National reaction to news Alabama head coach Nick Saban is set to retire

ESPN’s Chris Low is reporting that University of Alabama head coach Nick Saban is set to retire

Legendary head coach Nick Saban is set to retire and walk away from college football, according to ESPN’s Chris Low, who dropped the bombshell report on Wednesday afternoon.

Saban was hired by the University of Alabama in 2007 and has led the Crimson Tide to six National Championships and 11 Southeastern Conference championships.

Under Saban’s leadership, four skill players have won the Heisman Trophy (Mark Ingram, Derrick Henry, DeVonta Smith, and Bryce Young), while the Crimson Tide has recorded 201 wins during his tenure.

If this truly is it for Saban, he’ll exit the college football coaching ranks with a college record of 292-71-1 and 16 consecutive seasons with a top-five recruiting class, according to 247Sports.

Current Eagles who played for Saban include Jalen Hurts, Landon Dickerson, Julio Jones, DeVonta Smith, Josh Jobe, Eli Ricks, and Tyler Steen.

With the news quickly trickling out, here’s the national reaction to a shocking day in the coaching community.

Watch: Nick Saban’s pitches Alabama to recruit

This video surfaced recently of Alabama coach Nick Saban allegedly making a recruiting pitch, check it out here.

Nick Saban is one of the most storied coaches in college football history with a coaching record that is just ridiculous.

Saban’s all-time Alabama record: 165-23

That is an 87% win rate in case you are wondering, which is incredibly impressive given how hard consistency can be in the college football world.

I have often wondered how Saban makes his recruiting pitches, as if Alabama needs any pitch to sell the school to recruits.

This video surfaced recently of Saban allegedly making that pitch, check it out here.

Although we are not sure it was meant for a recruit, it is fascinating to watch Saban rattle off stats like how many guys Alabama has playing in the NFL or how many times the Crimson Tide have been in the playoffs.

Now let us hope Georgia coach Kirby Smart can follow in his mentor’s footsteps and turn Georgia into the next great dynasty.

 


 

This week former Bulldogs Brandon Boykin and Chris Burnette joined UGA Football Live with J.C. Shelton to talk Dawgs, their new podcast and more! Listen here for lots of laughs!

Nick Saban National Championship Rankings: How Do All 7 Rank?

Nick Saban now has seven national championships. Which were his best teams? How do all seven compare and rank?

Nick Saban now has seven national championships. Which were his best teams? How do all seven compare and rank?


[jwplayer 8hw0vgfm]

Nick Saban National Championship Rankings

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

Nick Saban is pretty good at this whole college football coaching thing.

Argue all you want about eras, all-time wins, longevity, and anything else you’d like to use when comparing and contrasting coaches, but at the very least, Saban is in the discussion of the greatest of all-time, if not the best of the bunch.

The seventh national title with this great 2020 team confirms what we already know – Saban has the machine rolling, and Alabama continues to be a force.

Which of his seven national championship teams were the best?

Personally – being a fan of killer defenses – I’d argue his 2009 and 2011 teams were the best of the lot. The 2011 D was historically amazing, and the 2009 squad had two of the most impressive wins – Florida in the SEC Championship and Texas in the BCS Championship – of the bunch, but that’s an opinion.

We can split hairs on talent, optics, and other aspects of what makes a national champion, but which ones had the toughest paths, which ones accomplished the most, and which ones had the best seasons?

The CFN Season formula just cares about numbers, schedules, point totals, and the strength of them all. All of Saban’s seven national title teams were fantastic. Here’s how they all rank according to the CFN Historical Season Formula.

7. 2011 Alabama (12-1)

All-Time Season Score: 23.1431

Defense, defense, defense, defense, defense.

The Crimson Tide D allowed fewer than 1,000 rushing yards in the 13 game season, and 302 of the 938 given up came to an option-running Georgia Southern. In all 12 other games, the Tide D allowed an average of just 53 rushing yards per outing.

That Georgia Southern team – an FCS program at the time – lost 45-21. That was the only team to score more than 14 points against Bama, who allowed fewer than 14 in ten games and fewer than ten points in eight of the 13 games.

That includes a 9-6 loss to an LSU team that would’ve been ranked among the best team seasons of all-time according to our formula had it won the national title, and a 21-0 win over those Tigers in the BCS Championship. This team beat everyone but LSU in that first game by 16 or more.

However, but SEC standards the schedule was just okay. It destroyed a terrific Arkansas team, but that was the only Elite Win – a win over a team with two losses or fewer, or on the road against a team with three or fewer losses – until the national championship, and the team didn’t play for the SEC Championship.

Nick Saban National Championship Season Ranking
No. 1 | No. 2 | No. 3 | No. 4 | No. 5 | No. 6
CFN Historical Season Formula

NEXT: Ranking Nick Saban’s National Championship Teams: No. 6