Another Kalen DeBoer Ranking Just Gave Alabama Fans A Reason To Stew

Despite his impressive track record, Kalen DeBoer's ranking ignites debate as critics question the premature selection of several other coaches.

Andy Staples and Ari Wasserman took on a college football head coach draft Monday, and Kalen DeBoer wound up as the name that kept sliding down the board. Staples eventually grabbed the Alabama coach at No. 11, but not before Wasserman and Staples had run through 10 other picks.

The two On3 analysts opened with a fairly expected group before the order started getting messy. Staples took Indiana’s Curt Cignetti, Ohio State’s Ryan Day, Texas’ Steve Sarkisian, Oregon’s Dan Lanning, Michigan’s Kyle Whittingham and Alabama’s DeBoer. Wasserman answered with Georgia’s Kirby Smart, Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman, Miami’s Mario Cristobal, LSU’s Lane Kiffin and Texas A&M’s Mike Elko.

DeBoer landed at No. 11, followed by BYU’s Kalani Sitake, Virginia Tech’s James Franklin, Clemson’s Dabo Swinney, SMU’s Rhett Lashlee, Penn State’s Matt Campbell, Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham, Tennessee’s Josh Heupel, Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz and Oklahoma’s Brent Venables.

Alabama fans had plenty to take issue with, especially when looking at the five coaches picked ahead of DeBoer that feel hard to justify.

Mike Elko came in at No. 10, and there’s no question he’s doing strong work in College Station. Still, the argument for him over DeBoer is thin.

Elko has coached at Duke for two seasons and Texas A&M for a pair, and while both programs improved under him, he has never won a conference championship or a playoff game. DeBoer, by contrast, won both in two years at Washington and also picked up a playoff road win last season.

The source also points to Texas A&M’s No. 7 vs. No. 10 game against Miami, saying Elko should have scored a touchdown at home there, while Alabama worked through a tougher schedule before avenging its Oklahoma loss.

At No. 9, Whittingham is the kind of coach people love to respect.

The Utah veteran already looks like a Hall of Famer after two decades in Salt Lake City, where he helped keep the Utes steady through multiple conference changes after inheriting a strong program from Urban Meyer. But he never got Utah into the playoff, and his Pac-12 title came in a league that “stunk,” as the source puts it.

Now at Michigan, he arrives as the steadying presence the Wolverines need, but DeBoer’s shorter run of accomplishments still stacks up better.

Lane Kiffin was next, and the source puts him on DeBoer’s level as an offensive architect. Both coaches know how to scheme touches for their best playmakers in space, but DeBoer gets the edge for a lot more than play design.

He hasn’t left behind wreckage at every stop the way Kiffin has, and he has already coached in the playoff twice, won multiple games there and captured a Power Five title. Kiffin has won plenty, but the source says his lack of maturity has kept him from ever raising a banner.

Steve Sarkisian checked in at No. 5, and there’s real respect here for what he has rebuilt at Texas after his USC collapse more than a decade ago. He’s a sharp offensive mind and may even win his first national title before DeBoer does because he’s at the better program right now.

But the source also notes DeBoer beat Sarkisian head-to-head in the Sugar Bowl when DeBoer was at Washington. Sarkisian’s reputation for frustrating play calls in crunch time also hangs over him, with the source invoking Texas, the Atlanta Falcons and Alabama fans in that discussion.

The top spot among the five went to Lanning, who is described as a fantastic coach with one major issue: rematches. The source also says he has had problems with DeBoer specifically, with DeBoer repeatedly being a thorn in his side while at Washington.

Oregon and Alabama haven’t played, but the source says one College Football Playoff bracket could make that matchup real. Lanning has given Oregon more edge since arriving from Georgia, but DeBoer’s playoff success in tougher circumstances and his edge in the Washington-Oregon head-to-head make the case for him over Lanning.

That’s the crux of the whole draft: Staples still took DeBoer, but the source argues Wasserman’s board makes a stronger case overall. And by the end of it, DeBoer looks less like the 11th-best coach and more like someone who belongs closer to seventh.

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