Alabama
Alabama receives commitment from transfer punter
Alabama appears to be adding a new name to the mix for next year’s punter opening. Sunday night, the Crimson Tide received a commitment from Colorado School of Mines punter Blake Doud. The redshirt junior will have one year of eligibility remaining at Alabama.
Doud earned Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Special Teams Player of the Year honors last season, leading NCAA Division II with 46.6 yards per punt. The Parker Colorado native had 13 punts of 50 or more yards this season and pinned his opponents inside the 20 on 19 occasions. He had a career-long 80-yard punt that was downed at the 1 against West Texas A&M
Along with Doud, Alabama added freshman Alex Asparuhov who ranks third nationally, according to Kohl’s Kicking.
“We identified him earlier in the spring,” DeBoer said during Alabama’s recruiting show. “He came and did a great job this summer at camp. Really narrowed down to him and a few others. He was a guy who we identified that we wanted. Can do it all — great athlete. Dad, very similar, pedigree — dad was a college football player, and things like that too. Just a lot of background checks, again, and things like that. I knew the people to go to. We knew the people to go to. He did more than check all the boxes.”
Alabama will have an opening at punter next season as redshirt senior James Burnip is out of eligibility.
Alabama
'Grew up an Alabama fan my whole life': Mobile (Ala.) DL AJ Pauley sets official visit, details high interest
Alabama
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.
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.
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.
Alabama
Alabama Running Back Is a Quiet Addition With Big Upside for Colorado
The Colorado Buffaloes’ offseason is all but wrapped up as training camp approaches, and coach Deion Sanders has been busy, adding more than 40 players from the transfer portal. With so much turnover, the roster is starting to finally take shape for the next season.
One of the most underrated additions this offseason is former Alabama running back Richard Young. Sanders and offensive coordinator Brennan Marion see potential in the former four-star recruit that hasn’t yet been realized.
Young came to Alabama as part of the 2023 recruiting class out of LeHigh Senior High School in Florida. Despite his talent, he spent much of his time buried on the depth chart and never got a real opportunity to showcase what he can do.
Production has been hard to come by for Young, which has been a sticking point in his development. He has fewer than 60 carries in his career and came off a season where he averaged less than three yards per carry.
If Young can stay healthy and find a consistent role in Colorado’s offense, he has a chance to finally show why he was once such a coveted recruit. With the Buffaloes’ revamped backfield, this could be the perfect stage for him to turn untapped potential into production.
MORE: Colorado Recruit Xavier McDonald Announces Massive Flip on National Signing Day
MORE: Colorado Buffaloes Emerge As Losers of National Signing Day
MORE: The Biggest Thing to Know About Colorado on National Signing Day
SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER HERE
Unlocking the Potential of Colorado’s Revamped Running Backs
Still to be determined is how Colorado’s offense will utilize its running backs, but Sacramento State’s Damien Henderson II and Jaquail Smith should be factors from the start. Young and Micah Welch have shown flashes, though neither has yet shown that he can be counted on.
Henderson II and Smith added 1,076 yards and 10 touchdowns last season, showing potential for big plays. This kind of game-breaking ability should serve them well at Colorado, where a much-improved front will set the tone for the offense.
Young will have a big offseason and training camp ahead of him if he wants to get reps, but at his size can make himself valuable as a goal-line bruiser type of tailback. Welch is arguably the biggest question mark in the running back stable, but Young is clearly the favorite to start.
As the main returning back, it’s unclear how Welch fits into Marion’s system. He’s flashed potential, but that hasn’t yet turned into consistent production.
If Henderson II and Smith can carry over their big-play ability from Sacramento State, they could become the engine of Colorado’s rushing attack. Early contributions from the two could set the tone for the offense and turn the backfield from a question mark into a genuine strength.
Can Richard Young Make an Impact in Colorado’s Backfield?
The odds of Young making an impact in Colorado’s backfield are high, especially as a redshirt junior. He brings experience that the Hornets running backs don’t, along with Welch, and could step in right away.
With his time at Alabama and his ability to run between the tackles, Young has the tools to take over the backfield. He was a four-star recruit for a reason, but he just needs the opportunity to show what he can do.
His mix of size, vision, and power gives the Buffaloes a back who can control the line of scrimmage and create opportunities for the entire offense.
If he can stay healthy and adapt quickly to the system, Young has the potential to be a reliable, dynamic weapon every game. This could be the season he finally lives up to the hype and becomes a true cornerstone of the Buffaloes’ rushing attack.
-
Politics6 days agoWhite House says murder rate plummeted to lowest level since 1900 under Trump administration
-
Indiana1 week ago13-year-old rider dies following incident at northwest Indiana BMX park
-
Alabama4 days agoGeneva’s Kiera Howell, 16, auditions for ‘American Idol’ season 24
-
Indiana1 week ago13-year-old boy dies in BMX accident, officials, Steel Wheels BMX says
-
Politics1 week agoTrump unveils new rendering of sprawling White House ballroom project
-
San Francisco, CA1 week agoExclusive | Super Bowl 2026: Guide to the hottest events, concerts and parties happening in San Francisco
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz on Mysteries Set in American Small Towns
-
Massachusetts1 week agoTV star fisherman’s tragic final call with pal hours before vessel carrying his entire crew sinks off Massachusetts coast