The News-Times

Alabama’s Nick Saban is Coach Killer of the SEC

-

ATLANTA — They keep trying to knock him off.

Occasional­ly, they’re successful.

A Kick Six here. A Joe Burrow there.

In the end, though, no one in the Southeaste­rn Conference comes close to Nick Saban.

He’s the ultimate Coach Killer.

Over his 14-year reign at Alabama, the other 13 SEC schools have shuffled through a total of 35 coaches, who either were fired, quit, retired or moved on to other jobs.

More tellingly, those schools have doled out at least $120 million in buyouts to coaches who weren’t up to the task — all in a futile quest to find someone, anyone, who can topple Saban.

Three more SEC coaches bit the dust this season, most notably Auburn’s Gus Malzahn, who guided the Crimson Tide’s fiercest rival to intermitte­nt success against the Saban dynasty — but not enough to keep his job.

In the midst of a financiall­y challengin­g pandemic, the Tigers will have to pay Malzahn more than $21 million to go away. That’s on the top of settlement­s reached with their previous two coaches (Tommy Tuberville and Gene Chizik), which cost the school at least $12.5 million.

At 69 — the same age, by the way, that Bear Bryant retired as Alabama’s coach — Saban shows no sign of slowing down.

“Obviously I love doing what I do, and want to continue to do it for as long as I feel like I can contribute in a positive way to the program,” Saban said. “That’s about the only plan I have for the future.”

Why would he stop now? This year’s Alabama team might be his best yet, having breezed through a 10-game, SEC-only schedule with a perfect record. No game was closer than 15 points, the average margin of victory for the top-ranked Crimson Tide a whopping 32.7 points.

And if anyone needed a reminder of how this behemoth keeps regenerati­ng year after year, even after sending countless firstround draft picks to the NFL, Saban landed what is projected to be the nation’s top recruiting class during this week’s early signing period.

“It’s almost unfair,” Steve Spurrier, the former Florida coach who once cast a nearly Saban-like presence over the SEC, told Sports Illustrate­d for a profile piece this week.

Alabama, he said, was “like being in the NFL, winning the Super Bowl and every year they get the first 10 picks in the first round. And then they get 10 in the second round and the rest of you guys take everyone else.”

Saban’s juggernaut heads into Saturday’s SEC championsh­ip game in Atlanta as a whopping 17-point favorite over No. 11 Florida, not exactly a slouch of a team.

The Gators’ coach, Dan Mullen, has faced the Tide nine times.

Nine times, he’s lost. At least he still has a job. “I guess I’ve survived because I’m still here,” quipped Mullen, who indeed has the second-longest coaching tenure in the SEC, having spent nine years at Mississipp­i State (where all nine of those losses occurred) before moving to Florida — and out of Saban’s division, if nothing else — in 2018.

Mullen sounds almost resigned to playing secondfidd­le to the Crimson Tide as long as Saban is around.

“I don’t know that it is knock them off or replace them. I don’t know that they’re going to go anywhere,” Mullen said. “You just want to get up to their level and go compete on the same level as they are, and then go compete with them on a yearly basis.”

There have been some one-year wonders.

Remember Auburn back in 2010? With Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton at quarterbac­k, the Tigers rallied from a 24-point deficit for a 28-27 victory in Tuscaloosa on their way to a national championsh­ip.

By 2012, the Tigers had plummeted to a winless mark in the SEC that culminated with a 49-0 blowout to Alabama. The day after that embarrassm­ent, Chizik was fired.

Or how about LSU just last season? Led by the record-setting Burrow, the Tigers knocked off Alabama in a 46-41 thriller, capped a perfect season by winning the national championsh­ip, and were touted as the nascent power in the SEC.

So much for that theory. When the teams met two weeks ago in Baton Rouge, Saban extracted his revenge with an ugly 55-17 beatdown. LSU will need to win Saturday’s regular-season finale against Ole Miss just to salvage a 5-5 season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States