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Steve Sarkisian responds to Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark’s remarks about Texas-Texas Tech game – Burnt Orange Nation

  1. Steve Sarkisian responds to Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark’s remarks about Texas-Texas Tech game Burnt Orange Nation
  2. Steve Sarkisian surprised by Brett Yormark’s jab at Texas – ESPN ESPN
  3. Texas’ Steve Sarkisian fires back at Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark as program prepares to depart for SEC CBS Sports
  4. Full Press Conference | UT Coach Sarkisian says Yormark likely won’t get holiday invite CBS Austin
  5. Steve Sarkisian responds to Brett Yormark rooting against Texas: ‘Embrace the hate’ The Athletic
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Texas Longhorns coach Steve Sarkisian says Alabama’s Nick Saban ‘saved my career’

AUSTIN, Texas — Steve Sarkisian hasn’t forgotten, and he won’t forget.

There’s no way he could, especially not this week with Nick Saban and the No. 1 Crimson Tide coming to town.

To most in the college football world, Saban is the guy who has led Alabama to a staggering six national championships, the guy who has transcended college football in myriad different ways and the guy who has built a dynasty the likes of which the sport may not see again any time soon.

But for Sarkisian, Saban is, simply, the guy who “saved my career.”

As big a game as it will be for Texas when Alabama visits DKR-Texas Memorial Stadium on Saturday — and as big a game as it is for Sarkisian to show that the Longhorns are on the right trajectory after suffering through a losing season in his first year at the helm — he says he will forever be indebted to his old boss.

“I’ve said this numerous times, but I would not be the head coach at Texas if it weren’t for Nick Saban,” Sarkisian told ESPN. “He gave me a chance when I had a hard time getting an interview, never mind a job. There were days that I thought, ‘Man, I’m never going to be a head coach again. I’m never going to be an offensive coordinator again. I’m never going to get another job.’

“But Coach Saban took a chance on me when I needed somebody to believe in me again.”

Sarkisian’s issues with alcohol have been well chronicled and led to his firing at USC five games into the 2015 season when then-athletic director Pat Haden said Sarkisian’s “conduct did not meet USC’s standards” and that Sarkisian was “not healthy.” Sarkisian has talked openly about his alcoholism and says he hasn’t held anything back from his players at Texas.

“I’m really transparent with my players. I’m really open. I’m really honest,” Sarkisian said. “I share my story about where I was in my career at 33 or 34 years old as head coach at the University of Washington, then being fired publicly on national television at USC and then going to a treatment facility for 30 days.”

Sarkisian needed a chance to rebuild his career, and there was no better place to do that than at Alabama under Saban, who has helped to resurrect more than a few coaches’ prospects.

“Sark is the one who did the work,” Saban told ESPN. “We supported him and made sure there were the right resources and people in place to help him, as we have with many others. But, listen, he saved his own career by doing a great job for us and rehabbing himself professionally, and I’m not just talking about personally, but professionally in a really, really positive way that impacted our program greatly and helped us be successful here.”

Saban actually took two chances on Sarkisian, whose Longhorns opened the season with a 52-10 victory over Louisiana-Monroe. The first came when Saban hired Sarkisian as an offensive analyst just before the start of the 2016 season, which was a complete surprise to Sarkisian. In fact, he had already committed to being a part of Fox’s broadcast team that season and had no plans (or opportunities) to coach.

He was on Alabama’s campus that summer as part of his own mini-tour where he spent time with the Jacksonville Jaguars, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Atlanta Falcons on the NFL side and Florida and Alabama on the college side.

Tuscaloosa just happened to be his final stop.

“I was spending three to five days at every spot, just trying to tap into where my friends were coaching and try to stay connected to the game,” Sarkisian said. “I’d never had an August where I wasn’t in training camp.” One of the main reasons he went to Alabama at all was to reconnect with old pal Lane Kiffin, the Tide’s offensive coordinator. They were together at USC as co-offensive coordinators under Pete Carroll and have remained close.

During Sarkisian’s visit to Alabama, Saban had Sarkisian watching tape and drawing up plays on the whiteboard.

“Every day, it was like, ‘Watch this, watch that and tell me what you think of this, what you think of that,'” Sarkisian recounted. “Coach Saban doesn’t miss anything. He’s always picking your brain.”

Ultimately, Sarkisian said it was Kiffin who was “kind of the champion behind a lot of it” and tossed out the idea of joining Alabama’s staff as an analyst. Sure enough, Saban offered him a position, but Sarkisian was unsure if he wanted to take it.

“I went back and forth and back and forth and agreed to take the job at Alabama, and it’s one of the best decisions I’ve ever made,” Sarkisian said.

Little did he know that he would be calling plays in the national championship game later that season after Saban parted ways with Kiffin following a 24-7 win over Washington in the College Football Playoff semifinals. Kiffin had planned to stay on for the championship game after agreeing to take the Florida Atlantic head job, but Saban had other ideas after seeing the Tide struggle on offense in the win over the Huskies.

“Definitely one of the more unique experiences of my career,” Sarkisian said of the 35-31 national championship game loss to Clemson.

Sarkisian had already been hired as Kiffin’s successor, but his first stint as Alabama’s offensive coordinator lasted less than two months. He left Feb. 7 to be the Falcons’ offensive coordinator, replacing Kyle Shanahan, who was named the San Francisco 49ers’ head coach. But after two years with Atlanta, Sarkisian was fired as part of a shakeup on the Falcons’ staff.

Saban admittedly wasn’t pleased Sarkisian bolted so quickly, but took a second chance on him after Mike Locksley left to take the Maryland head-coaching job following the 2018 season and then Dan Enos left abruptly to be Miami’s offensive coordinator. Sarkisian was all set to stay in the NFL and take a job as the Arizona Cardinals’ offensive coordinator when Saban called again.

“In my mind, I was staying in the NFL, but had to take a step back and look at myself and say, ‘You know what? Here’s a man that offered me a job when no one even wanted to interview me,'” Sarkisian said. “‘Here’s a man that entrusted me to call a national championship game when I had been an analyst all year long. Here’s a man that hired me as offensive coordinator and I left a few months later … and he’s still calling me to come back?’

“I felt like at that time I owed him. He extended me an olive branch, and I don’t know how much I really appreciated that and how much I acknowledged that.”

Under Sarkisian’s tutelage, Alabama’s offense put up record-setting numbers. The Tide averaged 47.2 points per game in 2019, second only to national champion LSU.

After that season, Sarkisian turned down head-coaching opportunities at Colorado and Mississippi State to stay at Alabama.

“I thought to myself, ‘You know, I think there’s a better job out there for me, and I’ve got unfinished business,'” Sarkisian said. “We didn’t win a national championship. We were good enough. We were talented enough. I didn’t do a good enough job. It was the right thing for me, for the program and for Coach Saban to stay another year.”

Sarkisian became an even hotter commodity in 2020 as the Crimson Tide rolled through the season unbeaten on their way to a national championship, and did so while playing an all-SEC schedule during the COVID-impacted regular season. The Tide again finished second nationally in scoring offense (48.5 points per game) with first-year full-time quarterback Mac Jones playing his way into being an NFL first-round draft pick and receiver DeVonta Smith winning the Heisman Trophy. They scored more than 40 points in 10 straight games.

As the College Football Playoff approached, Sarkisian turned down an opportunity to interview for the Auburn head-coaching job.

“There were a couple of opportunities, but they weren’t the right ones for me,” Sarkisian said. “But then Texas came … very late.”

And very quickly.

Texas announced Sarkisian’s hiring Jan. 2, 2021, about five hours after announcing that Tom Herman was out as coach.

“Then, it felt right,” Sarkisian said. “We were going to play for a national title, and I felt like I fulfilled what I owed to Coach Saban. Plus, it was Texas.”

Saban’s Alabama program has been something of a haven for coaches looking for second chances, whether they were fired at their previous stops for not winning enough or for other reasons. Saban said the ones who have received second chances all had one thing in common.

They were committed to helping themselves.

“I’ve given several people chances, and they’ve all done really, really well, whether it was Lane, who had lots of baggage, or Mike Locksley, who had a negative past, and then Sark,” Saban said. “I think people learn a lot sometimes when things go badly, and it makes them aware that there are some changes that need to be made.

“It wasn’t because I told them. They did it themselves, did a great job here and earned their opportunities.”

Texas will have to earn its way back to national relevance after going 12 straight years without as much as a conference championship. The Longhorns have had almost as many head coaches (four) as they’ve had winning seasons (six) over the last decade. Sarkisian knows what the pinnacle of college football looks like. He’s seen it up close.

“It’s been Alabama for the last decade and a half,” Sarkisian said. “And at the end of day, we should also be one of those teams at the pinnacle, and that’s what we’re striving to do.”

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Texas football coach Steve Sarkisian not concerned whether Alabama showdown defines Longhorns program

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian knows the college football world is focused on the Longhorns facing No. 1 Alabama on Saturday, with two of the sport’s biggest brand names facing off for just the 10th time in history.

But Sarkisian also is cautioning his team not to get too distracted by all the attention.

The Longhorns are 19-point underdogs at Caesars Sportsbook and are likely to close with their longest odds to win at home since the 1978 FBS/FCS split, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

Still, it’s a huge opportunity to see how Sarkisian’s progress stacks up against his old boss Nick Saban.

“It’s one game, you know?” Sarkisian said Monday. “It’s a chance for us to do what we love to do. I think one of the biggest mistakes people make is [thinking] this is going to be the game that’s going to define our program.

“It might, it might not. I’m not that concerned about it. I’m more concerned about just the way we play the game.”

Sarkisian said that his goal is to play for a Big 12 championship. While the Crimson Tide will be a future SEC opponent, Saturday’s matchup is a nonconference game for now, and Sarkisian said he’s focused on what he can control.

“All along, my goal is to be in Dallas on December 3,” he said. “This game has no impact on that. … I want to play really well. I want to make sure that our guys play our style of football, our brand of football and do it the way I know we’re capable of doing it.”

Sarkisian, who spent three seasons as an assistant at Alabama, was asked how Saturday’s game against Saban compares to facing another former boss in Pete Carroll in 2009, when Sarkisian’s Washington team upset then-No. 3 USC 16-13.

“Very similar scenario,” Sarkisian said. “I worked for Pete Carroll for seven years and had a great respect for what he did and what we were able to do in our time there. I think it was buying into the idea of what the game plan was, and where we needed to be from a psyche standpoint.”

Sarkisian knows the psyche he needs against a dominant Alabama program, and laughed remembering how intense working for Saban was, although he recalled Lane Kiffin getting the brunt of it.

“Lane used to get it pretty good. I don’t mind saying that,” Sarkisian laughed. “Lane’s been a good friend of mine. There’s a couple I vividly remember. I was kind of in the press box looking down and there was a lot of [wild gestures] going on.

“I got it too. I think that shaped us. But part of it is, if [Saban] is yelling at you, you probably didn’t reach an expectation or a standard of what he was expecting of you. And if you’re a guy like me, that’s what drives you ultimately.”

Texas will be facing Alabama for the first time since the 2010 national championship game after the 2009 season. This will be their first regular-season matchup since 1922, and Texas is 7-1-1 all-time against the Tide, which is the best winning percentage (.833) among teams that have played them at least five times.

Sarkisian said he wasn’t sure where he was during that 2010 championship game, but he echoed a frequent refrain from Longhorn fans — one that will be analyzed quite a bit this week: what might have been if former Texas quarterback Colt McCoy had not been hurt on the fifth snap of a 37-21 loss.

“I think we all wish, if Colt was in the game, what would have happened?” he said.

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College football first-year coach grades: Steve Sarkisian fails at Texas, Josh Heupel impresses at Tennessee

The 2021 college football season is almost in the books, which means it’s time to hand out grades for all of the first-year head coaches. Last offseason’s coaching carousel provided us plenty of intrigue heading into this season, including Steve Sarkisian’s move to Texas, Bryan Harsin’s decision to leave Boise State for Auburn and Josh Heupel’s jump up from UCF to Tennessee.

The Group of Five level had plenty of turnover as well, including the return of Butch Jones to the head coaching ranks at Arkansas State and Blake Anderson’s journey from Arkansas State to Utah State. 

There were 18 coaching changes overall that took place from mid-October all the way through the end of spring. Let’s break all of them down and hand out some grades. 

Several first-year coaches have bowl games ahead of them, which could send them into the offseason with momentum or stuck in neutral. For all of their sakes, a normal offseason with time to develop their rosters and further establish a culture would be incredibly helpful moving forward. 

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Big 12’s collapse puts focus on Lincoln Riley, Steve Sarkisian

One of the most relentless parts of college football realignment is that it courses through every corner of college athletics. As leagues reshape, budgets change and traditional power structures shift, there’s always a trickledown of trends.

With the announcement of the departure of Oklahoma and Texas to the SEC, the Big 12’s entire paradigm changed. Big 12 league revenues that are expected to eclipse $40 million in upcoming years could dip down to nearly $15 million if the eight teams don’t either find a partner or a creative way to generate revenue in their next television deal.

That precipitous drop in revenue – or the specter of it – will likely mean that the remaining Big 12 schools will struggle to remain a destination for top coaching talent. That means a countdown has begun to the potential devastating financial fallout coming in 2025, when the conference’s media rights deal expires.

So as we examine this year’s college football coaching carousel – an annual summer exercise that tracks jobs, coaches and assistants that are potentially in flux – the most timely trend impacting it is the Big 12’s diminished standing.

Here are three reverberations to look for in this and upcoming coaching cycles.

Head coach Matt Campbell of the Iowa State Cyclones talks with quarterback Brock Purdy during a timeout in the second half against Texas Tech. (Photo by David Purdy/Getty Images)

What happens to Iowa State’s Matt Campbell?

The Cyclones head coach would already have been atop the wish list at places like Michigan and USC, which are both expected to have openings if the schools don’t have outstanding seasons.

Campbell has been inordinately loyal to Ames, as he has resisted overtures the past few seasons from the highest levels of college and the NFL. Ames has been a perfect bubble for Campbell, who loves digging in with his team and is ambivalent toward the front facing parts of the job like media and engaging with boosters.

Iowa State has been able to thrive building what he likes to call a “life factory,” not a “football factory.” 

But with Big 12 revenues destined to shrink and recruiting made more daunting by the lack of being able to sell a top conference, Campbell may turn to more of a traditional football factory.

He has pushed Iowa State through some glass ceilings, including four consecutive bowls for the first time in school history and a breakthrough Fiesta Bowl victory on the national stage last season. He has built a staff fiercely loyal to him.

Can that last forever?

With 19 starters returning, this feels like a last call for Campbell in Ames. He should be able to have his pick of jobs in college and interest in the NFL.

The dilemma of Campbell doubles as the issue for the Big 12.

“Can you afford the coach?” asked a Big 12 source. “You could based on current revenues. But for the future, that’s the uncertain part of it. The second piece is perception. Are you at the same level? Does the coach see it through that lens? Do they think their job just got harder? Is recruiting harder?”

Does this impact Oklahoma’s Lincoln Riley and Texas’ Steve Sarkisian?

The NFL’s interest in Riley, 37, has been consistent the past few seasons. He fits the archetype of the current youth movement of NFL coaches – play-caller, quarterback developer and strong leader.

Sarkisian’s impending rejuvenation of Texas, which starts this season, got a lot more difficult as he has to simultaneously recruit against SEC schools while selling players on a majority of their career playing out in the Big 12.

Will the waiting to arrive in the SEC be the hardest part?

If the start date on OU and Texas going to the SEC doesn’t arrive until 2025, as the contract states, it puts both schools in an awkward limbo for a few years. Along with the tough recruiting sell, don’t underestimate the week-to-week misery of playing games in venues where fans are spitting vitriol and waving money at you. That’s a lot of bile to swallow for a career.

Steve Sarkisian is entering his first season as head coach at Texas. (Photo by Adam Davis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Then there’s the notion of Oklahoma in the SEC, where it will still be a contending program, but it will have an exponentially harder path to the playoff. Texas’ athletic department leadership void and facility apathy for most of the past two decades has allowed Oklahoma’s elite leadership under athletic director Joe Castiglione to sprint ahead of the Longhorns and the rest of the league.

A lot of OU’s edges in talent, leadership and facilities will be neutralized in the SEC. It was always hard to envision Riley as a college lifer, and perhaps this nudges him quicker to the NFL.

As for Sarkisian, Texas doesn’t have any of those same edges as Oklahoma. Nor do the Longhorns have anywhere near SEC-caliber talent on the offensive or defensive lines. The job is completely different than the one Sarkisian signed up for. And it got much harder before he ever coached a game.

Will either or both be around in 2025 for the SEC debut? Regardless, the road there promises to be a slog.

Where else will the ripples go?

West Virginia’s Neal Brown would be another coach to watch eventually make a move in this unstable Big 12 environment. He has been solid at WVU – 11-11 in two seasons – and a good fit. But it’d be a lot harder for him to resist an SEC, ACC or Big Ten job now, knowing that things like keeping a staff will be much more daunting with the potential of budget cuts being made with a cleaver.

Also, it will be worth watching to see if TCU’s Gary Patterson sticks through to the next iteration of the Big 12. He led TCU out of the Mountain West and it’ll be interesting to see his appetite, at age 61, to guide TCU through the next chapter.

For WVU, TCU and beyond, one of the scariest things for coaches and ADs is going to be staff retention. Big 12 staffs are more vulnerable to losing top coordinators and position coaches to leagues like the SEC, Big Ten and ACC.

Would an assistant like Baylor’s Joey McGuire, a former Texas high school coach, suddenly be more valuable to an SEC program now that the league’s footprint is deeper in Texas? Would a coveted young assistant like Iowa State’s Nate Scheelhaase be more likely to consider a Big Ten job? Could a longtime staple in the Big 12 footprint like Oklahoma State offensive coordinator Kasey Dunn look elsewhere?

Every macro hiring decision and defection in the upcoming few years involving a Big 12 coach or school will be made through the prism of realignment. If top coaches, coordinators and assistants leave, the league’s decline becomes a bit of a self-fulfilling prophecy.

And that’s why realignment will loom over the coaching carousel.

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