Terry Constable had no interest in Nick Saban when he started pursuing her back in West Virginia.
They were both in the seventh grade at the time and went to rival schools. They met at a 4-H science camp. In the years to come, he consistently pursued his crush, but she wasn’t interested. She was a city girl and he went to a smaller school in the country. Mostly, though, she spent six years — all through their junior high and high school years — dating a popular boy named Mick Shaffer.
It wasn’t until they were in college — Saban at Kent State in Ohio and Constable elsewhere — that they started dating long distance. Before long, they married and have now been together for close to 50 years.
Saban tells a story about a homecoming celebration thrown for him nearly 10 years ago to mark his growing success as a college football coach, most recently at the University of Alabama. He said it was a great trip home and he discovered that Terry’s old boyfriend, Mick Shaffer, had ended up as the owner of a service station.
Saban said he couldn’t resist the chance to brag a little about how well she had done by marrying him instead, so he drove by Shaffer’s station.

Would you be glad or ashamed if others could read your thoughts?
How can I share what’s obvious when nobody will listen or see?
If you want to honor military dead, stop supporting unnecessary wars
Without growth on similar paths, two people drift apart, love dies
As we enjoyed the sunset together, language and borders didn’t matter
Practically and legally, it’s true: Good fences make good neighbors
‘Vast military-industrial complex’ keeps growing and keeps killing
Get over it: There’s no media conspiracy against your beliefs