Current:Home > StocksNick Saban refusing to release Alabama depth chart speaks to generational gap -MoneyTrend
Nick Saban refusing to release Alabama depth chart speaks to generational gap
View
Date:2025-04-17 13:08:23
For the first time in 17 years on Monday, Nick Saban didn't provide media with an official depth chart ahead of an Alabama football season because the public dissemination of it puts backup players too much in their feelings. That might be a flippant way of saying it, but it pretty much captures the coach's explanation. And as explanations go, there's only one that makes sense for why Saban finds it necessary to withhold this somehow controversial document: a widening generational gap that's saddening to witness.
Let's be clear on three things:
1) Inside the Crimson Tide locker room, players know where they stand for playing time. Nothing written on this top-secret piece of paper will come as a complete surprise to any of them.
2) On Saturday, the depth chart will reveal itself in real time when the Crimson Tide opens the season against Middle Tennessee. By the end of the first quarter it will be a finished build, likely complete with specialists and top substitutes, and put on public blast just the same as it would have on Monday.
3) Saban keeps a finger on the pulse of his players more intuitively than just about any coach out there. And for the previous 16 years, he didn't think withholding a depth chart was necessary. Now he does. Something's changed, and it's not the coach.
All that begets a natural line of questioning: why bother sitting on the depth chart until it can't be sat on any longer, and why now? Why would some players react poorly to the public release of something they're already familiar with, and that will be on full display in the stadium in five days anyway?
BOWL PROJECTIONS: Forecasting the playoff field and entire postseason
TOP TRADITIONS: The best college football game day experiences
Saban cited "distractions," a pretty generic term, leaving us all to guess what those distractions might be. Social media, and the youngest generation's very obvious addiction to it, is mine. And if you think football locker rooms are insulated from its effects, think again. Even pro locker rooms aren't immune. Earlier this week, Kelly Stafford, the wife of Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford, said on her podcast that her husband, who is only 35 himself, can barely connect with young teammates anymore.
"They get out of practice and meetings during training camp, and they go straight to their phones," she said. "No one looks up from their phones. Matthew's like, 'I don't know ... am I the dad? Do I take their phones? What do I do here?'"
To be sure, social media's insidious grip on too many kids who engage with it doesn't suddenly let go because one goes off to college, or plays college football. It trains people to care too much about what others think. And it's a fine platform for hate and insults, anonymous or otherwise, that have a way of entering headspace and messing with the wiring. A classic example of what Saban would call a distraction.
HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers from college football's Week 0
CONFERENCE PREVIEWS: Big Ten | SEC | Big 12 | ACC | Pac-12
It would be easy enough to point out that mentally tough players don't have this issue, and the rest might be in need of a real-world kick in the butt. While that might be true, it's just as true that those of us who didn't grow up with a phone glued to our hand can't possibly comprehend what it's like to be 18 in 2023. And if it's hard for a 52-year-old like myself to comprehend, you can bet Saban, at 71, has wrestled with understanding it, too.
But in the end, he's concluded this about releasing a depth chart:
"It creates a lot of guys thinking that, well, this guy won the job now and I'm not going to play or whatever," Saban said. "And quite frankly, we don't need that."
Alabama's initial depth chart had always been softened by the word "or", listed between two players' names, to indicate co-starters at multiple positions, and even co-backups. Perhaps that was done as much to assuage angst as it was to define platoons.
On Saturday, however, only 11 can take the field on each side.
No ors.
And for at least a few hours, no phones.
veryGood! (7998)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- U.S. sending 1,500 active-duty troops to southern border amid migration spike
- A hacker bought a voting machine on eBay. Michigan officials are now investigating
- A hacker bought a voting machine on eBay. Michigan officials are now investigating
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Pictures show King Charles coronation rehearsal that gave eager royals fans a sneak preview
- The Bold Type's Katie Stevens Gives Birth, Welcomes First Baby With Husband Paul DiGiovanni
- A former CIA engineer is convicted in a massive theft of secrets released by WikiLeaks
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- How to deal with online harassment — and protect yourself from future attacks
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- A cyberattack hits the Los Angeles School District, raising alarm across the country
- Prince William and Kate visit a London pub amid preparations for King Charles' coronation
- Drones over Kremlin obviously came from inside Russia, officials say, as Wagner announces Bakhmut withdrawal
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Pictures show King Charles coronation rehearsal that gave eager royals fans a sneak preview
- Attention, #BookTok: Here's the Correct Way to Pronounce Jodi Picoult's Name
- TikTok says it's putting new limits on Chinese workers' access to U.S. user data
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
The U.S. made a breakthrough battery discovery — then gave the technology to China
Stylist Karla Welch Reveals the Game-Changing Lesson She Learned From Justin Bieber
Feuding drug cartels block roads near U.S. border as gunmen force children off school bus
What to watch: O Jolie night
Online pricing algorithms are gaming the system, and could mean you pay more
Lance Reddick Touched on Emotional Stakes of John Wick: Chapter 4 in Final E! News Interview
The explosion at Northeastern University may have been staged, officials say