Florida State-Alabama shocker was, above all, another indictment of Kalen DeBoer
I donāt know about you, but I totally believed Nick Saban when he took a moment Saturday, in the midst of a tremendous ESPN āGameDayā farewell to Lee Corso, to scold Florida State.
He did it not just for those who love Alabama football, but also for all levelheaded followers of the sport who cringed when FSU transfer quarterback Tommy Castellanos decided to invoke Sabanās name in goading the Crimson Tide over the summer. Bama canāt stop me, Castellanos told On3. Saban canāt save them, he said. The disrespect will be addressed, Alabama players said in response.
No doubt it will, you and I said. Perhaps not kindly.
āIām not here to save them, Iām here to save you all,ā Saban told his āGameDayā cohorts when the idea of Florida Stateās upsetting No. 8 Alabama came up Saturday.
In other words, donāt even think about it. Saban went on to tell millions of viewers why this second season under his successor, Kalen DeBoer, was going to be much better. And why words like the ones Castellanos chose can be foolish and used to the advantage of the other side.
Then Florida State beat Alabama 31-17, a thorough bullying, and one of the undercards of perhaps the greatest Week 1 ever became a headliner and a spectacular opportunity for overreaction.
Kalen DeBoer has four losses at Alabama as a 14+ point favorite, in 14 games as the coach.
Nick Saban lost three of those in 139 games.
ā Chris Vannini (@ChrisVannini) August 30, 2025
Maybe it canāt match āArch should have been a volleyball playerā and other gems spinning out of Columbus, but weāve got a wide range of things to consider after this shocker.
Like maybe Mike Norvell is going to be all right, a year removed from a 2-10 disaster, which followed up a 13-1 season that was a quarterback injury away from a shot at the whole thing. Heās good again. But seriously, his teamās physical superiority on both sides of the ball against Alabama suggests this could be a third season with double-digit wins in four years, which would make 2024 easier to dismiss as an outlier.
Like maybe going nuts in the transfer portal, as Florida State had to do again, isnāt always so bad.
Like maybe Alabama offensive coordinator Ryan Grubbās reunion with DeBoer ā a pairing that got Washington to the national championship game two seasons ago ā after serving as OC with the Seattle Seahawks last season isnāt going to be as transformative as hoped.
Like maybe Gus Malzahnās signing up to be Norvellās OC will be. Malzahn spent the past 13 seasons as a head coach at Arkansas State, Auburn and UCF, and Saturday was a reminder of how he got there. Give that guy some players, starting with a quarterback who can really run, and watch him concoct a creative offense that tramples opponents. Mighty Bama yielded 230 yards on the ground, 4.7 per pop.
Like maybe we should let quarterbacks play before crowning or condemning them. Thatās not an overreaction. It would be to say Ty Simpson definitely isnāt it for Alabama. It would be to say Castellanos is a low-key Heisman guy. But Simpson struggled, even though he has followed the path we think should maximize success ā waiting his turn for three seasons at an elite program, working and developing until he got his chance.
Castellanos was brilliant, even though his past nine months sent red flags waving. He was Thomas, not Tommy, at Boston College, where he transferred after it didnāt work out at UCF under Malzahn. He got into the portal before last season ended, which BC coach Bill OāBrien said was because he lost his job, which Castellanos rebutted publicly. Then Castellanos decided to pivot in public from spatting with OāBrien to making Alabama mad.
And then he shut everyone up who thought heād be shut up Saturday. He ran it 16 times for 78 yards and a touchdown, making it look like this offense was drawn up with him in mind. He threw it 14 times, completing nine, for 152 yards. Thatās a tidy 10.9 per attempt. Thatās backing up bold words.
āYou need a dog in that position,ā FSU safety Earl Little Jr., who transferred from Alabama in 2024, told reporters of Castellanos, reiterating that the Seminoles were behind him all the way when he made his comments.
But if Alabama was close Saturday to what it was supposed to be this season, those comments would have been brought up and quietly downplayed at a disappointed Florida State news conference.
Maybe Florida State can make a surprise College Football Playoff run this season. Certainly, Alabama was the biggest disappointment in Week 1. And thereās no maybe when it comes to the loud, ugly, earned noise around DeBoer.
Heās 9-5 now with the Crimson Tide after Alabamaās first season-opening loss since 2001. Heās 6-4 against unranked teams at Alabama; Saban was 124-4. DeBoer now has four losses as a two-touchdown favorite; Saban had three of those in his tenure.
Of course, it was never going to be fun to be compared with Saban. But DeBoer is making it hard not to think of Bryan Harsin, another coach from the Northwest who came to the SEC with no SEC ties. Harsin left Boise State for Auburn and didnāt make it through two seasons with the Tigers. DeBoerās $70 million buyout basically guarantees he wonāt suffer the same indignity.
But things arenāt going well. And this was inexcusable for a team with so much talent ā multiple projected first-round picks, guys all over Bruce Feldmanās āFreaks List.ā This is a team that had Saban, a guy who knows a thing about football and talent and this program, very confident about it before it actually played.
Alabama was weak and foolish when it mattered most. Former Bama running back Roydell Williams ran right through the middle of the Bama defense on a crucial fourth-and-1 in the fourth quarter. Two plays later, James Smith got an extra shot in on Castellanos on the ground, drawing a 15-yard personal foul. Four plays after that, Gavin Sawchuk carried most of the Bama defense with him into the end zone for the final margin.
āNo excuse,ā DeBoer told reporters afterward. He said he believes he has a good football team. He doesnāt want them in the āgray areaā anymore, which is something he said last year. Also, he said: āLast year isnāt this year.ā
But with Georgia, LSU, South Carolina and Tennessee on the schedule? It might be. Thatās when a one-year dip becomes a great program on the decline. Thatās when boosters start talking about how long, exactly, theyāre willing to let this continue.
Week 1 is a pathological liar, and many of the things we saw and concluded Saturday might make us laugh in November. But letās agree on this: Corso has been one of the best things about college football in the past 30 years, and we should have believed him when he picked his alma mater to win this game.
