By outreach@cw.ua.edu (Tyler Waldrep)

Alabama defensive back Minkah Fitzpatrick had already intercepted Arkansas quarterback Austin Allen twice when he picked him off in the end zone. Fitzpatrick could have just taken a knee with the ball then, but his teammate had other ideas.

“As soon as I caught the ball, Eddie (Jackson)’s just like, ‘Mink c’mon, c”mon,’” Fitzpatrick said. “So then I turned around and I just saw the whole left side of the field was open. So I just followed Eddie down the field and into the end zone.”

Jackson quickly led Fitzpatrick down the field, but Allen was standing in between the two Alabama players. Ftizpatrick knew Jackson would help him score.

That confidence paid off when the safety impeded Allen just enough that his teammate was able to slip by. Jackson jumped up and started celebrating before Fitzpatrick even crossed the goal line.

Fitzpatrick’s 100-yard interception return in the fourth quarter broke the school record, and gave the Crimson Tide the breathing room it needed to finish of the No.16 Razorbacks 49-30 on Saturday.

“You know, Minkah’s a ball hawk,” defensive back Marlon Humphrey said. “He’s always there around the ball, so it didn’t surprise me. I guess three did surprise me a little bit, but kept making plays, he always does that.”

Fitzpatrick’s third pick of the game also tied a school-record feat last accompolished by Rashad Johnson against LSU in 2008. To date the sophomore defensive back has returned three intercpetions for touchdowns. If he takes one more back he’ll break yet another school record.

The Razorbacks fell behind early, but Arkansas coach Bret Bielema had his team in a position to cut Alabama’s lead into something manageable mutliple times in the second half, but Alabama’s defense always seemed to make a play-or more accurately Fitzpatrick did.

He swatted one ball away early in the third quarter, but that play was quickly forgotten when he intercepted Allen for the first time to give Alabama a short field that would allow the Crimson Tide to extend it’s lead by seven.

“When you break on the ball it’s like baseball, you have to swing or take a ball,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said. “You have to make a decision to swing or take a ball. Good hitters hit good pitches.”

Saban said a lot of his guys instinctively know what to do to make the play, but he didn’t see a lot of that on Saturday when Arkansas passed the ball for 400 yards.

Besides Fitzpatrick, Saban said the other silver lining for his pass defense was the number of sacks the team got. The Crimson Tide pass rush sacked Allen six times for a loss of 49 yards.

Linebacker Ryan Anderson accounted for one of those sacks. He also tied fellow linebacker Shaun Dion Hamilton to lead the team with (a new career-high) nine tackles.

“[We were] playing Bama football. We were built for these types of games,” Anderson said.

…read more

Source:: The Crimson White Sports