Excuses, excuses.
That was the main topic at SEC Media Days in Hoover on Wednesday as hundreds of attendees were breathlessly writing or Tweeting that Nick Saban was making āexcusesā for Alabamaās loss to Ohio State because he suggested that the NFLās early draft entry date (Jan. 15) might have been a distraction for some Crimson Tide players.
Never mind that Saban has said since his postgame press conference in January that Ohio State deserved the credit for winning. Never mind that his main-room comments came on a question (from Chase Goodbread, a former colleague here at The News who now works for the NFL Network) that directly addressed the draft, not the Ohio State game. To be fair, he also made the point in a smaller group session earlier in the day. But in neither setting did it seem like his purpose was to āexplainā or, if you prefer, āexcuseā the Crimson Tideās loss to OSU.
Nonetheless, he said what he said, and what do you expect reporters to do? Tweet about Mark Stoops?
Lost in the kerfluffle was Sabanās actual, perfectly valid point: the college season lasts longer, the NFL Draft has been moved back, but the date for underclassmen to declare remains the same. Pushing back a week or two would eliminate a potential problem. (There is an unspoken implication that the problem affects Saban more than most coaches because those coaches donāt have to worry about playing in mid-January.) In an earlier draft of this column, I took some writers to task. Upon reflection, I think itās more fair to say this: if you arenāt around Saban on a fairly regular basis, you can miss the way that the thought process works. Did he think about the NFL Draft as one possible issue that affected āteam chemistryā leading up to the Playoff semifinal? Yes. Does he think constantly about every possible variable out of hundreds that may have affected that game? Yes. Did he bring in former Ohio State offensive coordinator Tom Herman earlier this year so they could talk about NFL Draft dates? Of course not. It was part of an exhaustive self-review.
Losing bothers Saban, tremendously. Thatās part of why he wins so often. But he isnāt give to reflexively making excuses about it. His off-season thought process hasnāt changed from what it was in 2008, when he also lost to Urban Meyer. He is thinking about every possible way to keep it from happening if the two teams meet again this season. Remember, Saban got the same heat that season when he said that Alabama wasnāt interested in the Sugar Bowl against Utah (it wasnāt) and that losing Andre Smith in an agent mess that week didnāt help matters (it didnāt.) āExcuses,ā the critics cried, but it was obvious in the following season that he had worked relentlessly on improving, not on standing still and looking for alibis.
Perhaps Saban would have been better served to have simply given a meaningless āwe lost to a fine opponentā answer and then moved on. Sadly, some commentators seem better equipped to handle the bland answer, no matter how much they complain about ācoach-speak.ā It doesnāt push them out of a quick-take comfort zone. If Saban came across as more concerned about what affected his own team last January, then maybe that doesnāt sound gracious, or humble. But it is the way you ultimately fix a lingering problem.
From the Tuscaloosa News...