Alabama
Jumbo Package: Alabama ranked 5th in first Coach’s Poll
In one of two major college football polls, Alabama football will begin its 2024 season with its lowest ranking since 2009.
The Tide was picked No. 5 in Monday’s preseason AFCA coaches poll, compiled by the USA Today. That ends a streak of 14 seasons (2010-23) in which Alabama began in the top three of the coaches poll.
The last time Alabama football was ranked outside of the top three of a preseason coaches poll was 2009, when it began No. 5 after a 12-2 season in 2008. The Tide was unranked in the preseason coaches poll in 2008.
The Tide coming in at number 5, huh? I get it, there’s no Saban and all that…. But still, the disrespect is strong and will be noted.
Really, it’s the undying love for Oregon that’s got me a little confused on all of these preseason polls. The Ducks just lost their 6th-year senior QB to the first round of the NFL Draft and are now going to have to play in a more competitive conference than they were before.
And if you’re interested in how these rankings would line up in the new Playoff format:
Alabama was ranked fifth overall in Monday’s poll, the first time since before the 2009 season that the Crimson Tide is not ranked in the top three of the preseason Coaches Poll, and the team was not one of the three to get a first-place vote. It is the third-highest ranked team from the SEC, meaning if these rankings were identical to the ones that will eventually take shape on Selection Day, Alabama would not get a bye.
The teams seeded fifth through 12th will play against one another in the postseason extravaganza’s opening round. Alabama would be seeded seventh, hosting 10th-ranked Michigan at Bryant-Dennt Stadium in a Rose Bowl rematch. Texas, new to the SEC as well, would get the No. 6 ranking as it finished one spot ahead of the Crimson Tide in the poll.
The Tide would be playing Michigan as a wildcard match, and Alabama would not have a bye week.
DeBoer enters his debut season following the retirement of longtime coach Nick Saban in January. DeBoer brings nearly an entirely new coaching staff to Tuscaloosa, led by offensive coordinator Nick Sheridan and defensive coordinator Kane Wommack.
To keep talking season going as practice gets going in Tuscaloosa, The Tuscaloosa News asks you how many games do you think Alabama football will win this season?
Voting is now open and will remain open until noon CT on Sunday.
If you think that #5 rating is too low… Now’s your chance to vote with the Tuscaloosa News on how well you think Alabama will do this year.
The Alabama Crimson Tide and the Auburn Tigers may just have two superstars on their hands with two in-state highly touted freshmen wide receivers.
For Auburn, it comes via Cam Coleman of Central Phenix City, who last season helped the Red Devils end the Thompson run of dominance in Class 7A with an MVP performance in the state championship game.
Coleman was a top-five recruit in the entire nation and has received nothing but great reports from Tigers staff throughout the spring. The official Auburn social media page shared an image of him coming down with a sensational one-handed grab at practice over the weekend.
Not to be outdone, Alabama freshman Ryan Williams out of Saraland, who skipped his senior year and reclassified after becoming the first player to ever win back-to-back Mr. Football awards, made a similar catch in practice that circled social media over the weekend as well.
There’s been something of a Twitter feud making its rounds over the last month or so with Auburn fans relentlessly hyping up Cam Coleman and going out of their way to trash talk about Ryan Williams.
I suppose it’s only natural since both would have been the #1 WR in most any given recruiting class, but Williams reclassifying to 2024 group at the last minute makes the rankings interesting and a bit ambiguous. Add in that they’re from the same state and went to rival schools, and we could have an even more heated version of the Julio Jones – AJ Green rivalry 15 years ago.
Finally, we have updated heights and weights on the official roster.
Go check out my other article on this specifically if you want the details, but the biggest changes are Tyler Booker dropping all the way down to 325, Parker Brailsford adding 15 pounds, and Keon Keeley officially moving to the line of scrimmage, bulking up over 30 pounds to 277.
Alabama
Alabama Crimson Tide Emerges As Transfer Portal Fit For Elite Lineman
The Colorado Buffaloes’ offseason hasn’t gotten off to a great start, especially since the program has lost so much talent. It’s not just talent; the young core coach Deion Sanders has been building around for years to come has entered the transfer portal.
Five-star quarterback Julian Lewis is sticking with the program, standing out as one of the few true cornerstone players who have not entered the transfer portal. Meanwhile, impact names like wide receiver Omarion Miller and safety Tawfiq Byard have elected to move on.
The loss of four-star offensive lineman Carde Smith stands out as one of the most impactful, with the lineman entering the transfer portal last week.
Protecting Lewis must be a priority heading into next season, when he’s expected to be the full-time starter under Sanders and the Buffaloes. That task becomes more difficult when the program loses a top-250 recruit from last year’s class.
Given how the program is structured, player departures aren’t surprising. The current state of college football and NIL has made it difficult for programs like the Buffaloes to consistently retain talent, with more than half the roster entering the transfer portal.
Smith is among several departures, but his combination of size and physicality sets him apart and will attract plenty of attention.
Smith’s size and physicality give him immediate value in the transfer portal, especially at a position that’s increasingly difficult to fill. That combination makes several programs logical fits as potential landing spots as his recruitment begins to take shape.
MORE: Deion Sanders Reportedly Hires Familiar Name As Colorado Running Backs Coach
MORE: Why Shedeur Sanders Will Bounce Back From Late-Season Struggles
MORE: Insider Reveals Biggest Reason Behind Colorado’s Transfer Portal Mass Exodus
SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER HERE
Why Carde Smith and Alabama Are a Transfer Portal Match Made in Heaven
There’s likely to be plenty of interest in Smith, especially after just finishing his redshirt freshman season. Coming from Mobile, Alabama, it’s easy to see why the idea of returning home to play for the Crimson Tide is so appealing.
With quarterback Ty Simpson expected to enter the NFL Draft this spring, the Keelon Russell era is set to begin next season. That transition brings an even bigger need for protection, especially with multiple linemen also leaving for the Draft.
That’s where Smith could make a difference. A four-star recruit, he can play both inside and outside on the offensive line, though he profiles more naturally as a guard.
Landing in Tuscaloosa would give him a chance to contribute immediately.
With his size, versatility, and experience, Smith could provide the stability Alabama’s offensive line needs while helping protect the next generation of elite talent. For a program losing key pieces up front, he might be exactly the type of player they’re looking for.
Carde Smith Could Find Immediate Opportunity at Ohio State
Ryan Day’s Buckeyes have leaned on the transfer portal for years, but developing a consistent offensive line has been a challenge, with many top linemen heading to the NFL. That need is only set to grow this offseason.
Smith is a natural fit for Ohio State and would be a strong cultural fit in Columbus.
Does that mean he’s guaranteed to land there? Of course not. But for a team that needs to protect Heisman Trophy finalist Julian Sayin, adding size and talent up front makes a lot of sense for Day and his staff.
If Smith decided to leave Deion Sanders and the Buffaloes, it’s likely going to be for a program like Ohio State or Alabama. He’s not looking for a lateral move to a mid-tier program with a slight NIL upgrade.
At Ohio State, Smith could step in immediately and help shore up a line losing key pieces. With his size, talent, and versatility, few programs offer the combination of opportunity, exposure, and competitive environment that the Buckeyes can provide.
Alabama
Scarbinsky: 2025 CFP is Alabama’s Kalen DeBoer vs. the Nick Saban coaching tree
Did you see it? Did you feel it? Did you understand what just happened in that moment last Saturday morning on College GameDay?
Nick Saban didn’t go viral. He got real. He didn’t toss out a gratuitous cuss word to make the rodeo clown next to him giggle. He let his guard down, put aside the coachspeak and spoke from the heart.
Saban, on the set in College Station before the Miami-Texas A&M playoff game, started to ask a question of Kalen DeBoer, who was back in Tuscaloosa after the stirring comeback victory at Oklahoma the night before. The GOAT veered off-script and off-brand for just a moment.
“God, I’m proud of ya,” Saban said, “and I’m proud of the team.”
DeBoer, on a split screen, didn’t change his expression, but you had to wonder if something fundamental had changed between the coach who stepped down in T-town and the coach who stepped up to take his place.
Before Oklahoma, Saban had questioned Alabama’s toughness because the Tide got bullied by Georgia in the SEC Championship Game, but toughness can show itself in different ways beyond a punishing running game. By withstanding the atmosphere, energy and incipient avalanche against the Sooners, DeBoer’s second Alabama team displayed an inner strength few understood it possessed.
Saban, whose teams routinely struggled to meet the moment in Auburn’s raucous house, seemed to understand the significance of what his successor had just accomplished. DeBoer, before getting to Saban’s question about what’s next, simply responded, “Appreciate that, coach.”
Do you understand the river running through the 2025 College Football Playoff? Do you appreciate that Saban’s influence on the sport has never been on more vivid display?
Of the eight teams remaining in the chase for the national championship, five of them are coached by former Saban assistants at Alabama. Unless Ryan Day and Ohio State or Joey McGuire and Texas Tech disrupt the storyline, DeBoer and the Crimson Tide may have to go through three Saban proteges to add his own statue to the Walk of Champions.
Up next: Indiana and former Alabama wide receivers coach Curt Cignetti in the quarterfinals on New Year’s Day in the Rose Bowl. Win there, and DeBoer could face Oregon and former Alabama graduate assistant Dan Lanning in the Jan. 9 semifinals in the Peach Bowl.
Win there, and DeBoer could meet Georgia and former Alabama defensive coordinator Kirby Smart or Ole Miss and former Alabama defensive coordinator Pete Golding or Miami and former Alabama offensive line coach Mario Cristobal in the Jan. 19 National Championship Game in Miami.
In a symbolic way, DeBoer has been competing with Saban’s shadow every single day since accepting the challenge to follow him. For the rest of this postseason, DeBoer may have to tangle with three branches of the Saban coaching tree.
Fun fact: DeBoer is 7-2 against Team Saban. He’s 2-1 against Smart, 3-0 against Lanning, 2-0 against Steve Sarkisian and 0-1 against Cristobal. DeBoer and Fresno State lost to Cristobal and Oregon 31-24 in 2021.
Cignetti is the most intriguing character in this Saban family Christmas play. While Smart is the son of Saban generally acknowledged as most like his coaching father, Cignetti didn’t fall far from the tree, either. He shares Saban’s disdain for mediocre people and dumb questions. The Indiana coach has a sharp edge to his wit, his tongue and his approach to attacking opponents.
He and DeBoer have never squared off as head coaches, but their resumes have a shared history. Each has coached at the other school. Cignetti was Alabama’s receivers coach and recruiting coordinator from 2007-10, working with the program’s foundational recruit, Julio Jones. He left to start his head coaching journey at Indiana University – of Pennsylvania, a Division II school where his dad, Frank, had been a highly successful head coach.
DeBoer spent the 2019 season as Indiana’s offensive coordinator. The Hoosiers went 8-5, their best season in 26 years, which helped DeBoer land his first FBS head coaching opportunity at Fresno State.
They bring different reputations into the Rose Bowl. DeBoer is the giant killer who’s 4-0 against top-10 teams in true road games as a head coach. Cignetti is the miracle worker who’s 24-2 in two seasons at historically inept Indiana.
This one may tie Saban’s heartstrings in knots. Cignetti helped him pour the foundation of Alabama’s dynasty, and long before that, Cignetti’s father hired Saban as his defensive backs coach at West Virginia. Meanwhile, Alabama is the school that gave Saban the chance to take his career to an elite level. He’s still a paid ambassador, and the field in Bryant-Denny Stadium is named in his honor.
Alabama AD Greg Byrne went outside the Saban family to hire his successor. DeBoer keeps reinforcing the wisdom of that decision. Making Saban proud added to the confirmation. Mowing down one Saban protege after another to win a national title would be the ultimate validation.
Alabama
Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker’s Luxury Birthday Gifts to Alabama Barker Revealed
Travis Barker’s Daughter Alabama Barker Reveals She’s Taking Weight-Loss Medication
Alabama Barker is getting blinged out.
Travis Barker‘s daughter rang in her 20th birthday on Dec. 24 with a haul of eye-popping luxury presents, posting a photo of a carful of Chanel and Louboutin shopping bags.
Alabama—who the Blink-182 drummer shares with ex Shanna Moakler—revealed that her dad gave her a diamond paved Cartier Love bracelet, worth about $38,000. After opening the jewelry, Alabama wrote to her dad on Instagram Story, “I love you.”
As for stepmom Kourtney Kardashian, who tied the knot with Travis in 2022, she also went all out on a present, wrapping up a pink Birkin bag worth over $20,000.
“I love you !!!!!” Alabama wrote to the Kardashians star alongside a snapshot of the Hermès purse.
And the feeling is mutual, with Kourtney writing a precious message on Instagram to reflect on their yearslong bond.
“Known you since 8!” the 46-year-old wrote. “May this next year be filled with love and peace and laughter. happy birthday … I love you and all our laughs!”
-
Maine1 week agoElementary-aged student killed in school bus crash in southern Maine
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro, a 47-year-old physicist and fusion scientist, shot and killed in his home in Brookline, Mass. | Fortune
-
New Mexico1 week agoFamily clarifies why they believe missing New Mexico man is dead
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz and See How Much You Know About Jane Austen
-
World7 days agoPutin says Russia won’t launch new attacks on other countries ‘if you treat us with respect’
-
Entertainment2 days agoPat Finn, comedy actor known for roles in ‘The Middle’ and ‘Seinfeld,’ dies at 60
-
Minneapolis, MN1 week agoMinneapolis man is third convicted in Coon Rapids triple murder
-
Maine1 week agoFamily in Maine host food pantry for deer | Hand Off