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Blake Toppmeyer (USA Today sportswriter) disrespects Saban & wife in his latest article.

Posted on 3/18/24 at 11:12 am
Posted by coachcrisp
pensacola, fl
Member since Jun 2012
30597 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 11:12 am
After listening to Nick Saban bemoan the direction of college football during a congressional hearing last week, I feel more certain Saban made the right decision to retire.

A hallmark of Saban’s greatness was his ability to evolve – if sometimes begrudgingly – to changes within the sport. But adjusting to a landscape in which players enjoy more power, freedom and compensation than ever before became the straw that broke the GOAT’s back.

“All the things I believed in for all these years, 50 years of coaching, no longer exist in college athletics,” Saban, 72, said on the Hill. “It’s always been about developing players. It was always about helping people be more successful in life.”

It’s not about that anymore? Not
at all? That’s hard to believe.
I’m supposed to think a coach can’t develop players just because athletes collect booster dollars and they can transfer freely? A coach no longer can help athletes find success?

Consider me skeptical.

What Terry Saban told Nick Saban about NIL

If Saban doesn’t think he can help college athletes anymore, then he’s right where he needs to be: Out to pasture.

Saban added that his wife, Terry, also found the coaching enterprise to be less fulfilling after NIL arrived.

“She came to me right before I retired and said, ‘Why are we doing this?’” Saban told lawmakers. “I said, ‘What do you mean?’ She said, ‘All they care about is how much you’re going to pay them. They don’t care about how much you’re going to develop them, which is what we’ve always done.’ ” Where is it written that a coach can’t develop players who are paid? If the only way you can help people is if they’re trapped within your program, unable to transfer without penalty, then maybe you should reevaluate your leadership style.

My employer pays me wages. If it didn’t, I wouldn’t be writing this, I can assure you. I can change jobs without penalty if I so desire. But my bosses still can develop me and help me.

Here’s what changed for Saban: The good ol’ days, as the Sabans viewed them, ended a few years ago when coaches were stripped of omnipotence after the dawn of NIL, coupled with the removal of transfer penalties.

Players and boosters enjoy more power than ever.

You don’t have to like NIL collectives, but the Supreme Court and federal antitrust law stand in the way of the NCAA reverting to a time when athletes couldn’t earn money.

NIL, transfers reduced coaches’ power, control

I believe Saban when he says he’s OK with players earning some coin, but I think he’d like to control how the players are compensated and the relative amount they’re compensated. He wants to control every facet of his enterprise. He says he’s up for revenue sharing with athletes. He’s down with NIL collectives.

He’s clearly uncomfortable with boosters acting as general managers, cutting checks to acquire and retain talent.

Saban’s opinion isn’t unique. Ask someone around his age for their thoughts on what has become of their profession, and they’ll probably tell you it used to be much better. I’m not just talking about coaches. Do this in any profession.

I’ve lost count of how many former journalists tell me the industry used to be so much better back in the day. I’m sure you hear it in your line of work, too.

In some cases, it’s true that things might have been better back in the day. Heck, I’d like a piece of those gluttonous expense accounts of which retired journalists tell tales.

In other cases, things just changed. For the better? For the worse? Depends who you ask. You adapt, you endure, or you quit. Saban quit. He earned that right. Absolutely, he did. You won’t hear me grumble about how much Saban earned during his coaching career. In a pure business sense, he was worth every penny – and more – to Alabama. Not just to the football program. To the university at large.

So, Saban should enjoy the fruits of his hard labor. Live it up a little in his retirement mansion at the beach. Play some golf. Flip a few burgers on the grill. Read a Grisham novel.

Do anything but coach. Saban lost the appetite for that once college sports evolved to the point where he just couldn’t stand the framework.

Saban claims that what he believes in no longer exists in college football, so it was time to go.

Time for Saban to put his feet up and make way for a new generation of coaches who might still think you can develop and help young athletes, even if they’re earning booster dollars and aren’t strapped to a program by transfer restrictions.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s SEC columnist.
Posted by Section 80
Member since Apr 2013
797 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 11:29 am to
quote:

My employer pays me wages. If it didn’t, I wouldn’t be writing this



But what do they do to develop you as a writer?



quote:

But my bosses still can develop me and help me.



How do they help you develop as a writer? All they are doing is writing you a check for you to do what you already know how to do (which you probably learned by going to college) and that is write paragraphs
Posted by remaster916
Alabama
Member since Oct 2012
12220 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 11:35 am to
People are forgetting how much the value is of a full scholarship, room & board, free books, unlimited free food, no utility bills.

Saban has said he supports NIL, just not a player being an employee of the school.

People will really be upset if these players become employees of a school and start getting fired for not being productive.
Posted by Tupelo
Member since Aug 2022
1459 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 11:53 am to
Not to mention top notch coaching/training. How much would it cost to pay private coaches and strength trainers to develop you for a potential NFL career?
Posted by coachcrisp
pensacola, fl
Member since Jun 2012
30597 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 11:55 am to
quote:

People will really be upset if these players become employees of a school and start getting fired for not being productive.
If a kid was "pink-slipped", could he legally go and draw his "pennies"?
Posted by JIB
Member since Sep 2013
808 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 12:24 pm to
There's not much that's more pathetic than some loser complaining about what someone that is more successful than he could ever imagine is doing.
Posted by Funky Tide 8
Tittleman's Crest
Member since Feb 2009
52656 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 12:34 pm to
These people cannot seem to see the forest for the trees. Unfettered NIL and transferring is clearly not good for the sport, and there needs to be some kind of actual structure. That's all Saban is lobbying for, and that is what the vast majority of college sports fans want. Its quite simple, but there are people who want to make it a matter of hypocrisy or contradiction. Saban is being neither of these things, and this guy's argument is very poor.
Posted by Che Boludo
Member since May 2009
18174 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 1:11 pm to
The heart of Saban's issue is that the value of the degree and personal growth as a player and young man (committed to a process of team first values, self-development, humility, hard work, a willingness to accept personal responsibility, listen and learn, etc.) Have been on the decline for years. Now, the power imbalance, focus and rules have completely killed it.

I genuinely believe Saban loved winning, but he also loved setting tough, yet supportive, conditions for young men to be truly successful in life, which transcends money and sports.

The false analogies and other fallacious argumentation throughout the article are ridiculous. His writing career and professional development as a writer are apples to oranges to coaching young student-athletes playing a team sport. The larger issue is that any semblance of being a "student-athlete" are completely removed. Any chance to build and sustain a team oriented culture, let alone a roster, are severely inhibited. Already challenged athletic department budgets will only be further strained.

The NIL money is not the issue in and of itself. The transferring out freedom on top of it creates an unsustainable situation. The diversion of donations to collectives takes away AD funds. It needs to be fixed, or the sport will be severely setback.

Waiting to see hard data on grad rates and APR. That will get the school administration attention.
Posted by TroyTider
Florida Panhandle
Member since Oct 2009
3763 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 4:24 pm to
quote:

People are forgetting how much the value is of a full scholarship, room & board, free books, unlimited free food, no utility bills.


Not to mention, the above comes with a 4 to 5 year guarantee. Wonder if USA Today has signed the author to a five-year contract? And if the author stays with Usaa today for 4 to 5 years, does that virtually guarantee him a way better station in life on his next job?
Posted by YStar
Member since Mar 2013
15178 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 4:44 pm to
quote:

People are forgetting how much the value is of a full scholarship, room & board, free books, unlimited free food, no utility bills.


It's not free. Those players have to get to a certain level and work to earn those things then keep them or they get processed.

Besides when someone is playing lacrosse or baseball and earning the athletic department nothing... yet they get the same scholarship, books, food, no utilities, etc...

Yet I never see anyone complaining that the football players who earn the lionshare oofmpney which basically pay for the other sports are given a bad deal because they should be given the same.
Posted by imjustafatkid
Alabama
Member since Dec 2011
50371 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 5:34 pm to
quote:

USA Today sportswriter


Stopped reading here.
Posted by CrimsonCrusade
Member since Jan 2014
5148 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 6:34 pm to
quote:

In other cases, things just changed. For the better? For the worse? Depends who you ask.


No it doesn't. Outside of shills in the media who know that keeping this sport popular is their livelihood, no one speaks positively about the state of college football. Every single fan you talk to is unhappy with conference realignment, unregulated NIL, and the transfer portal.
Posted by Amarillo Tide
Amarillo, TX
Member since Aug 2023
380 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 8:15 pm to
I’ve seen several writers recently take shots at CNS. I can easily see why he held most media types in utter contempt. Most of them have ZERO clue what they’re talking about and it shows with this bozo.
Posted by TizzyT4theUofA
This side of eternity
Member since Jun 2016
10051 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 8:21 pm to
quote:

Yet I never see anyone complaining that the football players who earn the lionshare oofmpney which basically pay for the other sports are given a bad deal because they should be given the same.


No matter how much logic you use, you will not convince them.
Posted by FoTownBam
Foley Al
Member since Oct 2023
1286 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 8:23 pm to
quote:

But what do they do to develop you as a writer?

Judging from the article, not much
Posted by Chad4Bama
Member since Sep 2020
5668 posts
Posted on 3/18/24 at 8:27 pm to
Sports writers want to be considered "journalists"...they care more about an agenda than they do the sport they're covering...they think it gives them journalistic cred to write about the plight of the poor, starving athlete (many of them black) in light of the greed of the multimillionaire coaches (mostly white). Players have "the power" now...young black players.... EQUITY... REPARATIONS... it's their civil rights moment in their minds.

Sounds like some crap Joey Goodman would post on al.commie...to be submitted later in the year for some journalism award no one has ever heard of or cares about.
Posted by FairhopeTider
Fairhope, Alabama
Member since May 2012
20760 posts
Posted on 3/19/24 at 6:20 am to
quote:

My employer pays me wages. If it didn’t, I wouldn’t be writing this, I can assure you. I can change jobs without penalty if I so desire. But my bosses still can develop me and help me.


These assholes don’t get it. His bosses aren’t preparing him for his next job or for life. That’s the job that a cfb coach.
Posted by CrimsonCrusade
Member since Jan 2014
5148 posts
Posted on 3/19/24 at 8:15 pm to
quote:

These assholes don’t get it. His bosses aren’t preparing him for his next job or for life. That’s the job that a cfb coach.


He ought to get it. He very likely worked for the school newspaper for free while he was in college studying journalism. This was done on the assumption that it was preparing him for his future career. That dynamic is accepted in every facet of college life, except for athletics. The counterargument is that athletes generate so much revenue that they deserve to be treated differently, but that doesn't really hold because every student generates revenue via tuition, housing, etc. and the vast majority of athletics departments around the country actually lose money. If anything, the average college football player is less financially valuable to a university than the average student.
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