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Alabama football plummets in coaches poll top 25 rankings after Tennessee loss

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Alabama football plummets in coaches poll top 25 rankings after Tennessee loss


Alabama football continues its fall in the rankings.

Alabama is now ranked No. 15 in the coaches poll.

Just a few weeks ago, after the victory over Georgia, Alabama earned the No. 1 spot in the AP top 25 and the No. 2 spot in the coaches poll. The Crimson Tide (5-2, 2-2 SEC) has been falling ever since.

The loss to Vanderbilt, now ranked in the top 25, two weeks ago dropped the Crimson Tide to No. 7 in both polls. Now, a second loss in three weeks has made Alabama fall even farther.

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The Crimson Tide has not lost two games before November since 2007, which was Nick Saban’s first season. Now new coach Kalen DeBoer looks to get Alabama back on track having lost twice.

Alabama failed to play team football against Tennessee on the road. Already one of the most penalized teams in the country, the Crimson Tide was flagged 15 times in Knoxville, two short of the program record for one game (also in Knoxville in 2022). The offense couldn‘t capitalize on opportunities via takeaways from the defense, and Tennessee made adjustments in the second half to win.

Now Alabama turns its attention to Missouri, which will travel to Tuscaloosa for a game at Bryant-Denny Stadium on Saturday.

Coaches poll: Top 25 rankings

  1. Oregon
  2. Georgia
  3. Penn State
  4. Ohio State
  5. Miami
  6. Texas
  7. LSU
  8. Tennessee
  9. Clemson
  10. Iowa State
  11. Notre Dame
  12. BYU
  13. Indiana
  14. Texas A&M
  15. Alabama
  16. Kansas State
  17. Missouri
  18. Ole Miss
  19. Boise State
  20. Pitt
  21. Illinois
  22. SMU
  23. Army
  24. Navy
  25. Vanderbilt

Nick Kelly is an Alabama beat writer for AL.com and the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X and Instagram.





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Tennessee football lands 4-star Malik Howard of Oak Ridge over Alabama, LSU, others

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Tennessee football lands 4-star Malik Howard of Oak Ridge over Alabama, LSU, others


Tennessee football defended its home turf by landing Oak Ridge standout Malik Howard, one of the top tight ends in the 2027 class.

Howard announced his commitment to the Vols in an Instagram post during his recruiting visit on June 6. They beat out Alabama, LSU, Miami, Notre Dame, Oregon, Texas A&M and Vanderbilt among other programs.

Howard, a 6-foot-4, 230-pounder, is a four-star recruit. He is the No. 8 player in the state, ranked the No. 8 tight end and No. 183 prospect overall in the 2027 class, according to the 247Sports Composite.

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“Just getting to (play) in an offense that’s really grown to learn how to use the tight ends, and that is really going to be key to my development to playing in the NFL, obviously, and just being around really good people in this program,” Howard told GoVols247. “There’s not a lot of places that are as genuine and hard-working as Tennessee is.”

He received dozens of scholarship offers as a prime target for most of the SEC and other Power Four programs. But Tennessee aggressively pursued him to continue its focus on pass-catching tight ends.

In his 2025 junior season, Howard had 53 receptions for 778 yards and 11 touchdowns, almost doubling his sophomore year production. He was an All-PrepXtra second team selection and helped push Oak Ridge to a 9-2 record in the Wildcats’ first season in Class 6A football.

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Tennessee football commitments in 2027 class

The early signing period is Dec. 2-4, 2026.

Howard is the 10th commitment in Tennessee’s 2027 recruiting class.

In-state players top the list. Howard, Brentwood Academy tight end Kesean Bowman and Siegel offensive tackle Princeton Uwaifo are four-star prospects. Defensive lineman Kadin Fife (Summerville, Georgia) is also rated four stars.

Cornerback Brandon Leavell (Goodpasture), safety Jaden Butler (Haywood), linebacker JP Peace (Maryville), quarterback Derrick Baker (Alpharetta, Georgia) and cornerback Carter Jamison (Fairburn, Georgia) are three-star prospects. Long snapper Sam McKeown is also committed, but doesn’t have a star rating on 247Sports Compositie. They round out the early commitments.

Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Email adam.sparks@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter@AdamSparks. Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.

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Life360 crash alert helps Madison family respond after Tennessee wreck

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Life360 crash alert helps Madison family respond after Tennessee wreck


MADISON, Ala. (WAFF) – A Madison family says a safety feature in the Life360 app helped their loved ones react quickly after a crash on an interstate in Tennessee.

The Claytons were traveling back to Madison, Alabama, after a visit to the Jack Daniel’s Distillery, when they saw another vehicle suddenly cut them off and T-bone their car.

Gerald Clayton’s daughter, Tiffany, was in Atlanta when she says her phone sounded an alert she’d never heard before.

“My phone does this crazy notification I’ve never heard, and I look down, and it says something like detected that Gerald might have been in a collision.”

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Tiffany said Life360 noted the event could have been something minor like a dropped phone but flagged a sudden movement consistent with a collision.

Gerald Clayton said he was riding in the back seat. His sister was driving, and his brother-in-law was in the front passenger seat.

“Basically, cut us off and I’m looking at this saying to myself, this is not going to end well.”

He said he braced for impact.

“So I just slipped my left hand between my seatbelt and my chest because I knew that the impact was going to be really severe.”

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Clayton says the crash fractured his sternum.

“It’s like somebody hitting you in the stomach and knocking the air out of you.”

Tiffany said when her father didn’t answer, she began making calls including to her mother in Huntsville to figure out what was happening.

Life360’s crash detection also prompted an in-app check-in.

“The app basically shows me in motion at 60 miles an hour. And then all of a sudden, it shows me at zero. So then I get this instant message from the app, you know, are you okay? Do you need to call the paramedics or anything like that?”

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Life360 includes a free option for location tracking and crash detection. Tiffany said the incident showed her the benefit of having those tools while family members are on the road.

“This is something I think can provide that extra layer of safety and visibility on people that you care about.”

Clayton agreed.

“Without a doubt. I mean, I can see the benefits of it, especially when you’re traveling.”

Wear your seatbelt. If you’re traveling, make sure someone knows your route and consider enabling safety features on your phone or apps you already use.

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Clayton remained in the hospital for four days recovering while his sister and brother-in-law were released within hours of the wreck. He credits wearing his seatbelt for the outcome.

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Texas discovery of ‘devastating’ flesh-eating fly that lays eggs in animal eyes prompts new regulations in Tennessee

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Texas discovery of ‘devastating’ flesh-eating fly that lays eggs in animal eyes prompts new regulations in Tennessee


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – The New World Screwworm, a flesh-eating fly that lays eggs in animal orifices, has been detected in Texas, prompting new temporary regulations in Tennessee.

The Tennessee Department of Agriculture said Friday that it has issued new temporary animal import requirements after the screwworm was found in Texas.

The USDA announced the first U.S. case of the New World Screwworm on Wednesday, saying it was confirmed in a 3-week-old calf in Zavala County, Texas. The larvae was found in the bovine’s umbilical area, the USDA said, calling it “a devastating pest.”

“It can cause serious, often deadly damage to animals and people in areas where the pest spreads,” the USDA says. “While NWS is present in parts of South America — where infections in animals and people continue to occur — it was eradicated from the United States decades ago. In recent years, NWS has moved northward through Central America and Mexico and was confirmed in Texas on June 3, 2026.”

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There have not been any other cases of the New World Screwworm in the U.S.

New World Screwworm larvae use sharp mouth hooks to eat animal tissue.(USDA)

The Tennessee Department of Agriculture said there is no indication of an outbreak in the state, but that officials wanted to issue temporary animal import requirements to help educate and prevent one from occurring.

As part of the order, the interstate movement of certain animals coming into Tennessee has been restricted. The order applies to animals imported from “infested zones, infested states, and high-risk counties.”

Animals imported from outside an infested zone, but within an infested state or high-risk county, will be required to obtain a Certificate of Veterinary Inspection declaring they do not have signs of the flesh-eating fly.

“The CVI must include the statement, ‘All animals listed on the CVI have been inspected and are free from screwworm larvae infestation,’” the state said. “The CVI shall be valid for no more than 7 days from the date of inspection.”

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Animals imported from an infested zone will need a CVI saying they were given effective treatment for the screwworm. Documents must also provide information about the treatment that was given, entry permit numbers, signatures from authorized representatives, and more.

The full list of requirements and exemptions can be found HERE.

WSMV

What is the New World Screwworm?

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says that the New World Scerwworm is a parasitic fly that eats “the tissue or flesh of warm-blooded animals and people.”

“NWS flies are attracted to wounds and body openings like the nose, eyes, ears, and mouth, where they lay eggs,” the CDC says. “The eggs hatch into maggots (larvae) that eat live tissue, causing a worsening, often painful and foul-smelling wound.”

They eat that tissue, the CDC says, by using “sharp mouth hooks,” adding that the wound will become “larger and deeper as more larvae hatch and feed on living tissue.”

While the fly has typically been found in South America and the Caribbean, the CDC says it has been steadily moving more north since 2023.

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“NWS infestations (presence of maggots on or in the body) do not regularly occur in the United States, but cases have occurred in travelers returning from areas where flies are present,” the CDC says. “If you travel to these areas, have an open wound and spend a lot of time outdoors, you may be at greater risk of becoming infested with NWS.”

Copyright 2026 WSMV. All rights reserved.



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