šŸˆ The ever-expanding college football coaching staff and how Nick Saban started it all

TerryP

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It started with Saban's arrival at Alabama. Four national championships later, everyone is playing copycat.

Looking at the college game through the lens of his time in the NFL, Saban beefed up the Tide's organizational infrastructure, adding bodies to the personnel department and bringing in accomplished coaches to lend a hand wherever possible.

Getting an accurate number of everyone working in the Mal Moore Athletic Facility is difficult -- in 2012, there were 146 non-coaches on the athletic department payroll -- but a few big names stand out over the past few years. For instance, when McElwain was offensive coordinator, he had former Power 5 offensive coordinators Mike Groh (Virginia) and Billy Napier (Clemson) on his staff. Kevin Steele, who had been a head coach at Baylor, served as director of player personnel in 2013. The next year, former Washington assistant and ace recruiter Tosh Lupoi joined the staff as an analyst. This year, former Maryland O.C. Mike Locksley will hold a similar position.

"We learn things all the time from other people, how they do things," Saban said. "We're always looking for a better way, and everybody is responsible for that. So when you have the opportunity to get somebody like Mike, they bring a lot to the table. ... He'll have some ideas that will contribute to what we're doing in a certain segment systematically. There are a lot of benefits in bringing somebody with his experience aboard."

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Long read, but interesting one ... and hey, Scarborough made it through an article with Bama as a subject and didn't mention Auburn. :shock:

The ever-expanding college football coaching staff and how Nick Saban started it all
 
Swinney, the Clemson coach, says he thinks having a great support staff is "awesome for our players."

"They want you to be accountable for your players, but then they want to complain when you have a good staff in place to help you do that," he said. "I've never understood that argument. You can't run Nike the same as you run Joe's Mom & Pop Shoe Store. It's just a difference, and it's always going to be that way. You can't run East Carolina the same way as the University of Alabama. It just is what it is."



Dabo has it figured out. I felt the same way when the Pac 10 and Ivy League schools led the fight against athletic dorms and eventually won.
 
Could we get a place kicker coach? I don't mean someone who has as one of his omnibus duties the coaching of Special Teams. I mean a coach devoted exclusively to the recruiting, development, and retention of reliable field goal kickers.
 
Could we get a place kicker coach? I don't mean someone who has as one of his omnibus duties the coaching of Special Teams. I mean a coach devoted exclusively to the recruiting, development, and retention of reliable field goal kickers.

That sounds like an on-field coach. Alabama is at the limit on those. CNS has done a great job to focus on the details. While there is a limit for on-field coaches, I don't think there is a limit for support personnel. Anybody know? CNS' raising the bar, and money, makes it all possible. So many programs don't make money so they can't have the resources that Alabama does.
 
While there is a limit for on-field coaches, I don't think there is a limit for support personnel. Anybody know?
There is no limit set.

many programs don't make money so they can't have the resources that Alabama does.

What makes this whole thing so entertaining to me is the person who brought all of this to the media's attention: Mack Brown. After complaining about it following the BCSNC loss (just after his comment "if Colt could have played) he immediately went out and hired support personnel.

Could we get a place kicker coach? I don't mean someone who has as one of his omnibus duties the coaching of Special Teams. I mean a coach devoted exclusively to the recruiting, development, and retention of reliable field goal kickers.

Hypothetical: Of the nine on the field coaches, who do you replace to hire this kicking coach? Assuming the hire is made, do you hire a psychologist? :devil:
 
Hypothetical: Of the nine on the field coaches, who do you replace to hire this kicking coach? Assuming the hire is made, do you hire a psychologist? :devil:


Well, Bobby Williams is gone as special teams coordinator, so there's that. If Burton Burns can coach up these guys as well as his proficiency at schooling running backs we could see a bump in our special team's play.
 
:devil:

Hypothetical: Of the nine on the field coaches, who do you replace to hire this kicking coach? Assuming the hire is made, do you hire a psychologist? :devil:

Which brings us to the next evolution, sports psychologists and specialist position coaches enrolling as students and becoming invited walk-ons.
 
Well, Bobby Williams is gone as special teams coordinator, so there's that. If Burton Burns can coach up these guys as well as his proficiency at schooling running backs we could see a bump in our special team's play.
There's nothing going to change with the Special Teams coaching or scheme. It's Saban's. Has been since day one back in 2007.

"Special Teams Coordinator" is a title.
 
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