The University of Alabama football team’s current motto, “LANK,” is no longer limited to players.
Crimson Tide alumni are reaping the benefits of Let All Naysayers Know.
LINK: ALABAMA TEAMS ARE GREETING WITH ROSES IN CALIFORNIA FOR THE ROSE BOWL GAME
There are several Alabama football players in the National Football League. From the Tide’s program, every active
player in the league receives a care package. Alumni of the Tide have all LANK merchandise from Terrion Arnold and
Jalen Milroe in this care box.
The Tide sent a package to Evan Neal, the 2020 College Football Playoff National Champion.
In 2021, he was selected as a first-team All-SEC player and a consensus All-American. Neal was selected by the New
York Giants as the seventh overall pick in the 2022 NFL Draft. When Milroe and Arnold were freshmen in 2021, he
played alongside them for one season.
Neal posted his LANK care package on social media, but other players might have also received them.
Michigan and Alabama will now face off in the Rose Bowl.
MORE:
Bowl Games Other Than the NFL Are Important
To start off, I don’t believe there are too many bowl games. The fact that the football season is almost over and there
will be a long wait before the next one is, in my opinion, their sole negative aspect. How is it that the season passes
by so quickly yet the off-season never ends?
Games of spring? When Alabama hosted their 2007 A-Day game, 92,138 fans packed Bryant-Denny Stadium, which
held capacity at the time, in Nick Saban’s first season as head coach. Some program broke that record, I seem to
recall; perhaps Ohio State distributed buckeye wheat cakes or something like to draw in attendees. But the reality is
that there are rarely large “crowds” for spring football games anywhere, even in Alabama these days.
Regretfully, it seems that the identical
That won’t be the case for the College Football Playoff, Saturday’s Sugar Bowl semifinal between Texas and
Washington and the Rose Bowl semifinal between Alabama and Michigan. Not even at exorbitant costs. However,
it’s highly likely that the CFP has an impact on the 39 other bowl games, which some people believe are unimportant.
The Orange Bowl, really? Cotton Bowl? Peach, Fiesta? Unimportant? Men who participate in this and other games,
or the “minor bowls,” will look back on these times with great fondness.
Think about this. The national champion was chosen by a vote conducted by the Associated Press and Coaches Poll
before the playoffs, Bowl Championship Series, and now the College Football Playoffs. Except for the Rose Bowl
winner, who was regarded as the greatest in the country until it closed its doors in 1946, the bowls were not involved
for a long time. Following the AP in 1965 (which featured a jalopy-like start-stop-start to assist Notre Dame) and the
Coaches in 1974, the national champion was typically selected by the results of one or two bowls, but most of the
time it was only one.
Back then, there weren’t quite as many, and since the majority were in the South, fans could enjoy a pleasant winter
getaway as a “reward for a good season.”
Moving forward to the present, I’m confident that the majority of people watch bowl games more on television than
they do in person, and throughout these early bowl games, ESPN (the main bowl game provider) practically
constantly promotes the CFP. I think it’s safe to assume that everyone watching a bowl game is aware of the playoff
games, therefore the commercials that detract from the game being watched won’t affect the viewer’s decision to
watch them or not.
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