Alabama
Live Updates: Alabama Baseball at Auburn (Game 1)

Any sequence towards Auburn is huge for Alabama. Nevertheless, this weekend’s journey throughout the state may carry a bit of additional weight for the Crimson Tide.
Alabama (27-22, 10-14 within the SEC) travels to No. 20 Auburn (33-16, 13) after dropping its final 4 SEC sequence. Since handing No. 1 Tennessee its first SEC loss on April 15, the Crimson Tide is simply 3-11 in league play.
Alabama’s present hunch has put its postseason possibilities in jeopardy. The Crimson Tide heads into the weekend with a 10-14 file in convention play, a sport forward of Kentucky and Mississippi State for the ultimate spot within the 12-team SEC Match.
Each Kentucky and Mississippi State face robust highway sequence this weekend because the Wildcats journey to South Carolina whereas the Bulldogs head to No. 10 Texas A&M. If Alabama is ready to win a sport or two in Auburn, it is going to be in much more comfy place heading into the ultimate week of the common season.
At this time’s sport between Alabama and Auburn is slated for a 7:30 p.m. CT first pitch. The sport will probably be broadcast on SEC Community.
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High 1
- Following a flyout from Jim Jarvis, Andrew Pinckney hits a double to proper heart.
- Again-to-back strikeouts finish the inning, and Alabama strands Pinckney at second.
Alabama beginning lineup
1. Jim Jarvis, SS
Alabama Baseball
2. Andrew Pinckney, RF

3. Drew Williamson, 1B

Alabama Athletics
4. Dominic Tamez, C

USA At this time
5. William Hamiter, LF

Alabama Athletics
6. Zane Denton, 3B

Saul Younger/Information Sentinel-USA TODAY NETWORK
7. Will Hodo, DH

Alabama Athletics
8. Caden Rose, CF

Alabama Athletics
9. Bryce Eblin, 2B

Gary Cosby Jr.-USA TODAY NETWORK
Garrett McMillan, SP

Gary Cosby Jr. / USA TODAY NETWORK

Alabama
Alabama’s Last Home Game and First Spring Practice Viewing on The Joe Gaither Show

Let’s have a lot of fun on a Wednesday edition of “The Joe Gaither Show on BamaCentral” with Mason Woods as we talk about Auburn basketball’s social media post, the Crimson Tide’s basketball game against Florida and the first practice availability of the spring period.
The show opens with the Auburn Tigers who celebrated Alabama’s demise over the weekend against Tennessee. Was it unusual to make the Tigers’ championship moment about the Crimson Tide losing?
The show then dives into tonight’s basketball game between Alabama and Florida. The last time the programs played the Gators destroyed Alabama in the SEC Tournament. Is Alabama out of gas? How will the Crimson Tide respond to Saturday’s heartbreaking defeat?
We move from basketball into football as we’re blessed to go to Alabama football practice on Wednesday. What should we look for in our limited availability? Who do we think will win the starting quarterback job? What conclusions can we draw from our time at the Mal Moore Athletic facility?
Call (205)462-7340 Extension 800 to leave your thoughts in a voicemail and you’ll be featured on the show or join us live on Mondays-Friday at 8 a.m. CT.
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The show can be seen on the BamaCentral YouTube channel. Keep up with each show on YouTube,Facebook and Twitter. Shows can also be heard on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon.
Alabama
Key court hearing as Alabama threatens prosecutions over abortion support

A bellwether test of states’ ability to prosecute people over abortions that take place across state lines will hold a critical hearing on Wednesday, when Alabama abortion rights supporters will square off against the state attorney general over his threats to prosecute groups that help women travel for the procedure.
In the months after the US supreme court overturned Roe v Wade in 2022, clearing the way for Alabama to ban virtually all abortions, Alabama attorney general Steve Marshall repeatedly suggested that abortion rights activists who help people go out of state for abortions could be charged as participants in an illegal conspiracy. The Yellowhammer Fund, an abortion fund that helped people pay for the procedure, and the West Alabama Women’s Center, a former abortion clinic that pivoted to providing services like miscarriage management, joined with other abortion rights advocates to sue Marshall over his comments.
Now, experts worry that a victory for Alabama could serve as a green light to other states’ efforts to attack people who want to end their pregnancies but live in states that ban abortion.
“If you go to Las Vegas to gamble, but your state doesn’t permit it, you don’t expect for your AG to suggest that anybody who helped you gamble in another state is going to be prosecuted, fined, and jailed,” said Rachel Rebouché, an expert in reproductive health law and the dean of Temple University’s law school.
“It’s a real encroachment on what we take for granted about how states treat each other – but also within the state, that the state will turn its law enforcement power against somebody who has done something that is not illegal.”
Since Marshall’s threats, the Yellowhammer Fund has stopped paying for people’s legal, out-of-state abortions, while the West Alabama Women’s Center is unable to help patients looking for out-of-state abortions, according to court documents. The plaintiffs in the case collectively receive about 95 questions each week from people looking for abortions outside of Alabama.
“The majority of our clients’ patients are poor or low income. They are people who may depend on financial assistance and support in figuring out how to get the resources they need to pay for travel,” said Meagan Burrows, a senior staff attorney at the ACLU, which is representing West Alabama Women’s Center (now known as WAWC Healthcare).
“All of these patients are coming to our clients very distressed, very confused about the legal landscape and their legal options, and are rightly contacting local healthcare providers in Alabama that they trust, who they know have all of the information and resources at their fingertips by virtue of being providers of reproductive healthcare, and former abortion care providers. And our clients have to turn them away.”
The attorney general’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But in court filings, it doubled down on Marshall’s claims. “An elective abortion performed in Alabama would be a criminal offense; thus, a conspiracy formed in the state to have that same act performed outside the state is illegal,” one brief read.
The hearing on Wednesday, which will take place in federal court in Montgomery, will deal with requests from both sides for summary judgment, or to move forward without a full trial.
Despite the downfall of Roe, which unleashed a wave of abortion bans across much of the US south and midwest, US abortions have increased in recent years. That rise, abortion rights supporters say, is due in large part to travel, as abortion clinics on the coasts have performed a growing number of procedures on women fleeing states with bans.
In response, anti-abortion activists have begun to test out various ways to attack out-of-state abortion travel, including by limiting talk of it. In Texas, an activist has drawn abortion funds, which help people travel out of state for abortions, into litigation and asked them to turn over information about past abortions. Idaho and Tennessee have passed laws that ban “abortion trafficking” – which they define as transporting a minor for an abortion without parental consent – as well as “recruiting” minors for abortions. A court has blocked the “recruiting” provision in Idaho’s law, citing first amendment concerns, while another court has paused the enforcement of Tennessee’s entire law.
“With criminal penalties for helpers, penalties for providers, what you see are anti-[abortion] rights politicians attempting to stop anyone who is helping a pregnant person or pregnant people from seeking care,” Elisabeth Smith, the director of state policy and advocacy for the Center for Reproductive Rights, told the Guardian last year. “The pregnant person, essentially, would be isolated and unable to seek the care that they want and need.”
Abortions have also risen thanks to the emergence of blue-state “shield laws”, which aim to protect providers who dispense medication abortion pills across state lines. Abortion opponents have, in recent weeks, targeted those providers, too. Louisiana has indicted a New York doctor for allegedly dispensing an abortion pill, while Texas has filed a lawsuit against the same doctor.
Mary Ziegler, who studies the legal history of reproduction, sees all of these efforts as intertwined. “It’s part of a broader set of issues about when states can project their power across their borders,” Ziegler said.
Regardless of the outcome of Wednesday’s hearing, red states appear to already be on a warpath. “Attorneys general are just going full speed ahead, even when it comes to out-of-state defendants,” said Ziegler, a professor at the University of California, Davis, School of Law. “I think the gloves came off after the election was over.”
A ruling in the requests for summary judgment is expected in the coming weeks.
Alabama
Alabama basketball’s Grant Nelson makes surprise appearance on injury report before Florida

WATCH: Alabama basketball HC Nate Oats previews SEC showdown vs Florida
The No. 5 Gators are due for a visit to Tuscaloosa. Alabama basketball coach Nate Oats previewed Wednesday’s game against Florida.
Despite Alabama basketball coach Nate Oats saying the Crimson Tide’s seniors would be good to go for Florida, forward Grant Nelson made an appearance on the injury report Tuesday.
Nelson was listed as questionable on the SEC availability report for Wednesday’s game against the No. 5 Gators, set to tip off at 6 p.m. CT in Coleman Coliseum.
“We do need Grant to be a little more aggressive and a little bit more efficient in his minutes. His turnovers, some games, he’s been a little inconsistent with taking care of the ball, so he has to take care of ball a little bit better, too,” Oats said ahead of Saturday’s loss at Tennessee.
Alabama basketball’s Grant Nelson makes unexpected appearance on injury report before Florida game
Nelson was listed as probable ahead of Feb. 23’s Mississippi State game, but entered the game for 24 minutes. He contributed six points, seven rebounds, two assists and a steal against the Bulldogs before a lackluster performance Saturday against Tennessee that was bolstered by a team-high 12 rebounds.
In the days before the Tennessee game, Oats mentioned Nelson had suffered a shin bruise, and the North Dakota State transfer took another hard fall over the weekend in Knoxville, landing on his hip.
With Nelson or not, Alabama will play Florida at 6 p.m. Saturday at Coleman Coliseum. The game will be aired on ESPN2, which can be streamed on ESPN+ and Fubo.
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Emilee Smarr covers Alabama basketball and Crimson Tide athletics for the Tuscaloosa News. She can be reached via email at esmarr@gannett.com.
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