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Alabama vs. LSU score, takeaways: No. 10 Tigers, Jayden Daniels roll No. 6 Tide in overtime, shake up SEC

No. 10 LSU knocked off No. 6 Alabama, 32-31, in an overtime thriller at Tiger Stadium that saw Tigers quarterback Jayden Daniels complete a star-making performance in the extra period. Trailing by a touchdown, Daniels ran for the end zone on his first play in OT, leaving LSU coach Brian Kelly to decide on a do-or-die 2-point conversion that Daniels completed to tight end Mason Taylor on a flare route, ending the game and handing the Crimson Tide their second loss of the season.

It was an uneven, sloppy game for most of the night, but everything turned in the fourth quarter with both teams trading the lead before a 45-yard field goal from Alabama kicker Will Reichard barely cleared the uprights to tie the game and effecitvely force overtime with 21 seconds left.

Alabama struck first after a third-down pass interference gave the Tide renewed life. Running back Roydell Williams scored from 1 yard out to make it a 31-24 game. This gave Bama 17 of 24 points down the stretch as it battled from a 17-15 deficit with 7 minutes left in regulation. That was before Daniels and LSU had a bit of magic left in their pockets with Kelly deciding to let it all ride on the 2-point conversion.

Daniels was excellent for the Tigers finishing with three total touchdowns, 182 yards passing and team-highs of 95 yards rushing on 18 carries. 

Though Alabama QB Bryce Young had some bright spots, including a stellar 41-yard touchdown pass to Ja'Corey Brooks late in the fourth quarter that gave the Tide a late lead, he was inconsistent throughout. A swarming LSU defend held him to 25 of 51 passing for 328 yards with that touchdown toss and an interception he threw in the end zone early in the game.

In other words, Young made his fair share of plays, but Daniels and LSU simply made more.

The victory puts LSU in the driver's seat of the SEC West as it now holds a tiebreaker over both Alabama and Ole Miss with all three teams having one loss in league play. While the defeat does not entirely eliminate Bama entirely from the SEC race, it makes a College Football Playoff an unlikelihood for a program that has participated in seven of the eight events to date.

Let's take a look at some more takeaways from LSU's stunning upset of Alabama in Death Valley.

Tide are entirely too dependent on Young

The reigning Heisman winner can only do so much. As Alabama has entered the meat of its SEC schedule, it's proven clearly not enough for the Tide to put their entire offensive game plan on his shoulders. After losing a bevy of talented playmakers to the NFL Draft over the last couple seasons, Bama has struggled to replace them with similarly dominant players in the passing game.

The Tide simply do not have enough players that can stretch the field and pick up chunk plays. Out of Alabama's top four pass catchers on Saturday, only Brooks (97 yards) is a wide receiver. The next wideout, Jermaine Burton, was fifth with two grabs for 19 yards. Bama is asking its running backs and tight ends to do far too much, and while RB Jahmyr Gibbs took 23 combined touches for 163 yards, that's not enough to compete offensively at the level to which the Tide are accustomed.

Bama isn't the same team on the road

This loss probably shouldn't come as a surprise. Sure, Alabama was a 13-point favorite, but anybody who has paid attention to how the Tide have performed on the road all season knew it might not be so easy. There was the 20-19 win over Texas in which Young had to lead a late comeback despite the Longhorns losing starting QB Quinn Ewers in the first half of the game. Then there was the game in which Bama couldn't finish its comeback. It fell behind Tennessee 28-7, and though it made a run and took a lead, it couldn't hold on in a 52-49 loss.

There was the 23-point win over Arkansas, but the Razorbacks just lost at home to Liberty on Saturday, so I'm not sure we should qualify that as a difficult road game this season. It's certainly not harder to win in Fayetteville, Arkansas, than it is in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, at night. It's enough to make you wonder what might happen next week when Alabama is on the road again against Ole Miss.

Daniels is a difference-maker

Daniels arrived at Arizona State in 2019 with pressure the size of the Grand Canyon. He was billed as the most polished quarterback in his class and earned the starting job as a true freshman. After a strong campaign, he regressed to a point that he was expendable and had to fight and claw to win his job at LSU. He wasn't ready -- at least not right away. 

Over the last month, though, he has proven exactly why he had that kind of hype. He has thrown 14 touchdowns and tossed only one interception this year with seven touchdown runs over the last three games. He had the heads of Alabama defenders spinning due in part to deceptive speed that he displayed when LSU needed it most: the first play of the bottom half of overtime to set up the game-winning 2-point conversion.

He was the best quarterback in Death Valley on Saturday. The way Daniels' season is going, the best might be yet to come.

Brian Kelly proved he's the man for the job

LSU's game-tying extra point attempt vs. Florida State in Week 1 was blocked, and all eyes immediately went to Kelly. He wasn't prepared. His team was undisciplined. He wasn't cut out for the SEC.

He changed that narrative in a hurry. 

Kelly has developed this offense into a force and kept this team together through some difficult times. Daniels was a mess in that opener and didn't get any help from his offensive line or his side receiving corps -- including supposed superstar Kayshon Boutte. Instead, he developed a more versatile wide receiving corps with Malik Nabers, Jaray Jenkins and Mason Taylor to give Boutte some help as the offense continued to develop. That coincided with the development of Daniels as a legit dual-threat who is incredibly difficult to prepare for. This LSU team has confidence on the ground and through the air, but Kelly fixed the special teams as well. That made a ton of difference on Saturday. 

Damian Ramos nailed his only field goal attempt on Saturday, Noah Cain averaged 21 yards on kickoff returns and Jay Bramblett pinned Alabama inside the 20-yard line on three of his six attempts. It was a position game, and LSU came out with the advantage. That is something that seemed impossible a month ago.

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Live updates
 
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We're back to short drives that go nowhere

LSU gets a first down but not much else. Jayden Daniels was getting heated up by the pass rush, and while he managed a few yards on scrambles, he lost more on a sack. His pass to Boutte on third down is behind him and incomplete, so the Tigers have to punt. Alabama gets the ball at the ALA 24 with a second left in the quarter.

 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 

LSU forces a 3 & out

The Tigers pass rush keeps Bryce Young uncomfortable in the pocket, and the Tide go backwards before having to punt. LSU will start at its 20 following the punt and an unnecessary roughness call backs them up an additional 15.

 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
 

LSU answers

That's an impressive drive. The Tigers respond to Alabama taking the lead by going 75 yards in 12 plays, with John Williams finishing the drive with a 2-yard touchdown run. Jayden Daniels got the party started early with a 21-yard scramble, and then hooked up with Kayshon Boutte a few times to set up a 1st and goal. A pass interference in 3rd down gave the TIgers a new set of downs, and then it was Williams finishing it off. It's now a 14-9 LSU lead with 3:30 left in the third quarter.

We've had two long, methodical drives from both teams this quarter, but as has been the story all night, LSU's best drives have ended with touchdowns. Alabama's had more good drives, but they've all ended in field goals or turnovers.

 
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@AlabamaFTBL via Twitter
 

A long Alabama drive ends with another field goal

It's a 15-play, 55 yard drive that only took four minutes off the clock, but felt like it lasted an hour due to injuries and other stoppages, ends with a 38-yard FG to give Alabama a 9-7 lead. LSU's defense continues to do a good job of keeping everything in front of it. While Alabama has busted a few big plays thanks to yards after the catch, they haven't been able to string them together, and once the field gets shorter, there's a lot less room to work with. But can the Tigers offense take advantage of what it's defense is doing?

 
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@LSUfootball via Twitter
 

Alabama has converted on two fourth downs this drive

It's a 10-play drive that's only covered 37 yards and has needed two conversions on 4th and 1, but Alabama is inside the LSU 40 and moving the ball consistently.

 
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@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
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@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
@AlabamaFTBL via Twitter
 

How I felt about the ruling

 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 

FUMBLE OVERTURNED

After review, officials determine Latu touched the loose ball while out of bounds, and by rule the play is dead at that point. Huge break for Alabama.

 

Turnover

Alabama has driven into LSU territory three times tonight, including twice into the red zone. It's thrown an interception, kicked a field goal, and now it's fumbled. Cameron Latu has the ball stripped fighting for yards along the sideline and LSU's Greg Brooks gets on top of the ball. 

 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 

The points were fun but it's time to bring the punters back out!

LSU cannot answer Alabama's FG drive. The Tigers pick up a first down on the first play of the drive but it's all for naught as the next three plays net only three yards. Jay Bramblett's punt isn't his best of the night, but a holding call on Bama backs em up an additional 10 yards to the ALA 16.

 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
 
@LSUfootball via Twitter
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