Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kickoff Game often a good gauge

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ATLANTA — One game does not make or break a season.

Especially the opener. Then again, the Chickfil-A Kickoff Game has often been an accurate predictor of where the season is headed for both teams.

Keep that in mind when No. 6 Washington faces No. 9 Auburn on Saturday.

The ramificati­ons of this first-of-September contest might still be lingering come December.

“The fact that we are playing a really high-profile game brings a little bit more to the table on both sides from a national standpoint,” Auburn Coach Gus Malzahn said.

While Washington’s Chris Petersen warned of placing too much importance on a single game — “We can’t make it bigger than it is,” the coach said — he is no doubt mindful that the outcome will likely have a huge impact how far the Huskies and the Tigers go this season.

The very first of these neutral-site games in Atlanta, played a decade ago, marked Alabama’s return to national prominence under Nick Saban. The Crimson Tide romped to a 34-10 victory over Clemson, a result that also signaled the end of the Tommy Bowden era. The Tigers coach didn’t even last out the season.

The following year, Alabama returned to Atlanta to open with a 34-24 victory over Virginia Tech, launching the first of five national titles with Saban at the helm. The Crimson Tide followed a similar past last season, starting with a dominating 24-7 victory over Florida State at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on the way to finishing No. 1.

It works the other way, too, as Bowden and others have discovered.

Auburn, for instance, opened the 2012 season with a 26-19 loss to Clemson and went on to finish 3-9, its worst season in 60 years and costing coach Gene Chizik his job. A year ago, Florida State lost its starting quarterbac­k to a season-ending injury in the loss to the Tide, leading to a disappoint­ing 7-6 campaign that ended with Jimbo Fisher bolting for Texas A&M.

Both teams are looking to bounce back from disappoint­ing finishes.

Auburn knocked off Georgia and Alabama to earn a spot in the SEC Championsh­ip Game, only to lose to the Bulldogs in a rematch with a trip to the College Football Playoff on the line. Forced to settle for the Peach Bowl, the Tigers were beaten again by Central Florida .

Washington stumbled in road losses to Arizona State and Stanford, falling out of national contention and even

a shot at the Pac-12 title. The Huskies closed with another loss to Penn State in the Fiesta Bowl.

Both teams are led by experience­d quarterbac­ks: Washington’s Jake Browning and Auburn’s Jarrett Stidham.

Browning took a step backward as a junior after leading Washington to the national semifinals in 2016. He still threw for 2,719 yards and 19 TDs, but that was a major drop from the 3,430 yards and 43 touchdowns he passed for the previous season.

Auburn has high hopes for Stidham, who was one of the SEC’s most efficient passers as a first-year starter. Auburn hasn’t had a holdover starter at quarterbac­k since Nick Marshall in 2014.

“We know what we are getting, at least at that position,” Malzahn said.

Washington is touted as the team that can make the Pac-12 relevant again in the national championsh­ip race. Every team in the league had at least three losses in 2017, which resulted in no serious contenders for a spot in the College Football Playoff. And the bowl season was dismal as the conference went 1-8 .

There are no such questions about the SEC, which hoarded both spots in the national championsh­ip game and will be looking for its 10th title in the last 13 years.

“We aren’t playing their whole conference,” Peterson said. “The rest of the Pac-12 has nothing to do with this game.”

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