Last week, Texas A&M head football coach Jimbo Fisher and Alabama head football coach Nick Saban had a verbal back and forth about the ethics of recruiting in college football. I think both Saban and Fisher had valid points and it will be interesting to see how this plays out over the coming weeks.Â
Hereâs what happened and my thoughts on the situation âŚ
From the video I saw, which was about a seven-minute clip, Nick Saban was on some sort of panel with ESPN, speaking about college football and the issue of NIL (name, image and likeness) came up. Saban was very open about his thoughts on NIL and what damage it could do to college football if not regulated properly.
âMy concern is college football in general,â said Saban during the panel discussion. âI think a lot of us are concerned about that. A lot of people are concerned about whatâs happening. People really want to understand whatâs happening in college football. People want to understand why people are transferring schools and getting money to do it.â
When it comes to people being concerned about whatâs happening with NIL, I think heâs correct. Some of these NIL deals donât seem like they are totally legit, and there seems to be a lot of room for shady business deals. Now when it comes to kids transferring schools, I donât totally agree with him on that. Because the coaches can resign and take whatever position they choose, then athletes should have similar power. Â
I do feel that some of these kids that transfer are doing so not because they feel another school would be a better fit, but instead because they are not getting the amount of playing time they assumed they would. There probably should be more regulation on that because there are too many players in the transfer portal which negatively impacts high school players looking for a scholarship.
Saban continued with his thoughts on NIL saying, âItâs gotten completely out of control and not a sustainable model. Itâs to the point where youâve got these attorneys/agents calling collectives and saying, âPay my player a hundred thousand dollars a year,â and then they want their piece of that. They all want a cut.â
I donât quite agree with Saban on this point either. I feel this is a sustainable model if the right regulations are put in place. The coaches, administration and schools have been profiting off of these players for decades and now the players are reaping the benefits. Â
If Saban would have stopped there with his comments, I donât think he would have made any headlines. However, Saban saved his most egregious comments for last and he ruffled a lot of feathers with this one. I personally felt he was wrong.
âWe were second in recruiting last year, A&M was first,â Saban said. âA&M bought every player on their team, made a deal for name, image and likeness. We didnât buy one player, but I donât know if weâre going to be able to sustain that in the future because more and more people are doing it.â
He didnât stop there either. He touched on Jackson State and Travis Hunter as well.
âJackson State paid a guy $1 million last year who was a really good Division I player to come to their school. It was in the paper, and they bragged about it. No one did anything about it.â
Saban was wrong in both cases when he spoke about Texas A&M and Jackson State. How does he know what A&M and Jackson State did to recruit those kids to their respective schools? And letâs not act like boosters havenât been paying players under the table for decades. There are hundreds of stories about players getting paid illegally and for Nick to try and single out just those two schools is rather low. Maybe heâs a little jealous that Alabama doesnât have the stronghold on recruiting as they did in the past. Maybe NIL can level the playing field.
Saban quickly tried to reverse course by issuing an apology the next day, but the damage had been done.
âThat was a mistake and I apologize for that part of it,â Saban said. âI really wasnât saying that anyone did anything illegal in using name, image and likeness. I didnât say that. That was something that was assumed by what I said, which is not really what I meant, nor was it what I said. Thereâs nothing illegal about doing this. Itâs the system that allows you to do it, and thatâs the issue that I have.â
The problem I have is Saban did say that Texas A&M âboughtâ every player in their recruiting class and that Jackson State âpaidâ a guy $1 million dollars. Those words are very clear in my book. The words âbought and paidâ imply that some illegal activity went on to obtain these players and I am sure Saban is smart enough to recognize the power of the words he was using during that interview. For him to come out and try to insult our intelligence is like a slap in the face, honestly.
Fisher did not wait long to give his response to the statements by Saban. Fisher fired back at Saban the next day with what seemed like more of a personal attack, rather than a denial of the claims made by Saban the day before.
âItâs despicable that we have to sit here at this level of ball and say these things to defend the people of this organization, the kids, 17-year-old kids and their families,â said Fisher. âItâs amazing. Some people think theyâre God. Go dig into how âGodâ did his deal. You may find out about a lot of things you donât want to know.
âWe build him up to be the czar of football. Go dig into his past or anybody thatâs ever coached with him. You can find out anything you want to find out, what he does and how he does it. Itâs despicable; it really is.â
Fisher did touch on if he broke any rules saying, âYouâre taking shots at 17-year-old kids and their families that they broke state laws, that we bought every player in this group,â he said. âWe never bought anybody. No rules were broken, nothing was done wrong. These families, itâs despicable that a reputable head coach can come out and say this when he doesnât get his way or things donât go his way.â
Jackson State head coach Deion Sanders also responded to the comments from Saban. Saban had to realize that there was going to be a big backlash from those statements, especially ones with no evidence to date.
âI havenât talked to Coach Saban,â Sanders said in an interview with Andscape. âIâm sure heâs tried to call. We need to talk publicly â not privately. What you said was public. That doesnât require a conversation. Letâs talk publicly and let everybody hear the conversation.
âYou canât do that publicly and call privately. No, no, no. I still love him. I admire him. I respect him. Heâs the magna cum laude of college football and thatâs what itâs going to be because heâs earned that. But he took a left when he shouldâve stayed right. Iâm sure heâll get back on course. I ainât tripping.â
When speaking on Travis, Sanders said, âI donât make a million. Travis ainât built like that. Travis ainât chasing a dollar. Travis is chasing greatness. Travis and his family donât get down like that. They never came to us in search of the bag. Theyâre not built like that. This kid wants to be great. He wants my hands on him. He wants me to mold him. He wants me to be his navigational system through life. He wants to be that dude.â
I am glad that Sanders and Fisher were so quick to come out and not only defend their programs, but to also defend the players they recently recruited. I wish Saban would stop trying to be so self-righteous to make it seem like there isnât illegal activity happening at a lot of the top programs. Everyone who is a sports fan is aware that under-the-table activity happens all the time. Â
Letâs see if anything else comes of this.