Alabama
Alabama Center Parker Brailsford Reveals Goal for 2025 Season
TUSCALOOSA, Ala.— The 2023 Washington Huskies made it all the way to the College Football Playoff National Championship game despite not having anywhere near those expectations at the start of the season.
The Huskies offense was one of the most potent units in the country as it had six players taken in the first three rounds of the 2024 NFL Draft. Washington’s front five was a big reason for the team’s tremendous success that season as it won the Joe Moore Award, which is given annually to college football’s best offensive line.
After opting for a redshirt in 2022, Parker Brailsford earned a starting spot on the Huskies offensive line ahead of the 2023 season as the center. He played an integral role in Washington’s stellar season as he was named to the All-Pac 12 Second Team at the end of the year.
When former Huskies head coach Kalen DeBoer took the vacant job at Alabama in January 2024, many players followed him to Tuscaloosa, including Brailsford. The Crimson Tide’s offensive line had a rough 2023 season, but the addition of Brailsford alongside OL head coach Chris Kapilovic made a big difference. Alabama allowed 49 sacks in 2023 but just 24 this past season.
Now that Brailsford has a year at Alabama under his belt, he revealed his hopes for the upcoming season.
“It’s kind of a personal goal but kind of not, I want to win the Joe Moore with my O-Line,” Brailsford said on Thursday.
There’s already an obstacle to this goal, though. Alabama lost co-captain and left guard Tyler Booker to the 2025 NFL Draft, as he has a chance to be selected in the first round. The Crimson Tide has multiple players competing to fill Booker’s practically unfillable shoes as A-Day looms.
“It don’t really matter who they put [at left guard], it always feels the same,” Brailsford said. “Geno [VanDeMark] is a smart guy, Kam [Dewberry] is a smart guy. They’re both doing really good in spring ball and I’m excited to just see that battle and see who wins that.”
Building chemistry is essential to the stoutness of an offensive line. This isn’t as easy when a team hasn’t established its starting five just yet, but this factor hasn’t changed Brailsford’s Joe Moore Award mindset.
“It takes time,” Brailsford said. “You’ve got to see who the guys are that are willing to do it, willing to strain and things like that. It’s not going to be exact during spring ball. Even as the whole O-line––whether it be the walk-ons, twos, threes, ones––we’re all pretty tight.
“It takes a long time. Everybody is different. Some groups are a little faster than others…but we’re all a close group and I feel comfortable with all of those guys. The chemistry is there.”
As previously stated, Booker was a co-captain and perhaps the ultimate leader for the Crimson Tide last season. Finding a new leader to push this year’s offensive line will be needed to win the Joe Moore Award. The transfer portal is a massive component of college sports today and Brailsford believes his experience in it combined with a first season at Alabama could help his case as a leader.
“I think it’s been really good getting that year under my belt because I feel comfortable talking to the guys and I have a relationship with the guys…Change is obviously hard. Like for me, it was a little bit hard and I had some things going on back then. But since I’ve been here, I give myself the room and go and talk to and hang out with the guys. That’s just helped me build relationships.”
It’s clear that Brailsford wants to be a leader of the Crimson Tide offensive line. But how far can his leadership take Alabama’s front five this upcoming season?
Alabama
46-year-old woman charged with murder of 27-year-old woman in Brewton
BREWTON, Ala. — A 46-year-old woman is charged with the murder of a 27-year-old woman in Brewton, Alabama.
Deputies arrested Renotta Seltzer on Friday. She was booked into the Escambia County Jail in Alabama around 4:15 p.m. She’s being held without bond.
The shooting happened Friday on McGougin Road.
The victim is 27-year-old Anna Brown.
Sheriff Heath Jackson tells WEAR News that the investigation into the incident is ongoing.
The sheriff’s office is expected to release more details on Monday.
Stick with WEAR News on-air and online for more updates on this story.
Alabama
Decades after violence in Selma spurred the Voting Rights Act, organizers worry about its fate
SELMA, Ala. — Sixty-one years after state troopers attacked Civil Rights marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, thousands are gathering in the Alabama city this weekend, amid new concerns about the future of the Voting Rights Act.
The March 7, 1965, violence that became known as Bloody Sunday shocked the nation and helped spur passage of the landmark legislation that dismantled barriers to voting for Black Americans in the Jim Crow South.
But this year’s anniversary celebrations – events run all weekend and end with a commemorative march across the bridge Sunday – come as the U.S. Supreme Court considers a case that could limit a provision of the Voting Rights Act that has helped ensure some congressional and local districts are drawn so minority voters have a chance to elect their candidate of choice.
“I’m concerned that all of the advances that we made for the last 61 years are going to be eradicated,” said Charles Mauldin, 78, one of the marchers who was beaten that day.
FILE – State troopers hit protesters with billy clubs to break up a civil rights voting march in Selma, Ala., on Sunday, March 7, 1965.
AP Photo/File
Justices are expected to rule soon on a Louisiana case regarding the role of race in drawing congressional districts. A ruling prohibiting or limiting that role could have sweeping consequences, potentially opening the door for Republican-controlled states to redistrict and roll back majority Black and Latino districts that tend to favor Democrats.
Democratic officeholders, civil rights leaders and others have descended on the southern city to pay homage to the pivotal moment of the Civil Rights Movement and to issue calls to action. Like the marchers on Bloody Sunday, they must keep pressing forward, organizers said.
Former state Sen. Hank Sanders, who helped start the annual commemoration, said the 1965 events in Selma marked a turning point in the nation and helped push the United States closer to becoming a true democracy.
“The feeling is a profound fear that we will be taken back – a greater fear than at any time since 1965,” Sanders said.
Tear gas fills the air as state troopers, ordered by Gov. George Wallace, break up a march at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., on Sunday, March 7, 1965.
AP Photo/File
U.S. Rep. Shomari Figures won election in 2024 to an Alabama district that was redrawn by the federal court. He said what happened in Selma and the subsequent passage of the Voting Rights Act “was monumental in shaping what America looks like and how America is represented in Congress.”
“I think coming to Selma is a refreshing reminder every single year that the progress that we got from the Civil Rights Movement is not perpetual. It’s been under consistent attacks almost since we’ve gotten those rights,” Figures said.
In 1965, the Bloody Sunday marchers led by John Lewis and Hosea Williams walked in pairs across the Selma bridge headed toward Montgomery. Mauldin, then 17, was part of the third pair behind Williams and Lewis.
At the apex of the bridge, they could see the sea of law enforcement officers, including some on horseback, waiting for them. But they kept going. “Being fearful was not an option. And it wasn’t that we didn’t have fear, it’s that we chose courage over fear,” Mauldin recalled in a telephone interview.
“We were all hit. We were trampled. We were tear-gassed. And we were brutalized by the state of Alabama,” Mauldin said.
Copyright © 2026 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
Alabama
Alabama in Third Place After Opening Round of The Hayt: Roll Call
No. 15 Alabama men’s golf closed the opening round of The Hayt with a team score of 9-under par 279 and enter Sunday’s second round in a tie for third overall. The Crimson Tide trails leaders LSU by five strokes.
The Crimson Tide saw two competitors land in the individual top 10 as Nick Gross is tied for second at 5-under par 67 and Brycen Jones is in seventh overall at 4-under 68. Gross finished the day with three consecutive birdies. Jonathan Griz and Jack Mitchell finished the first round even on the scorecard and tied for 35th while William Jennings shot 4-over par.
Crimson Tide Roll Call: Sunday, March 8, 2026
Alabama Crimson Tide Saturday results:
- Baseball: Alabama 9, North Florida 3
- Soccer: Alabama 5, UAB 1
- Men’s Golf: Tied for 3rd after the first round at the Hayt Tournament
- Women’s Tennis: Texas A&M 4, Alabama 1
- Men’s Basketball: Alabama 96, Auburn 84
Alabama Crimson Tide Sunday schedule:
- Men’s Golf: The Hayt Tournament Round 1, North Florida, Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
- Swimming and Diving: Diving NCAA Qualifying, Athens, Ga., 11:15 a.m. WATCH
- Softball: Alabama at Ole Miss, Oxford, Miss., 1 p.m., SEC Network+, 100.1 FM
- Men’s Tennis: Alabama at Auburn, Auburn, Ala., 1 p.m., WATCH
- Baseball: Alabama vs North Florida, 1 p.m., Tuscaloosa, Ala., SEC Network +
- Gymnastics: Alabama at Illinois, Champagne, Ill., 2 p.m. BIG10+
Countdown to Alabama Football’s 2026 season opener
181 days
On this date in Alabama Crimson Tide history:
March 8, 1982: More than 1,000 people, including a throng of Paul W. “Bear” Bryant’s former players, paid $125 a plate at a black-tie dinner at the Sheraton Hotel in Washington, D.C. honoring the fabled coach. In a telephone call, President Ronald Reagan told Bryant: “The real contribution you have made are the differences you have made in the lives of so many young people.”
Alabama Crimson Tide Quote of the Day:
“If wanting to win is a fault, as some of my critics seem to insist, then I plead guilty. I like to win. I know no other way. It’s in my blood.”
Paul W. “Bear” Bryant
We’ll leave you with this…
The Alabama football team had representatives on hand during the Alabama-Auburn basketball game to accept The Foy-ODK Sportsmanship Trophy. The trophy is awarded to the winner of the football game at said university’s home turn of the basketball series.
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