Scarbinsky: Will Nick Saban’s new coordinators send him out a winner?
This is an opinion column.
This is what winning looks like, Exhibit A. Script A, if you please. Both coordinator jobs come open after a letdown of a football season. Thirsty for change because two losses are too many, fans clamor for a familiar face, a hot name or both. Time passes, both jobs remain unfilled and heretofore loyal supporters who generally genuflect before the man who walks to work past his own statue start to wonder what’s taking so long.
Meanwhile, Nick Saban abides. He lands one of the most decorated recruiting classes of all time, then makes not one but two intriguing hires to help him write the final chapters of his career.
Naturally, he does it his way. He closes the circle and returns to his roots by hiring Kevin Steele and Major Applewhite 2.0 – a k a Tommy Rees – with a twist.
Steele in 2023 is an even better defensive coordinator than his 2007 self, and he was so good then that Saban pulled him away from Bobby Bowden and Florida State as one of his first hires in Tuscaloosa. Two days before Saban’s Alabama debut, he showed me what he thought of Steele.
Here’s what Saban said about Steele’s place in the universe of quality assistant coaches who had brought exceptional value to his organizations: “I don’t know if I could remember anybody that I would say, all around, is any better than him. And I’ve been around a lot of good coaches.”