A dozen of Nick Sabanâs greatest wins at Alabama
Nick Saban retired earlier this month after winning 206 games (or 201 — thanks, NCAA) in 17 seasons as Alabama head football coach.
Some of them were more important than others, however. But which wins were the greatest* during Saban’s Crimson Tide tenure?
*—highly subjective term that could mean different things to different people
Here’s a list of 12 of the all-timers (in chronological order):
Alabama quarterback John Parker Wilson (14) passes against Georgia in the first quarter at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga., Saturday, Sept. 27, 2008. (Birmingham News file photo by Michelle Williams)BN
1. Alabama 41, Georgia 30 (Sept. 27, 2008)
There were strong hints that Saban might be cooking up something special in Tuscaloosa early in his second season, but the “Blackout Game” left no doubt. The Bulldogs, clad in black helmets and jerseys to mark what would prove to be a somber occasion, came in ranked No. 3 nationally and were the preseason SEC favorites. The Crimson Tide was 4-0 and ranked eighth. This one was no contest, however, as Alabama raced out to a 31-0 halftime lead before Georgia made it mildly interesting in the second half. The Crimson Tide would finish the regular season undefeated and ranked No. 1 before losing to Florida in the SEC championship game.

Nick Saban and Florida quarterback Tim Tebow (15) meet after the game in the SEC Championship Game at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Ga., Saturday, Dec. 5, 2009. Alabama wins 32-13. (The Birmingham News , Hal Yeager) bnAL.com
2. Alabama 32, Florida 13 (Dec. 5, 2009)
Revenge and validation was on the Crimson Tide’s collective mind as it met the defending SEC and national champions in Atlanta a year after the Gators have come away with a 31-20 victory in 2008. Tim Tebow and No. 1 Florida kept it close for two quarters, but No. 2 Alabama’s defense shut the Gators out in the second half. Mark Ingram ran for 113 yards and three touchdowns, locking up his bid to become the Crimson Tide’s first-ever Heisman Trophy winner. The victory marked Alabama as a blossoming dynasty and put the Crimson Tide within one victory of its first national championship in 17 years.

FILE – This Jan. 7, 2010, file photo shows Texas quarterback Garrett Gilbert (3) being sacked by Alabama’s Javier Arenas (28) and an unidentified teammate, obscured at rear, during the second quarter of the BCS Championship NCAA college football game in Pasadena, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson, File)ASSOCIATED PRESS
3. Alabama 37, Texas 21 (Jan. 7, 2010)
After the win over the Gators, the Crimson Tide made its triumphant return four weeks later to Pasadena, the site of so many glorious Rose Bowl victories in the program’s early days. The opponent in the BCS national championship game was undefeated Texas, a team Alabama had never beaten up to that point in its history. The Crimson Tide knocked Longhorns quarterback Colt McCoy out of the game early with an injury, and streaked to a 24-6 halftime lead. Texas backup quarterback Garrett Gilbert helped make things close in the fourth quarter, but a strip-sack by linebacker Eryk Anders set up Ingram’s short touchdown run and Alabama was national champions for the first time since 1992.

Alabama running back Trent Richardson (3) breaks free of LSU cornerback Morris Claiborne (17) during the BCS Championship Monday, Jan. 9, 2012 at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, La. (Press-Register file photo by Bill Starling) MO
4. Alabama 21, LSU 0 (Jan. 9, 2012)
Rarely in college football does a team get a mulligan after a regular-season loss at home, but that’s the position Alabama found itself in after losing 9-6 in overtime to LSU in the so-called “Game of the Century” in Tuscaloosa in November 2011. The Tigers stayed unbeaten and second-ranked Oklahoma State lost a Friday night stunner to lowly Iowa State, allowing Alabama to sneak back in and claim the second spot in the final BCS standings. The rematch in New Orleans for the national championship was non-competitive, as Alabama kept LSU from even crossing the 50-yard line until the second half. Trent Richardson’s long touchdown run punctuated a dominant effort by the Crimson Tide, which secured its second national title in three years.

Georgia head coach Mark Richt and Alabama Coach Nick Saban meet at midfield before the Alabama vs Georgia SEC Championship NCAA football game, Saturday, December 01, 2012, at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Ga. (Vasha Hunt)AP
5. Alabama 32, Georgia 28 (Dec. 1, 2012)
The first of four classic SEC championship games between Alabama and Georgia during the Saban era nearly got away from the Crimson Tide when the Bulldogs returned a blocked field goal for a touchdown to take a 21-10 lead in the third quarter. But Alabama stormed back with two touchdowns to go up 25-21 early in the fourth, only to see Georgia again take the lead at 28-25 less than two minutes later. McCarron hit Amari Cooper on a 45-yard touchdown with 3:15 remaining to give Alabama the lead for good at 32-28, but the Crimson Tide still needed a defensive stand to win. With the ball on the 8-yard line and 5 seconds remaining, Alabama linebacker C.J. Mosley tipped Aaron Murray’s pass into the hands of Georgia receiver Chris Conley near the goal line. Conley could not keep his feet, however, and fell down inbounds as the clock expired. Alabama went on to beat another overmatched opponent in the BCS national championship game (this time Notre Dame, 42-14) to win its second straight title and third in four years.

Alabama wide receiver Amari Cooper (9) catches a 75-yard pass for a TD during the third quarter of the Alabama vs. Auburn Iron Bowl football game, Saturday, November 29, 2014, at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala. (Vasha Hunt/AL.com)
6. Alabama 55, Auburn 44 (Nov. 29, 2014)
The highest scoring Iron Bowl in history was a true shootout, with the two teams combining for nearly 100 points and more than 1,000 yards of total offense at Bryant-Denny Stadium. Nick Marshall and 15th-ranked Auburn led 33-21 early in the third quarter and 36-27 late in the same period before No. 1 Alabama scored four consecutive touchdowns — including Blake Sims’ 75-yard pass to Amari Cooper and Derrick Henry’s 25-yard run — to avenge the “Kick Six” loss at Jordan-Hare Stadium the previous year. Cooper, the SEC Player of the Year that season, had a monster day with 13 receptions for 227 yards and two scores. Alabama — which had lost at Ole Miss early in the season — beat Missouri in the SEC championship game to earn a spot in the first-ever College Football Playoff. The Crimson Tide lost to Ohio State in the Sugar Bowl semifinal game to finish 12-2.

Alabama linebacker Reggie Ragland (19), Alabama head coach Nick Saban and Alabama tight end O.J. Howard (88) celebrate with the trophy after their 45-40 victory over Clemson in the College Football Playoff National Championship football game, Monday, Jan. 11, 2016, at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. (Vasha Hunt/AL.com)AL.com
7. Alabama 45, Clemson 40 (Jan. 11, 2016)
The first of three national championship game matchups between the Crimson Tide and Tigers was the only one that went Alabama’s way, and it was a dandy. Quarterback Jake Coker and Henry — that season’s Heisman Trophy winner — both had big games for the Crimson Tide, but it was tight end O.J. Howard who was the breakout performer with five catches for 208 yards and two touchdowns. Still, Alabama needed a pair of huge special teams plays to secure the win. First came a perfectly executed onside kick — kicked by Adam Griffith and recovered by Marlon Humphrey — to set up Howard’s second touchdown to give Alabama the lead for good with 9:45 left in the game. Then came Kenyan Drake’s 95-yard kickoff return for a touchdown with 7:31 left, which put the Crimson Tide on top by two scores. With his fifth national championship — fourth at Alabama — Saban reached a plateau only three men before him at the major-college level (Alabama’s Paul “Bear” Bryant, Minnesota’s Bernie Bierman and Ohio State’s Woody Hayes) had achieved.

Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa passes against Georgia during the CFP national-championship game on Jan. 8, 2018, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.(AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
8. Alabama 26, Georgia 23 (Jan. 8, 2018)
The only walk-off national championship win of the modern era moved Saban into a tie with Bryant for most national championships of any coach in history (6). Once again, the Crimson Tide slipped back into the national championship picture through something of a back door, losing to Auburn in the regular-season finale but earning the No. 4 seed in the College Football Playoff after the Tigers dropped the SEC championship game to Georgia a week later. In the title game, Saban made the bold call to bench quarterback Jalen Hurts at halftime in favor of Tua Tagovailoa. The freshman validated his coach’s decision, leading Alabama back from down 13-0 to force overtime. The Crimson Tide missed a field goal on the final play of regulation, then Tagovailoa was sacked for a 16-yard loss on Alabama’s first play of overtime after Georgia had taken the lead with a field goal. Undaunted, Tagovailoa flung the ball deep to fellow freshman DeVonta Smith, who outran two Bulldogs defenders and hauled in the 41-yard, game- and national-championship-winning touchdown.

Alabama quarterback Jalen Hurts celebrates after the SEC Championship Game against Georgia on Dec. 1, 2018, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.(AP Photo/John Amis)
9. Alabama 35, Georgia 28 (Dec. 1, 2018)
For the second time in less than a calendar year, Alabama ripped out Georgia’s collective heart with a comeback win led by a backup quarterback in Mercedes Benz Stadium in Atlanta. This time, it was the SEC championship game and it was Hurts who relieved the injured Tagovailoa with the Crimson Tide down by a touchdown with just over 11 minutes to go. Hurts led top-ranked Alabama to a pair of touchdowns — his 10-yard touchdown pass to Jerry Jeudy to tie the game and his 15-yard run to win it with 1:04 to play — and a 35-28 victory. It was the kind of selfless, team-first effort that coaches and football fans dream about, and it made Hurts into an Alabama football icon for life despite the fact he transferred to Oklahoma after the season. The Crimson Tide went on to beat the Sooners in the College Football Playoff semifinals before getting blasted by Clemson 44-16 in the national championship game, Alabama’s most-decisive loss of the Saban era.

Alabama running back Najee Harris (22) leaps into the end zone for a touchdown against Florida during the first half of the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game, Saturday, Dec. 19, 2020, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)AP
10. Alabama 52, Florida 46 (Dec. 19, 2020)
Alabama was essentially unchallenged in the pandemic-marred season until it faced Florida in Atlanta on the weekend before Christmas, winning every game up to that point by at least 15 points. The Gators never led in the SEC championship game, but pulled with 35-31 at the end of the third quarter. The Crimson Tide answered with 10 points in the first five minutes of the fourth quarter to all but put the game out of reach despite two late Florida touchdowns. Mac Jones and Najee Harris accounted for five touchdowns each, but Smith clinched the first Heisman Trophy win by a wide receiver in nearly 30 years when he caught 15 passes for 184 yards and two scores. Alabama would go on to outlast Notre Dame in the Rose Bowl semifinal (which was played in Arlington, Texas, that year) before smashing Ohio State 52-24 in the national championship game for its sixth — and last, as it turned out — title under Saban, who won his record seventh championship as a head coach. Many regard this team as Saban’s best, and perhaps the finest in SEC history.

Alabama wide receiver John Metchie III (8) celebrates after scoring during the fourth overtime of an NCAA college football game to defeat Auburn 24-22 Saturday, Nov. 27, 2021, in Auburn, Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)AP
11. Alabama 24, Auburn 22 (Nov. 27, 2021)
Of all the games the Crimson Tide has pulled out of the fire in the program’s history, few were as unlikely as the four-overtime duel with Bryan Harsin’s Tigers at Jordan-Hare Stadium two years ago. Auburn led 10-0 after three quarters and 10-3 with the ball near midfield after Alabama failed on fourth-and-1 with 1:56 remaining. But the Crimson Tide forced a punt, then eventual Heisman winner Bryce Young led his team on an epic, 12-play, 97-yard drive that ended on a 28-yard touchdown pass to JaCorey Brooks with 11 seconds left. That touchdown resulted in the first-ever overtime Iron Bowl. Both teams scored touchdowns in the first extra period, then both kicked field goals in the second. The game reduced to competing two-point tries after that, both Young and Auburn’s T.J. Finley were successful with passes in the third overtime. Finley’s attempt in the fourth OT sailed incomplete, then Young hit John Metchie for two points and the walk-off win. Alabama went on to beat Georgia for the SEC title the following week, before losing to the Bulldogs in a national-title-game rematch.

Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe (4) holds up the MVP trophy after the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game against Georgia in Atlanta, Saturday, Dec. 2, 2023.AP
12. Alabama 27, Georgia 24 (Dec. 2, 2023)
What wound up being Saban’s final victory as Alabama coach ended Georgia’s 29-game winning streak and served as a reminder that the Crimson Tide was still the program to beat in the SEC. Alabama took the lead for good with two touchdowns in the second quarter, the second a 15-yard strike from quarterback Jalen Milroe to former Georgia receiver Jermaine Burton. Top-ranked Georgia got back within three at 20-17 after Carson Beck’s 1-yard touchdown run with 10:16 left, but Alabama then marched 75 yards in a little over four minutes before Roydell Williams clinched the game with a 1-yard run of his own at the 5:47 mark. The victory was enough to push the Crimson Tide ahead of unbeaten Florida State and into the College Football Playoff as the No. 4 seed, where it lost 27-20 in overtime to eventual national champion Michigan in the Rose Bowl semifinal game on New Year’s Day. Nine days later, Saban announced his retirement.

Alabama wide receiver DeVonta Smith catches a touchdown pass against Ohio State during the CFP national-championship game on Jan. 11, 2021, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla.(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
Honorable mention
Here are six other games that very nearly made our list:
Alabama 26, Auburn 21 (2009)
Alabama 21, LSU 17 (2012)
Alabama 42, Notre Dame 14 (2013)
Alabama 49, Texas A&M 42 (2013)
Alabama 52, Ohio State 24 (2021)
Alabama 27, Auburn 24 (2023)
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So that’s our list. Which of your favorites did we leave off?
Creg Stephenson has worked for AL.com since 2010 and has covered college football for a variety of publications since 1994. Contact him at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter/X at @CregStephenson.