BAMANEWSBOT
Staff
Lane Kiffin would like you to know that contrary to public perception, Nick Saban does have a sense of humor. In fact, he said, at one point this season the Alabama head coach joked to his offensive coordinator: āāHow did you get higher on the āMost Hatedā list than I did?ā He might have been mad about that.ā
As part of Alabamaās offensive press conference here Monday morning for this weekās playoff semifinal at the Sugar Bowl, Americaās Most Hated Coach -- silent all season due to Sabanās longstanding gag order on his assistants -- spoke to media for the first time since the Tideās preseason Media Day in August. Kiffin, who often made headlines for his wince-inducing sound bites while head coach at Tennessee and USC, managed to make it through two 25-minute sessions (one for television cameras, one for writers) without creating any mini-controversies.
But Kiffin, whoās overseen the most productive offense in school history (490.5 yards per game), did open up for the first time about his much-debated relationship with Saban; gushed about his quarterback, fifth-year seniorBlake Sims (who himself called Kiffin his ārole modelā); and attempted to deflect speculation about his possible return to the head-coaching ranks.
Here were a few of the highlights.
On getting fired at USC and returning to the assistant ranks: āItās very humbling. You can be really hot one minute, the next minute be unemployed.ā Asked what he did for the rest of the 2013 season after USC fired him in late September, Kiffin said with a chuckle: āNot much.ā
ā⦠I thought, well, OK, [Iām] probably not going to get a head coaching job, but it will be easy to get an offensive coordinator job because of what we've done before and places we've been. [But] the phone wasn't ringing. And [Saban] called and he took a chance. I know he thought a lot about it, because it wasn't going to be necessarily the popular media hire, as he's referred to before.ā
On learning from Saban: Kiffin said heās learned so much from Saban, particularly his game-management skills, that itās almost like being a GA. Heās constantly taking notes. āTo be able to learn from somebody like him and his process, shoot, I would have done it for free,ā said Kiffin. āI would have paid him for it, like most people would.ā
For the record, Kiffin is in fact making $680,000 a year.
On those oft-televised sideline exchanges where it appears Saban is none-too-pleased with Kiffin: āI donāt think [weāre] ever at odds. Coach told me from the beginning, Iām going to tell you exactly whatās on my mind, good or bad, and then weāre going to move on. Iām not going to think about it again.ā As for throwing up the touchdown sign when the ballās still in the air: āI do that 30 times a game,ā Kiffin said. āThey only show it when it works. ā
On Blake Simsā development: You can tell Kiffin takes particular delight in watching the development of Sims, a previously dismissed fifth-year senior whoās become the nationās seventh-rated passer in his first season as starter. Coming into the season many assumed Florida State transfer Jake Coker would beat out Sims. āThe kid (Sims) never once mentions it,ā said Kiffin. āI had one conversation. I brought it up because I was worried it was on his mind, about people being down on him. He said, āCoach, Iām not worried about that. Donāt worry about me. Iāll do whatever you want.ā
āTo see that attitude pay off -- which is so unusual nowadays, where you stay and you play -- has been great to see.ā Kiffin went on to say he believes Sims deserves to be drafted.
On his head coaching future: SIās Pete Thamel asked what he needs to do to become a head coach again, referring to him as ādivisive.ā āThanks Pete,ā Kiffin said with a grin. āDivisive? Gosh, this was going so well.
āYou can only worry about what you can control, and thatās moving the ball and performing well on offense. You canāt worry about the other stuff.ā
On if he expects to be back at Alabama next year: āYes. Definitely. Weāve still got a lot of stuff we need to do better. Weāll obviously be working with a new quarterback. Thatās always exciting, to see if we can do this again.ā
On his relationship with Urban Meyer: Itās no secret Ohio Statecoach Urban Meyer was not a fan of Kiffinās when both coached in the SEC -- mostly because Kiffin publicly accused him of cheating. Is that an issue this week? āCoach Meyer and myself communicated a few times over texts, phone call. I don't remember the timing of it. And it was, hey, all this kind of crap from before, let's move on. I obviously have great respect for what he's done everywhere he's been and how fast he's gotten this program up to being a top-four team.ā
On his USC connection: Kiffin keeps in touch with his former USC colleagues and players and caught the fourth quarter of Saturdayās Holiday Bowl. He said he talked with Steve Sarkisian the night before that game. Perhaps most surprisingly, he said heās talked with AD Pat Haden -- the guy who fired him at an airport in the middle of the night -- a couple times over the past month.
Needless to say, it was far from the typical bowl-week coordinator press conference, where most of the questions usually fall along the lines of: āWhat do you need to do to stop [the opponentās] running game?ā
In fact, in perhaps the ultimate sign of our collective Kiffin fascination, he did not get a single question in his print session about Ohio State
Continue reading...
As part of Alabamaās offensive press conference here Monday morning for this weekās playoff semifinal at the Sugar Bowl, Americaās Most Hated Coach -- silent all season due to Sabanās longstanding gag order on his assistants -- spoke to media for the first time since the Tideās preseason Media Day in August. Kiffin, who often made headlines for his wince-inducing sound bites while head coach at Tennessee and USC, managed to make it through two 25-minute sessions (one for television cameras, one for writers) without creating any mini-controversies.
But Kiffin, whoās overseen the most productive offense in school history (490.5 yards per game), did open up for the first time about his much-debated relationship with Saban; gushed about his quarterback, fifth-year seniorBlake Sims (who himself called Kiffin his ārole modelā); and attempted to deflect speculation about his possible return to the head-coaching ranks.
Here were a few of the highlights.
On getting fired at USC and returning to the assistant ranks: āItās very humbling. You can be really hot one minute, the next minute be unemployed.ā Asked what he did for the rest of the 2013 season after USC fired him in late September, Kiffin said with a chuckle: āNot much.ā
ā⦠I thought, well, OK, [Iām] probably not going to get a head coaching job, but it will be easy to get an offensive coordinator job because of what we've done before and places we've been. [But] the phone wasn't ringing. And [Saban] called and he took a chance. I know he thought a lot about it, because it wasn't going to be necessarily the popular media hire, as he's referred to before.ā
On learning from Saban: Kiffin said heās learned so much from Saban, particularly his game-management skills, that itās almost like being a GA. Heās constantly taking notes. āTo be able to learn from somebody like him and his process, shoot, I would have done it for free,ā said Kiffin. āI would have paid him for it, like most people would.ā
For the record, Kiffin is in fact making $680,000 a year.
On those oft-televised sideline exchanges where it appears Saban is none-too-pleased with Kiffin: āI donāt think [weāre] ever at odds. Coach told me from the beginning, Iām going to tell you exactly whatās on my mind, good or bad, and then weāre going to move on. Iām not going to think about it again.ā As for throwing up the touchdown sign when the ballās still in the air: āI do that 30 times a game,ā Kiffin said. āThey only show it when it works. ā
On Blake Simsā development: You can tell Kiffin takes particular delight in watching the development of Sims, a previously dismissed fifth-year senior whoās become the nationās seventh-rated passer in his first season as starter. Coming into the season many assumed Florida State transfer Jake Coker would beat out Sims. āThe kid (Sims) never once mentions it,ā said Kiffin. āI had one conversation. I brought it up because I was worried it was on his mind, about people being down on him. He said, āCoach, Iām not worried about that. Donāt worry about me. Iāll do whatever you want.ā
āTo see that attitude pay off -- which is so unusual nowadays, where you stay and you play -- has been great to see.ā Kiffin went on to say he believes Sims deserves to be drafted.
On his head coaching future: SIās Pete Thamel asked what he needs to do to become a head coach again, referring to him as ādivisive.ā āThanks Pete,ā Kiffin said with a grin. āDivisive? Gosh, this was going so well.
āYou can only worry about what you can control, and thatās moving the ball and performing well on offense. You canāt worry about the other stuff.ā
On if he expects to be back at Alabama next year: āYes. Definitely. Weāve still got a lot of stuff we need to do better. Weāll obviously be working with a new quarterback. Thatās always exciting, to see if we can do this again.ā
On his relationship with Urban Meyer: Itās no secret Ohio Statecoach Urban Meyer was not a fan of Kiffinās when both coached in the SEC -- mostly because Kiffin publicly accused him of cheating. Is that an issue this week? āCoach Meyer and myself communicated a few times over texts, phone call. I don't remember the timing of it. And it was, hey, all this kind of crap from before, let's move on. I obviously have great respect for what he's done everywhere he's been and how fast he's gotten this program up to being a top-four team.ā
On his USC connection: Kiffin keeps in touch with his former USC colleagues and players and caught the fourth quarter of Saturdayās Holiday Bowl. He said he talked with Steve Sarkisian the night before that game. Perhaps most surprisingly, he said heās talked with AD Pat Haden -- the guy who fired him at an airport in the middle of the night -- a couple times over the past month.
Needless to say, it was far from the typical bowl-week coordinator press conference, where most of the questions usually fall along the lines of: āWhat do you need to do to stop [the opponentās] running game?ā
In fact, in perhaps the ultimate sign of our collective Kiffin fascination, he did not get a single question in his print session about Ohio State
Continue reading...