A Quote by Lane Kiffin

There's not a day goes by that I don't ask, What would Coach Saban do? — © Lane Kiffin
There's not a day goes by that I don't ask, What would Coach Saban do?

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Anybody can do something one time. You have a great year because everything goes right. But can you maintain it and sustain it for a long period of time as Coach Carroll did and Coach Saban?
To me, personally, my development to become a head coach will be much better working for Coach Saban than necessarily going somewhere else because you learn every day that you're in there.
Coach Saban's a great coach; he does it his way, and I have to do it my way. I have to cut my own cloth.
I'm very grateful to Coach Saban.
That's what you don't see about coach Saban. He's a very funny guy.
Coach Saban and I have a great relationship, regardless of what people may think.
Three years under Saban changed me. He's the best coach in the world at what he does.
I don't know how Coach Saban found me all the way in Hawaii from Alabama.
I think Nick Saban is the greatest college football coach in history over there in Tuscaloosa.
You can take Saban's record when he was at Michigan State and when he was a coach in the Big Ten and put it against mine, and he can't compare.
Competition's always good, but the biggest thing I like about coach Saban is that he gives everybody the opportunity to play.
I'm tired of Nick Saban. I used to love Nick Saban. I don't know what he does on the recruiting side - he's the truth.
If you would have told me when I was 24 years old, right before I went with Coach Carroll to USC, you're going to get to be the offensive coordinator for Pete Carroll and then offensive coordinator for Nick Saban, arguably maybe the two best coaches in all of football by the time you're 40 years old, I would have said, 'Where do I sign up?'
Our personalities are the not the same, Coach Saban and I. And I have the utmost respect for what he's done and what he's done for me and my family.
I think when you've played in a league for as long as I have, it would be foolish for a coach not to ask a player with that kind of knowledge about other players. A lot of this goes beyond the court. Are they a good teammate? Are they good in the locker room? What's their attitude like? Do they work hard?
It’s easier to win the National Championship than the SEC, ask Nick Saban.
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