Alabama
Goodman: Will receiver Isaiah Bond regret leaving Alabama for Texas?
This is an opinion column.
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If anyone was still in denial about the new world of college football, then Isaiah Bond’s transfer from Alabama to Texas ended any and all doubt that the sport would ever be the same again.
Bond was the hero of the 2023 Iron Bowl. His game-winning touchdown reception on fourth and 31 made him an instant legend of Crimson Tide football. He led Alabama in receiving yards in the SEC championship game. After another year in Tuscaloosa, everything was in place for him to carry on the long tradition of Alabama receivers taken in the first round of the NFL Draft.
Then the unthinkable happened. Bond transferred out of Alabama shortly after Nick Saban announced his retirement from college football.
I’m not going to call Bond a turncoat villain, but it’s fair to say that his decision to double-cross Alabama left the Crimson Tide shaken and the rest of the SEC stirred.
Of all the moves we’ve seen throughout the sport of college football since January, Bond’s decision to leave hero status at Alabama for more NIL money at Texas represents the most jaw-dropping plot twist of the offseason. For me, it was even more shocking than Saban’s retirement.
Saban is 72 years old and there were plenty of signs throughout the 2023 season that his career was winding down. My Saban retirement column was ready to publish weeks before the news happened. Bond’s stunning flip caught me completely off guard.
Did a request by Bond for more NIL money from Alabama inform Saban’s decision to call it a career? Since walking away, Saban has acknowledged that the changing motivations of modern-day college football players coaxed him into retirement. When Bond arrived in Austin, Texas, after his transfer, one of the first places he visited was a local Lamborghini dealership.
Can Alabama compete with the NIL collectives out in Texas? Put it this way. The closest Lambo showrooms to Tuscaloosa are in Atlanta and Nashville. There aren’t any in Alabama.
Fans might not like the changes happening in college football, but the real truth can’t be denied. While the sport is evolving by the week, college football has never been more intriguing or popular. Over the next couple months, I’m going to write a series of columns focusing on 10 burning questions throughout the SEC and college football.
Question No.1: Will Isaiah Bond regret leaving Alabama?
NIL was the major factor in Bond’s move west, but Bond also wanted to play for Texas coach Steve Sarkisian. Sarkisian recruited Bond while the receiver was in high school. They had an established relationship before Bond entered the transfer portal. When Saban retired, Bond was the first Alabama player to bolt. It opened the floodgates.
If head-to-head coaching records are an indication, then Bond maybe should have waited to see who Alabama was going to hire as Saban’s successor.
Both Alabama and Texas made the College Football Playoff last season. Both teams went out in the semifinals. Alabama lost to Mighian in overtime of the Rose Bowl and Texas couldn’t keep pace with Washington in the Sugar Bowl.
Alabama then hired Washington coach Kalen DeBoer to replace Saban. It was a bold move not without the potential to fail, but DeBoer’s record against some of the best coaches in college football can’t be denied. Against Sarkisian of Texas, DeBoer is 2-0 over the last two years.
Based on recent history, Bond chose incorrectly and should have waited to hear DeBeor’s pitch.
There are other measures of DeBoer’s success with receivers as well. Look at the 2024 NFL Draft. DeBoer has the edge on Sarkisian there, too.
Texas had an excellent draft class. The Longhorns set a program record with 11 selections and three of those were receivers. Xavier Worthy went No.28 in the first round, Adonai Mitchell was drafted 52nd overall in the second round and then Jordan Whittington was drafted in the sixth round.
Now compare those draft picks to the pass catchers Alabama’s new coach just put in the draft. DeBoer’s trio of former Washington receivers went before the Texas threesome. Rome Odunze was ninth overall to Chicago. Ja’Lynn Polk, a transfer from Texas Tech, was drafted 37th overall in the second round. Jalen McMillan, a crisp route runner, went to Tampa Bay in the third round (92nd overall).
DeBoer scored a major victory for Alabama when he convinced receivers coach JaMarcus Shephard to leave Washington for the Crimson Tide. It was the most important hire for DeBoer’s new staff. Former Washington receiver Germie Bernard followed Shephard to Tuscaloosa and, based on the spring game, will fill the role previously manned by Bond.
Bernard is poised to be Alabama’s new breakout star and Bond is the biggest X-factor in the SEC entering the 2024 season. A spot in the SEC championship game could come down to which player fits in better with their new team.
SOUND OFF
Got a question for Joe? Want to get something off your chest? Send Joe an email about what’s on your mind for the weekly mailbag. Let your voice be heard. Ask him anything.
Joseph Goodman is the lead sports columnist for the Alabama Media Group, and author of the most controversial sports book ever written, “We Want Bama: A Season of Hope and the Making of Nick Saban’s Ultimate Team.”
Alabama
Alabama ‘Fully Aware’ of Losing Streak to Tennessee Ahead of Road Rematch
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Losing to a rival almost always hurts more than falling to another opponent during the regular season. Years of hatred, unforgettable moments and tradition boiled up into one game, and the delivery is nowhere to be found for one team.
No. 17 Alabama has won seven straight games and is eyeing an eighth on Saturday on the road against No. 22 Tennessee. This is the second time that Crimson Tide will face the Volunteers, as Alabama lost in Tuscaloosa in January.
The loss a month ago to head coach Rick Barnes and company brought UA’s losing streak against Tennessee to five games. It’s the first time that the Tide has dropped this many games to the Vols since 1968-72 — a streak that came two years before Alabama head coach Nate Oats was born (Oct. 13, 1974). It’s why Oats is not treating Tennessee as a faceless opponent or like any other team the Tide has faced.
“Every year we’ve been here they’ve caused us issues,” Oats said during Friday’s press conference. “Our players, are fully aware that we’ve lost five in a row. They’re fully aware of what happened out there last year. I’ve taken ownership for my share of what happened up there last year.
“We’re fully aware that they beat us at home. We haven’t lost very many home games in conference, period, really since we’ve been here, and they handed us one this year.”
After falling to Florida on Feb. 1, Alabama moved down to the ninth spot in the conference standings, and the college basketball world started to question whether or not the Crimson Tide would be a threat in the postseason.
But a switch flipped after that loss, and the current winning streak has Alabama tied for the No. 2 spot in the SEC standings. Everything seems to be trending in the Tide’s direction, as there are only three games remaining on the schedule.
Oats is in his sixth year as Alabama’s head coach. Following the retirement of former Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl during the offseason, Oats became the second-longest tenured coach for one team in the conference. The coach in front of him: Tennessee’s Rick Barnes, who has held his position since the 2015-16 season.
Both Alabama and Tennessee have finished conference play in the top-4 of the standings since the 2022-23 season. The Crimson Tide was the regular-season and SEC Tournament champions in both the 2020-21 and 2022-23 seasons, while the Vols won the 2022 SEC Tournament and were the conference’s regular-season champions in 2023-24.
“So our guys know, but at the same time, we’ve got a lot of respect for how they play and what they do. We’ve got to come in with a healthy amount of respect for them, but we got to try to win this game.
“There’s a lot riding on this game. What happens in Arkansas-Florida, you’re either going to be all alone in second place if we could get a win, or you’re going to be one game out first. If you take a loss, now you’re in danger of losing a top-4 seed. They’ll be tied with us if we take a loss.”
“So there’s a lot riding on the SEC standings in this game here. They know that. They know what our struggles against Tennessee have Been as well.”
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Alabama
Selmont seeks incorporation to become independent Alabama city
SELMONT, Ala. (WSFA) – An unincorporated community in Dallas County is seeking to establish itself as an independent city, hoping to gain control over local government services and community priorities that have long been managed at the county level.
Selmont, located across the Edmund Pettus Bridge from Selma, is home to approximately 2,700 registered voters and carries a significant place in civil rights history.
The community was the site of a pivotal moment during the Bloody Sunday march in 1965, when roughly 600 civil rights marchers were tear-gassed by Alabama state troopers, including 13-year-old Mae Richmond.
“People ask us ‘Were we afraid?’ No. We were not afraid. We were not afraid, first of all, even as a 13-year-old child, we knew that we were doing what God was permitting us to do,” Richmond, a 60-plus year resident of Selmont, said of the historic event.
As an unincorporated community, Selmont lacks its own municipal government. Residents must contact the Dallas County Commissioner for public works services. It’s a situation that community leaders say limits responsiveness to local needs.
Erice Williams, a community activist leading the incorporation effort, said the change would fundamentally alter how the community operates.
“It would give us decision power and allow us to get funding that we can allocate to our own community that we can make our own priorities be clear and resolved at the same time,” Williams said.
Williams also highlighted the strain on current county services. “Connel Towns (county commissioner) is the only person we have to call, and the resources and time that he would have to serve our community is very limited,” he said.
Operation Selmont, the group spearheading the incorporation effort, is currently gathering signatures on a petition to present to the local probate judge. The organization needs approximately 500 signatures to move forward with the incorporation process and has already collected 40 percent of its goal.
The next meeting for Operation Selmont is scheduled for March 6 at 6 p.m.
For longtime residents like Richmond, incorporation represents an opportunity to ensure Selmont’s future and maintain its identity for generations to come.
“That we will be able to teach and train our children to give them the strength that our foreparents had that they will be able to stand up for justice and for equality,” Richmond said of her hopes for the community’s future.
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Alabama
Report: Sen. Tuberville, Speaker Ledbetter uniting behind proposal to close Alabama party primaries: ‘Democrats shouldn’t be voting in our elections’
U.S. Senator Tommy Tuberville and Alabama House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter (R-Rainsville) announced support on Thursday for closing Alabama’s primary elections to only registered members of each party.
Alabama does not currently have party registration. Instead, voters choose a party ballot at the polls. State law also bars voters from switching parties between a primary and that cycle’s runoff.
Tuberville (R-Auburn) said during a press call with in-state reporters that Democrats have no place voting in Republican elections in Alabama.
“There’s a lot of talk about this,” Tuberville said.
“I’ve spoken with Speaker Ledbetter and we agree that we have to do something about Democrats voting in our elections. They shouldn’t be doing it. I know he’s moving a bill forward very very soon as we speak, and if we can get that done, I think it’s gonna help the cause of the conservative Republicans in the State of Alabama.”
Under Alabama’s current open primary system, any registered voter can participate in either party’s primary without declaring a party affiliation.
Voters simply choose which party’s ballot they want at the polls. Alabama does not require partisan voter registration, meaning residents register without declaring themselves a Republican or Democrat.
The push to close the Republican primary is not new.
The Alabama Republican Party (ALGOP) passed a resolution in 2022 calling on the Alabama Legislature to require party registration before voters can participate in a party’s primary, but the Legislature did not act on it at the time.
Closing the primary would require changing state law under Ala. Code 17-13-7, which governs the existing open primary system.
“I am proud to work with Coach Tuberville to begin the process of closing Alabama’s primary elections,” Ledbetter said in a statement on Thursday after lawmakers adjourned from the 17th day of the 2026 legislative session.
“Alabamians have made it clear that this is the direction our state needs to begin moving in, and I am committed to doing just that. Whether it was passing school choice, banning DEI, or making Alabama the most pro-life state in the nation, the Alabama Legislature has consistently delivered on its commitment to conservative governance, and we will do the same on this issue. We are in the process of reviewing the proposals before us and are eager to get the ball rolling.”
Sawyer Knowles is a capitol reporter for Yellowhammer News. You may contact him at [email protected].
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