Assistant coaches’ tweets have been some of the early highlights of college football’s lengthy offseason.

Alabama offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin’s timeline is worth a few scrolls, as he has hilariously updated his 107,000 followers with his various whereabouts on the recruiting trail and shared his feelings through bitmojis.

On the other hand, Texas A&M wide receivers coach Aaron Moorehead produced some negative headlines for the Aggies, as his social media comments created some backlash and even a decommitment for Texas A&M.

Crimson Tide head coach Nick Saban was asked about and provided his approach to Twitter this afternoon before he accepted the MacArthur Bowl championship trophy at Atlanta’s College Football Hall of Fame.

“We don’t have rules that people can’t use Twitter,” Saban said Friday in Atlanta, according to AL.com. “We just want people to be responsible. We certainly don’t want them to do anything that’s going to affect themselves in an adverse way or affect our program, our university or our team in an adverse way.”

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Kiffin and Moorehead’s tweets show both sides of the coin for coaches’ presence on social media. What Kiffin shared is entertaining and is in no way negative for Alabama. But Saban knows things can turn ugly fast on Twitter.

The Tide head coach has not, however, set limitations on what his assistant coaches can and cannot share on Twitter or Instagram. For the most part, he does not have to worry, because they mainly post promotional graphics.

“I don’t Twitter,” Saban said. “I don’t text for those very reasons. I don’t want anything to be misinterpreted. I would encourage our guys not to do that. You know, it’s a free country. I know we have a lot of regulations in the world right now in what we can and can’t do. I would rather our people be responsible and not have to be regulated.”