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Nick Saban retiring as Alabama coach, ending 'remarkable' career

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Nick Saban retiring as Alabama coach, ending 'remarkable' career

Nick Saban, who is widely considered the greatest college football coach because of his run guiding storied programs against the fiercest possible competition, is retiring after a 17-year stint at Alabama in which he delivered six national championships, he announced Wednesday night.

Saban called the university “a very special place” to him and his wife in a school-issued statement, adding that his legacy and the team’s process of sustained success is what was most important to him, not the number of wins or losses.

“The goal was always to help players create more value for their future, be the best player they could be and be more successful in life because they were part of the program,” he said. “Hopefully, we have done that, and we will always consider Alabama our home.”

His final championship in 2020 gave Saban seven national titles — he won one previously at LSU — and boosted him past another Alabama great, Bear Bryant, as the coach with the most championships, stamping a legacy defined by reaching the sport’s highest pinnacles.

Saban, 72, leaves his post with 292 career wins, fifth all time and the most among any active coach. He won 12 conference championships, more than 80 percent of his games and earned 17 total coach of the year honors nationally and in conference.

He led the Crimson Tide to winning seasons every year since 2008 and delivered something to Alabama that no other coach before him did: the Heisman Trophy, with four winners during his run, most recently Bryce Young in 2021.

Saban’s latest Alabama team went 12-2 and finished the 2023 season with a 27-20 overtime loss to Michigan — the eventual national champion — in the College Football Playoff semifinal at the Rose Bowl.


Saban runs out with team ahead of CFP semifinal against Michigan. (Photo: Ryan Kang / Getty Images)

Before joining Alabama in 2007, Saban had college stints with LSU (2000-04), Michigan State (1995-99) and Toledo (1990), and he coached the Miami Dolphins in the NFL (2005-06). He has a 292-71-1 record at the collegiate level, with five wins vacated by the NCAA as punishment for players wrongly getting free textbooks for other students. Saban won 11 SEC titles — two at LSU and nine at Alabama — and made bowl appearances every year with the programs. His bowl record at Alabama was 16-7.

Saban was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 2013. He’s a five-time SEC Coach of the Year, two-time Walter Camp Coach of the Year, two-time AP College Football Coach of the Year and two-time Paul “Bear” Bryant Award winner, among numerous other accolades.

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Saban was a high school quarterback turned defensive back in college, and the defensive back group remained his baby through his tenure at Alabama. Yet his versatility in coaching each position was one of his less visible specialties. Since his Alabama tenure began in 2007, no school had more first-round NFL Draft picks than Alabama (44), and that number is set to increase in April at the 2024 draft. Overall, 123 players under Saban at Alabama have been selected to NFL teams, and his four Heisman winners include players at three different positions with quarterback Young, running backs Mark Ingram II in 2009 and Derrick Henry in 2015 and wide receiver Devonta Smith in 2020.

Saban has coached more Heisman winners than anyone else.

Alabama athletic director Greg Byrne called Saban one of the best all time in any sport. “What an honor it has been for us to have a front-row seat to one of the best to ever do it,” Byrne said.

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said, “Knowing Nick, he’s not walking away from the game. He’s walking away from a role. I would anticipate Nick will have perspectives. I called his agent (and) said I’m looking forward to having a conversation. … I hope he’ll answer the call and share some thoughts from time to time on the big picture of college football.”

In 2022, Saban signed his last contract with the Crimson Tide, worth $93.6 million in total for a deal that had been scheduled to run over eight years, through 2030.

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Saban walks off the field after Alabama defeated Auburn on Nov. 25. (Photo: Michael Chang / Getty Images)

There was no more perfect pairing than Saban, the biggest figure in the sport, and Alabama, arguably the most recognizable college football brand in America. As the game progresses, there will be coaches that approach his win totals and, perhaps, his championships. But the aura of Saban and Alabama together might not be matched again.

Alabama fans held him in the highest regard, opposing fans feared him and his teams while maintaining a respect for the level of success he sustained. And in spite of all those sentiments of love, hate or something in between, Saban and his teams were the must-see draws of the sport and the ultimate measuring stick for opposing programs.

Saban’s retirement immediately prompted a question of who could coach Alabama next.

The job is widely considered among the best — if not the best — in college football, given the longest stretch of sustained success in the modern era of the sport. With that will come immense resources, the highest of expectations and no shortage of interest. Potential coaches to watch for the post include Oregon coach Dan Lanning, Texas coach Steve Sarkisian, Clemson coach Dabo Swinney, Washington coach Kalen DeBoer, Florida State coach Mike Norvell, among others.

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Alabama after Nick Saban: Pluses, drawbacks and candidates for the job

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And as the program seeks a new leader, its players could be on the move. Before Saban’s retirement, the window for Alabama’s players to transfer had closed. But that opened up again for another 30 days with Saban’s move. To date, Alabama has 17 transfer portal entries between scholarship players and walk-ons.

The most intriguing prospects are players who just finished their freshman seasons and the 2024 early enrollees, many of whom were drawn to the allure of playing for Saban. A five-star recruit, wideout Ryan Williams, decommitted quickly after Saban’s exit Wednesday.

Still, Alabama has one of the most attractive rosters in college football, with the No. 1 roster talent composition according to the 247Sports Composite. Alabama’s coaching search is the top priority, but a primary job of that coach is attracting and retaining talent.

As Saban leaves Alabama as its winningest coach, he is forever intertwined with Bryant, whose 25-year run at the school came mainly during the 1960s and 70s. Bryant took Alabama to new heights during his time, and while Alabama continued winning after him, it did not see another run that could compare until Saban arrived.

And Saban even surpassed that.

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Saban’s wife, in a statement on Facebook through the Nick’s Kids Foundation, said that she hoped the Saban legacy would be one of helping others in their lives and winning on the field. The foundation began in 1998, while Saban was at Michigan State, but its greatest impact has been in Tuscaloosa, Ala., where he and his wife Terry have resided since 2007 and donated more than $11 million to various organizations and causes to improve quality of life in the area.

“The rules for the game of football may change, but the ‘process’ will never go out of style: hard work, discipline, the relentless pursuit of a worthy goal, not cutting corners, and doing things the right way for the sake of constant personal improvement,” she said. “Not for the scoreboard.”


Saban and Smart shake hands after Alabama defeats Georgia in the 2023 SEC Championship game. (Photo: Todd Kirkland / Getty Images)

Saban has few contemporaries in winning, but also has long moved the needle with his every thought and opinion. That showed in recent years as the industry of college sports ballooned with ever-increasing TV deals, wrangling over football’s postseason structure, the transfer rules and the emergence of legal endorsements for athletes through name, image and likeness (NIL) deals.

“We have no contracts in college and we have no competitive balance. There is no salary cap, all right,” Saban said in November during his weekly call-in radio show. “Whoever wants to raise the most money and pay the player the most, they have the best opportunity to have the best team.

“In other words, just because School A over here has a bigger collective and is willing to pay guys more money, that gives them a better opportunity than School (B) over here that doesn’t have those same resources, so you’re not creating a competitive balance. So the haves are going to get further over here and the have-nots are going to get further over here,” he said.

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Saban has supported players using NIL to create more value for themselves, and eventually, Alabama got its own NIL collective up and running.

It was another indication of Saban’s ability to adapt and continue winning through every change in college football, including the rules for student-athletes and the shift from the BCS to the College Football Playoff. He won national titles in the 2000s, 2010s and 2020s, and used the shifts in the sport to extend his dominance.

Alabama’s initial offenses under Saban were designed around one-back running schemes and powerful offensive lines. By the end of his tenure, Alabama became innovators in the offensive space with the use of spread formations and run-pass option schemes.

In fitting fashion, Saban went out on perhaps his best coaching job ever, which ironically did not result in a national championship. The 2023 Alabama roster had a number of heralded prospects and players facing high expectations, like any other Saban team, but battled back from a loss to Texas, its biggest non-conference home loss since 2007, and a quarterback controversy that became one of the biggest talking points in the sport. Alabama was at a crossroads just three weeks into its season.

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What happened next was one of Saban’s best psychological jobs to date, publicly coming out and endorsing quarterback Jalen Milroe, acknowledging the outside criticisms about his team and using them as internal fuel while resorting to never-before-used tricks to inspire his team. When Alabama needed a win over Kentucky to clinch the SEC West, Saban had mouse traps placed throughout the football facility and locker room to alert players to not fall for a “trap game.”

The highlight of the season was a win over No. 1 ranked Georgia, the winner of 29 straight games, to earn one last College Football Playoff appearance. Though Alabama fell short to Michigan in the Rose Bowl, Saban said after the game that it was one of the greatest seasons in Alabama history and a team he will never forget — a team that saw a different side to Saban that other teams didn’t.

“I wouldn’t say more lenient, I would say he’s more open to us,” safety Malachi Moore, a senior, said. “He talks to us a lot. I think this year he’s made more jokes than I’ve ever heard him make before. So it’s just good to see that we brought that side out of him. I kind of credit to us a little bit.”

Now, Alabama and the sport as a whole is forced to turn the page, with an impossible question: Who will replace Saban?

The answer seems complicated but is really quite simple. There is no replacing Nick Saban.

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Chris Vannini, Bruce Feldman and Alex Andrejev also contributed to this story.

(Photo: Justin Ford / Getty Images)

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Kings searching for answers after sixth loss in seven games: ‘It’s a difficult time’

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Kings searching for answers after sixth loss in seven games: ‘It’s a difficult time’

January has traditionally been the harshest time of the year for the Kings, who haven’t had a winning record in that month the last three seasons. But winter grew dark and gloomy a little earlier than usual because December has hardly been a walk in the park.

With Tuesday’s 3-2 loss to the Seattle Kraken, the Kings head into the NHL’s three-day Christmas break having lost six of their last seven. And things aren’t getting easier any time soon: when the team returns to the ice Saturday, it will play host to the Ducks, who lead the Pacific Division in wins, before closing out 2025 Monday on the road against the Colorado Avalanche, who lead the NHL in wins.

“It’s not going the way we all want to,” forward Kevin Fiala said. “But you know, that’s going to happen for everybody. So it’s us who have to do something about it. Who can pull us out of it? Nobody else.

“I’m not worried. Like, I’m sure we’re gonna get out of this. But it’s not acceptable right now.”

And if it doesn’t change right now, the rest of the season will be as cold as a winter frost for the Kings.

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It’s not just that the team is losing, but how it’s losing that is most concerning. The Kings (15-12-9) are 31st in the 32-team NHL in scoring, 30th on the power play and have scored more than two goals just twice in 11 games this month. That’s negated a defense that is second in the league in goals allowed.

“Sometimes it’s difficult to make sense of things,” coach Jim Hiller said when asked to explain a slide that has dropped the Kings into the middle of the division standings. “We just feel like we haven’t had a good run of games where we felt like, win or lose, we really like how we’re playing.

“That’s something that we’ll keep driving towards. We just haven’t had it yet.”

Last season, Hiller’s Kings tied franchise records for wins and points in the regular season and had the best home mark in team history. This season, they’re 4-8-4 at Crypto.com Arena, the second-worst home record in the Western Conference. And that has general manager Ken Holland answering questions about Hiller’s future behind the bench.

“I expect him to be here the rest of the season,” said Holland last week, not exactly a full-throated vote of confidence.

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Yet for all their struggles, December has just been a continuation of the things that have plagued the Kings all season.

“We all have high expectations for ourselves,” Hiller said. “We just haven’t hit our stride yet. That’s the part that we’re chasing. That’s what we have to focus on. We have to hit that stride.

“It’s a difficult time right now, for sure.”

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On Tuesday, Hiller tried to shake things up by mixing up his lines, most significantly pairing Fiala and Andrei Kuzmenko with center Alex Turcotte. And while Fiala and Kuzmenko both responded with goals, they didn’t come until the Kraken had taken a 3-0 lead.

The first goal came from Jordan Eberle, who was left alone in front of the Kings’ net, giving him plenty of space to settle a pass from Matty Beniers before lifting the puck around goaltender Pheonix Copley and under the crossbar for his 13th goal of the season. It was the fourth power-play goal the Kings had allowed in the last two nights and the sixth in four games.

The Kraken doubled their lead on a quirky goal less than eight minutes later, with Copley misjudging a deflected shot from Seattle’s Frederick Gaudreau, allowing the puck to knuckle off his glove then trickle through his legs for the goal.

Ben Meyers extended Seattle’s lead to 3-0 with less than four minutes left in the second before the Kings finally got on the board with an unassisted goal from Fiala, his 13th of the season, 11 seconds later.

Kings coach Jim Hiller watches from the bench against the Kraken at Crypto.com Arena.

Kings coach Jim Hiller watches from the bench during the second period of a 3-2 loss to the Seattle Kraken on Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena.

(Luke Hales / Getty Images)

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Now the Kings will have three days to think about that, although Fiala said he’d gotten over the game by the time he finished showering.

“If you win five in a row or lose five in a row or whatever, it’s forgotten. It’s in the past,” he said. “I think we take the good things with us and the bad things we hopefully analyze and get better at.”

For Hiller, the break couldn’t come at a better time. Or a worse time since the team’s current seven-game slump is its deepest since the winter of 2023-24. That one cost coach Todd McLellan his job.

“I hope the players are able to relax and refresh themselves,” Hiller said. “It’s been from September till now, with the schedule and how busy it is. And 85% of our games, we’ve been playing within one goal.

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“It’s taxing physically and mentally. So I’m sure those guys need a break.”

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NFL reporter responds to fake death rumor in hilarious fashion: ‘Glitch in the matrix’

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NFL reporter responds to fake death rumor in hilarious fashion: ‘Glitch in the matrix’

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An internet rumor swirled last week that a longtime NFL reporter had died at the age of 40.

News of Jane Slater’s supposed death on social media, but she was quick to shut it down.

An X user posted a screenshot of a post on Facebook that showed Slater in black and white with the graphic “1980-2025” saying she had died at 40. Slater, 45, was born in 1980, but the years written in the post would mean she died at either age 44 or 45.

 

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NFL Network sideline reporter Jane Slater stands on the sidelines prior to an NFL football game between the Seattle Seahawks and the Chicago Bears, at Soldier Field on Dec. 26, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois.  (Todd Rosenberg/Getty Images)

“A veteran reporter who covered the Dallas Cowboys—having followed the team for over a decade—has passed away at the age of 40 after a tragic domestic violence incident, leaving behind a 5-year-old child. Her years of dedicated work, along with the heartbreaking circumstances surrounding her death, have left loyal fans stunned, devastated, and praying for her and her family,” the post read.

The user asked Slater, “did you pass away??”

Jane Slater speaks with T.Y. Hilton of the Dallas Cowboys after the game against the Philadelphia Eagles at AT&T Stadium on Dec. 24, 2022 in Arlington, Texas.  (Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

STEELERS’ AARON RODGERS HILARIOUSLY TRASH TALKS STAR DEFENDER IN MIC’D UP MOMENT

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“I don’t think so? But does this mean there is (a) glitch in the matrix? I’m gonna wrap myself in bubble wrap until NYE,” Slater joked.

If there is one thing the Facebook post got correct, it’s that Slater does mainly cover the Cowboys for the NFL Network.

NFL Network reporter Jane Slater on the sideline prior to an NFC Wild Card Playoff game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Dallas Cowboys at Raymond James Stadium on Jan. 16, 2023 in Tampa, Florida.  (Perry Knotts/Getty Images)

Prior to joining in 2016, Slater worked for ESPN and the Longhorn Network, having attended the University of Texas. She also hosted a radio show in Dallas.

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It’s love, set and match: Tennis icon Venus Williams weds actor, model partner in Florida

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It’s love, set and match: Tennis icon Venus Williams weds actor, model partner in Florida

Tennis legend Venus Williams wed Danish model and actor Andrea Preti over the weekend in Florida, the new bride announced in a shared post.

An Instagram post from Vogue Magazine’s Weddings section announced the nuptials, with the message garnering more than 30,000 likes as of Tuesday afternoon.

“We all love each other so much,” Williams, 45, said in the Vogue post. “It was just the happiest, most beautiful, sweetest day.”

The post was scant on details other than the event took place over five days in and around the couple’s home in Palm Beach Gardens.

An email for comment to representatives for Williams and Preti, 37, was not immediately returned.

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The couple met at 2024 Milan Fashion Week and began texting shortly after, according to Vogue.

The couple eventually became engaged on Jan. 31 in Tuscany, according to Vogue. That detail was confirmed in July during what was a historic month for Williams.

The Compton native defeated 23-year-old Peyton Sterns 6-3, 6-4 in the first round action of the D.C. Open after a 16-month hiatus from singles matches.

In victory, Williams became the second-oldest woman to win a tour-level singles match, trailing only fellow legend Martina Navratilova, who was 47 when she won in 2004.

“Yes, my fiance is here, and he really encouraged me to keep playing,” Williams told the Tennis Channel’s Rennae Stubbs in a post-match interview. “There were so many times where I just wanted to coast and kind of chill. … He encouraged me to get through this, and it’s wonderful [for him] to be here. He’s never seen me play.”

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Preti has written, acted and directed in a handful of films, primarily in Italy.

The wedding was the second for the couple, who also held a ceremony in Italy in September.

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