The Commercial Appeal

Saban derides state of college football

- Ralph D. Russo

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Nick Saban’s willingnes­s to adapt and often be a catalyst for change in college football, both on the field and off, has propelled Alabama to six national championsh­ips in 13 seasons.

The 70-year-old coach is confident his program will continue to thrive during this new era of college athletics, with players having more opportunit­ies to earn money than ever before and more power to determine where they play.

But the current state of college football has Saban concerned.

“I don’t think what we’re doing right now is a sustainabl­e model,” Saban told The Associated Press in a recent interview.

That’s a common theme among coaches these days, with Clemson’s Dabo Swinney and Southern California’s Lincoln Riley among the most prominent who have echoed Saban’s sentiments. The combinatio­n of empowered athletes and easily accessible paydays is changing the way coaches go about their business.

The uncertaint­y comes with the NCAA in a weakened state following last year’s Supreme Court loss and in the midst of a dramatic restructur­ing. Schools and the NCAA itself would prefer federal legislatio­n to regulate how athletes are compensate­d for their names, images and likenesses, but when that might come and in what form is unknown.

That has led to concerns about vast sums of money flowing in and around college athletics, including brazen entities called collective­s put together by well-heeled donors whose donations have traditiona­lly funded everything from lavish facilities to multimilli­on-dollar buyouts of fired coaches around Power Five conference­s.

“The concept of name, image and likeness was for players to be able to use their name, image and likeness to create opportunit­ies for themselves. That’s what it was,” Saban said. “So last year on our team, our guys probably made as much or more than anybody in the country.”

Paying a player to attend a particular

school is still a violation of NCAA rules, but NIL deals have quickly become intertwine­d with recruiting – both high school prospects and the growing number of college transfers.

“But that creates a situation where you can basically buy players,” Saban said. “You can do it in recruiting. I mean, if that’s what we want college football to be, I don’t know. And you can also get players to get in the transfer portal to see if they can get more someplace else than they can get at your place.”

Riley told reporters last week NIL has “completely changed” recruiting.

“I think that anybody that cares about college football is not real pleased with that because that wasn’t the intention,” said Riley, who is in his first season at Southern California after five years at Oklahoma. “And I’m sure, at some point, there is going to be a market correction if you will, with recruiting.”

What exactly is going on with recruiting and NIL is hard to know for sure because it is mostly happening outside the purview of schools and the NCAA between

parties with no obligation to publicly disclose deals.

A NIL contract drawn up for an unidentified blue-chip recruit reportedly could be worth up to $8 million. Earlier this year, Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher was angered by rumors the Aggies used millions in NIL money to sign the nation’s consensus No. 1 recruiting class for 2022.

Mississipp­i coach Lane Kiffin is among those who worry about conflicts in recruiting between coaches and emboldened boosters,

“I think that there’s going to start being issues potentiall­y of donors and collective groups saying they want Player A from their area. And the coaching staff wants Player B,” Kiffin told AP.

Swinney told ESPN major college football needs a “complete blowup” that might result in something that looks more like profession­al football.

“I think you’ll have 40 or 50 teams and a commission­er and here are the rules,” he said.

Saban said he is not against the shift toward players being compensate­d and given more freedom to switch teams.

“We now have an NFL model with no contracts, but everybody has free agency,” said Saban, echoing a comparison Kiffin has made.

“It’s fine for players to get money. I’m all for that. I’m not against that. But there also has to be some responsibi­lity on both ends, which you could call a contract. So that you have an opportunit­y to develop people in a way that’s going to help them be successful,” Saban said.

Saban, the highest-paid coach in college football with a salary of nearly $10 million last season, said the balance of power in the sport could tip toward the schools with the wealthiest collective­s.

“So there’s going to have to be some changes implemente­d, some kind of way to still create a level playing field,” he said. “And there is no salary cap. So whatever school decides they want to pay the most, they have the best chance to have the best team. And that’s never been college football, either.”

Saban would prefer Alabama guarantee a set amount of money for every player who plays football for the Crimson Tide.

“We give everybody the same medical care, academic support, food service. Same scholarshi­p. So if we’re going to do this, then everybody is going to benefit equally. I’m not going to create a caste system on our team,” Saban said.

Saban isn’t worried about the changing landscape derailing his dynasty. Alabama had more players on NFL rosters (53) than any school at the beginning of last season. The Tide’s track record of personal and profession­al developmen­t should remain attractive to top players, though maybe not quite as many as in the past.

Saban is OK with that.

“I know we have to adapt to that,” Saban said. “You’re going to have kids out there that say, ‘Well, I can get a better deal going someplace else,’ and they’ll go there. But you’re also going to have people that see the light and say, ‘Yeah, they’ve got a good history of developing players. They got a good history of developing people, they got a great graduation rate and that value is more important.’

“And they’re distributi­ng money to everybody in the organizati­on.”

 ?? JEFFREY MCWHORTER/AP ?? Alabama coach Nick Saban walks off the field before the Cotton Bowl against Cincinnati on Dec. 31 in Arlington, Texas.
JEFFREY MCWHORTER/AP Alabama coach Nick Saban walks off the field before the Cotton Bowl against Cincinnati on Dec. 31 in Arlington, Texas.

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