SEC teams battle to tighten widening gap with No. 1 Alabama

Alabama head coach Nick Saban walks towards a huddle during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Western Kentucky, Saturday, Sept. 10, 2016, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Saban called his team’s performance in a 28-point victory against Western Kentucky embarrassing and said he could not remember feeling more disappointed after a win. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)
Alabama head coach Nick Saban walks towards a huddle during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Western Kentucky, Saturday, Sept. 10, 2016, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Saban called his team’s performance in a 28-point victory against Western Kentucky embarrassing and said he could not remember feeling more disappointed after a win. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

The gap separating defending national champion Alabama from its Southeastern Conference rivals doesn't seem to be closing.

If anything, it's getting wider.

While every other team in the SEC either already has lost a game or had a relatively close call, No. 1 Alabama (2-0) has outscored its first two opponents 90-16 and is still finding things it could have done better.

"It's the Bama way," Alabama tight end O.J. Howard said. "It's just the way that we carry ourselves. We are a hard-nosed football team. We want to play at our standard that makes people not want to play us anymore, and I think we didn't play that way Saturday. So it's a disappointment right now."

The seemingly widening gap is also disappointing for the rest of the league.

A test of Alabama's superiority comes Saturday when it opens SEC competition at No. 19 Mississippi (1-1), the one team that seems to have the Crimson Tide's number. Alabama is 0-2 against Ole Miss and 28-1 against all other opponents since the start of the 2015 season.

"I have great respect for [Alabama coach Nick Saban] and the job he's done," Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze said. "They just continue to stockpile depth with four- and five-star kids. It's very difficult to say that you're ever going to overcome the gap. I think we've closed it considerably. Obviously, the proof is on the field."

No one in the league is conceding anything to the Crimson Tide. In some respects, the SEC looks as deep as ever with eight of its 14 members in this week's Top 25.

"The SEC's the SEC," Tennessee defensive tackle Kendal Vickers said. "It's why everybody wants to come to the SEC. It's the best conference in the world. You'll see when SEC play comes. You'll see all the talent that comes out."

But a closer look at the poll indicates Alabama is indeed separating itself from everyone else.

Alabama, which has won four of the last seven national titles, is the only SEC team ranked 14th or higher. That also was the case in the last two regular-season polls in 2015 before Ole Miss climbed to 10th in the final rankings.

Before 2015, the last time only one SEC team was ranked 14th or higher was in the final poll of the 2000 season. The last time the SEC had only one team ranked in the top 14 of a September poll was in 1989.

"I think there's a little bit more of a gap, especially based on what we've seen the first two weeks," said SEC Network analyst Marcus Spears, who played at LSU from 2001-04. "They seem to be the only team that hasn't struggled to get wins. I think for the most part, though, it's just so early. You'll see teams get better."

Joining Alabama and Ole Miss in the Top 25 are No. 15 Tennessee, No. 16 Georgia, No. 17 Texas A&M, No. 20 LSU, No. 23 Florida and No. 24 Arkansas.

All the ranked teams other than Ole Miss and LSU are undefeated but haven't been dominant.

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