Kalen DeBoer’s place in ESPN’s latest college football coach rankings says as much about Alabama’s expectations as it does about his own résumé.
DeBoer is still one of the sport’s most accomplished winners entering 2026. He built his reputation over a long climb that started with five seasons as an offensive coordinator, then a run as head coach at his alma mater, then success at Fresno State, Washington and now Alabama. But after sliding to No. 10 in ESPN’s poll of reporters, the message is clear: the margin for error in Tuscaloosa is razor thin.
His track record is hard to ignore. At Sioux Falls, DeBoer won at least 11 games in each of his five seasons and helped deliver NAIA championships in 2006, 2008 and 2009.
He later spent a decade as a Division I offensive coordinator before getting his first FBS head coaching job at Fresno State in 2020. Two seasons there were enough to launch him to Washington, where he went 25-3 in two years, won the Pac-12 in 2023, reached the College Football Playoff and beat Texas in the Sugar Bowl to get to the national championship.
At Alabama, the results have still been strong on paper. DeBoer is 20-8 in two seasons, with the Crimson Tide moving from nine wins in 2024 to 11 in 2025.
But the standard he inherited is not ordinary, and Nick Saban’s shadow still hangs over every result. Alabama made the College Football Playoff in 2025, yet the offense never looked clean.
The run game was poor, the offensive line was out of sync, and those are the kinds of problems SEC teams usually can’t afford.
The losses also stand out. Four of DeBoer’s eight defeats have come against teams that finished with seven or fewer regular-season wins: Vanderbilt, Oklahoma and Michigan in 2024, plus Florida State in 2025. Alabama also wasn’t competitive in either of its postseason losses in 2025.
That backdrop helps explain why ESPN dropped DeBoer three spots from No. 7 in 2025 to No. 10 entering 2026. Still, the poll wasn’t unanimous. Heather Dinich ranked him No. 6 and made the case that his body of work deserves more respect.
"DeBoer enters the season with 20 wins against Top 25 teams since 2021, the second most among active head coaches," Dinich said. "Bama fans don't have patience, but that's what it's going to take, along with an understanding that the days of Nick Saban-esque dynasties are probably over."
DeBoer wasn’t the only SEC coach to move ahead of him. Lane Kiffin and Mike Elko both jumped into the No. 7 and No. 8 spots, respectively.
Kiffin’s Ole Miss run was built on steady 10-win seasons, though LSU brings a different level of pressure - and the last time he coached in a job with that kind of expectation, he was fired in an airport terminal five weeks into the season. Elko, meanwhile, got credit for something his two predecessors at Texas A&M never managed: his team improved from his first season to his second, even if 2026 will bring a much tougher schedule.
The Big Ten also produced two coaches who moved ahead of DeBoer. Curt Cignetti rocketed from unranked in 2025 to No. 1 in 2026, while Kyle Whittingham landed at No.
- ESPN pointed to Whittingham’s consistency, noting his 177-88 record over 22 seasons at Utah before the move to Michigan, where he is expected to restore order after plenty of turnover since the program’s latest national championship.
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