It's the first time two SEC teams have met before the league title game ranked 1 and 2 in the nation.

There hasn't been a regular season No. 1 and 2 showdown anywhere since Ohio State and Michigan's 2006 finale.

"We live for games like this," Tide noseguard Josh Chapman said. "You want to go against great teams. Being in the SEC, it's a great matchup. We're ready for it."

The two SEC West rivals have been on a season-long collision course.

Both brushed off their first eight opponents with a series of double-digit wins, walloping East Division foes Florida and Tennessee by a combined 61 (LSU) and 59 (Alabama) points.

The Tigers dispatched No. 6 Oregon by 13 points; the Tide walloped No. 8 Arkansas 38-14. It didn't take long for this one to start seeming like the big one.

Even bigger than usual. The winner of this game has played for the SEC championship game four of the past six years, twice apiece. And last year was the first time in that span that the winner didn't either play in Atlanta or in a BCS bowl.

It seems everyone knows it's not just another game.

"Twitter, Facebook, we've been hearing it from everywhere," Hightower said. "It's really exciting. You've been hearing about it ever since the Tennessee game. As soon as I got home, I saw the commercials for it, LSU versus Alabama. We're really excited for it, but we can't let that get to us."

Saban said instructing players to ignore the hype and keep the TV and laptops tuned away from pre-game coverage is like laying down dating ground rules for your children - you hope they abide by them but you can't really be sure.

"I'm sure that there's some players on our team who pay very little attention, and there's other players who could get caught up in that type of thing," Saban said.

He isn't dismissing the notion that the loser of the game is bumped from the national title picture, and maybe even a possible rematch in the BCS championship game.

Chances are, that would require a loss by unbeaten teams like No. 3 Oklahoma State, No. 4 Stanford and No. 5 Boise State.

"I think everybody should view that game as these are two of the best teams playing and how that game affects the future should not be relative to just who won and lost, but actually the quality of the teams," Saban said.

That's a down-the-line concern, though. He's more concerned about stopping LSU quarterbacks Jarrett Lee and Jordan Jefferson and finding a way to score against LSU's defense.

Saban said there's no "magic formula" for winning such games, just the basics like execution, focusing and winning the turnover battle.

In a region where priorities often go something like faith, family and football, they've become intertwined for some fans.

"People are coming up to me and saying they are praying for us," LSU safety Brandon Taylor said. "I am getting so many text messages and phone calls. They say, `Bring it to Alabama. You are playing for the state of Louisiana.'"

For Australia, too. LSU punter Brad Wing doesn't have many comparisons for this game from his native country. The stadium will be packed to its 101,821-fan capacity for a primetime game.

"From the culture I came from, there has not been a game like this that I've seen," Wing said. "There was the Grand Final (in Australian Rules football). It is the equivalent to the Super Bowl with 95,000 people. But the hype for that game doesn't match the hype for this game.

"This is the biggest game I've been around. I knew the hype was coming. When the teams are No. 1 and No. 2, the hype keeps getting bigger and bigger."

Updated October 31, 2011

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