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Alabama football roster: No scholarship players departed in spring. What it signifies for Kalen DeBoer

The Alabama football roster visited the doctor in April for its bi-annual physical, and the results are in. The Crimson Tide couldn’t be much healthier. After evaluating blood pressure, heart rate, and going through the infamous spring-transfer-portal-window test, Alabama’s roster passed the checkup with flying colors. Not a single scholarship player entered the transfer portal […]

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The Alabama football roster visited the doctor in April for its bi-annual physical, and the results are in.

The Crimson Tide couldn’t be much healthier. After evaluating blood pressure, heart rate, and going through the infamous spring-transfer-portal-window test, Alabama’s roster passed the checkup with flying colors.

Not a single scholarship player entered the transfer portal in the 10-day period. Not one. No other school in the SEC can say that. Ole Miss led the conference with nine scholarship player portal entries in the spring.

Losing players to the portal has become commonplace in today’s college football. Maybe a program doesn’t lose starters each window, but it’s difficult to hold onto depth each portal window. Other programs might be willing to pay another team’s depth players more money than they would get as a backup at their current school. So they enter the portal. Or players seeking more playing time might enter the portal.

Yet none for Alabama did in this cycle. The deadline to submit the paperwork to enter the transfer portal arrived Friday, and a source with knowledge of transfer portal movement told AL.com none had submitted the paperwork.

That’s rare these days. So what does it mean? Here are a few takeaways.

What it says about Kalen DeBoer

If there were any kind of prevalent disbelief on the roster in DeBoer’s ability to lead the Crimson Tide, at least one player would have gone elsewhere in the spring window. At least. Probably more.

Instead, none did. That’s DeBoer and company’s investment in relationships paying off. It’s players buying what he’s selling. It’s one thing for players to say nice things about DeBoer during interviews, but their actions speak much louder than words.

Listen to this roster’s action of staying put.

What it says about NIL, athlete compensation

Alabama would not be retaining all of its talent, whether it be the starting quarterback or a third-string offensive tackle, if it was struggling to compensate athletes.

Good roster retention just doesn’t happen these days if you have bad NIL infrastructure.

That’s not to say Alabama’s rolling in all this extra cash and paying all of these players more than any other school. But this much roster retention would indicate Alabama’s ability to compensate athletes sits in a healthy spot, whether it be through future revenue sharing (expected to be made possible this fall through the House settlement) or through facilitating NIL deals.

Mix solid compensation with relationship building and development, and players are more inclined to stick around. So they did.

What it says about 2025 outlook

The spring provided a chance for each player on this roster to see what the Crimson Tide could be this season. Players would probably be less likely to stay if the outlook was bleak.

Particularly reserves. If a player who is set to be a backup didn’t think they could be part of a notable season, transferring could become more appealing. Maybe some would see a benefit to staying for development purposes, but for others, transferring could open the door to making more money and/or getting more playing time.

Yet none did from the spring roster. Specifically the backups. That bodes well for Alabama’s outlook in 2025.

Final thoughts

Don’t hand Alabama the national championship crown solely because it retained its scholarship roster from the spring, but it’s a good early piece to the puzzle. It’s worth highlighting, considering the rarity of it these days.

The Crimson Tide will surely have its depth tested throughout the season, especially if Alabama reaches the College Football Playoff and makes a deep run. So, hanging onto all of the depth it did is a good thing on face value.

How it’s of greater significance — DeBoer’s way seems to be registering with players in Tuscaloosa. We’ll find out this fall how that translates to the field.

Alabama is listed at +1400 to win the National Championship over on DraftKings. Our comprehensive guide to Alabama’s championship odds provides a deeper look at their chances to win it all.





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Cooper Flagg’s Stunning Duke NIL Earnings Revealed

Cooper Flagg’s Stunning Duke NIL Earnings Revealed originally appeared on Athlon Sports. During his lone season with the Duke Blue Devils, former No. 1 overall recruit Cooper Flagg lived up to the billing as the next great American prospect. Advertisement Although he and the Blue Devils fell in the Final Four to eventual runner-up Houston […]

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Cooper Flagg’s Stunning Duke NIL Earnings Revealed originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

During his lone season with the Duke Blue Devils, former No. 1 overall recruit Cooper Flagg lived up to the billing as the next great American prospect.

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Although he and the Blue Devils fell in the Final Four to eventual runner-up Houston Cougars, Flagg led Duke in all five major statistical categories en route to a 35-4 record. In addition to being named ACC Player of the Year, Flagg also became the ninth Duke player to be named Naismith Men’s College Player of the Year.

Aside from prospering on the court, many fans likely assumed that Flagg was compensated quite well off of it, thanks to his Name, Image and Likeness earning potential. Although it’s not always an exact number, his NIL Valuation according to On3 was a staggering $4.8 million. A mark that only trailed Texas quarterback and nephew of Peyton Manning, Arch Manning.

However, as revealed during an interview with Bob Costas by insider and author Howard Bryant, Flagg’s earnings were significantly higher than the estimated numbers.

Duke Blue Devils forward Cooper Flagg (2).Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Duke Blue Devils forward Cooper Flagg (2).Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

After initially asking Costas how much money he thought Flagg brought in during his lone season in Durham, Bryant answered his own question with a jaw-dropping figure. As a result of Flagg inking monster deals with New Balance and Fanatics, he was bringing in at least $28 million on the year.

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“He had a $13 million deal with New Balance and then $15 million with Fanatics,” Bryant said.

A staggering mark, considering an April report revealed that at least eight teams in college basketball will spend over $10 million on their entire roster for next season.

While around $30 million is chump change by any means, Flagg’s earnings will more than double following next month’s NBA Draft. Flagg has been projected to be the top pick for over a year, and now that the Dallas Mavericks have the pick, the safest assumption in the world is that he will be heading to the Lone Star State. According to Spotrac, the No. 1 pick is set to sign a four-year deal worth nearly $63 million.

Turns out being a generational basketball prospect pays quite well, who knew?

Related: Cooper Flagg Makes Big Career Move Before NBA Draft

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on May 31, 2025, where it first appeared.



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Celebrating the Football Life of Legendary Coach Peter Mazzaferro

By Jim Fenton   BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — Peter Mazzaferro had a number of different addresses after graduating from Suffield Academy in Connecticut.   He spent four years at Centre College in Danville, Ky., graduating in 1954, and pursued a Master’s degree at Springfield College in Massachusetts.   Mazzaferro was then drafted into the U.S. Army and […]

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By Jim Fenton

 

BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — Peter Mazzaferro had a number of different addresses after graduating from Suffield Academy in Connecticut.

 

He spent four years at Centre College in Danville, Ky., graduating in 1954, and pursued a Master’s degree at Springfield College in Massachusetts.

 

Mazzaferro was then drafted into the U.S. Army and was stationed in Texas and Virginia, and he was also a teacher and coach in Philmont, N.Y.

 

He was a college coach at Waynesburg University and Geneva College in Pennsylvania and also Curry College in Milton, Mass.

 

After all those stops, Mazzaferro found a permanent home when he was hired as an assistant football coach at the former Bridgewater State College in 1966 by head coach Ed Swenson.

 

At the age of 36, Mazzaferro landed in a spot where he would settle in, becoming the long-time head coach and an associate professor in the Department of Physical Education.

 

Mazzaferro was the Bears’ head coach from 1968 until 2004, compiling a 195-137-7 record.

 

Coach Mazzaferro died on Friday, May 30 at the age of 94.

 

After his 34-year teaching and 36-year coaching career ended, Mazzaferro could be found at the Bridgewater State football, basketball and baseball games, following the athletics program closely while in his 90s.

 

The school meant a lot to Mazzaferro, who was born in Torrington, Conn., on June 24, 1930.

 

“It’s been my whole life, really,” Mazzaferro once said. “I dedicated my life to Bridgewater State football.”

 

Mazzaferro was in need of a job in 1966, and Swenson, who he had met at a coaching clinic in the Catskills, was there to offer one.

 

After two seasons on Swenson’s staff, Mazzaferro was elevated to the head job when Swenson, also the director of athletics, stepped down.

 

The Bears won six New England Football Conference titles and made it to the NCAA Division 3 tournament in 1999 and 2000 under Mazzaferro. He also guided them to ECAC postseason games in 1989 and 1992.

 

Mazzaferro was the New England Football Writers Divisions 2-3 Coach of the Year in 1989 and 1999. BSU went 34-6-1 from 1989-92, putting together a 10-0 regular season on the way to the NCAAs.

 

He received the George C. Carens Award in 1996 for outstanding contributions to college football in New England and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the All-American Football Foundation.

 

“I had met Ed Swenson at a coaching clinic up at the Catskills,” recalled Mazzaferro. “One time when I was coaching at Waynesburg (University in Pennsylvania), he asked me to play them.

 

I looked at the football guide and Bridgewater wasn’t even listed. I didn’t know much about it.

 

“I came here and they gave me faculty ranking and a decent salary, so I never thought of leaving.

 

“If I had never met Ed Swenson back then, “I guess I never would have known about Bridgewater State.”

 

Mazzaferro was a defensive end on the Centre College football team in the 1950s and ran the quarter-mile in track in addition to playing basketball. Mazzaferro was inducted into Centre’s Athletics Hall of Fame in 2008.

 

Whenever Mazzaferro was discussing his alma mater, he was sure to note that Centre pulled off one of the greatest college football upsets in 1921, knocking off Harvard.

 

Mazzaferro was inducted into the Bridgewater State University Athletics Hall of Fame in 1994.

 

“We refer to him as ‘Papa Bear,'” Rich Florence, who played for Mazzaferro from 1971-74 and was an assistant coach from 1977-93, once said. “He’s touched and he’s  impacted the lives of so many players. It’s almost tough to count them. He’s just so well respected.”

 

Joe Verria, the current head coach at BSU, also played for Mazzaferro from 1976-79 and became one of his assistants in 1988.

 

“He’s someone who has dedicated his life to BSU football, BSU athletics,” Verria once said. “When I came  here my freshman year, he was my head coach and he’s the one who gave me the opportunity to coach college football and I’ve been here ever since.”

 

Bridgewater State honored Mazzaferro on Sept. 8, 2023 when it named the Bears’ home field the Peter Mazzaferro Field.

 

“The reason is really clear,” said BSU President Fred Clark at the time. “He’s done so much for us, 36 years as not  just a coach but a physical education faculty member, and in both areas he excelled.

 

“It’s the way he coached that influenced my enthusiasm. He focused on fair play, strong character  and understood the importance of not just creating great students but creating great people.

 

“We remember where we’ve come from and as we’re moving forward into the future, we remember that we  stand on the shoulders of truly great people that created the foundation on which we’ve built.

 

“Peter Mazzaferro is one of those folks who created the remarkable foundation here at Bridgewater State.”

 

Mazzaferro wrote a book, “Dropkick Me Through the Goalposts,” detailing his life and coaching career. He told the story of teaching and coaching at Ockawamick Central School near Albany, N.Y., where one of the students was Oliver North, the Marine involved in the Iran-Contra scandal.

 

He was also an expert on western Pennsylvania because of his time at Waynesburg and Geneva and rattled off the names of outstanding football talent from the area like Joe Montana, Joe Namath, Mike Ditka, Dan Marino and Johnny Unitas.

 

Mazzaferro also worked at camps operated by Clair Bee, the famous basketball coach.

 

But for all of his stops along the way, none could top all of the time that he spent at Bridgewater State dating back to the mid-1960s.



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Texas Tech softball player key as pitcher, hitter vs. UCLA

Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series OKLAHOMA CITY — NiJaree Canady continued to dominate as a pitcher and added a key hit for the Texas Tech softball team in their Women’s College World […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY — NiJaree Canady continued to dominate as a pitcher and added a key hit for the Texas Tech softball team in their Women’s College World Series game against UCLA on Saturday at Devon Park.

Canady improved to 32-5 on the season in the complete-game effort, striking out seven batters in Texas Tech’s 3-1 win over the Bruins. She allowed just two hits and two walks through six innings before the Bruins got a pair of hits to lead off the bottom of the seventh.

Much like she did when UCLA loaded the bases with one out in the second inning, Canady got out of it, getting a strikeout and a fielder’s choice hit to Alexa Langeliers at second base, who tagged out the runner for the final out of the game.

At the plate, Canady laced a double over the head of the right fielder that set up Texas Tech’s first run of the game, which came via a steal of home from Makayla Garcia, who was the pinch runner for Canady.

Through two WCWS games with the Red Raiders, Canady is 2-0 with 17 strikeouts, six hits, two walks and one run allowed.



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Chris Kent – Assistant Coach/Director of Player Development – Men’s Basketball Coaches

Florida State head men’s basketball coach Luke Loucks has named Chris Kent as the Director of Player Development on his first Seminole staff. Kent began his coaching career as an assistant coach for the Fort Wayne Mad Ants in the NBA D-League from 2013 to 2015. He then served as a graduate assistant for the […]

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Florida State head men’s basketball coach Luke Loucks has named Chris Kent as the Director of Player Development on his first Seminole staff.

Kent began his coaching career as an assistant coach for the Fort Wayne Mad Ants in the NBA D-League from 2013 to 2015. He then served as a graduate assistant for the Florida State University men’s basketball program from August 2015 to May 2017 before joining the University of South Florida (USF) men’s basketball program in June 2017 as the team’s Director of Player Development.

In 2018, Kent joined the Chicago Bulls as a coaching intern for the 2018-19 season. Following his internship, he was hired as the team’s video coordinator. He later transitioned to the Windy City Bulls, the Chicago Bulls’ G League affiliate, serving as an assistant coach during the 2022-23 season.

Kent played college basketball for two seasons at both Huntington University (Ind.) and Trine University (Ind.), bringing firsthand playing experience to his coaching career.

 



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Report: Texas A&M to part ways with assistant coach Will Fox after retaining Michael Earley

After announcing plans to retain Michael Earley as head baseball coach, Texas A&M is planning to make changes to the staff. The program is set to part ways with assistant coach Will Fox, D1Baseball’s Kendall Rogers reported. Fox spent the last six seasons at Texas A&M after previously serving on the staff at his alma […]

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After announcing plans to retain Michael Earley as head baseball coach, Texas A&M is planning to make changes to the staff. The program is set to part ways with assistant coach Will Fox, D1Baseball’s Kendall Rogers reported.

Fox spent the last six seasons at Texas A&M after previously serving on the staff at his alma mater, McNeese State. Rogers said he “would not be surprised” if he’s involved with an assistant vacancy at McNeese following his departure.

News of Texas A&M’s plans to part ways with Fox comes after Earley’s first season as head coach. The Aggies entered the year as the preseason No. 1 team, but wound up missing the NCAA Tournament one year after making it to the College World Series finals.

Following the 30-26 record, questions swirled about Earley’s future. However, Texas A&M athletics director Trev Alberts announced the program is set to bring him back for Year 2 in 2026.

“Earlier today I met with Coach Earley to discuss the state of our baseball program,” Alberts said in a statement. “I appreciate Mike’s work in taking a holistic view of what changes need to be made so that we have a baseball program that meets our high standards. Baseball success is critically important to Texas A&M. I am confident in Mike’s ability to execute the needed change and fully support his vision going forward.”

Earley served as the hitting coach on last year’s Texas A&M staff, which rattled off a run to Omaha. He appeared set to leave and follow Schlossnagle to Texas, but ultimately chose to stay put in College Station and take over at Texas A&M.

After the news came down, the Aggies got another big boost when Gavin Grahovac announced his plans to return next year, as well. He told TexAgs’ Ryan Brauninger he wants to be part of turning things around after the up-and-down season.

“There was never a decision to be made for me. I’m looking forward to being a leader for Coach Earley,” Grahovac said. “This year wasn’t the standard. There’s a chip on our shoulder to fix it and get it right.”

Grahovac was among the names to return to College Station following last year’s coaching change. He was a key part of Texas A&M’s run to the College World Series finals, hitting .298 with 23 home runs and 66 RBI. However, he suffered a shoulder injury and underwent season-ending surgery after just six games this year.



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Report: SEC indicates it is not supporting multiple CFP automatic bids after ‘pushback’

Following this week’s spring meetings, the SEC indicates it is not supporting multiple automatic bids to the College Football Playoff, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reported. The league received “pushback” from coaches and data, which led to the change in support for the proposed 4-4-2-2-1 format. Top officials at Georgia and Alabama played key roles in […]

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Following this week’s spring meetings, the SEC indicates it is not supporting multiple automatic bids to the College Football Playoff, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reported. The league received “pushback” from coaches and data, which led to the change in support for the proposed 4-4-2-2-1 format.

Top officials at Georgia and Alabama played key roles in the conversations this past week, Dellenger added, considering the model could have limited the SEC to four spots in the CFP. They also pushed back on the idea of “play-in games.”

Throughout the week in Destin, the sense was SEC coaches had more support for a 5-plus-11 model than the 4-4-2-2-1. Under the latter, the SEC and Big Ten would each receive four bids to the CFP, while the Big 12 and ACC would get two bids apiece, and one spot would be for the Group of 6. There would also be three at-large spots.

Under the 5-plus-11, the five highest-ranked conference champions would make the field, along with 11 at-large teams. However, Dellenger noted, it “is in no way a guarantee for approval.”

On3’s Pete Nakos confirmed Big Ten athletics directors discussed the 5-plus-11 format on their weekly call this week. Dellenger also added the sense is most would not support the model if the SEC stays at eight league games.

The SEC’s conference schedule could be a reason for the coaches’ hesitancy about the 4-4-2-2-1 model, Dellenger said. That could lead the league to add a ninth game, one of the central points of discussion during this week’s meetings. Dellenger wondered how many coaches want the additional league game, and he heard frustration was building around the 4-4-2-2-1 format.

“I think they’re not in favor of that for a few reasons,” Dellenger said. “One, I think most of the coaches in the SEC don’t want to play a ninth conference game. I think when you have a 4-4-2-2-1 format, that would lead itself to playing a ninth conference game. I don’t know how many coaches want to play these play-in games that they talked about doing, along with the 4-4-2-2-1.

“So the ADs heard today from some somewhat, I heard, frustrated coaches at this model. We have a real serious consideration here from the SEC ADs and presidents today, and then tomorrow, for this 5-11 that has more at-larges than the automatic qualifiers.”

During its spring meetings, the SEC presented documents and graphics illustrating the “gauntlet” of the regular season. It showed the strength of the conference through multiple metrics such as Massey Ratings, SP+ and strength of record.

The documents illustrated the rigor of the conference schedule. In the last 10 years, the SEC showed it only has two teams outside the Top 50 in both average strength of record and average Massey Rating. That, the league said, showed “clear evidence of the rigor of its regular season compared to other schools.”





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