Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh has apparently been keeping an eye on the SEC spring meetings in Destin, Florida, today.

After Alabama coach Nick Saban spent a large portion of his press conference speaking out against satellite camps (of which Harbaugh is quite fond), the Wolverines’ head man fired off the following tweet:

According to an ESPN report, Saban pulled no punches in calling out the Michigan coach earlier in the day:

“I’m not blaming Jim Harbaugh,” Saban said. “I’m saying it’s bad for college football. Harbaugh can do whatever he wants to do if he thinks that’s what’s best. There needs to be somebody who looks out for what’s best for the game, not the SEC or the Big Ten or Jim Harbaugh. But what’s best for the game of college football. The integrity of the game.

“The coaches, players and people who play it. That’s bigger than all this. Now who does that? Now because we have the Power 5, everyone is doing what they want. There needs to be a [college football] commissioner.”

Saban continued his speech by likening satellite camps to the outlaw days in the West:

“Anybody can have a camp now. If they have a prospect, they can have a camp. Then you’re expected to go to that camp and they can use you to promote their camp because Ohio State is coming, Alabama is coming, whoever else is coming.

“Someone sponsors the camp, they pay them the money. What do they do with the money? And who makes sure the kid paid to go to camp?

“This is the wild, wild West at its best. There have been no specific guidelines relative to how we’re managing control of this stuff. It’s happening outside the normal evaluation window, which means we’re taking time away from our players. We have to worry about our players doing the right things with the limited time we have them, but we’re not going to do that because we have to be somewhere else to see someone else.”

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey addressed satellite camps on Tuesday as well, but took a much softer stance on them than Saban:

There’s clearly some bad blood between Harbaugh and Saban. With both Alabama and Michigan primed for big seasons, here’s hoping college football fans get to see the two famous coaches square off on the field this year instead of sniping at one another through the press and social media.