Tua's career day propels Tide in SEC opener

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Hilinski's number represents a brother's eternal bond

The number on South Carolina QB Ryan Hilinski's jersey symbolizes a brother's eternal bond, and hope for a family trying to heal from unimaginable hardship.


COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa focused on what his team needs to work on instead of his career performance.

Sounds familiar, huh?

Tagovailoa threw for a career-best 444 yards -- the third most in history for No. 2 Alabama -- and tied his personal best with five touchdown passes in a 47-23 victory over South Carolina on Saturday.

But there was no gushing or celebrations for Tagovailoa, who seemed to channel his coach, Nick Saban, in a single-minded focus on what the Crimson Tide (3-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference) must do to improve.

"When we start drives, we've got to finish them," he said. "We were able to move the ball really well, but we got stuck."

It seemed like Tagovailoa, the All-American and Heisman Trophy contender, unstuck the Tide much of the game against South Carolina (1-2, 0-1).

He had TD throws of 24 yards to Najee Harris and 81 yards to Henry Ruggs III in the opening quarter. When the Gamecocks closed to 17-10, Tagovailoa hit Harris, who finished a nifty run in which he broke through one tackler, leaped over another and dragged a third over the goal line with him.

"I always tell him not to do that. I think it could be dangerous," Saban said about Harris' jump. "But he's got a good feel for it."

Tagovailoa finished 28-of-36 passing. He surpassed his previous best of 387 yards set against Texas A&M last season. Tagovailoa matched his career high of five TDs on an 11-yard toss to DeVonta Smith in the final quarter.

"As a quarterback, you have to expect to throw the ball a lot whether you want to or not," Tagovailoa said.

Saban improved to 12-1 at Alabama in SEC openers and wiped away some bad memories of his previous visit to Williams-Brice Stadium nine years ago.

The passing numbers are gaudy and great, but Saban said his team must show more balance offensively. "It's great that we're a great passing team," he said. "I also think from a team standpoint, we need to be able to run the ball well."

The Crimson Tide finished with 76 yards rushing against 495 passing.

Saban reminded his players, about all who were in middle or elementary school in 2010, of the Tides' previous game here when the top-ranked Tide were soundly beaten 35-21.

And the Gamecocks tried anything they could to pull off another miracle, but little worked -- especially with Tagovailoa in complete control.

Parker White's fake field goal run to the end zone was called back because of holding. Alabama snuffed out a fake punt to stop the Gamecocks well short of a first down. And when South Carolina drove to Alabama's 1 on the final play of the half, freshman Ryan Hilinski's pass to the back of the end zone was off target.

Smith and Ruggs both surpassed 100 yards receiving. Smith had 136 yards on eight catches, including two TDs. Ruggs had six catches for 122 yards.

South Carolina coach Will Muschamp said his team's errors near the goal line -- Hilinski threw high on one fourth-and-goal play and threw an interception into the end zone -- cost them the chance to keep things closer.

"I thought we made some nice drives today, but we didn't get what we wanted and that's to win the game," he said.

THE TAKEAWAY

Alabama: The Crimson Tide played a game sure to please Saban: good enough to win by double digits but with enough mistakes on defense for him to drill into players before next week. Alabama allowed a 300-yard passer and a 100-yard rusher, both benchmarks Saban likely will address going forward.

South Carolina: The Gamecocks showed some pluck in the face of the defending national champions. Freshman quarterback Ryan Hilinski threw for 324 yards and two touchdowns in his second career game with expected starter Jake Bentley lost for the season.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Alabama's performance wasn't perfect, but it should certainly keep the Tide at No. 2 without major upheaval in the rankings.

RAPINOE TRIBUTE

Alabama tailback Najee Harris gave a personal salute to U.S. women's soccer star Megan Rapinoe when at the end of his 42-yard TD reception, he extended his arms in celebration as Rapinoe did after scoring goals in helping the Americans win the World Cup this past summer. "Shout out to her," Harris said.

DECISIVE STRETCH

South Carolina faces a pair of season-making games the next two weeks, first at Missouri and then back home against Kentucky. Losing either of those makes a winning season near impossible given the Gamecocks must face ranked opponents in Georgia, Texas A&M and Clemson down the stretch. "We're going to be desperate, we're going to be hungry," offensive lineman Donell Stanley said. "We need wins."

UP NEXT

Alabama returns home to another daytime kickoff when it plays Southern Miss on Saturday.

South Carolina plays its first SEC road game when it faces Missouri on Saturday.