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2024 college football rankings: Alabama moves to No. 1 following win over Georgia

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2024 college football rankings: Alabama moves to No. 1 following win over Georgia


This sport loves a monarch. This sport loves a despot. This sport craves a conqueror.

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Georgia is 49-3 since Nov. 7, 2020, with all three of those losses coming against Alabama. But since the Bulldogs beat the Crimson Tide in the 2022 national title game, UGA has felt more and more like Zeus who defeated Cronus, took the crown and declared itself king in this here Olympia.

With respect to Ohio State and Texas, this game — Alabama vs. Georgia — is about who carries the standard. There’s nothing hot about that take, though there is heat here for Kirby Smart.

If Smart won this game, we would’ve decided he had a Nick Saban problem. But he lost. And now Georgia has an Alabama problem — like Zeus had with Prometheus. The path to the pantheon starts with this fire, and Jalen Milroe was an orange forge.

With that, here is a look at my top 25 rankings following Week 5 of the college football season:

1. Alabama (4-0)

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Week 5 result: Defeated Georgia, 41-34

In an instant classic, Alabama QB Jalen Milroe passed for 374 yards, rushed for 117 yards and was responsible for four touchdowns, while 17-year-old Ryan Williams caught six passes for 177 yards, including the game-winning 75-yard catch-and-run that would prove to be the winning score.

Alabama is the only program to defeat Georgia since Nov. 7, 2020. And Kalen DeBoer is 1-0 against Kirby Smart.

2. Texas (5-0)

Week 5 result: Defeated Mississippi State, 35-13

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McDonald’s has the Golden Arches. But like McDowell’s has the Golden Arcs, Texas has the Golden Arch. 

Arch Manning completed 26 of 31 passes for 324 yards with two touchdowns and zero interceptions in Texas’ win over Mississippi State. DeAndre Moore Jr. accounted for four catches for 103 yards and two touchdowns.

3. Ohio State (4-0)

Week 5 result: Defeated Michigan State, 38-7

The Buckeyes looked dominant in their Big Ten Conference opener with Jeremiah Smith continuing to play at a Biletnikoff Award-level as a true freshman. He caught five passes for 83 yards, including an incredible one-handed 17-yard touchdown catch.

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Ohio State’s Jeremiah Smith makes an UNREAL one-handed touchdown catch vs. Michigan State

4. Tennessee (4-0)

Week 5 result: Idle

5. Georgia (3-1)

Week 5 result: Lost to Alabama, 41-34

The Bulldogs have lost just three times since Nov. 7, 2020 — all three are to Alabama. It appears Kirby Smart doesn’t have a Nick Saban problem. He has an Alabama problem, and for a few minutes late in the fourth quarter on Saturday night in Tuscaloosa, it looked like Smart was going to prevail. But then, Jalen Milroe and freshman phenom Ryan Williams struck. Carson Beck did his best in the second half, but in the end, the Tide were too much for this Georgia team.

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6. Penn State (4-0)

Week 5 result: Defeated Illinois, 21-7

The Nittany Lions walked into Beaver Stadium with a top 10 rushing attack thanks to a punishing offensive line and tailbacks Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen. Those two dominant backs combined for 196 rushing yards and a pair of rushing touchdowns in Penn State’s win over Illinois.

7. Oregon (4-0)

Week 5 result: Defeated UCLA, 34-13

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The Ducks entered this game as 25.5-point favorites and left with a 21-point victory over the lowly Bruins. Dillon Gabriel threw three touchdown passes – two of which went to Tez Johnson – and continued to move up in the NCAA record books as the Ducks notched their first Big Ten win.

No. 8 Oregon Ducks vs. UCLA Bruins Highlights

8. Miami (Fla.) (5-0)

Week 5 result: Defeated Virginia Tech, 38-34

Look, Da’Quan Felton caught it. Then the ACC overturned the Hail Mary touchdown — that would’ve led to the Hokies upsetting the Canes — to an incomplete pass.

But before that mess, Cam Ward put the Canes on his back like Beatrix Kiddo did two buckets of water up Pai Mei’s steps, throwing for 343 passing yards and four touchdowns, while adding 57 yards and a rushing score in the win.

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9. Missouri (4-0)

Week 5 result: Idle

10. Clemson (3-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated Stanford, 40-14

The Tigers are back to looking like one of the best teams in the ACC with their third win in a row, scoring at least 40 points in each.

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11. Michigan (4-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated Minnesota, 27-24

The was Michigan’s 27th-straight win against a Big Ten opponent. The 27-24 victory came despite another anemic passing performance from quarterback Alex Orji, who finished 10-of-18 for 86 yards.

Despite playing lights-out football early on, the Wolverines couldn’t close with authority. Minnesota scored 21 points in the fourth quarter.

12. Iowa State (4-0)

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Week 5 result: Defeated Houston, 20-0

The Cyclones sit atop the Big 12 standings and are off to their first 4-0 start since 2000. 

Quarterback Rocco Becht is the real deal, and Iowa State’s defense has been great, holding opponents to an average of 7.3 points per game.

13. USC (3-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated Wisconsin, 38-21

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Despite being booed off the field at halftime, the Trojans scored 28 unanswered points in the second half at the Coliseum to improve to 3-1 with Miller Moss passing for 308 yards with three touchdowns and one interception.

14. Oklahoma (4-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated Auburn, 27-21

Linebacker Kip Lewis came up with a pick-six with just over four minutes left to play to give Oklahoma its first SEC win. True freshman Michael Hawkins Jr. became the first Oklahoma quarterback to win his first start on the road in school history.

15. BYU (5-0)

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Week 5 result: Defeated Byalor, 34-28

Coming off last weekend’s dominant showing against Kansas State, this could have been a spot for the Cougars to slip up. But instead, Kalani Sitake’s team took care of business against a Baylor team that fell to 2-3 following the loss.

No. 22 BYU Cougars vs. Baylor Bears Highlights

16. LSU (4-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated South Alabama, 42-10

Garrett Nussmeier continues to look like a legitimate SEC quarterback, throwing for a career-high 409 yards in LSU’s 42-10 win over South Alabama. Caden Durham totaled 217 yards from scrimmage as Brian Kelly’s team put up 667 yards of total offense in the victory.

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17. Ole Miss (4-1)

Week 5 result: Lost to Kentucky, 20-17

Lane Kiffin might have a good football team, but you can’t go 1-for-10 on third down while losing to Kentucky and expect to stay in the top 15 of these rankings.

18. Notre Dame (4-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated Louisville, 31-24

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Riley Leonard only had one passing touchdown heading into Notre Dame’s matchup against Louisville. The senior QB doubled that total on Saturday, throwing for 163 yards and a pair of scores, as well as rushing for 52 yards and a touchdown in the win.

19. Boise State (3-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated Washington State, 45-24

Ashton Jeanty is playing like the best running back in the country, and it’s not even close. The do-it-all back carried the ball 26 times for 259 yards and four touchdowns in the win. This was Jeanty’s fourth 200-yard game, tying the school record.

Washington State Cougars vs. No. 25 Boise State Broncos Highlights

20. UNLV (4-0)

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Week 5 result: Defeated Fresno State, 59-14

UNLV kicked off conference play without starting QB Matthew Sluka, who announced through his agent earlier this week that he would sit out the remainder of the season over a $100,000 NIL payment he alleges was promised to him prior to transferring to UNLV, but was never paid.

Hajj-Malik Williams filled in, and the Rebels didn’t miss a beat. Williams threw for 182 yards and three touchdowns, while adding 119 yards and a score on the ground in a dominant win over Fresno State.

21. Kansas State (4-1)

Week 5 result: Defeated Oklahoma State, 42-20

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Taylen Green proved a dual-threat QB can light up Oklahoma State when he went for 416 passing yards and 61 rushing yards against that defense. Then, Utah tailback Micah Benard ran through the Cowboys’ defense for 183 yards. On Saturday, DJ Giddens ran through it for 187 yards on 15 rushes.

22. Illinois (4-1)

Week 5 result: Lost to Penn State, 21-7

Illinois and Tennessee were the only programs in the country with two top 25 wins heading into Week 5. Brett Bielema’s team was looking for another one on Saturday, but they came up short in a 21-7 loss to Penn State. The Illini gave up 239 yards on the ground and only produced 219 yards of total offense in the loss.

23. Texas A&M (4-1)

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Week 5 result: Defeated Arkansas, 21-17

Marcel Reed threw for two touchdowns, including the go-ahead 5-yard score to Tre Watson with nine minutes remaining in the game to secure the win for the Aggies.

24. Utah (4-1)

Week 5 result: Lost to Arizona, 23-10

The Utes were able to survive last weekend without Cam Rising, but that wasn’t the case again Saturday night against Arizona. Kyle Whittingham’s team struggled mightily on offense as QB Isaac Wilson completed only 50% of his passes and threw two interceptions in the loss.

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25. Indiana (5-0)

It’s time to show some well-deserved respect to the Hoosiers, who are off to their first 5-0 start since 1967. First-year head coach Curt Cignetti, who came from James Madison, promised Hoosier fans he would put his stamp on the program, and that’s exactly what he has done through five games.

RJ Young is a national college football writer and analyst for FOX Sports and the host of the podcast “The Number One College Football Show.” Follow him at @RJ_Young and subscribe to “The RJ Young Show” on YouTube.

[Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily.]

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2026 Alabama Gymnastics Season Preview

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2026 Alabama Gymnastics Season Preview


TUSCALOOSA, Ala.— Ashley Johnston is entering her “senior season” as the Alabama gymnastics head coach at her alma mater. Of course, there is no such thing in coaching, but Johnston feels like she’s gotten to grow up alongside the Crimson Tide’s current senior class as both have spent four years in Tuscaloosa.

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“We do always talk about how our senior class, we’re all seniors together as this is my fourth year now,” Johnston said. “And our senior class, we’ve grown, we’ve tweaked the recipe. We’ve really had a variety of experiences over the last three years, now going into our fourth.”

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Alabama’s 2025 season ended in the NCAA semifinals. The Crimson Tide is looking to make it back to the finals for the first time since 2017. The road to get back there starts Friday at Clemson.

“We have to treat every meet like we’re competing against our own standard as we want to be a final four team in the country,” Johnston said. “That journey started in August. So this is just one more opportunity to practice being what we want to do this year.”

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Schedule

The Alabama schedule features 11 opponents ranked in the preseason top-25, including the top-three teams (Oklahoma, LSU and Florida.) Week in and week out, the Crimson Tide will be competing against the best teams in the nation, which will prepare it for what it will face in postseason play.

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Alabama will face the eight other SEC gymnastics teams at least once each in a dual meet format starting at Florida on Jan. 16 and wrapping up at home against Georgia on March 13. The Tide will travel to Norman to face defending national champion Oklahoma on Feb. 6. The first home meet is Jan. 23 against Missouri.

Clemson, Oregon State, North Carolina and Illinois make up the non-conference slate. Alabama will face North Carolina as part of a tri-meet with LSU in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on March 1. Two days prior, the Tide will face LSU in a regular season dual meet.

There are two times this regular season where Alabama will compete on both Friday and Sunday of the same weekend. Johnston likes to do this to get the team prepared for the quick turnaround that happens between competitions during the NCAA postseason. The Tide will be well prepared for the gauntlet it could face in the postseason with the type of schedule it has in the regular season.

Roster

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Alabama’s available roster is comprised of one graduate (Jordyn Paradise), three seniors (Gabby Gladieux, Natalia Pawlak and Rachel Rybicki) three juniors (Chloe LaCoursiere, Gabby Ladanyi and Jamison Sears), four sophomores (Love Birt, Ryan Fuller, Kylee Kvamme and Paityn Walker) and five “trailblazer” freshmen (Jasmine Cawley, Noella Marshall, McKenzie Matters, Azaraya Ra-Akbar and Derin Tanriyasukur.) Corinne Bunagan and Karis German will miss the entire season with injuries.

“These freshmen are trailblazers,” Walker said. “They’re like veterans, and I’m so proud of them and how they have come out of their shell.”

Paradise is returning from an injury that kept her out all of last season and will bring a veteran presence to the vault and uneven bars lineup. Birt also returns from injury and will make her Crimson Tide debut this season. The other sophomores are all coming off strong freshmen seasons and will look to continue making an impact for the Crimson Tide in 2026.

LaCoursiere, Cawley and Ra-Akbar are all names to watch for the all-around competition alongside Gladieux of course. Gladieux has been a steady contributor on all four events since her freshmen campaign. The senior has stepped into an even bigger leadership role heading into her final year.

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“I think what I’m most excited about for Gabby is not just how she’s leading herself, but how she is leading others,” Johnston said. “I’ve been really excited to see how she has really broken through her own struggles and things that she has been trying to break down the walls of trying to be perfect all the time. I think learning how to be authentically herself, and by being authentically herself, she has really been an incredible role model for the rest of our team. So how that plays out on competition night is not just her worried about her own performances but her really looking around, leaning in and helping to bring in others— learning what it’s like to compete in a really fierce way. She is a fierce competitor, but I think she’s really grown to be able to look around and meet the needs of her teammates, and that’s what being a great team leader is all about.”

Outlook

Over and over this offseason, Johnston has emphasized that there will a lot of new routines in Alabama’s lineups from both new faces and returners. The Crimson Tide is ranked No. 8 in the preseason coaches poll and has a great mix of fresh talent and experienced depth.

It isn’t finals or bust for Alabama this season. Johnston has been building the program in a steady direction, but a Final Four appearance would go a long way. The SEC is always a challenge, now more than ever with parity from top to bottom. Johnston doesn’t want her team to be average, but she wants them to compete their average week after week to have ultimate success.

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“I think this team has worked relentlessly to make sure they’re capitalizing on every half tenth, every possible way that they can increase their scoring potential,” she said. “This team’s talented. They’re excited. They’ve worked so incredibly hard, and I’m just excited for each of their stories to break through in their own unique and special way.”

Friday night

Alabama will open the season at Clemson on Friday at 6 p.m. on ACC Network Extra. The Tigers are relatively new on the college gymnastics scene, only having a program since 2024. Clemson did not score higher than a 196.575 all of last season, but the Tigers are under new direction with first-year co-head coaches Justin Howell and Elisabeth Crandall-Howell.

This will be the first meeting between the two programs. Clemson traveled to Tuscaloosa last year for NCAA regionals, but the Tigers were not in the same session as Alabama and finished fourth in their session. The Tide should be the higher-scoring team on Friday night, but Johnston is more focused on learning how ready her team is.

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“Clemson is going to be a great kind of litmus test for that,” Johnston said. “While they’re not an SEC competitor, their environment certainly is similar to what an SEC environment is going to look like. It’s going to be a sold-out crowd. I know they sold out tickets early when this meet was announced, so I think it’s going to be a really energetic, exciting environment.

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“We’re going to be able to see how quickly our athletes are going to be able to adapt to the different feelings that they’re going to have. They’re going to be a little nervous, they’re gonna be a little stressed, they’re gonna want to be perfect…I’m most interested in seeing how they’re going to handle it, but at the same time, I trust that they’re going to handle it well. This team has worked really hard on handling hard moments where I think that’s our superpower. I think our strength as a team is that we’re able to step into the hardest moments and trust and know that we can get it done.”

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Alabama defensive back officially declares for 2026 NFL draft

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Alabama defensive back officially declares for 2026 NFL draft



Jones transferred to Alabama from Wake Forrest prior to the 2024 campaign.

Alabama defensive back DaShawn Jones has officially declared for the 2026 NFL draft.

A senior out of Baltimore, Maryland, Jones was an excellent rotational piece in the Alabama secondary throughout the 2025 campaign. Jones joined the Crimson Tide in 2024 after transferring in from Wake Forrest, and the defensive back took full advantage of the opportunities he was given and thrived in Tuscaloosa as a result. The former three-star prospect recorded 11 solo tackles and one interception this season, as the playmaker will now turn his attention towards the NFL draft in April.

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Jones was ranked as the No. 137 cornerback and the No. 1551 overall player from the class of 2021, per the 247Sports Composite rankings, prior to attending Wake Forest to begin his collegiate career. The talented defensive back played far above his expectations over the course of his college career, as the former Demon Deacon was a solid contributor during his time at both Wake Forrest and Alabama.

Jones could quickly prove to be an excellent pick up for any team that choses to draft him, as the promising playmaker’s time in Tuscaloosa officially comes to an end.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion.





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May they see your driver license?: Down in Alabama

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May they see your driver license?: Down in Alabama


Driver license, please

A case we followed here in 2022 has found its way to the Alabama Supreme Court.

AL.com’s Sarah Whites-Koditschek reports that the question is whether Alabama Police officers can demand to see people’s driver licenses or other IDs if they have probable cause.

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In 2022, Childersburg Police answered a call about somebody on the property of people who were not home. The man, Michael Jennings, said he was watering flowers for his neighbors. The officers told him to provide an ID. He would only give his name as “Pastor Jennings” and refused to provide identification. Eventually the officers arrested him on a charge of obstructing government operations.

Attorney Ed Haden is representing the city and a group of police officers. He argued before the justices that state law gives officers with probable cause the authority to identify people, and that means a full name verified by identification.

Jennings attorney Henry Daniels argued the opposite, telling the justices that “Entitlement to live one’s life free from unwarranted interference by law enforcement or other governmental entities is fundamental to liberty.”

How low can you go?

Alabama’s preliminary, seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for December came in at a low 2.7% and was accompanied by record-breaking employment totals, reports AL.com’s Heather Gann.

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Alabama Department of Workforce Secretary Greg Reed announced the figures on Wednesday.

Records fell for the number of people counted as employed and wage and salary employment. The difference between those two stats is that “wage and salary employment” doesn’t include a few types of workers such as the self-employed.

Alabama’s 2.7% rate was down from 3.3% in November ’24. And it was tracking well below the national rate.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. unemployment rate was 4.6%. That’s low, historically speaking, but the highest it’s been since September 2021.

RIP, songwriter Jim McBride

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Huntsville native, country-music songwriter and Alabama Music Hall of Famer Jim McBride has passed away, reports AL.com’s Patrick Darrington.

McBride, who was from Huntsville, wrote or co-wrote No. 1s such as Johnny Lee’s “Bet Your Heart on Me” and Waylon Jennings’ very last chart-topper, “Rose in Paradise.”

With legends such as Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson and George Jones cutting his songs, he became a Nashville mainstay himself during the 1980s. In the country-music business, a lot of figures like McBride aren’t the household names of the recording artists, but the smart recording artists are going to gravitate to somebody who can take a song or a hook or an idea and turn it into something that might hit. So the songwriters become famous inside the industry and many of them are like family to the Opry stars and in high demand for late-night guitar pulls. We had another one — Bobby Tomberlin — on the podcast on Sept. 12, and he told some great stories about that life.

Well, one of those smart recording artists who wound up in McBride’s orbit in the late ’80s was a fresh-faced Alan Jackson. Their songwriter partnership produced the No. 1 songs “Someday” and CMA Single and Song of the year “Chattahoochee” as well as many others, including the Top 5s “Chasing That Neon Rainbow” and “(Who Says) You Can’t Have it All.”

That alone is a career.

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Jim McBride was 78 years old.

Quoting

“To all our ICE agents in Minnesota and across the country: if you are violently attacked, SHOOT BACK.”

U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, in a response to a woman’s being shot and killed in Minnesota on Wednesday after she allegedly tried to drive her SUV into an immigration officer.

By the Numbers

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60%

That’s the percentage of Alabamians in an AL.com survey that said they expect to spend more on housing or rental costs this year compared to 2025.

Born on This Date

In 1977, actress Amber Benson of Birmingham.

The podcast

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