Alabama
The new role Mark Sears needs to fill for Alabama
Alabama men’s basketball doesn’t need or want Mark Sears to fill the role he did in 2023-24.
Sears doesn’t need to be the player averaging 21.5 points and 33.6 minutes per game for this version of the Crimson Tide to succeed at a high level. And frankly, it’s going to be a challenge for him to do that again, as it already has been. Teams are too aware of him.
“First thing is, he’s got to understand it’s going to be a lot different than any other college year for him because he’s preseason player of the year, people are going to design their defense to stop him,” Alabama coach Nate Oats said. “He may play a game where he has an unbelievably great game and only scores five points but he moves the ball around and attracts so much attention that it makes it easier for his teammates.”
Sears’ role on this new roster has moved to center stage after he scored no points and didn’t play as much in a win over Illinois last week. He played 13 minutes in the first half then eight minutes in the second. Sears finished 0-for-5 and 0-for-4 from deep. Yet No. 8 Alabama won 100-87 at Legacy Arena in the CM Newton Classic.
Alabama got strong play from its other guards: Labaron Philon, Latrell Wrightsell Jr. and Aden Holloway. Philon scored 16 points, grabbed seven rebounds and tallied nine assists. Wrightsell Jr. also scored 16 but had two rebounds and four assists. Then Holloway scored 18 and made 3 of 4 from deep.
Alabama didn’t have that much talent or depth in its backcourt a season ago. Especially when Wrightsell missed time with injuries. So Sears had to be the guy almost all the time and play a bunch of minutes for the Crimson Tide to play at a high level.
Now he doesn’t have to do as much, even though he’s capable.
“I think one, he’s got to quit pressing,” Oats said. “He’s not going to average as many points this year as he did last year. We knew that coming in. People are going to focus on him. We’ve got more talent around him. It just is what it is. He’s got to do it takes to help us win games.”
Sometimes, Oats said, that will be moving the ball and getting assists. Other games, he will be a decoy, attracting attention away so others can get open looks. And then there will be nights where teams let Sears score a bunch and prevent others from having an impact.
“He’s just got to get comfortable with the new role and get comfortable with doing whatever it takes to win and understanding that there’s going to be games he’s just not going to score that many,” Oats said. “We’ve got to do a decent job screening for him to get him open. Give him enough space to get downhill. Keep him playing aggressive without being overly aggressive to where he’s trying to score on multiple opponents. He’s got to stay aggressive and make the right reads when they bring multiple defenders to him.”
Next up, No. 9 Alabama (4-1) will play in the Players Era Festival in Las Vegas, starting with a game against No. 6 Houston on Tuesday (7 p.m. CT, TBS). Then the Crimson Tide will face Rutgers on Wednesday (9 p.m. CT, TBS).
Nick Kelly is an Alabama beat writer for AL.com and the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X and Instagram.
Alabama
New Alabama parole board chairman sworn in
Hal Nash has been elected to the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles in a unanimous vote from the Alabama State Senate today, Jan. 29. Governor Kay Ivey appointed Nash as chairman of the board from a list of five qualified nominees back in July, 2025.
“I’m grateful to Governor Kay Ivey for her confidence in me and look forward to continuing to fulfill my duties to the people of Alabama,” Nash said. “As a law enforcement officer for more than three decades, I understand the importance of our role to serve and protect the people of Alabama. We will be detailed, diligent and strive to ensure a stronger, safer state through my work with fellow board members and our partnership with the Bureau and its officers in the field.”
Before this, Nash served as the Chief Corrections Deputy with the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office. He’s previously swerved at other law enforcement agencies such as the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office. Ivey reportedly picked Nash because she was seeking a candidate that was pro-law enforcement, fair and had a tough-on-crime stance with previous experience with leadership. Nash reportedly also has experience in leadership positions in civic organizations such as serving as the Chairman of the Chattanooga/Hamilton County Air Pollution Control Board and the Jackson County Hospital Authority.
Cam Ward, the current director of Alabama Bureau of Pardons and Paroles, issued the following statement after Ivey’s appointment of Nash.
“Governor Ivey’s appointment and the Alabama Senate’s confirmation of Hal Nash to the Board is a fine choice. I know with Chairman Nash’s background that he will continue to represent our law enforcement community well,” Ward said. “The Bureau functions separately from the Board, but we enjoy cooperation with its members and work to promote the safety of our state’s citizens while providing meaningful paths to reentry into society for formerly incarcerated Alabamians.”
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The Board and Bureau are sepe3rate entities, with the Board serving on Alabama’s legislative branch of government. Its single legal authority under the law is to determine who receives parole and is comprised of three members, each serving a six-year term. The Bureau is part of the Executive Branch agency and provides legal and administrative support to the Board as needed. In addition, the Bureau Director has the power to perform duties assigned to the board by law except for the ability to adopt rules, guidelines or other policies and to grant or deny pardons, paroles, the restoration of political and civil rights, the remission of fines and forfeitures as well as the ability to revoke parole.
Alabama
Inmate serving life for 1989 murder-for-hire dies in Alabama prison
A Jefferson County man serving life for a 1989 contract killing has died in prison.
Guy Greggory Griggs, 60, sustained a head injury on Jan. 9 when he fell at William Donaldson Correctional Facility, according to the Jefferson County Coroner’s Office.
He was hospitalized and then returned to the prison infirmary where he died at 1:16 p.m. Wednesday, said Chief Deputy Coroner Bill Yates.
Griggs was convicted of capital murder in Jefferson County in the 1989 shooting death of Kerry Mixon. According to court documents, Griggs and another man paid the shooter $1,000 to killed Mixon on Sept. 7, 1989.
Alabama
Alabama inmate activists from an Oscar-nominated film are moved to solitary, attorneys say
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — The Alabama prison system has moved three well-known inmate activists who supported a 2022 prison strike and were featured in an Oscar-nominated documentary about the troubled system to isolated cells with little contact with others, family members and attorneys said.
Family members of the three men said they fear for their loved ones’ safety and are concerned the moves to solitary confinement are a form of retaliation for outspokenness about problems within the prison system. Robert Earl Council, Melvin Ray and Raoul Poole were transferred two weeks ago from their existing prisons to solitary confinement at Kilby Correctional Facility outside Montgomery, Alabama, their lawyers said. The transfers come as some groups have encouraged a new prison labor strike this year.
“This is straight-up retaliation,” said Julie Sledd, who is close to Poole and spoke to The Associated Press about his situation. “They’ve all three been very involved in standing up for the rights of incarcerated citizens.”
Council, Ray and Poole were featured in “The Alabama Solution,” a documentary about the state prison system that relied heavily on cell phone footage from inmates. The film has been nominated for an Academy Award in the documentary category.
Sledd said she has been able to talk to Poole once since the transfer and he told her the men are being held in separate cells on an isolated and closely guarded floor.
“Since their arrival, the men have been cut off from contact with their families and are being held in isolation with no contact with other prisoners or prison staff except for a small group of guards and supervisors,” lawyers representing the three men said in a statement.
The attorneys said the prison system did not provide a reason for the move and said the restrictions “far exceed standard administrative segregation protocols.”
“Given ADOC’s decade-long documented history of excessive force against prisoners and its pattern of retaliation against these specific individuals — including a prior 2021 incident in which four guards nearly killed Robert Council — their attorneys fear for the activists’ safety and well-being,” the lawyers wrote.
The Alabama Department of Corrections cited security concerns as the reason the men were moved, but did not elaborate.
“The transfer of inmates is based on intelligence that they are engaged in activity that is detrimental to the safety and security of the facilities and the public,” prison officials said in an statement emailed by spokeswoman Kelly Betts.
The statement added that “all inmates are safe, secure, and receiving regular meals and other services as needed,” and that they have had legal visits and phone service.
Earnestine Council said Wednesday that she has gotten little information about her son and has not been able to speak with him. Ann Brooks, Ray’s mother, said she hasn’t been able to reach her son, although he was able to make one call to his brother.
“I don’t know what is going to happen or what could happen,” Brooks said.
The moves come as some have pushed for a new prison labor strike this year similar to one in 2022 that drew national attention. Thousands of Alabama inmate workers went on strike that year, refusing to labor in prison kitchens, laundries and factories to protest conditions in the state lockups.
Several inmates told The Associated Press that prisons have recently reduced the amount of food and other items they can purchase each week at the prison commissary, a move that could prevent items from being stockpiled ahead of any strike.
The prison system said in a statement that food service has been contracted out to a new vendor, Aramark, but didn’t elaborate.
“We’re really concerned because they’ve had retaliation and abuse in response to all of their activism,” said Andrew Jarecki, director of “The Alabama Solution.”
“It’s particularly ironic that these men who are incredibly brave — and frankly, scholars — and have learned the law and have been leaders and always observe nonviolent means of protest, are always met with violence by authorities.”
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