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Barry Moore outraises main rival in Alabama US Senate race, hauls in nearly $500,000

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Barry Moore outraises main rival in Alabama US Senate race, hauls in nearly 0,000


U.S. Rep. Barry Moore, R-Enterprise, took in more campaign cash in the third quarter than any other GOP contender for Alabama’s U.S. Senate seat, according to Federal Election Commission records.

The congressman reported $513,992 in donations from July through September — almost $100,000 more than the $417,890 in contributions reported by Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall, his main rival in the GOP primary.

Incumbent U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville is running for governor instead of seeking a second term in the Senate.

More than 77% of Moore’s contributions came from individuals, the records showed.

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Roughly $114,000 was donated by political action committees.

Moore’s campaign spent more than $244,000 during the third quarter, including fundraising and digital advertising. He also refunded $29,500 in contributions.

The congressman ended the third quarter with more than $557,279 in cash on hand.

Moore, who registered his Senate campaign committee in mid-August, has raised about $780,000 since then.

Meanwhile, more than 86% of the $417,890 in donations Marshall’s campaign took in from July through September came from individuals, FEC records showed.

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The remainder came from $42,300 Marshall transferred from Marshall Victory Fund, another campaign committee he controlled, in the third quarter while political action committees contributed $14,500.

Marshall spent $245,291 during the quarter, mostly on political consulting, polling and fundraising.

He ended the quarter with $555,553 in cash on hand.

The attorney general formally entered the race on May 29.

Since then, Marshall has raised more than $824,209, records showed.

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Former Navy SEAL Jared Hudson came in third in the third-quarter money race with a more than $330,861 haul. The entire total came from individual contributors.

Hudson spent about $175,000 during the quarter.

He ended the fundraising period with more than $357,038 in cash on hand.

Rodney Walker, a cattle farmer and businessman, loaned his campaign $325,000 and personally contributed another $50,000, records showed. He only reported $26.03 in contributions that were not from himself.

Morgan Murphy, a former Tuberville staffer who entered the race in late September, did not yet have fundraising figures on the FEC website.

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The candidates’ fundraising totals were reported a month after Marshall led the Senate race’s only poll.

Marshall was the choice of 37% of respondents in The Alabama Poll, to 16% for Moore.

The poll found a large number — 40% — remain undecided.

Hudson got 7% while Walker got 1%.

On the Democratic side, Kyle Sweetser, a business owner and lifelong Alabama Republican who spoke at last summer’s Democratic National Convention, reported more than $21,688 in donations. He had more than $32,400 in cash on hand to end the quarter.

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Dakarai Larriett, a business owner, Birmingham native, and University of Alabama graduate, did not show any fundraising numbers as of 6:27 p.m. Wednesday.

A report also did not show up for Mark Wheeler of Heflin, a Jacksonville State University graduate and chemist who works for a wire manufacturing company.

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College Football Playoff committee absolutely blew it

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College Football Playoff committee absolutely blew it


College football lost on Sunday. 

It lost because a team, Notre Dame, capable of winning a national championship was left out.

It lost because the College Football Playoff selection committee ignored the downward spiral of another team, Alabama.

It lost because of the committee’s inconsistencies in the ranking process, dropping one team (BYU) that was crushed in its conference tournament, but not treating the Crimson Tide the same way even though they performed in the exact same manner on Saturday night in a 28-7 drilling at the hands of Georgia. It lost because the committee ranked Notre Dame ahead of Miami all year, then flipped the two based on a head-to-head Week 1 result after ignoring the matchup in the previous five editions of the rankings.

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Florida man arrested in 2011 New York murders of Alabama veteran, toddler once linked to serial killer

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Florida man arrested in 2011 New York murders of Alabama veteran, toddler once linked to serial killer


The New York Times is reporting that a 66-year-old man from Florida has been charged in the death more than two decades ago of a woman born in Alabama and her two-year-old child.

Andrew Dykes of Ruskin, Fla., was indicted this week by a grand jury on charges of murdering Tanya Denise Jackson and her two-year-old, Tatiana Marie Dykes.

Tanya Jackson was known as Jane Doe No. 3, or “Peaches,” after a tattoo on her torso of a heart-shaped peach with a bite taken out of it. She was identified in April.

According to The New York Post, Jackson’s torso was discovered in 1997 stuffed in a container in a wooded section of Hempstead Lake State Park, along a remote stretch of Long Island oceanfront, several miles from the New York City border.

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In 2011, more of Jackson’s remains were found in the Gilgo area, along with the body of her daughter.

Tatiana was found in a thicket, wrapped in a blanket and wearing gold jewelry.

Tanya Jackson had been born in Alabama and served in the U.S. Army from 1993 through 1995, when Tatiana was born. Jackson later moved to Brooklyn, where she may have worked as a medical assistant, according to police.

Jackson had never been reported missing and was reportedly estranged from family members.

She and her daughter were buried at the Alabama State Veterans Memorial Cemetery at Spanish Fort.

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Dykes was the father of Tatiana Marie Dykes, according to police. He was arrested on Wednesday in Florida on a felony fugitive warrant.

Both Jackson and Tatiana Dykes had initially appeared to be possible victims of the Gilgo Beach serial killer, in part because of their proximity to where other victims were discovered, but investigators eventually ruled this out.

Rex Heuermann, a Massapequa Park, N.Y., architectural consultant, faces charges of killing seven women, six of whom were found in the Gilgo Beach area.



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Comparing Alabama Final CFP Resume Against Notre Dame, Miami

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Comparing Alabama Final CFP Resume Against Notre Dame,  Miami


It’s been said for years that teams playing in conference championship games won’t be penalized for losses when it comes to College Football Playoff rankings. That might be put to the test on Sunday when the 12-team 2025-26 tournament bracket is set and announced (11 a.m. CT, ESPN)

Following Saturday’s results, when just about everything didn’t go the Crimson Tide’s way, chances are the committee will end up picking two just teams between Alabama, Notre Dame and Miami for the final at-large spots.

Did Alabama do enough to get in after being the first team out last year? Will the committee switch it and Notre Dame in the rankings after moving the Crimson Tide ahead of the Fighting Irish last week? Might Miami leapfrog one or both despite not playing this week?

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This is to put the team resumes next to each other to make them easier to compare, but before doing so we’re going to make two assumptions:

  • That No. 11 Brigham Young (12-2) is out of the mix after getting routed in the Big 12 Championship Game to Texas Tech. Why? Their only win against a ranked opponent this season was 24-21 over then-No. 24 Utah.

  • Unranked Duke won’t be seriously considered by the selection committee despite winning the ACC Championship Game in overtime against Virginia. Even with the win, the Blue Devils finished 8-5.

That means the ACC will be out of the playoff if Miami doesn’t get in.

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To fill in a couple of details, one of the changes from last year was that only the top five conference champions in the rankings secure the automatic bids. Consequently, James Madison will squeeze in instead. In case you missed, it, Duke played in the ACC title game in Charlotte after a five-way tie for second place in the league standings, which was finally broken by the sixth tiebreaker.

Tulane, No. 20 in last week’s CFP rankings, will be the No. 11 seed.

Two of these teams will be in the top 10 and still alive for the national championship. Unless the selection committee makes a change with the teams that were idle this week (Ole Miss without Lane Kiffin?) the No. 9 team will visit Oklahoma, and the No. 10 team will draw Texas A&M.

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SEE ALSO: Kalen DeBoer Makes Final Pitch to CFP Committee After SEC Championship Loss

Alabama Crimson Tide

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CFP Ranking Last Week: 9
Record: 10-3
Did it play in conference championship: Yes, but not well, losing to No. 3 Georgia.
Wins over ranked teams: at then-No. 5 Georgia 24-21; No. 16 Vanderbilt 30-14; No. 14 Missouri 27-24; No. 11 Tennessee 37-20
Losses: at Florida State in season opener, 31-17; No. 11 Oklahoma 23-21; No. 3 Georgia in SEC Championship Game 28-7.  
Note: First team in SEC history to beat four ranked opponents on four subsequent Saturdays. Went 2-2 over final four games.

Strength of schedule last week: 11
Strength of record last week (ESPN): 8
BCS computers last week: 8

Notre Dame Fighting Irish

CFP Ranking Last Week: 10
Record: 10-2
Did it play in conference championship: No.
Wins over ranked teams: Then-No. 20 USC 34-24; at No. 22 Pitt 37-15
Losses: 27-24 at then No. 10 Miami in season opener, 41-40 to No. 16 Texas A&M
Note: Won 10 straight, but didn’t beat a top-15 team.

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Strength of schedule last week: 42
Strength of record last week (ESPN): 13
BCS computers last week: 10

Miami Hurricanes

CFP Ranking Last Week: 12
Record: 10-2
Did it play in conference championship: No.
Wins over ranked teams: Then-No. 6 Notre Dame 27-24 in season opener; No. 18 South Florida 49-12; at No. Florida State 28-22; at No. 22 Pitt 38-7
Losses: Louisville 24-21; at SMU 26-20 OT
Note: Beat Notre Dame, and a team that defeated Alabama, Florida State.

Strength of schedule last week: 44
Strength of record last week (ESPN): 14
BCS computers last week: 13

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Texas Longhorns

CFP Ranking Last Week: 13
Record: 9-3
Did it play in conference championship: No.
Wins over ranked teams: Then-No. 6 Oklahoma 23-6; No. 9 Vanderbilt 34-31; No. 3 Texas A&M 27-17
Losses: at then-No. 3 Ohio State 14-7; at Florida 29-21; at No. 5 Georgia 35-10
Note: It had three regular-season losses, which was the difference for the Crimson Tide not making it last year. Texas is arguing that it shouldn’t be penalized for its season-opening loss against Ohio State. You could say the same then for Alabama and Notre Dame.

Strength of schedule last week: 8
Strength of record last week (ESPN): 12
BCS computers last week: 15

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Vanderbilt Commodores

CFP Ranking Last Week: 14
Record: 10-2
Did it play in conference championship: No.
Wins over ranked teams:  Then-No. 11 South Carolina 31-7; No. 10 LSU 31-24; No. 15 Missouri 17-10; at No. 19 Tennessee 35-24
Losses: at then-No. 10 Alabama 30-14; at No. 20 Texas 34-31
Note: Best team in Vanderbilt history? The problem is the Commodores lost to two other teams in this group, Alabama and the one directly ahead of it, Texas.

Strength of schedule last week: 22
Strength of record last week (ESPN): 11
BCS computers last week: 12



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