The Alabama Crimson Tide earned the #7 National seed on Monday morning. Joining the #1 Tide in the Tuscaloosa Regional will be 2nd seeded Oklahoma State, 3rd seeded South Carolina Upstate, and 4th seeded Alabama State. The Tuscaloosa Regional is lined up with the Tallahassee Regional and the 10th overall seed, the Florida State Seminoles. OSU and SCU will open play at 1 p.m. CT Friday at Sewell-Thomas Stadium. Alabama and Alabama State will follow at 6 p.m; CT on Friday night. The Tide has now made the NCAA Tournament in four straight seasons, and will host for the second time in that time frame, joining the special 2023 team. If the Tide survives the Regional they would host a Super Regional for the first time since 2006.
Alabama
Beekeepers monitor hives for Africanized honeybees after confirmed detection in Alabama – The Cullman Tribune
AUBURN UNIVERSITY, Ala. — The Apiary Protection Unit of the Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries (ADAI) confirmed the presence of Africanized honeybees (AHBs) in beehives in Jackson and St. Clair counties through genetic testing.
Officials at ADAI are developing a strategic monitoring plan for AHBs. Swarm traps will be placed within a five- to 10-mile radius of the confirmed cases. Bees from nearby beekeepers will also be sampled as a precaution. ADAI said this proactive measure aims to assess the extent of AHB infiltration and prevent future spread.
Monitoring hives in Alabama
Jack Rowe, an Alabama Cooperative Extension System bee specialist, said Alabama hasn’t had an AHB presence before, which keeps the state’s beekeepers from having colony management problems.
“The Apiary Protection Unit maintains a careful watch on the Port of Mobile to prevent an AHB invasion,” Rowe said. “It is up to the rest of us to ensure that we don’t bring AHBs in by accident. Vigilance is important, as is compliance with Alabama’s apiary laws.”
AHBs look like European Honeybees, but their behaviors are different. AHBs are more defensive, more easily disturbed and respond in greater numbers. Other identifying qualities are outlined in the press release from the ADAI (https://agi.alabama.gov/plantprotection/2024/06/africanized-honeybees-detected-in-alabama).
Apiculturists who regularly collect swarms or conduct bee removals should be alert for bees that seem highly aggressive to humans or animals. If encountered, Phillip Carter, an apiary inspector with the plant protection division of ADAI, encourages apiculturists to contact the plant protection division so a sample can be collected and tested for AHB genes.
“Investigators are speculating the two confirmed AHB colonies are a result of purchasing queens, packages and illegal nucs from other states with the presence of AHBs,” Carter said.
Follow laws to protect Alabama’s bee population
Rowe said Carter is asking all beekeepers to obey the No Comb Law by not purchasing nucs from out of state.
“We have this law in place to prevent exactly what is now happening, not just honeybee pests and diseases,” Carter said.
When purchasing mated queens or packages from another state with a confirmed presence of AHBs, it is imperative that the buyer request the seller’s certificate, confirming their testing for AHBs through their state’s apiary program.
“We must all comply with Alabama’s apiary laws to protect the bee population in Alabama and prevent the spread of AHBs in our state,” Rowe said.
Extension recommendations
Rowe said if beekeepers are receiving packages or queens from the following states, it is best to request certificates stating that the bee stock that they were raised from are free from AHB genes:
- Florida
- Louisiana
- Arkansas
- Texas
- New Mexico
- Arizona
- Nevada
- California
More information
If you think you’ve encountered an unusually aggressive hive, contact Rowe or Allyson Shabel, both members of Alabama Extension’s beekeeping team. Also reach out to the Apiary Protection Unit through the following contact information:
Central and north Alabama beekeepers, contact Jason James at 334-850-7757. South central and south Alabama beekeepers, contact Phillip Carter at 334-414-1666 or Randy Hamann at 334-850-7758. You may also contact Daniele Sisk in the ADAI Montgomery office at 334-240-7228.
Alabama
Federal court again blocks Alabama congressional map, finds intentional discrimination against Black voters
A three-judge federal court on Tuesday barred Alabama from using its Republican-drawn congressional map in this year’s elections, ruling that the map intentionally discriminated against Black voters — a conclusion the panel reached even after a recent US Supreme Court decision that made such claims significantly harder to win.
The court ordered Secretary of State Wes Allen to administer the rest of Alabama’s 2026 congressional elections using a court-drawn, race-blind map, the same one Alabama used in the 2024 election and under which voters have already cast ballots in this year’s primaries. Switching maps now, the judges said, would risk disrupting elections already under way. The order will expire if the Legislature passes a new plan.
“We cannot see our way clear to requiring Alabamians to cast their votes in the 2026 elections under a districting plan tainted by intentional race-based discrimination,” the judges wrote.
The ruling is among the first to apply a tougher standard the Supreme Court announced last month in Louisiana v. Callais, which overhauled the decades-old framework for evaluating Voting Rights Act claims. The justices had thrown out the panel’s earlier ruling against the Alabama map and sent the case back for reconsideration. After taking another look, the panel said its conclusion was unchanged: “We again cannot understand the 2023 Plan as anything other than intentionally discriminatory.”
The dispute dates to Alabama’s redistricting after the 2020 census, which produced a map with only one majority-Black district even though Black residents make up more than a quarter of the state’s population. After the Supreme Court affirmed in 2023 that the original map likely violated the Voting Rights Act, the Legislature passed a replacement that again drew just one majority-Black district. The state conceded the new plan did not add a second district where Black voters could elect their preferred candidate.
Those two choices are connected. The Black Belt — a rural band of central Alabama named for its dark soil and home to a large share of the state’s Black residents — is too sparsely populated to form a congressional district on its own. The most direct way to draw a second district where Black voters could elect their preferred candidate is to pair Black Belt counties with the sizable Black population of Mobile, on the Gulf Coast. By keeping Mobile bundled with heavily white Baldwin County in one coastal district, the Legislature’s map removed that building block, leaving Black Belt voters split among majority-white districts.
The court found that the refusal, paired with a series of “highly unusual steps” pointed to the conclusion that the map was designed “to distribute Black voters across districts to dilute their votes, at least in part because they are Black.”
These steps included eight pages of “legislative findings” that lawmakers bolted onto the 2023 map, something the court said Alabama had never done in any previous redistricting bill. The findings declared it “non-negotiable” to keep the Gulf Coast counties together, cementing the arrangement that foreclosed a second Black district, yet pointedly declined to make the non-dilution of Black voting strength non-negotiable, quietly dropping that protection from the Legislature’s own longstanding guidelines even though vote dilution was the entire reason the session was being held. The findings devoted several pages to the Gulf Coast and its “French and Spanish colonial heritage” but described the heavily Black Black Belt in a few short sentences, and deleted language the state had earlier agreed to acknowledging that the region’s Black population descends from people enslaved there. And though the map existed only because the courts had ordered a second district where Black voters could elect their candidate of choice, the findings said nothing about such a district at all.
Alabama had argued that partisanship, not race, explained the map. But the panel said the record contained “zero evidence” of a partisan motive. It found that voting in the state remains driven by race rather than party, citing evidence that Black Alabamians hold conservative views on issues such as abortion yet vote overwhelmingly Democratic. “[I]f party politics drove voting patterns in Alabama,” the court wrote, “it is unclear why Black voters don’t support the party that aligns more closely with their values.”
Allen, who has taken each of the prior injunctions to the Supreme Court, has already appealed.
Alabama
Federal court blocks Alabama from using GOP-drawn congressional map
A three-judge panel on Tuesday blocked a Republican-drawn congressional map in Alabama from going into effect, writing that the district lines “intentionally discriminated based on race in violation of the Constitution.”
“We cannot see our way clear to requiring Alabamians to cast their votes in the 2026 elections under a districting plan tainted by intentional race-based discrimination,” the panel of federal judges wrote.
The decision is a setback for Republicans, who sought to enact the map after a major redistricting ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court last month. The map would eliminate one of Alabama’s two majority-minority districts, putting the GOP in position to gain a seat in this year’s midterm elections.
Alabama is expected to appeal the ruling. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey scheduled a second primary date in August for the districts affected by the Republican-drawn map. Other primaries were were held in the state on May 19.
“The Legislature well knew that a plan without an additional Black-opportunity district would dilute Black Alabamians’ opportunity to participate in the political process, and it intentionally enacted that very plan,” the panel wrote. “Further, the Legislature well knew what dilutive mechanisms would prevent Black voters in Alabama’s Black Belt and Gulf Coast communities from having any opportunity to elect representatives of their choice, and the Legislature employed precisely those mechanisms.”
The state has spent years feuding with the courts over its congressional map.
The 2023 map was drawn by Republican legislators who defied a federal court’s order — which was affirmed by the Supreme Court — to create two districts in which Black voters make up voting-age majorities, “or something quite close to it.”
Alabama Republicans instead chose to pass a new map with just one majority-Black seat and a second district that is approximately 40% Black. In response, the court put its own map in place, which was used in the 2024 election.
Alabama is one of several GOP-led states in the South that have rushed to attempt to implement new congressional maps for the mditerms after the Supreme Court gutted a key section of the Voting Right Act, paving the way for the elimination of majority-minority districts represented by Democrats.
Alabama
Alabama Baseball Earns #7 National Seed
Alabama played Alabama State twice this season, winning 2-1 at home on February 18th and 13-4 in Montgomery on March 4th. Bobby Alcock was the winning pitcher in February while Joe Chiardo was awarded the win in the March show down.
Here is a thumb nail look at each of the teams that will be in Tuscaloosa this weekend.
Alabama- 37-19 overall record. SEC record 18-12, 4th in the conference.
Team Offense:,
Team batting average , .253, 70 home runs, 90 doubles, 82 stolen bases, .428 slugging percentage, .372 on base percentage.
Leading hitters: RF/C Brady Neal, .328 average, 8 home runs, 14 doubles, 43 RBI, CF Bryce Fowler .316 average, 17 doubles , 35 RBI, 15 stolen bases. SS Justin LeBron, .266 average, 14 home runs, 11 doubles, 40 RBI, 38 stolen bases in 39 attempts, 3B Jason Torres, .241 average, 7 home runs, 45 RBI, LF/DH Eric Hines .278, 7 home runs, 18 RBI, C Johnny Lemm .244 average, 9 home runs, 9 doubles, 31 RBI.
Team Pitching: 4.26 ERA, .242 batting average against, 50 home runs allowed, 484 innings pitched, 446 hits allowed, 476 strikeouts, 195 walks.
Individual: Tyler Fay, 9-4 4.70 ERA, 90 innings pitched, 104 strikeouts, 20 walks, .230 batting average against, Zane Adams 6-4 4.36 ERA, 76 innings pitched, 85 strikeouts, 24 walks, .264 average against, Myles Upchurch 8-3 3.54 ERA, 64 innings pitched, 68 strikeouts, 38 walks, .195 batting average against. Matthew Heiberger 23 appearances, 3-1, 4 saves, 3.31 ERA, 35 innings pitched, 30 strikeouts, .242 batting average against. Ashton Crowther 16 appearances, 2-2, 2 saves, 2.90 ERA, 31 innings pitched, 8 walks, 21 strikeouts, .235 batting average against. Hagan Banks 16 appearances, 1-0 6 saves, 2.79 ERA, 19 innings pitched, 23 strikeouts, .234 batting average against.
Oklahoma State-37-20 18-12 BIG 12
Offense: .280 average, 137 home runs, 106 doubles, .562 on base percentage, .402 on base percentage
Leading hitters: Alex Conover, .383 average, 14 home runs, 15 stolen bases, Kollin Ritchie, .335 average, 29 home runs, 73 RBI, Aidan Meola, .320 average, 17 home runs, 69 RBI
Pitching: 6.24 ERA, .274 batting average against, 76 home runs allowed, 275 walks, 558 strikeouts.
Individual: Hudson Barrett, 5-1 3.05 ERA 38.1 innings pitched, 12 games, 8 starts, 4 saves, 15 walks, 54 strikeouts, .212 average against. Ethan Lund, 5-2, 5.26 ERA, 77 innings pitched, 127 strikeouts, 48 walks, .219 average against, Mario Pesca 6-4, 5.62ER, 65 innings pitched, 75 strikeouts, .276 average against.
South Carolina Upstate-33-28 Big South Conference 13-11
Offense: .291 average, 70 home runs, 138 doubles, 83 stolen bases, .463 slugging percentage, .400 on base percentage.
Leading hitters: Henry Zenor, .346 average, 18 doubles, 51 RBI,12 stolen bases, Wylie Waters, .320 average, 12 home runs, 50 RBI, Malloy Heaghney, .303 average, 21 doubles, 6 home runs, 50 RBI, 22 stolen bases.
Pitching: 5.89 ERA, 82 home runs allowed, .278 batting average against, 249 walks, 449 strikeouts.
Individual: Brent Stukes, 7-3, 5.42 ERA, 73 innings pitched, 35 walks, 50 strikeouts, .285 average against. Chris Torres 5-4, 5.42 ERA, 74 innings pitched, 30 walks, 69 strikeouts, .287 average against. Jacob Kirby 5-1, 3.91 ERA, 2 saves, 48 innings pitched, 19 walks, 35 strikeouts, .230 average against.
Alabama State-34-21, 20-10 in SWAC
Offense: .281 average, 57 home runs, 91 doubles, 38 stolen bases, .433 slugging percentage, .391 on base percentage.
Leading hitters: Miguel Oropeza, .366 average, 11 home runs, 19 doubles, 65 RBI. Niguel Jennings .331 average, 15 doubles, Jackson Williams, .269 average, 12 home runs, 45 RBI, Trey Calloway, .268 average, 16 home runs, 46 RBI.
Pitching: 6.05 ERA, .301 batting average against, 33 home runs allowed, 89 doubles allowed, 260 walks, 362 strikeouts.
Individual: James Peterson, 7-1 3.32 ERA, 4 saves, 29 games, 5 starts, 24 walks, 54 strikeouts. Jordan LaBoy, 9-5, 4.52 ERA, 85 innings pitched, 24 walks, 65 strikeouts, .291 average against. Trey Power, 7-3 6.40 ERA, 58 innings pitched, 27 walks, 40 strikeouts, .278 average against.
The Crimson Tide has a regional they can surely win. Oklahoma State has some mashers, and hits a ton of home runs and doubles, but their pitching struggles. South Carolina Upstate has a few power bats, but also struggles on the mound. Bama is obviously more familiar with Alabama State since they have played the Hornets twice this year already. ASU doesn’t have much power and the pitching staff can definitely be “got”. The Tide just needs to play clean defense, pitch like they are capable, and have just enough offense at the right times to win the weekend and move on to host a Super Regional for the first time since 2006.
If you are in the area, come to The Joe this weekend, this team deserves your support. In 2023 the atmosphere was electric and the Tide advanced. Let’s give them that home field advantage again!
Bama Baseball Fever, Catch it!
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