Alabama
Predicting The Winner Of Alabama’s Wild QB Competition

For the first time since before Jalen Hurts, the Alabama quarterback picture is unclear. Nick Saban and the Alabama football dynasty have enjoyed a long run of elite quarterback play. The Crimson Tide’s last four quarterbacks (Hurts, Tua Tagovailoa, Mac Jones, and Bryce Young) are all currently NFL starters. But with time running out before the start of the 2023 season, Alabama still hasn’t chosen a starting quarterback. Will it be 2022 backup Jalen Milroe? Former 5-star Ty Simpson? Or will Notre Dame transfer Tyler Buchner win the job?
Here’s the case for (or against) each of Alabama football’s quarterback options and a prediction for who wins the battle:
Jalen Milroe
Jalen Milroe was a four-star high school prospect and the No. 2 quarterback out of Texas. He has a big frame at 6-3, 206 lbs and great athleticism to go with it. His physical traits make him a dangerous threat with his legs, but he also has impressive arm strength.
Milroe is the most experienced quarterback in Nick Saban’s system. He appeared in eight games in 2022 and started one against Texas A&M, throwing three touchdowns in the 24-20 win. Saban’s familiarity with Milroe is the strongest case for him to win the starting job.
Milroe’s shortcomings are visible in the pocket; his accuracy and consistency certainly need improvement. Milroe completed 58.5% of his 53 pass attempts a year ago, with five touchdowns and three interceptions. He did rush for 263 yards and a touchdown as well, but the fact that he rushed for nearly as many yards as he threw for shows what his real strength is.
Alabama leaned heavily on Bryce Young’s individual ability last year, and Young’s biggest strength was his processing and improvisation. If this year’s offense is at all similar to last year’s, the Crimson Tide is going to ask a lot of their quarterback, and Milroe isn’t up to Young’s standard in those areas.
Ty Simpson
Ty Simpson is the best pure prospect of Alabama’s three quarterbacks. He was the No. 3 QB in his class, per the 247Sports Composite. The sophomore has respectable size and athleticism at 6-2, 200 lbs. He’s much more of a pure passer than either of the other two candidates, but he also has enough mobility to escape pressure and extend plays with his feet, a trait which seemingly becomes more important every year.
Simpson’s primary area for improvement is his physical frame. He has good arm strength and accuracy, but he would benefit from adding some pounds to play in the very physical SEC. His best strengths in the pocket may also be limited by a less-than-spectacular receiving corps at Alabama football this year. They simply don’t have the weapons they usually do on the outside.
Simpson’s 247 scouting report reads: “Projects to an all-conference, potential All-American prospect at the next level. Needs one season to sit and develop as he acclimates to the speed of the game at the collegiate level, but possesses the ability to be a multi-year high level performer for a Power Five program.”
Well, that is the timeline he’s on. Simpson sat behind a former Heisman Trophy winner and has had over a year practicing against one of the best defenses in college football. His development should be far enough along for him to have earned the starting spot. But, he hasn’t separated himself yet, which brought Alabama to acquire its third quarterback.
Tyler Buchner
Apparently, Nick Saban and Alabama were not satisfied with the quarterback options they had after the spring football season. That led the Tide to bring in Tyler Buchner from Notre Dame. Buchner reunited with his his former offensive coordinator, Tommy Rees, who Alabama hired away from the Fighting Irish in February.
Buchner graded out similar to Milroe as a high school prospect. He’s a good athlete with excellent elusiveness in the backfield. He’s not as strong or fast as Milroe, but he’s better and more versatile as a passer. Buchner is something between Milroe and Simpson in terms of play style and strengths, and he’s more dynamic than either.
He also hasn’t played a ton of football at the collegiate level, suffering an early-season shoulder injury that ended his 2022 campaign. Buchner likely has a lot of untapped potential left and could thrive behind the overall talent of Alabama’s roster.
Prediction
Based on the fact that Saban still wanted to bring in a quarterback after spring football, it feels like Tyler Buchner will be the choice. Alabama knows what they have in Milroe, and if Simpson hasn’t developed by now, he’s not going to by next Saturday.
Saban brought in Tommy Rees to lead his offense and then brought in the guy Rees has worked with before. That will be a favorable dynamic for both Rees and Buchner as they learn to adjust to a new situation.
Buchner’s strengths just make the most sense for what Alabama needs out of its quarterback right now. This isn’t typically a QB-centric offense, but it does need a guy that can make it more dynamic right now. Buchner’s ability to buy time and let plays develop will be valuable for the Crimson Tide, and that’s the skill that will earn him the starting job.
Saban has repeatedly made it clear that he hasn’t made his choice yet. He wants one of these three guys to force him to play them. Alabama has a high standard, and Saban isn’t just going to hand the job to one of these guys without them earning it. It’s looking more and more probable that this QB battle isn’t settled by Week 1. All three guys may get reps in Alabama’s non-conference warm-up game, but the Tide needs to find its identity before they face Texas in Week 2.

Alabama
A Year After a Fatal Explosion, Alabama Extends Deadline for Coal Companies to Monitor Methane Gas Above Mines – Inside Climate News

Undermined: Fourteenth in a series about the impacts of longwall mining in Alabama.
JASPER, Ala.—Verby Burton said she wasn’t expecting much from Thursday’s meeting of the Alabama Surface Mining Commission, the agency tasked with regulating the surface impacts of underground coal mining in the state.
“And that’s exactly what I got,” Burton said after the meeting. “Not much.”
Burton is a resident of Oak Grove, a rural community in western Jefferson County, about 45 miles southwest of Birmingham, that sits above an expanding longwall coal mine. The impacts of the aggressive form of mining—cracking roads, damaging foundations, causing land subsidence and triggering the escape of potentially explosive methane gas—have plagued the community for years. That culminated in a home explosion atop the mine in March 2024 that that killed grandfather W.M. Griffice and seriously injured his grandson.

In December, after a series of investigations by Inside Climate News into the explosion and Alabama’s lax regulatory response, federal mining officials forced the state’s hand, issuing a so-called ten-day notice requiring the Alabama Surface Mining Commission to demand methane monitoring plans from coal companies in the state.
In a letter sent in January, the agency’s director, Kathy Love, did just that, requiring that the companies submit new “subsidence control plans” that include measures related to monitoring levels of potentially explosive methane gas in and around homes located above their operations.


At Thursday’s meeting, however, Love announced that she had unilaterally delayed the March 31 deadline she’d previously imposed for submitting such methane monitoring plans by six months, giving coal companies until Sept. 30 to submit the updated documents.
“I was under pressure to get an answer out for that ten-day notice, and, unbeknownst to me—I should’ve thought about it—March 31 is not enough time,” she said.
Love did not mention during Thursday’s meeting how she’d determined that the initial 90-day period was insufficient, but a draft letter from her agency to coal companies across the state obtained by Inside Climate News notes that her decision came after a request from the Alabama Mining Association, a lobbying group that bills itself as the “collective voice of Alabama’s mining industry.”
The draft letter says “mine operators sought assistance from the Alabama Mining Association (AMA) to obtain a deadline extension to allow adequate time for the completion of the comprehensive plans.”
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AMA then formally requested a 180-day extension of the deadline in a letter to the state agency dated March 18, the letter states, and “upon review of the facts and circumstances,” the Alabama regulator granted the request.
Meanwhile, residents who reside atop the expanding Oak Grove mine live in fear of a methane explosion in their home.
Resident Phyllis Wright said in an interview that during a recent thunderstorm, her home methane monitor alerted her to an unsafe level of the gas, advising her to “ventilate and evacuate” her home. Wright didn’t know what to do, she said, and still hasn’t received guidance from mine operators or state or federal regulators as to what should be done in such situations.


At Thursday’s meeting, Love, citing that incident, initially appeared somewhat dismissive of home methane monitors.
“I don’t know what caused that, but it was just an incident that may have been a false alarm or caused by the lightning,” she told residents and commissioners gathered for the meeting. “I don’t know. I can’t even verify anything like that.”
Asked later by an Inside Climate News reporter whether she would have such a monitor in her home were she to live above an expanding longwall mine, however, Love didn’t hesitate to answer.
“Yes, I would,” she said. “Just like I have a fire alarm.”
Love emphasized in the meeting that she believes that coal operators in Alabama are going beyond what’s required by law to monitor methane and ensure the safety of those living above mines. Residents like Lisa Lindsay, W.M. Griffice’s closest neighbor, are skeptical of that claim.


Crimson Oak Grove Resources, the mining company that owns and operates the mine below her home, placed methane monitors under her property following the fatal explosion in 2024.
Since then, Lindsay told Love and commissioners, she’s requested information on the observed methane levels. Only occasionally has she gotten a response, she said. And when she has heard back from company representatives, their answers aren’t specific, simply telling her that elevated levels of methane were detected beneath her home “fewer than five times.”
“They’ve refused to tell me what’s happening under my house,” Lindsay said.
“I don’t know what the justification is for not giving you those readings,” Love responded. “I will make the phone call and see what I can do.”
Oak Grove Resources did not respond to a request for comment. The company hasn’t answered any of Inside Climate News’ questions since the explosion.
“Y’all need to get on it, then,” Lindsay told Love and agency commissioners. “Y’all are the last line of defense for us residents versus the mining industry. Your job is to regulate and help protect us, right? So that’s something that really, really has got to be followed up on. We need to know what’s going on underneath our houses.”
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Alabama
Alabama Center Parker Brailsford Reveals Goal for 2025 Season

TUSCALOOSA, Ala.— The 2023 Washington Huskies made it all the way to the College Football Playoff National Championship game despite not having anywhere near those expectations at the start of the season.
The Huskies offense was one of the most potent units in the country as it had six players taken in the first three rounds of the 2024 NFL Draft. Washington’s front five was a big reason for the team’s tremendous success that season as it won the Joe Moore Award, which is given annually to college football’s best offensive line.
After opting for a redshirt in 2022, Parker Brailsford earned a starting spot on the Huskies offensive line ahead of the 2023 season as the center. He played an integral role in Washington’s stellar season as he was named to the All-Pac 12 Second Team at the end of the year.
When former Huskies head coach Kalen DeBoer took the vacant job at Alabama in January 2024, many players followed him to Tuscaloosa, including Brailsford. The Crimson Tide’s offensive line had a rough 2023 season, but the addition of Brailsford alongside OL head coach Chris Kapilovic made a big difference. Alabama allowed 49 sacks in 2023 but just 24 this past season.
Now that Brailsford has a year at Alabama under his belt, he revealed his hopes for the upcoming season.
“It’s kind of a personal goal but kind of not, I want to win the Joe Moore with my O-Line,” Brailsford said on Thursday.
There’s already an obstacle to this goal, though. Alabama lost co-captain and left guard Tyler Booker to the 2025 NFL Draft, as he has a chance to be selected in the first round. The Crimson Tide has multiple players competing to fill Booker’s practically unfillable shoes as A-Day looms.
“It don’t really matter who they put [at left guard], it always feels the same,” Brailsford said. “Geno [VanDeMark] is a smart guy, Kam [Dewberry] is a smart guy. They’re both doing really good in spring ball and I’m excited to just see that battle and see who wins that.”
Building chemistry is essential to the stoutness of an offensive line. This isn’t as easy when a team hasn’t established its starting five just yet, but this factor hasn’t changed Brailsford’s Joe Moore Award mindset.
“It takes time,” Brailsford said. “You’ve got to see who the guys are that are willing to do it, willing to strain and things like that. It’s not going to be exact during spring ball. Even as the whole O-line––whether it be the walk-ons, twos, threes, ones––we’re all pretty tight.
“It takes a long time. Everybody is different. Some groups are a little faster than others…but we’re all a close group and I feel comfortable with all of those guys. The chemistry is there.”
As previously stated, Booker was a co-captain and perhaps the ultimate leader for the Crimson Tide last season. Finding a new leader to push this year’s offensive line will be needed to win the Joe Moore Award. The transfer portal is a massive component of college sports today and Brailsford believes his experience in it combined with a first season at Alabama could help his case as a leader.
“I think it’s been really good getting that year under my belt because I feel comfortable talking to the guys and I have a relationship with the guys…Change is obviously hard. Like for me, it was a little bit hard and I had some things going on back then. But since I’ve been here, I give myself the room and go and talk to and hang out with the guys. That’s just helped me build relationships.”
It’s clear that Brailsford wants to be a leader of the Crimson Tide offensive line. But how far can his leadership take Alabama’s front five this upcoming season?
Alabama
American Heart Association holds Alabama Lobbying Day

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WSFA) – This year, the American Heart Association has their eye on three bills.
At their Alabama Lobbing Day, the organization educated their advocates on what their focus is and how to get lawmakers on board.
“This year, we are advocating to add sporting events and sporting locations to protect children from cardiac arrest,” said advocate Heather Amberson, speaking about automated external defibrillators, or AEDs.
Amberson’s son died from a sudden cardiac arrest while playing an outdoor sport.
She hopes her story will help advocates encourage lawmakers to vote ‘yes’ to House Bill 416, a bill to add more AEDs to schools and sporting grounds in an effort to save more people from cardiac arrest.
The association is also pushing for free breakfasts for all students in Alabama, because a full stomach comes with the full capability for succeeding in the classroom.
In addition to the bills they support, they’re also lobbying against one bill aimed at stopping kids from vaping, House Bill 8.
“HB 8, we are opposing because we agree that students should not be penalized for using vapes when the people selling the vapes won’t be penalized as much,” said Alabama Advocacy Chair for the American Heart Association Heidi Darbo.
Kids found with a vape could be fined up to $1,000.
And while the bill says the money will go towards implementing vaping prevention and education in schools, it has yet to determine a program to implement.
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