Current:Home > MyKalen DeBoer is a consummate ball coach. But biggest unknown for Alabama: Can he recruit? -Keystone Wealth Vision
Kalen DeBoer is a consummate ball coach. But biggest unknown for Alabama: Can he recruit?
Poinbank Exchange View
Date:2025-04-11 00:29:39
In choosing Washington’s Kalen DeBoer to replace the greatest college football coach of all time, Alabama athletics director Greg Byrne has opted for safe and logical over high risk/high reward.
Fresh off leading the Huskies to the national title game, DeBoer is both a big-enough name to satiate Alabama’s fan base and a consummate ball coach whose record suggests he translates to every level.
67-3 at NAIA-level Sioux Falls.
9-3 in his only non-COVID season at Fresno State.
25-3 at Washington.
If the theory is that winners win, Alabama just hired one of the only guys out there who won at about the same clip as Nick Saban.
But DeBoer isn’t Saban. And for all the reasons he makes sense in this job, there’s one that makes this hire as terrifying as it is exciting.
Recruiting.
Can he do it? Does he even like it?
Let me offer some advice to Coach DeBoer: You better learn the lay of the land in the Southeastern Conference — and fast. Because at the place you now work, it’s going to take a lot more than your playbook to survive.
The secret of Saban’s success at Alabama wasn’t really a secret. As told in Monte Burke’s book “Saban: The Making of a Coach,” Saban once asked then-athletics director Mal Moore if he thought Alabama had just hired the best coach in college football. When Moore responded that he did, Saban famously shot back: “Well, you didn't — I'm nothing without my players. But you did just hire a helluva recruiter."
Is DeBoer a “helluva recruiter?” We don't know. He's never had a job in Div. I football long enough for anyone to be able to tell. Even at Washington, the players who mattered were mostly there already when he got the job in 2022. Even Michael Penix, the excellent quarterback who made it all go, transferred there because of a prior relationship with DeBoer.
MORE:Who is Kalen DeBoer, Nick Saban's probable successor at Alabama?
To put it mildly, he's never done the kind of recruiting it takes to navigate the shark-infested waters of the South. The closest place to SEC territory DeBoer has ever worked is Southern Illinois. Does he even know you aren't supposed to put sugar in your grits?
This isn’t merely going to be culture shock for DeBoer; it’s going to be a jolt the size of Tuscaloosa’s electrical grid. Can he handle it?
You don’t need to be an SEC guy to win in the SEC. Byrne made that bet once before when he plucked Nate Oats out of Buffalo to be his basketball coach. Oats, a former Michigan high school coach, had never worked anywhere close to the South. He’s done pretty well for himself with a couple of SEC championships and trips to the Sweet 16.
But even that example doesn’t quite capture the magnitude of what DeBoer is walking into. If you want to win national championships, you have to regularly beat Georgia and LSU for players, not to mention Auburn, Ole Miss, Tennessee, Florida, Texas A&M and the rest.
OPINION:We'll never see Nick Saban's kind again
The easy response to that is, “OK, but it’s Alabama. They’ll get players.” Maybe that’s true.
But Saban recruiting to Alabama was a different animal. His track record was about getting guys to the NFL. His aura was unmatched. Without him, Alabama looks a lot more like everybody else it’s competing against for those recruits — and that's not going to be easy in the name, image and likeness era.
To that end, DeBoer and Alabama’s administration are going to have a lot of work to do. In talking to a few people since Saban announced his retirement, it became clear that Alabama’s NIL program was not set up to just go out and buy a bunch of players.
Saban adjusted and adapted to the NIL era, but only to a degree. His NIL philosophy was built more around ensuring all of his players had a relatively equal baseline and anything else above that number was secured individually. Players accepted that “Saban discount” because they wanted to go to Alabama and play for him.
That will not happen under DeBoer, and Alabama will have a lot of work to do getting its NIL program on equal footing with its competition and convincing donors that things are going to be different under a new coach. You’re not going to be able to pick and choose who you want to come to Alabama because the lure of the coach is unmatched. Recruits and transfers will need to be convinced, and the competition has never been this strong.
It’s going to be a very different world -- especially for a guy who was a relatively anonymous offensive coordinator at Indiana a mere four years ago.
Becoming the coach at Alabama and the guy who followed Nick Saban is not just a change of jobs, it’s a new life. He will never walk out of his house without people knowing who he is. Everything he does on and off the field, practically every minute of his day, will be scrutinized to a degree that will surely make him uncomfortable. And if he loses some games, it will be a miserable existence — Alabama’s fan base will make sure of that.
But it’s the job DeBoer wanted. Hopefully he knows what he's getting into.
The same can be said of Alabama. To fulfill the expectations that will now be placed on DeBoer, you have to be an excellent coach and recruiter. We know he can do the first part. The second will be a mystery for everyone.
veryGood! (67)
Related
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Sober October? Sales spike shows non-alcoholic beer, wine are on the drink menu year-round
- From 'No Hard Feelings' to 'Old Dads,' here are 15 movies you need to stream right now
- Iranian teen injured on Tehran Metro while not wearing a headscarf has died, state media says
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Pregnant Kailyn Lowry Reveals She Was Considering This Kardashian-Jenner Baby Name
- About 30 children were taken hostage by Hamas militants. Their families wait in agony
- How FBoy Island Proved to Be the Real Paradise For Former Bachelorette Katie Thurston
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- China’s chief epidemiologist Wu Zunyou who helped drive the anti-COVID fight dies at age 60
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- At least 32 people were killed in a multi-vehicle pileup on a highway in Egypt, authorities say
- Seeing no military answer to Israel-Palestinian tensions, the EU plans for a more peaceful future
- The economy surged 4.9% in the third quarter. But is a recession still looming?
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Rep. George Santos pleads not guilty to fraud charges, trial set for September 2024
- Desperate Acapulco residents demand government aid days after Hurricane Otis
- NASA works to recover 4.5-billion-year-old asteroid sample from seven-year mission
Recommendation
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Captured: 1 of 4 inmates who escaped Georgia jail through cut fence arrested 50 miles away
Israel resists U.N.'s calls for ceasefire as Hamas says Gaza death toll is soaring
Massachusetts man's house cleaner finds his $1 million missing lottery ticket
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
HBO's 'The Gilded Age' is smarter (and much sexier) in glittery Season 2
3 teens were shot and wounded outside a west Baltimore high school as students were arriving
Belarus leader asks Hungary’s Orban to visit and seeks a dialogue with EU amid country’s isolation