Alabama’s 2025 season defies its proud ground-game roots: reviving the rushing attack isn’t just about numbers, but restoring the Tide’s identity—and keeping their championship path alive.
From Dominant Backfields to Unfamiliar Territory
For over a decade, the Alabama Crimson Tide’s identity has been synonymous with power running: Mark Ingram, Trent Richardson, Derrick Henry—tailbacks whose productivity anchored national title runs. The 2025 campaign, however, has delivered an almost unthinkable statistical slide: Alabama ranks 114th in FBS and 14th in the SEC with just 118.9 rushing yards per game [ESPN Team Stats]. Such output wouldn’t have sufficed for a single player in the Tide’s heyday, much less an entire roster.
With quarterback Ty Simpson delivering a hyper-efficient aerial performance—67.8% completions, 2,184 yards, 20 touchdowns, and only one interception—many may wonder if the run game even matters given modern college football trends. But for a program whose championship culture was built on balance and trench dominance, the 2025 offense’s struggles on the ground have hit at the core of Alabama’s identity.
Why the Run Game Still Matters—Even in a Passing Era
On paper, Alabama’s passing attack looks more than sufficient to carry them deep into the College Football Playoff. Yet recent history—and the raw numbers—suggest otherwise:
- One-dimensional teams rarely survive the playoff gauntlet. In Alabama’s 2020 national championship campaign, the team averaged 183.1 yards rushing per game [NCAA Official Stats]. Balanced attacks forced defenses to defend every inch, opening up both play-action passes and late-game clock control.
- Games against elite SEC defenses routinely pivot on the ability to run between the tackles—especially in fourth quarters and in the red zone.
- Last week’s nailbiter versus South Carolina saw Alabama eking out just 72 ground yards on 23 attempts (3.1 yards per carry), with a single explosive run masking an otherwise stagnant effort.
Simpson’s stellar passing has temporarily compensated for the plodding ground game, but the flaws are obvious when Alabama is forced into short-yardage or when the lead must be protected late—a fact not lost on Tide fans, who remember dominant run-blocking as an annual birthright.
Coaching Adjustments: Is a Fix on the Horizon?
Addressing the issue head on, offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb reported that the bye week was spent retooling the run game’s scheme, focusing on double-team attack angles and improving line communication. While schematic tweaks are essential, execution and mindset matter equally: as quarterback Ty Simpson acknowledged, the collective confidence in the huddle on run plays needs to return.
Historically, coaching adjustments during a bye week at Alabama have correlated with second-half surges—whether it was Lane Kiffin’s tempo innovations or the ground-game tweaks made before the 2017 championship run after injuries to key backs. Fans are holding out hope for a similar turnaround, but as of early November, the rushing identity remains in flux.
When History Weighs Like a Shadow
This season’s struggles are historic by Alabama standards. From 2009 to 2018, the Crimson Tide averaged 215+ rushing yards per game. The current output would rank as the program’s worst in well over a decade—outdoing even some criticized post-title transition years.
There are, of course, precedents for elite Alabama teams rebounding midseason:
- 2015: After a tepid September ground game, Derrick Henry powered a relentless November surge en route to a national title.
- 2017: Post-iron bowl corrections to blocking schemes and backfield usage propelled the Tide through the playoff field to another championship.
Comparisons linger, but the need for a revival in 2025 is more acute; the gap between the program’s past and present rushing effectiveness is wider than ever, and the margin for error in the modern SEC has shrunk.
Fan Perspective: Between Anxious Legacy and Eager Optimism
Within fan communities—from r/rolltide to message boards—the theme is clear: this run-game slump is more than a blip, it’s a referendum on the Tide’s identity. Is this a temporary schematic mismatch, personnel issue, or a deeper sign of shifting program philosophy? The debate rages between fans decrying “softness in the trenches” and those calling for patience with an evolving roster and coaching staff.
Fans also remain anxious about the implications for the CFP. With programs like Georgia and Michigan thriving on physicality, and considering how Alabama’s signature close-game edge has always relied on a late-game rushing push, the sense of urgency is palpable. As the calendar turns deeper into November, the question is not just: can the Tide run the ball—but whether they can rediscover themselves in time.
The Stakes Down the Stretch
The upcoming clash with LSU is more than a single game; it’s a midseason reckoning. If the Tide can leverage Grubb’s adjustments for a meaningful ground-game spark, their championship aspirations remain alive. If not, the legacy of the 2025 squad may be defined by an uncomfortable question: when tradition works against current reality, can a program change fast enough to compete for the greatest prize?
Alabama has owned the all-time series with LSU (57-27-5), but all historical comfort means little if November’s results reflect the struggles of September and October. Restoring the running game—from mentality to mechanics—isn’t just about stats; it’s about keeping the team’s greatest ambitions within reach and preserving what has made Alabama football a dynasty.
Sources: ESPN Team Stats, NCAA Official Stats