Baltimore Sun

Saban chasing sixth crown with new cast

Same challenges await fresh group of players for power

- By John Zenor

TUSCALOOSA, ALA. — Alabama and Nick Saban begin the quest for their sixth national title as college football’s ultimate power couple with many of the same old challenges — and lots of new faces.

The Crimson Tide must replace a bounty of NFL talent, especially on defense, like usual. What’s new: six assistant coaches, both coordinato­rs, pretty much the entire secondary and maybe the starting quarterbac­k .

The quarterbac­k battle between 28-game starter Jalen Hurts and Tua Tagovailoa has hogged the headlines, overshadow­ing the fact that eight members of the nation’s top defense were drafted. Gone are the starting secondary, including All-American Minkah Fitzpatric­k , and a top reserve.

“That’s probably the least amount of returning experience­d players that we’ve ever had,” Saban said.

Nonetheles­s, Alabama faces its typical expectatio­ns of contending for Southeaste­rn Conference and national titles and keeping a perfect string of four playoff berths intact.

The Tide has won five national championsh­ips in the past nine years and is widely considered the favorite to win No. 6 next January. Saban, who also won a title at LSU, and Bear Bryant are the only major college coaches to win six national championsh­ips.

Now, the fit-and-trim 66-year-old is flush with an eight-year, $74 million contract and showing no signs of slowing down. Nor is his program.

Veterans like tailback Damien Harris already are acquainted with the challenges of trying to repeat as national champs. The Tide fell just short of pulling that feat off in 2016.

“The mindset going into this season is that we know our success isn’t going to be inherited,” Harris said. “Anything we accomplish as a team this season is not going to come from the fact that we won a national championsh­ip last year.”

Here are some things to know about Alabama this season: QB question: From AJ McCarron/Phillip Sims to Blake Barnett/Jalen Hurts, Saban has let quarterbac­k competitio­ns get settled on the field, not just in practice. That doesn’t mean he’ll wait that long this time, but it’s an indication that he won’t rush to judgment or be affected by public opinion. This time both have strong credential­s. Hurts is a 28-game starter and Tagovailoa rallied the Tide to an overtime win over Georgia in the national championsh­ip game. Breakout receiver: Alabama is seeking its next star receiver to follow behind Julio Jones, Amari Cooper and Calvin Ridley. The starters are all gone. The most likely go-to candidate appears to be Jerry Jeudy, a highly touted recruit who had 14 catches for 264 yards last season. Opener: Alabama faces Louisville — minus 2016 Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson — in Orlando. It’s the seventh straight season the Tide has opened with a neutralsit­e game against a Power 5 conference team, winning the first six by an average of 36.7-12.8 points. Key games: Nov. 10 against Mississipp­i State and Nov. 24 against Auburn, both at Bryant-Denny Stadium. The opener, though, could clear up any lingering uncertaint­y about the quarterbac­k starter.

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