Print

Tide dealing with another injury at receiver

By The Associated Press
Posted 5:21PM on Monday 26th November 2012 ( 11 years ago )
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- No. 2 Alabama's once-deep receiving corps has been hit by its third big injury. <br /> <br /> The Crimson Tide lost deep threat Kenny Bell to a broken leg against Auburn, marking the third major hit among receivers this season. It has left a thinned-out group facing No. 3 Georgia in Saturday's Southeastern Conference championship game. <br /> <br /> Coach Nick Saban said Monday he's considering playing highly touted freshman Chris Black, who had shoulder surgery in August, over the final two games. Black is in line for a redshirt season. <br /> <br /> ``He's been practicing for three weeks now. Now he's been cleared,'' Saban said Monday. ``So we're going to try to get him some reps because we're getting down to where we only have maybe five guys that have much experience at the position. We still feel good about the guys that we have. We just need to get more guys ready to play so that they can complement each other. <br /> <br /> ``You'd like to be able to roll guys in and out at that position.'' <br /> <br /> The Tide (11-1) has been able to do that pretty well this season despite the casualties. DeAndrew White started the first five games before a season-ending knee injury against Mississippi. <br /> <br /> Now, Bell has had surgery and is out five or six weeks. Saban said it's up to the team doctors to determine when he can return. <br /> <br /> Bell is averaging a team-high 25.4 yards per catch and had the team's two longest receptions, 85 yards against Florida Atlantic and 57 versus Mississippi State. <br /> <br /> The biggest playmaker for quarterback AJ McCarron has clearly been freshman Amari Cooper, easily the team leader with 767 yards and eight touchdowns. He has three 100-yard games in his last six games despite being held without a catch against LSU, when he missed the second half with an ankle injury. <br /> <br /> ``The one you notice is Cooper, obviously,'' Georgia coach Mark Richt said. ``He's the leading receiver. He's definitely the go-to guy, the deep ball guy, made some wonderful plays. Some of the long yardage receptions have been just launching it out there deep and him making a play. He's also caught a couple balls, shorter range balls, made people miss, has taken it to the house or had some big plays. <br /> <br /> ``He's very versatile. They have a couple other guys that have been outstanding for them, as well.'' <br /> <br /> Kevin Norwood and Christion Jones are veterans having solid seasons but no other healthy wideout has more than four catches. <br /> <br /> Tight end Michael Williams is fourth on the team with 19 catches and tailback Eddie Lacy fifth with 18. <br /> <br /> Georgia can relate to Alabama's problems. <br /> <br /> The Bulldogs' Marlon Brown and Michael Bennett have both been lost for the season with knee injuries. They were leading the team in receiving at the time of their injuries. <br /> <br /> Alabama started preseason camp with plenty of bodies at receiver despite the departure of Marquis Maze and Darius Hanks. The numbers have since dwindled. <br /> <br /> ``It was really deep. It's a shame that we had a lot of injuries,'' Norwood said. ``Injuries happen. We just got to deal with it the best way we can.'' <br /> <br /> With Alabama trying to play for a national championship, Black's situation presents an interesting dilemma. One of the nation's top receiving prospects, he enrolled in January and scored on a 44-yard catch-and-run play in the spring game. <br /> <br /> Alabama cornerback Dee Milliner has faced him frequently in practice and thinks he could get the job done if needed. <br /> <br /> ``He's been practicing against us for, like, the last three weeks, giving us a great look of different receivers from different teams,'' Milliner said. ``He does a great job with that. Hopefully, if he can play he'll be a big step for us.''

http://accesswdun.com/article/2012/11/255568

© Copyright 2015 AccessNorthGa.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.