Alabama
Saharan dust expected to arrive to Gulf Coast by the weekend. Will it affect Alabama?
Look ahead: Cool in Northeast; Wet from Texas to Carolinas
The Northeast is expected to remain cool while Texas through the Carolinas can experience wet weather.
If you see hazy skies across the coast of Alabama, rest assured that your eyes are not playing tricks on you.
A plume of Saharan dust is making a 6,000-mile journey from Africa, crossing the Atlantic and drifting into the southern U.S.
The dust can lead to stunning sunsets, reduced air quality and hazy conditions across the coastal region.
Here’s what to know:
What is Saharan Air Layer and how will it affect Alabama?
Each summer, a natural event called the Saharan Air Layer (SAL) sends dust from the Sahara Desert across the Atlantic Ocean. This dust often causes hazy skies and vivid sunrises and sunsets. Made up of fine sand and minerals like iron, quartz and clay, the dust can also affect air quality, worsening symptoms for people with allergies or respiratory issues.
When will the Saharan Dust arrive in Alabama?
While the peak usually happens from late June to mid-August, the WTVY First Alert Weather Team in Dothan is already tracking this year’s dust as it moves across the Caribbean. Forecasters expect the plume to reach the Gulf Coast by the weekend.
On the bright side, the dust can help stabilize the atmosphere, limiting the development of showers and thunderstorms. That means Alabama could be in for beautiful, sunny summer days ahead.
What is the Sahara Desert?
The Sahara Desert stretches across North America, covering an area roughly the size of the U.S. Spanning more than 3.5 million square miles, it’s the world’s largest hot desert, with temperatures reaching up to 136 degrees.
Despite the heat, the Sahara is home to a surprising mix of life, from people and wildlife to scattered oases, mountains and plateaus.
The dry, windy conditions of the Sahara help lift millions of tons of dust into the atmosphere each year. Some of that dust eventually reaches the southern U.S. and turns skies hazy from the Texas to the Florida Panhandle.
Jennifer Lindahl is a Breaking and Trending Reporter for the Deep South Connect Team for Gannett/USA Today. Connect with her on X @jenn_lindahl and email at jlindahl@gannett.com.
Alabama
Alabama basketball 2025-26 season preview, predictions: Collins Onyejiaka
A late addition to the Alabama Crimson Tide’s 2025-26 roster, could talented freshman Collins Onyejiaka make an impact at some point this season?
Onyejiaka joined the Crimson Tide during the summer months from the high school ranks, reclassifying following a junior season at the prep level in which he certainly impressed.
As a result, Onyejiaka now enters his freshman season of college basketball with the Crimson Tide, but his exact role entering the year one could argue is a bit unknown on a deep Alabama men’s basketball team.
Here is everything you need to know about Alabama newcomer Collins Onyejiaka entering the 2025-26 season.
Collins Onyejiaka player information
- Position: Center
- Jersey Number: No. 34
- Height: 6’11
- Weight: 265
- Class: Freshman
- Hometown: Abuja, Nigeria
- High School: The Newman School
Collins Onyejiaka career stats
This will be the first season of college basketball for Onyejiaka. Onyejiaka has yet to compile any collegiate stats.
Collins Onyejiaka 2024-25 stats
Onyejiaka spent the 2024-25 season as a high school junior at The Newman School in Massachusetts. During the 2024-25 season, Onyejiaka averaged 9.5 points, 7.9 rebounds, and 2.7 blocks per game across 39 games played.
Collins Onyejiaka recruiting ranking
According to the 247Sports Composite rankings, Onyejiaka was considered as the No. 100 overall prospect in the 2025 recruiting class, as well as the No. 14 center nationally. Rated as a four-star recruit, Onyejiaka also ranked as the No. 2 player in the state of Massachusetts out of The Newman School, and committed to Alabama in June 2025.
Collins Onyejiaka 2025-26 season outlook
A new face to the Alabama program, it is likely an unknown as to how much action the freshman could see in 2025-26.
As to why, not only is Onyejiaka an incoming freshman this season, but the talented center also reclassified during the offseason, meaning that he is younger than other freshmen across the country. Onyejiaka also likely sits behind some experienced options on the depth chart at the center position entering this season, meaning that a starting role is potentially not in the works in 2025-26.
Overall, expect Onyejiaka to see some action though, and to potentially emerge into a larger role in which he is one of Alabama’s top interior defensive presences.
Collins Onyejiaka 2025-25 season prediction
- 2025-26 Prediction: 2.1 PPG, 2.2 RPG, 0.1 APG, 0.3 SPG, 1.1 BPG, 55 FG%, 70 FT%
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Alabama
Alabama at South Carolina injury updates: Wednesday availability report revealed
Alabama and South Carolina are set to meet on Saturday in a game between programs moving in vastly different directions. Still, if there’s going to be a turnaround story for the Gamecocks, the injury report will loom large.
South Carolina has lost two straight and four of its last five, with the lone win in that span coming against Kentucky. Alabama, meanwhile, has won six straight after dropping its season opener, including four straight over ranked opponents.
So what will the injury situation look like? Well, the initial availability report released by the SEC on Wednesday night helps clue us in. Let’s take a look.
Alabama Crimson Tide
South Carolina Gamecocks
Perhaps the biggest name to watch for Alabama recently was running back Jam Miller, who suffered a concussion prior to last week’s Tennessee game. After going through protocol, he was cleared just in time for the game and managed to log 12 carries, albeit for just 15 yards and one score.
With him healthy, the attention shifts elsewhere. The Tide had five players who were ruled out for the Tennessee game: linebacker Qua Russaw, linebacker Jah-Marien Latham, linebacker Cayden Jones, receiver Derek Meadows and defensive lineman Jeremiah Beaman.
Those players have been out for varying lengths of time. Meadows, for instance, suffered a concussion against Missouri two weeks ago.
On the other side, South Carolina has been without a handful of players, while several others have been listed as game-time decisions or available in recent weeks.
The players that were out for last weekend’s contest against Oklahoma were receiver Brian Rowe, offensive lineman Nolan Hay, offensive lineman Cason Henry and defensive lineman Davonte Miles. It’ll be interesting to see if any can return against Alabama.
South Carolina and Alabama are set to meet at 3:30 p.m. ET on Saturday. The game will be broadcast on ABC.
Alabama
Alabama board seeks to ban books that ‘positively’ depict trans themes from library youth sections
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — An Alabama board is seeking to prohibit public libraries from placing books that “positively” depict transgender themes and topics in teen and children’s sections.
The Alabama Public Library Service Board of Directors is considering a proposed rule change that expands the existing requirement for youth sections to be free of “material deemed inappropriate for children.” The new proposal said that includes any material that “positively depicts transgender procedures, gender ideology, or the concept of more than two biological genders.”
The Alabama proposal is the latest salvo in the national fight over library content. The state board on Tuesday held a lengthy and sometimes heated and emotional public hearing ahead of next month’s expected vote.
Opponents called the proposal blatantly discriminatory and an attempt to impose one viewpoint on all Alabamians at the expense of trans youth and their families.
“These changes do not protect children — they police ideas,” said Matthew Layne, a past president of the Alabama Library Association.
Supporters of the proposal said parents who want their children to read the books can get them in other places.
“Removing trans books is not book-banning,” Julia Cleland, a member of the group Eagle Forum, told the board. Cleland said she would prefer the books be removed entirely from public libraries, not just youth sections.
John Wahl, the chairman of the library board, said he expects the board to approve the rule change, or an amended version of it, when they meet next month. He said libraries could stock the materials in adult sections where parents could access them for their children.
“We want parents to be confident that the children’s sections of Alabama libraries are age appropriate, that their children are not going to stumble against sexually explicit content,” Wahl said. Wahl is also chair of the Alabama Republican Party.
Some speakers said public libraries must serve all types of families, including those with trans children and adults.
Alyx Kim-Yohn, a librarian in north Alabama, told the board that as a queer teenager, they were isolated and bullied to the point of writing a suicide note.
“What saved me was reading literature that had people like me in it. What saved me was finding other queer folks who had the opportunity to grow up and be queer adults, which not all of us get,” Kim-Yohn said.
Other speakers said they didn’t want their child or grandchild to see books suggesting that gender can be changed.
The three-hour meeting ended with pointed disagreements over the motivation for the proposal.
“It’s politically motivated. It is taking away control from local libraries who are appointed by local governing bodies,” board member Ronald A. Snider said. Snider accused Wahl of using his position as Republican Party chairman to drum up support of the proposal.
Wahl said the proposal was in response to concerns and that his goal was “to put parents in charge.”
If the Alabama change is adopted, a local library could lose state funding if the board decides it is not compliant. The Alabama library board this spring voted to withhold state funding from the Fairhope Public Library because of some of the books available in the teen section of the library.
The Alabama proposal comes amid a wave of legislation and regulations in Republican-controlled states targeting libraries.
Kasey Meehan, the director of the Freedom to Read program at PEN America, said this is not the first time they’ve seen a state government “attempt to remove youth access to books with LGBTQ+ themes.” She noted an Idaho law that restricted access to books with content considered “harmful to minors.”
“Policies that target LGBTQ themes in libraries are not only discriminatory but a disaster for libraries and readers,” Meehan said. “These policies feed on ignorance and fear-mongering against queer and trans people, and diminish the ability of libraries to effectively serve all within their communities.”
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