Paul Finebaum didn’t need long to explain why Alabama keeps popping up as a playoff pick.
The ESPN analyst zeroed in on the Crimson Tide’s schedule on Monday’s edition of The Paul Finebaum Show after reacting to a Tuscaloosa News ranking from Chase Goodbread that placed Alabama’s slate at No. 11 in the SEC. Finebaum moved through several other conference teams before landing on Alabama, and his point was simple: the path is friendly.
"How many times have you heard us talk about that on this show?" Finebaum said.
"Alabama's schedule, incredibly manageable. (It is) why many believe Alabama is a playoff team.
They have Georgia at home, A&M at home, at Tennessee, and at LSU."
Those four games are the heart of Alabama’s SEC season, and the setup matters. Georgia and Texas A&M both come to Tuscaloosa, while the trips to Tennessee and LSU are the road tests that will likely define the Crimson Tide’s ceiling. If Alabama can split those four, Finebaum’s case says, it should be in the playoff mix.
The rest of the schedule gives Kalen DeBoer’s team room to breathe before the pressure spikes. Alabama opens against East Carolina on Sept. 5 in Tuscaloosa, then goes to Kentucky on Sept. 12 before home games against Florida State and South Carolina.
Mississippi State follows on the road, and only then does Georgia arrive on Oct. 10.
From there, the schedule tightens fast. Alabama hosts Georgia, then goes to Tennessee, then brings Texas A&M to Tuscaloosa, with a bye on Halloween before the Nov. 7 trip to LSU.
The Tide then finish with Vanderbilt, Chattanooga, Auburn, and the SEC Championship in Atlanta on Dec. 5.
What makes the schedule stand out is who Alabama does not have to face in SEC play. The Crimson Tide avoid Oklahoma, Ole Miss, and Texas, and they draw only two playoff teams from a season ago: Georgia and Texas A&M. Both of those games are at home.
That leaves a narrow but clear path. Alabama can slip once or twice and still stay alive, but too many losses in that October-November stretch would likely end the conversation. Finebaum also noted that Alabama can be vulnerable to an upset under DeBoer, yet the overall floor still looks high enough to keep the Tide in the hunt.
He has been back and forth on Alabama at times, but even he landed on a confident bottom line: this is a team that can win 10 games. With a manageable first half of the season and the biggest tests clustered in a stretch that breaks in Alabama’s favor, the Crimson Tide have a schedule that gives them a real shot to climb back into the playoff picture.
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