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Michael Sykes

Nick Saban and Bill Belichick were so good that time was the only thing that could truly beat them

This is For The Win’s daily newsletter, The Morning Win. Did a friend recommend or forward this to you? If so, subscribe here. Have feedback? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey! Now, here’s Mike Sykes.

Goooood morning, folks! Happy Thursday! Hope you’re doing well. Welcome back to the Morning Win. Thanks so much for reading us today. We appreciate it.

I woke up this morning thinking I’d just be jotting down thoughts about Nick Saban. Nope. Absolutely not.

Not even a full day after Alabama’s head coach announced his retirement, Bill Belichick announced he’s stepping down from the New England Patriots. It’s unreal.

In less than 24 hours, football might be losing the two greatest coaches ever to grace the sidelines. I say might because there’s a possibility Belichick continues to coach after this, but man. This certainly does feel a lot like the end.

If it is, what a glorious run it has been for both of them.

Saban is college football royalty. He is the greatest to do it at the college level. Some coaches have won more total games, sure. But nobody has done it better. Seven national championships. Eleven SEC titles. Seven College Football Playoff appearances and 49 NFL players. That’s sick.

READ MORE: Where Nick Saban ranks among college football’s best coaches

On Belichick’s side, there’s also no question that he’s the best coach to ever do it. His six Super Bowl wins are the most all-time. Along with that, his 31 playoff wins are the most all-time. He also coached Tom Brady, which is a feat in itself.

READ MORE: Where Bill Belichick ranks among the NFL’s best head coaches

But, as they say, Father Time falls victim to no one. Eventually, everything catches up to success. Or, rather, maybe success just slows down. One day you wake up and you’re just not what you used to be. It’s the only inevitability life presents to us. We’ll all experience that someday.

That’s how good these guys were. The only thing that could truly rid the opposing fanbases they tortured of them year after year was time. That’s why they’re out. It was just time.

Saban and Belichick have done everything they can do. They have nothing left to prove to anyone. Their greatness is unmatched and probably will be for the rest of forever.

I have no idea where their respective teams go from here. I can assure you of one thing, though: It definitely won’t be as good as where they came from.


Hey! Pete Carroll retired, too!

Jane Gershovich/Getty Images

There must be something in the water. Or, you know, maybe these dudes are just getting old.

Before Saban retired and Belichick stepped down, Pete Carroll walked away from the Seahawks’ sideline into a more cushy front office job. It was weird and kind of out of nowhere. Nobody anticipated this one — especially after Seattle missed the playoffs to end the season.

But, hey! It was probably time. Carrol is 72 years old. He’s given a ton of time to that sideline and it’s probably time to take some of it back.

He didn’t go without his flowers. Seahawks fans gave him a ton of love. So did Russell Wilson, despite his tenure in Seattle not ending on the greatest of terms. Blake Schuster has more on that here.

“Even on off days, the Carroll-Wilson Seahawks were hard to stop. The slow march of time combined with the instant reaction world we live in can make that difficult to recall fondly. As Wilson’s career reaches new lows and Carroll’s transitions away from the sidelines, the two can always look back at their successes together.

Wilson did just that on Wednesday as the Seahawks officially moved on from Carroll as their head coach. In a short, but heartfelt, message, the quarterback praised his former coach for all they accomplished.”

That’s so nice to see, man. Happy trails, Pete.


Don’t question Kawhi

Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

Kawhi Leonard is still one of the best players in the NBA. That’s why it was a no-brainer for the Clippers to sign him to the $153 million extension the team did on Wednesday.

There were lots of people questioning it, though. Not because of Leonard’s ability, but because of his health. Obviously, Leonard has struggled to stay on the court over his last four seasons with L.A.

Prince Grimes tells you why that’s not an issue in the latest edition of Layup Lines here. Availability has not been an issue.

“Leonard erased those doubts with how good (and available) he’s been this season. He’s played in 32 of a possible 36 games. He has a career-best true shooting percentage. He’s averaging about 24 points on close to a 50/40/90 shooting split. He’s Leonard again.

This version of Leonard can lead a team to a championship. We’ve seen it. And with the supporting cast he has on this year’s Clippers, that’s very much a possibility. That’s why extending him now made so much sense. It went from a question mark to a no-brainer for the Clippers.”

Good on Leonard and the Clippers for getting this done.


Quick hits: Why Bill Belichick might hang around … Who replaces Saban? … and more

— Our Meghan Hall has one big stat here that might end up keeping Bill Belichick around for more.

— Here’s Blake Schuster with seven candidates to potentially replace Nick Saban

— And here’s Charles Curtis with seven potential landing spots for Belichick if he does choose to stay in the NFL and keep coaching.

— UConn just can’t stop the injury bug. Aurbey Griffin is out with a torn ACL now. Meghan Hall has more here.

— Oddsmakers think Jim Harbaugh’s next stop is in the NFL. We’ll see.

— Here are our January NBA Power Rankings so far. The Celtics are just better than everyone else.

That’s all, folks! Thanks so much for reading TMW today. We appreciate you. Have a fantastic day. Let’s chat again tomorrow. Until then, peace.

-Sykes ✌️

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