Alabama
How much did Alabama football make, spend in 2024 fiscal year? How did other Crimson Tide teams fare?
After operating in a deficit of about $12.1 million during the 2023 fiscal year, that number grew for the University of Alabama athletic department in 2024.
According to Alabama’s NCAA financial report, obtained via open records request by the Tuscaloosa News, the department operated in a deficit of about $28 million in the 2024 fiscal year.
Per an Alabama spokesperson, the net loss was “largely due to one-time expenses associated with the football coaching transition.” Alabama football spent $30.5 million more from July 1, 2023, through June 30, 2024, than in the previous 12 months.
Alabama reported $234.8 million in revenue for the athletic department as a whole in the 2024 fiscal year and $262.8 million in expenses.
Alabama also operated at a $21.2 million deficit in 2019, the only fiscal year between 2005-22 in which the department spent more than it made.
Of the $234.8 million in revenue, Alabama had more than $75 million in contributions provided and used by the athletic department. The department did not report pledges for contributions or contributions set to used for later years.
Of the program’s $262.8 million in expenses, about $65.3 million was spent in coaching salaries.
Alabama football revenue and expenses: How much did Crimson Tide make?
The Crimson Tide football program was responsible for $140.6 million in revenue and $113.8 million in expenses in the 2024 fiscal year.
The leading areas for Alabama football’s revenue were contributions ($53.6 million), ticket sales ($38.3 million) and media rights ($24.9 million).
Alabama football’s $42.2 million surplus was about $3.8 million less than 2023.
Alabama men’s basketball revenue and expenses
Alabama men’s basketball operated in a surplus again in fiscal year 2024. But the number continues to decrease. get smaller and smaller.
After an $8.15 million surplus in fiscal year 2022 and $7.76 million in 2023, the Crimson Tide had about a $6 million surplus in 2024, with $21.3 million in revenue while spending $15.3 million.
Alabama men’s basketball eclipsed $2 million in travel, coming within about $500,000 of the travel budget for the Crimson Tide football team.
Alabama men’s basketball made about $3.3 million in ticket sales, received about $2.8 million in contributions and more than $9 million in media rights.
What did other Alabama sports make in 2024 fiscal year?
In the 2024 fiscal year, the Alabama women’s basketball program operated at about a $4.2 million deficit.
All other Alabama sports lost more than $21 million in the 2024 fiscal year.
Colin Gay covers Alabama football for The Tuscaloosa News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at cgay@gannett.com or follow him @_ColinGay on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Alabama
Two ejected after boat crash on Alabama lake
A crash between two vessels on Lake Mitchell ejected two and injured one on Friday night, authorities have confirmed.
Around 7:15 p.m. on June 26, a 17-foot Bumblebee Bass boat collided with a 17-foot Nova Bass boat in Hatchet Creek on Lake Mitchell in Coosa County.
The collision caused the operator of the Bumblebee and a passenger to be ejected into the water. The passenger — 38-year-old Natasha L. Holt of Munford — was recovered from the water and transported to Baptist Medical Center East in Montgomery for treatment.
The others involved in the crash — 24-year-old Duncan Davis of Deatsville and 30-year-old Trevor Howell of Munford, the operators of the Nova and Bumblebee respectively — were not injured in the crash.
ALEA’s investigation into the incident is ongoing.
Sarah Clifton covers business for the Montgomery Advertiser. You can reach her at sclifton@montgome.gannett.com or follow her on X @sarahgclifton and TikTok @sarahgclifton. To support her work, please subscribe to the Montgomery Advertiser.
Alabama
The legend of Alabama’s black panthers: Why the sightings never stop
So what are so many otherwise reliable people seeing in the woods? Wildlife experts believe most sightings are misidentifications—animals seen in low light that appear larger, darker, or differently shaped than they truly are. Locals frequently report encounters in wooded and mountainous regions, and in most cases, the culprit is likely a bobcat, a black bear cub, an oversized dog, or even a house cat caught in the wrong light. Alabama’s only native wildcat, the bobcat, is typically tan and spotted, though melanistic all-black bobcats have occasionally been recorded—still far smaller than any panther, but striking enough to give pause in a dark wood.
Alabama
2019 Alabama Prison Escapee Now Facing Florida Charges For Walnut Hill Machete Carjacking : NorthEscambia.com
A man who escaped an Alabama prison facility and allegedly staged a local carjacking in 2019 has been extradited to Escambia County, Florida.
Travis Wyatt Dawson was served with outstanding warrants and extricated last week for felony carjacking with a weapon and misdemeanor battery. He remains in the Escambia County Jail with bond set at $102,500.
The charges stem from a July 14, 2019, incident on Miller Road in Walnut Hill. Dawson, who had escaped from a Loxley, Alabama, work release center four days prior, allegedly grabbed a victim from behind, brandished a machete, and stole a 2016 Dodge Caravan. As Dawson fled the scene, a witness jumped into the back of the minivan to try to stop him. The vehicle was later found abandoned after running out of gas at Interstate 65 and Government Street in Mobile.
Dawson eluded capture until May 2020, when he was apprehended in Louisiana.
At the time of his escape, Dawson was serving a 20 years sentence for a 2013 convocation for possession of a controlled substance in Escambia County, Alabama.
A man who escaped an Alabama prison facility in 2019 and allegedly staged a local carjacking has been extradited to Escambia County, Florida.
Travis Wyatt Dawson was served with outstanding warrants and extricated last week for felony carjacking with a weapon and misdemeanor battery.
The charges stem from a July 14, 2019, incident on Miller Road in Walnut Hill. Dawson, who had escaped from a Loxley, Alabama, work release center four days prior, allegedly grabbed a victim from behind, brandished a machete, and stole a 2016 Dodge Caravan. As Dawson fled the scene, a witness jumped into the back of the minivan to try to stop him. The vehicle was later found abandoned after running out of gas at Interstate 65 and Government Street in Mobile.
Dawson eluded capture until May 2020, when he was apprehended in Louisiana.
At the time of his escape, Dawson was serving a 20 years sentence for a 2013 convocation for possession of a controlled substance in Escambia County, Alabama.
Pictured top: Officers from the Alabama Department of Corrections speak to an Escambia County (FL) deputy and a citizen a roadblock on Miller Road in Florida on July 12, 2019. Dawson allegedly carjacked a minivan just a few yards from this location on July 14, 2019. Pictured below: An Escambia County (FL) Road Prison K-9 team searches near a Rockaway Creek Road bridge that spans the Alabama-Florida state line. Pictured bottom: An Escambia County (FL) deputy helps maintain a perimeter around a neighborhood along Rockaway Creek Road at Grubbs Street in Atmore. NorthEscambia.com photos, click to enlarge.
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