Nick Saban couldn't be more satisfied with how Alabama's transition from Lane Kiffin to Steve Sarkisian as offensive coordinator is going. (0:42)

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Alabama's transition at offensive coordinator from Lane Kiffin to Steve Sarkisian is going smoothly as the team prepares to face Clemson in the College Football National Championship on Monday, coach Nick Saban said Wednesday.

Sarkisian has led two practices since assuming coordinator duties after Saban and Kiffin "mutually agreed" to part ways following the Crimson Tide's 24-7 win over Washington in the CFP semifinal at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on Saturday.

"It's been excellent," Saban said of the players' response to Sarkisian, who has been part of the staff as an offensive analyst since early September. "Very positive. Very upbeat. Practice has been good. The energy level has been really good. The attitude has been really, really good."

While the transition at coordinator was abrupt, Saban said he felt that Sarkisian was well prepared.

"The guy has been with us the whole year, the whole football season," Saban said. "He knows the offense. He knows the players. He's worked on the game plans every week and knows the system inside and out and knows the terminology.

"I just feel like I have to make decisions about what's best for the players to have the best chance of being successful. You know, we made the decision and we're not talking about it anymore. We're moving forward. We're looking forward, and everybody is doing everything they can to support the people that are here now to make it work."

"The energy level has been really good," Nick Saban, above, said of the players' response to new OC Steve Sarkisian. "The attitude has been really, really good." Gerald Herbert/AP Photo

Philosophically, Saban doesn't expect to change anything on offense against Clemson. Whether it was Kiffin or Sarkisian, work needed to be done to improve an Alabama offense that was sloppy at times against Washington.

Saban lamented 25 negative plays and a general lack of execution. Players were frustrated, he said, including freshman quarterback Jalen Hurts.

Hurts, who won SEC Offensive Player of the Year with 34 regular-season touchdowns, threw for a season-low 57 yards against the Huskies.

"Jalen was a little frustrated with the way he played in the last game," Saban said, "and puts a lot of pressure on himself to prepare well. But I think it's our job as coaches to do a good job with him to help him prepare so that he feels comfortable and confident in going out there and being able to feel like he's practiced the things that we're going to ask him to do in the game. And he's done it enough that he feels confident and feels good about it."

Sarkisian and the rest of the staff, Saban said, need to get Hurts into "a little better comfort zone" this week.

The last time Sarkisian was a coach on the field was during his time as head coach at USC. Sarkisian was fired five games into the 2015 season after then-athletic director Pat Haden said Sarkisian showed up in no condition to lead practice following a pep rally in which he appeared to be intoxicated while giving a speech.

Sarkisian later sought treatment for alcoholism and sued USC, alleging breach of contract and discrimination on the basis of a disability.

In his previous role as an analyst at Alabama, Sarkisian worked hand-in-hand with Kiffin, whom he'd spent time with on the staff at USC under former coach Pete Carroll. Sarkisian was allowed to be part of the game-planning aspect of football at the time but could not coach players hands-on, whether in practice or during games.