Alabama
Alabama lost one of its superfans, and I lost a great friend, in Mike Parker | Goodbread
I’ll call Mike Parker a superfan only in the purest, most rudimentary sense of the term.
He was, no doubt, the biggest Alabama fan I’ve ever known, so it’s a fitting way to describe him, although he had zero interest in launching a personal brand around his fandom. That he started Crimson Cover, a local radio and television show covering Alabama athletics, might sound contradictory to the notion of a humble superfan. But for Mike, Crimson Cover was never about him, only about the school he loved. Which is to say that he was nothing like the typical sports superfan who seeks to draw attention to self, go viral at any cost, and feed off any scrap of notoriety.
I said goodbye to Mike at a memorial service on Saturday morning — he was 42 — and he would’ve been glad to know that as the church gathering paid its respects, his Crimson Tide basketball team was putting the finishing touches on a 93-91 overtime win over Auburn.
Life dealt Mike the toughest of hands, but he played it with the toughest resolve.
He became quadriplegic in the summer of 2004 after a diving accident in Destin, Fla., while celebrating the Fourth of July. He was confined to a wheelchair for roughly half his life, but his personality refused to be confined to anything. In 2008, he convinced me to co-host Crimson Cover radio with him, having secured a small loan from a relative to pay for the airtime, because he had no advertisers. Within a year, he’d recruited former Alabama All-American defensive end John Copeland as a third co-host, and the three of us would become the best of friends. Soon after, he willed it into existence in its current form, a weekly television show on WVUA.
Among the myriad of health issues related to Mike’s paralysis was a relatively constant battle with nausea, and back when Crimson Cover was strictly on radio, he’d arrive at the station most Saturday mornings with a large plastic bowl in his lap and looking a bit pale. He would warn us and apologize for what he was sure would happen during the show. But the moment the red “on the air” light came on, his nausea would vanish until the show ended, and he’d take the bowl home clean enough to put right back in the cabinet. I always likened it to the “clutch gene” that great athletes have when the game is on the line. Mike mentally locked out his nausea for the show the way Michael Jordan locked out distractions for game-winning shots. His parents saw it more as an indicator of how much he loved talking about Alabama sports. Either way, Crimson Cover broadcasts made him feel better than any prescription ever could.
So did watching Alabama football or basketball games. He never missed one on television, but I know he would’ve been to many more in person were it not for his paralysis. He hated his wheelchair about like how he hated Alabama’s rivals; not shy to curse either. At the visitation following his memorial service, the wheelchair he hated was appropriately turned upside down.
But that wheelchair also got him around to make Crimson Cover a reality.
In an era when growing an audience demanded savvy social media promotion, Mike — who cared so little about social media that he barely kept a Facebook page — did it the hard way. And for someone in a wheelchair, it was the extra-hard way. He went all over Tuscaloosa to grow the show’s audience by taking the brand to the streets. He secured deals for remote broadcasts of Crimson Cover radio and TV at local businesses all over town. BamaLand. Archibald’s BBQ. The Bear Trap. Northport Pharmacy. Wings U. The Purse Man. The Booth. Crimson Carpet and Flooring. Corks & Tops. Even BabyTalk in Northport, an infant/toddler emporium. Yep, Mike could talk Alabama football while pitching onesies and rattles.
On Saturday mornings in the fall, the radio show broadcast live from the Holiday Inn Express lobby on Veterans Memorial Parkway. That’s where the CBS broadcast crew used to stay when it was in town, and its announcing team of Gary Danielson and Verne Lundquist would often come down for the breakfast buffet, then sit in for a segment with Mike on the radio show.
Eventually, as the show transitioned from radio to TV at Mike’s behest, he maintained an integral role in planning its content, piloting its fun, off-the-cuff style on air, securing title sponsors, and more. Now, after 15 years and roughly 750 episodes on WVUA, Copeland and I will continue hosting Crimson Cover in Mike’s memory. But it won’t ever be the same.
Mike was a force of nature, and I wish I’d met him before his diving accident.
But I’m lucky to have met him at all.
Tuscaloosa News columnist Chase Goodbread is also the weekly co-host of Crimson Cover TV on WVUA-23. Reach him at cgoodbread@gannett.com. Follow on X.com @chasegoodbread.
Alabama
Is flashing your headlights legal in Alabama? Here’s what the law says
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A quick flash of your headlights can catch someone’s attention faster than a horn. On busy or quiet streets, it’s a simple, wordless way drivers communicate.
Sometimes it’s a quick “thanks,” a warning or just a mystery. But is this way of communicating legal? Here’s what Alabama law says about flashing headlights.
Is it legal to flash your headlights at other cars in Alabama?
Yes, in Alabama, it technically is legal to flash your headlights at another car. There are no laws that explicitly say it’s illegal. However, some codes prohibit the use of high beams.
Alabama law says drivers must use low beams when within 500 feet of oncoming traffic or 200 feet of the vehicle ahead. These rules help everyone see clearly and stay safe.
Is flashing headlights to warn drivers of speed traps a form of free speech?
See a speed trap? Flashing your headlights to warn others is common. Is it legal? The Free Speech Center at MTSU notes that courts have protected this as free speech.
In 2012, Michael Elli of Ellisville, Missouri, was pulled over for warning of a speed trap by flashing his headlights. Officials said he hindered police, but later agreed he did not.
Other similar cases were Elliott v. Warrick County in 2014 and Beaver v. City of Federal Way in 2018.
Jennifer Lindahl is a Breaking and Trending Reporter in Alabama for USA TODAY’s Deep South Connect Team. Connect with her on X @jenn_lindahl and email at jlindahl@usatodayco.com.
Alabama
Breaking Down Auburn’s Path to the NCAA Tournament Ahead of Alabama Clash
The Auburn Tigers are firmly on the bubble heading into the final game of the regular season, and the urgency couldn’t be higher for Steven Pearl and company.
Auburn travels to Tuscaloosa for a rematch with the Alabama Crimson Tide on Saturday, currently standing at 16-14 overall and 7-10 in the SEC. Alabama knocked off the Tigers on their home floor at Neville Arena just over three weeks ago, meaning Auburn should be seeking revenge this weekend inside Coleman Coliseum.
The Tigers have dropped seven of their last nine games, most recently falling to Ole Miss 85-79 last Saturday and defeating LSU by 14 points on Tuesday’s senior night. Auburn played like two extremely different teams in these two matchups, and it certainly needs to carry the momentum it garnered from the midweek win into Saturday.
The newly updated NCAA Tournament projections feature Auburn on the outside looking in, according to multiple outlets. The Tigers are listed as ESPN bracketologist Joe Lunardi’s second team out of the field, which is disappointing after sitting as a solid No. 7-seed just a few weeks ago.
In CBS Sports’ latest bracketology, Auburn is projected to land as the First Team Out, alongside New Mexico, Seton Hall, and Indiana. However, the Tigers actually boast a higher NET ranking than all seven of the other squads featured in CBS Sports’ Last Four In and Last Four Out.
Prior to its clash with Ole Miss last Saturday, the general consensus was that if Auburn took care of business on its home floor against the Rebels and LSU, the Tigers would put themselves in a good position to crack the tournament, assuming they lost to Alabama in the season finale.
However, obviously, Auburn was unable to get both tasks done, as Pearl’s squad, frankly, seemed uninspired in what was a near must-win game for the Tigers versus Ole Miss. Auburn looked slightly more motivated in its victory over LSU on Tuesday, but could it be too late?
Now, with Auburn sitting just two games over .500 overall and playing some of its worst basketball as of late, it feels as if its season is absolutely on the line in Tuscaloosa on Saturday.
ESPN’s most recent betting odds lean toward Auburn missing the tournament, but a win over the Crimson Tide could, and would, certainly shift that line.
If the Tigers are able to emerge from Coleman Coliseum victorious, which would be a top-20 Quad-1 win on the road, they will most likely hear their name called on Selection Sunday.
But on the flip side, if Auburn falls to its arch rival to close the regular season, it would likely need to win three games or more in the SEC Tournament next week to feel somewhat hopeful about its postseason fate.
Nonetheless, as mentioned previously, there’s no excuse why urgency shouldn’t be at an all-time high on Saturday. With their NCAA Tournament hopes virtually on the line and a chance for revenge on their most-hated rival, the Tigers should come out desperate and hungry from the tip.
Alabama
Southern 88-85 Alabama A&M (Mar 5, 2026) Game Recap – ESPN
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — — Terrance Dixon Jr.’s 19 points helped Southern defeat Alabama A&M 88-85 on Thursday.
Dixon shot 7 of 10 from the field and 5 of 6 from the free-throw line for the Jaguars (15-16, 11-7 Southwestern Athletic Conference). Michael Jacobs scored 15 points while going 4 of 11 and 7 of 9 from the free-throw line, and added five rebounds. AJ Barnes shot 3 for 7 (1 for 3 from 3-point range) and 7 of 8 from the free-throw line to finish with 14 points, while adding six rebounds.
Koron Davis finished with 23 points for the Bulldogs (17-14, 10-8). James Graham added 19 points, 12 rebounds, four assists and two steals for Alabama A&M. Kintavious Dozier also had 12 points.
The Jaguars led by 10 points with 59 seconds to go, before the Bulldogs executed a three-point play from Bilal Abdur-Rahim then got a 3-pointer from Dozier in the span of nine seconds, cutting the deficit to four. A free throw battle closed out the result for the Jaguars.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
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