? Gary Cosby-USA TODAY Sports

A bit of unfortunate timing led to some unintentional comedy during Sunday’s final round at The American Express, courtesy of one Nick Saban.

The former Alabama football coach has been making the media rounds since his retirement and took a few moments out of his day on Sunday to join the Golf Channel broadcast. That afforded him the opportunity to talk a little bit about Justin Thomas, a former Alabama golfer that has crossed paths with Saban a few times over the years.

Saban had some warm words for Thomas before disaster struck.

“Justin is a great person, great family. His dad Mike is a great guy and has been his teacher for a long time. But he’s a hard worker,” Nick Saban said. “I know he’s had to overcome some adversity last year, but he’s done it like a trooper and I think he’s going to have a great year this year.”

As Saban finished speaking the camera shot panned to follow Thomas’ golf shot. It tracked right toward some brown rough area surrounded by rocks, with water on the opposite side.

And it sure looked like Thomas got wet, twirling his club in frustration after the shot. At the time he was just two strokes off the tournament lead, playing the 10th hole.

Check it out below:

Nick Saban’s retirement stuns football world

Nick Saban has been active on the media circuit in part because he’s been freed of the constraints of being a current college football head coach.

He announced his retirement on Jan. 10.

Saban, 72, has been the head coach at Alabama since 2007, leading the Crimson Tide to six national championships during that time. He also won a title at LSU, giving him seven championships as part of his legendary career — widely considered the greatest of all time.

Questions about Saban’s future swirled over the last few seasons as some wondered if he’d eventually step away from coaching and head into retirement. Saban provided the answer before things had a chance to unravel on him.

Now it begs the question: What’s next in retirement for Saban? He certainly seems comfortable behind the microphone, so it’ll be interesting to see if Saban makes a pivot to media in the coming years.

On3’s Nick Schultz also contributed to this report.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Stars even series with hard-fought win over Oilers in Game 2
Celtics surge late to take 3-0 lead in Eastern Conference Finals
PGA Tour golfer Grayson Murray dies at 30
Another heartbreak for Justin Allgaier as Chase Elliott wins Xfinity Series race
Former Bengals first-round pick announces retirement
Luka Doncic joins trio of NBA champions in exclusive club
Yankees ace takes big step in first rehab stint
Which active NFL players are most likely to make the Hall of Fame?
Bulls' Lonzo Ball opens up about injury that's sidelined him for two years
The most overpaid & underpaid players at every MLB position
How Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and others' pro starts stack up to WNBA history
Watch: Sun forward Alyssa Thomas ejected after hard foul on Sky's Angel Reese
Kirk Cousins updates Achilles rehab
Mets rapidly approaching rock bottom with another ugly loss
Rangers rule out depth forward for Game 3 against Panthers
NBA Finals path clears for Celtics with devastating Pacers injury update
Yankees' Hal Steinbrenner under fire over Juan Soto comments
Former NFL first-round pick retires after 'terrifying' health scare
Penguins want to add legendary former player to front office
Rays place outfielder on 10-day injured list