Longtime ESPN commentator Stephen A. Smith isn't sold on Alabama football's performance under Kalen DeBoer, nor its recent seven-year contract extension for the coach.
Smith, who also hosts his own political and sports talk radio call-in shows on SiriusXM and dabbles part-time in acting on the long-running ABC soap opera 'General Hospital,' shared his thoughts on DeBoer's new extension during Thursday's edition of "First Take."
The extension will see DeBoer earn $12.5 million per season, and Smith isn't impressed.
Alabama is 20-8 since DeBoer left Washington for the Crimson Tide job after Saban retired in January 2024. Alabama finished 9-4 in 2024 and missed the College Football Playoff in no small part due to a disastrous late-season loss at Oklahoma.
The Crimson Tide were back in the CFP a year ago following a 10-win regular season, but they lost two of their final three games by a combined 66-10 margin. Alabama fell to the Georgia Bulldogs, 28-7, in an SEC title game rematch on Dec. 6 in Atlanta and suffered a 38-3 blowout loss to national champion Indiana at the Rose Bowl in the CFP quarterfinals on Jan. 1.
Smith said Alabama has seen a "precipitous drop-off" since Saban retired, and he isn't happy with what he's seen from the Crimson Tide during the first two seasons under DeBoer.
Smith may not be sold, but Alabama's 2026 recruiting class was ranked No. 2 nationally by 247Sports and No. 5 by ESPN.
USA TODAY Sports slams 'absurd and fiscally reckless' Alabama for Kalen DeBoer extension
Smith isn't the only national analyst that isn't a fan of Alabama AD Greg Byrne's decision to extend DeBoer to a seven-year deal that will pay him $87.5 million.
Veteran college football scribe Matt Hayes of USA TODAY Sports took it a step further, calling Byrne's decision an "unthinkable gamble by one of the most respected athletic directors in college sports."
He added:
Hayes concluded:
DeBoer will have chances to prove his critics wrong, but for 2026 at least, he'll have to do so against a gauntlet SEC schedule that's now nine games instead of eight. Most notably, Alabama has road trips to Tennessee, LSU and a Vanderbilt program that's gone from perennial punchline to narrowly missing the CFP last season.
Alabama will also host Georgia, Texas A&M, South Carolina and Auburn at Bryant-Denny Stadium in the annual Iron Bowl showdown in conference play.
The Crimson Tide open the regular season on Sept. 5 against East Carolina in Tuscaloosa.
Alabama football schedule 2026
Here's a look at Alabama's game by game 2026 regular-season schedule. Kickoff times and TV channel designations have not been announced.
• Sept. 5: vs. East Carolina
• Sept. 12: at Kentucky
• Sept. 19: vs. Florida State
• Sept. 26: vs. South Carolina
• Oct. 3: at Mississippi State
• Oct. 10: vs. Georgia
• Oct. 17: at Tennessee
• Oct. 24: vs. Texas A&M
• Nov. 7: at LSU
• Nov. 14: at Vanderbilt
• Nov. 21: vs. Chattanooga
• Nov. 28: vs. Auburn
Follow us at @RollTideWire on X and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide news, notes and opinions
This article originally appeared on Roll Tide Wire: Alabama football offseason move has Stephen A. Smith unimpressed