
Alabama basketball's final USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll ranking for 2024-25 revealed
Alabama basketball's final USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll ranking for 2024-25 revealed
Nate Oats and the Alabama Crimson Tide came into the 2024-25 college basketball season hoping to be the ones cutting down the nets in San Antonio instead of an SEC foe.
They'll have to settle for another top 10 finish in the polls.
A day after the Florida Gators defeated the Houston Cougars, 65-63, in a thrilling national championship game at the Alamodome Monday night, Tuesday saw the release of the final men's basketball USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll for the 2024-25 season.
Alabama (28-9 overall, 13-5 SEC) placed No. 6 in the Coaches Poll -- four spots lower than their preseason No. 2 ranking. With coach Todd Golden's Gators (36-4 overall) the unanimous No. 1 with 31 first-place votes and Houston (35-5) the runner-up, No. 3 Duke (35-4), No. 4 Auburn (32-6) and No. 5 Tennessee (30-8) rounded out the top five.
The Crimson Tide were ranked one spot above No. 7 Michigan State in the final poll. Alabama was eliminated by East Region champion Duke, 85-65, in the Elite Eight on March 29 in Newark, N.J.
It's the third consecutive season -- and the fourth time in five years -- that Alabama basketball has placed in the top 10 of the final Coaches Poll under Oats, who just completed his sixth season in Tuscaloosa. A year ago, Alabama finished at No. 4 in the Coaches Poll after reaching the first Final Four in program history.
Alabama also finished No. 4 in the 2022-23 poll, a disappointing result for a team that came into the NCAA Tournament as the No. 1 overall seed for the first time in school history. The Crimson Tide were upset in the Sweet 16 by San Diego State that season.
Alabama finished No. 5 in the final Coaches Poll of 2021. The Crimson Tide are the only SEC program to place in the Top 10 of the final Coaches Poll in four of the past five seasons. That includes Kentucky and other SEC basketball powers.
With his track record of consistency, no one has proven himself more capable of leading Alabama basketball moving forward than Oats.
ON THE MOVE: Keep up with Alabama's busy offseason by visiting Roll Tide Wire's transfer portal tracker.
Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion.
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USA Today
40 minutes ago
- USA Today
Everything Rob Vaughn said following Alabama's season-ending loss at Southern Miss
Everything Rob Vaughn said following Alabama's season-ending loss at Southern Miss On Saturday afternoon in Hattiesburg, the Alabama Crimson Tide's 2025 season officially came to an end with a 6-5 loss to Southern Miss in the NCAA Tournament. An elimination game in the 2025 Hattiesburg Regional, Alabama went back-and-forth with Southern Miss in hopes of keeping their season alive to Sunday, but unfortunately suffered a disappointing loss in which the Crimson Tide blew a two-run lead in the final innings. With the result, Alabama's season ended with an overall record of 41-18 overall This is also the second consecutive season that Alabama has gone 0-2 in a regional, with their last win in the NCAA Tournament coming back in 2023. After the game, Alabama head baseball coach Rob Vaughn also commented on the loss during his postgame press conference. Here is a look at everything Vaughn said following the season-ending loss: Rob Vaughn opening statement after loss vs. Southern Miss "Man, these journeys are fun. Every year is different. Every year has its' ups-and-downs. Every year you've got a different group, a different mentality, a different culture really that's building, and I got a lot of kids hurting out there right now because it meant a lot to them, and they poured their heart and soul into Alabama baseball. I came here two years ago now, and there's guys, especially in the world we're in right now, that could cut-and-run, could have gone found bright, shinier things, and they chose to stay. There's guys that came in like Bryce (Fowler) that believed in what we were doing, and wanted to be a part of it, and there's a lot of kids that laid the foundation for what Alabama baseball is going to be. I remember standing in center field after a game like this in East Carolina when I was at the University of Maryland, and I told that group the same thing I told this group out here is we are going to dogpile. We're going to be the one standing in the end at some point, and we don't get there without the group that laid the foundation first, and that's the group that toed the rubber for us last year. That's the group that showed up and punched the time card every single day. These journeys are always so hard when they end. They're so hard because you do love these kids, and there's guys that will move on to professional baseball. We have plenty of draft picks running around on the field out there. What I am most proud of, and I told them this at the end, is the men that they are, and who they are as people. I get that our job is to go develop baseball players and win games, and it's my job to get us to that next step. What we did this year, as good as it was, wasn't good enough, and we're going to be better. But at the end of the day, I've got a group of 40 guys in there that are going to be unbelievable husbands one day, unbelievable dads one day, and at the end of the day, that's what our job's all about is helping young people grow. I've got a special group of them, and it's been a really fun ride with them. It's crazy. I feel like they just got here in August, and now we're sitting up here kind of at the end. It goes fast, but I love them, and we'll be back." Rob Vaughn on Alabama's staff preparation for Hattiesburg Regional "No, I mean nothing we'd do differently. I thought the guys were ready. Thought they competed hard. I think people may underestimate how hard it is, and that's just the world we're in now, but how hard it is for a guy like Bryce (Fowler) to come to a place that his career started, and not make it more than it needs to be. I mean he played his heart out this weekend, played his heart out today, was incredible today. He was absolutely incredible today, and that's toughness man. We got a tough group of kids. We weren't good enough, and ultimately that is my responsibility to make sure that we get better, that we prepare them better, that we coach them better, that we do all that stuff. But what I can tell you is they gave me every tiny thing of who they had. I thought my staff, I mean, Paps up at 1:00 in the morning watching video trying to prepare for how we're going to go up against Middleton, and I thought gave our guys a great game plan. I thought as good as that dude is, and he is elite, I thought we hit him just as good as anybody did in the country, which that tells you how good he is that it wasn't enough. Wouldn't change a thing about any of that. Ultimately, it's my job to get this program to the next step, and we're going to do it." Rob Vaughn on decision to DH Will Plattner "We have a sign that hangs in our dugout that says just be tougher than they are, and Will Plattner might be the toughest dude on this team. When you look up and you look at your season on the line, and look at trying to fight one more day, I'm going to ride with toughness all day long, and he did that. Gave us a great at-bat there in the first, got the first homer, got the first run on the board, and Will Plattner is going to be right in the middle of what we're doing next season. When push comes to shove, I'm going to go with toughness, and Will Plattner is toughness." Rob Vaughn on decision to load the bases "Yea, no hesitation. I thought, as weird as that inning was, you get the leadoff homer and go to Oz (Carson Ozmer) who should be the stopper of the year. I mean, that guy led the country in saves, was incredible. He goes hit-by-pitch and walk, very uncharacteristic, but goes hit-by-pitch and walk. We execute a perfect crash play, get the lead out. You're sitting there first-and-second again, and you get to two outs there with a base open and the left-right matchup. Stockman had good at-bat's all day, that's not a knock on Stockman at all, but Paetow's got serious power, like there's some real, real power in there, and you like the right-right matchup with Oz. He is tough on righties, and you've got to credit Stockman. Got to two strikes and didn't panic. Slider, I'll have to see it on video, probably stayed up just enough, and he put a great swing on it so you've got to credit him for beating up there. But zero hesitation, I'd do it again." Rob Vaughn on how he'd want 2025 Alabama team to be remembered "I'm going to remember the people on this group for a really long time. Will Hodo is going to be a guy that I talk about for the rest of my career. There's seven-or-eight guys throughout the course of my coaching career that just stick with you, and Will Hodo is one of them. Kade Snell is another one. We have No. 3 as our captain every year, and that's something that we were very selective with, and he led this team as good as anyone I've ever seen. It was unbelievable the way he blended being able to communicate with absolute immense toughness while also having a career-year. There's just some special, special people on this group, and that's what you remember. Right now it hurts because we all want to raise a trophy at the end. Alabama deserves that. We got to be better, and give them that. At the end of the day, it's all about relationships. When you get those wedding invitations and baby announcements and all that stuff, at the end of the day, as much as we all want to win, when my time on earth is done, I want to be remembered as somebody that helped build people and relationships and we did that. Now, it's turned to continue what we're building. This group won 40 games for the first time since 2002. Everybody talks about "yea it's fine," and I get the fans want more. We all want more, and we're going to get more, I can promise you that. But this group laid that foundation, and if you want a strong program and culture, everybody likes the microwave. We're in a microwave society where it's immediate. I want it now, quick fix here-and-there. Quick fixes blow down when things get rough. This thing isn't going to blow down I can promise you that. We're going to build this thing the right way, with the right people, and the last two years have been the foundation of that. Now it's time to keep moving forward." Rob Vaughn on both Hattiesburg Regional games going down to wire "I know sometimes when you get run out of the yard, and you're never in it, it's like a slow painful death, whereas that one you kind of get it ripped away from you late. I told every one of those kids that went up in the ninth inning and said just be present. Just be in this moment and be present. Win, lose, or draw, just go send it in this moment. We've talked about that from the rip. We've talked about the man in the arena. It's not the critic who counts. I get that there is a lot of voices, especially in our league. There's a lot of people with opinions and thoughts and all that. Those people don't matter. What matters is the 40 dudes out here. We feel defeat and it hurts and it sucks, but it's not because these kids didn't send it, and they will be able to put their head on their pillow at night and know they emptied the tank for us. Now it's my job to take us to the next level." Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Top 10 College Softball recruiting classes for 2026
Top 10 College Softball recruiting classes for 2026 The 2025 Women's College World Series has been electric so far. The average margin of victory is just 2.36 runs per game. Tennessee's 11-3 win over UCLA is the only game with a margin of victory greater than three. Of the 11 games played pending Oklahoma vs. Texas Tech in the evening, there have been eight games with a margin of victory of two runs or less. Four of those games were one-run games. The level of competition in this Women's College World Series has been fantastic. And that's in large part due to the level of commitment athletic departments across the country are putting into softball. Programs across the country are investing more resources into facilities, recruiting at both the high school and transfer ranks, and developing that talent, raising the level of play across the sport. In the SEC, there doesn't seem to be a huge gap between the top teams like Oklahoma and Texas and those at the bottom of the standings. And down the road, the gap may close even further. Taking a look at Softball America and On3's recruiting rankings for the 2026 recruiting class, nine of the top 10 teams in the national rankings are from the SEC and 12 of the top 15. All 15 SEC programs rank inside the top 18 recruiting classes in the country with Alabama coming in at No. 18. The only non-SEC team to rank inside the top 10 is the Oregon Ducks, led by former Oklahoma assistant and player Melyssa Lombardi. Here's a look at the top 10 recruiting classes for 2026 according to Softball America and On3. Just missed the top 10: Arkansas, Cal, NC State, South Carolina, Kentucky. 10. Oregon Ducks No. of Commitments: 5 Blue Chip Prospects: 3 Top Rated Player: Bailey Goldberg, INF - No. 32 overall Under Ducks coach Melyssa Lombardi, the Oregon Ducks won the Big Ten in their first year in the league and were the only team in the Women's College World Series to rank in the top 10 in ERA, team batting average, and fielding percentage. The Ducks have three top-50 players committed to the class and are hoping to build off of their success in 2025. No. of Commitments: 7 Blue Chip Prospects: 5 Top Rated Player: Milan Torres, OF - No. 26 overall The Texas A&M Aggies had a great season, spending several weeks at No. 1, finishing in second place in the SEC and earning the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. However, the Aggies had a disappointing College Station regional, getting upset by Liberty and earning the distinction as the only No. 1 overall seed to lose in the regional round. The Aggies recruiting class features three top-50 players. 8. Auburn Tigers No. of Commitments: 6 Blue Chip Prospects: 4 Top Rated Player: Cece Springfield, OF - No. 27 overall The Auburn Tigers had a disappointing 2025 season but that hasn't stopped them from putting together a strong recruiting class in 2026. The Tigers have four top-100 commitments in the cycle. 7. Ole Miss Rebels No. of Commitments: 12 Blue Chip Prospects: 5 Top Rated Player: Charli Calas, INF - No. 17 overall Ole Miss has 12 players committed in the 2026 recruiting class, which is more than any program inside the top 25. Six of those players rank inside the top 100 of Softball America and On3's recruiting rankings. The Rebels are certainly hoping a strength-in-numbers plan of attack pays off after a run to the Women's College World Series. No. of Commitments: 5 Blue Chip Prospects: 3 Top Rated Player: Kynzee Anderson, P - No. 10 overall Despite finishing 12th in the SEC during the regular season, the Georgia Bulldogs had a nice run in the NCAA Tournament. The Dawgs knocked of Durham regional host Duke and took Florida to a game three in the super regionals. Their recruiting class features three top-50 prospects, including the No. 10 overall player and No. 1 player in the state of Louisiana, Kynzee Anderson. 5. Tennessee Volunteers No. of Commitments: 4 Blue Chip Prospects: 3 Top Rated Player: Avary Stockwell, C - No. 13 overall Tennessee's class is smaller than the rest of the top five, but it has star power to it. Stockwell is the No. 3 catcher in the class and the No. 1 player in the state of Tennessee. 4. Texas Longhorns No. of Commitments: 6 Blue Chip Prospects: 4 Top Rated Player: Annie Abdullah, INF - No. 2 overall player The Texas Longhorns have two of the top five players in the class signed in the 2026 class in Abdullah and Grandview pitcher Madi Doty. 3. Florida Gators No. of Commitments: 6 Blue Chip Prospects: 6 Top Rated Player: Caroline Stanton, P - No. 1 overall Three of Florida's top four players in the class come from the state of Georgia, including the No. 1 overall player Caroline Stanton. They also pulled infielder Brooklyn Gidley out of College Station, Texas. Surprisingly, the Gators don't have a player from the state of Florida signed in 2026. 2. Oklahoma Sooners No. of Commitments: 6 Blue Chip Prospects: 6 Top Rated Player: Ki'ele Ho-Ching, INF - No. 2 overall The Oklahoma Sooners have recruited well across the country, bringing in the No. 1 player in California, Oklahoma, and Hawaii, the No. 2 player in Texas, and the No. 4 player in Arizona. Pitcher E.K. Smith out of Katy, Texas is considered the No. 6 pitcher in the country. 1. LSU Tigers No. of Commitments: 7 Blue Chip Prospects: 6 Top Rated Player: Samantha Alekman, C - No. 5 overall The LSU Tigers have five five-star prospects heading to Baton Rouge in the 2026 class, including four players in the top 10 and two of the top five pitchers in the class. Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow John on X @john9williams.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Two Alabama football legends on College Football Hall of Fame ballot for 2026
Two Alabama football legends on College Football Hall of Fame ballot for 2026 A pair of Alabama football legends are under consideration for the College Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class. On Monday, the National Football Foundation (NFF) announced the names of 79 former players and coaches who are under consideration for Hall of Fame induction. Two former Crimson Tide players are eligible for induction in the 2026 class: linebacker DeMeco Ryans and Alabama's first Heisman Trophy winner, running back Mark Ingram. Mark Ingram (2008-10) Ingram was a huge contributor for Alabama's first national championship team in 17 years -- and the Crimson Tide's first under Nick Saban -- in 2009. The Flint, Michigan, high school star rushed for 1,658 yards and 17 rushing touchdowns en route to both the Heisman Trophy and SEC Offensive Player of the Year honors. In that year's SEC Championship Game against Florida, Ingram ran for 113 yards and three touchdowns to go with a 69-yard catch-and-run as the Crimson Tide dethroned the defending national champions and quarterback Tim Tebow. A month later, Ingram was the offensive MVP in the Tide's 37-21 BCS Championship Game win over Texas at the Rose Bowl, going for 116 yards and two touchdowns. He finished his career at Alabama with 3,261 rushing yards and 42 touchdowns and single-handedly took over such games as the Crimson Tide's 20-6 win over South Carolina in 2009 when the offense had fallen into a midseason rut. Ingram rushed for 246 yards (10.3 AVG) -- primarily out of the Wildcat -- against Steve Spurrier's Gamecocks on Oct. 17 as Alabama improved to 7-0. DeMeco Ryans (2002-05) Ryans was a star linebacker at Alabama for one season under Dennis Franchione and three seasons under Mike Shula. He won the Lott IMPACT Trophy in his senior season in 2005 as part of a 10-win Alabama team that defeated Texas Tech in the Cotton Bowl and had thrilling regular-season wins over Tennessee and Florida. That same year, Ryans was named SEC Defensive Player of the Year and still holds the Alabama single-game record for tackles with 25. In his final season in Tuscaloosa, Ryans led defensive coordinator Joe Kines' unit with 76 tackles (9.5 for loss) and had 3.5 sacks, plus an interception and a forced fumble. Controversial former Alabama head coach under consideration for College Football Hall of Fame Speaking of Franchione, the two-year former Crimson Tide coach is one of nine former college football coaches on the ballot for Hall of Fame induction in 2026. Franchione led Alabama to a 7-5 season in his first year in 2001, including a 31-7 upset win over Auburn at Jordan-Hare Stadium in that year's Iron Bowl. Alabama went 10-3 in Franchione's next season in 2002 before he bolted for the Texas A&M job. The announcement for the Hall of Fame class will be made in early 2026. Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinions.