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Kalen DeBoer confirmed he never engaged with Michigan during his coaching decisions. He emphasized his commitment to Alabama and his focus on the team's future.
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Kalen Deboer of the Alabama Crimson Tide looks on before the game against the Indiana Hoosiers in the College Football Playoff Quarterfinal at Rose Bowl Stadium on January 01, 2026 in Pasadena, California.
TUSCALOOSA, AL â Kalen DeBoer never talked to anyone at Michigan. Those are his words.
Weâre seated inside DeBoerâs office at Alabama, and weâve dispensed with a couple of softball questions to warm up the conversation, before shifting to some brass tacks.
Michigan.
You know, that blue-blooded job that opened last winter, that job that had DeBoerâs name linked to it for days, attached with enough stickiness it seemed like maybe this was more than rampant speculation.
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Did DeBoer have interest in Michigan?
âI never once talked to anyone there,â he says.
Kalen DeBoer stated that he never talked to anyone at Michigan regarding coaching opportunities.
Kalen DeBoer expressed strong commitment to Alabama, indicating he never wavered in his decision to coach there.
Kalen DeBoer is the head coach of the Alabama Crimson Tide football team.
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He never talked to anyone at Penn State, either. Also, his words.
Itâs important to be clear on these matters. So, I ask a second time: You personally did not talk to Penn State or Michigan, is that accurate?
âThatâs accurate,â DeBoer said in an exclusive, wide-ranging interview with USA TODAY Sports earlier this spring. âThatâs 100% accurate.â
As for whom his agent might have spoken to, well, agents like to talk, donât they?
So, what of it, did DeBoerâs representatives talk to anyone?
âI mean, when theyâre reaching out to people...,â he answers, before transitioning to another thought.
Hey, thatâs agent business.
Agents drive up market value and secure extensions and raises, and they fatten buyouts. They use job openings to aid their quest. DeBoerâs agent, Jimmy Sexton, plays the coaching carousel game like Bobby Fischer played chess.
Only a fool would say the Michigan and Penn State coaching vacancies did nothing to help DeBoerâs paycheck. Those are premier jobs within college footballâs best conference. DeBoer wouldâve been well-qualified for either position. Those are my words.
Now, letâs return to DeBoerâs words, the words of a coach whoâs not built to tuck and run.
âI never flinched or looked at or talked with anyone about going there once,â DeBoer says of Michigan. âIâm at Alabama. I donât mean that in an arrogant way. I just, I have a great opportunity. Iâm at a great place. Iâve got great support.
âI didnât leave a place that I really enjoyed being at, at Washington, that was one of the premier programs in the country in my mind, to come to Alabama, to then leave Alabama two years later. My family enjoys it here.â
DeBoer came to Alabama, because he wants to be at Alabama. He wants this job. He accepted being Nick Sabanâs heir. And, he embraces the demands of a fanbase thatâll only truly cherish him if he restores Alabama to a perch it hasnât held since 2020.
Thatâs the only way to interpret his words.
In April, Alabama announced a contract extension for DeBoer that included a raise and a beefed-up buyout. Alabama would be on the hook for nearly $70 million if it fired DeBoer after this season. The deal runs through the 2032 season.
Alabamaâs administration wants DeBoer to be its coach, wants him badly enough to push in more chips, lest it risk losing him during a particularly active carousel.
Thatâs how to interpret this extension.
âIâd much rather have a coach in demand,â Alabama athletic director Greg Byrne told me in March, when I asked him whether Alabama worried it might lose DeBoer, âthan one that youâre saying, âIs that going to work here, long-term?ââ
In truth, itâs fair to hold both thoughts, simultaneously.
Fair to recognize DeBoer was in demand, and why shouldnât he be? He catapulted Washington to national runner-up status within two seasons. He took Alabama to the CFP quarterfinals and won 11 games in his second season. At almost any other program, thatâd be a celebrated Year 2 achievement.
Alabama isnât any other program, and Saban set an unreachable bar, so itâs also fair to wonder: Is this going to work, long-term?
Whatâs unfair to question anymore: Whether DeBoer wants to be at Alabama, and whether Alabama wants him.
Theyâre married to one another, and theyâve renewed their vows.
What does one do in the 24 hours after suffering the ugliest postseason loss in program history?
Thatâs not a rhetorical question. It demands an answer.
So, what did DeBoer do the day after the Rose Bowl spanking?
Alabama Crimson Tide head coach Kalen Deboer leaves the field after the 2026 Rose Bowl and quarterfinal game of the College Football Playoff against the Indiana Hoosiers at Rose Bowl Stadium.
âWe flew home, and I was up here doing Zooms by 9 oâclock the next morning,â DeBoer said. âIt was roster retention, it was portal. We were on it.â
âThe very next morning,â DeBoer added, âour whole staff was locked in and rolling.â
No time to sit in the failure. No day off for a pity party. No coming in late so he could spend the morning licking wounds.
âWhen you fall short like we did,â DeBoer said, âweâve got to raise our bar to catch others and close the gap.â
If anyone needs a reminder, the scoreboard looked like this:
Thatâs the gap between the national champion and the SECâs runner-up.
âWeâre hungry,â says senior safety Bray Hubbard. âObviously we lost in the Rose Bowl last year, and thereâs guys that still remember that. Weâve obviously got to learn from that.
âYou have to use it as motivation.â
Hunger and motivation are good fuel.
Discipline, execution, sound fundamentals, all of those buzz words matter, too.
Also, another important maxim was on display in Pasadena, California: If you have a quarterback, you have a chance. Nobody possessed a better quarterback than Indiana. Fernando Mendoza torched the Tide, while Alabama starter Ty Simpson had one of his worst performances, before heading to the NFL.
The starting quarterbacks in DeBoerâs first two seasons at Alabama were Saban leftovers. Now, one of DeBoerâs recruits will take the controls.
Thatâs where we must take this conversation next.
Close your eyes if you want to understand Keelon Russellâs talent.
Listen.
Thatâs Hubbardâs advice.
âYou can hear the ball sizzle when he throws it,â Hubbard said of Russell, Alabamaâs redshirt freshman quarterback.
DeBoer wonât name a starting quarterback at this point in the calendar. No need to.
Maybe, the quarterback battle between Russell, the promising 19-year-old, and veteran Austin Mack is as competitive as DeBoer makes it out to be. The spring game told a different story.
Russell sizzled. Mack struggled.
Teammates point to attributes in each that they like.
âAustin, he does a really good job of commanding the offense,â Hubbard told USA TODAY Sports, before the spring game. âKeelon is a younger guy. Austin has been in the system (longer), but I will say, Keelon has got a cannon. He gets us all the time with some balls. Iâm like, âWow, that takes a really impressive arm to throw.â â
Wide receiver Ryan Coleman-Williams brags on Russellâs playmaking skills. Of Mack, he says he knows ball, as a former backup to Michael Penix Jr., then Jalen Milroe and finally Simpson.
Alabama quarterback Keelon Russell throws a pass at Bryant-Denny Stadium during the Alabama A Day scrimmage, April 11, 2026.
Perhaps this oversimplifies the situation, but the choice appears to boil down to talent and upside versus age and experience.
Mack hasnât played much, but heâs played more than Russell. Mack's time with DeBoer extends to Washington. Russell signed as a five-star prospect, as one of the first high-profile prospects to pledge to DeBoer after Alabama hired him to replace Saban. Russellâs talent âspeaks for itself,â DeBoer says.
Whatâll tip the scales? As DeBoer tells it, the quarterback whoâll win this competition will be the one who provides big-play ability and also ball security.
âThereâs a fine line between a guy who can attack and be aggressive and make big plays," DeBoer said, "and also balance that with risk-reward and not having the big mistakes."
Fair enough, but a quarterback whose passes sizzle, so that you hear his talent, sounds appealing.
In Penix and Simpson, DeBoer coached first-round draft picks in two of the past three years. DeBoer's offensive acumen accelerated his career.
Defense, though, saved Alabamaâs 2025 season and helped the Tide win seven of eight SEC games.
Ask DeBoer what he likes about this team, and heâll likely begin his answer on defense.
In the secondary, everybodyâs back.
âThatâs exciting,â he says.
DeBoer saw the need to get bigger on the defensive line after Alabama got outmuscled in losses to Florida State and Indiana. Transfers Terrance Green (330 pounds) and Kedrick Bingley-Jones (320 pounds) supply some beef.
âI like the potential that exists,â on the defensive line, DeBoer said.
Alabama's stagnant ground game last season offered a stark reminder the program's heyday under Saban has faded into yesteryear. Fixing that run attack rates as a top priority.
âThe big question,â DeBoer said, âis how much better can we be offensive line wise, as a whole, and in particular the run blocking?â
Those are the types of questions a third-year Alabama coach must begin to answer, if he wants to gain affection from a fanbase that can be best described as still on the fence.
DeBoer works a pressure-cooker job. Year 3 represents and up-or-down inflection point for his tenure. But, heâs not on the hot seat. His exorbitant buyout should tell you that.
And, still, there are miles between the hot seat and the kingâs throne Saban once occupied, or that Kirby Smart built for himself at Georgia, or that Curt Cignetti swiftly ascended to at Indiana. DeBoer stands amid those many miles, not on the hot seat, but no king, either.
Alabama fans ache for a king.
âUntil you experience being here at Alabama,â Byrne said, âthere are very few, if any things, that prepare you forâ the demands and scrutiny of the job.
Head coach Kalen DeBoer arrives for the Captain's Ceremony at Denny Chimes during the Alabama A Day at the University of Alabama.
DeBoerâs second season represented progress. Only the most ardent naysayers would deny it. He beat Smart for a second time, before losing the rematch in the SEC Championship. He swept rivals Tennessee, LSU and Auburn. He won a playoff game.
At programs like Alabama, though, coaches whoâve never won a national championship are only as good as their last game. In Alabamaâs last game, Indiana defaced the elephant. That lingers in the zeitgeist.
Is it fair DeBoer didnât earn more praise and affection for Alabamaâs achievements in Year 2?
âWhen you say, is that fair? No,â Byrne says. âBut, itâs reality, and you have to deal with reality.â
âKalen,â Byrne adds, âis really steady-eddie.â
And, Iâd add, heâs become increasingly aware of this job's realities.
âWe have high expectations. Thatâs why I came here,â DeBoer said. âThatâs what we signed up for. I remind the guys of that when the criticism comes: âHey, this is part of it, and we got a choice, and weâre going to be better because of it.ââ
Heâs talking like a coach who chose Alabama, more than once. To be feted as king, he must rule like one.
Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppme
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Alabama football craves a king. Can Kalen DeBoer wear crown?