
Kalen DeBoer is looking to escape Nick Saban's shadow and lead Tide back to playoffs in 2nd season
Similarly, one year of missing the College Football Playoff has second-year coach Kalen DeBoer feeling the pressure to restore the Crimson Tide's status as one of the nation's top teams in 2025.
When asked Wednesday at the Southeastern Conference media days if a 9-4 finish in his 2024 debut season met the Alabama standard, DeBoer said: 'I mean, if you internally ask us, no. We fell short of making the playoffs. It's as simple as that, right? Giving yourself a chance to go compete for a championship.'
DeBoer's task is especially difficult because he's the coach who followed Nick Saban, who led Alabama to its last national championship in 2020. It was Alabama's sixth championship under Saban since 2009.
Junior offensive tackle Kadyn Proctor said Wednesday the Crimson Tide players have endured a painful wait to reach the standard set by Saban.
'For the whole team honestly we obviously know that we haven't won a championship in a long time,' Proctor said. 'And that's everybody's goal at the end of the season.'
Included in Alabama's 9-4 season under DeBoer was a 5-3 SEC mark that included road losses at Vanderbilt, Tennessee and Oklahoma. Alabama was No. 17 in the final AP Top 25 following a 19-13 loss to Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl in Tampa, Florida.
DeBoer, who coached the 2023 Washington team to the national championship game, says added familiarity and continuity on his staff are reasons to expect improvement.
Defensive lineman Tim Keenan said another reason the Crimson Tide will be better is players believe in DeBoer. Keenan hinted the shadow of Saban followed DeBoer in 2024.
'It's definitely changed," Keenan said. 'You definitely see guys definitely bought in. If they're not here, no knock to them, but everyone who is here now, they believe in the system. They believe in Coach DeBoer.'
Ryan Grubb, who worked on DeBoer's staff at Washington, was hired as Alabama's offensive coordinator after one season with the Seattle Seahawks.
Keenan said he respects DeBoer for having the confidence to follow Saban.
'I know a lot of people say they want to do that, but they ain't got the courage enough to do it,' Keenan said. "So I'm gonna go hard for my coach, always.
'Just, you know it's Coach Saban, like the greatest coach of all time. The GOAT. You know, greatest of all time. So to take that responsibility, saying. 'I'm going to take over for him now.' ... I believe in him. And also, I know that God was going to put the right person in the right place at the right time, and he's in the right place at the right time.'
DeBoer said Alabama 'fell short' last season.
'We've got to be better in the big moments,' DeBoer said. "We lost some close games last year. We had chances maybe not even in the fourth quarter, but early in the game to separate ourselves or make a play here or there. Whether it was the belief or whether it was the confidence, a lot of that just comes through repetitions. We really had a great offseason understanding where we fell short, why we fell short. Not just the what and the how but the why.
'I'm excited about our guys taking those next steps, understanding when we get in those moments this year, those critical times, how to come through and make the play that's necessary to go win football games.'

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I got a chance to talk to Cignetti for a story that will come closer to the season (teaser!) about this, and one of his most fundamental approaches to offense was (as he described it), to "build around the quarterback." Let their strengths guide the way they're used. Don't make the player come to the system. Build the system to be able to accommodate the player. That's obviously easier said than done, and probably something plenty of coaches would love to do in theory. But Cignetti's track record and virtually every level of football has now proven it, and I think it's fair to give him benefit of the doubt again, especially with a 3,000-yard passer with some pretty obvious physical gifts and a Power Four track record. Niziolek: I think it speaks just as much to the work Cignetti and his offensive staff of identifying the quarterbacks they project will work in their system. 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It seems like the staff still sees him learning to trust that protection, but if you overlay his production plus potential onto these skill groups, and then give him more time/better protection, that's where I think the optimism really starts. Say it ain't so: Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, top 2026 NFL Draft prospect, a 'wide receiver's dream' Ferguson: Is his relationship with his brother overplayed or properly played? As much as nobody will want to admit it, does Fernando's play translate into what's next for Alberto, whether at IU or elsewhere? Niziolek: I think their relationship certainly played at least a small role in Fernando landing up in Bloomington. Alberto vouched for the staff, and offered his brother insight into the offense from a trusted source. It worked the other way as well since Cignetti and his staff was more familiar with Fernando and already had a relationship with the family. Beyond that, I'm not sure how much his play will impact Alberto's future. 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Another CFP push is going to require more than just good quarterback play but it's reasonable, I think, to believe Mendoza can deliver performances strong enough to put Indiana in that position again. Niziolek: I think 3,000 yards passing and 20 touchdowns are reasonable benchmarks for Mendoza given the fact that IU will face a tougher schedule with some really challenging road games. While it wouldn't break any records, there are only three other quarterbacks in program history who reached both milestones in the same season. It all comes down to wins and losses though, and that's harder to project. He has a 3-6 record in one-possession games (2-4 last year) and none of the victories were against teams with winning records. That's not all on him since Cal obviously had plenty of problems, but he's got to prove he can come through in big moments and that's mainly how fans will judge whether not he had a successful season.