Alabama
What do Kalen DeBoer, Alabama football look for in recruits? Insider peek at evaluation process
On the Wednesday before the Iron Bowl, Alabama football coach Kalen DeBoer faced one in-person question at Baumhower’s Victory Grille.
Jack, a seventh-grade athlete, stepped up to the microphone during the “Hey Coach” radio show and relayed a question seventh-graders across the country have at the front of their minds.
“I want to know some things (that) I should be focusing on right now,” he asked.
Succinctly: How can I get the attention of the Alabama staff as a recruit?
This is the path DeBoer gave Jack: Play as many sports as possible, be active, developing hand-eye coordination and movement skills. And while there is training depending on how serious the player wants to play at the next level, simply playing football in the backyard can develop skills that could help in the long run.
But Crimson Tide Sports Network host Christ Stewart quickly added another.
“And grow,” Stewart said.
“Grow,” DeBoer echoed. “Eat well.”
Easy enough, right?
Alabama produced 10 top-ranked recruiting classes in the Nick Saban era, per 247Sports’ composite rankings. DeBoer is expected to maintain that standard this week with the arrival of the early signing period. The Crimson Tide has the second-ranked class in the country in DeBoer’s first year in Tuscaloosa.
What do DeBoer and his staff look for in evaluating recruits? Prospects have parameters to meet if they want to fit the Alabama puzzle, ones that separate athletes before the relationships even begin.
And it’s not simply those that play football in the backyard.
“We’re trying to find the best people and the best players in the United States of America,” Alabama co-defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach Maurice Linguist said.
Here’s a look at what Alabama coaches seek at each position grouping in assembling a signing class.
What Kalen DeBoer wants in Alabama football QB recruits
The job sounds simple.
In a quarterback, DeBoer wants an athlete who is going to “deliver the ball,” one who gets the ball to the players around him efficiently.
“We’re recruiting a lot of skill around him,” DeBoer said. “That skill’s got to be used.”
But that is just a starting point.
DeBoer wants poise. He want someone to lead both vocally and by example, who knows what playing football at a high level is like. He wants a well-rounded athlete who can carry the load of headlining the future of the Crimson Tide offense.
On paper, it’s what Alabama has in Texas five-star Keelon Russell, who is the Crimson Tide’s highest-ranked quarterback commit since Bryce Young in 2020. DeBoer’s staff flipped the SMU commit this past summer.
Russell looks the part, standing at 6-foot-3, 175 pounds. He’s accurate, completing more than 70% of his passes in each of his two seasons as a starting quarterback at Duncanville High School, where he’s thrown for 81 touchdowns in 26 games compared to five interceptions per MaxPreps. And he’s won, leading Duncanville to a 6A Texas state championship in 2023 and on a path for another in 2024.
In what will be a defining signee in the DeBoer era, Russell seems to fit the mold.
What Robert Gillespie wants in Alabama RB recruits
When asked what he wants out of an all-around running back in the Alabama offense, Robert Gillespie turned the question around.
“Explain it to me,” the Alabama running backs coach said. “You tell me what it is.”
It’s a running back who can block, one who can catch passes out of the backfield, one who can run between the tackles and over the tackles. Gillespie nodded.
“You hit those things on the head,” Gillespie said. “I think you answered your own question.”
It’s what Alabama feels it has in Akylin Dear, a 6-1, 200-pound back out of Quitman, Mississippi, who the Crimson Tide flipped from Ole MIss, a prospect who is the second-ranked running back in the 2025 class. He averaged more than seven yards per carry, broke 4.6 seconds in the 40-yard dash and 4.4 seconds in the short shuttle, per 247Sports.
It’s what Alabama feels it has in Jace Clarizio, a 6-foot, 190-pound back out of East Lansing, Michigan, who averaged 8.4 yards per carry with scored 18 touchdowns as a junior at East Lansing High School, per MaxPreps.
It’s what Gillespie expects of current running backs Justice Haynes and Jam Miller. It’s what will be expected from Dear and Clarizio when they arrive.
What JaMarcus Shephard wants in Alabama WR recruits
To fit DeBoer’s offensive system, Alabama doesn’t need a cookie-cutter wide receiver.
JaMarcus Shephard has developed all shapes and sizes from the extremes of Rondale Moore at Purdue and Rome Odunze at Washington to current UA freshman Ryan Williams.
But there is one thing that separates Alabama wide receiver prospects from the rest. It’s something Shephard says is incredibly hard to teach.
“To me, it’s about can you learn? How well do you learn? Can you make people miss?” Shephard said. “And those guys did that at a high level.”
While Alabama could add another to its wide receiver room, the Crimson Tide has onecommitment who fits that bill: Lotzeir Brooks, a 5-9, 170-pound New Jersey four-star Alabama sees as its “Deebo Samuel,” one who is a play-making and dynamic tool who has set high school records with 4,543 career receiving yards and 66 receiving touchdowns.
Shephard saw it with Moore, Odunze and Williams. Brooks is next in line.
What Bryan Ellis wants in Alabama TE recruit
Bryan Ellis did not sugar-coat things.
“To me, there’s five or six guys a year in the entire country that can play tight end at Alabama,” the Alabama tight ends coach said.
Ellis seeks players with the size and strength to match up and block future first-round draft picks at defensive end each snap in the SEC, who can seamlessly transition between run-blocking and pass protection while showcasing enough athleticism to run routes and catch the football.
Marshall Pritchett and Kaleb Edwards fit the billing.
Both stand at 6-6. Pritchett, who flipped from North Carolina, is viewed more as a receiving-first threat at 225 pounds, serving as a red-zone target at Rabun Gap High School in Georgia. Edwards, at 240 pounds, is already built more as a blocker, but was a target in the passing game at Oak Ridge High School in El Dorado Hills, California, with more than 2,000 receiving yards and 23 touchdowns since 2022.
With Pritchett and Edwards, Ellis believes Alabama has two of the five or six 2025 tight ends who meet his expectations.
What Chris Kapilovic wants in Alabama OL recruit
To Chris Kapilovic, it really doesn’t matter what Alabama’s offensive line class looks like.
The Alabama offensive line coach has two incoming five stars in guard Michael Carroll and tackle Ty Haywood along with a 6-7, 290-pound, athletic tackle in Jackson Lloyd and players like tackles Micah DeBose or Mal Waldrep who fit the mold of a Crimson Tide offensive line prospect.
The jump to Alabama is never easy. There’s nothing that can be done at the high school level to simulate what is expected when they play in the SEC.
What is Kapilovic looking for? An athletic lineman who can mentally handle challenges.
“You want them to be super confident when they come in here, and they can do it,” Kapilovic said. “That’s OK. But, again, it’s like anything else in life that you do: People can tell you and prepare you for it. But until you actually do it, it’s not real. And it’s just part of the deal.”
What Freddie Roach wants in Alabama DL recruit
There is one test a defensive line recruit must pass to get Freddie Roach’s attention.
“I always say, if they’re not bigger than me,” Roach said, “I don’t want them.”
For Roach, who played linebacker for the Crimson Tide from 2002-05, it’s not solely about a player’s current size or length, but “growth potential,” the weight the player can put on once he gets to Tuscaloosa.
Athleticism is also key for Roach, who seeks prospects who can easily change direction even with the requisite size and length.
In 2025, Roach is also getting experience in two prospects. Interior lineman Steve Mboumoua,a 6-4, 290-pounder who played high school football in Quebec and originally was a member of the Crimson Tide’s 2024 class. He spent his freshman season playing at Southwest Mississippi Community College. Kevonte Henry, a 6-4, 220-pound defensive end, is a former Oklahoma signee who played his 2024 season for Cerritos College in California.
London Simmons, a 6-3, 295-pound interior lineman out of Flowood, Mississippi, finished his high school career with 67 tackles for loss and 34 sacks.
What Christian Robinson wants in Alabama LB recruit
In terms of responsibilities for an Alabama linebacker, Christian Robinson has a long list.
It starts with size when facing current UA offensive linemen like Kadyn Proctor and Tyler Booker on a daily basis, and bringing a violence and tenacity to match up. It’s an athleticism to play off the ball, to guard tight ends and running backs in man and zone coverage.
It’s what Robinson tells players currently in his room: They have to be some of the most versatile players on the field. And that’s what will get a linebacker to the NFL.
“We’re trying to find guys that love the math and the scheme of football and don’t just want to be, ‘I just want to set edges,’” Robinson said. “That’s great. But then they are going to pay you to run the field when you’re playing at the next level. The guys that have historically done that here have been able to do that.”
Robinson and defensive coordinator Kane Wommack have players for each spot in 2025, with four-stars Justin Hill and Abduall Sanders Jr. as the primary rushing linebackers at Wolf, four-star Luke Metz as a prototypical Will linebacker and Darrell “Duke” Johnson as the Mike linebacker with a chance to be a versatile weapon at multiple linebacker spots and even the nickel in pass coverage.
What Marurice Linguist wants in Alabama DB recruit
Linguist knows defensive backs come in all shapes and sizes. And there are numbers he could throw out, criteria he could say each recruit should meet.
But the thing that separates defensive backs whom Alabama covets from others is their competitive resolve, recruits who shine when things get difficult, who can match the production of past heralded DB rooms.
“We want to find capable guys that we feel can turn into high-level SEC players, draft pick-type players for us that we can continue the tradition of putting guys in the NFL and continue to hold trophies over our head,” Linguist said.
Alabama’s 2025 defensive back class is not one that is standard, highlighted by 6-4, 190-pound five-star athlete Dijon Lee, whom the Crimson Tide staff sees as its future boundary cornerback. Chuck McDonald, standing at nearly 6-1 and 190 pounds, is more of a prototypically-built corner who is the No. 64 player in the national rankings, while Ivan Taylor is the only committed safety at 6-foot, 174 pounds, built similarly to current strong safety Malachi Moore.
What Jay Nunez wants in Alabama special teams recruit
For Alabama kickers and punters, Alabama special teams senior analyst Jay Nunez is looking for attributes not everyone possesses.
For punters, it’s all about hang time, expecting them to hit 4.5-to-4.6 seconds on each kick to “give you a chance” on punt coverage.
“This league is unforgiving,” Nunez said. “You hit the wrong ball, you got someone who’s going to make you look stupid really fast down there.”
Alex Asparuhov, the Crimson Tide’s three-star punter commit, landed 14 of 32 punts inside the opponent’s 20-yard line, per 247Sports, and averaged 43.5 yard per punt.
When scouting kickers, like Alabama commit Peter Notaro, Nunez said he looks at how fast the ball moves after a kick and its speed and height off the foot after four or five yards.
Colin Gay covers Alabama football for The Tuscaloosa News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at cgay@gannett.com or follow him @_ColinGay on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Alabama
Alabama mom sentenced to life for hiring hitman to kill her child’s father over custody dispute
An Alabama woman was sentenced to life in prison Friday after authorities said she hired a hitman to kill her child’s father in a custody dispute.
Jaclyn Skuce, 43, of Madison, was convicted of capital murder after hiring a man to kill the child’s father in order to prevent him from gaining custody or further visitation, the Morgan County District Attorney’s Office said.
The Hartselle Police Department was dispatched on July 24, 2020, to a residence for a welfare check after Anthony Larry Sheppard failed to appear in court for a scheduled custody hearing.
His attorney had asked officers to check on him, investigators said.
Upon arrival, police discovered Sheppard’s storm door shattered and the main door ajar.
Officers later found Sheppard dead with multiple gunshot wounds.
Investigators determined that Skuce hired Logan Delp to kill Sheppard in order to prevent him from gaining custody or further visitation with his child.
Prosecutors said Skuce used social media to hire the hitman, who lived in Hartselle, according to the Hartselle Enquirer. She allegedly offered to pay $30,000.
“There are never any winners in a case like this,” Chief Assistant District Attorney Garrick Vickery said following the verdict.
“This jury was incredibly thorough and took their time to make sure they made the right decision, both for Mr. Sheppard and for the defendant.”
Vickery added, “We are glad that they convicted her for the choice she made to take Mr. Sheppard away from his family.”
Skuce was found guilty of three counts of capital murder: murder for hire, murder of a witness, and murder committed by shooting into an occupied dwelling.
Four other defendants have been charged with capital murder in connection with Sheppard’s death.
Delp was convicted of capital murder in October 2025, the DA’s office said. Another defendant has pleaded guilty, and two others are awaiting trial.
Skuce will be imprisoned without the possibility of parole in the Alabama Department of Corrections.
Alabama
Alabama softball vs Texas today: recap, score and highlights
The SEC Tournament championship trophy is headed to Austin.
The Texas Longhorns erased an early 1-0 deficit and never looked back in a 7-1 victory over the Alabama Crimson Tide in the SEC’s title game Saturday at John Cropp Stadium in Lexington, Kentucky.
Alabama, ranked third in D1Softball’s top 25 rankings, fell to 49-7. Texas, ranked No. 6, improved to 42-10. The Crimson Tide will learn their NCAA tournament seeding and four-team regional draw in Sunday’s selection show, which begins at 6 p.m. CT on ESPN.
Texas starter Teagan Kavan (22-4) was dominant in a complete-game masterpiece against the Tide, holding Alabama to one run on three hits. Her only blemish was a towering home run by Alexis Pupillo with two out in the first inning.
Texas scored three runs in the fourth inning to open up a 5-1 lead. Katie Stewart lined an RBI single in the fourth and would launch her 25th homer of the season two innings later in the sixth to cap the scoring. Stewart was 3-for-5 at the plate as Texas outhit Alabama, 13-3.
Jocelyn Briski (21-3) suffered just her third loss of the season and was tagged for two runs on six hits in three innings. Vic Moten surrendered five runs (three earned) on five hits in 2 1/3 innings. Kaitlyn Pallozzi recorded the final five outs for Alabama.
Texas, the defending national champion, won its first conference tournament trophy since 2005. Alabama was seeking its seventh SEC Tournament title in program history, and its first since 2021.
The Crimson Tide will have to settle for a top-eight national seed in the NCAA Tournament and hopefully a run to the Women’s College World Series in Oklahoma City.
Following are live updates from Alabama-Texas in the 2026 SEC Tournament championship game on Saturday from Lexington.
Kavan finished off a complete-game masterpiece with 108 pitches. She allowed just three hits against an Alabama lineup that had totaled 21 hits in its first two games at the SEC Tournament.
Kavan finished with 12 strikeouts in seven innings. Texas wins it, 7-1, and is your 2026 SEC Tournament champion.
Pallozzi yielded back-to-back singles with two out but escaped without giving up any damage. All the same, Alabama is down to its last three outs against Texas.
Audrey Vandagriff, Ambrey Taylor and Salen Hawkins are due up for the Tide as Kavan looks to finish off a complete game victory.
Kavan picked up her 10th strikeout when she retired Alexis Pupillo to open the bottom of the sixth. Ana Roman flied to left, and Alisa Sneed made a running catch in left on a hard-hit fly ball from Marlie Giles for a 1-2-3 inning.
Texas leads, 7-1, and is three outs away from an SEC Tournament championship.
Reese Atwood drove in the Longhorns’ seventh run of the afternoon with an RBI sac fly to deep left. Hannah Wells flied out to center for the third out.
Texas now leads it, 7-1. Alabama wil look to get something going off Teagan Kavan in the sixth with Alexis Puplilo, Ana Roman and Marlie Giles due up for the Tide.
That home run felt inevitable. Stewart crushed her 25th homer of the season over the scoreboard in left to extend Texas’ lead to 6-1 in the sixth inning.
Texas is still threatening with runners at the corners and one after. Moten just departed after taking a hard-hit line drive to the stomach. Moten was in some obvious pain as Patrick Murphy and the trainers came out to check on her. Hopefully Moten will be OK and just got the wind knocked out of her a bit.
She leaves after 2 1/3 innings. Kaitlyn Pallozzi (8-0, 1.62 ERA) takes over in the circle for Alabama.
Nothing doing for Alabama in the fifth.
Kristen White used her speed to leg out an infield single to shortstop with one down. Teagan Kavan fell behind 3-1 on Jena Young before getting Alabama’s leadoff hitter to swing at a rise ball for the second out. Brooke Wells grounded into a force at second to end the inning.
Texas holds a 5-1 lead over Alabama after five innings. Kavan has thrown 86 pitches and surrendered three hits.
Alabama pitching gets its first 1-2-3 inning of the afternoon as Vic Moten needed 10 pitches to retire Alisa Sneed, Jaycie Nichols and Ashton Maloney in order.
Can Alabama build on some momentum from the fourth and cut into this Texas lead? Longhorns are up 5-1 heading to the bottom of the fifth. Salen Hawkins, Kristen White and Jena Young are due up for Alabama against Texas’ Teagan Kavan.
So much for cutting into the Longhorns’ lead there. After loading the bases with one out, Teagan Kavan struck out Audrey Vandagriff for a big second out. Ambrey Taylor went down swinging to leave the bases loaded.
Alabama drove Kavan’s pitch count up a bit that inning. The Texas starter is at 72 pitches after four innings, but the Horns still lead the Tide, 5-1, headed to the fifth.
Alabama is starting to make more consistent contact. The Tide caught a break when Brooke Wells reached on a fielding error at first to open the fourth inning. Alexis Pupillo then grounded back to the mound to move pinch runner Kinley Pate to second.
Another ball that took a strange bounce, this time off Jaycie Nichols at third, allowed Ana Roman to reach on a single as Pate moved to third with one down. Marlie Giles drew a walk to load the bases.
Audrey Vandagriff is up with the bases loaded and one down in the fourth against Teagan Kavan.
Walks, hit batters, wild pitches, errors, dropped third strikes. They all plagued Alabama in that fourth inning.
Ashton Maloney used a high hop at second base for a single with one out. With two down, a wild pitch from Moten allowed Maloney to reach second. That proved costly as Moten took Katie Stewart to a full count before the Texas slugger lined a single into left for a 3-1 Longhorns lead. Stewart took second on the throw in.
Martinez drew a four-pitch walk, and Moten hit Leighann Goode with a pitch to load the bases for her third free pass of the inning.
Alabama looked to be out of the inning without further damage, but Audrey Vandagriff appeared to lose a fly ball in the sun. Two runs cross the plate to make it 5-1.
Texas scores three runs on only two hits in the fourth as eight batters came to the plate. Moten threw 39 pitches in the fourth inning. She struck out Hannah Wells for the third out.
Still some chances for Alabama to get back into the game with the heart of the order due up, but with Teagan Kavan dealing, the SEC Tournament championship trophy looks headed to Austin midway through this one.
After three shaky innings from Briski in the circle, Vic Moten takes over for Alabama in the fourth. Briski allowed two runs and six hits. Moten is scheduled to face the 9-1-2 spots in the order for Texas: Jaycie Nichols (1-for-2), Ashton Maloney (0-0) and Kayden Henry (0-2).
Kavan is dealing. She froze Salen Hawkins for a strikeout to open the bottom of the third before doing the same to Kristen White on a drop ball at the knees. Jena Young flied out to center for the third out.
Kavan, the Most Outstanding Player in last year’s Women’s College World Series, has struck out six of the first 10 batters she’s faced and has thrown back-to-back 1-2-3 innings. She’s given up one hit, the home run to Alexis Pupillo.
Texas leads Alabama, 2-1, headed to the fourth inning.
Texas strands two in the third after picking up two more hits.
Leighann Goode singled to right with one down, and Reese Atwood fought back from a 1-2 pitch for a single up the middle. After a lengthy at bat, Hannah Wells popped up in foul territory to Ambrey Taylor. Briski then struck out Alisa Sneed for the third out.
That was a 23-pitch inning for Briski, who doesn’t look comfortable at all in the circle today. She’s already thrown 70 pitches through three innings. Texas has had traffic on the bases in every inning. Salen Hawkins, Kristen White and Jena Young are due up for Alabama in the third.
Marlie Giles struck out swinging on four pitches to open the inning. Audrey Vandagriff, who was 4-for-7 in the tournament entering the day, just missed a double down the left field line before striking out on a rise ball up over the shoulders. Ambrey Taylor grounded to short as Teagan Kavan finished off a 1-2-3 inning.
Vivi Martinez, Leighann Goode and Reese Atwood are due up for Texas in the third. Longhorns lead Alabama, 2-1.
Texas loaded the bases after freshman Jaycie Nichols reached on an infield single to second base with one out. Longhorns coach Mike White used pinch hitter Victoria Hunter to try to capitalize. She reached on a second straight infield single to Jena Young at second as pinch runner Taylor Anderson scored the tying run.
Ambrey Taylor made a terrific stretch at third to field a force out, but Alisa Sneed scored the go-ahead run on a fielder’s choice for a 2-1 Texas lead. Katie Stewart popped up to second base for a big third out.
Texas scores two runs on three hits. That was a 32-pitch inning for Briski in the second. Marlie Giles, Audrey Vandagriff and Taylor are due up for Alabama in the second.
With two down, Alexis Pupillo got a pitch up in the zone and crushed it far out to right for a 1-0 Alabama lead. That’s Pupillo’s 17th home run of the season and her second in three days at the SEC Tournament.
Teagan Kavan threw 19 pitches in the first inning for Texas. Reese Atwood, Hannah Wells and Alisa Sneed are due up in the second inning for the Longhorns.
Take a look at Pupillo’s no-doubt blast.
Katie Stewart won the first battle between SEC Player of the Year and SEC Pitcher of the Year. Stewart hit a sharp single to right off Jocelyn Briski with one out in the first. Stewart advanced to second on a groundout by Vivi Martinez, but Leighann Goode popped up in foul territory to Salen Hawkins for the third out.
Briski retired Kayden Henry on a first-pitch pop up to open the inning, which allowed her to throw 15 pitches in the first. Jena Young, Brooke Wells and Alexis Pupillo are due up for Alabama against Texas starter Teagan Kavan.
Will the Tide keep the bats hot for the third straight day in Lexington?
Kayden Henry, Katie Stewart and Vivi Martinez are due up for Texas against Alabama ace Jocelyn Briski in the first inning. Stewart was named SEC Player of the Year on Friday, while Briski took home SEC Pitcher of the Year honors. Patrick Murphy earned SEC Coach of the Year honors.
The Crimson Tide take the field in their home white jerseys and pants with Crimson pinstripes. Texas is wearing its Burnt Orange jerseys over matching pants.
Chris Nabors is back behind the dish to call the balls and strikes today at John Cropp Stadium. Steve Gould is the third base umpire with Marty Abezetian down at second base. Cam Ellison will be making the decisions at first base.
First pitch for Alabama-Texas is less than 10 minutes away.
For Alabama:
For Texas:
In the circle for the Longhorns today is Teagan Kavan (20-4, 2.72 ERA). Last year’s WCWS Most Outstanding Player, Kavan is making her 27th start of the season, and her third against Alabama.
Kavan held the Crimson Tide to one run on five hits in the opener of the regular-season series back on April 2 in Tuscaloosa. Two days later, she suffered the loss after Alabama tagged her for seven runs on seven hits in 3 1/3 innings.
In the Longhorns’ win over Georgia on Friday, Kavan allowed four runs in 4 2/3 innings. All four Georgia runs came in the fifth inning.
Here’s the 1-9 lineup for coach Mike White’s team.
| CF | 21 Kayden Henry | L | .410 |
| 1B | 20 Katie Stewart | R | .429 |
| SS | 23 Viviana Martinez | L | .381 |
| 2B | 43 Leighann Goode | R | .375 |
| C | 14 Reese Atwood | R | .351 |
| DP | 13 Hannah Wells | R | .302 |
| LF | 9 Alisa Sneed | R | .268 |
| 3B | 24 Jaycie Nichols | R | .330 |
| RF | 7 Ashton Maloney | L | .289 |
Alabama’s ace has been nothing short of magnificent in the circle this year. Her 1.38 ERA ranks second best nationally. Briski’s only real blemish in SEC play came against Texas back on April 2 in the opener of a three-game series in Tuscaloosa. She allowed five runs on six hits in three innings, marking only her second loss of 2026.
Across all three games of the series, Briski surrendered seven runs on 14 hits over 7 2/3 innings.
Murph is going with the same lineup and batting order for the third straight day at the SEC Tournament. That’s hardly a surprise. Alabama produced a combined 16 runs on 21 hits in its two games against Arkansas and Florida.
Jocelyn Briski (21-2, 1.38) is in the circle for the Crimson Tide and is seeking her 22nd win. She went the distance in Thursday’s 8-1 victory over Arkansas, surrendering one unearned run on three hits. Briski struck out seven and walked two.
2B
4 Jena Young
L
.331
1B
15 Brooke Wells
R
.412
DP
31 Alexis Pupillo
L
.404
RF
21 Ana Roman
L
.326
C
34 Marlie Giles
R
.388
LF
12 Audrey Vandagriff
L
.314
3B
36 Ambrey Taylor
R
.340
SS
47 Salen Hawkins
R
.292
CF
3 Kristen White
L
.328
Surely there won’t be any “co-champions” in the SEC Softball Tournament this year. Today’s forecast for Lexington, according to the National Weather Service in Louisville:
“Sunny, with a high near 75. West wind around 7 mph.”
It’s currently sunny and 71 degrees in Lexington with first pitch roughly 90 minutes away. No chance of rain in the forecast either Saturday afternoon or evening, per the National Weather Service.
Where to watch Alabama vs Texas softball today: TV channel, streaming for SEC Tournament championship game
- TV Channel: ESPN
- Livestream: Fubo, ESPN+
Alabama-Texas will broadcast nationally on ESPN in Week 14 of the 2026 NCAA softball season. Beth Mowins, Michele Smith and Jessica Mendoza will call the action from the broadcast booth at John Cropp Stadium. Streaming options for the game include ESPN+ and FUBO, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.
Alabama vs Texas softball start time today
- Date: Saturday, May 9
- Start time: 4 p.m. CT
Stream Alabama vs. Texas
The Alabama-Texas game starts at 4 p.m. CT Saturday from John Cropp Stadium in Lexington, Kentucky.
SEC Softball Tournament 2026: full bracket, final scores
First-round games, Tuesday, May 5
- Game 1: Auburn 6, Missouri 2
- Game 2: Mississippi State 4, Kentucky 3
- Game 3: Ole Miss 2, South Carolina 0
Second-round games, Wednesday, May 6
- Game 4: Auburn 11, Texas A&M 8
- Game 5: Arkansas 3, Mississippi State 0
- Game 6: Ole Miss 4, Tennessee 1
- Game 7: Georgia 7, LSU 3
Quarterfinals, Thursday, May 7
- Game 8: Florida 10, Auburn 9
- Game 9: Alabama 7, Arkansas 1
- Game 10: Texas 6, Ole Miss 0
- Game 11: Georgia 10, Oklahoma 5
Semifinals, Friday, May 8
- Game 12: Alabama 9, Florida 1
- Game 13: Texas 5, Georgia 4
SEC Championship Game, Saturday, May 9
- Game 14: Alabama vs. Texas, 4 p.m., ESPN
Follow us at @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook, for ongoing coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide news, notes and opinions.
Alabama
How to watch, stream Alabama softball vs Texas for SEC championship
For the first time in five years, Alabama is heading to the SEC Softball Tournament championship.
The No. 2-seeded Crimson Tide (49-6) is coming off a 9-1 run-rule win over No. 3 seed Florida (48-10) on Friday, May 8. Alabama first opened tournament play with a 7-1 win over No. 7 Arkansas (42-11) on Thursday.
The Crimson Tide will face No. 4 Texas, which is coming off a walkout 5-4 win over No. 9 Georgia.
Alabama had not reached the SEC Tournament championship game since 2021, when it won its last conference championship.
Here’s what to know about how to follow the Crimson Tide against Texas in the SEC Tournament title game.
When does Alabama softball play vs Texas in SEC Tournament?
- Location: John Cropp Stadium in Lexington, Ky.
- Game time — 4 p.m. CT Saturday, May 9
First pitch in the Alabama softball vs. Texas matchup is set for 4 p.m. CT Saturday, May 9 for the championship title.
What channel is Alabama softball vs Texas in SEC Tournament?
The 2026 SEC Softball Tournament conference championship game will air on ESPN.
How to listen to Alabama softball vs Texas in SEC Tournament
You can tune into each Alabama softball game on Catfish 100.1 FM.
2026 SEC Softball Tournament bracket
Click here to see the full 2026 SEC Softball Tournament bracket.
2026 SEC softball standings, conference records
All conference records are as of entering the SEC Softball Tournament.
- Oklahoma (20-4)
- Alabama (19-5)
- Florida (17-7)
- Texas (16-8)
- Tennessee (16-8)
- Texas A&M (16-8)
- Arkansas (15-9)
- LSU (12-11)
- Georgia (12-12)
- Mississippi State (9-15)
- Missouri (9-15)
- South Carolina (7-17)
- Ole Miss (6-18)
- Auburn (4-19)
- Kentucky (1-23)
Amelia Hurley covers high school and college sports for The Tuscaloosa News and USA TODAY Network. You can find her on X at ameliahurley_ or reach her at ahurley@usatodayco.com.
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