Tag Archives: C.J. Mosley

Live Post: 2013 A-Day

Bryant-Denny Stadium while the players warmup for the 2013 A-Day game. (Copyright photo by Brett Hudson)

Bryant-Denny Stadium while the players warmup for the 2013 A-Day game. (Copyright photo by Brett Hudson)

Here is your home for 2013 A-Day updates, as this post will be updated constantly during the game.

**NOTE: The Live Post will end after the third quarter for on-field access. Photos and video from on-field time to come with postgame coverage here on Daily Bama Blog.

Third Quarter

The third quarter ends without a score. White 10, Crimson 7.

2:56. Not a good day to be a reserve quarterback. Parker McLeod comes in for first snap as the White team’s QB, fumbles the snap. He does recover it, however.

3:23.

6:32. Del Rio hits running back Trey Roberts for a 31-yard pass on a dump-off, puts the Crimson offense around the 50.

8:08. Luke Del Rio misses on his first pass attempt for the Crimson team. He’s the last of the four Crimson quarterbacks to enter the game (Bateman came in for one snap).

Halftime: White 10, Crimson 7

White Stats
– 30 plays, 157 yards
– T.J. Yeldon: 6 carries, 23 yards; 5 catches, 45 yards.
– Kenny Bell: 3 catches, 71 yards, 1 touchdown
– Amari Cooper: 3 catches, 17 yards
– AJ McCarron: 12-17, 136 yards, 1 touchdown, 1 interception
– Phillip Ely: 2-4, 8 yards
– Time of Possession: 17:21

Crimson Stats
– 25 plays, 147 yards
– Kenyan Drake: 5 carries, 24 yards; 2 catches, 12 yards
– Raheem Falkins: 2 catches, 40 yards
– Chris Black: 2 catches, 15 yards
– Blake Sims: 4-6, 40 yards, no touchdowns, 2 interceptions
– Alec Morris: 4-7, 29 yards, no touchdowns, no interceptions
– Time of Possession: 12:39

Second Quarter

0:00. Vinnie Sunseri catches a bobbled pass and returns 86 yards for a touchdown. HALFTIME: White 10, Crimson 7.

0:16. AJ McCarron leading a little bit of a last-second drive here, might get in field goal range with a another good play.

3:18. AJ McCarron overthrows Amari Cooper and has it intercepted by HaHa Clinton-Dix. Clinton-Dix returns it 50- or 60-something yards for a touchdown, but it’s called back by an offsides call on Ed Stinson.

Update on the man injured on the play:

3:33. Alec Morris throw to the sidelines is jumped and picked off by Landon Collins. Collins returned it for 28 yards, then was pushed out-of-bounds into a person on the sidelines. Pretty hard contact. The person is receiving medial attention, being taken off on a stretcher.

4:01. Bateman lasted just one play. False start called and Alec Morris came back in. His first play, completed a pass to freshman tight end O.J. Howard.

4:37. Things getting sloppy now. Kenny Bell catches a pass and tries to make more of it, has the ball poked out and recovered by C.J. Mosley. Cooper Bateman in at QB for Crimson team.

6:20. Well, there goes that. A not-so-great exchange from Morris to Kenyan Drake turns the ball over to the White team. Dillon Lee recovered the fumble on the 25-yard line.

6:54. Alec Morris continues his impressive first drive of action with a 36-yard completion to DeAndrew White. First down, Crimson.

9:35. Nice punt from Cody Mandell flips the field, announced as a 58-yarder. Alec Morris enters as the new QB for the Crimson team, Phillip Ely in for the White team.

First Quarter

White 10, Crimson 0

White Stats:
– 11 plays, 100 yards
– T.J. Yeldon: 4 carries, 20 yards
– Kenny Bell: 2 catches, 63 yards, 1 touchdown
– AJ McCarron: 5-6, 89 yards, 1 touchdown, no interceptions

Crimson Stats:
– 11 plays, 60 yards
– Kenyan Drake: 4 carries, 12 yards
– Raheem Falkins: 1 catch, 31 yards
– Blake Sims: 4-6, 40 yards, no touchdowns, 2 interceptions

2:40. Another Blake Sims interception right on the goal line to Nick Perry (again) sends the Bryant-Denny into silence. Probably don’t like what they see. White ball, inside the 1-yard line.

3:12. First Raheem Falkins sighting of the game with a easy drag route turned into a 31-yard play and a first down. First time the Crimson offense has been in White territory all game.

7:09. FIELD GOAL, WHITE. McCarron was sacked by Ed Stinson and forced a 29-yard field goal from Cade Foster. That will surely be good for his resume when making his case to be Jeremy Shelley’s replacement. White 10, Crimson 0.

9:34. Blake Sims under pressure, threw a highly questionable pass that was intercepted by Nick Perry and returned to the redzone. White team sitting pretty.

12:05. TOUCHDOWN, WHITE. Again, welcome back, Kenny Bell. Bell follows up his 23-yard catch by catching a 40-yard touchdown pass from McCarron. White 7, Crimson 0. Scoring drive only took 2:55.

12:48. Welcome back, Kenny Bell. Bell catches a 23-yard pass from McCarron for a first down.

The first play of the game was a AJ McCarron hand-off to T.J. Yeldon that would have gone for a first down, but was called back by a holding call on Christion Jones. We’re underway.

The JumboTron here in Bryant-Denny Stadium has spotted the following former players: D.J. Fluker, Julio Jones, Eddie Lacy and Mark Ingram.

Pregame

Running back Dee Hart is not wearing a noncontact black jersey for the first time this spring, fully dressed out in his white jersey. Hart is running drills with the rest of the running backs and looks good doing it.

The players that are in the noncontact black jerseys (other than all of the quarterbacks) are: linebacker C.J. Mosley (shoulder), cornerback John Fulton (toe) and running back Jalston Fowler (knee).

Wide receiver Kevin Norwood is walking around, off crutches, in windpants. The press box is way too high for me to see if he has a boot over his toe. Also not in pads is defensive lineman Wilson Love (concussion).

Saban, players shake off challenge from Bielema

New Arkansas head coach Bret Bielema. (AP Photo)

New Arkansas head coach Bret Bielema. (AP Photo)

Keeping boosters happy is not a convenient perk for college football coaches in today’s world: it’s a necessity. So many programs around the nation remain standing on the support of boosters alone, and feeding them what they want to hear to keep the money flowing is part of the job of a head coach.

But sometimes, what coaches say to these boosters for their money is not meant for public knowledge, but gets out anyway.

That has just happened to new Arkansas head coach Bret Bielema, who said the following to the Saline County Razorback Club.

The reason the SEC is talked about all the time is one team, because of their dominance. But I didn’t come here to play Alabama. I came here to beat Alabama.

Bielema continued on to compare his résumé favorably to Alabama head coach Nick Saban’s.

You can take Saban’s record when he was at Michigan State and when he was a coach in the Big Ten and put it against mine, and he can’t compare.

Bielema later took to Twitter to downplay his remarks.

Saban did the same in his Monday press conference, not paying the situation any attention.

“I really don’t have any reaction to it,” Saban said. “I’m really concerned about what we do here with our players and how we try to get the people in our organization to play at a high standard. I really don’t defend anything that I ever did any place that we’ve ever been. Everybody has different situations that they’re in, everybody inherits different situations that they’re in.

“You do the best you can to try to build a new program in those situations, and that’s certainly what we’ve always tried to do and will continue to do and focus on the process of doing what we need to do to continue to be successful here. We obviously have a lot of work to do with our team and that’s certainly what we’re focused on right now. That’s the only thing I’m really concerned about.”

Some of Saban’s players took the disregard for the challenge further and labeled it as the expectation, nothing out of the ordinary.

“That’s everybody’s goal. Everybody’s goal is to win,” offensive lineman Anthony Steen said. “But every time we go out and play, I expect that from everybody. Being the competitor I am and the guys on the team are, we’re expecting to win every game, too.”

Linebacker C.J. Mosley added, “That’s the first I’ve heard of it. He’s a grown man. I can’t listen to that. I just have to do what I can to help this team win.”

Return from Spring Break makes for rough day at practice

Spring break for Alabama football players, like most of daily life, is not quite the same as it is for every other UA student.

The team generally doesn’t find themselves traveling to the beaches of Destin, Fla., or exotic locations like Hawaii and Puerto Rico.

Even if they did, they would regret it greatly when they returned to practice, as they did on Monday.

“It’s good to be back. I’m not sure the players would probably agree with that after going through practice today,” head coach Nick Saban said. “It was what you’d expect for a day back after eight or nine days off.”

The leader of the linebacking corps, C.J. Mosley, did not seem surprised either.

“The main thing was some of the guys were probably thinking it was going to be an easy day coming off a week of not practicing,” Mosley said. “Some guys didn’t know how to handle it.

“We’ve been here for a few years. We know what to expect. I knew it was going to be in pads. Those kind of things happen.”

Like they could not control the rigors of the practice the coaches were pushing them through, the players were also hopeless in the grips of the heat, one of the first warm days of Tuscaloosa’s spring.

“I think it was more of we hadn’t really had any kind of hot weather yet,” offensive lineman Anthony Steen said. “When I went home for my spring break, it was cold. The coldest day was 25 degrees. Today, it felt hot and we just weren’t used to it. I definitely feel it right now.

For some reason, the coaches did not seem to mind.

“It was one of the nicer days we’ve had this spring in terms of weather, practicing outside for just the third time this spring,” Saban said.

The team’s difficulty adjusting to the weather forced such a sloppy practice, the coaches had to scratch some plans.

“We ended up having to restart one period just because we weren’t going full speed,” Steen said. “I felt like I was. I know it’s not going to look like it tomorrow on film, but everybody was definitely feeling the heat today.”

Now the most crucial task is putting it behind them as they go for two good practices before the spring’s first scrimmage on Saturday.

“That’s why we have 15 practices,” Mosley said. “It’s bad that we wasted this day. We’ve got to come in tomorrow and get the guys in the right mindset and get ready for Wednesday.”

C.J. Mosley hoping for contact before A-Day

C.J. Mosley battled a shoulder injury through the 2012 BCS National Championship Game and is now out-of-contact in spring practice due to the corrective surgery. (AP Photo)

C.J. Mosley battled a shoulder injury through the 2012 BCS National Championship Game and is now out-of-contact in spring practice due to the corrective surgery. (AP Photo)

Alabama senior linebacker C.J. Mosley was spotted in the initial practice of spring football wearing a black noncontact jersey to help protect his right shoulder.

Mosley, who said he had a, “cleanup,” surgery on the shoulder after the season, is making progress in rehab.

“It’s feeling better,” Mosley said. “I had a good surgery so I’m just working my way back into the spring.”

Mosley could not attribute the injury to one specific hit or game, just an accumulation of knocks over the course of the season.

“I played through it the whole season so it got banged up,” Mosley said. “After the championship game, I had my surgery and rehabbed so I’m just working my way back into it.”

With the departure of linebacker Nico Johnson, Mosley is hoping to lead his linebacking corps physically, like he did in tackles last year, as soon as possible.

“I hope so,” Mosley said. “I don’t really know how things are going to work out. I just have to keep rehabbing every day, work on getting better, learning plays and helping people out.”

Alabama needs offseason meeting to adjust attitude

Nick Saban, pictured here at SEC Media Days, had to hold a meeting to corral his players in the offseason. (AP photo)

Nick Saban, pictured here at SEC Media Days, had to hold a meeting to corral his players in the offseason. (AP photo)

Team-wide meetings in mid- to late-January usually mean a major coach, like a head coach or an offensive coordinator, has decided to leave the school for another.

Instead of injecting questions into his players’ heads by leaving Alabama, head coach Nick Saban was eliminating any questions as how things are supposed to be done in his program.

“Until we got into the offseason program and sort of got a handle on things, we did not respond as well as we’d like with this group,” Saban said. “I think we had more guys miss class, more issues, the first behavioral issues we’ve had with the guys who got in trouble that we’ve had in five and a half years. A lot of little loose-ended things.

“When guys have entitlement, you see a little slippage. Once we got into the offseason program where we were seeing the players just about four out of five days, and the coaches were around them more, I think we got them recentered and refocused and we’ve improved in all those areas.”

Senior linebacker C.J. Mosley affirmed the meeting was successful.

“As a team, we all had a meeting and basically told everybody that’s not the way we do things,” Mosley said. “It’s good that we’re back in football because we don’t have all of that off time we’ve been having. We just have to focus on football and going to school. That’s when the family and leadership part of things start to set in.”

Saban said the transition from offseason workouts to spring practices helped greatly.

“I think they’ve made a tremendous amount of improvement,” Saban said. “We’ve had the best academic week that we’ve had all semester, and guys are making progress. We really had a good offseason program and the attitude was good today at practice. We are making progress.”

Countdown to Spring Football: Linebackers Breakdown

C.J. Mosley, the Defensive MVP of the BCS National Championship Game win over Notre Dame, highlights a linebacking corps loaded with talent. (AP photo)

C.J. Mosley, the Defensive MVP of the BCS National Championship Game win over Notre Dame, highlights a linebacking corps loaded with talent. (AP photo)

Daily Bama Blog correspondent Brett Hudson, like he did for the BCS National Championship Game against Notre Dame, will count you down to the beginning of spring practice with another series. Each day, Brett will break down a different position group going into spring practice until the beginning of practice on March 16. Here is the schedule.
March 7th: Quarterbacks (click here to read it)
March 8th: Running backs (click here to read it)
March 9th: Wide receivers (click here to read it)
Sunday: Tight ends/H-Backs (click here to read it)
Monday: Offensive Line (click here to read it)
Yesterday: Defensive Line (click here to read it)
Today: Linebackers/Pro Day
Tomorrow: Cornerbacks
Friday: Safeties
Saturday: Opening day of spring practice

After the 2011 season, Alabama had two linebackers, Dont’a Hightower and Courtney Upshaw, taken in the first 35 picks of the NFL Draft and lost another to graduation, Jerrell Harris. Yet another national championship later, the Crimson Tide is set for a similarly-loaded linebacking corps.

It starts with C.J. Mosley, the soon-to-be senior that decided to forego a rather promising NFL Draft position to stay for one more season. Mosley had very similar numbers to Notre Dame linebacker and Heisman Trophy finalist Manti Te’o.

Alabama also has returning starters in Adrian Hubbard, Trey Depriest and Xzavier Dickson. The trio combined for 133 tackles and four forced fumbles. Hubbard led the team in tackles for a loss with 11 and sacks with seven. Depriest added four tackles for a loss while Dickson added five with 3.5 sacks.

Replacing Nico Johnson in the rotation will be the alrgest task for the Tide’s linebacking corps this season, and many options present themselves. Last year, Denzell Devall saw his playing time increase as the 2012 season, his freshman campaign, progress forward. Dillon Lee’s freshman season had a similar trajectory before his suspension from the BCS National Championship Game for breaking curfew.

Other options include Tana Patrick and Reggie Ragland, both of whom saw limited action defensively last season but did play larger roles in special teams. Ryan Anderson, the other player sent home from Miami early for breaking curfew, redshirted last season and is now available to contribute.

Alabama has two recruits entering the program at this position, but neither will be in spring practice as early enrollees. The Reuben Foster saga landed in Tuscaloosa after Foster signed with the Tide on National Signing Day. Alongside Foster will be Walker Jones, the younger brother of both Barrett and Harrison. Walker is the only one of the three brothers to play on the defensive side of the ball.

Breakdown: Two seniors (Patrick and Mosley), three juniors (Depriest, Dickson and Hubbard), three sophomores (Ragland, Lee and Devall), one redshirt freshman (Anderson) and two true freshmen (W. Jones and Foster, neither in for the spring).

Prediction: Depriest, Mosley, Hubbard and Dickson are no-brainers for the coaching staff in their starting spots, with healthy splashes of Devall thrown in. Lee, Ragland and Anderson will be competing for a 6th spot of sorts, while the other two will be relegated to special teams assignment or late-game situations in blowouts.

Usually, freshmen that do not early enroll do not have much of a chance at playing immediately in an important role, but Foster and Jones are the exceptions. Foster’s talent had him ranked as the No. 1 linebacker in the nation by certain experts and Jones’ ties to the program should make his transition as seamless as possible. One of these two freshmen could steal the show in the fall, much like Devall did last year.

Announcement on Tide juniors coming Friday

The University of Alabama has announced a news conference for today at 11 a.m. in which the Crimson Tide’s juniors will reveal their decisions regarding the NFL draft.

So, who’s going and who’s staying? Offensive tackle D.J. Fluker, running back Eddie Lacy and cornerback Dee Milliner are expected to go. Alabama coach Nick Saban advises his players to go if they will be drafted high enough, and all three likely will go high enough for it to be worth leaving.

Linebacker C.J. Mosley and quarterback AJ McCarron announced in December they will return, while the university issued a news release Wednesday starting guard Anthony Steen has decided to come back.

Two Tide players who are question marks are defensive end Ed Stinson, a fourth-year junior, and starting outside linebacker Adrian Hubbard, a third-year sophomore and a 6-foot-6, 248-pound prospect as a pass rusher.

Tomorrow, check us on Twitter at @DailyEdwards and on the blog for the latest news on the decisions.

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Getting back to the BCS game: Tide defense rebuilt into another productive unit

Alabama's Jesse Williams had the right touch at noseguard. (Copyright photo by Gary Cosby Jr. of The Decatur Daily)

Alabama’s Jesse Williams had the right touch at noseguard. (Copyright photo by Gary Cosby Jr. of The Decatur Daily)

MIAMI — If ever a defense reloaded rather than rebuilt, maybe it’s Alabama’s 2012 group.

The statistics aren’t quite as sterling as a year ago, but then again, the Crimson Tide’s 2011 defense set a standard that few may reach. That team led the nation in total yards, points, rushing yards and pass defense, and only one other team (1986 Oklahoma) led all four categories that since the NCAA began keeping track of national statistics in 1937.

Alabama's C.J. Mosley (32) made first team All-American. (AP photo by Jeff Roberson)

Alabama’s C.J. Mosley (32) made first team All-American. (AP photo by Jeff Roberson)

Even so, Alabama ranks first nationally this season in total yards and rushing defense and second in points. The 2012 defense allowed 63 more yards a game than the 2011 version, but if you’re curious how Alabama made the BCS National Championship Game for the third time in four years, point to a group that somehow produces big numbers despite having a mostly revamped lineup.

For defensive end Damion Square, a senior captain, it’s hardly puzzling a Nick Saban defense would produce even if several different guys than before are wearing the crimson jerseys.

“We’re great players that are fortunate enough to get scholarships and come here and play in his system,” Square said. “We bought in and give credit to that guy to get 11 guys to buy into his system and play shutout football. We’re great players and great players come to this university. And this university is great. But credit to Coach Saban and what he does here and the system he runs.”

Alabama lost seven starters from a year ago, including six who NFL teams took in the first five rounds of the annual draft. Safety Mark Barron, linebacker Dont’a Hightower and cornerback Dre Kirkpatrick went in the first round. Outside linebacker Courtney Upshaw went in the second, while noseguard Josh Chapman and cornerback DeQuan Menzie were taken in the fifth.

The only starter who wasn’t drafted? Linebacker Jerrell Harris, who spent the season on the Jacksonville Jaguars’ practice squad.

Three full-time starters returned, including senior safety Robert Lester, who was set for his third season on the first team. Square has started since midway through the 2010 season. Tide senior Jesse Williams returned after starting full-time at defensive end last year but he switched to noseguard.

Cornerback Dee Milliner and linebackers Nico Johnson and C.J. Mosley — a pair of juniors — returned after starting part-time in 2010 and 2011. Those three, Square and Lester are the only five guys on this year’s defense who played much in 2010, either as a reserve or a starter.

For Saban, the lack of experience didn’t bother him as much at the start as lack of consistency.

“When you have a young team, I think you’re going to basically do how well your team learns to execute on a consistent basis,” Saban said. “I think that’s probably one of the biggest goals that we have every fall camp.”

But Alabama managed to find consistency in every section of its defense. Newcomers provided it on the defensive line, at linebacker and in the secondary.

Junior Ed Stinson started all 13 games at end and ranked second with 8.5 tackles for loss. Sophomore linebacker Adrian Hubbard started 12 of 13 games and ranked first with 10 tackles for loss. Sophomore middle linebacker Trey DePriest started 12 games and made 56 tackles, which are second on the team. Junior college transfer Deion Belue started all 13 games at cornerback, made two interceptions and broke up six passes, which ranked second.

Those four started only a combined two games before this season. Stinson had a couple of token starts early in 2010 but struggled and fell out of the playing rotation.

A couple of stars emerged, too. Mosley and Milliner each spent 2010 and 2011 as role players but turned into consensus first-team All-Americans this season. Mosley led the team in tackles with 99, while Milliner broke up 18 passes.

Both have long since reached that point Saban calls the “I got it” moment, when everything they’ve learned begins to fit together and they understand what they’re supposed to do.

Saban said when Milliner makes a rare mistake, he realizes it before a coach starts correcting him.

“That’s always a good thing because that means a guy has good experience and a good understanding of what’s expected of him,” Saban said. “He’s a really good player, he’s played well for us, and is probably one of the better corners in the country.”

Mosley wasn’t an every-down linebacker because Alabama doesn’t include him in its base 3-4 defense. Even so, Saban estimates the Tide used its base defense only about 20 percent of the time, and for the remaining 80 percent, Mosley took the field.

He played so well his teammates voted him the Crimson Tide’s most valuable player. In 13 games, Alabama’s coaches voted him one of the team’s players of the game 10 times. No other Tide player got more than five awards.

“C.J.’s a great guy on and off the field,” Williams said. “He’s a leader vocally and he leads by example. … He’s an unselfish guy. He does his job, just like everyone else. He’s a physical freak and he gets things done for the team. He’s a great guy and I think he deserved MVP — 100 percent.”

Other young players emerged in the secondary, including sophomore HaHa Clinton-Dix, sophomore Vinnie Sunseri, junior Nick Perry, junior John Fulton and freshman Geno Smith. All five weren’t consistent parts of the regular rotation until this season, but as Alabama used five and six defensive backs at a time more and more, they became about as important as the full-time starters.

But even with different personnel, the philosophy remained the same, according to Johnson: Stop the run, and everything else will fall into place.

He said he and his teammates always gotten their best work at this while going against their own offense, which wants to run the ball first.

“In order to make a team one-dimensional, we’ve got to stop the run,” Johnson said. “Every Tuesday and Wednesday we go at it. When fourth period comes around, it’s competitive, and both sides don’t want to lose. That’s what makes us so good at stopping the run or running the ball because we do it everyday full throttle, and it’s just best on best. When we get in the game, it’s easy to us and we just want to go out and show that we can do it.”

Saban said the key to it all was getting these young players to go out and play — no worries about what mistakes they might make. He said that’s always the biggest chore every year with young players.

“When I went over to visit the Mercedes plant for the first time and they gave me a tour of the plant, they had this clothesline working through the whole assembly line,” Saban said. “I said, ‘Well, what’s that for?’

“And they said, ‘Well, we don’t have very many cars that need working on when we get finished here because of what our quality control is. Whatever you’re doing at your station, if it’s not working exactly right, you pull the cord. We stop the assembly line. We reengineer that circumstance so that we fix it, so that we don’t do things incorrectly.’ I said, ‘Well, that’s great. That sounds wonderful. What’s the biggest problem?’ Getting people to pull the cord, because nobody wants to think that their part of it’s not working, that they’re doing it wrong, that they’re not doing it the right way.

“You’ve got all these new players that don’t know what they’re doing, but they don’t want anybody to think they don’t know what they’re doing so they become very risk aversive and sort of don’t go play fast and don’t want to make a mistake.”

Saban doesn’t mind the occasional mistake, especially when they come with the results he’s getting from his defense.

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Mosley set to return for 2013 season

Alabama linebacker C.J. Mosley, right, sacks Missouri quarterback Corbin Berkstresser for a 9-yard loss during the first quarter. (AP photo by L.G. Patterson)

Alabama linebacker C.J. Mosley, right, sacks Missouri quarterback Corbin Berkstresser for a 9-yard loss during the first quarter. (AP photo by L.G. Patterson)

TUSCALOOSA, Alabama — Alabama junior linebacker C.J. Mosley announced today he will return for the 2013 season.

However, he said he made the decision a long time ago. The 6-foot-2, 235-pound linebacker said he never thought about heading out early for the NFL and didn’t even contact the NFL advisory board to find out how high he might go in the draft.

“I already knew I was coming back to school,” Mosley said. “But I didn’t want it floating around that I was leaving. It happened that way anyway. I wanted to focus on this season and focus on school. My parents and I already knew I was coming back.”

Mosley said he wants to graduate, which he added he will do next December.

He also wants to earn a spot on the first-team defense. Alabama never has listed him as a starter.

Mosley was on the field for the first defensive snap for eight of the Tide’s 13 games, but that was because of the requirements of whatever defense Alabama needed that particular day.

The Crimson Tide coaches never listed him as a first-team linebacker all year, because his strength is in pass defense, rather than against the run. Sophomore Trey DePriest and senior Nico Johnson hold the two inside linebacker spots.

Not being included on the first team has given Mosley a target to fill the shortcoming on his college football resume. He wants to be an every-down linebacker.

“That was a big hole, a big gap,” he said.

Even without occupying a spot on Alabama’s official starting defense, Mosley played so much he wound up with statistics that match up favorably to celebrated Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o, the Heisman Trophy runner up.

Te’o had 103 tackles, which were 42 more than any other Notre Dame player, compared to Mosley’s 99 tackles, which were 43 more the Tide player in second place. Mosley had more tackles for loss (7 to 5.5) and sacks (4 to 1.5), while Te’o had more interceptions (7 to 2) and passes defended (11 to 4).

Alabama coach Nick Saban said he appreciates having Mosley back for more than all those tackles he makes.

“C.J. is really a good person,” Saban said. “I know that he has never been in my office for ever not doing what he’s supposed to do, like missing class, or getting in trouble in the dorm, or not doing something he was responsible for, or being late, I mean not once. Not ever once.”

Saban added Mosley isn’t talkative.

“He’s very quiet,” Saban said. “You don’t even know he’s around until the ball’s snapped, then he shows up big and does what he’s supposed to do.”

Alabama adds to its list of consensus All-America picks

Alabama defensive back Dee Milliner (28) is a unanimous All-American for 2012. (AP photo by LM Otero)

Alabama defensive back Dee Milliner (28) is a unanimous All-American for 2012. (AP photo by LM Otero)

Chance Warmack pulled in plenty of hardware as a Tide senior. (AP photo by Dave Martin)

Chance Warmack pulled in plenty of hardware as a Tide senior. (AP photo by Dave Martin)

Each year, the NCAA compiles a list of consensus All-Americans. The organization takes the most respected All-America lists and combines them for a team of the guys with the most first-team selections. These aren’t just players who got named third team on somebody’s All-America squad or managed one first-team selection. Instead, the consensus All-America team showcases the elite of the elite.

This year, Alabama has four consensus first-team All-Americans, including center Barrett Jones, guard Chance Warmack, defensive back Dee Milliner and linebacker C.J. Mosley. Alabama now has 54 consensus All-America selections. Warmack and Milliner were unanimous picks, and Alabama has 22 of those.

Since 2002, the NCAA has used the All-America teams from The Associated Press, America Football Coaches Association, Football News, Sporting News and Walter Camp Foundation to produce the consensus team.

The NCAA has come up with a consensus team each season since 1889. Here are the Alabama players who have made it. An * means they were a unanimous selection.

1930: Fred Sington*, T

1934: Don Hutson, E; Bill Lee, T; Dixie Howell, B

1935: Riley Smith, B

1937: Leroy Monsky, G

1941: Holt Rast, E

1942: Joe Domnanovich, C

1945: Vaughn Mancha, C

1961: Billy Neighbors*, T

1962: Lee Roy Jordan*, C

1965: Paul Crane, C

1966: Ray Perkins, E; Cecil Dowdy*, T

1967: Dennis Homan, E; Bobby Johns, DB

1971: Johnny Musso, RB

1972: John Hannah*, G

1973: Buddy Brown, G

1974: Leroy Cook, DL; Woodrow Lowe, LB

1975: Leroy Cook*, DL

1977: Ozzie Newsome, WR

1978: Marty Lyons, DL

1979: Jim Bunch, OL

1980: E.J. Junior*, DL

1981: Tommy Wilcox, DB

1982: Mike Pitts, DL

1986: Cornelius Bennett*, LB

1988: Derrick Thomas*, LB

1989: Keith McCants*, LB

1990: Philip Doyle*, K

1992: Eric Curry, DL; John Copeland, DL

1993: David Palmer, KR; Antonio Langham*, DB

1996: Kevin Jackson*, DB

1999: Chris Samuels*, OL

2005: DeMeco Ryans, LB

2008: Andre Smith*, OL; Antoine Caldwell, C; Terrence Cody, DL

2009: Mike Johnson, OL; Mark Ingram*, RB; Terrence Cody, DL; Rolando McClain*, LB; Javier Arenas, DB

2011: Barrett Jones*, OL; Trent Richardson*, RB; Dont’a Hightower, LB; Mark Barron*, DB

2012: Barrett Jones, C; Chance Warmack*, OL; Dee Milliner*, DB; C.J. Mosley, LB

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Final results of The Daily Bama Blog’s MVP poll

Daily Bama Blog readers picked AJ McCarron as the most valuable player of six Alabama games this season. (AP photo by Dave Martin)

Daily Bama Blog readers named Alabama’s Eddie Lacy as the most valuable player of the Crimson Tide’s 32-28 win over Georgia, which is the third time he has taken the honor.

However, one of his teammates got the most mentions in the weekly poll this year: Tide quarterback AJ McCarron. Giving three points for every first-place finish in the weekly voting, two for second place and three for third, McCarron compiled the most points with 23.5. (He tied for second one week, resulting in the .5).

The complete list
Player (first-place finishes), points total
AJ McCarron (6), 23.5
Eddie Lacy (3), 16
Amari Cooper (3), 13
T.J. Yeldon (1), 9
C.J. Mosley, 4

Click here to read the results of each of The Daily Bama Blog’s weekly polls.

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League coaches put eight from Tide on their All-SEC team

The Southeastern Conference coaches put eight Alabama players on their all-league team, which was released by the conference office today.

Senior center Barrett Jones, senior guard Chance Warmack, junior right tackle D.J. Fluker, junior running back Eddie Lacy, junior linebacker C.J. Mosley and junior cornerback Dee Milliner.

Junior quarterback AJ McCarron and senior safety Robert Lester.

COACHES ALL-SEC TEAM
(*-Ties) (Coaches could not vote for their own players)
First team
Offense

TE: Mychal Rivera, Tennessee
OL: Luke Joeckel, Texas A&M
OL: Chance Warmack, Alabama
OL: D.J. Fluker, Alabama

OL: Jake Matthews, Texas A&M
C: Barrett Jones, Alabama
WR: Cobi Hamilton, Arkansas
WR: Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt
QB: Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M
RB: Mike Gillislee, Florida
RB: Eddie Lacy, Alabama
AP: Cordarrelle Patterson, Tennessee

Defense
DL:
Jadeveon Clowney, South Carolina
DL: Sam Montgomery, LSU
DL: Damontre Moore, Texas A&M
DL: Sharrif Floyd, Florida
LB: Jarvis Jones, Georgia
LB: C.J. Mosley, Alabama
LB: Kevin Minter, LSU
DB: Dee Milliner, Alabama
DB: Matt Elam, Florida
DB: Eric Reid, LSU
DB: Johnthan Banks, Mississippi State

Special teams
PK:
Caleb Sturgis, Florida
P: Kyle Christy, Florida
RS: Ace Sanders, South Carolina

Second team
Offense
TE:
Jordan Reed, Florida
OL: Larry Warford, Kentucky
OL: Gabe Jackson, Mississippi State
OL: Chris Burnette, Georgia
OL: Dallas Thomas, Tennessee
C: T.J. Johnson, South Carolina
WR: Ryan Swope, Texas A&M
WR: Justin Hunter, Tennessee
QB: AJ McCarron, Alabama
RB: Todd Gurley, Georgia
RB: Zac Stacy, Vanderbilt
AP: Ace Sanders, South Carolina

Defense
DL:
Barkevious Mingo, LSU
DL: Sheldon Richardson, Missouri
DL: John Jenkins, Georgia
DL: Corey Lemonier, Auburn
LB: A.J. Johnson, Tennessee
LB: Jon Bostic, Florida
LB: *Cameron Lawrence, Mississippi State
LB: *Alec Ogletree, Georgia
DB: D.J. Swearinger, South Carolina
DB: Bacarri Rambo, Georgia
DB: Robert Lester, Alabama
DB: Darius Slay, Mississippi State

Special teams
PK:
Drew Alleman, LSU
P: * Dylan Breeding, Arkansas
P: * Richard Kent, Vanderbilt
RS: Cordarrelle Patterson, Tennessee

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2012 All-SEC football team

The Associated Press released its All-Southeastern Conference team today, and four Alabama players made first team: Chance Warmack, Barrett Jones, C.J. Mosley and Dee Milliner. AJ McCarron, D.J. Fluker, Jesse Williams and Eddie Lacy made second team. Robert Lester made honorable mention.

The team, with player’s position, name, school, height, weight and class (u-unanimous selection):

First team
Offense

WR: u-Cobi Hamilton, Arkansas, 6-3, 209, Sr.
WR: Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt, 6-3, 205, Jr.
L: Chance Warmack, Alabama, 6-3, 320, Sr.
L: Luke Joeckel, Texas A&M, 6-6, 310, Jr.
L: Jake Matthews, Texas A&M, 6-5, 305, Jr.
L: Gabe Jackson, Mississippi State, 6-4, 320, Jr.
C: u-Barrett Jones, Alabama, 6-5, 302, Sr.
TE: Jordan Reed, Florida, 6-3, 243, Jr.
QB: u-Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M, 6-1, 200, Fr.
RB: Todd Gurley, Georgia, 6-1, 218, Fr.
RB: Mike Gillislee, Florida, 5-11, 209, Sr.
K: Caleb Sturgis, Florida, 5-11, 184, Sr.
All-purpose: Cordarrelle Patterson, Tennessee, 6-3, 205, Jr.

Defense
T: Sharrif Floyd, Florida,6-3, 303, Jr.
T: Sheldon Richardson, Missouri, 6-4, 295, Jr.
E: u-Jadeveon Clowney, South Carolina, 6-6, 256, So.
E: Damontre Moore, Texas A&M, 6-4, 250, Jr.
LB: u-Jarvis Jones, Georgia, 6-3, 241, Jr.
LB: C.J. Mosley, Alabama, 6-2, 232, Jr.
LB: Kevin Minter, LSU, 6-2, 245, Jr.
CB: u-Johnthan Banks, Mississippi State, 6-2, 185, Sr.
CB: u-Dee Milliner, Alabama, 6-1, 199, Jr.
S: Matt Elam, Florida, 5-10, 202, Jr.
S: Eric Reid, LSU, 6-2, 212, Jr.
P: Kyle Christy, Florida, 6-2, 199, So.

Second team
Offense

WR: Justin Hunter, Tennessee, 6-4, 200, Jr.
WR: Chad Bumphis, Mississippi State, 5-11, 200, Sr.
L: D.J. Fluker, Alabama, 6-6, 335, Jr.
L: Larry Warford, Kentucky, 6-3, 343, Sr.
L: Antonio Richardson, Tennessee, 6-6, 332, So.
L: Dallas Thomas, Tennessee, 6-5, 310, Sr.
C: Travis Swanson, Arkansas 6-5, 305, Jr.
TE: Mychal Rivera, Tennessee, 6-3, 244, Sr.
QB: A.J. McCarron, Alabama, 6-4, 210, Jr.
RB: Eddie Lacy, Alabama, 6-0, 220, Jr.
RB: Zac Stacy, Vanderbilt, 5-9, 210, Sr.
K: Carey Spear, Vanderbilt, 5-10, 190, Jr.
All-purpose: LaDarius Perkins, Mississippi State, 5-10, 190, Jr.
All-purpose: Ace Sanders, South Carolina, 5-8, 175, Jr.

Defense
T: Jesse Williams, Alabama, 6-4, 320, Sr.

T: John Jenkins, Georgia, 6-3, 358, Sr.
T: Bennie Logan, LSU, 6-3, 295, Jr.
E: Sam Montgomery, LSU, 6-5, 260, Jr.
LB: Alec Ogletree, Georgia, 6-3, 232, Jr.
LB: Cameron Lawrence, Mississippi State, 6-3, 230, Sr.
LB: Barkevious Mingo, LSU, 6-5, 240, Jr.
LB: Denzel Nkemdiche, Mississippi, 5-11, 203, Fr.
CB: Andrew Hal, Vanderbilt, 6-0, 184, Jr.
CB: Marcus Robertson, Florida, 6-0, 178, So.
S: D.J. Swearinger, South Carolina, 6-0, 210, Sr.
S: Craig Loston, LSU, 6-2, 205, Jr.
S: Bacarri Rambo, Georgia, 6-0, 210, Sr.
P: Dylan Breeding, Arkansas, 6-1, 211, Sr.

Honorable mention
Offense

La’el Collins, L, LSU, 6-5, 321, So.; Josh Dworaczyk, L, LSU, 6-6, 300, Sr.; Wesley Johnson, L, Vanderbilt, 6-5, 285, Jr.; Marcus Lattimore, RB, South Carolina, 6-0, 218, Jr.; Aaron Murray, QB, Georgia, 6-1, 210, Jr.
Defense
Robert Lester, S, Alabama, 6-2, 210, Sr.
; Chris Smith, E, Arkansas, 6-3, 251, Jr.

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
u-Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M

DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Jarvis Jones, Georgia

COACH OF THE YEAR
Kevin Sumlim, Texas A&M

FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR
Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M

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Tide passes out awards, including Mosley as MVP

C.J. Mosley won team MVP honors. (AP photo by Jeff Roberson)

Alabama named linebacker C.J. Mosley as its most valuable player Sunday night at the team banquet at Birmingham’s Cahaba Grand Conference Center.

Meanwhile, defensive end Damion Square, guard Chance Warmack and center Barrett Jones won the captain awards, which means they’ll put their hand and footprints into cement at Denny Chimes this spring.

The rest of the awards:

Iron Man Award: T.J. Yeldon, Cade Foster, Kelly Johnson and Jesse Williams

Commitment to Academic Excellence Award: Denzel Devall, Geno Smith, D.J. Fluker, Quinton Dial and Arie Kouandjio

Outstanding Senior Scholar Award: Barrett Jones and Chance Warmack

Unsung Hero Award: Kenny Bell, Quinton Dial, Carson Tinker, Xzavier Dickson and Jeremy Shelley

Outstanding Defensive Performer Award: C.J. Mosley and Dee Milliner

Up-Front Award: Jeoffrey Pagan, Ed Stinson, Cyrus Kouandjio and Anthony Steen

Most Inspiring Player: Damion Square

Defensive Achievement Award: Adrian Hubbard, Deion Belue, HaHa Clinton-Dix and Trey DePriest

Offensive Achievement Award: Amari Cooper, Eddie Lacy, T.J. Yeldon, D.J. Fluker

President’s Award: Jesse Williams, Robert Lester, Chance Warmack and Kevin Norwood

Special Teams Award: Vinnie Sunseri, Cody Mandell, Christion Jones and Landon Collins

Defensive Player of the Year: Nico Johnson and Dee Milliner

Offensive Player of the Year: AJ McCarron and Barrett Jones

Pat Trammell Award: Michael Williams and Nico Johnson

Jefferson County Alumni Association Distinguished Alumnus Award: Bobby Humphrey

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Tide lands three on coaches’ All-America team but someone is missing

Alabama’s Barrett Jones probably doesn’t care the AFCA left him off its All-America team. After all, he has two national title rings and is working on a third.

The American Football Coaches Association has released its FBS All-America team, and the good news for Alabama fans is that it includes three Crimson Tide players.

The bad news: There’s a pretty big name missing. The center on the squad is not Alabama’s Barrett Jones, the Outland Trophy winner from a year ago.

Clemson senior Dalton Freeman (6-foot-5, 285 pounds) is the team’s center.

The Alabama guys who made it include offensive lineman Chance Warmack (6-3, 320), linebacker C.J. Mosley (6-2, 232) and defensive back Dee Milliner (6-1, 199).

Click here to see the whole team. (By the way, Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel isn’t the quarterback. Instead it’s Clemson’s Tajh Boyd.)

Last year, Alabama landed five on the AFCA team, including Jones, running back Trent Richardson, linebacker Dont’a Hightower, safety Mark Barron and defensive back DeQuan Menzie.

Keep in mind this is one of many All-America teams that will be released in the coming weeks. In my opinion, the most important and influential one is The Associated Press All-America squad, which includes first, second and third. Jones made AP first team last year and AP third team in 2010.

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