Alabama–LSU football rivalry

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The Alabama–LSU football rivalry, also known as the "First Saturday in November" and the "Saban Bowl" (as both schools's football teams had Nick Saban as head coach), is an American college football rivalry between the Alabama Crimson Tide football team of the University of Alabama and the LSU Tigers football team of Louisiana State University.[1] Both schools are charter members of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and both universities' sports teams competed in the SEC's West Division when the conference was split into two divisions from 1992 to 2023.

Series history

File:Sidline picture of Alabama vs LSU on November 5th 2011.png
Sideline picture of Alabama vs LSU on November 5, 2011

The series started in 1895, with a 12–6 win for LSU in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.[2] The rivalry has been played in Baton Rouge; New Orleans, Louisiana; Birmingham, Alabama; Montgomery, Alabama; Tuscaloosa, Alabama; and Mobile, Alabama.

The teams began playing each other on an annual basis in 1964, (and the series is uninterrupted since then), with Alabama playing its home games at Legion Field in Birmingham and LSU playing its home games on campus at Tiger Stadium. The series has been marked by long stretches where the home team has struggled. Alabama is 30–10–2 against LSU in Baton Rouge; they went 16–1–1 from 1965 to 1998. Since 1981, Alabama has gone 9–12 in games played in Alabama while LSU has gone 5–18–1 in games played in Louisiana. There have been five overtime games in total: two in Tuscaloosa (2005, 2011) and three in Baton Rouge (2008, 2014, 2022). Throughout the series, only 42% of games have been won by the team playing in its home state (excluding ties). In 1988, Alabama began playing its home game in the series on their Tuscaloosa campus at Bryant–Denny Stadium; LSU won the first game in the series after the move 19–18. Played without interruption now since 1964, the game alternates between the two respective campuses. Contests in odd-numbered years are played in Tuscaloosa, and even-numbered years in Baton Rouge.

While Alabama controlled most of the series' early history by going 31–11–4 against LSU, the intensity and competitiveness has grown during the last four decades. Since Bear Bryant's retirement in 1982, Alabama leads the series 26–16–1. Four games in ten seasons (2005 to 2014) were decided in overtime. A 2009 poll of SEC fan bases found that over 60% of LSU fans singled out Alabama as their most bitter rival, while Alabama fans mostly did not consider it to be a rivalry, placing far more importance on the Iron Bowl vs. Auburn and the Third Saturday in October vs. Tennessee.[3]

In 2007, the meeting was even more heated following Alabama's hiring of head coach Nick Saban, who had coached LSU to a National Championship; many media outlets dubbed the 2007 meeting the "Saban Bowl".[4][5][6] Alabama won the series 13–5 in the games played during the "Saban Bowl" era.

In their 2011 regular season matchup, No. 1 LSU beat No. 2 Alabama 9–6 in overtime at Bryant–Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, on November 5.[7] Later, during the 2011 post season, the two were selected by the Bowl Championship Series[8] to play each other again in the 2012 BCS National Championship Game, which was the first time since 1986 that the two teams played in a location other than Baton Rouge or Tuscaloosa. Alabama, a controversial selection to the game after failing to win the conference title, proved its legitimacy and won the game 21–0. The rematch was the first BCS Championship Game to feature two teams from the same conference (as well as the same division), and was also the first shutout of any BCS bowl game in the BCS's 14-year history.

In 2012, #5 LSU and #1 Alabama met each other at Tiger Stadium on November 3, 2012. Alabama took a 14–3 lead into halftime, but LSU running back Jeremy Hill ran for a touchdown to cut the lead to 14–10. QB Zach Mettenberger threw a touchdown pass to wide receiver Jarvis Landry early in the 4th quarter for a 17–14 lead. LSU held twice on defense, but kicker Drew Alleman, the hero of the last year's game, missed a key field goal. Alabama then quickly drove downfield on completion by quarterback A. J. McCarron to wide receiver Kevin Norwood of 18, 15, and 11 yards to the LSU 28. On 2nd and 10, McCarron threw a screen pass to running back T.J. Yeldon, who weaved through LSU defenders for a game-winning touchdown with 51 seconds left. LSU failed to do anything, and Alabama won 21–17.[9]

In 2014, the #16 Tigers met the #5 Crimson Tide at Tiger Stadium on November 8, 2014. Alabama clawed to a 10–7 lead in a defensive battle, but LSU tied at 10 entering the 4th quarter. With 50 seconds left and following a Yeldon fumble in which he was injured, LSU kicker Colby Delahoussaye kicked a 39-yard field goal for a 13–10 lead. Facing a second loss, and elimination from the first College Football Playoff, Alabama drove to the LSU 10, aided by a Delahoussaye kickoff that went out-of-bounds, which gave Alabama great field position at the 35 yard line. There, sophomore kicker Adam Griffith made a 27 yarder to send the game into overtime tied 13–13. On the first possession of overtime, Alabama QB Blake Sims found DeAndrew White in the end-zone for a 20–13 lead. LSU threw 4 straight incomplete passes, and Alabama escaped Baton Rouge with a 20–13 win.[10]

File:President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump in Alabama (49048699168).jpg
Spectator view of Alabama vs LSU on November 9, 2019

In 2019, the two teams met for their second Game of the Century of the decade as #1 LSU faced off against #2 Alabama. The game featured the top two NFL quarterback prospects and Heisman Trophy candidates at the time in Alabama's Tua Tagovailoa and LSU's Joe Burrow. Although the matchup was fairly even in the first quarter, the Tigers never trailed over the course of the game and outscored Alabama 23–6 in the second quarter to lead 33–13 at halftime. The Tide pulled within one score multiple times in the fourth quarter, but LSU's high scoring offense would prove to be too much for Alabama to overcome with the Tigers winning 46–41. The game snapped an eight-game losing streak in the series for LSU and virtually ensured both an SEC West title win and a College Football Playoff berth barring a total collapse.[11] For Alabama, it set up the first time since the founding of the Playoff that they would not make an appearance, which they not would not miss again until 2022. The 46 points given up by the 'Bama defense was the most points scored in the Nick Saban era (later surpassed in the same season in the 2019 edition of the Iron Bowl) and the most given up by any Alabama team since October 25, 2003, against Tennessee. The game was the most viewed match-up of the 2019 regular season by over four million viewers, it also topped all conference championship games by a significant margin.[12]

Game results

Template:Sports rivalry series table

Series record sources: 2011 Alabama Football Media Guide,[13] 2011 LSU Football Media Guide,[14] and College Football Data Warehouse.[15]

Results by location

State City Hosted style="Template:NCAA color cell" |Alabama victories style="Template:NCAA color cell" |LSU victories Ties Years played
Louisiana Baton Rouge 42 30 10 2 1895, 1904, 1919, 1925, 1944–present
New Orleans 2 1 0 1 1921, 2012
Alabama Tuscaloosa 25 15 10 0 1902–03, 1920–26, 1947, 1980, 1988–present
Birmingham 14 8 5 1 1909, 1927–28, 1964–86
Mobile 4 2 1 1 1907, 1951, 1953, 1958
Montgomery 2 2 0 0 1923, 1930

Top-5 games

Since 1936, when the AP Poll began being released continuously, the Crimson Tide and Tigers have met 7 times when both have been ranked in the top 5. The first instance came in 2005, with the most recent in 2019. Alabama holds a 4–3 record in these top-5 meetings. The 2011 and 2011 NCG games were the only times the teams were the top two in the rankings.

Year Away team Home team Notes
2005 style="Template:NCAA color cell"|No. 4 LSU style="Template:NCAA color cell"|16 No. 1 Alabama 13 OT
2011 style="Template:NCAA color cell"|No. 1 LSU style="Template:NCAA color cell"|9 No. 2 Alabama 6 OT
2012 style="Template:NCAA color cell"|No. 2 Alabama style="Template:NCAA color cell"|21 No. 1 LSU 0 2011 NCG
2012 style="Template:NCAA color cell"|No. 1 Alabama style="Template:NCAA color cell"|21 No. 5 LSU 17
2015 No. 2 LSU 16 style="Template:NCAA color cell"|No. 4 Alabama style="Template:NCAA color cell"|30
2018 style="Template:NCAA color cell"|No. 1 Alabama style="Template:NCAA color cell"|29 No. 3 LSU 0
2019 No. 3 Alabama 41 style="Template:NCAA color cell"|No. 2 LSU style="Template:NCAA color cell"|46

Template:Notelist

Coaching records

Alabama

Head Coach Games Seasons Wins Losses Ties Win %
Kalen DeBoer 1 2024–present 1 0 0 1.000
Nick Saban 18 2007–2023 13 5 0 0.722
Mike Shula 4 2003–2006 0 4 0 0.000
Dennis Franchione 2 2001–2002 1 1 0 0.500
Mike DuBose 4 1997–2000 2 2 0 0.500
Gene Stallings 7 1990–1996 6 1 0 0.857
Bill Curry 3 1987–1989 2 1 0 0.666
Ray Perkins 4 1983–1986 1 2 1 0.375
Bear Bryant 20 1958–1982 16 4 0 0.800
Jennings B. Whitworth 1 1955–1957 0 1 0 0.000
Harold Drew 6 1947–1954 3 2 1 0.583
Frank Thomas 3 1931–1946 1 1 1 0.500
Wallace Wade 6 1923–1930 5 0 1 0.917
Xen Scott 4 1919–1922 3 0 1 0.875
J. W. H. Pollard 2 1906–1909 1 1 0 0.500
W. A. Blount 2 1903–1904 2 0 0 1.000
Eli Abbott 2 1893–1895, 1902 0 2 0 0.000

LSU

Head Coach Games Seasons Wins Losses Ties Win %
Brian Kelly 3 2022–present 1 2 0 0.333
Ed Orgeron 6 2016–2021 1 5 0 0.167
Les Miles 12 2005–2016 5 7 0 0.417
Nick Saban 5 2000–2004 4 1 0 0.800
Gerry DiNardo 5 1995–1999 1 4 0 0.200
Curley Hallman 4 1991–1994 1 3 0 0.250
Mike Archer 4 1987–1990 1 3 0 0.250
Bill Arnsparger 3 1984–1986 2 0 1 0.833
Jerry Stovall 4 1980–1983 1 3 0 0.250
Charles McClendon 16 1962–1979 2 14 0 0.125
Paul Dietzel 2 1955–1961 2 0 0 1.000
Gaynell Tinsley 5 1948–1954 2 2 1 0.500
Bernie Moore 4 1935–1947 1 2 1 0.375
Russ Cohen 2 1928–1931 0 2 0 0.000
Mike Donahue 4 1923–1927 0 3 1 0.125
Branch Bocock 2 1920–1921 0 1 1 0.250
Irving Pray 2 1916, 1919, 1922 0 2 0 0.000
Joe Pritchard 1 1909 1 0 0 1.000
Edgar Wingard 1 1907–1908 0 1 0 0.000
W.S. Borland 2 1901–1903 1 1 0 0.500
Albert Simmonds 1 1894–1895 1 0 0 1.000

See also

References

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  13. 2011 Alabama Football Media Guide Template:Webarchive, University of Alabama Department of Intercollegiate Athletics, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, pp. 176–195 (2011). Retrieved December 1, 2011.
  14. 2011 LSU Football Media Guide Template:Webarchive, LSU Athletic Department, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, pp. 153–163 (2011). Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  15. College Football Data Warehouse, Alabama vs Louisiana State Template:Webarchive. Retrieved December 1, 2011.

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