Alabama
Alabama WBB Suffers First Loss: Roll Call, December 6, 2024
The SEC rolled over ACC in the men’s version of the ACC/SEC Challenge, but it wasn’t quite the same level of success on the women’s side, including for the Crimson Tide. No. 19 Alabama suffered its first loss of the season in a 69-65 defeat at Cal on Thursday night.
“Tough one tonight,” Alabama head coach Kristy Curry said after the game. “Credit Cal – it was an amazing environment. I thought we battled, battled, battled. We just weren’t able to get a couple of critical stops and make a couple of plays down the stretch. We missed nine free throws, which are little things on the road that we know we can correct. Cal is a really good team, a veteran team, that can really shoot the ball. We struggled a little bit there in the third [quarter] and I think we gave them five for seven from deep. Our kids battled through a lot of adversity tonight. I thought it hurt us with Diana [Collins] being out, and Sarah Ashlee [Barker] had flu-like symptoms, so no excuses. Those aren’t excuses, but I thought our kids really battled through some adversity tonight.”
Alabama (9-1) and Cal (8-1) switched leads seven different times during the game, before the Bears took the final lead under the five-minute mark in the fourth. Zaay Green contributed a season-high 28 points with a pair of assists and a steal for the Crimson Tide, while two other Alabama players picked up double-digits, including Essence Cody (13) and Karly Weathers (10).
Gymnastics in Crimson and White Preview Meet, Coleman Coliseum, 7 p.m.
Women’s basketball: Cal 69, Alabama 65
Not 1. Pro Bowl vote 🗳️: https://t.co/JsfUV5geTn pic.twitter.com/fa2thKuoZm
— Green Bay Packers (@packers) December 6, 2024
Not 2.
But TD No. 3 for Josh Jacobs!
In his first game back since an injury on Oct. 29, Herb Jones helped lead the Pelicans to a 126-124 victory over the Suns with 12 points, seven rebounds, five assists, four steals and one block.
HERB JONES. THE SAVIOR pic.twitter.com/XeXBA4jaWB
— New Orleans Pelicans (@PelicansNBA) December 6, 2024 Sonic end zone sighting 👀@Jahmyr_Gibbs1 pic.twitter.com/7SNHbAEHzm
— Detroit Lions (@Lions) December 6, 2024 SEC Community Service Team
♦️ Tim Keenan III♦️#RollTide pic.twitter.com/NdsXDlJOkS
— Alabama Football (@AlabamaFTBL) December 5, 2024
December 6, 1915: Legendary Crimson Tide lineman Arthur Pershing “Tarzan” White was born in Lockhart, Ala.
December 6, 1938: The University of Georgia reportedly offered a substantial contract to Frank Thomas to become the next head coach of the Bulldogs. Thomas, who was 57-6-3 with the Crimson Tide, said he would listen to the Georgia offers but was extremely happy as the head coach of Alabama.
December 6, 1941: Former Alabama player and coach Ray Perkins was born in Petal, Miss.
December 6, 2014: Fifth-year senior Blake Sims was 23 of 27 for 262 yards and two touchdowns to be named MVP of the SEC Championship Game. Alabama pulled away with three fourth-quarter touchdowns in a 42-13 rout of No. 16 Missouri at the Georgia Dome. The win secured the No. 1 Crimson Tide a spot in the inaugural College Football Playoff.
“You love to see a guy who’s gone through what he’s gone through, who’s worked so hard and always persevered, then have success. It’s a credit to his character and work ethic. … I’ve never seen a guy work so hard.” — Alabama coach Nick Saban on Blake Sims after the SEC Championship Game on this date in 2014.
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!”
Alabama
Kalen DeBoer, Curt Cignetti’s Alabama-Indiana coaching paths meet in Rose Bowl
CFP quarterfinal preview Alabama vs Indiana
Alabama faces top-seed Indiana in a CFP quarterfinal matchup. Does Alabama have what it takes to upset No. 1 Indiana?
BLOOMINGTON, IN – A self-professed film junkie, Curt Cignetti actually got an unintended head start on Alabama prep earlier this season.
The Crimson Tide played games during both of Indiana’s idle weeks this season, and Cignetti confessed he’s “always enjoyed studying coach (Kalen) DeBoer’s offenses.” So, without necessarily meaning to, IU’s coach managed to get eyes on the Hoosiers’ Rose Bowl opponent long before Cignetti know what would await him in Pasadena.
“They do a lot of really great stuff,” Cignetti said. “They’ve got a lot of great players, are extremely well-coached. They’re a really good team, and a tremendous challenge.”
That complimentary nod from one sideline to the other Monday afternoon reflected a College Football Playoff quarterfinal game steeped in intrigue, its two programs remarkably interwoven not least by the journeys of their two coaches.
Cignetti and DeBoer spent time during bowl-organized Zoom sessions praising one another’s success, and considering the similarities in their respective career paths.
From 10,000 feet, Indiana vs. Alabama in the Rose Bowl will be billed as a clash of new and old money. Of Southern establishment against Midwest revolution. History and heritage colliding with so many of modern college football’s overturned conventions.
On the ground, though, it presents a fascinating case study into the binding ties of a sport that’s never quite as far removed from itself as it thinks. And it pits against one another two programs that have never met on the field, yet remain unusually influential on one another today.
Curt Cignetti, Kalen DeBoer mirror one another’s coaching paths with stops at Alabama, Indiana
Their respective histories with one another’s current employers are the only meaningful points of intersection, career-wise, between DeBoer and Cignetti.
DeBoer spent one year as Tom Allen’s offensive coordinator, helping Indiana reach its first Florida-based January bowl game (at a time when that still carried greater meaning) in 2019.
And Cignetti spent four years as part of Nick Saban’s first Alabama staff, coaching wide receivers and coordinating recruiting for the program Cignetti eventually helped win a national championship.
But they’ve both distinguished themselves in their profession through their willingness to climb the coaching pyramid: From outside Division I, through lower levels as either a head coach or coordinator, all the way up to the sport’s biggest stage.
“Knowing coach Cignetti and — you referred to it — his path, nothing but respect for how he’s done it, how he’s gotten to this spot,” DeBoer said.
Cignetti’s path is well documented at this point: He left Tuscaloosa for Division II Indiana-Pennsylvania (IUP), coaching six years at the same school where his father built a hall-of-fame career before moving up through Elon, James Madison and Indiana. He routinely cites that experience as formative now.
DeBoer’s own arc is not that different.
The former Sioux Falls wide receiver won three NAIA national titles with his alma mater before taking coordinator jobs at Southern Illinois, Eastern Michigan, Fresno State and Indiana, then landing his first head job back in Fresno.
In just five full seasons since — Fresno State only played six games in DeBoer’s first season due to COVID-19 — he’s won 54 games, guiding Washington to the national championship game and now Alabama to the playoff.
In an era when breaking into Power Four coaching without Power Four bloodlines has become increasingly difficult, each of the men captaining a Rose Bowl sideline come New Year’s Day will have earned his way to that moment through his willingness to walk the less-traveled road.
“I wouldn’t trade it for the world,” DeBoer said. “I think all of it goes into just being built for these moments.”
Kalen DeBoer is a historical marker of IU football’s growth
If their experiences have indeed built them that way, then what on their paths is shared has built the programs they bring with them.
DeBoer spent just one season at Indiana, but he has with him on staff several faces familiar to Indiana and its fans.
Defensive coordinator Kane Wommack and co-offensive coordinator Nick Sheridan were on staff in Bloomington with DeBoer. Director of sports performance David Ballou worked in Bloomington before joining Nick Saban’s staff, and DeBoer held him over through the coaching change. Rick Danison, a longtime member of IU’s strength staff, now works with Ballou in Tuscaloosa.
Even DeBoer himself still represents something increasingly important in Bloomington.
When Tom Allen hired him from Fresno State, IU handed DeBoer what was then the richest contract given to one of its coordinators. By the time his one season at Indiana finished — inclusive of bonuses and incentives — DeBoer landed just short of becoming the Hoosiers’ first million-dollar coordinator.
That number seems small now, when compared to the eight-figure salary Cignetti now commands, or the new three-year contract Bryant Haines signed this month expected to be worth in the region of $3 million annually.
They all represent the same basic idea: Indiana spent the best part of two decades spending meaningfully on football with the ultimate goal of eventually climbing to the place it occupies today.
“I felt like when we were there, there was a growth, an investment that was happening, and there was success,” DeBoer said. “Coach Cignetti has done a great job providing the spark, which really leads people continuing to be all in. As you get more people all in, you get the moments that you’re in right now.
“It works off each other — the energy and the commitment to the success.”
Curt Cignetti’s Indiana football a flavor of Nick Saban’s Alabama
Cignetti knows Alabama even better, in some ways, than DeBoer knows Indiana.
It was his last stop (of several) as an assistant before beginning his head-coaching career. It was where he won a national championship under Saban.
And it offered Cignetti an experience he refers back to now, almost daily.
“I probably think about it every single day,” Cignetti said.
Cignetti is not shy about referring to his blueprint — an all-encompassing philosophical approach to running his program he adheres to religiously. He even has a self-published handbook on many of its fundamentals to use like a sort of program bible.
Ask Cignetti about the mentors and experiences that helped him build that structure, and he’ll take you on a journey through his football life. From growing up watching his father, Frank Cignetti Sr., to his time at Pitt with Johnny Majors and Walt Harris, through to his time working under Chuck Amato at NC State.
Cignetti’s years at Alabama, which he spent watching perhaps the best program builder in college football history, remain among his most formative.
“Philosophically, the program we run here is probably a lot more the same than different at Alabama,” he said. “There’s probably not a day that goes by where I don’t draw from those experiences.”
He will carry them onto the Pasadena grass in less than two weeks’ time, his program’s first Rose Bowl victory and a place in the playoff semifinal on the line.
That game will come with all kinds of outside noise and meaning. It will be cast as representing many things, some more legitimate than others.
Few more so than the fundamental truth that both Indiana and Alabama will arrive to that moment in a remarkable number of ways because of one another, the connections that bind them together defining their respective journeys to Jan. 1, 2026.
Alabama
Alabama D-lineman LT Overton cleared to return for playoff quarterfinals
Alabama defensive lineman LT Overton has been cleared to return from an undisclosed illness, sources confirm to BamaOnLine. Overton will play in the Crimson Tide’s Rose Bowl matchup with Indiana on New Year’s Day. CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz first reported the Overton news.
Earlier on Tuesday, Overton stated, “Back like I never left,” on his Instagram story.
On Monday, Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer provided an update on Overton’s progress.
“LT, just continue to monitor him,” DeBoer said. “Definitely not ruling him out right now, but we’ll continue to evaluate him and see how things go here in the days ahead.”
Overton has missed the last two games because of an illness. The senior started the first 12 games of Alabama’s 2025 season before being ruled out for the SEC Championship Game. He is second on the team in sacks (4) and has recorded 35 tackles and six tackles for loss.
Overton’s return will be a boost for an Alabama defense that recorded a season-high five sacks in its 34-24 playoff win over Oklahoma. One of Overton’s backups, Keon Keeley, had one of the five sacks. The senior was missed in the Crimson Tide’s SEC title game loss to Georgia.
DeBoer said on Monday that Alabama was “as healthy as we’ve been in a long time.” The Tide offense was nearly at full strength in Norman. Now, the defense is healthy with Overton back.
Alabama will play Indiana in Pasadena, Calif., on Thursday, January 1, at 3 p.m. CT (ESPN).
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