Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jury remains out on if Saban has lost a step

- WALLY HALL Read Wally Hall’s SPORTS BLOG Wallylikei­tis.com

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — He’s still the greatest of all time, but the growing opinion seems to be that Alabama’s Nick Saban is either slipping, or at least being outrun by Georgia’s Kirby Smart and maybe LSU’s Brian Kelly.

Those privy to Saban’s private news conference last Wednesday morning said he was upset and talked off the record, although when he left the room he was laughing with an SEC Network producer.

In his news conference in the “main” room — which basically is everyone but radio and TV, although they sneak in — he was subdued.

If one didn’t know better one might think he was being slightly humble, if that exists in his psyche.

Maybe Saban had heard

that SEC Network show host Paul Finebaum said Smart had passed him as the top coach in the SEC, which it would appear that way since the Bulldogs have won consecutiv­e national championsh­ips.

Alabama didn’t make the College Football Playoffs for only the second time since they began in 2015. There was no chance for an eighth national championsh­ip because the Crimson Tide didn’t even make the SEC Championsh­ip

Game.

Georgia beat LSU, who won the tie-breaker in the Western Division with its win over Alabama, on its way to the top of the college football heap.

It was rare air for Saban, who had 10 players drafted by the NFL, including three in the first round and quarterbac­k Bryce Young at the No. 1 pick.

Since Saban became the head coach at Alabama no team in the country has had more players taken in NFL Draft.

Yet, the last time he played Georgia was for the 2021 national championsh­ip, a 33-19 loss for the Crimson Tide.

Saban doesn’t appear to have lost any of his energy or enthusiasm, but there was a strong indication the aging process works on the GOAT the same way it does everyone else.

After his introducto­ry talk Saban opened it for questions and Dennis Dodd from CBSsports.com was first.

Dodd, always clear and precise, asked about the lack of returning starters, and everyone in the room heard it but Saban, who asked him to repeat the question and when he did Saban stared at Dodd’s face, apparently reading his lips.

It has been told and retold he has a hearing aid but it is so tiny it is almost invisible and those types, according to an audiologis­t, don’t work as well.

No doubt he has the darkest colored hair of any 71-yearold in the world, but looking young and being with it benefits recruiting, although it appears NIL has balanced the recruiting scales.

Saban always starts a conversati­on about NIL by stating he’s glad the players are getting paid but that it is unsustaina­ble at the rate it is going. In other words players, who are still human, are going to the highest bidder instead of who can coach you up to the next level.

If there is pressure on Saban it comes from within, for now. Not including his first season as Alabama’s head coach, his Crimson Tide overall record is 187-21 and his SEC record is 108-14.

Saban changed coordinato­rs after last season bringing in Kevin Steele to run the defense and Tommy Rees on offense. A couple of stats that were mind-boggling for a Saban team were the Tide ranked 123rd in penalties, giving up 68.7 yards per game, and tied for 104th in takeaways with just 14.

Early in his talk he said, “We are focused on the process, not the expectatio­ns.”

This seems like a clear message to the fans who have come to expect a parade every year.

The best thing anyone affiliated with Alabama can do is get out of the way and let the man prove he is still the SEC’s King of Swing. Or not.

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