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Alabama football 2027 commit shuts down recruitment

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Alabama football 2027 commit shuts down recruitment


An Alabama football commitment from the class of 2027 has shut down his recruitment.

Three-star defensive end Avrian (AJ) Pauley out of McGill-Toolen Catholic High School in Mobile revealed his decision to 247Sports on Saturday. Pauley committed to Alabama while in Tuscaloosa for the annual A-Day event in April.

He’s a 6-foot-5, 265 pound lineman that chose the Crimson Tide over a list of finalists including Michigan, Florida State and Ole Miss. Two of those schools were pushing to get Pauley on or back on campus.

Per Brett Greenberg of 247Sports:

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“Florida State was set to receive a trip the following weekend (June 5-7) and Michigan was pushing hard to get Pauley on campus the next two weeks (June 12-14, June 19-21). None of those trips took place and now Alabama will be the only program receiving visits before the Early Signing Period in December.”

Pauley is one of three defensive line prospects in Alabama’s 2027 recruiting class, along with three-star EDGE rushers Tyler Younger (Norcross, Georgia) and Jeremiah Beverly (Hillcrest High School, Tuscaloosa), both of whom committed to the Tide this past week. Rivals lists Pauley as the nation’s 69th best defensive end.

Alabama landed its fifth recruit in the past week on Saturday when four-star wide receiver Osani Gayles committed to the Tide over Washington and Stanford. The Crimson Tide now has 13 total commitments in their 2027 recruiting class.

Gayles was the ninth commitment for coach Kalen DeBoer and staff since May 31. Alabama’s 2027 class is No. 34 in Rivals’ updated Industry Football Team Recruiting Rankings. 247Sports ranks the Tide’s class No. 49.

Follow us at @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook, for ongoing coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide news, notes and opinions.





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83-year-old man killed in Alabama boat crash | WKRG.com

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83-year-old man killed in Alabama boat crash | WKRG.com


ST. CLAIR COUNTY, Ala. (WIAT) — A Pell City man was killed in a two-vessel crash that occurred Thursday on Lake Logan Martin, according to the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency.

ALEA stated that the crash occurred near the Interstate 20 bridge at around 9:31 a.m. Gary M. Kendrick, 83, was injured when the 1993 Ranger Bass boar he was operating collided head-on with a 2005 Hurricane Pontoon boat.

Kendrick was taken to the UAB St. Vincent’s St. Clair Hospital, where he died from his injuries. The operator of the Hurricane Pontoon boat was not injured.

The Pell City Police Department and the Lincoln Fire Department both responded to the scene, assisting troopers with ALEA’s Marine Patrol Division.

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Two ejected after boat crash on Alabama lake

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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.

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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.



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The legend of Alabama’s black panthers: Why the sightings never stop

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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.



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