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THE BIRMINGHAM NEWS AL.COM ♦ OUR HOME ONLINE SPORTS ** THE BUZZ | PREP GAMEDAY Vestavia’s Burgess at the center of the action against Minor 6B FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2008 SECTION B MONEY | 8B NFL 4B ❘ NBA 4B Padres GM says Peavy won’t be back 2B THUMBS DOWN THUMBS UP Tony Gwynn. The Hall of Famer signed a three-year contract to remain the baseball coach at San Diego State, his alma mater. The former San Diego Padres star is 173-190 in six seasons at SDSU. Mike Peterson. The Jacksonville Jaguars linebacker was sent home again Thursday and probably will be benched or suspended for this weekend’s game at Detroit. Coach Jack Del Rio was still deciding how to punish the Jaguars’ captain, who was asked to leave Wednesday after a confrontation with the coach. ALABAMA FOOTBALL SOUTHERN HOSTILITY COLLEGE BASEBALL BEVILL STATE Player says punishment was abuse Freshman pitcher says coach fired baseballs at him as punishment By MIKE PERRIN News staff writer The Sumiton Police Department and Bevill State Community College-Sumiton are investigating the claim of a Bevill baseball player that his coach punished him by forcing him to kneel in catcher’s gear in front of a pitching machine that hurled fastballs at him. The player’s mother, Debbie Rider of Gilbert, S.C., said she saw photos of multiple bruises on the left elbow, left bicep and left shoulder of her son Shawn, as well as on both collarbones and his right elbow. He underwent an MRI on Monday, she said. The player’s grandfather, Fred Hambrecht of Gilbert, contacted The News about the incident, but the family has not made Shawn Rider available for an interview. One of his attorneys, Frank Russo of Birmingham, also declined comment while the investigation continues. Hambrecht said Rider, a right-handed pitcher, missed a Bevill practice and initially gave coach Ed Langham a false excuse. “Like any other 19-year-old, he told the coach he was someplace he wasn’t to avoid practice,” Hambrecht said. When Rider later told the coach the truth, the freshman was told to put on a catcher’s mask and chest protector and kneel about 45 feet from a pitching machine without a glove, Hambrecht and Debbie Rider claim. The distance from a mound to home plate is 60 feet, 6 inches. With the player holding his hands behind his back, Langham dispatched “80-, 90-mile-per-hour fastballs” from the machine, Hambrecht claims. See BEVILL SPECIAL Page 5B Shawn Rider Freshman pitcher claims Bevill State coach abused him Ed Langham Has coached at Bevill State for 10 years and, according to Bevill Athletics Director Russell Howton, “nothing has ever come up with him.” A Baton Rouge condominium advertises its sentiments toward the once revered, now reviled, ex-LSU coach Nick Saban. An effigy and bonfire at the ready, LSU awaits return LSU needs win of its former coach, the once-revered St. Nick to save season, but By KEVIN SCARBINSKY News staff writer ALABAMA AT LSU When: Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Television: CBS 42 Radio: FM-99.5, AM-690 L BATON ROUGE ate this afternoon, Nick Saban’s fear is going to become reality. The Alabama football team’s plane will touch down in the town where he used to coach — and Dana Hastings will be there to meet it. Hastings plans to pick up Saban’s wife, Terry, at the airport and take her shopping. “I am Nick’s worst nightmare,” Hastings said. “I am an Olympic gold-medal shopper.” Hastings suspects that Saban arranged for Alabama to arrive at a time when he thought all the stores would be closed. “I called a few, and they’re keeping their doors open for us,” Hastings said. “I can hardly wait.” From friends of the Sabans, then and now, to Saban supportersturned-enemies to entrepreneurs trying to make a buck, it seems the entire state of Louisiana has been waiting for this weekend since Jan. 3, 2007. That was the day the former LSU coach, two years after leaving for the NFL, accepted the Alabama job. The day the man many LSU fans idolized as St. Nick during his five years here became, in their eyes, Coach Satan. “It’s amazing that people are so angry that he has the job at Alabama,” retired LSU Athletics Director Skip Bertman said. “As long as he was in the pros, he was still our hero,” said Charlie Weems, a longtime member of the LSU board of supervisors who still calls Saban a friend. “When he came back (to Alabama), the general feeling among the rank and file was that he had somehow betrayed us.” Oh yeah, a ballgame, too This game would be big enough without a subplot thicker than “War and Peace.” See SABAN Page 5B “As long as he was in the pros, he was still our hero. When he came back (to Alabama), the general feeling among the rank and file was that he had somehow betrayed us.” CHARLIE WEEMS, a longtime member of the LSU board of supervisors who still calls Saban a friend Saban visits LSU with no extra security By IAN R. RAPOPORT News staff writer TUSCALOOSA — It began with a joke. At the Southeastern Conference spring meetings, Alabama coach Nick Saban recounted an administrative meeting to discuss the itinerary for the team’s visit to Baton Rouge. An assistant raised his hand, and with all the sincerity of a standup comedian said, Saban related, “ ‘Ain’t none of us riding on your bus.’ ” A day away from the topranked Crimson Tide’s visit to Death Valley, it’s not nearly so funny. When Saban rides into Tiger Stadium to face his former team, the 15th-ranked Tigers, it will likely be as hostile an environment as he has ever entered. LSU fans have a well-earned AP Alabama coach Nick Saban, left, and LSU coach Les Miles are surrounded by police officers after their game last season in Tuscaloosa. LSU says it doesn’t plan to increase security for Saturday’s game in Baton Rouge. reputation for enjoying libations and taunting opponents. They have been known to terrorize opponents’ buses with bottles. ONE-MINUTE MADNESS Security personnel from both sides are on high alert, though without additional personnel. “We’re going to have be more vigilant, of course, because of who he is,” said Maj. Lawrence Rabalais, the LSU police spokesman. “But as far as actual numbers, we’re not adding any. The only thing we’re concerned about is, if we win, are our people going to rush the field?” This won’t be new to Saban. He is a villain in most opposing stadiums. For a look at how Saban handles such situations, ask the man who protected him for five years at LSU. “Certainly, fans have gotten irate with him,” said Mike Edmonson, then a captain and now the head of the Louisiana State Police. “He never showed anger toward that person. He understood it was a part of life.” On Saturdays, LSU’s security is already immense. See ALABAMA Page 5B Ray Melick and Kevin Scarbinsky video on Saban psychology: Tide coach fixes focus by saying LSU game is “not about me.” Go to al.com/sports/birminghamnews Tide is too tough S aturday’s game in Baton Rouge shapes up as a season-saver for No. 15 LSU. The defending national champs have a chance to knock off No. 1 Alabama (9-0) and former coach Nick Saban in his return to Tiger Stadium. Because of lopsided losses to Florida and Georgia, that’s where LSU (6-2) finds itself. The good news for LSU is that it matches up well with Alabama. Both teams like to hang their success on defense and the running game and, if they have their druthers, avoid a lot of air time. Now we’ll see who blinks first. For Saban, he knows LSU is going to do everything it can to make the Crimson Tide play left-handed. What Alabama does best — run the football — is what LSU will try to stop. If that means putting seven and eight players near the line of scrimmage, they’ll do it. LSU coach Les Miles believes his defensive front, which hasn’t played as advertised, can contain running backs Glen Coffee, Roy Upchurch and Mark Ingram. That puts the game on the passing arm of quarterback John Parker Wilson, who hasn’t had to win a game with his passing in the fourth quarter this year. For Saban, Alabama’s strength lies in discipline and hammering away at a team’s weakness. In LSU’s case, that’s first-year quarterback Jarrett Lee, who has thrown almost as many interceptions (10) as touchdowns (12) in eight games. If Saban’s defense can get in Lee’s head early, 3 1 ⁄ 2 -point favorite Alabama is on its way to clinching the SEC West and a berth in the league championship game. This weekend’s picks: ALABAMA AT LSU If you’re LSU offensive coordinator Gary Crowton, you’ve watched films of Alabama a gazillion times and you know Saban’s style rarely changes. See HOLLIS Page 7B CHARLES HOLLIS COLLEGE PICKS INSIDE Tigers in a rush to win Tommy Tuberville says Tigers’ problems revolve around the running game. The offense can’t run the ball, and the defense can’t keep the other team from running the ball. See the story on PAGE 7B by CHARLES GOLDBERG j News staff writer