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Ty Simpson's comments revealed Alabama's weaknesses during their 38-3 loss to Indiana in the College Football Playoff Rose Bowl quarterfinal. His remarks highlighted that Alabama was aware of Indiana's defensive strategies.
Ty Simpson didn't hurt Indiana's feelings, he exposed Alabama's flaws
Before we jump into whoâs feelings are hurt and whoâs acting like a petulant child, letâs start with some intellectually honesty, shall we?
Ty Simpson wasnât praising the Indiana defense when excerpts from a podcast with former teammate Caleb Downs showed him proclaiming Alabama âknew exactlyâ what Indiana was doing defensively.
Thatâs right, every single play of a 38-3 loss to the Hoosiers in the College Football Playoff Rose Bowl quarterfinal â the worst bowl loss in the storied history of Alabama football â was right there in the Crimson Tide game plan.
Knew it all, yet the Indiana defense was just too good despite Alabama knowing where theyâd be. And could only mange three lousy points.
If you believe that, you must follow it down the road to an undeniable question: What does that Rose Bowl scenario say about the current Alabama coaching staff?
âFrom my point of view, I was like, they donât do much,â Simpson said on the podcast. âThey do the same thing every down. They just donât mess up, bro.â
OK, letâs stop this nonsense right here.
Ty Simpson stated that Alabama 'knew exactly' what Indiana was doing defensively, indicating a lack of adaptability during the game.
Alabama's 38-3 loss to Indiana marked the worst bowl loss in the history of Alabama football.
The defeat raised questions about Alabama's game strategy and exposed flaws in their performance leading to criticism of their coaching and player execution.
Ty Simpson is a player who previously played for Alabama and made comments regarding the team's performance against Indiana.

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If Team A knows what Team B is doing every single play, there are two logical deductions: Team A should have been able to adjust and find a way to counteract Team B, or Team Bâs players are far and away better than Team Aâs â leaving Team A utterly helpless.
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Either answer is frighteningly scary for all things Houndstooth.
Because if Indiana, long the armpit of college football, rebooted in just two seasons under coach Curt Cignetti and had significantly better players than big, bad Alabama, oh boy, somebody made a massively bad hire to follow the great Nick Saban.
And if Alabama couldnât adjust to what the Indiana defense was doing â despite knowing where they would be every single play â then someone is really in over his head as the guy who replaced the greatest coach in the history of college football.
Again, two dangerous truths for the Tide faithful.
Now, letâs return to whoâs feelings are hurt and whoâs acting like a petulant child â because itâs not Indiana defensive coordinator Bryant Haines and his response after he and his players were insulted.
Itâs Simpson. But why?
Why would Simpson, a borderline first round pick in this weekâs NFL Draft, direct the spotlight back to one of his failures in his only season as a starter? And then make a point to say he didnât play the whole game â even though it was 24-0 when he left the game in the third quarter with cracked ribs.
Thereâs a reason Simpson was throwing shade at Indiana with his former teammate at Alabama (Downs), who just happened to lose to the same Indiana team two weeks before the Tide did, as a star safety at Ohio State.
It may have something to do with Alabamaâs two games against the best defenses it faced all season (Georgia, Indiana), where Simpson had one touchdown, two turnovers (one fumble) and averaged a measly five yards per attempt. The Tide were outscored 52-7 with Simpson on the field.
Or maybe Alabama knew everything Georgia was doing, too.
âThey were so well-coached,â Simpson said of Indiana.
A throwaway, backhanded compliment if there ever was one.
Because you canât say we knew what they were doing and they were well-coached in the same sentence â without exposing either of the two previous undeniable deductions. Heaven help the good folks of Tuscaloosa if Indiana not only had better coaches, but had better players, too.
And whaddya know, weâre all the way back to the hurt feelings and petulant children.
All it took was a little intellectual honesty.
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ty Simpson beef with Indiana exposed Alabama problems under Kalen DeBoer