Alabama
Alabama women’s basketball’s defense propels them in victory against Morehead State

Alabama women’s basketball put on a defensive clinic once again on Sunday in a 85-44 win against Morehead State in Coleman Coliseum.
The Crimson Tide (3-0) were able to hold the Eagles (0-2) to just 31% shooting from the field the entire game, while maintaining a season-high 30-point lead at halftime. Alabama’s defense also forced 24 turnovers, leading to 20 points.
Aliyah Nye led Alabama in scoring with 14 points, followed by Jessica Timmons with 12 and Sarah Ashlee Barker with 10.
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Here are a few takeaways from Alabama’s win:
Alabama’s lethal first-half defense
It seems like any time Morehead State tried to drive into the paint, the Crimson Tide had all five bodies ready for action.
Not only was the defense in the paint at a high level but Alabama’s defense was smothering the Eagles at half court the entire quarter.
The Crimson Tide held Morehead State to just six points in the first quarter on 3/10 shooting from the field. Alabama also forced a season-high 10 turnovers in the first quarter.
In the first half, the Crimson Tide defense only allowed 11 total points on 23% shooting from the field. Alabama also forced a season high 17 turnovers in the first half.
The Eagles only made five baskets in the first half, and 15 for the whole game.
Crimson Tide’s stellar rebounding
Alabama crashed the glass at a high level throughout the entirety of the game against the Eagles.
The Crimson Tide out-rebounded Morehead State by 10 in the first half.
Alabama nearly doubled Morehead State’s rebounding total at the end, totaling 41-23.
Rebounding is going to be very important for Alabama the rest of the season and entering SEC play.
Coach Kristy Curry emphasized the importance of hitting the boards for Alabama.
“Rebounding is going to be a crucial part for us moving into SEC play,” said Curry. “We know we need to defend and rebound. We had 18 total rebounds among our centers and that is what we’re looking for from them the rest of the season.”
Up next
Alabama faces USF (2-0) at 6 p.m. CT Thursday at Coleman Coliseum on SEC Network+.

Alabama
Alabama Track and Field to be Heavily Represented at National Championships

Alabama track and field wrapped up its final day of the NCAA East First Round in style as the Crimson Tide are sending three more athletes to the National Championships.
Doris Lemngole’s 9:13.12 time at the 3,000-meter steeplechase not only helped her win the race but she also broke the Hodges Stadium facility record. NC State’s Angelina Napoleon crossed the finish line in 9:37.12––which was the second-best mark. In other words, as usual, Lemngole absolutely dominated.
Joining Lemngole was Miracle Ailes, who used a season-best performance of 1.82 meters (5-11.50) to advance in the high jump, and Precious Nzeakor, who clocked an advancing, 23.03 time in the 200-meter race.
Across the four-day NCAA East First Round meet, the Crimson Tide be heavily represented at the National Championships at Oregon’s Hayward Field from June 11-14:
“Our team showed incredible grit and focus this week – advancing the number of student-athletes we did is a testament to their hard work, and we’re excited to carry this momentum to the National Championships in two weeks,” Alabama head coach Dan Waters said in a press release. “I couldn’t be prouder of how everyone competed throughout this meet – they supported each other, they rose to every challenge and represented the University of Alabama with excellence. This was a total team effort, and they’ve truly earned their shot on the national stage.”
No events are scheduled.
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90 days
June 1, 1968: Kenny Stabler and Dennis Homan were named to compete in the College Football All-Star game, with the collegiate stars slated to face the NFL Champion Green Bay Packers, winners over the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl II. The Packers were led by former Alabama quarterback Bart Starr, the MVP of both world championship games. — Bryant Museum
“I don’t know, we haven’t played Alabama yet.”
— Vince Lombardi after being asked what it felt like to be the greatest football team in the world just after winning the ’66 Super Bowl.
Alabama
United Methodists close 20 churches in Alabama: where are they?

United Methodists on Friday voted to close 20 churches in North Alabama, including a church founded in Hoover in 1993 with a 15-acre campus next to Hoover Metropolitan Stadium.
Discovery United Methodist Church, with a 350-seat sanctuary, had grown to 600 members by 2003. The church held its closing service on Easter Sunday, April 20, after years of declining attendance.
The conference has a plan to turn the Discovery campus over to Trinity United Methodist Church in Homewood to possibly reopen next year as a third location of Trinity, which has its main campus on Oxmoor Road and another in West Homewood.
“We want to be part of planning something new, but we want it to be about a redemption story,” said the Rev. Brian Erickson, senior pastor of Trinity United Methodist Church. “A lot of conferences would have just taken that property, sold it and put the money in the bank. I’m so grateful to the conference they want to invest in the kingdom instead. They’re gifting us the property.”
Trinity, which is celebrating its centennial next year, plans to re-launch the campus as the Trinity campus in Hoover by August 2026, Erickson said.
“We’re trying not to get caught in a narrative that we can’t move forward, in places in which there are opportunities for United Methodist presence to be,” said Bishop Jonathan Holston, who oversees all United Methodist churches in Alabama. “That’s what we’re trying to do, is find those places where God has called us to go.”
More than half of all United Methodist churches in Alabama disaffiliated over the past several years, leaving the denomination in a schism. Most negotiated to buy their property and take it with them, although some left empty churches behind. Money paid to the conference by departing churches went into a reserve fund, which the conference is drawing on to make it through current budget deficits.
“We’re still processing all of that, to see where we are,” Bishop Holston said.
Closing declining churches is sometimes necessary, he said.
“It’s always a solemn moment when we think about the mission and ministry of those congregations we are closing,” Bishop Holston said. “They were part of our community.”
The other United Methodist churches announced as closing include:
Jubilee Church in Alexander City
Oak Grove Church in Childersburg
Rehobeth Church in Vincent
Trinity Church at 400 East St. in Talladega
Christ Central Church in Rainbow City
Langston Church near Lake Guntersville in Jackson County
Mt. Oak Church in Marshall County
Tucker’s Chapel in Boaz
Courtland Church in Lawrence County
Hollywood Church in Jackson County
Isom’s Chapel in Athens
Moulton First Church in Lawrence County
The Table, which started in 2015 as a house church in Huntsville
Cahaba Church at 3580 Cahaba Valley Road in Jefferson County
Cottondale Church in Tuscaloosa County
Restoration Mission, 631 3rd St. West in Birmingham
Walker Chapel on Walker Chapel Road in Fultondale
Wesley Chapel in Ralph in Tuscaloosa County
Woodstock Church in Bibb County
Erickson noted that Trinity was once a failed church in Birmingham’s Lakeview neighborhood, before it relocated to Homewood in 1926. The 3,600-member Trinity Church is now one of the largest United Methodist congregations in North Alabama with several thousand members.
“We were a failed church,” Erickson said. “The conference took the proceeds from that building in 1926 that they sold to make the fire station that became Bogue’s and is now Taj India. They set aside that money for a new church in 1926 in Homewood.”
Discovery’s failure was surprising, after a promising start that coincided with Michael Jordan playing baseball for the Birmingham Barons at the Hoover Met in 1994 at the hub of the Trace Crossings subdivision that has more than 1,200 houses.
“It’s really baffling,” Erickson said. “Every church has a life cycle. The lives that were shaped and changed and made better by Discovery, those continue. That legacy will never go away.”
Discovery United Methodist Church in Hoover opened in 1993 in the Trace Crossings subdivision. The North Alabama Conference voted to close it on May 30, 2025, after its final service was held on Easter Sunday. (Photo by Greg Garrison/AL.com)ggarrison@al.com
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