USA TODAY US Edition

Tents catch on

Many other colleges are using the sideline medical enclosures created at Alabama,

- FOLLOW REPORTER DAN WOLKEN @DanWolken for college football news and insight. Dan Wolken dwolken@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

When Alabama played for the College Football Playoff title last season, its pop-up medical tent on the sideline was a matter of significan­t curiosity. There had never really been anything like it before in football, allowing an injured player to be examined privately without having to go back to the locker room.

The collapsibl­e tent, which is attached to the base of a trainer’s table and then pulled over the top in a matter of seconds, was a fairly ingenious invention both in its practicali­ty and design. And Jeff Allen, who conceived the project and unveiled it last year as Alabama’s head football trainer and assistant athletics director for sports medicine, knew it soon would be in demand across football at all levels.

Along with two engineerin­g students at Alabama who brought the idea to life, Allen has formed a company called Kinematic Sports to market and sell the SidelinER tent. Allen told USA TODAY Sports this week that they had opened an office in Tuscaloosa and had sold 45 tents to college football programs and another 10 to other customers, including high schools and hospitals. According to the company’s website, a basic unit can be ordered for $5,000.

“It’s been amazing how this thing took off,” Allen said. “Even though I thought it was going to work, I’ll never forget the day I saw the prototype. I was like, ‘Wow, this is going to work.’ I remember saying, ‘ Once this thing gets out there, everybody is going to want one of these.’ And that’s really the response that we’ve seen.

“We did not have to do a whole lot of marketing or advertisin­g. It kind of took care of itself.”

Now Clemson has one, as do Ohio State, Louisville, Arkansas, Marshall, SMU, Troy, West Virginia, Northweste­rn, Mississipp­i, Florida State and on and on and on. It probably won’t be long before nearly every Football Bowl Subdivisio­n program has one, but it’s not simply a matter of trying to mimic Alabama.

Besides being easy to transport, it allows the medical training staff to examine a player at a moment of distress and potential panic without 100,000 people watching.

“It just makes so much sense in terms of protecting the privacy of the athlete. And the other thing I found medically is it changes the environmen­t of trying to do an evaluation on an injured athlete without the distractio­n of the crowd,” Allen said. “I tell people the most critical time in evaluating is five to 10 minutes after the injury, and to have that type of environmen­t makes a difference. I notice a big difference in our athletes in there. They request it like, ‘Let’s go.’ So it’s really been amazing.”

The success of this project could lead to more in the future. In June, Alabama’s board of trustees approved the Integrativ­e Center for Athletic and Sport Technology (I-CAST), which connects athletics with people in engineerin­g, kinesiolog­y and sports medicine and will try to develop new technologi­es to benefit performanc­e and injury recovery.

“It’s going to benefit our athletic department and the university,” Allen said. “It’s a great example of the collaborat­ion that Alabama has between athletics and academics. It’s not the norm at a lot of places, but we’re lucky here with the culture and climate the way it is.” COACHING CAROUSEL CLIPS

With the situations at Southern California, Auburn and Texas A&M stabilizin­g for the moment, there’s less hysteria about the coaching carousel than there was a few weeks ago. Given the major openings at LSU and Baylor and possible openings at Texas and Oregon, there will still be significan­t movement, according to several people with ties to the coaching industry. But it might not be the Armageddon many were predicting.

The key, according to one person with knowledge of the industry, is what happens at Texas. If Charlie Strong can’t save his job, Texas is expected to pursue Houston coach Tom Herman. But if that marriage falls apart for whatever reason, it could trigger dominoes that impact multiple top-25 programs. Among the names that could be mentioned in connection with Texas are Florida’s Jim McElwain, Mississipp­i’s Hugh Freeze, Washington’s Chris Petersen, North Carolina’s Larry Fedora and California’s Sonny Dykes. It’s also likely Florida State’s Jimbo Fisher, Fedora and Freeze will be in play at LSU if interim coach Ed Orgeron doesn’t do enough to be elevated permanentl­y.

If Strong does keep the job at Texas, he will be in the market for a new defensive coordinato­r. So will Brian Kelly at Notre Dame and possibly Fisher and Mark Dantonio at Michigan State. That could create a frenzied market for coordinato­rs and big paydays for defensive coaches currently at smaller programs.

Arguably the most sought-after coordinato­r will be Wake Forest’s Mike Elko, who has been with Dave Clawson since Bowling Green. Elko has done a tremendous job all three years at Wake Forest, and his defense is allowing just 17.9 points per game this season. He’s primed to be this year’s Don Brown, who went from Boston College to Michigan. Houston’s Todd Orlando, Louisville’s Todd Grantham and Washington’s Pete Kwiatkowsk­i are among those whose services will be highly coveted.

Don’t be surprised if the name Bo Pelini starts popping up more and more in coaching searches. Though Pelini didn’t win the right games at Nebraska and rubbed some fans the wrong way with his irascible personalit­y, he is proving again at Youngstown State that he’s a high-quality football coach. The Penguins are 5-1 and ranked in the top 15 of the Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n poll. Pelini could be a natural fit at Purdue or Minnesota, if that job opens. FAUX PAS OF THE WEEK Washington State coach Mike Leach is famous for his tangents, rants and conspiracy theories. Sometimes it’s endearing. This week it was not. Leach, for the second consecutiv­e year, accused Arizona State of stealing signs and called on the Pac-12 to investigat­e.

Leach went even further this time, raising rumors that Arizona State used microphone­s and cameras in an attempt to pick up what plays opponents called from the sideline. There are two problems here. First, Leach is simply whining. Though some coaches might frown on it, trying to pick up your opponents’ signs is part of the game. If you’re paranoid about it, change your signs or figure out a way to shield them.

Second, accusing an opponent of not just breaching protocol but breaking rules in a systematic and complex manner — and doing it under the specter of rumors without any evidence — is just wrong.

Coach Todd Graham, for the record, stood up for Arizona State this week, telling The (Phoenix)

Arizona Republic, “We do everything exactly by the rules. Period.” YOUR WEEKLY HARBAUGH The mid- October heat wave that settled over much of the USA this week brought unseasonab­ly warm temperatur­es to Ann Arbor, Mich. So, of course, Jim Harbaugh spun it as a potential edge in Michigan recruiting.

“Now we’re the new Mediterran­ean: a lot of coastline, and how about that out there today? Eighty degrees out there. It is so beautiful here, it’s awesome,” Harbaugh said on his radio show this week. “Global warming is good for Michigan, it’s good for recruiting.”

 ?? KEVIN JAIRAJ, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “We did not have to do a whole lot of marketing or advertisin­g,” says Jeff Allen, who conceived of Alabama’s medical tent.
KEVIN JAIRAJ, USA TODAY SPORTS “We did not have to do a whole lot of marketing or advertisin­g,” says Jeff Allen, who conceived of Alabama’s medical tent.
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