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Anonymous
What exactly is a crimson tide?

Is that like when your girlfriend goes in the ocean, and gets her period?
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
It's when a stadium wearing crimson does the wave.
>> Anonymous
parting the Red Sea?

i don't know how the elephant fits in though
>> Anonymous
no really, what the fuck does an elephant have to do with red tide?
>> Anonymous
Crimson tide wasn't started by Alabama fans it was adopted by them. When Paul "Bear" Bryant coached up at Alabama the team was often described as a "sea of crimson" the other replied
"and the tide has rolled in".

Could be worse could see an eagle fly over your endzone and think it's a sign from god.
>> Anonymous
The Crimson Tide

Early newspaper accounts of the University's football squad simply referred to them as the "varsity" or the "Crimson White." The first nickname popular with the media was the "Thin Red Line," which was used until 1906. Hugh Roberts, former sports editor of the Birmingham Age-Herald, is credited with coining the phrase "Crimson Tide" in an article describing the 1907 Iron Bowl played in Birmingham. The game was played in a sea of red mud with Auburn a heavy favorite to win. Alabama held Auburn to a 6-6 tie, thus graduating to their newfound nickname.
The Elephant

The elephant's association with Alabama dates back to the 1930 football season when the Crimson Tide was led by Coach Wallace Wade. There are two stories about how Alabama became associated with the elephant.

Officially, following the 1930 game versus Ole Miss, Atlanta Journal sports writer Everett Strupper wrote:

"At the end of the quarter, the earth started to tremble, there was a distant rumble that continued to grow. Some excited fan in the stands bellowed, 'Hold your horses, the elephants are coming,' and out stamped this Alabama varsity. It was the first time that I had seen it and the size of the entire eleven nearly knocked me cold, men that I had seen play last year looking like they had nearly doubled in size."

Another account attributes the Rosenberger's Birmingham Trunk Company for the elephant association. Alabama used the Birmingham Trunk Company's luggage to travel to the 1930 Rose Bowl. The luggage company's trademark was a red elephant standing on a trunk. When the football team arrived in Pasadena, the reporters greeting them associated their large size with the elephants on their luggage.

Despite these early associations of the elephant to the University of Alabama, the university did not officially accept the elephant as university mascot until 1979.

Rammer Jammer, Yellowhammer, give 'em hell, Alabama!