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Clay Travis’ Starting 11: Alabama, UNLV, OutKick Are The Big Winners This Weekend

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Clay Travis’ Starting 11: Alabama, UNLV, OutKick Are The Big Winners This Weekend


With 2:33 to play in the fourth quarter, Georgia took possession, trailing Alabama 33-28. The Bulldogs, who had spotted the Tide a 28-0 lead, had fought their way nearly all the way back. Now they had the ball with a chance to take the lead for the first time all game, a sense of nervous apprehension had settled into Bryant-Denny Stadium. 

And then, a bolt of football lighting — a 67-yard touchdown strike from Carson Beck to Dillon Bell — and the Bulldogs had the lead 34-33. 

For just an instant, it was so silent you could only hear the Georgia Bulldog fans cheering in the stadium. 

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My 14-year-old son, who is perfect except for being an Alabama fan, had his hands on top of his head, mouth hanging open in stunned disbelief. 

I’m not gonna lie, a part of me was gleefully thinking about sending a simple Tweet: “Nick Saban never gave up a 28 point lead,” just to see the chaos in my mentions. 

But then Ryan WIlliams saved the game for Alabama. Because on the very first offensive play of the very next series he made the best catch and run I’ve ever seen in person. It wasn’t just the catch, which was spectacular enough, it was that Williams then managed to juke two all-star Georgia players out of their shoes and streak down the sideline for a touchdown. Watching in person, the catch was so good, I was already trying to do the yardage for the field goal in my head, when WIlliams somehow avoided going out of bounds and then juked and accelerated simultaneously en route to a scintillating touchdown, I couldn’t believe what I’d just seen.

(By the way, Ryan Williams being just 17 years old is already the most over shared fact of the 2024 college football season. You aren’t allowed to mention him without mentioning his age.) 

Yes, Georgia had a chance to answer and win or tie the score, but the Tide extinguished the drive with an end zone interception and everyone was left in awe over how a game that started off looking like a snoozer turned into an absolute college football classic. 

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The best part?

It feels like Alabama and Georgia have a great chance to meet again later in the season, but for now, even a day later, I feel like I have to catch my breath from that frenetic finish.  

Let’s dive into the Starting 11 for the week. 

1. Since the start of the 2021 season Georgia is 47-0 against every team in college football not named Alabama. 

And 1-3 against Alabama. 

Granted one of those wins was for a national title, but still, Alabama football is the only thing standing between Kirby Smart and one of the most dominant, dynastic runs in college football history. Sorry, Michigan fans, I really do think if Georgia had made the playoff, the Bulldogs would have won the title for a third straight season. 

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In fact, Georgia fans may have the late game defense from Auburn to thank for ending their national title runs. 

So what explains Georgia’s dominance against everyone but Alabama?

First, Alabama was just really, really good under Nick Saban and Kirby was the chaser as opposed to the champion for much of this era.

Second, did I mention Alabama is just really, really good?

Last night to me was really two different games. In the first 20 minutes Kirby Smart thought he could contain Jalen Milroe’s legs. 

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He was wrong. 

Milroe was unstoppable, primarily making plays with his legs, and Alabama surged out to a 28-0 lead. So then Kirby decided he had to stop Milroe from running the football. And that’s when Ryan Williams made two huge plays in the passing game, because Georgia was forced to pick a poison. 

I think if Georgia plays Alabama again Kirby will do whatever is necessary to keep Milroe from running and take his chances again in the passing game. In fact, I think if you asked Kirby Smart, he didn’t expect Milroe to gash his defense with his legs like he did. And I bet when he watches film today — or last night on the flight home — he was furious with what he saw from Georgia on defense. It looked like the Bulldogs took bad angles early, underestimating just how fast Milroe was. Heck, the fourth down touchdown run of 36 yards that Milroe scored on just shouldn’t be possible. Georgia had four defenders who should have forced him out of bounds. 

Instead they all got torched, they just didn’t expect him to be as fast as he was. 

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Having said all of this, the Bulldog response from 28-0 down was phenomenal. I’m not sure any team in college football could have come back from a deficit and taken the lead in Bryant-Denny last night like Georgia did. 

That bodes well for the Dawgs in a rematch, if it happens.    

I feel like Georgia solved Alabama last night, it just dug too big of a hole for itself in the process.

I don’t think a deficit like that will happen again.  

2. The 12 team playoff changes the calculus of how fans respond to these games. 

All weekend, I talked to Georgia and Alabama fans about how a 12-team playoff limits the sting of an early season loss. 

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Think about this, if Alabama had won this game for any of the last ten plus years when we had a four-team playoff in place, we’d all be talking about how Georgia has to run the table to make the playoff now. 

If this was the BCS era, we’d all be saying Georgia needs help to make the title game. 

In September!

Because early season losses could be completely devastating to a team’s title chances. 

But with a 12 team playoff most Georgia fans — and Alabama fans — still expect both teams to make the playoff and are already talking about how a rematch might go. 

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Even after a loss Georgia is still the fourth most likely team to win the title per Vegas odds. 

It’s just an entirely different era, and we all have to remember that.

College football fans have spent generations believing a single loss was devastating. Now some rival teams will end up playing three times in the same season! Enjoy the wins, but don’t spend much time on that enjoyment, because a rematch is likely coming.  

3. What a weekend in Tuscaloosa for me and for OutKick. 

In the space of 36 hours, we did a Friday night bar crawl with Fox’s Big Noon camera crew — it was great meeting so many of you at Innisfree and Gallette’s, y’all were fantastic. 

The next morning at 8:45 I did Fox and Friends. 

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Then we did Big Noon at 9:45. 

Then our OutKick social team was all over town getting videos. Caitlyn McDuffee came up with the idea to put out Kamala and Trump hats out on a table and let college kids announce their voting decisions like football recruits often do. 

Here is one of them that went mega viral and has been viewed millions and millions of times. 

Then later in the evening we did a halftime Trump interview. 

The result? On Saturday alone OutKick posted videos from Tuscaloosa that were viewed tens of millions of times all over social media. 

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In just one day!

It’s truly incredible to see how much we have grown over the past several years. 

In 2019, I attended LSU-Alabama with my then nine-year-old son. 

We got to our seats early because President Donald Trump was scheduled to attend the game. At some point during the game, Trump came out on the balcony of the suite he was in and waved to the crowd. 

I posted this video then. 

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Earlier that year on my OutKick the Coverage morning radio show, I’d predicted Trump would come on our sports radio show at some point. And most people, including my own wife, said I was crazy to suggest it. 

Five years later, on Saturday, Trump was back at Bryant-Denny Stadium and I interviewed him at halftime. 

This was the 10th time since the summer of 2020 that I’ve interviewed Trump either for OutKick or on Clay and Buck. 

Here I am with Trump and my middle son after the interview. 

I get lots of questions about how my son ended up an Alabama fan. 

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The Travis boys all watch an absolute ton of sports, especially college and NFL football, which we spend all weekend watching. That’s probably not a surprise given what I do for a living. And unfortunately, Tennessee didn’t win many games when my 14-year-old was really young and watching games. 

Now you can argue that I should have worked harder to get him to pick the same favorite team as me, but I didn’t want to browbeat him for force him to root for the same team as the rest of our family. And I honestly thought he’d eventually grow up and have some common sense. 

But so far it hasn’t happened. 

He’s a great kid except for his taste in teams. So if this is the worst thing he puts me through, I can live with that I suppose. 

On Sunday when we woke up in our Tuscaloosa hotel room, I asked him how he would rate the weekend. 

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He said it was a 10. And that even if Alabama had lost, it would still have been a nine. 

And he said it was his new favorite game ever, replacing 2019 LSU at Alabama, which he remembers every single moment from even though he was just nine years old. 

4. I don’t understand how the Virginia Tech touchdown catch was changed to an incomplete pass. 

Look, my understanding of instant replay review is that calls are overturned on the field only when you are 100% certain the call is wrong. 

Do I think Virginia Tech caught the Hail Mary touchdown pass?

No. 

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But can you tell with 100% certainty from instant replay review that they didn’t catch the pass?

No, again. 

In that situation, I think you have to stick with the call on the field. 

Or you have to change the instant replay review criteria to, “We’re going to change the calls on the field if we think it’s likely the officials got the call wrong.”

Because otherwise many fans, like me, are going to ask whether it’s a coincidence that a 5-0 Miami and 2-3 Virginia Tech is a much more valuable result to the ACC in the playoff era than a 4-1 Miami team and a 3-2 Virginia Tech would be. 

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Maybe that’s unfair, but it’s a natural point of discussion that fans across the country were having after the way this game ended with an unjustified instant replay change. 

5. Kentucky upset Ole Miss on the road. 

Congrats to Mark Stoops and the Wildcats for a massive road win. 

Unlike against Georgia, Stoops went for it on 4th down instead of punting, got a huge conversion, and his team hung on for a huge road win. 

The Wildcat defense stifled Ole Miss all day long, just like they did to Georgia. 

Which is why I think it’s fair to say Kentucky is a very good defense with a middling offense. So long as the Wildcats don’t have to score many points and avoid turning the football over, they can compete at a top 25 level. 

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Good for them. 

So where does this leave us with Ole Miss?

This was supposed to be the year the Rebels marched into the playoffs and, maybe even, made their first ever trip to Atlanta for the SEC title game. 

But after this loss to the Wildcats, the Ole Miss schedule, which looked so easy in the offseason, looks like it is filled with landmines. 

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The next two weeks for the Rebels aren’t easy — at South Carolina and at LSU. Then comes Oklahoma, at Arkansas, and Georgia. Can Ole Miss go 4-1 in these five games? Sure. But after what we saw against Kentucky does it feel likely to me?

No. 

Why do I ask if they can get to 4-1? Because I think it’s going to take 10-2 against this schedule to punch a ticket to the playoff. Maybe a 9-3 SEC team can put itself in the playoff mix too, but I think that’s unlikely. 

So Ole Miss has its work cut out for itself over the next five games. (The final two Rebel games are at Florida and Mississippi State, which I think are less difficult.) 

6. The Big 12 standings are already a mess, and we aren’t even to October yet. 

There are only three 2-0 teams in the Big 12: BYU, Colorado and Texas Tech. Utah and Kansas State have both already lost and Oklahoma State is 0-2. 

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My prediction for the biggest controversy in the first year of a 12 team college football playoff? The four conference champions getting a bye. 

I don’t think the SEC or Big Ten conference champion will ever get a bye without at least being 11-2, but I think a three loss Big 12 or ACC champion is definitely possible. 

Which is why I’m going to keep arguing the top four teams in the playoff rankings should get byes no matter what conferences they are in. This seems like a no brainer to me. If you still want to guarantee all four power conference teams a spot in the playoff, I’m fine with that, but you can’t give them all a bye. 

Think about this for a moment, you can argue the number five seed might get the best draw in the playoff. 

Why?

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The five seed will likely play the non power conference team 12 seed at home — as a two or more touchdown favorite — and then they will get the Big 12 champ in a neutral site venue, likely as a touchdown or more favorite. 

Granted you get matched up with the one seed in the semifinals, but that might be a better draw than the one, two or three seeds get given they are likely to be match up against a strong power conference team, maybe from their own conference, on a neutral site field in the quarterfinals. 

Now my ideal scenario is eliminating the conference title games completely and going to 16 playoff teams, but in the meantime these four automatic byes make no sense to me. 

7. Clemson may well be the best team in the ACC.  

I know, I know, many of us left the Tigers for dead after their poor performance against Georgia in week one. 

But after Miami was lucky to survive against Virginia Tech, Clemson looks like it may still be the class of the ACC.  

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Since the 31 point loss to Georgia, Clemson has won by 46, 24, and 26. 

Next week Clemson looks likely to drop Florida State to 1-5 on the season and then comes at Wake Forest, Virginia, Louisville, at Virginia Tech, Pitt, the Citadel, and South Carolina. 

There’s no Miami on this schedule, which means the two teams could meet for the only time in the ACC title game and an 11-1 Clemson team in the title game doesn’t feel crazy to me.  

8. I don’t even know what to say about Auburn. 

Up by 11, 21-10 with 11:30 left in the 4th quarter, the Tigers took possession near midfield, at their own 45, in complete control of the game.

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And then things got even better.  

Auburn popped a 22 yard run here for a first down at the Oklahoma 33. At this point there’s under 11 minutes left in the game and it looks like Auburn is poised not just to win, but to run away with the game. 

Then come double incomplete passes and a run for no gain. The clock barely moves. 

There’s still 10:12 left and Auburn settles for a 51-yard field goal, which they miss. 

Then Oklahoma hits a 60 yard pass play — did I mention the Sooners are starting a true freshman quarterback and their top five wide receivers are out?! — and suddenly it’s 21-16. 

Then with four minutes left, the turnover bug returned and the Tigers give up a 63-yard interception return for a touchdown that gives Oklahoma the lead.

I’m honestly shell shocked by all of this. 

I had Auburn and the under and I was cruising all day on this bet and then, boom, I get to Alabama’s stadium, check the score and can’t believe what’s just happened.

I don’t think Auburn’s an awful team, but its record is looking like it may well be awful.  

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9. UNLV crushed Fresno State 59-14 after a week of NIL drama involving their former starting quarterback quitting on the season. 

Good for Barry Odom and UNLV. 

It’s hard not to root for the rest of the team when the starting quarterback just quits on the season and walks out on an undefeated team like this.

It’s great to see the locker room rally around the new quarterback and the team come together. 

But with the NIL era we’re in, how long until the next UNLV situation emerges? My bet is not very long at all.   

10. My OutKick National Top Ten and my OutKick Playoff 12

Reminder, I rank teams entirely based on what we’ve seen on the field. Not what I expect to see, what we’ve actually seen on the field. 

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Now that many teams have played five games, our rankings are starting to jump around less. But there can still be a great deal of variation week to week. 

With that in mind, here we go out with my OutKick Top Ten. 

1. Alabama

2. Texas

3. Tennessee

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4. Georgia

5. Ohio State

6. Penn State

7. Oregon

8. Miami

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9. Missouri

10. Clemson

My playoff 12 — reminder the top four teams have to be conference champions and there has to be at least one non-power conference team included in the 12. 

These are my playoff projections based entirely on the games we’ve seen on the field so far. 

1. Alabama (SEC champion)

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2. Ohio State (Big Ten champion)

3. Miami (ACC champion)

4. BYU (Big 12 champion)

5. Texas

6. Tennessee 

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7. Georgia 

8. Penn State

9. Oregon

10. Missouri

11. Clemson

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12. UNLV

11. SEC power rankings 1-16

Ole Miss is the toughest case right now. On the one hand, they crushed each of their first four opponents, on the other hand, they lost at home to Kentucky, which got smoked at home by South Carolina. Ultimately I dropped the Rebels this far because if you compare one loss resumes, Ole Miss lost at home to a worse team than LSU, Texas A&M, South Carolina and Oklahoma did. So I have them at the bottom of my one loss teams. Yes, this means Kentucky is below them even though the Wildcats beat them. But Kentucky has two home losses, which cancel out the one road win, and I try to rank the overall team season performance as opposed to direct head-to-head. 

1. Alabama

2. Texas

3. Tennessee

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4. Georgia

5. Missouri

6. LSU

7. Texas A&M

8. Oklahoma

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9. South Carolina

10. Ole Miss

11. Kentucky

12. Arkansas

13. Vanderbilt 

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14. Auburn

15. Florida

16. Mississippi State





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Nate Oats Rips Alabama Players for Being ‘Too Comfortable With Losing’

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Nate Oats Rips Alabama Players for Being ‘Too Comfortable With Losing’


TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — No. 13 Alabama men’s basketball might have a bit of a problem.

The Crimson Tide was upset by Texas at home on Saturday night, and the 92-88 loss was riddled with negatives. Alabama came into this one with a road loss to undefeated Vanderbilt, and this should’ve been a game to shake it off.

But Alabama was down by double digits to Texas on numerous occasions throughout the contest. Crimson Tide head coach Nate Oats said during the postgame press conference that defensive assistant Brian Adams “does a really good job putting good game plans together,” but “guys that don’t care enough to lock in and follow” those game plans.

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“It starts with effort,” Oats said. “The want-to, competitive edge, guys just don’t want to lose, give you everything they got. The guys are apparently too comfortable with losing right now, because they’re not giving us everything they got on that side of the floor.

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“So, I think it starts with having guys that just refuse to lose. From there, it goes to guys, like in the moment, having some personal pride in stopping their man. Too many blow-bys, too many isolation plays, just beat one-on-one, guy’s not locked down on the help side, a guy gets beat…I do think we’ve got some guys that care enough about winning on the defensive end, but you’ve also got to score the ball on offense, too.

“So we’re going to have to figure out the right lineups to play that care enough, compete enough, are tired of losing, got enough personal pride in their defense and they care enough to prepare. … Losing doesn’t bother them enough yet. I don’t know how many losses it’s going to take until it bothers them, but it bothers me. It bothers the coaching staff, and as soon as it starts bothering the players enough, I’m sure they’ll change.”

Another way to ensure winning is by converting at the free throw line. Alabama looked the part in the first half, as it hit 11 of its 12 attempts from the charity stripe. But in the second half, in part due to the defense, the Crimson Tide continued to fall behind, and it led to UA converting just eight of its 15 attempts in the latter 20 minutes.

“When you’re locked in, you’re locked in,” Oats said. “When you’re locked in on defense, all you care about is winning the game. When you’re locked into the defense and you go to the line, and you’re just focused on winning the game, you’ll step up and you’ll make your free throws.

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“When you’re worried about a lot of stuff that’s a distraction, worried about stats and some other stuff, and you’re not locked in, that’s when you go to the line and miss. Especially when you’re a good shooter, guys that should be making free throws at a high level. And the pressure got them a little bit in the second half, we got down 13.

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“I mean, we do a free-throw game. It took us four tries to get it the way I wanted it yesterday. Guys have got to care enough to get in the gym and work on their free throws. So, free throws are the only thing in the game of basketball that has no variation to it ever, except for a variation you put in your own mind. Well, get enough reps up, you train your mind and basically become a machine at the free-throw line. Obviously, we’re not putting enough reps up right now.”

Alabama freshman forward London Jemison said after the game that the team needs to be “more connected” during games, practices, film and even when focusing on nutrition.

Oats provided an outline for the defense to gel more, the free throws to fall through the basket and a stronger connection to be enforced. And it’s quite a simple solution.

“It looks like we need some leadership to step up,” Oats said. “Some guys that want to get everybody together, tired of losing, stuff’s got to change. It’s not a talent problem. It’s a focus, effort and competitive juice problem. So, if they’re not as connected, that falls on the leadership of the team.

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“And we’ve told these guys, ‘We’re here to help you. This is your team, your season. I’ll be coaching for a long time after this. They get one opportunity with this group to put it together. That’s it.’ So, if they love their brothers and they want their teammates to perform well, they’re going to give a lot better effort on the floor than what they’re doing. Maybe they’re not as connected.

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“To me, it seems like we don’t have any bad guys. Like, there’s nobody that everybody just doesn’t like. They seem to like each other, but they obviously don’t respect their teammates enough to give a winning effort out there. Some of the guys are really bought into winning, but not everybody. So we’ve got to get everybody bought into winning.”

Alabama (11-5, 1-2 SEC) aims for a resurgence against Mississippi State (10-6, 2-1 SEC) on the road on Tuesday night.

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Where to watch Texas vs. Alabama today: College basketball free stream

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Where to watch Texas vs. Alabama today: College basketball free stream


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The No. 13 Alabama Crimson Tide host the Texas Longhorns Saturday at 8 p.m. ET. The Crimson Tide have four losses this season, all have come against teams ranked inside the top 11.

Texas vs. Alabama will air on ESPN, and streams live on DIRECTV (free trial).

What: Men’s college basketball regular season

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Who: Texas Longhorns vs. No. 13 Alabama Crimson Tide

When: Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026

Where: Coleman Coliseum, Tuscaloosa, Alabama

Time: 8 p.m. ET

TV: ESPN

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Live stream: DIRECTV (free trial), fuboTV (free trial)

Texas is 3-4 in its past seven games, and doesn’t have a win over any currently ranked teams. A road win over Alabama would help its cause in the national ranking and the SEC standings. Alabama hasn’t lost to an unranked team this season, and a second straight would hurt their hopes for a top seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Here’s a recent college basketball story via the Associated Press:

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tyler Tanner scored 23 of his career-high 29 points in the second half and No. 11 Vanderbilt remained undefeated by beating 13th-ranked Alabama 96-90 on Wednesday night.

The Commodores (15-0, 2-0 Southeastern Conference) extended their best start since winning 16 straight games to open the 2007-08 season. This is only the second time in the program’s 124-year history that Vanderbilt has won its first 15.

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Vanderbilt hadn’t played a ranked opponent until this game, also the first here between two top-15 teams since Jan. 5, 1974. Then-No. 10 Vanderbilt beat the 14th-ranked Crimson Tide in that game on its way to splitting the SEC championship with Alabama.

Vanderbilt also beat Alabama for the first time at Memorial Gym since 2018, ending a five-game skid against the Tide.

Duke Miles had 19 points and five steals before fouling out, and four other Commodores finished with at least four fouls. Tyler Nickel scored 12 points while Devin McGlockton and AK Okereke, who also fouled out, each had 10.

Tanner, a sophomore guard, added seven assists and four steals. He was 12 of 15 at the free-throw line — all in the second half.

Alabama (11-4, 1-1) had its four-game winning streak snapped in a game featuring 63 combined fouls, with two technicals on the Crimson Tide.

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Amari Allen led Alabama with a season-high 25 points. Leading scorer Labaron Philon Jr. added 18 but checked out with 16:06 to go and never returned. Aden Holloway had 22 points and Latrell Wrightsell Jr. scored 13.

Fouls called left and right turned the first 10 minutes of the second half into ugly ball, and Alabama never led by more than four. Allen hit two free throws that pulled the Tide to 59-58 with 12:14 left.

Vanderbilt went on a 16-4 spurt that included a technical foul on Alabama coach Nate Oats with 8:39 to go. Tanner hit both free throws off the technical, then Mike James knocked down a 3-pointer for a 74-63 lead. The Tide made it interesting but got no closer than 94-90.

Up next

Alabama hosts Texas on Saturday.

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Vanderbilt hosts LSU on Saturday.

Can I bet on the game?

Yes, you can bet on the game from your phone in New York State, and we’ve compiled some of the best introductory offers to help navigate your first bets from BetMGM, FanDuel, DraftKings, Bet365 and more.



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Texas vs. Alabama Prediction, Odds and Key Players to Watch for Saturday, Jan. 10

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Texas vs. Alabama Prediction, Odds and Key Players to Watch for Saturday, Jan. 10


The Alabama Crimson Tide are coming off a tough loss to Vanderbilt, but at 11-4 overall, they’re still in a great spot this season. On Saturday, they’ll host the Texas Longhorns, who are still seeking their first SEC win of the 2025-26 college basketball campaign.

Texas lost to Mississippi State in overtime and then lost by 14 points to Tennessee this past week. The oddsmakers now have them set as significant underdogs in this game, meaning a 0-3 start in conference play is likely. Let’s dive into it.

Odds via FanDuel Sportsbook

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Moneyline

Total

Dailyn Swain is leading Texas in points (15.6), rebounds (7.1), assists (3.5), and steals (1.8) per game. You’d be hard-pressed to find another team in college basketball where the same player leads the team in all four of those statistics. Alabama will have to shut him down to win and cover in this game.

The key factor in any Alabama game is how its opponent defends the perimeter. The Crimson Tide is primarily a three-point shooting team, which means the ability for their opponent to defend the three-ball plays a big role in how the game turns out.

Unfortunately, the Longhorns rank 223rd in the country in opponent three-point field goal percentage. They allow teams to shoot 34.4% from beyond the arc, which means Alabama, especially with the Crimson Tide being on their home court, has a chance to shoot the lights out on Saturday.

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I’m going to lay the points on Alabama as a big favorite.

Pick: Alabama -13.5 (-110) via FanDuel

Claim the FanDuel Sportsbook promo code offer to win $300 in bonus bets. Simply sign up, deposit $5, and place a $5 wager. If you win your bet, you will receive $300 in bonus bets within 72 hours.

Odds refresh periodically and are subject to change.

If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.

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You can check out all of Iain’s bets here!



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