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BamaFreak
10-22-2007, 12:34 AM
Here is an interesting story. My feet are still firmly grounded in reality. I know that going to Atlanta is still quite a reach and that LSU and Auburn will both be rightfully favored over Alabama in the coming weeks. However, I am very hopeful for the future. The following article does a better job of explaining why than I ever could. (And another thing, even though I had forgotten about all the snide remarks about Saban's stint in the NFL, after reading this article, I realized that most of that stupid horsecrap has faded.) Anyhoo, here is the article (with linkage.)


How valuable is Nick Saban?

As an avid fan of the NFL, I always follow the Sunday games. Today I was perusing the scores and noticed that, at halftime, the New England Patriots were leading the Miami Dolphins by a score of 42-7, and Tom Brady was on his way to having a perfect day in terms of passer rating.

At this point, I wondered to myself, "Just how valuable is Nick Saban?"

Personally, I always find it interesting to hear people say that Saban "flopped" in the NFL. When he came to Miami, the Dolphins were coming off of a 4-12 season, had their star player suspended, were well over the salary cap, and didn't have many draft picks. In the NFL Draft, Saban selected Ronnie Brown -- a controversial pick at the time -- out of Auburn, and then went 9-7 in his first season. His second year was a disappointment going 6-10, but the Dolphins were still in a much better situation than what he inherited. The talent level had improved, the Dolphins were now well under the salary cap, and Ronnie Brown is at the moment only one of two of the top ten picks in the 2005 NFL Draft that doesn't look like an absolute bust.

And what about the Dolphins the year after Saban's departure?

At this point, 6-10 seems like the Super Bowl. The Dolphins are currently 0-7, with 0-8 likely coming next week. 0-16 could potentially be a very real possibility, and would likely be an outright probability if the Dolphins weren't in the same division with two other terrible teams (the Bills and the Jets). And what about Nick Saban's defense, which finished fifth in scoring defense in the NFL a year ago? Despite the acquisition of big dollar free agent linebacker Joey Porter, the Dolphins defense is now dead last in the NFL in scoring defense.

Obviously the Dolphins have turned disastrous, but what about Alabama?

A year ago the Crimson Tide finished 6-7, and coming into this season we've only had one winning season since the departure of Dennis Franchione in 2002. The team itself had a talent deficit to all of the top programs in the conference, and overall was simply overweight and out of shape due to four years of Club Shula.

Nine months after taking over as the Alabama head coach, however, Saban has the Tide sitting atop the SEC West with his former team, the LSU Tigers, going into a week nine showdown. Though the the Bayou Bengals will certainly be favored in the upcoming showdown, if the Tide can pull out the victory they are likely headed to Atlanta, and that fact alone speaks volumes for what Saban has done so far. Moreover, after administering the worst beating of the Tennessee Volunteers in over twenty years, the Tide has now moved to 6-2, and this season marks only the second time since 1994 that the Crimson Tide has knocked off both Arkansas and Tennessee in the same season.

On the recruiting front, things are going great as well, and are honestly well ahead of schedule. We are looking like we will have a top five recruiting class, and it will be, with little doubt, the top recruiting class in the SEC. It could very well be the best recruiting class we've had at Alabama in almost 20 years.

So how valuable is Nick Saban?

From the looks of the Dolphins and the Crimson Tide, extremely valuable.


Roll 'Bama Roll :: An Unofficial University of Alabama Crimson Tide Blog (http://www.rollbamaroll.com/story/2007/10/21/234511/12)

Justin251
10-22-2007, 01:57 AM
Sounds good to me. :)

M2J
10-22-2007, 03:51 AM
Good article. Its convenient for people to say he failed in the NFL, but he really did not. How many coaches do better than 6 wins with their starting QB hobbling and then out, and arguably best RB in Ricky Williams suspended? But in his first year 9 wins is impressive and good enough to make the playoffs in a lot of divisions.

The team was generally on the right track, just waiting on the QB to come through and I think Daunte would've known the system and been healthy enough. Then they idiotically got rid of Daunte for 40 year old Green. Took their top 7 pick and drafted a bad kick returner and invested a hell of a lot of money into an old ass linebacker.

Saban is the perfect type of coach for the NFL. Obviously could teach defense and adapt, and got the players respect

reese
10-22-2007, 03:55 AM
im a huge dolphins fan and i was glad we got saban and disappointed that we lost him. i think he was gonna be a good head coach and i def dont think he failed in the nfl. saban is a hell of a coach and its scary to think what he will do at a program like alabama if he can bring lsu from nuthin to where they are now.

Justin251
10-22-2007, 03:56 AM
He mentioned many times that he liked college better because he had more control over the team in college.

In college if a player screws up you can sit him a few games and that hurts his chances of showing what he can do for the NFL scouts.

In the NFL if a player screws up they get benched and fined. But they player doesn't really care so much because what's sitting a few games and a $15k fine when they are already getting millions per year?

Thats one of my problems with the NFL. The players make more then the coaches but the coaches get fired when the players don't produce. LOL