College football world reacts to Tommy Rees leaving Notre Dame for Alabama

Reactions were mixed when the news came out…how do you feel about it?

Two days ago the possibility wasn’t on anyone’s mind, but 48 hours later here we are: [autotag]Tommy Rees[/autotag] is bolting [autotag]Notre Dame[/autotag] for Alabama. If you follow Notre Dame closely enough, you’ve heard enough about how Rees is seen nationally and his career desires, so you knew it was only a matter of time before he’d leave South Bend.

However, we thought it’d be for an NFL job or head coaching position one day. Not another collegiate offensive coordinator spot.

But that’s the world we live in, and Marcus Freeman begins what will be one the most important decisions he has had in his time at Notre Dame. Who will he pursue as his next offensive coordinator?

The news came as a surprise on Thursday but with everything seemingly pointing to Rees going, the report that came Friday felt inevitable. Here is how the college football world reacted to the news of Rees departing.

Tommy Rees Notre Dame-Alabama update – reports says offer has been made

Huge development on a developing story…

There has been a giant development in the [autotag]Tommy Rees[/autotag] saga that seemingly came out of right field today.  As you probably already know by now the Notre Dame offensive coordinator boarded Alabama’s private jet for a meeting with Nick Saban in Tuscaloosa this afternoon.

According to a report from Football Scoop, Rees has in fact been offered the offensive coordinator position at Alabama.

From the Football Scoop report:

Later Thursday afternoon, sources told FootballScoop that Alabama has already issued a preliminary job offer to Rees to become the Crimson Tide’s offensive coordinator.

Additional sources have told FootballScoop that the situation is not believed to be one about money; in fact, per sources, the initial Alabama offer to Rees was in the range of $2 million per year, on average.

It would certainly appear the ball is now in Tommy’s court.  Will he stay or will he roll out of South Bend?

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Notre Dame will reportedly match any Alabama offer to Rees

Will he stay or will he go?

In a story we’ve been following throughout the day, Notre Dame offensive coordinator Tommy Rees has emerged as a top candidate for the same role at Alabama.  According to Pete Sampson of The Athletic, Alabama sent a private jet to South Bend to pick up Rees and he’s on the Tuscaloosa campus today.

As we await word if Rees will get a job offer or what may come of this meeting, it would appear that Notre Dame isn’t going to lose out on Rees because of money.  Veteran Notre Dame football reporter Eric Hansen offered the following on Thursday afternoon:

Stay tuned for more on today’s episode of “As the Tommy Turns”.

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Notre Dame OC Tommy Rees to meet with Nick Saban in Tuscaloosa

Tommy Rees emerging as top candidate to join Crimson Tide as OC, he will soon be in Tuscaloosa to meet with Nick Saban.

The search for the Alabama Crimson Tide offensive coordinator position is heating up as the Tide are currently in pursuit of Notre Dame offensive coordinator Tommy Rees. A plane from the University of Alabama is in South Bend, Indiana to pick Rees up to meet with Coach Saban in Tuscaloosa later today.

There has to be some level of mutual interest for the two sides to meet, but we don’t know how serious the two sides are. Rees just finished his third year as an offensive coordinator with the Irish and they went 9-4 with a bowl win over South Carolina. The offense was not the issue as they scored nearly 32 points per game.

Rees could become a serious head coaching candidate in the next few years with the guidance of Coach Saban.

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See where Marcus Freeman ranks alma mater Ohio State in final top 25 ballot

It would appear Marcus Freeman still has a bit of a soft-spot for @BuckeyesWire

Perhaps technically the final task for Marcus Freeman to complete in his first year at Notre Dame was to turn in his postseason ballot to the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll. Freeman was one of 63 coaches to fill out a final ballot, and he made some interesting choices. For instance, despite TCU beating Michigan in the national semifinal, he had the Horned Frogs outside his final top five.

He also had a pair of two-loss teams ranked in the top five, both above conference rivals they had lost to head-to-head. And shocking nobody, Freeman ranked Notre Dame higher than any of the other 62 coaches did.

Take a look at Marcus Freeman’s final top 25 ballot for the 2022 season below:

College Football Head Coach Salaries

Who is the most overpaid and underpaid on this list?

Each year the USA TODAY compiles the salaries of current NCAA FBS football coaches and the 2021 edition came out this week.  Atop the list you’ll be anything but surprised to find Nick Saban who is set to earn $9.753 million in 2021.

Related: The winningest college football coaches of all-time

Ed Orgeron at LSU is second on the list as he’ll make $9.012 from LSU this year.  Also worth noting with the LSU head coach is that his buyout is listed at $17.150 million dollars after December 1, something that appears to be headed into play in Baton Rouge.

Third on the list is a bit of a surprise in David Shaw of Stanford who $8.924 million while Dabo Swinney of Clemson ($8.37 million) and Lincoln Riley at Oklahoma ($7.672 million) round out the top five.

Notre Dame’s Brian Kelly is listed all the way at 60th as his total earnings amount to $2.670 according to the report which can be viewed in full here.

Related:

FiveThirtyEight handicaps College Football Playoff odds 

Kirk Herbstreit’s college football top six entering week seven

Latest bowl projections see various blue bloods in Notre Dame’s future

REPORT: Alabama assistant coach to miss Missouri game

Alabama assistant coach for the safeties Charles Kelly will not be present for the team, due to undisclosed reasons.

As the Crimson Tide is set to take on the Missouri Tigers on the road to open up the 2020 season, the team will be almost fully healthy for the contest. While only one player will definitely be sidelined due to injury, there are now reports of a coach that will not be present.

Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports reports that Alabama’s safeties coach, Charles Kelly, will miss the game for an undisclosed reason.

Kelly won’t be the only coach to miss the game. Missouri’s defensive backs coach, Charlie Harbison will also not be on the sidelines.

Roll Tide Wire will keep you updated on the status of these coaches and the health of the players in this season-opening game for the two SEC programs.

ESPN identifies 3 Alabama teams that should’ve won a national title

Let’s go over the three Alabama teams ESPN named that should have, but didn’t, win the national championship:

Last season for the Crimson Tide did not go as planned or as hoped. Alabama was one of the teams going into the last season that were predicted to win at all. Especially since Alabama had Tua Tagovailao returning as quarterback, Ruggs, Jeudy, and Smith as wide receivers, depth at running back, and so on. But, then injuries occurred. Before the season even started, Alabama had already endured injuries on both sides of the ball, especially on defense. Towards the end of the season, not only had the Crimson Tide lost a lot of experience and leadership on defense, they also lost their star quarterback, Tua Tagovailoa, to a season ending injury. Although the 2019 Alabama Crimson Tide football team didn’t make ESPN’s list of “Our top college football teams that failed to win the national championship,” they certainly should have.

Regardless, let’s go over the three Alabama teams that should have, but didn’t, win the national championship:

(The list will be numbered in the order the appear on ESPN’s list)

12. 2016 Alabama (14-1)

“In 2016, Nick Saban’s Crimson Tide nearly went wire-to-wire for the national title despite 10 ranked opponents and a true freshman quarterback. With Jalen Hurts behind center, Bama beat eventual Rose Bowl champion USC by 46, defeated ranked Ole Miss and Arkansas on the road, and pummeled top-10-at-the-time Tennessee and Texas A&M by a combined 82-24. The Tide hung 54 points on Florida in the SEC title game, too. Two years earlier, Saban had hired Lane Kiffin to modernize his offense; this was the realized vision.

But the Tide peaked early and still had to deal with the best Clemson team of all time. Bama eased by Washington 26-7 in the Peach Bowl CFP semifinal, but Clemson corralled Hurts, played keep-away, wore the Bama defense out and prevented the Tide from winning their fifth title in seven years with a Deshaun Watson-to-Hunter Renfrow touchdown in the dying seconds.”

Alabama fans will forever remember this season, and how it ended. It was a heartbreaking ending to the national championship for Alabama fans who had witnessed Jalen Hurts take on (and beat) 10 ranked opponents as a true freshman. Going into the national title game, Alabama was undefeated. Hopes were high that Alabama could beat Clemson for the second year in a row, but Clemson qb Deshaun Watson had an incredible game, and threw a game ending touchdown to win it all.

11. 1966 Alabama (11-0)

“Books have been written about why voters chose a blemished Notre Dame team — one that famously tied fellow unbeaten Michigan State 10-10 — over an unbeaten Alabama. It is something older Bama fans will never totally get over.

What’s sometimes lost in the discussion is how good that Bama team was. The Tide scored their most points in 14 years and allowed their fewest in four. They beat John Vaught’s still-formidable Ole Miss by 10 in Jackson, survived a brutal trip to Tennessee and manhandled three other opponents that finished with winning records by a combined 81-0. Tackle Cecil Dowdy and end Ray Perkins were consensus All-Americans, and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Ken Stabler was at quarterback (though he wasn’t asked to do much). On paper, this team was better than both the 1964 and 1965 teams that the AP voted No. 1.”

This is still a debate many fans have today. Clearly put: Alabama should have been the national title in 1966. But they had won in 1964, and 1965 and I’m sure people were tired of seeing them win, something that hasn’t seem to change today. But in 1966, the Tide not only went defeated, but was a better team than the 64/65 title teams that were voted number 1 by the AP.

8. 2018 Alabama (14-1)

“Nick Saban has won five national titles at Alabama, but you could make the case that his two best teams (2016 and 2018) didn’t. With 2017 national title game hero Tua Tagovailoa at QB, the Tide outscored their first eight opponents by an average of 54-16, then shut out two great defensive teams (LSU and Mississippi State). They rolled to a nearly unchallenged 12-0 season.

Tagovailoa got hurt against Georgia in the SEC title game, but 2016-17 starter Jalen Hurts led an unlikely comeback for a 35-28 win. The Tide rolled through Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl and headed to the third Bama-Clemson national title game in four years as a solid favorite. Then they blew an abundance of scoring chances, attempted the worst fake field goal of all time, threw a pick-six and got their doors blown off 44-16. That’ll knock you down the list a bit.”

This is a game Alabama fans don’t like to think about. It was a very hard game to watch. The Tide had beaten Georgia for the SEC Title and also beat Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl before once again facing Clemson for the National Title. No one ever imagined that Alabama would lose to Clemson by that much of a margin, given the scoring history when they two teams faced each other. Regardless, it is hands down one of Saban’s worst losses at Alabama.

There could be other Alabama teams added to this list, like the 2019 team I mentioned earlier. But when you remember that Alabama has won 17 national titles, 5 of which are under Saban, it’s hard to be too upset that three teams were close but came up short.

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