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9912010108
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
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<DATE>
991201
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, December 01, 1999
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
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<PAGE>
1A
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<ILLUSTRATION>

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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
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<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SIDEBAR ATTACHED
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<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1999, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
SABAN HITS GOLD WITH LSU DEAL -- BUT WHY HIM?
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<SUBHEAD>

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<BODY>
PLEASE DON'T say you're surprised. Anything but surprised. Disappointed,
perhaps, that Nick Saban -- who finally built a winner at Michigan State --
will not be coaching there anymore. Saddened, perhaps, that the Spartans have
to start over again.

But surprised? Come on. Rumors about his departure had become a ritual with
Saban. He was going to the National Football League. He was taking over the
Indianapolis Colts. He was taking over the New York Giants. There were times
when Michael Jackson's marriage seemed more solid than Saban and MSU.

So please don't say you were surprised Tuesday when the guy finally bit on one
of the lures in the water. To be honest, the only question I had when I heard
that Louisiana State was going to make Saban the third-highest-paid college
football coach in America was simple:

Why him?

No offense to the work Nick has done in East Lansing, but the guy hadn't
exactly lit it up before this year. His record at MSU is 34-24-1. Take out
this year's excellent 9-2 season and he's barely above .500. Does that put you
right behind Hertz and Avis in the college football pecking order?

Does that get you shoulder-to-shoulder with Florida's Steve Spurrier and
Florida State's Bobby Bowden, both of whom have national championship rings
and are in the hunt for No. 1 every year?

No, it does not. But Saban is no dummy. He knows heat and sizzle. And a New
Year's bowl game and a program on the upswing gives a coach heat and sizzle.
Saban became an Internet stock; more promise than production.

They pay for promise in sports.

And the man got a whale of a payday.

"That's a college job with pro money," said former Spartans coach George
Perles of Saban's five-year contract with LSU, believed to be worth up to $1.5
million a year with incentives, "and being the third-highest-paid coach in the
country is something you can be proud of."

Even if you can't feel so proud about the way you took it.



Recruiting's name of the game

Remember, Saban still had a contract with MSU, a rollover deal which paid him
around $700,000 a year. He still had a game to coach with this year's
Spartans, the Citrus Bowl, the school's first New Year's Day game in 10 years.
It is a significant date for MSU fans.

But it's also part of the sparkle that Saban traded in to get his new job. He
won't be coaching the Citrus Bowl. He shouldn't be. LSU wouldn't have it. MSU
shouldn't have it. Truth is, the reason LSU sent a private plane to fetch
their new man was the same reason MSU is angry that he left so abruptly.
Recruits. LSU wants to hold up their new coach and say, "Come to our school.
Look who we just got."

While MSU now must say, "Come to our school. We'll get ...somebody."

Should you be mad at this? Well, in some ways, of course. Coaches are always
preaching loyalty to their players. And if a kid transfers schools, he is
penalized, and forced to sit out a year. No such penalty exists with coaches,
who can jump on a day's notice -- which, if you believe Saban, is all he
needed to decide to pack up and head south.

As for regrets? Well, consider these fond words from Saban:

"It's a sad day for me because I love these guys and I love what this (place)
has done for me. You develop a bond with your players as a coach that
difficult to break."

Nice. Except Saban didn't say those words Tuesday.

He said them in 1995, when he left the Cleveland Browns.

So much for regrets.

He came, he saw, he fixed, he left.



Now Nick's the Big Cheese

Now, this is not meant to castigate Saban. Most people would jump at a job
that nearly doubles his salary. MSU will be all right in the long run.
Besides, I believe Saban's leap was much less financial than geographical.

Consider this: Saban, in 1999, finally got MSU off the ground. He finally got
his guys to stop shooting themselves in the foot and losing the close ones. He
finally gave the Spartans an exemplary season, including a win over arch-rival
Michigan -- and what does he have at the end of the year?

His team still finished behind U-M in the national rankings. It still is
playing in a lesser bowl than Michigan.

Now compare that to LSU, down on the bayou, where they love their football,
where the movie "Everybody's All-American" was set, where the Tigers are the
only show in town. There's no Michigan to challenge the fans' loyalty. There
are no pro teams besides the Saints (if you can call them a pro team) to
challenge the attention span.

If you're looking for a telling quote from Saban, it's this one, which he told
the press down in Louisiana on Tuesday: "At Michigan State, we were never No.
1. That was always Michigan. It was always U-M this or that."

Nick Saban left to be the Big Cheese.

The fact that they lined the mouse hole with gold is an added bonus.

And one, quite frankly, that makes me scratch my head. I always liked Nick,
although he was hardly forthcoming with his comments, and you could sense a
smoldering command beneath his placid demeanor.

But I never thought he was the hot stock that everyone else did. His records,
in four years before this one, were 6-5-1, then 6-6, then 7-5, then 6-6.

He was awful in bowl games, getting shellacked in the three he coached in. And
while he pulled off the occasional jolting win -- the upset of Michigan in his
first year, the stunning defeat of No. 1 Ohio State last year -- there was
always a regrettable loss that seemed to follow.

Even this year, when the Spartans cruised to 6-0 with the win over U-M, they
promptly came back and blew all title hopes with a blowout loss the next week
to Purdue, followed by another blowout loss to Wisconsin.

Where, exactly, is the genius coaching in that?

Saban is a good coach, a very good recruiter. But what he seems best at is
leaving at the right time. He coached at six schools in seven years, left
Toledo after one good season, left two pro teams, and now bolts from a program
fighting to gain equal footing with its arch rival, to one that owns its
state, and loves football so much it's willing to pay a million bucks to get
rid of its current coach.

Whose record, by the way, isn't all that much different from Saban's.

"Remember," said Perles, whose messy departure led to the wooing of Saban in
the first place, "all us coaches, we're all phys-ed majors. There's a lot of
people who can do what we do, and we know it, so it makes us insecure. When
you get an opportunity, you take it."

He came, he saw, he fixed, he left. You can say that Nick Saban didn't do
anything the next guy in line wouldn't do, except maybe teach by example.

Then again, isn't that what college is supposed to be about?



MITCH ALBOM can be reached at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Listen to
Mitch's radio show, "Albom in the Afternoon," 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM
(760).



ATTRACTIVE DEAL

Comparing football coach Nick Saban's contract at Michigan State with his new
deal at Louisiana State (both are five-year rollover contracts that renew
annually):

Michigan State

Base salary  -- $203,730

TV/radio  -- $340,000

Supplemental pay*  -- $121,100

Annual bottom line  -- $664,830

Buyout clause  -- $600,000

Incentives  -- a mininum of $110,000 from the profits of a $1-million
investment portfolio managed by MSU since April 1, 1997.

Louisiana State

Base salary  -- $250,000

TV/radio/internet --  $550,000

Supplemental pay*  -- $400,000

Annual bottom line  -- $1.2 million

Buyout clause  -- $1.8 million

Incentives  -- Bonuses for things such as graduation rates and bowl game
appearances could push Saban's annual take to $1.5 million.

*Supplemental pay includes such things as equipment endorsements, football
camps, insurance premiums, etc.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
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<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;NICK SABAN;MSU;FOOTBALL;SALARY;COMPARISON
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