Alabama
Rece Davis explains why Nick Saban decided now to retire at Alabama
Nick Saban’s abrupt retirement caught the entire sports world by surprise.
Right when the almighty Alabama empire seemed to get back its swagger following a run to the College Football Playoff semifinal, Saban will ride off into retirement as the arguably greatest college football coach to have ever lived.
ESPN College GameDay host Rece Davis explained why this was the right time for Saban, now 72, to call it quits after his enjoyment of the 2023-24 season.
“I felt like he got a great deal of satisfaction out of coaching this team,” Davis said during an appearance on SportsCenter. “There have been times at Alabama because of the dynasty — which I believe to be the greatest in the history of the sport — I think it has been frustrating to him because people become complacent. They take things for granted, because they operate like regular human beings, which he often does not, you know, in terms of being continually driven, continually in the moment, never being complacent.
“I believe this team, because it had a lot of room to grow, was very satisfying to him. And I certainly believe it was one of his best coaching jobs to take his team, make them the SEC Champion, get them into the playoff, be a play or two away from getting into the national championship game. So I believe there was a certain sense of he was confident, relaxed, happy with the progress that his team had made.”
Saban took an Alabama team that everyone wrote off after losing to Texas in Tuscaloosa in September, which was followed up by an upset scare by USF on a neutral site. After that game, the Crimson Tide were back in business and playing like the Nick Saban teams of the 2010s.
Of course, Saban has tried to adapt with the ever-changing college football market. And for the most part, he has succeeded tremendously while also turning just about every player that has crossed his path into a better man along the way.
“He’s been a lot different the last several years than he was, say, when I first met him when he got the job at Michigan State [in 1995],” Davis continued. “People do that. They change over a period of time. And I think his appetite to learn, his appetite to be able to relate to the players to try to get the most out of them, to help them become the best versions of themselves on and off the field.
“I’m not sure that anyone had done it at a level that high over this period of time, as he has during this time of Alabama.”
Now, the Crimson Tide will begin their search for a new head football coach to succeed arguably the greatest head coach in college football history. According to AD Greg Byrne, the next time he speaks publicly will be to announce the new Alabama headman.
Alabama
‘Maverick Act’ aims to preserve three F-14 Tomcats with restoration in Alabama
PENSACOLA, Fla. — A bipartisan bill is making its way through Washington that would preserve and possibly restore a famous piece of naval aviation history.
The F-14 Tomcat was in service with the Navy for more than 30 years and was famously used in the original “Top Gun” movie.
But when the aircraft retired in 2005, the U.S. government destroyed a majority of the airplanes that were here in the U.S. This made the prospects of the jet returning to the skies next to impossible.
The “Maverick Act” hopes to bring a jet that inspired a generation back to life.
“The Maverick Act got a lot of support,” “It passed the Senate unanimously. It now heads to Congress for a final vote.”
Pensacola Navy veteran Dan McCort can still feel the raw power the F-14 Tomcat brought to naval aviation.
“It was a blast to fly. I gotta tell you I got it,” McCort said. “I love the airplane. I love the missions because it came with a huge mission set.”
The only country in the world flying the jet was Iran. The jets were given to Iran in 1979. But when the government was overthrown, the jets fell into the hands of an anti-American government.
Because of that, when the jet retired in 2006, the U.S. ordered most of the aircraft and its parts be destroyed.
During Operation Epic Fury, American and Israeli pilots destroyed Iran’s entire Air Force, including all the remaining flyable F-14s.
“We had to take them out, but boy that was hard for me to watch,” McCort said.
A bill dubbed the “Maverick Act” was introduced through a bipartisan effort. The legislation would preserve and restore three F-14s sitting in our nation’s boneyard.
“That airplane inspired an entire nation, partly because of the movie, partly because of the times it was hard Cold War, and it represented frankly American air power,” said McCort.
“A fantastic piece of equipment that served our country well,” Congressman Jimmy Patronis said. “But I can’t help but poke fun at it simply because of what Tom Cruise has done with the most recent ‘Top Gun’ movies.”
The bill calls for the Navy to donate the Tomcats to the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville, Alabama, where they will be restored. If there’s enough spare parts, the bill calls for one of them to be restored to flight status to be flown at airshows across the country.
All of this would be funded by private donors, and not American taxpayers.
“If there’s no taxpayer dollars being used to restore these things then put it on the table,” said Patronis.
McCort says restoring the airplane will cost millions of dollars.
“A foundation that could generate some donations to defer the costs of making this thing fly because it will not be inexpensive,” said McCort. “I believe we’ll pay dividends down the road, both for the museum as well as a recruiting opportunity… as well as a recruiting opportunity for the country in general, and for the Navy frankly.”
Alabama
Alabama moves to implement 2023 congressional map as legal battle continues in courts
Alabama
Alabama football vs East Carolina kickoff time, TV channel announced
Alabama football’s first game of the 2026 season has a kickoff time.
Alabama vs. East Carolina will be at 11 a.m. CT Saturday, Sept. 5 from Bryant-Denny Stadium on ABC. The game will be a part of an SEC tripleheader on the network, along with Baylor vs. Auburn (2:30 p.m. CT) and LSU vs. Clemson (6:30 p.m. CT).
East Carolina is one of three nonconference games for Alabama in 2026, along with Florida State on Sept. 19 and Chattanooga on Nov. 21.
Here’s a look at Alabama’s full 2026 schedule:
- Sept. 5: Alabama vs East Carolina; 11 a.m., ABC
- Sept. 12: Alabama at Kentucky
- Sept. 19: Alabama vs. Florida State
- Sept. 26: Alabama vs. South Carolina
- Oct. 3: Alabama at Mississippi State
- Oct. 10: Alabama vs. Georgia
- Oct. 17: Alabama at Tennessee
- Oct. 24: Alabama vs. Texas A&M
- Nov. 7: Alabama at LSU
- Nov. 14: Alabama at Vanderbilt
- Nov. 21: Alabama vs. Chattanooga
- Nov. 28: Alabama vs. Auburn
Colin Gay covers Alabama football for The Tuscaloosa News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at cgay@gannett.com or follow him @_ColinGay on X, formerly known as Twitter.
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