There were some whispers following the CFB semi-finals that Nick Saban might walk away but they were hard to believe and brushed off in most places. On Wednesday night, news broke that it was actually happening. At the age of 72, one of the college football titans is officially hanging it up. The 2024 college football season will be played without Nick Saban.

To say this is massive news for the sport is an understatement. Suddenly, as we hurl towards the first ever 12-team college football playoff one of the premier jobs opens up which could set off a chain reaction all across the nation.

Here are a few quick thoughts as I process this breaking news.

#1 The One That Got Away

I will always lament the fact that Nick Saban missed out on coaching at Notre Dame. Or rather, that the Irish missed out on hiring him. Early in his career with Alabama he took on a much more villainous role for rivals fans and as he aged I think the stance on Saban softened quite a bit. For someone who spent such a long time at a blue-blood and had his team playing at such a high level it became apparent that Saban did things the right way (at least in a SEC framework) and his character was pretty hard to denigrate.

I’ve said it for years and years–Saban would’ve been awesome at Notre Dame. Fans were tortured over the failed acquisition of someone like Urban Meyer but no one would’ve had guaranteed success in South Bend quite like Saban.

While there was never much of a flirtation period like there was with Meyer–Saban was right there up the road at Michigan State exactly when Notre Dame should’ve realized their mistakes post-Holtz and he was needed most. After the 1999 season, Notre Dame decided for 2 more seasons with Bob Davie while Saban went off to LSU. We could’ve saved ourselves so much grief and anguish! Perhaps Saban never spends a quarter century in South Bend and retires like this in his early 70’s but damn if Notre Dame wouldn’t have profited gloriously with him coaching for a long time under the golden dome.

#2 Simply the Best

Nick Saban’s resume throughout his career is just absurd to reflect upon now that he’s retired. Some brief nuggets:

  • 7 National Championships
  • 18 seasons of 10+ wins (including his final 16 seasons at Alabama)
  • 9 seasons with 1 or fewer losses
  • 18 seasons with 2 or fewer losses
  • NCAA record for wins against unranked opponents
  • 4 Heisman winners
  • 49 picks in the NFL Draft 1st round
  • 10 classes that finished no. 1 nationally in the Rivals rankings
  • Signed 65 prospects who were Rivals 5-stars in 17 seasons at Alabama

We could spend all day listing more achievements. In major bowls or those championship games he ended up 15-8 combined at LSU and Alabama. If you took a list of Notre Dame’s biggest wins and Alabama’s biggest wins since 2008 and created a list of 100 games, how many from the Irish make it to that list?

I think Saban will go down as the greatest coach ever, certainly the best ever coach in the modern era.

#3 Who’s Filling These Shoes?

Good luck to Saban’s successor. This is not a job anyone should take lightly–especially coming off a season where the Tide looked as mortal as they have in maybe 15 years–and with a deep stable of Saban assistants either firmly entrenched elsewhere (Kirby Smart ain’t leaving Georgia) or firmly out to pasture. Their defensive coordinator just retired, too.

Remember, with Saban’s retirement a 30-day transfer portal window opens up for everyone at Alabama. No matter how much talent they have today, the roster could be an unholy mess in a matter of days.

Some credible names to take over the Tide being thrown around by the media include:

Dan Lanning (Oregon)
Steve Sarkisian (Texas)
Lane Kiffin (Ole Miss)
Dabo Swinney (Clemson)
Mike Norvell (FSU)
Kalen DeBoer (Washington)

The scuttlebutt within the media seems to coalescing around Lanning tonight which might be Alabama’s best bet for a high ceiling coach–but also one of the most expensive options and not an easy situation to pry away from the Ducks and Nike’s money.

Years ago, it seemed like Swinney was destined to return to Tuscaloosa but he’s proven to be too weird and his stance(s) in the NIL era probably don’t jive well with the Alabama faithful.

Sarkisian and Kiffin, while familiar, are too damaged I would think.

I don’t believe James Franklin is a candidate for one second. No way.

DeBoer is an interesting choice, but I would think a little too unproven and he lacks the experience in the SEC and southeast part of the country to the point where the Tide may be way too uncomfortable taking that leap.

Norvell is a really interesting choice and he could be had for pennies, relatively speaking in the world of college football. He’s exhibited he can turn around a major program under pressure and he’s definitely proven to be a fantastic recruiter. With the pain of this past season and the shaky future of the ACC, would he be willing to walk away from the Seminoles and take the Alabama job if offered?