Nick Saban is just over a year removed from retiring as the head coach of the Alabama Crimson Tide and certainly has made his feelings known about the state of college football.
Former Alabama football players preparing for the national championship with Notre Dame and Ohio State remembered hearing the news of Nick Saban's retirement.
Nick Saban has cemented his status as the greatest college football head coach of the current generation after rewriting the history books during his career on
On former Tiger Ryan Clark’s “The Pivot” podcast, Saban said leaving LSU was “the biggest mistake I ever made,” throughout his storied career. “I found out in that experience that I like coaching in college better because you can develop players personally, academically, athletically, and all that a little more than in pro ball,” Saban said.
Alabama football fell several spots in the final AP top 25 rankings for the 2024 season, Kalen DeBoer's first with the Crimson Tide.
The Alabama football program's offensive identity continues to look certain for the 2025 season. A-Day looms in April to potentially further affirm it.
Let's have a lot of fun on a Tuesday edition of "The Joe Gaither Show on BamaCentral" with Mason Woods as we discuss Monday's national championship, the final AP Poll of the 2024 season, Alabama's basketball game with Vanderbilt and Nick Saban's suggestion to fix college football.
Former Alabama coach Nick Saban was named to the College Football Hall of Fame's 2025 class on Friday. He first heard the news on "College GameDay."
Nick Saban shared the one regret he has in the aftermath of his legendary coaching career, and it has everything to do with the SEC.
Longtime head coach, now ESPN college football analyst Nick Saban revealed what he feels is the biggest mistake of his coaching career in The Pivot Podcast. The mistake was leaving LSU for the National Football League to coach the Miami Dolphins.
Nick Saban joined the The Pivot Podcast this week and was asked if he would coach football again in the future. Saban retired from coaching more than a year ago after 17 years with the Alabama Crimson Tide.