A REPORTER’S QUESTION about physicality reminded Alabama football coach Nick Saban of a conversation he had earlier in the week with former All-Star and World Series champion Pete Rose. Saban said Rose once asked his manager, Sparky Anderson, about the key to handling players. Anderson’s response: “You gotta know when to kick them in the ass, you gotta know when to pat them on the ass and you gotta know when not to say anything.”
With young players at several key positions in 2023, Saban said he and his staff were still trying to figure out what their approach would be.
“But,” he said, grinning, “I think I’ve been kicking them in the ass a little bit more than I’ve been patting them on the ass. So we’ll just keep on keeping on.”
Saban then grabbed his notes and his water bottle and left the room laughing.
It was a jarring sight: a joyful Saban in a news conference. YouTube is littered with his fiery rants, whether it’s “s— through a tin horn” or “rat poison” or “dead and buried and gone.”
This was different and begged for a pair of questions: Why was Saban so happy? And does this mean Alabama, which missed the College Football Playoff for only the second time last season, is getting back to its ass-kicking ways of old?
Because, frankly, it’s been a while since we’ve seen that version of the Crimson Tide. Over the past five-ish years, Saban traded in a smashmouth brand of football for something with more finesse. Featuring spectacular quarterbacks and receivers, the Tide scored points in bunches and won plenty of games, but at what cost? When it mattered most the previous two seasons — against LSU, against Tennessee, against Texas A&M, against Georgia — they couldn’t impose their will on either side of the ball. They couldn’t get a stop, ranking 42nd nationally in fourth-down conversion percentage. (They were second in the category from 2009 to 2020.) And they couldn’t move the chains and kill the clock, ranking 115th in the percentage of rushes for zero or negative yards on third and fourth down. (They were eighth from 2009 to 2020.)
Meanwhile, former Saban assistant Kirby Smart took the original Bama blueprint to Georgia, where the Bulldogs have successfully supplanted the Tide as the preeminent program in college football. Winners of back-to-back national championships, the Dawgs are the preseason No. 1 team in the country, while Alabama is fourth, which is its lowest ranking since 2009.
Alabama players like right tackle JC Latham are angry — about the ranking, about Georgia being the team to beat, about the notion that the Tide’s dynasty is dead, about the criticism that the culture has fallen off. Latham said he tries to block it out, but, he added, “I take it as extremely disrespectful.”
“I know we put in countless hours — blood, sweat and tears, literally, to be the best,” he said. “So when someone says that, it’s like you don’t know how hard we’re working for this.
“I think with this team, we’re going to shock the world.”
AN SEC COACH sounded reverential as he talked about what Alabama used to be. Pick a spot, he said, and the Tide were loaded:
“The talent they had on offense at running back, receiver, quarterback, offensive line … “
The coach could go on and on, especially about the defense. There wasn’t a weak link at linebacker, and the linemen were big and nasty, he said.
After one particular loss to Alabama, the coach recalled some locals giving him a hard time. To which he fired back, “You f—ers watched the same game I did. You can say whatever you want, but we played our ass off. They’re just much better.”
And now?
“That wasn’t the same team we played last year,” he said.
Suddenly, the coach’s hushed tone was gone, as if he had stepped out of church and into a pub. He said Alabama’s defense regressed, especially up the middle at inside ‘backer and defensive tackle. On offense, he said of former Vanderbilt lineman Tyler Steen, “That’s not a good sign when you have to plug and play a one-time starter at Alabama.”
“The quarterback was magic,” the coach said, referring to Heisman Trophy winner and No. 1 overall draft pick Bryce Young, “but they didn’t have some of the dynamic playmakers on the edge that they had in years past.”
Bit by bit, Alabama’s aura of invincibility has dissipated.
“But it’s still Nick Saban, and it’s a consistent approach,” the coach said.
Former players were openly critical of the program last year. After losing at LSU, Saban said he met with former tailback Bo Scarbrough, who told Saban, “When we played here, we were making sure the other team, when the game is over, would say we never want to play them.”
Reminded of those comments this summer, Saban harkened back to the “fundamentals of why did a player come to Alabama?”
“Julio Jones came to Alabama because he wanted to prove something,” Saban said. “We were 7-6; we weren’t worth a damn. So he wasn’t coming there because of what Alabama could do for him. He was coming there for what he could do for Alabama. Now, as you have success, maybe culturally people come for different reasons.”
Saban said the goal now is to “reestablish” accountability.
“For us to have the kind of team we need to have, there’s got to be an element of being hungry,” he said. “We’ve had to deal with complacency at times because of the success that we’ve had, and I think that creates a blatant disregard for doing what’s right.”
Saban thought that last year’s team was burdened with expectations primarily because of Young and defensive end Will Anderson — two of the top three picks in the NFL draft — and “there wasn’t a holistic view” of the rest of the roster. So when things went poorly, Saban said, players became anxious and committed too many mental errors.
He recalled standing in the tunnel before kickoff at Tennessee and noticing the players weren’t doing their normal pregame chant:
“It was silence. I turned around and said, ‘What’s wrong with you guys? What’s up?'”
IT WAS 2008 when Saban delivered his most notable pregame speech. Undefeated and back at LSU for the first time since he left as the Tigers’ coach for the NFL, he told players what to think.
“How much does this game mean to you?” Saban said. “Because if it means something to you, you can’t stand still. You understand? You play fast. You play strong. You go out there and dominate the guy you’re playing against and make his ass quit. That’s our trademark. That’s our M.O. as a team, alright? That’s what people know us as.”
Or at least they did.
Nowhere is Alabama’s identity shift more noticeable than on offense, where the power running game has been all but abandoned. Last season, the Tide ranked 12th in the SEC in the rate of runs between the tackles. It’s been five years since they fielded a top-three running attack in the conference.
From 2009 to 2020, they ranked fifth nationally in rushing yards after contact (a testament to the backs) and eighth in yards before contact (a testament to the line). Since 2021, they’re 38th and 35th, respectively, in those categories.
On the one hand, turning to the spread made sense as quarterback and receiver became their strength. “Why would you want Bryce Young to run the ball?” Saban asked. Ditto for Tua Tagovailoa and Mac Jones. But again, there’s a cost. When they needed to run the ball — in short-yardage situations, inside the red zone, late in games — “We weren’t very good at all,” Saban admitted.
“You got to understand, players kind of grow up in a culture,” he said. “So we had all these quarterbacks that are passing the ball, and we’re passing the ball, passing the ball, passing the ball. So you’re not developing that mentality of running the ball. Like when Derrick Henry was there, if they weren’t bloodying the other guy’s nose, they were pissed.
“When Greg McElroy played quarterback — no disrespect, he was a good college quarterback — but he didn’t have to win the game because he had good players around him. He just had to make good decisions as to who gets the ball. And we ran the ball. So maybe we need to be more that way.”
McElroy, now an analyst for ESPN, wasn’t insulted by Saban’s comments. He agreed, both with his role of facilitator and the need for the Tide to return to a more complementary style of offense.
He used the human body as an analogy for the team, with the quarterback as biceps.
“If you do curls every day and squat every other week,” he said, “your legs are going to become weaker and in time atrophy.”
That, he added, is what happened to Alabama, even if it was only subconsciously. He felt as if Young’s teammates started believing, with good reason, “Bryce will bail us out. Don’t worry: I don’t have to pay attention to the minute details the way I once did because this guy is going to make us right.”
For the first time since 2015, there is no heir apparent at quarterback. With Young gone, it’s down to a three-man race: Jalen Milroe, a dual-threat player with some accuracy issues who backed up Young last season; Ty Simpson, a former four-star recruit who redshirted his first season on campus; and Tyler Buchner, who started three games in two seasons at Notre Dame.
Meanwhile, drops remain a problem at receiver, where coaches are looking for someone who can stretch the field like in years past.
So don’t be surprised if Alabama feeds its running back corps, which is as deep as it’s been in a while, with returning backs Jase McClellan, Roydell Williams and Jam Miller and newcomers Richard Young and Justice Haynes — the No. 1- and No. 2-rated backs in the 2023 class, respectively.
While McElroy said the program is in a different place since Saban gave that “make his ass quit” speech, McElroy sees in new offensive coordinator Tommy Rees someone who buys into that philosophy. Rees, a former quarterback, once said that if he could go back in time, he would’ve played pulling guard.
“Tommy’s going to run the ball into a brick wall if he has to,” McElroy said.
Right guard Tyler Booker is loving Rees’ run-first approach.
“We want to make people quit this year,” Booker said. “And there’s no better way to do that than to run the ball.”
Not only that.
“We want guys to tap out,” Booker added. “We want guys to fear us.”
FORMER ESPN ANALYST David Pollack didn’t hold back on Saban’s account. Sitting next to Saban during halftime of the national championship game, with Georgia beating TCU 38-7 en route to back-to-back titles, Pollack said of his former school, “Georgia, obviously, we’ve seen from the past couple seasons now, really, they’ve taken hold of college football.”
While it’s dangerous to attempt reading a person’s body language — Saban seemed awkward and maybe even a little annoyed — at least one former Alabama player took it as an insult that would be revisited down the road.
Setting emotions aside, however, the moment also might have been informative for Saban.
“The worm is turning because everybody’s gotten so spread-oriented … that people who now are running the ball are having more success because the defense is more geared to stopping all that stuff than it is to stopping just the straight, old-fashioned running game,” Saban said this summer. “And I think that’s one thing that Georgia has done really, really well.”
Saban recalled playing in the national championship and being ahead of Georgia in the fourth quarter, 18-13. Despite missing starters John Metchie and Jameson Williams at wide receiver, Saban said they were “hanging in there” because the Bulldogs were unsuccessful throwing the ball. Georgia then took the lead on a 40-yard touchdown pass from Stetson Bennett to AD Mitchell, and Saban said it was as if Smart and his staff decided, “OK, here we go.”
Georgia forced Alabama into a three and out and proceeded to ice the game with a seven-play drive that featured six runs and only one pass — a 15-yard touchdown to Brock Bowers that was the final play of the series.
“We couldn’t stop ’em,” Saban said.
Time will tell whether Alabama is able to make those stops again, but Saban, 71, is clearly trying to recapture the past by bringing back former assistant Kevin Steele as defensive coordinator this offseason. The 65-year-old assistant, who is decidedly old school, was on Saban’s inaugural 2007 Tide staff and again in 2013 and 2014.
Outside linebacker Dallas Turner, who projects to be one of the top defensive players in college football this season, said of Steele, “He’s trying to bring back the standard.”
Then he reconsidered.
“I wouldn’t say he’s trying to,” Turner said. “I’d say he is bringing back the standard.”
Turner expects a defense that’s more intent on creating pressure and negative plays. Alabama’s seven interceptions last season were the fewest of the Saban era.
Giving up those 52 points in last season’s loss to Tennessee was “sickening,” Turner said. He pointed to his empty ring finger when a reporter reminded him that no Alabama player has gone more than two seasons without winning a championship under Saban.
“Hearing all the critics, all the stuff about not winning a national championship, it’s all motivation,” the ‘backer said.
While it’s too early to say whether that will fuel the kind of prolonged accountability Saban is seeking to reestablish, so far players have said they’re not letting up. Just the other day, lineman Latham recalled, linebacker Deontae Lawson criticized a teammate for not staying behind for a post-practice workout.
“He was cussing him out like, ‘Yo, this ain’t optional. We do this as a group. This is who we are,'” Latham said. “So understand that’s the mentality we’re setting.”
Players have taken last season personally, Saban said, adding that he has been pleased with their effort and leadership this offseason.
“The transfer portal can work both ways,” he said. “Some of the guys that are energy vampires, I call ’em, they leave, so you don’t have the problems. I only think that we had one player leave the program that I can honestly say that guy belongs here; the other nine guys or however many, they really may be better off going someplace else. And it took away some of the distractions that are created by guys who don’t buy into doing things the way you want to do ’em.”
While Alabama might be young, replacing 15 players with starting experience, Saban said it’s a tradeoff because all that youth has contributed to a team that’s “hungry and [has] great energy and enthusiasm.”
How far that will take the Tide is anyone’s guess. While a lack of focus and intensity can doom a talented football team, no amount of focus and intensity can save a team that isn’t talented enough to win one-on-one matchups.
The only thing that seems certain on the eve of the season is this: Saban is happy to kick their ass across the finish line.
College Football Senior Writer for ESPN. Insider for College Gameday.
Bill Belichick’s first coaching staff at North Carolina continues to come together.
Longtime NFL special teams coach Mike Priefer and veteran SEC offensive line coach Will Friend are expected to finalize deals to join Belichick’s staff, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.
After coaching for nearly a decade in college, Priefer moved to the NFL in 2002 and was a special teams coordinator from 2006 to 2022. He is noted in Cleveland Browns history as serving as the head coach in a January 2021 wild-card victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers, which is the franchise’s only postseason win since the 1994 season. Priefer stepped in for Kevin Stefanski, who watched the game at home with COVID.
Priefer was the special teams coordinator for the Kansas City Chiefs (2006-08), Denver Broncos (2009-10), Minnesota Vikings (2011-18) and Browns (2019-22). He brings ties to the Naval Academy, something he shares with Belichick and his family. Priefer is a Navy graduate and served as a graduate assistant there.
Friend worked last season as Western Kentucky‘s offensive coordinator. He brings strong recruiting ties in the South, having worked at Georgia, Tennessee, Auburn and Mississippi State as the offensive line coach. He has also worked as the offensive coordinator at Colorado State and WKU.
Friend has a long history of developing linemen for the NFL.
With Priefer and Friend, there are six known members of Belichick’s staff, which includes longtime NFL coach Freddie Kitchens as the offensive coordinator and veteran NFL coach Stephen Belichick as the defensive coordinator.
The hires line up the objectives of Belichick, who has stressed that he wants to run the Tar Heels like a NFL program.
Before taking the UNC job, Belichick told ESPN’s Pat McAfee that if he were to run a college program, it would be a “pipeline to the NFL for the players that had the ability to play in the NFL.”
He added: “It would be a professional program. Training, nutrition, scheme, coaching, techniques that would transfer to the NFL. It would be an NFL program at a college level and an education that would get the players ready for their career after football.”
The decision ends a career at Texas that saw him help revive the program from a 5-7 season in 2021 and lead the Longhorns to their only two College Football Playoff appearances, in the 2023 and 2024 seasons.
Ewers went 21-5 as a starter the past two years and to two CFP semifinal appearances. In his career, he led Texas to wins at Alabama and at Michigan, led it to the Big 12 title in 2023 and to consecutive College Football Playoff wins over Clemson and Arizona State this season. Those are Texas’ only College Football Playoff victories since that format began in 2014.
Ewers played in 36 total games for the Longhorns after transferring from Ohio State. He threw for 9,128 yards and 68 touchdowns in his three seasons in Austin, completing 64.9% of his passes.
Ewers’ decision doesn’t come as much of a surprise. He told ESPN’s “College GameDay” in an interview that aired before the Cotton Bowl on Friday that he did not expect to return to college football next year.
When asked about what he hoped his Texas legacy would be, Ewers said: “A great teammate that pushed his teammates to be the best that they could be, but pushed himself to be the best that he could be, so he’s able to say things like that. And, you know, one of the best to ever do it here.”
Ewers finished tied for fourth all time for wins by a Texas quarterback with 27, tying Sam Ehlinger and training only Colt McCoy (45), Vince Young (30) and Bobby Layne (28), per ESPN Research.
When asked what it’s like to be in the conversation with those Longhorns legends, Ewers told ESPN before the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic: “It’s definitely special. I mean, growing up, you know, seeing Colt McCoy play, you know, watching highlights of Vince Young, you know, obviously I was really young whenever he was playing but just hearing all the stories and, you know, the legacy that they left behind. It’s unreal to even be in the conversation with those guys.”
Ewers will be a fascinating draft prospect, as one general manager told ESPN that among his scouts there was a “wild variance” of opinions. His three years in the offensive system with Texas coach Steve Sarkisian, pure arm talent and consistent production will be positives. He’s expected to perform well in the workout and interview portions of the draft process, with time in a sophisticated offense a positive in the eyes of the NFL.
Ewers was the No. 2 overall recruit in the country, per ESPN’s rankings, and came out of high school a year early in the Class of 2021 and attended Ohio State for a semester. Part of the allure of that decision was opportunities for name, image and likeness that wouldn’t have been available if he’d stayed in Texas for his senior year of high school at Southlake Carroll High School in the Dallas area.
That trailblazing decision began a college career that played out in a fishbowl. He transferred to Texas in December, with Texas in the wake of a 5-7 season. For Sarkisian, Ewers’ decision loomed large.
“For him to come back home, I think sent a little bit of a message to everybody that we’re trying to recruit the best players, not only around the country, but in the state of Texas,” Sarkisian told ESPN before the Cotton Bowl. “And for him to come home, I think then rallied a few other guys to want to stay home. It kind of started that process of us signing a great class and we built on it from there.”
Ewers’ departure puts the program in Arch Manning‘s hands as the starter in 2025. The son of Cooper Manning, grandson of former NFL quarterback Archie Manning and nephew of Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks Peyton and Eli Manning passed for 939 yards and nine touchdowns and ran for four TDs this season.
Elizabeth Merrill is a senior writer for ESPN. She previously wrote for The Kansas City Star and The Omaha World-Herald.
Jack Hoffman, the young Nebraska football fan who ran for a touchdown during the 2013 Cornhuskers’ spring game and became a catalyst for pediatric brain cancer fundraising, died Wednesday after a 14-year battle with cancer, according to the Team Jack Foundation. He was 19.
Hoffman was diagnosed with a cancerous glioma when he was 5. Doctors told the family that most of his golf ball-size tumor could not be removed. But his father, Andy Hoffman, did exhaustive research and found a doctor in Boston who extracted more than 90% of the tumor.
Jack’s favorite player was Nebraska running back Rex Burkhead, and before the surgery, Andy reached out to Nebraska hoping his son could meet him. Burkhead had lunch with Hoffman and raced him on the field, and the family forged an enduring friendship with the former NFL back.
In late 2011, when the Cornhuskers trailed Ohio State by three touchdowns, Burkhead fired up some of his teammates by mentioning the inspirational boy he’d just met. “Hey, Jack wouldn’t give up,” he told them, “so why should we?” Nebraska rallied, and Burkhead scored the game-winning touchdown.
A year and a half later, in April 2013, Nebraska’s coaches decided to put Jack in a spring game. Wearing an ill-fitting helmet that bounced as he ran, Jack, who was then 7, ran for a 69-yard touchdown as 60,000 fans roared. Video of the play garnered more than 10 million views on YouTube.
Hoffman went to Washington to meet President Barack Obama and won an ESPY award for the best moment in sports. Known simply as “The Run,” the moment helped Hoffman’s dad launch the Team Jack Foundation. The venture, started in tiny Atkinson, Nebraska — population 1,245 — has raised more than $14 million to aid pediatric brain cancer research.
In 2020, Andy Hoffman was diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme, an aggressive brain cancer. He died less than a year later. In ESPN interviews with the family in September 2020, Bri Hoffman, Jack’s mom, said their hope for Jack was to keep the tumor at bay as long as they could.
“For kids and tumors,” she said, “what [doctors] told us is if you can keep it from growing until they reach like their 20s, a lot of times they just go away.”
With the help of clinical trials, and despite the seizures that could come at any time, Jack Hoffman was able to do things that seemed unimaginable in 2011. He went to homecoming and was a lineman for his high school football team in Atkinson. He went tubing, boating and fishing and played tug-of-war with his dog, Roxy. He cheered on his Nebraska Cornhuskers.
But brain scans in 2023 revealed tumor progression and he underwent a tumor resection surgery in summer 2024. Pathology results eventually revealed that his tumor had advanced to a high-grade glioma, “which is extremely rare,” according to the Team Jack website.
After receiving 30 radiation treatments, Hoffman began his freshman year at the University of Nebraska at Kearney in the pre-law program this past fall. He wanted to be a lawyer, like his dad.
In a statement Wednesday, the university called Hoffman “a valued member of our Loper community” and noted he earned a spot on the dean’s list this past semester.
“Jack was widely admired across Nebraska and beyond for his courageous spirit and dedication to raising awareness about childhood cancer through the Team Jack Foundation,” the school’s statement read. “We extend our heartfelt condolences to Jack’s family, friends and all those whose lives he touched. His connection to the UNK community was meaningful, and his impact will not be forgotten. We are grateful for the time he shared with us.”
In a CaringBridge post from December, Bri Hoffman said that it was “heartbreaking” to email Jack’s professors to let them know he couldn’t take his finals because he was too sick.
“He has worked very hard this semester,” she wrote.
In an interview with ESPN in 2020, Hoffman said he had no idea “The Run” would be such a big deal. He thought it was just going to be in front of a few people and was scared when he realized it wasn’t. But he changed into an oversize pair of old football pants, and his dad took him out onto the field. Hoffman wasn’t sure where the touchdown line was, so Andy told him to keep going until he hit the fence.
Hoffman held on to that advice when he dealt with unknowns.
“If you don’t know it,” he said, “just run until you hit the fence.”