Nick Saban’s rumors increase during the media days of the SEC


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The old adage goes: where there is smoke, there is fire. And the metaphorical smoke was scored during the first day of the media days of the SEC on Monday around the Legend of Nick Saban university football.

Rumors about Saban returned to the sport they left more than a year ago.

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Alabama coach Nick Saban discusses with an arbitrator after a call from the fourth quarter against Arkansas. (Robert Sutton/USA Network Network through Imagn Images)

The former Alabama Crimson Tide Marshal Tide, Greg Mcelroy, brought some of the rumors to the atmosphere during an interview on the “Mac and Cube” radio program in Birmingham.

“A well -known person for whom I have a lot of respect and I have spent a lot of time and really admire, they seem to think that Nick Saban has not finished training,” Mcelroy said. “It is quite inflexible that he believes that Nick Saban will train again.”

Mcelroy said he believed, personally, Saban had ended during an ESPN appearance.

“I would be surprised (if he came back) … there are people connected to the world of sport who think it’s not over. Now, he interprets that as you do.

Alabama coach, Nick Saban, reacts in the fourth quarter at the Bryant-Denny stadium on Saturday, September 11, 2010. (Robert Sutton/The Tuscaloosa News)

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The chief coach of Ole Miss Rebels, Lane Kiffin, said she believed that Saban would return to the margin, either in university football or in professionals.

“He won’t need him to hire it,” Kiffin said, through Ledger Clarion. “I don’t think it’s over. I think it’s going back. Whether university or NFL, I think it will come back.”

The chief coach of the LSU Tigers, Brina Kelly, seemed to be all to Saban returning to the sport.

“It would be better for university football if Nick Saban is training,” he said, through ON3 Sports. “Period. There is no one better to develop players and certainly build championship programs.”

Saban left Alabama after several national championships. He suggested that the advent of the name, image and likeness and anarchy of the transfer portal were the reasons why he moved away from sport.

Nick Saban, from Alabama Crimson Tide, reacts before a game against Texas Longhorns at the Bryant-Denny stadium on September 9, 2023 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

It is not clear if they knew the idea of a return.

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