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Bama News
Nick Saban Discusses Tua Tagovailoaās Injury, Rehab and Special Makeup
Nick Saban discusses his relationship with Tua Tagovailoa throughout the rehab process, and the special makeup of the former star Alabama quarterback.
Nick Saban says Tua Tagovailoa helped him get through the injury more than the coach helped his player.
The start of this story, youāve heard before.
Nick Saban had this freshman quarterback that he knew he might need at some point. So here and there, in 2017, heād try and get him extended playing timeāagainst Fresno State and Vandy, and then for the whole second half against Tennessee, even after this 19-year-oldās first possession ended in a pick-six. Then, in the teamās regular season finale, Auburn held the Tide to 112 yards passing and out of the end zone for the gameās final 27 minutes.
Alabama lost its place in the SEC title game. Saban made a decision.
āThe thought after that game in my mind was, āIf this is an issue for us moving forward, there may be a time when we have to put him in, so we can take advantage of some of the skill players we have,āā Saban says now. āSo we go into the Georgia game, the national championship game, with the idea, āHey, these guys have a really good run defense, theyāve got really good players, itās gonna be hard for us to not throw the ball effectively and win.āā
The idea was prescient. Georgia went up 13ā0 at the half, holding starter Jalen Hurts to 21 yards on 3-of-8 passing. Bama needed a spark. And Saban thought to himself, This is the situation when you said youād put the other guy in and give him a chance.
The other guy went in and the rest is history.
Tua Tagovailoa wasnāt perfect the rest of the way. He threw a pick to DeAndre Baker on a call that, per Saban, wasnāt even supposed to be a pass play. Then, thereās the sack he took in overtime, losing 16 yards on the Tideās first offensive snap of the extra period, prompting Kirk Herbstreit to say on the broadcast, āThrow it away, nobodyās open, you gotta give up on the play.ā But as we know now, all of that was just a set-up to what was coming.
On second-and-26, Tagovailoa uncorked a moonshot to fellow freshman Devonta Smith, streaking down the sideline for a 41-yard touchdown. Saban won his sixth national title, and fifth in Tuscaloosa. The young Hawaiian was etched in Tide lore forever.
Now, for the part you donāt know.
Saban found Tagovailoa in the locker room postgame and, in a quiet moment, approached him in a way only this particular coach could.
āTua, man, you can never take a sack in overtime. Especially when itās a three-point gameāthe game is already tied,ā Saban said to his quarterback. āBut when we get sacked, weāre out of field goal range. I donāt know what you were thinking about. But you canāt do that.ā
āNo, coach,ā Tagovailoa responded, āwe just needed more room to throw the ball.ā
Saban laughs now, āJust to show you what kind of personality he has, and how heās affected by the game, or the way you said it, the size of the game, the impact, the consequences.ā
The point in Saban telling the storyā25 months later, with Tagovailoaās collegiate journey having become much more complicated in the interimāisnāt hard to figure out. One, it shows how Tua changed Alabamaās program as much as any single player has in Sabanās 13 years there. Two, it shows how his star has been ready for whatās next for quite some time.
