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Fact or Fiction: Blame Nick Saban for Tua Tagovailoa's injury

National Recruiting Director Mike Farrell and National Recruiting Analyst Adam Gorney tackle three topics daily and determine whether they believe the statements or not.

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1. Nick Saban is responsible for Tua Tagovailoa's injury.

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Farrell's take: FICTION. As much as people want to blame someone when a horrible sports tragedy occurs, and this could be one, it's not Saban's fault. Yes, Tagovailoa didn't practice during the week and apparently didn't look great during the walk-through and Saban still pushed forward and started him in a clearly winnable game. And yes, Saban kept him in even after it was 35-7 and the game was clearly in hand.

But no one, not even the greatest coach in college football history, could foresee such a rare and serious injury for the talented quarterback. I would have had Tagovailoa out of the game at 28-7 as I tweeted during the game, but Saban clearly wanted to give him the half and this is just an awful situation. Saban will be scrutinized as the NFL Draft gets closer if Tua falls, but right now there's no need to point a finger.

Gorney’s take: FICTION. It’s ridiculous for some people to come out and say Saban owns any responsibility for Tagovailoa’s injury, especially since the new injury had nothing to do with his ankle issues. The Alabama doctors cleared him, Tagovailoa wanted to play and it was just an unfortunate circumstance that put him out for the rest of the season. Alabama could have beaten Mississippi State handily without Tagovailoa, so it’s curious that he was playing, but there’s no way Saban should be held accountable at all for this.

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2. Tua will still be a first-round pick.

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Farrell's take: FICTION. I don't see how he will recover in time or even at all to be a first-round pick. This is considered a very serious injury and some say it could be career threatening and the NFL teams will do their due diligence and likely not want to take a gamble in the first round on a quarterback who had injury questions before this horrible, season-ending broken hip. There are some out there that think the potential No. 1 pick in the draft will bounce back and still be drafted in the first round, but I can't see that happening.

Gorney’s take: FACT. This is going to be one of the most interesting debates around the NFL Draft in years and Tagovailoa is going to be poked and prodded like a pin cushion, but I still believe an NFL team is going to take a tremendous chance and draft him in the first round. He has way too much upside and if he rehabs the right way then his career over the long term should be just fine. I’m not sure he will go in the top five any longer, but that could actually be good for Tagovailoa, who can go to a team that doesn’t need him immediately and he can rehab and get back into game shape without rushing it.


3. Sean Clifford's death threats will hurt Penn State recruiting.


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