Can Tide win another recruiting title? 
June, 7, 2012
6/07/12
1:57
PM ET
By
Greg Ostendorf | ESPN.com
The University of Alabama closed strong a year ago and finished with the No. 1 recruiting class on ESPN. The team rankings for 2013 were released on Thursday, and the Crimson Tide came in at No. 3. What will they have to do to claim the top spot for the second year in a row?
The biggest name still on the board is Loganville, Ga., Brookwood High School defensive end Robert Nkemdiche. At 6-foot-5, 265 pounds, he’s a physical freak and is ranked No. 1 in the latest ESPN 150 rankings.
Nkemdiche plans to make a decision this summer, and Alabama is among his finalists. He’s expected to visit Tuscaloosa this month.
The biggest name still on the board is Loganville, Ga., Brookwood High School defensive end Robert Nkemdiche. At 6-foot-5, 265 pounds, he’s a physical freak and is ranked No. 1 in the latest ESPN 150 rankings.
Nkemdiche plans to make a decision this summer, and Alabama is among his finalists. He’s expected to visit Tuscaloosa this month.
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From now until kickoff in Arlington, Texas, we'll be counting down the days before Alabama and Michigan get the season started. Today, we move to No. 86 and what it means to UA football.
In the 2011-12 season, Eddie Lacy and Jalston Fowler combined for about 86 yards per game. With Trent Richardson carrying the load, they didn't need to do much of the heavy lifting. With the defense worn out from having to chase and bring down Richardson, Lacy and Fowler could feast -- both averaging about 7 yards per carry.
[Keep in mind that they were two of the three SEC running backs (minimum 50 carries) to accomplish that.]
But the single-digit-per-game carries that Fowler and Lacy enjoyed last season will all but evaporate with Richardson gone. Lacy steps into the role as the No. 1 tailback and Fowler is anywhere from second, to third, to fourth, depending on how you see Dee Hart and T.J. Yeldon fitting in.
While Lacy will be the lead back, don't look for him to tote the ball 22 times a game the way Richardson did. Because of his health and the overall depth at the position, there's no need for Lacy to be that kind of workhorse back. Expect to see something similar to the 2010-11 season, when Mark Ingram was the No. 1 back but carried the ball only 34 percent of the time while Richardson took care of 24 percent of the carries in a backup role.
In the 2011-12 season, Eddie Lacy and Jalston Fowler combined for about 86 yards per game. With Trent Richardson carrying the load, they didn't need to do much of the heavy lifting. With the defense worn out from having to chase and bring down Richardson, Lacy and Fowler could feast -- both averaging about 7 yards per carry.
[Keep in mind that they were two of the three SEC running backs (minimum 50 carries) to accomplish that.]
But the single-digit-per-game carries that Fowler and Lacy enjoyed last season will all but evaporate with Richardson gone. Lacy steps into the role as the No. 1 tailback and Fowler is anywhere from second, to third, to fourth, depending on how you see Dee Hart and T.J. Yeldon fitting in.
While Lacy will be the lead back, don't look for him to tote the ball 22 times a game the way Richardson did. Because of his health and the overall depth at the position, there's no need for Lacy to be that kind of workhorse back. Expect to see something similar to the 2010-11 season, when Mark Ingram was the No. 1 back but carried the ball only 34 percent of the time while Richardson took care of 24 percent of the carries in a backup role.
The University of Alabama’s first summer prospect camp featured not only some of the top rising seniors, but also a group of elite 2014 prospects, including Bamberg, S.C., tight end Kevin Crosby.
Crosby made the seven-hour drive to Tuscaloosa with his family on Sunday and stayed through the entire camp. He worked out Sunday, Monday and Tuesday before leaving town on Wednesday.
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Count Alabama commitment O.J. Howard among those who were excited when ESPN 150 quarterback Cooper Bateman committed to the Crimson Tide in May. The big 6-foot-6 tight end target knew he had a special player now on board to throw him the ball in the future.
“When I saw we got a really good quarterback, that caught my eye,” Howard said. “I was like, ‘This guy can play.’ I went and watched his film. He can throw. He can run if he wants to, but he’s a great quarterback, and he makes things happen on the field.”
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From now until kickoff in Arlington, Texas, we'll be counting down the days before Alabama and Michigan get the season started. Today, we move to No. 87 and what it means to UA football.
In 1987, the Ray Perkins era ended at the University of Alabama, and the Bill Curry era began.
After four seasons in which he compiled a 32-15-1 record, Perkins, who was an All-American under coach Paul 'Bear' Bryant, left to become the head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers -- a position he was rumored to be in the running for a earlier in his tenure at UA. He failed to guide the Crimson Tide to any better than a second place finish in the SEC.
On June 4, 1987, Curry became the second coach to take over at Alabama since Bryant's retirement in 1982. The former head coach of the Georgia Tech Yellowjackets and assistant with the Green Bay Packers, lasted just three season with Alabama before Gene Stallings entered the fold and led UA to its 12th national title. Curry was able to get the Tide on the right track in his final season, though, going 10-2, tying for first place in the SEC and earning a trip to the Sugar Bowl.
Oddly enough, both Curry (age 64) and Perkins (age 71) are still coaching. Curry is the head coach of upstart Georgia State while Perkins chose to stay closer to home at Jones County Junior College.
In 1987, the Ray Perkins era ended at the University of Alabama, and the Bill Curry era began.
After four seasons in which he compiled a 32-15-1 record, Perkins, who was an All-American under coach Paul 'Bear' Bryant, left to become the head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers -- a position he was rumored to be in the running for a earlier in his tenure at UA. He failed to guide the Crimson Tide to any better than a second place finish in the SEC.
On June 4, 1987, Curry became the second coach to take over at Alabama since Bryant's retirement in 1982. The former head coach of the Georgia Tech Yellowjackets and assistant with the Green Bay Packers, lasted just three season with Alabama before Gene Stallings entered the fold and led UA to its 12th national title. Curry was able to get the Tide on the right track in his final season, though, going 10-2, tying for first place in the SEC and earning a trip to the Sugar Bowl.
Oddly enough, both Curry (age 64) and Perkins (age 71) are still coaching. Curry is the head coach of upstart Georgia State while Perkins chose to stay closer to home at Jones County Junior College.
Rapid Reaction: Alabama forces Game 3
June, 5, 2012
6/05/12
11:18
PM ET
By
Brandon Chatmon | ESPN.com
Oklahoma refused to quit but it was not enough.
Alabama held off a late rally from the Sooners to earn a 8-6 win in Game 2 of the championship series of the Women’s College World Series at Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City on Tuesday night. The Crimson Tide’s win forces a championship-deciding Game 3 on Wednesday night.
The Sooners trailed by an 8-1 deficit throughout much of the game but rallied to get within two runs with a five-run seventh inning but the hole proved too big to overcome.

Turning point: Amanda Locke’s 3-run double broke the game wide open in the top of the second inning. Two walks and a hit batter contributed to a four-run, two-hit inning for the Crimson Tide. Not only did it give Alabama a comfortable lead, it helped force the Sooners to replace standout pitcher Keilani Ricketts in the fourth inning.
Uncommon sight: Ricketts struggled for the first time during the postseason. Ricketts, the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year, allowed six runs (two earned) and hit five batters in 3.1 innings pitched in the loss. The junior had allowed five runs in four games before Tuesday.
Player of the game: Jessica Shults continued her clutch hitting, adding four more RBI to her WCWS resume including a three-run home run in the seventh inning. She has a WCWS-high eight RBIs in five WVWS games and 65 RBIs this season.
Stat of the game: .667. Alabama was 2 for 3 with the bases loaded as their clutch hitting overcame their .154 overall batting average.
What it means: Wednesday night’s game is winner-take-all. Oklahoma will have to rebound from Tuesday’s loss to become the national champion.
It’s no secret the University of Alabama is looking for another quarterback in 2013. The UA coaching staff is hosting signal-callers from all over the country at their camp this week, but Georgia native Parker McLeod feels that he stood out among the group.
“I thought it went really well,” McLeod said. “I took a lot of reps, but I thought I did really well. Coach [Doug] Nussmeier said I did outstanding, so I felt pretty confident about how I did.”
McLeod earned an offer from the Crimson Tide last month, but he wanted to attend Alabama’s camp, throw in front of Nick Saban and show the UA head coach what he could do. Saban came away impressed with the Walton High School signal-caller.
“I thought it went really well,” McLeod said. “I took a lot of reps, but I thought I did really well. Coach [Doug] Nussmeier said I did outstanding, so I felt pretty confident about how I did.”
McLeod earned an offer from the Crimson Tide last month, but he wanted to attend Alabama’s camp, throw in front of Nick Saban and show the UA head coach what he could do. Saban came away impressed with the Walton High School signal-caller.
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Greg Gilmore's list of schools reads like an Under Armour All-American. That's appropriate since he is one. The ESPN 150 prospect was just selected to the annual event that will take place this January in Orlando, Fla.
“I'm pretty much taking my life one play at a time, and that was one of my milestones,” the defensive tackle from Hope Mills, N.C., said about his selection.
Gilmore remembers watching some of the more talented players at the all-star game in recent years. Based on his scholarship offers list, he should be able to uphold the tradition.
“I'm pretty much taking my life one play at a time, and that was one of my milestones,” the defensive tackle from Hope Mills, N.C., said about his selection.
Gilmore remembers watching some of the more talented players at the all-star game in recent years. Based on his scholarship offers list, he should be able to uphold the tradition.
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Brendan Langley (Marietta, Ga./Kell) recently named Alabama as his leader and dropped Georgia to fourth on his list. He talks with DawgNation about the decision and what he likes about the Gators as well.
From now until kickoff in Arlington, Texas, we'll be counting down the days before Alabama and Michigan get the season started. Today, we move to No. 88 and what it means to UA football.
Call the Alabama offense anemic, conservative or even boring. But don't call it ineffective.
Last season the Crimson Tide were downright lethal in the red zone, scoring 88 percent of the time. That landed Alabama tied for 19th in the nation in red zone scoring. Only LSU had better luck among SEC teams inside the 20-yard line.
Alabama finished third in the SEC in scoring offense and touchdowns, and second in the league in total offense by averaging just shy of 430 yards per game.
Conversely, UA was tops in the nation in red zone efficiency on defense, letting 17 drives inside the 20 end with points. Of those 10 scores, six were touchdowns. In Alabama's final three games of the season, the Tide surrendered no points inside the 20.
Call the Alabama offense anemic, conservative or even boring. But don't call it ineffective.
Last season the Crimson Tide were downright lethal in the red zone, scoring 88 percent of the time. That landed Alabama tied for 19th in the nation in red zone scoring. Only LSU had better luck among SEC teams inside the 20-yard line.
Alabama finished third in the SEC in scoring offense and touchdowns, and second in the league in total offense by averaging just shy of 430 yards per game.
Conversely, UA was tops in the nation in red zone efficiency on defense, letting 17 drives inside the 20 end with points. Of those 10 scores, six were touchdowns. In Alabama's final three games of the season, the Tide surrendered no points inside the 20.
The rundown
2011 record: 11-2
2011 conference record: 6-2
All-time against Alabama: 8-12
2011 record: 11-2
2011 conference record: 6-2
All-time against Alabama: 8-12
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Each week at TideNation we will speak with a writer who covers one of Alabama's 2012 opponents. Today, we spoke with Arkansas beat writer Robert Neiswanger of the Arkansas News Bureau/Stephens Media.
How have players reacted thus far to a tumultuous offseason and an unexpected coaching change? And how would you gauge their response to John L. Smith?
Robert Neiswanger: The good news for Arkansas is this team has plenty of veterans. Especially on offense. There’s no doubt the spring has been challenging for everyone, but by all accounts guys like Tyler Wilson and Knile Davis haven’t let it become a distraction. And players really do like John L. Smith. They’re happy to see him back. In fact, defensive ends coach Steve Caldwell told us the players gave Smith a standing ovation when he walked into the team meeting room after being named Arkansas’ coach.
How have players reacted thus far to a tumultuous offseason and an unexpected coaching change? And how would you gauge their response to John L. Smith?
Robert Neiswanger: The good news for Arkansas is this team has plenty of veterans. Especially on offense. There’s no doubt the spring has been challenging for everyone, but by all accounts guys like Tyler Wilson and Knile Davis haven’t let it become a distraction. And players really do like John L. Smith. They’re happy to see him back. In fact, defensive ends coach Steve Caldwell told us the players gave Smith a standing ovation when he walked into the team meeting room after being named Arkansas’ coach.
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Alabama offers two Peach State products 
June, 4, 2012
6/04/12
11:36
PM ET
By
Greg Ostendorf | ESPN.com
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Lawrenceville, Ga., defensive end Antonio Riles has been on the University of Alabama’s radar all spring. He came to the Crimson Tide’s first prospect camp this week hoping to earn a scholarship offer.
After a strong showing on Monday, Riles did just that, but it came as a surprise to the 6-foot-4, 261-pound defender.
“I was mesmerized,” Riles said. “I actually didn’t think I was going to get it because I didn’t think I did enough, but I just kept working hard at practice giving my all. I was just trying to soak in everything that coach [Chris] Rumph was showing us."
After a strong showing on Monday, Riles did just that, but it came as a surprise to the 6-foot-4, 261-pound defender.
“I was mesmerized,” Riles said. “I actually didn’t think I was going to get it because I didn’t think I did enough, but I just kept working hard at practice giving my all. I was just trying to soak in everything that coach [Chris] Rumph was showing us."
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Rapid Reaction: Sooners drop Alabama 4-1
June, 4, 2012
6/04/12
11:00
PM ET
By
Brandon Chatmon | ESPN.com
National championship No. 2 is within reach for Oklahoma.
The Sooners opened the championship series of the Women’s College World Series with a 4-1 victory over Alabama at Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City on Monday night. OU won its first softball title in 2000.
Turning point: After Alabama scored a run to take a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the fourth inning, OU answered. The Sooners scored two runs in the top of the fifth inning, scoring one run on Jessica Shults sacrifice fly and Brianna Turang’s fielder’s choice. OU manufacturing offense was key for the Sooners as OU’s four runs came on four hits combined in the fifth and sixth innings.

Player of the game: Keilani Ricketts. The junior continues to dominate from the mound, recording a complete game victory. She allowed one earned run and five hits while striking out 12 batters in seven innings pitched. Ricketts worked her way out of several scoring opportunities for the Crimson Tide, who left eight runners on base.
Unsung hero: Shults went 1 for 3 with 2 RBIs for the Sooners. Her sacrifice fly accounted for OU’s first run in the fifth inning and her one-run single in the sixth inning helped extend the lead.
Stat of the game: 12 left on base. The Sooners continued to leave runners on base, something that has become commonplace during their postseason run, yet pulled out the win anyway.
What it means: The Sooners are one win away from their second WCWS title, with Game 2 of the best-of-three series beginning at 7 p.m. on Tuesday.


