NIL and the transfer portal have changed the game, but there is still a lot that works even if more reinvention is coming.
On "The Pat McAfee Show," legendary coach Nick Saban criticized the current state of college football regarding the lack of name, image, and likeness rules. Teams spend millions on NIL like the Ohio State Buckeyes,
Monday's title game between the No. 8 seed Ohio State Buckeyes and No. 7 seed Notre Dame Fighting Irish in Atlanta marks not only the final game of the season but the conclusion of the first-ever 12-team College Football Playoff.
In his rookie season, Nick Saban has safely circumvented the garbage pile of failed TV sports analysts once ticketed for stardom.
Former Alabama coach Nick Saban explains how Ohio State should get Jeremiah Smith involved against Notre Dame.
Sure, Alabama was able to dominate college football during Nick Saban's prime from playing by the rules. I don’t doubt Nick Saban was ethical during the peak of his coaching career at Alabama. He doesn’t seem like the type to pass money back and forth in brown paper bags to sway a player to choose Tuscaloosa over anywhere else.
J.D. Pickell of On3 Sports and host of "The Hard Count" podcast offered a list of college football's top 10 coaches Wednesday morning, and it has room for
Hurts’ winning percentage as a starter in the NFL is 68.9. Compare that to Dan Marino, who is considered by many to be the NFL’s greatest passer of all time and the best player never to win a Super Bowl. As a starter, Marino won 61.3 percent of his games and played in one Super Bowl.
In the hours preceding Ohio State's eventual national championship victory, it was hard not to be transfixed watching a 6-foot-1 freshman quarterback throw the ball. Spend a minute watching Julian Sayin throw the ball and you understand why he was ranked the No.
Nick Taylor continues to thrive when it's time for extra golf. Taylor tapped in a birdie putt from 2 feet, 9 inches on the second playoff hole at the Waialae Country Club on Sunday to win the Sony ...
Even before trading his coaching whistle for a microphone on ESPN’s College GameDay, Nick Saban was already considered “the G.O.A.T.” — the greatest of all-time — by many college football fans, and not just those located in Tuscaloosa.
Earlier this month, the College Football Hall of Fame announced it will be inducting Nick Saban into its ranks later this year. During an appearance on The Pivot Podcast, the former Alabama head coach reflected on his journey to becoming a legend.