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The Crimson White Print Edition - January 18, 2024

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In the Week 11 AP<br />

Top 25 poll for<br />

college basketball, the<br />

Alabama <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide<br />

is nowhere to be found.<br />

Head coach Nate Oats’<br />

squad, which sits at<br />

11-5 after an 82-74 win<br />

over Mississippi State<br />

on Saturday night, is<br />

on the outside looking<br />

in for the seventh<br />

consecutive poll, a<br />

streak dating back to<br />

immediately after its<br />

loss to Ohio State.<br />

Nobody is making a<br />

legitimate case for the<br />

<strong>Crimson</strong> Tide to crack<br />

the Top 25. It wasn’t<br />

even close, receiving<br />

just 60 votes; it’s simply<br />

unrealistic to rank a<br />

team with five losses<br />

before conference play<br />

begins, especially one<br />

with such glaring issues<br />

as Alabama’s dubiousat-best<br />

defense.<br />

It’s possible,<br />

however, that the team’s<br />

prolonged absence from<br />

national recognition<br />

is masking the threat<br />

it potentially poses to<br />

highly ranked teams<br />

down the line.<br />

<strong>The</strong> most potent<br />

piece of evidence for<br />

this potential lies in the<br />

NCAA NET Rankings, a<br />

method of sorting teams<br />

based on strength of<br />

schedule, results and<br />

efficiency. As of Jan.<br />

9, the NET went as<br />

follows:<br />

Houston first.<br />

Arizona second. Purdue<br />

third. BYU fourth.<br />

Tennessee fifth. And ...<br />

Alabama sixth.<br />

Those top five<br />

come as no surprise;<br />

all are ranked in this<br />

week’s AP poll, and<br />

even then, the Cougars<br />

find themselves at<br />

eighteenth. Why then, is<br />

an Alabama team that<br />

equaled last season’s<br />

loss total before the end<br />

of the calendar year<br />

so respected by such a<br />

sacred metric?<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are a couple<br />

of different answers.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first is simple, and<br />

it is directly tied to the<br />

brand of basketball Oats<br />

has held fast to since<br />

coming to Tuscaloosa:<br />

<strong>The</strong> offense is prolific.<br />

As of Jan. 11, the<br />

<strong>Crimson</strong> Tide was third<br />

in the country in points<br />

per game at 90.6, onetenth<br />

of a point behind<br />

the Kentucky Wildcats.<br />

As in every other<br />

year during Oats’<br />

tenure, the defense<br />

sports<br />

has taken its fair share<br />

of lumps. Fortunately,<br />

the offense is firing on<br />

all cylinders. As of Jan.<br />

15, it has crossed the<br />

100-point threshold four<br />

times, and in two other<br />

games it scored 99 and<br />

98; it boasts the SEC’s<br />

leading scorer and three<br />

others in the Top 25; it<br />

is first among Power<br />

Six teams in 3-point<br />

attempts per game and<br />

12th overall in 3-point<br />

percentage.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next answer,<br />

perhaps even better<br />

for the total-season<br />

outlook, is that<br />

Alabama played a<br />

brutal nonconference<br />

schedule. Its five losses<br />

have come at the hands<br />

of Ohio State, Clemson,<br />

Purdue, Creighton and<br />

Arizona, four of which<br />

are highly ranked and<br />

esteemed contenders<br />

in their respective<br />

conferences. As of Jan.<br />

11, the <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide<br />

is third in national<br />

strength-of-schedule<br />

rankings.<br />

This punishing<br />

schedule is nothing<br />

new under Oats.<br />

Fans will remember<br />

that Novembers and<br />

Decembers in the last<br />

few years have seen<br />

highlight matchups<br />

galore, whether it be<br />

high-octane bouts<br />

with Gonzaga or<br />

controversial slugfests<br />

with Houston.<br />

A season ago, then-<br />

<strong>Crimson</strong> Tide center<br />

Charles Bediako<br />

summarized the<br />

philosophy behind these<br />

rigorous schedules: “We<br />

love competition. We’re<br />

looking for the hardest<br />

teams to play; we look<br />

to challenge ourselves<br />

and play the toughest<br />

teams. It all helps for<br />

March especially.”<br />

Oats echoed this<br />

idea earlier this season,<br />

before the early-<br />

December stretch<br />

against Purdue, Arizona<br />

and Creighton, saying,<br />

“We like scheduling<br />

hard. I think we get<br />

our guys up for games.<br />

We get deficiencies<br />

exposed, and we can<br />

work on them.”<br />

This obviously<br />

doesn’t make five<br />

losses before <strong>January</strong> an<br />

optimal position to be<br />

in. One could even see<br />

it as a major letdown<br />

that Alabama came<br />

up empty-handed in<br />

an area of the season<br />

where in years past it<br />

often flourished. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

1B<br />

Alabama men’s basketball is ready to pounce<br />

Luke McClinton<br />

Staff Writer<br />

losses aren’t necessarily<br />

ignominious or illogical,<br />

but it’s unfortunate<br />

that such an offensively<br />

inclined team couldn’t<br />

steal any of these<br />

games in which it was<br />

competitive for most of<br />

the time.<br />

As Nick Kelly of<br />

the Tuscaloosa News<br />

put it, Alabama “has<br />

five losses, albeit good<br />

ones. That won’t hurt<br />

Alabama drastically<br />

come NCAA Tournament<br />

selection time, but the<br />

<strong>Crimson</strong> Tide has to<br />

start winning games to<br />

bolster its resume and<br />

help its case.”<br />

It’s easy to write off<br />

Alabama as washed,<br />

suffering the perils of so<br />

much lost talent from<br />

last year. But if Oats<br />

has proven anything in<br />

his quick turnaround<br />

of a program that for<br />

so long dwelt in the<br />

pit of mediocrity, it’s<br />

that this culture of<br />

running, gunning and<br />

not backing down from<br />

even the most elite of<br />

competition produces<br />

results. History says it’s<br />

only a matter of time<br />

before those results<br />

show themselves<br />

this season.<br />

<strong>The</strong> hottest sports to watch this winter<br />

Henry Sklar<br />

Contributing Writer<br />

Despite Alabama<br />

football’s season<br />

ending in the Rose Bowl,<br />

there are still plenty of<br />

sports at the Capstone<br />

to enjoy.<br />

Men’s basketball<br />

is coming off a<br />

disappointing exit in the<br />

2023 NCAA tournament<br />

but is led by a soaring<br />

offense in <strong>2024</strong>.<br />

Women’s basketball is<br />

looking to continue its<br />

recent success after<br />

also appearing in the<br />

NCAA tournament in<br />

2023. Lastly, gymnastics<br />

is ranked among the<br />

premier teams in<br />

the country, fighting<br />

for its first national<br />

championship in over<br />

10 years.<br />

Here is a synopsis of<br />

the top Alabama sports<br />

to watch this winter.<br />

Men’s basketball<br />

<strong>The</strong> Alabama men's<br />

basketball program,<br />

which won its second<br />

SEC championship in<br />

the past three seasons<br />

in 2022-23, is off to a<br />

11-5 start in the 2023-<br />

24 season, as of Jan. 15.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide men's<br />

team faced a gantlet of<br />

a schedule in the outof-conference<br />

portion of<br />

the season with games<br />

against No. 1 Purdue,<br />

No. 22 Creighton and<br />

No. 8 Arizona.<br />

Despite the fiveloss<br />

start, KenPom<br />

has Alabama as the<br />

seventh-ranked team in<br />

the NCAA, boasting the<br />

country's top offense.<br />

Senior guard Mark Sears<br />

and Hofstra transfer<br />

Aaron Estrada are<br />

the backcourt leaders<br />

for the <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide,<br />

averaging over 13 points<br />

a game.<br />

Ahead of Alabama's<br />

SEC home opener<br />

against South Carolina,<br />

Nate Oats said he hopes<br />

students will support<br />

the <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide.<br />

“We need everybody<br />

to come out and just<br />

get the energy in the<br />

building so our players<br />

play a little harder,”<br />

Oats said. “Our players<br />

hopefully will be playing<br />

with maximum effort<br />

and giving the fans a<br />

show that they deserve<br />

to see when they come<br />

to watch us play.”<br />

Must-attend game:<br />

Jan. 24 vs. Auburn —<br />

Auburn and Alabama<br />

are off to high-flying<br />

starts, ranked in the<br />

top 10 in KenPom<br />

and the NCAAM NET<br />

Rankings. Both teams<br />

are contending for the<br />

national title; however,<br />

with the Iron Bowl of<br />

basketball comes the<br />

right to claim to be the<br />

top basketball team<br />

in the Yellowhammer<br />

State.<br />

Women’s basketball<br />

Before 2021,<br />

Alabama's women's<br />

basketball team had<br />

yet to make March<br />

Madness since 1999. <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>Crimson</strong> Tide program<br />

has gained heavy<br />

momentum, making<br />

the NCAA tournament<br />

twice in the past three<br />

seasons.<br />

When asked about<br />

the critical factors of<br />

continuing the team’s<br />

recent success, head<br />

coach Kristy Curry said<br />

multiple interconnected<br />

elements are crucial.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> foundation is<br />

laid on the court, in<br />

the classroom and in<br />

the community,” Curry<br />

said. “It's this time, it's<br />

this team's turn for<br />

that. I think that the<br />

expectations, that's<br />

what it's about<br />

at Alabama.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> women's team<br />

is off to a high-flying<br />

start with a 15-4 record,<br />

as of Jan. 15 (2-2 in SEC<br />

play). <strong>The</strong> <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide<br />

is led by senior guard<br />

Sarah Ashlee Barker,<br />

who's in her second<br />

season with Alabama<br />

after transferring<br />

Alabama gymnast Shania Adams performs her beam routine against Missouri on Jan. 12 in Coleman Coliseum.<br />

CW / Hannah Grace Mayfield<br />

from Georgia. Barker<br />

is averaging 16 points<br />

a game to start the<br />

season.<br />

Must-attend game:<br />

Jan. <strong>18</strong> vs. LSU —<br />

Alabama faces a major<br />

test as the defending<br />

national champion LSU<br />

Tigers, led by legendary<br />

head coach Kim Mulkey,<br />

come to Tuscaloosa. <strong>The</strong><br />

Tigers have two box<br />

office superstars, Angel<br />

Reese and Hailey Van<br />

Lith; both are projected<br />

to be selected in the<br />

first round of the<br />

WNBA draft.<br />

Gymnastics<br />

<strong>The</strong> hype in Coleman<br />

Coliseum doesn't stop<br />

after basketball, as in<br />

the program's 50th<br />

season, gymnastics is<br />

looking to continue its<br />

growth in its second<br />

season under head<br />

coach Ashley Johnston.<br />

In 2023, the <strong>Crimson</strong><br />

Tide made a run in<br />

Johnston's first season<br />

but bowed out of the<br />

NCAA tournament in<br />

the Sweet 16.<br />

<strong>The</strong> 2023 team<br />

boasts graduate student<br />

Luisa Blanco, who<br />

will compete in the<br />

<strong>2024</strong> Tokyo Olympic<br />

Games for Colombia.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dallas, Texas,<br />

native qualified for<br />

the Summer Olympics<br />

via the 2023 Pan<br />

American Games. In<br />

2023, alongside Blanco,<br />

graduate student<br />

Makarri Doggette and<br />

junior Lilly Hudson were<br />

voted All-Americans.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide<br />

won its first season<br />

meet at the Mean Girls<br />

Super 16 Gymnastics<br />

Championships over<br />

schools like UCLA,<br />

California and Auburn<br />

with a final score of<br />

197.125.<br />

Before the season<br />

opener, Johnston said<br />

the team was looking<br />

forward to the long<br />

season ahead.<br />

"We cannot wait to<br />

finally be competing,”<br />

Johnston said. “We've<br />

had a great preseason,<br />

working and growing<br />

together as a team,<br />

but this is where all<br />

the hard work and<br />

excitement pays off.”<br />

Alabama hosts<br />

Arkansas on Friday,<br />

Jan. 19, in Coleman<br />

Coliseum.<br />

Must-attend meet:<br />

Feb. 2 vs. Kentucky —<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Crimson</strong> Tide will<br />

be looking for revenge<br />

when Kentucky comes<br />

to town. In last season’s<br />

NCAA tournament, the<br />

Wildcats knocked off<br />

Alabama in an upset to<br />

advance to nationals for<br />

the second time in that<br />

program’s history.

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