http://www.gq.com/story/coach-nick-saban-alabama-maniac
http://www.gq.com/story/coach-nick-saban-alabama-maniac
"And yet something about Nick Saban bothers a lot of people. The rap is that he's grandiose and unfeeling, a robot set on "win," that he's a hired gun with no particular loyalty to any team or institution. His detractors have their case file. In Miami he once stepped over a convulsing player after practice without acknowledging his presence. Saban was also captured on film screaming at a 300-pound lineman until the poor guy walked away weeping. Saban then enraged Dolphins fans when he left for Alabama after saying he wouldn't. In the college ranks, he's been accused of flouting the rules limiting scholarship numbers by encouraging injured players to leave the team. In 2007, he likened a loss to 9/11. The iconic images of Nick Saban after his championship wins are not of a jubilant victor lifting a crystal football over his head but of a coach giving the death stare to players who dared to douse him with Gatorade.
In SEC country, Saban bashing has become a particularly popular pastime. In January, Vanderbilt head coach James Franklin referred to Saban as "Nicky Satan" in front of a group of high school kids. In May, one of Saban's own former assistants, Tim Davis, now an offensive-line coach at Florida, called Saban "the devil himself" at a booster meeting. In an indication of the sort of loathing Saban inspires, one
Orlando Sentinel writer penned a column taking Davis to task not for calling Saban the devil but for later apologizing for it."