For nearly two decades, Nick Saban’s life revolved around a singular, relentless pursuit: perfection on the football field. It all eventually turned the University of Alabama into a modern dynasty. But at 74, over two years into a retirement that many thought he would never actually accept, the greatest coach in college football history has found a new obsession.
Nick Saban Finds Metaphor for Life in New Passion for Golf
Standing on the tee box at the Regions Tradition Pro-Am in Birmingham, Saban looked less like a man missing the sidelines and more like a man invigorated by a different kind of scoreboard.
He said, “I always love to play golf. You know, that’s the one thing that you can do when you get older. And I always played all the sports, basketball, football, whatever was in season.”
For Saban, golf isn’t just a hobby to kill time between media appearances for ESPN’s “College GameDay.” It is a psychological mirror.
Throughout his coaching career, he preached a philosophy of focusing on the next play. He has found that golf demands that same mental discipline, perhaps even more than football did.
In football, a coach can rely on 11 players to execute a scheme. In golf, Saban is alone with his thoughts and his swing. The accountability he once demanded from his players, he now demands from himself on every fairway.
“So we make golf in season year-round. I think golf’s a metaphor for life,” Saban explained during the tournament. “And if you can, you know, keep focusing on the next shot and try to make the, you know, hit a good one, you’ve got to deal with it. You hit a bad one, you’ve got to deal with it. And that’s the only way you can play this game.”
Beyond the mental challenge, Saban is also enamored with the sport’s longevity. Having spent a lifetime in the high-impact world of basketball and football, he views golf as the ultimate forever sport. He noted that while his days of playing pickup basketball or coaching in 100-degree heat may be behind him, the golf course remains open regardless of age.
“You know, it’s the love of my life, really, when it comes to sports now. And I’m just happy that I can still play at my age,” Saban concluded.
While Saban may have traded the crimson headset for a golf glove, the competitive fire hasn’t dimmed. Those close to him suggest that his retirement is simply a relocation of his intensity. Whether he is analyzing a defensive scheme or reading a double-break putt, the objective remains the same: total mastery.
