JoseyWalesTheOutlaw
Member
Nick Saban describes Alabama's daily operations during pandemic
"I think the best thing we can do is adapt and adjust to it the best we can."
247sports.com
The novel coronavirus pandemic ended Alabamaās spring football practice schedule before it even started. Hours before the first of 15 practices were set to begin on March 13, the Crimson Tide suspended its 2020 spring football season until further notice due to the virus.
This would have been Nick Sabanās 14th spring in Tuscaloosa, Ala. While he is still in town and at the helms of the storied football program, he was the only member of his coaching staff at the Mal M. Moore Athletic Facility on Thursday. Holding a media teleconference, and later more public service announcements, Saban shared how his daily schedule has changed.
āI think the whole worldās turned upside down, so itās really different for everybody,ā Saban told reporters. āBut I think the best thing we can do is adapt and adjust to it the best we can.
āBasically, thereās really three areas that weāre trying to focus on. Every morning I have a Zoom staff meeting at 7:30 just like we always do. Itās now on Zoom, so thereās no personal contact with anybody. And we discuss basically what weāre going to do with our team and our players that particular day. We usually use the morning to sort of work on next yearās opponents, which is not something weād typically be doing at this time of year with spring practices going on.
āOn Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, right now, weāre doing sessions with our players. I do video conferences and phone calls with recruits then in the afternoon. Thatās pretty much what a day is like, and weāre doing the best we can and weāll continue to do that.ā
With his team scattered across the country, Saban said the additions of David Ballou and Dr. Matt Rhea have been āa huge positiveā in keeping track of the playersā training routines.
āDr. Rhea has actually got a PhD, so his knowledge and experience in a lot of technical-type testing and stuff that you can do with players and the new training programs that weāre doing, the players really liked,ā Saban said. āHopefully, this will help us with some injury prevention and help us be able to perform better when the time comes. They were very instrumental in setting up this whole program of what weāre doing with the players, in terms of Apple Watches for their workouts, apps on their phones for weight training programs.
āWe had issues with some players not having a place to work out because high schools are closed, so we put them on band workout programs. Theyāve done a really, really good job of managing this to this point, and the players have done a good job responding to it.ā
Saban said ānobody knowsā what the future holds when it comes to the coronavirus, but he did lay out how his coaching staff is utilizing the time theyāre allotted to teach the players.
āWeāre not in any real hurry with whatever installation weāre doing with the players,ā Saban said. āI think basically thereās three parts to teaching -- what to do, how to do it, why itās important to do it that way. So, if we just take a single concept, like for example, if weāre on offense and weāre teaching inside zone, aight. Well, we could take 30 minutes on teaching the techniques, the aiming points, the footwork and then actually show the players video of doing it correctly or actually let them evaluate whether the guy that weāre looking at is doing it correctly or incorrectly.
āI think conceptually, thereās a lot of benefit to it because we donāt have to hurry through it because (before) weāre going through this install and then weāre going to go practice in a half hour so weāve got 30 minutes to meet then weāve got to go on the field and weāve got to be able to go do this today.
āI do think it gives the players the opportunity to be engaged, No. 1. But No. 2, I do think itās a slow process of learning that can be beneficial to them having a better understanding of concepts. So, weāre not in any hurry. Weāre kind of taking it slow, and so far, itās worked out really, really well.ā
