Getting Your A$$ Chewed Out By Nick Saban Sounds BAD | Bussin’ With The Boys
Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe’s viral motto became the rallying cry for the Crimson Tide, and the team is now using it as the basis for a new documentary.
Alabama announced on Monday that it will premiere its “LANK” documentary this Friday, based on Milroe’s “Let A Naysayer Know” saying.
Former head coach Nick Saban will be among those featured in the documentary. Saban stepped down from his position at the end of last season following 17 years at the helm and six national championships.
Alabama used the motto as motivation to bounce back from an early loss to Texas last season and earn a spot in the College Football Playoff after beating Georgia in the SEC Championship Game. Milroe also launched NIL-branded apparel with the phrase.
No caked is baking at the Mal M. Moore Athletic Facility this August.
Of course, Nick Saban isn’t the coach anymore to make that analogy like he did a year ago when Alabama football had a quarterback competition brewing. But there also is no starting quarterback competition. That cake was baked a long time ago.
Jalen Milroe is the starting quarterback, and any chance new coach Kalen DeBoer has had to say otherwise, he has always pointed to Milroe being the top guy at the position and the passer getting the reps with the first team.
And it sounds like Milroe has not only gotten those reps but also made the most of them. On Sunday, DeBoer praised Milroe for the weekend he had. The coach also said his quarterback threw the deep ball Sunday as well as he’d seen him throw it.
“I thought yesterday and today, took the best steps I’ve seen since I’ve been here,” DeBoer said on Sunday. “The way he’s intentional about coming out. Even not just what you say, but how you do things. What your body language is and he gets that. That’s important, but he’s actually just really leading that way and then it leads to really him playing well and the other guys following suit.”
AL.com spent Wednesday morning watching Milroe and the quarterbacks work during the media viewing period that lasted about 25 minutes. Here’s what we noticed.
Alabama football observations: Quarterbacks
- The Crimson Tide held practice inside the Hank Crisp Indoor Facility on Wednesday during the viewing period.
- No drills during the media viewing period provided an opportunity to see offense vs. defense. So the quarterback drills we witnessed primarily included working against air or offensive players standing in for defensive players.
- The pecking order through drills always started with Milroe. Then Ty Simpson always went next. For the third quarterback, it depended on the drill. In full offense walk throughs, Dylan Lonergan and Austin Mack split reps with the third offense. Then in a handoff drill, the order went Milroe, Simpson, Mack, Lonergan then walk-on Cade Carruth. That order continued in a passing drill where quarterbacks threw to tight ends.
- Mack is literally head and shoulders above the rest of the quarterbacks. His height stands out immediately when looking at the group as a tall quarterback. He’s listed at 6-6, four inches taller than Milroe, who’s certainly not a short quarterback.
- It’s clear Milroe and Simpson have a leg up on the other quarterbacks in the room. Simpson seems to be the second option behind Milroe, which makes sense as that was the case a season ago after the South Florida game.
- The first drill during the viewing period was an interesting one. A quarterback had to throw over/between the four dummies as the pass catcher (either a running back, tight end or receiver) ran across the middle, behind the dummies. On the other side, a staffer with a padded arm tried to knock the ball out. Meanwhile, another staffer rolled a blue exercise ball toward the recipient of the pass.