No. 7 Alabama scores 35 in 2nd quarter, buries No. 21 Texas A&M

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Sunday, October 19, 2014

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Alabama looked every bit the part of a national title contender, with a point-a-minute attack and a defense that planted a goose egg on one of the nation's most prolific offenses.

Blake Sims passed for 268 yards and three touchdowns, and he scored on a 43-yard run while leading the seventh-ranked Crimson Tide to 35 second-quarter points and a 59-0 pummeling of No. 21 Texas A&M on Saturday.

The Tide (6-1, 3-1 SEC) shut down the nation's No. 4 offense and dominated a game that had produced two straight thrillers.

"I think this is as close as we can get to the Alabama football that we want to try to get from our players in terms of effort, toughness, emotional excitement and execution that we got throughout the game," Alabama coach Nick Saban said.

Led by Sims, T.J. Yeldon and Amari Cooper, Alabama outgained the Aggies 602-172.

Texas A&M (5-3, 2-3) has lost its past three games, all to teams currently ranked in the top 10.

Alabama set a school record for points in a quarter and matched the second-most scored in a half while racing to a 45-0 lead.

It was Alabama's largest margin of victory since a 62-0 defeat of Tulane in 1991. It was also the Tide's most lopsided SEC win since beating Vanderbilt 66-3 in 1979.

Alabama fell four points shy of the largest margin of victory over a Top 25 team, trailing No. 8 Florida State's 63-0 win over No. 25 Maryland in 2013 and UCLA's 66-3 win over No. 11 Texas in 1997.

Yeldon had 114 yards and two touchdowns on 13 carries, all in the first half. Cooper gained 140 yards on eight catches with two touchdowns.

Sims completed 16 of 27 passes before exiting midway through the third quarter.

By halftime, it seemed Alabama could name its score.

The Tide had 30 first downs to Texas A&M's eight after facing doubters following a 14-13 win over Arkansas and a loss to No. 3 Mississippi. Saban even grew frustrated that some Tide fans were disappointed by such a close win.

That's hardly an issue this time.

Johnny Manziel and Texas A&M had set a record for an Alabama opponent with 628 total yards last season in a 49-42 loss. The Aggies came in averaging 565 yards a game, but coach Kevin Sumlin called the performance "embarrassing."

"I thought we were prepared," Sumlin said. "I thought we had energy during the pregame warmups. Obviously the performance was extremely poor."

It's the first time Texas A&M has been shut out since a 77-0 loss to Oklahoma in 2003 and the program's second-largest defeat.

Kenny Hill could never get them going. He was 17-of-26 passing for just 138 yards -- 220 below his average -- and was intercepted for the sixth time in three games long after the outcome was determined.

"We just tried to confuse the quarterback as much as possible, and play sound football, fly to the ball," Alabama safety Landon Collins said. "If we fly to the ball, they can't make good plays on us."

Freshman Kyle Allen replaced Hill in the fourth quarter and had to chase down a high snap in the end zone on his first play.

"It's not just the quarterback," Sumlin said. "There are 10 other guys out there. They got him off the spot a little bit more than he needed to be. When you get the kind of output we had -- zero -- it's more than just the quarterback."

The Aggies couldn't even get a spark from the return of star receiver Malcome Kennedy from a separated shoulder that sidelined him for two games. Kennedy gained 4 yards on four catches.

"We go into every game expecting to win, expecting a great performance," Kennedy said. "This game we just got exposed a little bit more."

The Tide scored on their first eight possessions, all touchdowns after the opening drive.

Alabama hit the locker room with a 449-51 advantage in yards and no doubt about the outcome.

The Tide did have some standout plays in a game full of Bama highlights.

Sims flashed his running ability with a nifty touchdown run when he faked to Yeldon, made two defenders miss and won a footrace to the end zone.

Yeldon set up his second touchdown run with a 31-yarder after appearing to be bottled up at the line of scrimmage. He scored on fourth-and-goal from the 1.

Texas A&M missed an early opportunity. Deshazor Everett dropped a near-certain pick-6 on the Tide's opening drive. Alabama settled for a field goal.

"We came in confident that we could do all right," Hill said. "It just went down as the game went on."

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