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Jumbo Package: Alabama commit Ryan Williams makes state high school history

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Jumbo Package: Alabama commit Ryan Williams makes state high school history


Happy Gump Day, everyone. We now know the dates of probably the most exciting A Day in years, and Homecoming.

The University of Alabama announced Tuesday that the 2024 Golden Flake A-Day Spring Football Game will be played on Saturday, April 13.

UA also revealed that the 2024 Homecoming Game will be played on Saturday, October 26, against Missouri. Alabama is 88-13-1 in Homecoming games and is currently in the middle of a 21-game winning streak on Homecoming.

Mizzou will be a formidable opponent for a Homecoming game.

Tide commit Ryan Williams did something that no other high school player has ever done in Alabama.

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“When you look at all the athletes who have come through the state in the last 42 years and no one has won it more than once, it tells you how special Ryan really is,” Saraland head coach Jeff Kelly said. “When it is all said and done, we may all look back and have him at the top of our lists of the best players in state history. This puts a cap on one of the best two-year runs we’ve ever seen, and that really is all we are talking about. Two years. Incredible.”

The state has produced some unreal talent through the years, but nobody has repeated as Mr. Football. And Ryan didn’t even get a senior year, folks. He accomplished that feat as a sophomore and junior. The young man is special.

Tide enrollee Jaylen Mbakwe was also in the running, and he was asked about how long it took him to decide to play for Kalen DeBoer.

Just how quickly did Mbakwe make the decision to stay? What did he have to say about the new staff? Bama247 asked all of those questions and more.

“It was pretty instant, it didn’t take anytime,” Mbakwe talked about making a decision soon after the first team meeting with head coach Kalen DeBoer. “The way he settled himself in and talked with us, there was no waste of time.”

“It’s been great,” Mbakwe continued giving his thoughts on the last two and half weeks or so. “He’s a great guy, family oriented and one that wants to win. He is a winner, so I feel like we got something good coming for the next few years.”

Both of those young men come across as special people in addition to their obvious talents on the field. This class is quite exciting.

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Also exciting? Tennessee getting more grief from the NCAA.

Iamaleava initially committed to Tennessee in March 2022. Around the same time, reports surfaced of an an NIL deal worth $8 million. Iamaleava’s involvement with such a deal was never confirmed, nor have any details emerged about any NIL deals he signed before or after enrolling at Tennessee.

In May 2022, the NCAA reminded schools that using NIL as a recruiting tool was a strict violation of its policy. It simultaneously promised to retroactively investigate programs and their associated collectives for any potential violations. The NCAA sent out another notice in October that further clarified the interim policy and aligning it with state laws, allowing schools officials to interact with NIL collectives.

Apparently the main issue was the NIL collective paying for a private jet to bring Nico in for a visit. Tennessee, of course, claims no wrongdoing and Ross Dellenger notes that the NCAA has created its own mess.

The NCAA’s predicament: For more than two years, coaches and administrators have staunchly encouraged the NCAA to punish schools for NIL violations. And, yet, when those punishments are delivered, the targeted schools vehemently decry them unfair and often even file legal challenges.

We could very well see legal action in the case of Tennessee, whose chancellor, Donde Plowman, used harsh language in email exchanges with NCAA officials recently.

“Two and a half years of vague and contradictory NCAA memos, emails and ‘guidance’ about name, image and likeness (NIL) has created extraordinary chaos that student-athletes and institutions are struggling to navigate,” she wrote to NCAA president Charlie Baker. “In short, the NCAA is failing.”

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Maybe they are. Still, Tennessee is already under sanctions for the McDonald’s bags. Personally, I’m fine with throwing the book at them.

Justin Eboigbe is practicing for the Senior Bowl currently, and was asked about the moments after Nick Saban spoke to his team for the last time.

“I called one of my former teammates and he told me. (He) Facetimed me in and showed me the locker room,” Eboigbe said Tuesday after the Reese’s Senior Bowl afternoon practice. “It was a lot of guys showing the same emotion that Bama fans and people around the world of sports felt. Shocked, confused, not really understanding where this came from. It felt like it came out of left field, but you can’t do anything but respect his decision.”

That had to be a surreal moment for everyone in the room. Also in Mobile? Will Reichard.

That thing was crushed. Young Conor Talty has some big shoes to fill.

Last, we will have coverage of tonight’s basketball game at Georgia later on, but Nate Oats spoke about his technical fouls.

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Perhaps the most impressive stat is the Crimson Tide’s record in games where Oats has received a technical foul: 17 wins to just 4 losses. In fact, Alabama won the first nine games in which Oats was assessed a tech. The first loss didn’t come until Oats’ third season, a loss to Iona in the 2021 ESPN Events Invitational.

“We should probably get more techs then, if we’re 17-4,” Oats said with a laugh. “17-4 is a higher win percentage than our overall winning percentage.”

Considering Nate’s love of data, he may well fire off a few more.

That’s about it for now. Have a great day.

Roll Tide.



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Alabama Finalizing Deal to Hire Louisville Assistant as New Tight Ends Coach

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Alabama Finalizing Deal to Hire Louisville Assistant as New Tight Ends Coach


Alabama is finalizing a deal to hire Louisville offensive line coach Richard Owens as its next tight ends coach, per 247 Sports’ Matt Zenitz.

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Owens will take over for Bryan Ellis, who became the Crimson Tide’s quarterbacks coach earlier this offseason. Ellis is filling in for Nick Sheridan, who took the offensive coordinator job at Michigan State on Dec. 20, 2025.

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Owens was Louisville’s offensive line coach from 2023 up until this deal. Owens’ alma mater is with the Cardinals, as he played tight end there from 1999-2003.

He wasn’t selected in the 2004 NFL Draft, but played for the Minnesota Vikings (2004-06), the then-St. Louis Rams (2007) and the New York Jets (2009). Owens appeared in 53 games between 2004-09 with seven starts, totaling 17 receptions for 141 yards and one touchdown.

After playing football, Owens got into coaching as a graduate assistant at Arkansas State from 2010-11. He then became UAB’s tight ends coach in 2012 before moving to the Blazers’ offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach the following season. However, he went back to the role he knows best as UAB’s tight ends coach in 2014.

Owens held that same title at South Alabama in 2015, but then became the Jaguars’ offensive line coach for the next two seasons. He returned to Louisville as the tight ends coach in 2018 and then proceeded to spend the next three years as UAB’s offensive line coach. Owens was Georgia Southern’s offensive line coach and run game coordinator and in 2022 before taking his current position with the Cardinals.

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Owens will mentor the following tight ends for Alabama in 2026:

  • Danny Lewis Jr., redshirt senior
  • Jack Sammarco, junior
  • Jay Lindsey, redshirt sophomore
  • Josh Ford, redshirt sophomore- Oklahoma State transfer
  • Kaleb Edwards, sophomore
  • Marshall Pritchett, sophomore
  • Mack Sutter, freshman

Edwards is all but certainly Alabama’s starting tight end for 2026. He’s filling the role of Josh Cuevas, who exhausted his collegiate eligibility this past season.

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“He’s adjusted very efficiently,” Cuevas said of Edwards on Oct. 31. “I’m super proud of him for that. We put a lot on him and he takes it with grace. It’s just something that comes naturally to him as a football player. Just kind of getting this offense going and going out there and doing it. He’s one of those guys where, if you tell him one thing, he’ll go out and do it better.

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“Just trying to see where he’s at, and him getting playing time on the field is great for him. Especially being a younger guy just catching the pace of the game and knowing what it takes to win a football game in the SEC. That experience is invaluable.”

Alabama’s 2026 Coaching Staff:

Head Coach: Kalen DeBoer
Offensive Coordinator: Ryan Grubb
Defensive Coordinator: Kane Wommack
Co-DC/Defensive Backs: Maurice Linguist
Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Line: Freddie Roach
Assistant Head Coach/Running Backs: Robert Gillespie
Quarterbacks: Bryan Ellis
Wide Receivers: Derrick Nix
Offensive Line: Adrian Klemm
Tight Ends: Richard Owens
Outside Linebackers: Christian Robinson
Defensive Backs: Jason Jones
Linebackers: Chuck Morrell
Special Teams: Jay Nunez

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'Grew up an Alabama fan my whole life': Mobile (Ala.) DL AJ Pauley sets official visit, details high interest

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'Grew up an Alabama fan my whole life': Mobile (Ala.) DL AJ Pauley sets official visit, details high interest


Bama247 has confirmed several over the last few weeks and the latest to share plans is Mobile (Ala.) defensive lineman Avrian Pauley, who added an offer from Alabama last fall on Sept. 28. The Crimson Tide was the first Power 4 program to jump in the recruitment.



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Sources: Rice finalizing deal for Alabama assistant coach

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Sources: Rice finalizing deal for Alabama assistant coach


Scott Abell helped the Rice Owls to a rare postseason berth in his first year atop the program in 2025.

Tevin Madison aided perennial powerhouse Alabama as the Crimson Tide returned to the College Football Playoff — the program’s first bid under second-year head coach Kalen DeBoer.

Now, Abell is set to add Madison to his Rice Owls staff.

Sources tell FootballScoop that Madison is set to depart Tuscaloosa, Alabama, barring any unforeseen snags, to take the cornerbacks coach’s job in Abell’s Rice program.

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Most recently, Madison has worked for the Alabama Crimson Tide with an official title of “football analyst,” though Madison has been the program’s assistant defensive backs coach.

It’s another step in the Football Bowls Subdivision for Madison, a former three-year player for the Texas Tech Red Raiders who capped his career at NCAA Division II program West Alabama.

In addition to a stint as a graduate assistant coach at Kansas State, Madison has coached at Illinois State and Southeast Missouri State at the Football Championship Subdivision level.

Abell guided Rice to five wins in 2025, his first season atop the Owls program after a decorated run in charge of the FCS, non-scholarship Davidson Wildcats. The Rice program was awarded a bowl berth for its academic standing when there was a shortage of bowl-eligible teams to fill all postseason slots.

Rice, which had mustered a 5-5 mark through its first 10 games of the 2025 season, dropped its final three including the Armed Forces Bowl against in-state foe Texas State.

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In 2026, the Owls are slated to open Abell’s second year at the helm at home against FCS program Houston Christian University before traveling to the Midwest for a game at Notre Dame, which is entering Year 5 under Marcus Freeman and has emerged as an early consensus contender for the 2026 College Football Playoff.



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