Alabama
Final Transfer Portal Score: Alabama Crimson Tide Football vs Everyone
Friday, February 9 marks the closing of the 30-day transfer portal window that opened the day that Nick Saban retired. If you listen to non-Alabama college football fans that want nothing more than for the Crimson Tide to drop back to the pack of mediocrity, they will tell you that there was a “mass exodus” in Tuscaloosa.
The final tally stands at 30 players exiting Bama via the Transfer Portal. Granted, that is a large number of players but the quality of those who have departed versus their replacements, balances the books a bit.
PRE-RETIREMENT
Before Saban made his announcement, there were already 20 Tide players in the Transfer Portal. Many of them were reserves who had not played much and did not have much of a chance of cracking the starting lineup any time soon. This number includes two walk-ons.
- Tyler Buchner entered 12/04/2023, destination: Notre Dame Lacrosse – He was never going to get significant snaps at Alabama ever again. (+)
- Thaiu Jones-Bell 12/04/2023 ? – Not sure if this one even counts since he was not on the 2023 team. (+)
- Isaiah Hastings 12/07/2023 Syracuse – not much of a future with Bama. (+)
- Ja’Corey Brooks 12/07/2023 Louisville – former starter who saw his playing time dwindle to almost nothing in 2023. (+)
- Anquin Barnes 12/11/2023 Colorado – not much future in T-town. (+)
- Eli Holstein 1/03/2024 Pitt – bleak future. (+)
- Monkell Goodwine 1/03/2024 South Carolina – bleak future. (+)
- Malik Benson 1/03/2024 Florida State – this WR had one disappointing season at Bama after being hailed as the #1 juco recruit. 13 receptions for 162 yards, 1 TD (vs Chattanooga). (+)
- Seth McLaughlin 1/03/2024 Ohio State – God bless him, this poor guy had to go. He needed a change of scenery to help him get over the snapping yips and escape certain fans’ scorn. (+)
- Shazz Preston 1/03/2024 Tulane – bleak future. (+)
- Miles Kitselman 1/03/2024 Tennessee – bleak future. (+)
- Kristian Story 1/03/2024 Kentucky – After four seasons at Alabama, he finally got some meaningful playing time at safety with a game on the line… and it did not go so well. He is now in his bonus season and Alabama can only take back so many 5th/6th year seniors. (+)
- Ian Jackson 1/04/2024 UTSA – no future. (+)
- Roydell Williams 1/05/2024 Florida State – Another super senior who served as the second running back thi past campaign for reasons unknown to the public while Justice Haynes and Jam Miller stood around on the sidelines. Justice and Jam will be back along with three other talented young backs. (+)
- Walk-on Hayden Neighbors 1/05/2024 (+)
- Walk-on Jax Porter 1/05/2024 (+)
Let’s take a break here. Buchner has quit football. Jones-Bell most likely quit football a year ago and just thought he would float his name out there just in case. Brooks disappeared. Left over are two walk-ons who have not played a down, seven guys who were probably never going to see significant playing time, a receiver who was starting for some reason but could not get open, a center who forgot how to snap the ball, and two bonus year seniors who were not worth the precious few roster spots remaining to bring them back.
Moving on.
17. Earl Little II 1/03/2024 Florida State – Little was expected to compete for a starting role or at least as a top back-up in the secondary in 2023. However, he hardly saw the field in non-special teams situations. There must be a good reason for that. With so many defensive back teammates heading to the NFL, his odds of increased playing time were much better. But okay… (+/-)
18. Terrence Ferguson 1/03/2024 Florida State – A bit of a surprise as he was expected to compete for a starting role, but far from being a lock. (+/-)
19. Kendrick Blackshire 1/08/2024 Texas – In his third year, he was getting more playing time. 2024 will be his final season of eligibility. He probably saw a better chance of starting somewhere else. (+/-)
20. Jake Pope 1/07/2024 Georgia – Worked exclusively on special teams in 2023. He only played one season after a redshirt year. It seems a bit early to bail, but maybe he was homesick? (+/-)
Above we have two guys who may or may not have started in 2024 and two guys who excelled at special teams but would probably not be cracking the starting lineup.
The total comes to two-thirds of transfers coming BEFORE Saban hung it up on January 10. He most certainly met with all these guys to talk about their futures with the program. Had he not retired, nobody would be saying anything about an “exodus”.
POST-RETIREMENT
Kalen DeBoer was announced as the new head coach on January 12, 2024.
21. Isaiah Bond 1/12/2024 Texas – By the time the DeBoer announcement came, Bond was already in the transfer portal. He was a starter but had only 668 yards and 4 TD. He will be missed in the receiving corps but his yard totals were way lower than what Tide fans are used to seeing from a starting receiver. (-)
22. Shawn Murphy 1/13/2024 Florida State – With only two years in the program, what’s the rush? (+/-)
23. Antonio Kite 1/13/2024 Auburn – Based on where he landed, he must have been buried in the depth chart. (+/-)
24. Dezz Ricks 1/13/2024 Texas A&M – Only one season in Tuscaloosa. smh (+/-)
25. Amari Niblack 1/14/2024 Texas – A disappointing loss of a promising player. (-)
26. Trey Amos 1/15/2024 Ole Miss – Had an opportunity to fight for a starting spot. (+/-)
27. Kadyn Proctor 1/17/2024 Iowa – Freshman All-American and a starter. But the Iowa folks got in his head and made him homesick. It hurts losing him but if his heart is not into it, what good is he to Alabama? (+/-)
28. Caleb Downs 1/17/2024 Ohio State – Another Freshman All-American and a starter. I still don’t get this one. You don’t want to play for Kalen DeBoer but Ryan “Always a Bridesmaid” Day is a better option? Based on Downs’s recent comments, it sounds like he got some Uncle Mentor Godfathers in his ear. (-)
29. Julian Sayin 1/19/2024 Ohio State – I hate losing this kid. I have to blame KDB on this one. (-)
30. Jameer Grimsley 1/18/2024 Florida – I hope this does not sound like sour grapes, but I was very unimpressed with this commitment/signing. Maybe he will prove me wrong someday? (+)
Of course, these grades are all based on this writer’s opinion. There is probably some margin of error, but not too much. That said, let’s add them up:
(+) = 17 or over half are no real significant losses.
(-) = Four can be considered deficits with one of them having never played a down of college football.
(+/-) = Nine we may never know.
INCOMING
Before Saban’s departure, he picked up transfers from three outstanding players. They have all stuck around.
- LT Overton 12/05/2023 Texas A&M – Pencil him in as a starter at DL.
- Domani Jackson 12/19/2023 Southern Cal – Likely starter at CB.
- Naquil Betrand 12/20/2023 Texas A&M – 6-6/340 OL still has four years to play.
Soon after coach DeBoer came on board at Alabama, he was able add three more transfers, all from Washington:
4. Parker Brailsford – Freshman All-American center instantly fixes a serious issue that was lingering at Alabama. He is a definite win in the TP for the Tide.
5. Austin Mack – RS freshman QB already knows the system and is highly regarding by the new coaching staff. He will have four years to play.
6. Germie Bernard – Rising junior WR was behind three Huskies who are all going to end up being selected in April’s NFL Draft. And still, he ended up with 752 all-purpose yards. He has two seasons of eligibility remaining.
DeBoer got a flip and a re-commitment as well:
7. Noah Carter – Flipped high 4-star Edge Rusher who was released from his Letter Of Intent with Washington.
8. Ryan Williams – 5-star WRwas brought back into the fold.
9. Quinton “QB” Reese – DeBoer also found a spot for this 3-star linebacker from Birmingham.
ADD IT UP
Based on the info listed above, the hypothetical math leaves Alabama in the profit column.
The use of the (+) symbol is not meant to represent a positive that a player has departed. It is meant that it does not hurt the team. The Tide loaded up on plenty of incoming freshmen that can fill those voids.
The ones with (+/-) are unknown how good of football players they are or will be. They may all turn into All-Americans or they may all become busts.
The four negatives (-) are the ones to look at.
- Isaiah Bond – Ignoring incoming freshmen Williams, Rico Scott and Bubba Hampton, focus more on junior Germie Bernard. As mentioned above, he had 752 all-purpose yards last season as the 4th receiver. Bond amassed 668 total yards and equaled Bernard with four touchdowns as a starter and favorite target of Jalen Milroe. It makes little sense why a receiver like Bond would want to pull the ripcord on the type of offense that KDB is bringing in. Based on his social media, it appears he wanted a quick money grab. For argument’s sake, we’ll leave the personal side out of it. Bernard is a more than adequate replacement.
- Caleb Downs – Many folks figured he was leaving to join DB coach Travaris Robinson who defected to Georgia. However, it was a big swing and a miss for T-Rob and now Kirby Smart is saddled with a $1.3 million cornerbacks coach. That softens the blow a bit but Alabama will have a hard time replacing Downs in 2024.
- Julian Sayin – It is unfortunate to have a QB of his caliber hit the bricks. To KDB’s credit, he brought Mack along with him from Seattle. Mack has a year under his belt with the new staff and they are mighty high on him. Who knows if either can live up to their hype? This is a wash.
- Amari Niblack – This tight end had a slow start to his Alabama career but showed some real sparks of talent in year 2. Even still, he had only 20 catches for 327 yards and 4 touchdowns. In addition, he was not often the first choice on blocking plays. CJ Dippre and Robbie Ouzts were called on for most of those instances and they are both coming back this fall. That does not count as a replacement, but freshman Caleb Odom does. Not since OJ Howard have I been more excited to see and incoming tight end at Alabama.
So, what is the point to all this? Alabama lost 30 guys to the portal but it is not as bad as it seems. The only true loss appears to be Downs. Conversely, they addressed the problem at center with a guy who is younger and was probably not obtainable by Saban. All things considered, all these factors put Bama ahead in our books.
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Alabama
Alabama Department of Education releases 2023-24 report card
DOTHAN, Ala. (WTVY) – The Alabama State Department of Education released its annual report card for the 2023-2024 school year.
This report breaks down the overall academic success of the state.
Overall the state scored an 85, up two points from last school year. The ALSDE said, however, that academic achievement is low, scoring a D. Academic growth earned a 97. The state’s graduation rate scored an A. English language proficiency scored a 41.
College and Career Readiness for the state received an 84 B. The full report card for the state can be viewed here.
The report also provides scores for individual schools and school systems.
The Coffee County School System scored a 90 overall, improving by one point from last school year.
Kinston saw a drop in chronic absenteeism from 8.44 to 6.62. New Brockton Elementary raised its overall grade from an 87 to a 90. New Brockton Middle School also saw a big drop in absenteeism this school year, going from 13 to 6.86. New Brockton High School also raised its score by three points, moving from an 80 to 83. A full breakdown of all Coffee County Schools is below:
School | Overall Grade | Academic Achievement | Academic Growth | Graduation Rate | Chronic Absenteeism | English Language Proficiency | College and Career Readiness |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kinston | 92 | 77.86 | 89.06 | 100 | 6.62 | N/A | 100 |
New Brockton Elementary | 90 | 79.15 | 100 | N/A | 12.66 | 54.84 | N/A |
New Brockton Middle | 79 | 63.40 | 93.39 | N/A | 6.86 | 21.62 | N/A |
New Brockton High School | 83 | 42.90 | 84.26 | 100 | 9.29 | N/A | 100 |
Zion Chapel High School | 93 | 73.31 | 99.75 | 100 | 13.09 | 100 |
The Enterprise City School System scored an 89 overall, keeping the same score as last school year.
Enterprise High School scored a 79, dropping from its 82 last year. Dauphin Jr. High raised its score by four points to 94. Pinedale Elementary’s overall score stayed the same but there was a three-point increase in academic achievement. The full breakdown of Enterprise City Schools scores is below:
School | Overall Grade | Academic Achievement | Academic Growth | Graduation Rate | Chronic Absenteeism | English Language Proficiency | College and Career Readiness |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brookwood Elementary | 96 | 92.3 | 100 | N/A | 7.82 | N/A | N/A |
Coppinville School | 86 | 76.18 | 100 | N/A | 14.20 | 30.44 | N/A |
Dauphin Jr. High | 94 | 88.50 | 100 | N/A | 5.10 | 45 | N/A |
Enterprise High School | 79 | 55.74 | 92.47 | 90.11 | 13.28 | 15.39 | 80.42 |
Harrand Creek Elementary | 84 | 75.92 | 90.86 | N/A | 14.96 | 55.36 | N/A |
Hillcrest Elementary | 92 | 86.02 | 100 | N/A | 6.71 | 43.90 | N/A |
Pinedale Elementary | 90 | 81.98 | 100 | N/A | 10.17 | 38.10 | N/A |
Rucker Boulevard Elementary | 94 | 84.96 | 100 | N/A | 1.33 | N/A | N/A |
Houston County School System raised its score by two points, going from an 87 to an 89. Ashford Elementary saw a large drop in absenteeism from 13 to 1.02. Wicksburg High School upped its graduation rate by 9 points. Cottonwood Elementary saw a jump in academic achievement from 75 to 80. A full breakdown of Houston County Schools scores is below:
School | Overall Grade | Academic Achievement | Academic Growth | Graduation Rate | Chronic Absenteeism | English Language Proficiency | College and Career Readiness |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ashford Elementary | 93 | 83.63 | 100 | N/A | 1.02 | N/A | N/A |
Ashford Middle School | 86 | 69.97 | 100 | N/A | 10.50 | N/A | N/A |
Ashford High School | 81 | 42.53 | 92.72 | 86.75 | 19.06 | N/A | 91.57 |
Cottonwood Elementary | 92 | 80.56 | 100 | N/A | 2.05 | N/A | N/A |
Cottonwood High School | 89 | 62.61 | 98.50 | 96.83 | 14.18 | N/A | 95.24 |
Houston County High School | 88 | 54.31 | 99.40 | 94.87 | 11.57 | N/A | 97.44 |
Houston County Virtual Academy | 71 | 40.09 | 63.85 | 83.33 | 0.28 | N/A | 88.46 |
Rehobeth Elementary | 93 | 87.10 | 100 | N/A | 3.02 | 35.71 | N/A |
Rehobeth Middle School | 87 | 73.45 | 96.93 | N/A | 8.87 | N/A | N/A |
Rehobeth High School | 82 | 48.36 | 89.04 | 91.18 | 8.11 | N/A | 91.76 |
Rehobeth Primary | 96 | 91.74 | 100 | N/A | 2.05 | N/A | N/A |
Webb Elementary | 95 | 88.26 | 100 | N/A | 1.05 | N/A | N/A |
Wicksburg Elementary | 97 | 92.72 | 100 | N/A | 1.83 | N/A | N/A |
Wicksburg High School | 95 | 83.49 | 100 | 97.18 | 5.86 | N/A | 95.77 |
Dothan City Schools overall scored a 79. So did Carver 9th Grade Academy. Dothan High School raised its score by 7 points to 78 and saw a drop in absenteeism. Highlands Elementary scored a 91 in academic growth. Dothan Prep saw an increase in English language proficiency, going from a 19 to 34. A full breakdown of all schools in the Dothan City School System is below:
School | Overall Grade | Academic Achievement | Academic Growth | Graduation Rate | Chronic Absenteeism | English Language Proficiency | College and Career Readiness |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Beverlye Intermediate School | 62 | 37.84 | 77.61 | N/A | 18.64 | N/A | N/A |
Carver 9th Grade Academy | 79 | 41.34 | 96.81 | N/A | 13.81 | N/A | 66.46 |
Carver School of Mathematics, Science, and Technology | 97 | 100 | 100 | N/A | 21.61 | N/A | N/A |
Dothan City Virtual School | 74 | 44.89 | 76.52 | 91.89 | 10.50 | N/A | 51.35 |
Dothan High School | 78 | 41.34 | 96.81 | 89.11 | 27.75 | N/A | 66.46 |
Dothan Preparatory Academy | 67 | 50.20 | 82.49 | N/A | 26.50 | 34.29 | N/A |
Faine Elementary | 53 | 22.29 | 73.90 | N/A | 25.59 | N/A | N/A |
Girard Intermediate School | 61 | 35.66 | 82.27 | N/A | 37.22 | N/A | N/A |
Girard Primary School | 64 | 35.66 | 82.27 | N/A | 11.91 | N/A | N/A |
Heard Elementary School | 79 | 54.78 | 99.08 | N/A | 16.18 | N/A | N/A |
Hidden Lake Primary School | 63 | 37.84 | 77.61 | N/A | 14.17 | N/A | N/A |
Highlands Elementary School | 87 | 81.03 | 92.81 | N/A | 13.35 | N/A | N/A |
Kelly Springs Elementary | 79 | 57.22 | 98.94 | N/A | 21.94 | 64 | N/A |
Morris Slingluff Elementary | 74 | 46.44 | 94.50 | N/A | 15.22 | N/A | N/A |
Selma Street Elementary | 86 | 65.98 | 100 | N/A | 5.88 | N/A | N/A |
Elba City Schools scored an 81 B overall. For the full report card, click here.
Overall, Dale County scored a 90, raising its score from 88 last year. For the full report card, click here.
Daleville City Schools raised its score three points from 74 to 77. For the full report card, click here.
Ozark City Schools scored an 83 overall. For the full report card, click here.
Geneva County Schools raised its overall score from a 91 to a 93. For the full report card, click here.
Geneva City Schools scored a 93 overall. For the full report card, click here.
Henry County Schools scored an 89 overall. View the full report card here.
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Alabama
Alabama Crimson Tide: By the Numbers
Oklahoma is going to have its hands full on Saturday night.
The Sooners will welcome Alabama to Norman for just the second time ever, and it’s only the seventh all-time meeting between the two college football powers.
The No. 7-ranked Crimson Tide (8-2, 4-2 SEC) are looking to continue their march toward the College Football Playoff while OU (5-5, 1-5) is just trying to honor its seniors in the home finale by getting bowl eligible.
Kalen DeBoer has kept Alabama’s offense firing as one of the nation’s best, presenting a tough test for the Sooners.
The Crimson Tide offense can hurt defenses in a hurry.
Quarterback Jalen Milroe has forged a lethal connection with freshman wide receiver Ryan Williams, and he can also do damage with his legs.
Slowing down Alabama play-after-play is hard enough, but make one mistake and DeBoer’s offense can make defenses pay.
The Crimson Tide have scored 53 touchdowns on offense this year, and 23 of those have from from 20-plus yards out.
It’s not just been ‘Bama beating defenses over the top, either. Of the 23 chunk plays that have scored, 12 have been passes and 11 runs.
OU’s rushing defense has held up Ewell this year, as the Sooners rank 18th in the country in rushing yards allowed per game, but the Sooners have struggled with letting receivers hurt them deep in SEC-play this year, which will be a concern come Saturday.
Nick Saban may be gone, but Alabama’s defense is still turning opponents over at a high rate.
The Crimson Tide have forced 24 turnovers this year, recovering 10 fumbles and picking off quarterbacks 14 times.
That’s an area of concern for Oklahoma, who has been allergic to ball security.
In OU’s last outing alone against Missouri, the Sooners put the ball on the ground six times, losing four of those fumbles.
Quarterback Jackson Arnold was responsible for two of the lost fumbles by himself, the last of which was returned for a touchdown and untimely did OU in.
If the Sooners are to have any shot of pulling the unlikely upset on Saturday, they’ll have to take care of the football — something that hasn’t happened since the win over Auburn in September.
While the Alabama defense has been opportunistic, it hasn’t quite been the dominant unit of the Saban Era.
Opponents have rushed for 132.2 yards per game against the Tide, which ranks 53rd in the country.
While OU’s offense has struggled this year, there have been glimpses of a rushing attack that can keep the Sooners in SEC games, especially against Ole Miss and Missouri.
Jovantae Barnes’ availability is up in the air, but true freshman Xavier Robinson looked like a difference maker at running back late against Missouri.
Oklahoma’s path to victory includes winning the turnover battle and having success on the ground to shorten the game, something Vanderbilt was especially good at in its upset victory over ‘Bama earlier this year.
The Crimson Tide are 18th in the country in third down defense, allowing conversions 31.5 percent of the time, so staying ahead of the chains by having success on the ground will be crucial for Oklahoma’s offense to stay on track.
Alabama
JD Crowe: People are dying in Alabama's ‘ambulance desert’
This is an opinion cartoon.
“In the three weeks since Pickens County dropped down to one ambulance, two women died after waiting an hour for paramedics to arrive.”
That’s the first line of Savannah Tryens-Fernandes’ report on Alabama’s ‘ambulance desert.’
It’s an enlightening report. Read all of it here.
Let’s cut to the chase: Many of Alabama’s rural healthcare issues could be fixed with one stroke of the pen by Gov. Ivey. Expand Medicaid. To include the working poor people of Alabama. Rural Alabama. The places that need at least one more ambulance. Or one more doctor. To save a life. Or two.
Medicaid expansion is frowned upon by Ivey because it’s an Obamacare thing. And because it works. Why not just embrace it and call it yours? That’s how politics works, right?
So, let’s do this: Call it IveyCare. Or TrumpsterCare. What Alabama has now is WeDon’tCare. Maybe we just need NobodyCares.
Medicaid expansion would help cure a lot of ills in this defiant state. If nobody cared who got the credit.
The ‘one ambulance’ problem in Pickens County is a mixed bag of Alabama dysfunction. Read on …
Excerpts from This Alabama county is now down to just one ambulance: ‘It costs lives’
“Pickens County moved to only one ambulance on Oct. 25. The reduction in ambulance service is just the latest in a downward spiral, as rural communities across Alabama watch emergency rooms and hospitals shutter, and as pediatricians, dentists and maternity care have disappeared in over a third of the state’s counties.
“Sullivan McCrory said her team of paramedics has had to triage callers ever since the move to one ambulance. She said it’s not unusual to get two to three calls all within an hour, forcing them to decide where to go based on which call is most life-threatening.
“All I know is people are suffering,” she told AL.com. “What can you do when you have one ambulance in a county with over 19,000 people in it?”
“In 2022, Alabama passed a law deeming emergency medical services and ambulances an essential service, saying “emergency medical services are an essential public service and a part of the health care safety net for many residents of this state.”
“Alabama is one of 37 states to pass such a law. But unlike most other states, Alabama does not require the state government to fund the service.
“U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell represents Pickens County in Washington. Her office said typically the only source of federal funding for those services comes from Medicare reimbursements. She has introduced two bills in the House since 2021 to increase rates for both ambulances and rural hospitals to help them stay operational. But neither bill has received a vote.
“Congresswoman Sewell and our whole team have spent years pushing for congressional action to address these ambulance shortages at the federal level,” said Christopher Kosteva, Sewell’s Communications Director, in a statement to AL.com. “This issue has been exacerbated by the state’s refusal to expand Medicaid, which has put an enormous strain on the resources of rural health care providers.”
“When asked by AL.com if any emergency support could be provided by the state to keep an ambulance running, a spokesperson for Gov. Kay Ivey’s office said “we continue monitoring and are aware of developments in Pickens County, but at this time, you may wish to reach out to local officials.”
Read the whole report right here: This Alabama county is now down to just one ambulance: ‘It costs lives’
True stories and stuff by JD Crowe
The mysterious ‘Bubble Guy’ of Fairhope and the art of bubble Zen – al.com
How I met Dr. Seuss
Robert Plant head-butted me. Thanks, David Coverdale
I was ZZ Top’s drummer for a night and got kidnapped by groupies
Check out more cartoons and stuff by JD Crowe
JD Crowe is the cartoonist for Alabama Media Group and AL.com. He won the RFK Human Rights Award for Editorial Cartoons in 2020. In 2018, he was awarded the Rex Babin Memorial Award for local and state cartoons by the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. Follow JD on Facebook, Twitter @Crowejam and Instagram @JDCrowepix. Give him a holler @jdcrowe@al.com.
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