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What do Kalen DeBoer, Alabama football look for in recruits? Insider peek at evaluation process

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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.

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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.”

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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.

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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.” 

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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.

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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.”

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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.

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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. 

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“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.

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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.

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 “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. 

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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. 

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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.

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“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.” 

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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. 



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Scarbinsky: To even the score, Alabama has to believe it’s a better team than Oklahoma

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Scarbinsky: To even the score, Alabama has to believe it’s a better team than Oklahoma


This is an opinion column.

Alabama has been here before.

Not this Alabama quarterback or this Alabama coach or this Alabama team, but that script “A” brand. Those crimson helmets. That championship DNA.

Questioned. Doubted. Defeated in the regular season in its own sandbox by a team it would be forced to meet again in the postseason in that team’s back yard.

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Except the players and coaches who made up the 2011 Alabama football team didn’t question or doubt themselves after the Game of the Century went the wrong way. They didn’t feel defeated by LSU 9, Alabama 6 in Bryant-Denny Stadium.

When the polls and computers combined to put them in the BCS Championship Game in New Orleans, they didn’t look at it as if they were forced to play LSU again even though pundits were already talking about those Tigers as one of the greatest teams in college football history.

Just the opposite. Alabama felt fortunate. Confident. Almost arrogant. AJ McCarron, Trent Richardson and the rest learned something about themselves and their opponent on Nov. 5, 2011. The scoreboard said Alabama was the loser in that No. 1 vs. No. 2 showdown. Their hearts and minds told them they were the better team.

Given a second chance, they proved it. They shut down LSU, shut up the critics and locked down another national championship. Alabama 21, LSU 0 told the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. The better team lived in Tuscaloosa.

That team believed it but needed a second chance to validate it. This team should feel the same way when it gets on the plane to kick off the 2025 College Football Playoff on Friday night.

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Round 2 of Alabama vs. Oklahoma is not the second coming of the Jan. 9, 2012 Game of the Century Part Deaux, but it is a reasonable facsimile. When their heads hit the pillow on the night of Nov. 15, after Oklahoma 23, Alabama 21, Kalen DeBoer and company had every reason to believe the scoreboard showed some facts without telling the truth.

Alabama ran 24 more plays and gained 194 more yards that day. Alabama possessed the ball 8 minutes and 56 seconds longer. Each team faced 13 third downs. Alabama converted five of them, two more than Oklahoma. Alabama committed three fewer penalties.

There was a serious disconnect between the box score and the final score until you looked at the turnovers. Alabama committed three of them, Oklahoma not one. The Sooners turned those turnovers into 17 points. Ballgame.

It’s one thing to feel like you gave your best effort but lost to a better team. It’s far more maddening to know in your gut that you were your own worst enemy.

Ty Simpson was better than John Mateer that day except for the killer interception that turned a promising drive into an 87-yard pick-six. Alabama’s underappreciated defense was better than Oklahoma’s celebrated unit except for the sudden change after Ryan Williams fumbled a punt and OU scored a touchdown two plays later.

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The field tilted decisively toward the Sooners only on special teams, but it was more than enough to give them the signature victory they lacked.

To supplement the punt coverage punchout, the nation’s best kicker, OU’s Tate Sandell, went 3 for 3 on field goals, including a 52-yard laser. Alabama’s Conor Talty had his only attempt partially blocked but it might not have mattered, and rather than writing his name in crimson flame, he torched his rep by berating his snapper in plain sight.

One play made here or there or a single mistake erased, and Alabama wins the game. Will the Crimson Tide make the same mistakes twice? They didn’t in January of 2012, the last time an Alabama team got a do-over after a defeat against the same opponent in the same season.

Don’t misunderstand. This 2025 Alabama team is not that 2011 team, but there is one striking similarity. This team is better than it showed on that unseasonably warm Tuscaloosa afternoon in mid-November. This team, pound for pound and player for player, is better than Oklahoma.

All this team has to do now is prove it, in the box score and on the scoreboard. Kadyn Proctor, Bray Hubbard and the rest have to get in OU’s face in OU’s house, make their mark and leave no doubt.

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No one has to believe it but them.



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How to Watch Alabama Basketball vs USF, Preview and Open Thread

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How to Watch Alabama Basketball vs USF, Preview and Open Thread


Nate Oats’ squad will try to rebound from a disastrous second half in the last outing against top-ranked Arizona. It was the first time this season that the Tide looked truly overmatched in a game and should be instructive in terms of which areas need addressed.

The problem is that the biggest issue, rebounding the ball and keeping opponents off the offensive glass in particular, may not be something that they can solve for with the current roster, against better teams anyway.

Tonight the Tide will host a South Florida squad that shouldn’t be much trouble if Alabama plays to its potential. The Bulls have rebounded the ball reasonably well, albeit against a relatively weak schedule, averaging 15.5 offensive boards per game. Guard Joseph Pinion is a name to watch. He leads the Bulls in scoring and shoots 38% from three, and also averages better than two steals per contest.

The Bulls generally run a four guard look with Izayiah Nelson and Daimion Collins rotating down low. Nelson has been particularly effective on the glass, averaging more than nine boards a game in only 24 minutes.

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The Bulls are coached by longtime Oats assistant Bryan Hodgson, in his first season at South Florida after two at Arkansas State. Stylistically, expect something of a mirror image in this one.

What: South Florida at Alabama

How to Watch: ESPN+ or ESPN app

Use this as your open thread.



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The Alabama Position Group Kalen DeBoer Has Sat in ‘Every Meeting’ With This Week

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The Alabama Position Group Kalen DeBoer Has Sat in ‘Every Meeting’ With This Week


The first sentence that Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer said during Monday’s press conference: “Just got off the practice field. Having coached those receivers a little bit more and help out, I’m a little more winded than normal.”

Former Alabama head coach Nick Saban often worked closely with the defensive backs, as he was one at Kent State in the early 1970s. Meanwhile, DeBoer was a wide receiver at Sioux Falls from 1993-1996, as he set school records for receptions (234), receiving yards (3,400) and touchdowns (33), while earning All-American honors.

As Alabama enters the postseason with a trip to Norman on Friday to face Oklahoma in the first round of the College Football Playoff, DeBoer said on Wednesday that he’s recently worked very closely with the Crimson Tide wide receivers.

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“I like the attention to detail these guys [have] and the questions they’re asking,” DeBoer said. “I get in that room every once in a while but I’ve been in it more, pretty much every meeting here the last week. Just really like the way they’re trying to be dialed in. I just think they’re really working together well to add to what we’ve done before.

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Alabama’s wide receivers room underwent a massive change a few weeks ago, as JaMarcus Shephard took the open head coaching job at Oregon State. DeBoer previously said that the coaching staff had a “celebration” for Shephard and that they’re “really excited for him.”

After taking the Oregon State position, Shephard remained at Alabama to coach the Iron Bowl and SEC Championship. The Crimson Tide reportedly hired Derrick Nix on Tuesday to fill Shephard’s role, but DeBoer was “not ready to talk about that” on Wednesday.

Alabama hired former New England Patriots wide receivers coach Tyler Hughes to its coaching staff as an analyst in February, and DeBoer’s been impressed with his efforts lately.

“Tyler Hughes is a guy that’s been in our program, he was with us a few years ago when we were at Washington,” DeBoer said. “He’s been back and forth between the Patriots in different capacities, and last year he was the wide receivers coach there.

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“From a fundamental and teaching standpoint, he understands that position. Has done it at the highest level, and then understands our offensive system. He’s been a critical piece to our success for a couple years now.

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“He’s done a great job filling in and really working with that group each and every day, in the meetings, on the side just to get them up to speed on what the game plan is all about. We got, at this point, guys that understand what it takes. We’ve got good leadership in that group. Guys that care. Guys that can make plays. So it’s certainly a unified effort, which is great to see.”

Alabama’s offense has been a bit stagnant lately and not as explosive as it was during the first few weeks of the season. Finding ways to get these wide receivers open quicker for quarterback Ty Simpson to easily find and connect with them will be a major key to success.

Alabama’s first-round matchup against Oklahoma is set to kick off on Friday at 7 p.m. CT in Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium on ESPN and ABC.

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