
Florida State, Alabama War of Words Continues: 'Disrespect Will be Addressed'
Published July 17, 2025
The Alabama Crimson Tide travel to Tallahassee to play the Florida State Seminoles on Aug. 30, in one of the headline games in Week 1 of the 2025 college football season — and there has been plenty of chirping from Florida State's starting quarterback.
Speaking about Alabama earlier this offseason, Florida State quarterback Thomas Castellanos said he couldn't see the Crimson Tide "stopping" him and that "they don't have Nick Saban to save them" — not to be mistaken with Prospector telling Woody "that silly Buzz Lightweight can't help you" in "Toy Story 2"; Saban retired following the 2023 season after 17 years at the helm and winning six national titles at Alabama.
A video surfaced earlier this week of Castellanos saying that he "just wanted to instill some confidence" in his team. Nevertheless, Alabama defensive lineman Tim Keenan III had a direct response when asked about Castellanos.
"Disrespect will be addressed," Keenan said at SEC Media Days on Wednesday, according to AL.com.
Last season, Keenan, who stands at 6-foot-2 and 335 pounds, totaled 2.5 sacks, eight tackles for loss and 40 combined tackles. Keenan is entering his redshirt senior season at Alabama, with whom he has spent his entire collegiate career (2022-present) and started the past two seasons.
As for Castellanos, the senior quarterback transferred to Florida State after two seasons at Boston College (2023-24) and one season at UCF (2022). Last season, Castellanos totaled 1,366 passing yards, 18 passing touchdowns, five interceptions and a 163.4 passer rating, while completing 61.5% of his passes in eight games. The year prior (2023), he posted a 121.0 passer rating, completed 57.3% of his passes but also rushed for 1,113 yards and 13 touchdowns.
Both Alabama and Florida State are coming off underwhelming seasons but in vastly different contexts. Alabama went 9-4 (5-3 in SEC play), the most losses it has recorded in a single season since going 7-6 in 2007 in what was Saban's first season as Alabama's head coach, in what was Kalen DeBoer's first season as head coach.
Meanwhile, Florida State, which went 13-1 in 2023 and had many clamoring for its inclusion in the College Football Playoff after going 13-0 before bowl season, finished the 2024 season at 2-10 (ACC-worst 1-7 in conference play). It was the Seminoles' lowest win total since winning just one game in the 1974 season.
This will be just the sixth time that the Crimson Tide and Seminoles face off, with Alabama winning the last matchup between the two teams in 2017, 24-7, in what was a neutral site game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, GA.
Each of their last two matchups came at a neutral site, with the upcoming Week 1 matchup being the first time that they'll play on a college campus since 1974 and the first time Florida State will host Alabama. The Crimson Tide are 3-1-1 in the all-time head-to-head matchup.
Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! Print Close
URL
https://www.foxnews.com/sports/florida-state-alabama-war-words-continues-disrespect-will-addressed
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Colorado Rockies minor league pitcher Eric Veras suspended 56 games following positive drug test
NEW YORK (AP) — Colorado Rockies minor league pitcher Eric Veras was suspended for 56 games Friday by Major League Baseball following a positive test for the performance-enhancing substance Boldenone. Veras was disciplined under the drug program for minor league players assigned outside of the U.S. and Canada. An 18-year-old left-hander, Veras was 2-0 with a 3.97 ERA in five starts this season. He signed for a $125,000 bonus in January 2024 and was 3-1 with 3.80 ERA in 10 starts last year. Veras was the ninth player suspended this year for a positive test, the seventh under minor league programs. Atlanta Braves outfielder Jurickson Profar was suspended for 80 games on March 31 and Philadelphia Phillies closer José Alvarado for 80 games on May 25 under the major league program. ___ AP MLB:
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Mo'ne Davis returning to baseball to try out for the Women's Professional Baseball League
Mo'ne Davis is ready to play baseball again, she told Alex Coffey of The Philadelphia Inquirer. Davis, who was 14 when she became an international star after being the first girl to pitch a team to victory — a shutout — during the 2014 Little League World Series, is set to try out for the Women's Professional Baseball League. Next month, over 600 players will attempt to make an impression and make themselves eligible to be one of 150 players that will be part of the October draft. Davis plans to be one of them. 'I like to try things,' Davis, now 24, told the Inquirer. 'And this was something that I was like, 'You know what, why not give it a try? Why not help the league grow?' I'm just not done playing at all.' A conversation with league founder Justine Siegal, who has been a coach in professional baseball since 2009, ended with Davis pondering two options: serve as a WPBL broadcaster or suit up and play again. 'I was like, 'I'm just gonna try it out,'' Davis said. 'I'm just going to play. I don't have anything to lose. It's not like I'm older, and it's my last [season to play]. I have plenty of years that I can keep going, so I'm just going to give it a try.' A middle infielder while playing for Hampton's softball team, Davis is planning to try out all over the field. Davis' performance in Williamsport for Philadelphia's Taney Youth Baseball Association led to her winning an ESPY for Best Breakthrough Athlete and being on the cover of Sports Illustrated, among numerous other opportunities. She went on to graduate from Hampton University in 2023, earn a graduate degree from Columbia University, intern for the Los Angeles Dodgers and serve as a broadcaster for ESPN's Little League coverage. She told the Los Angeles Times in 2023 while working with the Dodgers that she was eyeing a future where she was working for a team. 'Hopefully, I can work my way up to a front-office position," Davis said. "Maybe a GM. We'll see where it takes me.'


Fox News
26 minutes ago
- Fox News
Nick Saban's daughter shuts down unretirement rumors: 'You had your time'
Don't get your hopes up on Nick Saban returning to college football. Rumors about the legendary coach's potential comeback began earlier this week after former Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy said on his radio show he was told by a source Saban may return in the future. McElroy acknowledged he did not believe it was true. Days later, Saban's daughter, Kristen, posted on her Instagram story a photo of her dad walking onto the field, captioning it, "Damn, I miss this." With the timing, fans thought it was a foreshadowing of a huge announcement. It was not. "Apparently, some of y'all feel trolled by my last story of Nick's walkout… he's not coming back to coaching, hate to break it to you," Kristen said in another post on her story, via the New York Post. "You had your time." Saban surprisingly retired after the 2023-24 collegiate season, which ended in a Rose Bowl loss to the eventual national champion Michigan Wolverines. And the pay-for-play landscape that college sports has become seems to have played some role in his decision even if he has denied that in past interviews. "All the things I've believed in for all these years — 50 years of coaching — no longer exist in college athletics," Saban said shortly after he retired. "It always was about developing players, always been about helping people be more successful in life. "My wife even said to me — we have all the recruits over on Sunday with their parents for breakfast. She would always meet with the mothers and talk about how she was going to help impact their sons and how they would be well taken care of. She came to me right before I retired and said, 'Why are we doing this?' I said, 'What do you mean?' She said, 'All they care about is how much you're going to pay them. They don't care about how you're going to develop them, which is what we've always done. So why are you doing this?' "To me, that was sort of a red alert that we really are creating a circumstance here that is not beneficial to the young people, which is why I always did what I did. My dad did it, I did it. So, that's the reason I always like college athletics more than the NFL, because you had the opportunity to develop young people." Saban has since joined ESPN's "College GameDay" and has fought on Capitol Hill for regulating name, image and likeness (NIL) deals. He won seven national championships, the most ever by a head college football coach — one with LSU and six in Tuscaloosa. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.