November 22, 2024

Cautiously, the Alabama staffer approached Nick Saban, crossing directly into his inner sanctum. It was only a spring practice in 2013. What’s the worst thing that could happen? You get canned. You get humiliated.

Or both.

So he double-checked with the caller on the cell phone. “Can I just have Coach Saban call you back?”

“Absolutely not,” the caller shot back. “Put my son on the phone — now!”

The staffer approached Saban, swallowed hard and, and said, “Coach, your mom is on the phone. She said she has to talk to you right now.”

Mary Saban was 81, and Nick was somewhat concerned with the urgency of the moment. So Saban, for the first time in 51 years of coaching, took a call right there on the practice field.

You’re not going to believe what happened next. Or maybe you will — because it lays the foundation of the most driven coach in football like nothing else could.

“She says ‘brother’ — everyone from West Virginia calls each other ‘brother’ — ‘Brother, I just wanted to let you know I just made a hole-in-one and you’ve never made one,’” Saban said, laughing. “Yes, she really called me during practice to tell me she made a hole-in-one.”

At the SEC’s spring meetings in late May, Saban shared that story with me. Nearby on the deck of the Hilton Sandestin Beach Resort, hundreds of people mingled around the various food stations and open bars.

Saban gazed at the crowd.

“I don’t know anyone out here anymore,” he said.

That’s what happens when you’re the one constant and last one standing in the ever-changing landscape of college athletics — who just happens to be the greatest coach in the greatest league.

The SEC’s “It Just Means More” slogan? For Saban, “It Just Means More” SEC coaches.

Since Saban was hired in 2007, there have been 54 — fifty-four! — different head coaches (not including interim coaches) at the 13 SEC schools.

Arkansas and Tennessee have had six coaches each. Hugh Freeze will be the sixth different coach Saban has faced at rival Auburn. Florida, Ole Miss, Mississippi State and Vanderbilt each have had five different coaches.

Several of Saban’s assistants have become head coaches. He faces another one when No. 3 Alabama hosts No. 11 Texas and Steve Sarkisian on Saturday (7 p.m. ET, ESPN).

“Coach Saban saved my career,” said Sarkisian, whom Saban first hired as an assistant in 2016. “He gave me a chance when I couldn’t get an interview, much less a job.

“Without Nick Saban, I wouldn’t be sitting here today. I owe a great deal to him. I owe so much to him, and I will never, ever forget that he and Miss Terry have been tremendous in my life and my wife’s life and what they’ve done for us on and off the field. I owe them a great deal.”

He’s not the only one.

Despite Saban’s success — seven national titles, 15 consecutive double-digit win seasons, we could go on and on — Saban’s mother Mary, now 92, is the self-proclaimed best play-caller in the family.

“She’ll say, ‘I’ve been watching you play since you were nine,’” Saban said. “‘I can call plays better than you.’”

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