Alabama
Will Alabama's three-point shooting be too much for Duke?
NEWARK — While every team begins the college basketball season wanting to win a national championship, there are others who go into it surrounded by expectations it will.
Duke and Alabama both had that this season. And with the teams pitted against one another in Saturday night’s East Region championship game at Prudential Center, the pressure to meet the expectation has reached a height neither has experienced yet.
“It’s the hardest game to win because you’re balancing two things,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said of playing in the Elite Eight. “One, each team has great momentum going into this game . . . each team has won three games in a row. And then, obviously, you’re an inch away from the promised land, going to a Final Four. With that at stake, it brings out really high-level basketball, desperation and the competitive level, [because] you’re that close.”
Each program’s expectations come from different places.
Duke is steeped in a championship tradition with 17 Final Four appearances and five national titles. Scheyer lived it as part of the 2010 championship team.
But in three seasons since taking over for Hall of Fame coach Mike Krzyzewski, the deepest he’s guided a team is to last season’s Elite Eight.
“It’s heartbreaking when you lose and it’s the best feeling when you win — that’s what you work for,” Scheyer said. “That’s why you recruit. That’s why you build a team. All the time, energy and all that goes into those moments.”
And he’s built quite a team with three freshmen expected to be among the first 10 picks in the 2025 NBA Draft, including star Cooper Flagg, the consensus No. 1 selection.
Alabama’s expectations are mostly rooted in the climb it’s made in six seasons under coach Nate Oats, including reaching the Final Four last season only to fall in the semifinals to eventual champion Connecticut.
“I don’t think we’d want it any other way: If you’re at a program with no expectations and you’ve been there six years, it means you haven’t been doing your job,” Oats said. “Whatever you call it, pressure [or] whatever you want, the expectation is you win. That’s what we expect around here now.”
Many in the Blue Devils’ rotation — freshmen Flagg, Kon Knueppel and Khaman Maluach — weren’t on the team last season. They may feel the pressure spun off that disappointment. But they also have a different one.
The trio has been part of a team that’s rolled to a 35-3 record and is heralded for how well they work together. This is their one and only chance at a national championship, an opportunity the group doesn’t take for granted.
“Every game could be our last, so I think it’s . . . cherishing these moments together, knowing that every game could be our last one together,” Flagg said. “So [we’re] just playing for each other and having that connectivity. It’s kind of what’s got us to these moments all year long.”
“That comes [to] our mind, too, knowing that this could be the last game so that we attack it harder now,” Maluach said. “Go in with the mentality to win and be prepared.”
Each team has more than one thing it will need to combat. Top of mind for Duke is Alabama’s three-point shooting. The Crimson Tide (28-8) went 25-for-51 on three-point in dispatching BYU on Thursday night. And while Duke is ranked fourth in defensive efficiency and holds opponents to 30% shooting from beyond the arc, there is far more to ’Bama than just outside shooting.
“I’ll say this: If you want to take the three away from us, you can take the three away from us,” Oats said. “I’m going to say it’s harder to hold Cooper under his averages because there’s a way to take the three away from us. . . . [but] if you want to completely run us off the line, we’ll try to go score 70 or 75 points in the paint.
The Crimson Tide will want to stifle Flagg’s scoring and playmaking, but they know that Duke has plenty more weaponry with a roster of players who will go on to the NBA (five are regulars on mock draft boards).
“You’re not going to hold him down to 10 points — that’s just not happening,” Oats said of Flagg. “What you can’t have is him scoring 25 and getting eight, nine, 10 assists and [drawing] all these fouls. You’re going to have to decide what you want to do and [with] some of their guys, you’d better not help very far off because they can really shoot it.”
Alabama
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Alabama
Right Solution, Wrong Method For Alabama Baseball This Season: Just a Minute
Welcome to BamaCentral’s “Just a Minute,” a video series featuring Alabama Crimson Tide on SI’s beat writers. Multiple times per week, the writers will group up or film solo to provide their take on a topic concerning the Crimson Tide or the landscape of college sports.
Watch the above video as BamaCentral baseball beat reporter Theodore Fernandez reflects on the first two months of Alabama baseball’s season and explains why the team has left much to be desired despite success on the field.
At face value, this has been a successful campaign for Alabama baseball. Entering the final four weeks of the regular season, a Crimson Tide team that was projected to finish No. 13 in the SEC is 9-9 in conference play, and just one game out of fourth place. The first sweep of Auburn in more than a decade, the Frisco Classic title, and a road series win over Oklahoma are big-time results that speak to the potential Alabama clearly possesses.
But it continues to appear increasingly likely that this team may not realize that potential.
There are issues up and down the roster. The bulk of the attention has been on Justin Lebron’s struggles. His career-high in errors and underwhelming offensive numbers have led to his draft stock beginning to fall, and it led to him even being experimentally moved out of the two-hole for a game against Arkansas.
Players like Luke Vaughn and Jason Torres have struggled, and there is still a significant amount of regular roster experimentation occurring on a week-to-week basis. Will Plattner, Justin Osterhouse, Chase Kroberger, Andrew Purdy and Peyton Steele are all among the players who have started games over the past two weekends and still appear to have undefined roles.
The biggest question remains the bullpen, as it is nearly impossible to predict what it will provide on any given day. There was a two-weekend stretch where it gave up just five earned runs over 22.1 combined innings against Auburn and Oklahoma, willing Alabama to wins in games where the bats did not show up. Then there have been the lows: implosions against Arkansas and Texas that cast serious doubt on the unit’s ability to show up in big moments.
In all of those areas where the team has struggled, there is hope of a turnaround. There are the bullpen’s aforementioned elite stretches. There are the web-gem plays in short by Lebron, that will leave him with one of the most impressive defensive highlight reels of any player in the nation. There’s Torres responding to a 1-for-12 weekend against the Razorbacks with a two-hit game where he drove in one of Alabama’s two runs to avoid a sweep against Texas last Sunday.
In a sport defined by randomness, where the thinnest of margins can mean the difference between going home in a regional or making a run to Omaha, we simply have no way of knowing where Alabama will land.
Would we really expect it any other way?
That’s baseball.
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Alabama
Alabama juvenile is charged with murder of missing 10-year-old girl found dead at a home
A “joyful” 10-year-old Alabama girl was found dead soon after being reported missing — with another juvenile charged with her murder.
Katheryn Bigbee, 10, was reported missing just before 11 p.m. Friday, when police were called to an undisclosed address in Calhoun County, AL.com reported.
“Officers responded immediately to the residence,” Piedmont Police Chief Nathan Johnson said in a statement. “They tragically discovered a deceased juvenile inside the home.”
It remains unclear where the house was, or whether it was the young girl’s family home — but another juvenile was soon taken into custody and hit with murder charges.
Their identity and connection to Bigbee have not been disclosed due to their age.
Bigbee’s cause of death also remains unclear, with police saying the investigation was still ongoing.
“Our family has been torn to pieces, and we have lost the most amazing, sweetest little girl,” relative Blake Trammel wrote on Facebook.
“She was a light in any room she walked into. I cannot express the pain, guilt, and emptiness that has come from all of this. We don’t have answers, only more questions,” he added.
The girl’s school also recalled her as a beloved member of its community.
“Our entire Piedmont Elementary School family is grieving as we remember a sweet little girl who brought smiles, kindness, and a bright light to our halls each day,” the school said in a statement.
“Katheryn had a joyful, spunky personality that made her truly special,” the school said. “She was an enthusiastic reader and will be remembered for the happiness she shared so freely.”
“She will always be a part of our school family, and her memory will live on in the hearts of her classmates, teachers, and all who knew and loved her.”
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