What gives me pause about DeBoer is that even with all of the talent on the team (which, to his credit, DoBoer assembled), Alabama is a few plays away from only a 7 to 8-win season in year two, which would be a continued regression from the midway point of year one.
Alabama fans loved to take the opposite side of this argument when it was the last coach.
"We're just two plays from being undefeated."
- 2022 Alabama fans
Not one of them wanted to say, "We were one play - the safety or the missed field goal or a missed field goal by us - from losing to Texas and six feet from losing to Texas A/M." We were also ONE PLAY from losing to Ole Miss and the Land Sharks had first and ten at our 14-yard-line with 2:23 to play down by six.
We were - in the most literal sense possible - three plays from our 10-2 being 7-5 despite having some legend coaching on the sidelines. But nobody ever wants to say it that way.
I'm not disputing there are some troubling things. Some of it are the growing pains any coach has when he takes over and especially when he succeeds a legend. Some of it is related to the paydays for players now and the portal. Some of it are from DeBoer's personal deficiencies that one hopes age and experience improve.
DeBoer is 51 right now. When Nick Saban was 51 years old, his 2002 team was regressing from 2001 SEC champions to "we're only 8-5 because of the Bluegrass Miracle" and a 31-0 clobbering at the hands of Alabama. He was in his 8th year at a MAJOR program and had coached in the NFL. DeBoer is in his FOURTH year at a major program and never set foot in the NFL. And 2002 Saban didn't have to contend with NIL or the portal, and he had Alabama and Kentucky on probation, Mississippi State headed to probation, and Auburn in enough disarray that Jetgate was right around the corner.
I'm not for one second suggesting DeBoer is the next Nick Saban, but he does seem to have learned quick corrections from last year. What hangs over this year was the total lack of preparedness for Florida State. Take that one loss away from Alabama, and the entire perception of how good we are or our worthiness for the playoff is changed dramatically.
He's not Saban, no.
But he's not:
- Mike DuBose, who would have stood there clapping after a stupid penalty
- Mike Shula, who would insist after the game that we'd turned the corner
- Dennis Franchione, who would have spoken like Mr Rogers and left town like Oscar Pistorious
Either.