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“I love Diego Pavia, but that would have been a catastrophic player-coach relationship moment before the game,” Saban said. I never wanted our players to ever do anything. I didn’t even let them talk to the other team. I never wanted [them] to do anything that was going to affect the other team’s motivation. So don’t ever say, ‘Don’t give anybody a reason.’ They got enough reason.” In the end, Saban says, “Everybody wants [to beat] Bama, brother.” The gamble backfired spectacularly Alabama dominated 30-14, with Ty Simpson throwing for 340 yards and two scores, while Jam Miller rushed for 136 yards and a touchdown. Pavia managed 183 passing yards and 58 on the ground but coughed up the ball twice via interception and fumble, underscoring the pitfalls of overconfidence. Vanderbilt’s lone score came on Sedrick Alexander’s 65-yard sprint. Saban’s critique serves as a master class in game-day psychology, reminding underdogs that bravado can boomerang in the SEC’s unforgiving arena. For Pavia, a gritty transfer turning heads this season, it’s a tough lesson in the fine line between swagger and strategy.