Daily Archives: February 13, 2013

Two key pieces returning for Tide in 2013

This is the first of a three-day series of posts welcoming the 2013 Alabama baseball season. The Crimson Tide starts the season on Friday at home at Sewell-Thomas Stadium against VMI, the first of a three-game series. Coverage of the series can be found here on Daily Bama Blog.

Comfort has been the hot-button word for Alabama baseball coach Mitch Gaspard. In 2012, the Crimson Tide did not have much of it, as freshmen and inexperienced sophomores were heavily populating the pitching staff and depth was not as great as the coaching staff would have liked.

Gaspard has that comfort now that pitchers Tucker Hawley and Taylor Wolfe are returning from arm injuries that kept both of them out for the entire season last year.

“This team has more depth and roster of any team we’ve had,” Gaspard said. “There are still a lot of young guys on the roster, but I think there are some talented guys.

“I think right now we’re probably 10 or 12 deep in our pitching staff, which is really comforting from where we were last year.”

The addition of the two pitchers, both redshirt juniors, not only adds two bodies to the rotation, but also two players capable of performing well immediately.

“I’m really encouraged right now,” Gaspard said. “Velocity with Tucker and Taylor aren’t yet where we’d like to be, but they’re not that far off. The biggest issue with those guys, and a lot of young guys, is command. One of the biggest Achilles’ heels last season was the pitch count; we couldn’t get a starter past the fifth inning.”

Hawley, despite a setback in the fall with shoulder tendinitis, is ready for the 2013 season.

“My arm’s been feeling great,” he said. “Throwing program went amazing.”

Gaspard added, “He’s a strike-thrower. He’s pitched in Regionals, Super Regionals and big-time SEC venues. Tucker can help not only with the sophomore group, but this freshman group also.
Tucker’s always been a strike machine.”

Story and video contributed by Brett Hudson

TimesDaily complete report on 4 arrested UA football players

With some help from Daily Bama Blog contributor Brett Hudson and the Associated Press, Tom Smith with the TimesDaily in Florence wrote a story for the Wednesday print edition. Here is his work.

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TUSCALOOSA — Former Russellville standout Brent Calloway was suspended from the Alabama football team today after being charged a day earlier with fraudulent use of a debit/credit card. Three of his teammates were also suspended after being charged with knocking students unconscious and stealing their wallets.

Calloway, 20, was accused of using one victim’s university action card/debit card and knowing it was stolen, according to a deposition filed in Tuscaloosa County District Court.

The deposition (which can be seen here) said Calloway admitted using the card for numerous purchases from the vending machine on the first floor of Bryant Hall. Calloway, a running back, was released on $5,000 bail.

The other football players arrested Monday:

– Defensive back Eddie Williams was charged with two counts of second-degree robbery and also fraudulent use of a credit/debit card. He was released on $65,000 bail.
– Linebacker Tyler Hayes was charged with two counts of second-degree robbery. He was released on $60,000 bail.
– Defensive lineman Dennis “D.J.” Pettway was charged with two counts of second-degree robbery. He was released on $60,000 bail.
– Hayes, 18, and Williams, 20, confessed to robbing a student who was punched in the head and face and kicked in the ribs and back early Monday morning, according to court documents.

Williams said Pettway, 20, and Hayes waited in a nearby vehicle about an hour later while he knocked out and robbed another student. Williams and Hayes both admitted to their involvement, according to the documents.

Williams also admitted to using a stolen credit card to buy snacks from vending machines inside a dormitory.

“The young men charged are indefinitely suspended as we continue to gather information and talk to the appropriate people,” football coach Nick Saban said in a statement released this afternoon. “The university and football program have strict guidelines regarding issues of this magnitude. This behavior is unacceptable for any student-athlete at the University of Alabama and not representative of our football program.”

All four players were backups last season for Alabama, which has won two straight national titles and three of the past four. Williams didn’t play in 2012. But he was one of the nation’s top prospects the previous year and moved from receiver to safety.

The first student reported having his Apple Macbook Pro stolen from his backpack. Both sustained mild concussions, cuts on the face and heavy swelling, and had their wallets taken, according to documents.

The first incident occurred at approximately 12:35 a.m. in the 800 block of Campus Drive and the second at approximately 1:20 a.m. in the 200 block of Seventh Avenue, the school said today in a release.

University police posted an advisory Monday saying two students reported being robbed after they were approached by two men who asked for a light for a cigarette.

Athletics Director Mal Moore issued the following statement: “This is a very serious matter and we are very disappointed in the actions that have resulted in the charges against these student-athletes. In this type of situation, the athletics department works in conjunction with the university. We will have more to say at the appropriate time.”

Police also said Williams had been arrested on a charge of carrying a pistol without a permit a day before his Monday arrest. Tuscaloosa police Sgt. Brent Blankley said in a news release that a clerk at a gas station called police early Sunday, telling officers that Williams threatened that he had something in his trunk after a fight about paying for gas.

Officers who pulled over Williams found a pistol in his pants pocket, the release said. In that case, he was released on $500 bail.

Jail records did not show whether any of the players had an attorney.

This is the second arrest for Calloway since he signed a scholarship with the Crimson Tide in 2011.

He was arrested on marijuana possession charges in October 2012 as a passenger in a vehicle stopped on campus.

A high school All-American at Russellville and four-star recruit, Calloway, along with the other three players, all were backup players on the 2012 National Championship team.

As a senior at Russellville, Calloway ran for 1,974 yards and 29 touchdowns while also starring at linebacker.

He made headlines in January 2011 after switching his long-standing commitment from Alabama to Auburn. Another change of heart led him to sign with the Tide in February 2011.

Alabama ends Georgia’s five-game winning streak, now tied for 2nd in SEC

Alabama coach Anthony Grant coaches guard Andrew Steele and forward Nick Jacobs, a Georgia native, in Alabama's road win.

Alabama coach Anthony Grant coaches guard Andrew Steele and forward Nick Jacobs, a Georgia native, in Alabama’s road win (Photo from the Associated Press).

Tuesday night, the Crimson Tide traveled to Athens, Ga. and earned a 52-45 win, its second in-a-row before coming to Tuscaloosa for a two-game homestand. Here is the AP report.

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ATHENS, Ga. — Levi Randolph and Rodney Cooper hit back-to-back 3-pointers in the closing minutes, leading Alabama to an ugly 52-45 victory that ended Georgia’s five-game winning streak Tuesday night.

The Crimson Tide (16-8, 8-3 Southeastern Conference) won for the eighth time in 10 games with another stifling defensive effort. Alabama has held nine straight SEC opponents to less than 60 points, limiting the Bulldogs to 31 percent (16 of 52) from the field.

Georgia (12-12, 6-5) went more than 10 minutes without a field goal in the second half but still had a chance because of both teams’ offensive woes. When Donte Williams slammed in a wild miss off the backboard, the Bulldogs led 41-40 with 2:37 remaining.

But Randolph swished a 3-pointer, and Cooper followed with another to finish off Georgia.

Cooper led the Crimson Tide with 14 points — no one else on the winning team was in double figures. Alabama prevailed despite shooting just 39 percent (19 of 49) and getting beat on the boards, 41-33.

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope scored 22 points for the Bulldogs, and Nemanja Djurisic added 12. But Georgia didn’t have another player with more than four points, a staggering display of offensive ineptitude that might have ended any hope of making an improbable late-season run for NCAA consideration.

The teams meet again March 9 in Tuscaloosa, the regular-season finale for both.

Georgia was trying for its first six-game winning streak in the SEC since 2001, coming into the game tied with Kentucky for the longest active run in the conference. Both teams lost Tuesday, with the Wildcats falling at Florida.