Category Archives: SEC Tournament

Notebook: Streaking Alabama men’s golf goes for back-to-back SEC Championships

Cory Whitsett is swinging the hottest club for the Crimson Tide men's golf team moving towards the SEC Championship Tournament. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Cory Whitsett is swinging the hottest club for the Crimson Tide men’s golf team moving towards the SEC Championship Tournament. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Alabama men’s golf knows a thing or two about peaking at the right moment: after winning the SEC Championship last season, it went on all the way to the national championship round of match play before finishing as the national runners-up.

Now on a three-tournament win streak and won four of the last five, Alabama just hopes it has not reached that point too early before the postseason.

“I hope not,” Alabama men’s golf coach Jay Seawell said. “We want to be good everyday.

“I’m proud of the guys. We haven’t settled, we haven’t taken a day off, I’m proud of how we committed. They’re a very hungry team.”

Back to old form

Of the three-straight team tournament wins, two of them were also claimed by an individual member of the Tide, both going to Cory Whitsett. Whitsett, a junior from Houston, Texas, is not surprising anyone with his recent success, but is just getting close to realizing his potential.

“He came here as a great player,” Seawell said. “He had a little bit of a setback before he came here, he had a stress fracture in his back and didn’t play golf for about eight months before he came to school. It was just a process to get him fully back and confident.

“Just like Tiger on TV, it’s taken a little time to get him what we call ‘back.’”

Whitsett’s improvement was no surprise to him, either.

“No, I think it’s just the level of improvement I’ve wanted to see since I’ve come to Alabama,” Whitsett said. “Coach Seawell and the staff understand what I need to do to play my best golf, and I think my results this semester have shown that.”

How he started his comeback may be unorthodox, however. Whitsett did not take on a new practice technique or even make a drastic swing change: he just did what he came to college to do.

“I tried to play more,” Whitsett. “Coach Bradley loves playing and all the guys love playing, so any opportunity I get I try to get out on the golf course.

“When I’ve been practicing, I’ve been working on shaping shots and really getting rid of any technical thought.”

His teammates are enjoying just watching him work his way around the links.

“He’s just Cory, he’s just a great player,” sophomore Justin Thomas said. “I don’t even consider him on-fire, he’s just being him. I think he’s finally in the right place mentally.”

Seawell added, “I truly believe he is as good as he’s ever been and it’s fun to watch.”

Staying away from sophomore slump

Few things impressed Seawell more than Justin Thomas as a freshman, taking National Player of the Year honors after winning the SEC Individual Championship.

Even more impressive, how Thomas has handled that load going into this season.

“That’s a big burden, to have to be the Player of the Year and carry it into next year,” Seawell said. “I’m really proud of how he’s handled that: won a couple of times already, on par to be a All-American.

“Maybe hasn’t made the putts that he made last year consistently like he did last year, but still doing a great job on- and off-the-course for us.”

Sopomore Justin Thomas of Goshen, Kentucky. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Sopomore Justin Thomas of Goshen, Kentucky. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Thomas said, despite the praise from his head coach, his season has not been as good as he had hoped it would be after his freshman campiagn. But now is the time to turn things around.

“We’re getting down to that crunch time where we’re trying to make a great year out of a good year,” Thomas said.

“It truly decides the champion”

At all levels of golf, the best players do not always win. Often, as it never does in football or basketball, the playing field favors certain teams or competitors.

The home of the SEC Tournament, Seaside Golf Course in Seaside, Ga., might be immune from this: it will be equally difficult for all teams.

“Sea Island is a great golf course,” Seawell said. “All 10 years I’ve been there, the best team has won. It truly decides the champion. The team that’s the most confident usually wins.”

The weather, even more out of the players’ control, may have more affect than the course itself.

“If the weather is good and it’s not breezy, it’s a very gettable golf course,” Whitsett said. “But it’s all at the mercy of the wind. If the wins blows, it’s very difficult.”

Full Story: Florida catches fire in second half, ends Alabama’s SEC championship bid one game early

Alabama forward Nick Jacobs was leading the team with nine points at halftime and finished with 11. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Alabama forward Nick Jacobs was leading the team with nine points at halftime and finished with 11. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Here is the full Associated Press story from Nashville from Alabama’s 61-51 loss to Florida in the semifinals of the SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament. You can also click here to view the boxscore.

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Florida finally showed it can win a close game. All it takes is for senior guard Kenny Boynton to answer his coach’s challenge.

Held scoreless for the first 25 minutes, Boynton had 11 straight points during a critical 15-0 run Saturday as No. 13 Florida erased a 10-point, second-half deficit to beat Alabama 61-51 in a Southeastern Conference semifinal.

Boynton said he benefited from Gators coach Billy Donovan’s halftime message to him. The senior guard’s second-half surge helped Florida end its season-long frustration in close games.

“He challenged me to come out and play with confidence,” Boynton said. “Honestly he did challenge me, and I think I tried to step up to it.”

The top-seeded Gators (26-6) advanced to the championship game Sunday against Mississippi or Vanderbilt. Alabama (21-12), the tournament’s No. 4 seed, will spend Sunday waiting to learn its fate from the NCAA tournament selection committee.

Most mock brackets had Alabama on the wrong side of the NCAA tournament bubble at the start of the week. Alabama went 12-6 in conference play during the regular season but hurt its cause by going 1-5 in December, including home nonconference losses to Mercer and Tulane.

“I’ll just go to sleep, wake up tomorrow and see what they choose,” Alabama guard Trevor Releford said. “Whatever they choose, we go from there.”

Boynton scored all 16 of his points during a 7-minute span. Patric Young had 13 points and nine rebounds for the Gators. Mike Rosario added 10 points. Releford scored 12 points, and Nick Jacobs and Trevor Lacey each added 11 for Alabama.

Alabama led 37-27 with 16:05 remaining before Florida reeled off 15 straight points over the next 5 minutes. In the lone regular-season meeting between the two teams, Florida rallied from eight points down in the final 12½ minutes to win 64-52 on March 2 in Gainesville.

That 64-52 result represented Florida’s narrowest margin of victory all season before Saturday. The Gators entered Saturday leading the nation in scoring margin (plus-18.9), but they’re 0-5 in games decided by six points or fewer.

“We know that to win out games in the NCAA tournament, games are going to be close, so we have to consistently close out games,” Boynton said.

This game featured the SEC’s two best scoring defenses, with Florida (53.4) and Alabama (58.9) allowing fewer than 60 points per game. And it started out as a defensive struggle. Seven minutes into the game, Florida led 6-2.

But after missing four of its first five shots and committing four turnovers in the first 5½ minutes, Alabama’s offense found a rhythm.

The Crimson Tide shot 55 percent (11 of 20) in the first half against a Florida team that hadn’t allowed anyone to shoot 50 percent or better this season.

The Tide stayed hot early in the second half and extended its lead to 37-27 when Releford sank two free throws with 16:05 remaining.

“We were playing good defense,” Young said. “They were knocking down some tough twos, some tough threes. But we knew they can’t hold that up the whole (game) because they haven’t been doing that the whole year. It’s been tough for them to score in the halfcourt the whole season.”

That’s when Boynton took over the game.

Boynton entered the day shooting just 38.9 percent, making him a subject of criticism for much of his senior season. Boynton shot 1 of 7 and scored two points Friday in an SEC quarterfinal victory over LSU, but he didn’t get down on himself and maintained the support of his teammates.

“Our team loves Kenny Boynton,” Donovan said. “When people watch and the ball doesn’t go in the basket, it’s very, very easy to point fingers and be critical. But I would say that maybe of anybody on our team, Kenny Boynton is truly loved inside of our team. He’s a great teammate. He does want to win. He wants to make every shot he takes. He doesn’t intentionally try to miss. But he’s gone through a little bit of a tough shooting period.”

That tough period might have ended Saturday.

First, the senior guard made a pair of free throws to cut Alabama’s lead to 37-31. Next, he made a driving basket. Then, Boynton sank a 3-pointer. He followed that up with a fast-break layup that gave Florida the lead. Boynton closed this stunning flurry by going into the paint and making a shot off the glass that extended Florida’s advantage to 40-37 with 12:02 remaining.

“My teammates found me in transition,” Boynton said. “Basically, I didn’t get more aggressive or anything. The floor just opened up more.”

Boynton added a basket that put Florida ahead 47-40 with 9:40 left and a 3-pointer that made 50-42 with 8:11 remaining. Alabama wouldn’t cut the margin below four points the rest of the way.

“This was a grind-it-out game,” Rosario said. “This was a 40-minute game. Guys knew Kenny needed to step up for us in the second half. I felt he took on that challenge. When that run happened, it just fed off positive energy to all (his) teammates. I felt everyone on the team embraced that.”

Halftime Report: Alabama leads No. 1 seed Florida 28-25

Alabama is led by Trevor Lacey’s eight first-half points as the No. 4 seed Crimson Tide leads No. 1 seed Florida 28-25 in the semifinals of the SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament. Winner of this game moves on to face either Ole Miss or Vanderbilt in the SEC Championship Game.

Lacey, like fellow guard Trevor Releford, is shooting 50 percent from the floor (Lacey 3-6, Releford 2-4) as Alabama is leading the shooting battle 55 percent to 40.7 percent over the Gators. Alabama is 3-5 from behind the three-point line while Florida is 1-8.

Nick Jacobs has nine points off the bench on 4-5 shooting.

Lacey and Moussa Gueye both have four rebounds, while Jacobs has three. Alabama is outrebounding the Gators 15-11.

The Tide had three turnovers in the first five minutes of play compared to just two points, but then turned the ball over only twice in the next 15 minutes to end the first half with five turnovers. Florida had two first-half turnovers.

Florida is led by Mike Rosario’s seven points on 2-3 shooting. Erik Murphy, Patric Young, Will Yeguete and Casey Prather all have four points.

Full Story: Releford, Randolph push Alabama to SEC Tournament semifinals

Trevor Releford had 14 points in Alabama's win in the SEC Men's Basketball Tournament quarterfinals over Tennessee. (AP photo)

Trevor Releford had 14 points in Alabama’s win in the SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament quarterfinals over Tennessee. (AP photo)

Here’s the AP report from Alabama’s 58-48 win over Tennessee in the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament on Friday. The win gave the Crimson Tide the right to face Florida at noon CST on Saturday with a berth in the SEC Championship Game on the line. There are also a couple of quotes from postgame at the bottom of the post.

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Levi Randolph scored 15 points Friday as No. 4 seed Alabama defeated No. 5 seed Tennessee 58-48 in a Southeastern Conference tournament quarterfinal between two teams seeking to improve their postseason credentials.

Alabama (21-11) advanced to a Saturday semifinal against No. 13 Florida, the tournament’s top seed. Florida (25-6) trounced LSU 80-58 in its quarterfinal.

This game was considered one of the most intriguing of the day because both teams are considered to be on the NCAA tournament bubble.

Tennessee and Alabama had split two close regular-season meetings, with Alabama winning 68-65 at Tuscaloosa on Jan. 12 and the Vols surviving 54-53 in the Jan. 26 rematch at Knoxville. This game followed a similar pattern, as neither team pulled ahead by more than five points in a first half that featured three ties and four lead changes.

Alabama pulled away in the second half by wearing Tennessee down with its pressure defense.

Tennessee (20-12) shot 32.1 percent (18 of 56) overall, 50 percent (7 of 14) on free throws and 21.7 percent (5 of 23) on 3-pointers. After making six of its first seven shots Friday, Tennessee went 12 of 49 the rest of the way.

Trevor Releford scored 14 points for Alabama, which shot 41.3 percent (19 of 46), 78.9 percent (15 of 19) on free throws and 50 percent (5 of 10) from 3-point range. Nick Jacobs had six points and a career-high 12 rebounds.

Josh Richardson scored 16 points for Tennessee, which lost for just the second time in its last 11 games. Jarnell Stokes added 12 points and 13 rebounds for his 15th double-double of the season, the most by a
Tennessee player since Bernard King had 19 in 1976-77.

Tennessee star Jordan McRae had been averaging 24.6 points over his last seven games, but he scored just nine points and shot 3 of 13 Friday while struggling with foul trouble.

The Vols made six of their first seven shots and went on an early 9-0 run to grab a 13-8 lead, but they cooled off from there as Alabama quickly caught up.

Alabama had plenty of success driving to the basket early on with Releford and redshirt freshman Retin Obasohan, a reserve guard who hadn’t even played in the Tide’s two regular-season games with Tennessee.

Tennessee lost the lead by getting too dependent on its perimeter attack. The Vols attempted nearly as many 3-point shots (13) as two-pointers (14) in the first half.

The Vols trailed 44-41 midway through the second half when Trae Golden and Armani Moore missed potential game-tying 3-pointers. Alabama followed with a 6-0 run to seize the momentum and grab a 50-41 advantage. Jacobs made consecutive baskets and McRae picked up his fourth foul during that critical spurt.

Tennessee responded with five straight points to cut Alabama’s lead to 50-46, but that’s as close as the Vols would get.

Also, a couple of quotes from postgame.

Alabama coach Anthony Grant: “You have to take your hat off to Tennessee. I thought they came in to this game playing great basketball right now as a team, and we knew we would have to come out and compete at a high level today. I’m really proud of our guys for answering that bell. It was a highly contested game, physical game, a game of inches, and it’s a good win.”

Junior point guard Trevor Releford: “I think we are really successful when we get out in transition, just play up-tempo, push the ball and try to get easy layups. We tried to do that today. For the most part it worked.”

Alabama comes in as No. 4 seed in SEC Tournament, has three possible opponents

imageAlabama is one of four programs that lays claim to the first double-bye in SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament history, locking up one of the top four seeds in the tournament with its thrilling win over Georgia and a little help from Tennessee in their home win on Missouri on Saturday.

But with the extra day off comes a little more uncertainty, as Alabama’s list of potential opponents increases from two to three. The winner of Mississippi State’s opening round game with Auburn will move on to play No. 5 seed Tennessee. The winner of that game will advance to take on the Crimson Tide.

Alabama is 1-1 against Tennessee this season, winning at home 68-65 on Jan. 12 but lost to the Volunteers in Knoxville just 14 days later, 54-53.

The Tide also split the season series with Auburn, winning at home 61-43 on Feb. 26 to avenge a 49-37 loss at Auburn Arena on Feb. 6. Alabama swept the season series with the Bulldogs, winning 75-43 in Starkville in its third conference game of the year before winning in Coleman Coliseum 64-56 on Feb. 20.

Live blog: LSU/Alabama SEC baseball championship

FINAL: LSU 4, Alabama 3

Jon Kelton struck out, Brett Whitaker grounded out to second and Andrew Miller struck out to end it.


More later.

Middle 10th: LSU leads 4-3 after Tyler Hanover’s RBI single to left scored Matt Gaudet. That followed a Josh Rutledge throwing error on what would have been the third out of the inning. 

End 10th: No clutch 2-out hit this time. Jake Smith left the game-winning run stranded at third with his pop out to right. Ross Wilson got to third on a walk, stolen base and a throwing error. Still 3-3 heading into 11th.

Middle 10th: Jake Smith turns a huge double play after allowing a lead off single. Micah Gibbs SAC bunt attempt turned into the DP that included a very close play at first. LSU was not happy with the call. Two walks and a looking strike out later, the game remains tied 3-3 with the top of the Alabama lineup coming to the plate.

End ninth: Cal Tinsley struck out swinging, as did Andrew Miller and Brock Bennett grounded out to second base. You know what that means: Bonus baseball. We’re going to extras with the SEC title on the line, tied 3-3. LSU fans are jacked up.

5:59 update: Play ball!

5:39 update: Tarp coming up again. Let’s hope we can play some baseball soon. A good chunk of the crowd took off after it went back on about an hour ago. Restart time: 6:05 p.m. (Central)

You’ve got to be kidding me:  Tarp is out. We are delayed by lightning again at 4:53 p.m.

Middle ninth: Andrew Miller makes catch falling into the wall for first out then another in shallow left before a Mason Katz single to left. Mikie Mahtook then grounded out to end the threat, 3-3 going to the bottom of the ninth.

End eighth: Jake Smith single to right scores Ross Wilson, ties game 3-3 before Jon Kelton pops out to left field.

Middle eighth: Ross Wilson’s leaping stab of Alex Edwards’s hard line drive saved at least a run and ended the threat with runners on first and second. Taylor Dugas up first next inning with 48-game streak of reaching base in jeopardy.

End seventh: LSU left fielder Mason Katz just made the play of the game so far. He dove to catch a sinking liner off the bat of Brock Bennett then doubled up Brandt Hendricks who was expecting the ball to drop in for a single. That’s huge for LSU, still leading 3-2 with two innings left and the top of the Tide lineup coming up in the eighth.

Bottom seventh: Andrew Miller’s single scores Jon Kelton to cut deficit to 3-2 with one out and another new pitcher coming in.

Middle seventh: With Jimmy Nelson pitching, the Tide retires the side in order. 3-1 LSU.

Middle sixth: The Tide avoids damage after a 1-out triple. Still no score after the delay. LSU up 3-1.

End fifth: Taylor Dugas’ long drive to center field was not deep enough in this big park. Leon Landry gloves the third out to keep LSU up 3-1. Jimmy Nelson warming up in Tide bullpen.

Middle fifth: One hit, no runs, one runner left on base. LSU still leads 3-1.

3:26 p.m. update: And … we’re back. Play ball, take II.

3:05 update: Wrong again. Tarp off. Announcement says game restarts in 20 minutes. $20 says that doesn’t happen, but we’ll see.

2:58 p.m. update: False alarm. Tarp is still down and the weights holding to down are coming back out.

2:51 p.m. update: The tarp is about to come off the field and the radar looks more positive. How this delay affects pitching will be interesting.

RAIN DELAY!!
It’s 2:05 and the tarp just came out. We are delayed. In a softball update, Alabama was just stunned by a 2-out, 2-run homer in the bottom of the seventh to get eliminated by Hawaii, 5-4 is the final.



End fourth: Ross Wilson’s single to center scored Josh Rutledge from second to cut the hole to 3-1 with no outs. But that was all the damage Alabama did as Wilson was left standing on first. Then the rains began and the crowd is seeking shelter.

Middle fourth: Hawley strikes out two, retires side in order. Still 3-0 LSU.

End third: Alabama goes down in order again to trail 3-0 entering the fourth. In softball, a 3-run homer put the Tide up 4-3 late in the super regional title game.

Middle third: Mikie Mahtook’s lead-off homer put LSU up 3-0. Taylor +Wolfe then exits after 2+ innings after hitting Tyler Hanover. Tucker Hawley replaces him on the mound to close out the inning.

End second: A 1-2-3 inning included two strike outs. For the first time this week, Alabama is not in control.

Middle second: Wolfe records first walk by Alabama pitchers this week and Matt Gaudet makes him pay for it with a 2-run double to put the Tide behind for the first time all week, 2-0 LSU. Leon Landry’s long at-bat and walk set up the shot to left with two outs.

End first: The Tide strands Ross Wilson at second with a Clay Jones ground out to third. Score remains 0-0 under still-sunny skies.

Middle first: Tide pitcher Taylor Wolfe puts two strikes on all three hitters, strikes out last two in 1-2-3 first. After a half inning, 0-0 with the Tide coming to the plate. LSU fans are running away with the spirit stick at this point.

Weather improves; let's play ball

Much to my surprise, the weather has cleared and we are about 15 minutes from first pitch in the SEC baseball championship game between Alabama and LSU.

It appears as if a few hundred more LSU fans traveled to Hoover over night to balance out the crowd a little more. Alabama fans, though, still outnumber those in purple and gold.

Stay here for all the between-innings updates I can manage.

SEC baseball championship weather report

In a word: Bad.

About 90 minutes before scheduled first pitch of the championship game between Alabama and LSU, and the downpour we just experienced in Hoover was biblical. A look at the radar shows a lot of green, some orange and red — not good for a game of outdoor baseball.

We saw a similar rain storm an hour or so after Saturday’s game ended. The tarp was nowhere in sight so the grounds crew had to scramble to cover the infield, but not before taking a good soaking. We’ll see if that has any impact today.

Stay tuned for updates.

Live blog: Florida/Alabama baseball

FINAL: Alabama 5, Florida 2

The hot streak continues. Consecutive win No. 8 puts Alabama into the championship game with defending conference and national champion LSU.

The final begins at 1 p.m. Sunday and will air on ESPN2.

More later.

End sixth: Tide needs three outs to wrap up its spot in the championship game against LSU. Adam Morgan still on the mound.

Middle sixth: Preston Tucker scored on a ground out to cut the lead to 5-2 Alabama after his leadoff double and a SAC fly.

End fifth: Ross Wilson, Clay Jones and Jake Smith all went down with strike outs. After five innings, Alabama still leads 5-1.

Middle fifth: The Gators got one back, but still trails Alabama 5-1 heading into the bottom of the fifth. Morgan gave up a pair of doubles and not dominating as he had in the first few innings.

End fourth: For the first time all afternoon, Alabama doesn’t put a run on the board. It still leads 5-0 with three innings left.

Middle fourth: The Gators stranded two runners as Adam Morgan’s no-hit bid ended with a lead-off single by Nolan Fontana. No damage on the scoreboard, though. Still 5-0 Tide.

End third: A 2-out, 2-run single from Jake Smith puts Alabama ahead 5-0 with Adam Morgan rolling on the mound.

Middle third: The Tide worked around a Jake Smith throwing error to keep the shutout alive, 3-0 Alabama after 2 1/2.

End second: Andrew Miller’s 2-RBI double to the left field put the Tide up 3-0 before he was doubled off on a Brock Bennett line drive hit right to the second baseman.

Middle second: Three up, three down in the Florida half of the second. Still 1-0 Tide.

End first: Josh Rutledge scores on a Ross Wilson SAC fly to take a 1-0 lead. Rutledge reached on infield single, then advances to third on a pick-off attempt throwing error.

Middle first: Tide pitcher Adam Morgan puts the Gator batters down in order — the first two by strike out. The score: 0-0 heading into the bottom of the first. Remember, all games Saturday will last just seven innings because of weather delays.

Sky sunny for now

We are about 20 minutes from first pitch between Alabama and Florida in the SEC baseball semifinal. For now, the weather looks good, but storms are in the forecast later this afternoon.

The Tide will be playing without designated hitter David Kindred this afternoon as he deals with a medical issue. According to a news release just delivered, he “returned home for tests to determine the origin of shortness of breath and tightness in his chest.”

Kindred hit .314 with three home runs this season and he had a two-run single in Wednesday’s 7-1 win over Auburn on Wednesday. Brandt Hendricks (.279 average) replaced him in the seventh spot on Alabama’s lineup card.

UPDATED: More rain, more delays

10:20 a.m. UPDATE: Ole Miss and LSU will begin at 11 a.m. and all games will be seven innings today. That will be interesting to see how that helps teams who played Friday and have less bullpen support.

The first game of the SEC baseball tournament’s semifinal Saturday is already a half hour behind schedule, so we could be in for another marathon day. Look at the radar and weather forecast, and it looks even worse for what could be two or three or four games (depending on if winner’s bracket teams get victories in the first game).

This will give Florida a little more time to rest before meeting Alabama. The Gators didn’t finish off their win over Vanderbilt until a few minutes past midnight this morning, so I’m sure they are happy to see the tarp covering the Regions Park infield this morning.

The Alabama/Florida semifinal will start 30 minutes after conclusion of the LSU/Ole Miss game that was supposed to start at 9:30 a.m. Stay tuned.

In other SEC news, check out this New York Times story detailing potential NCAA troubles for Kentucky involving Birmingham product Eric Bledsoe

And now, the Bama Blog humorous video of the day and one of my personal favorites.

Alabama/Ole Miss baseball time lapse

Watch all the the 6-3 Crimson Tide win over the Rebels in 30 seconds via my trusty point and shoot camera. Enjoy.

Alabama/Ole Miss live blog: Tide wins

FINAL, ALABAMA 6, OLE MISS 3

From sneaking into the field to a semifinalist, Alabama took care of Ole Miss behind a second straight pitching gem and a little small ball.

Nathan Kilcrease almost threw his third straight complete game and the Tide’s second of the tournament after Jimmy Nelson’s outing Wednesday against Auburn. He was pulled for Jake Smith with one out in the ninth after Ole Miss brought the tying run to the plate.

Alabama gets the winner of the Florida/Vanderbilt game on Saturday.

Read more later.

Middle ninth: It looks like Kilcrease will get an opportunity to close it out himself after the Tide goes down in order in the top half of the last inning.

End eighth: Miles Hamblin’s lead-off, solo homer made it 6-2 after it rocketed over the right field wall but Kilcrease battles back and gets third out with a swinging K. Tide takes four-run lead to ninth.

Middle eighth: Josh Rutledge single scores Brock Bennett who moved to second on a balk after a bloop single to put Alabama up 5-1 and a Clay Jones single plates Rutledge to take a 6-1 advantage.

End seventh: Ole Miss isn’t going down quietly. Matt Smith ended Kilcrease’s streak at 17 straight retired with a double to right. David Philips then drove him home with a single to right. Alabama still leads 4-1 with two innings left.

Middle seventh: Ross Wilson got his third hit to lead off and later scores on a Jake Smith sacrifice fly to center. Another play at the plate, another Tide runner slide in safely to make it 4-0 Tide.

End sixth: Kilcrease got the put-out on to end the inning with 16 straight outs. Alabama comes back to the plate with its 3-0 lead in tact.

Middle sixth: The Tide scores two more. Jon Kelton triple to right scores David Kindred who led off with an infield single. Then an Andrew Miller squeeze scores Kelton in a wild inning. It’s now 3-0 Tide.

End fifth: Another inning without a base runner keeps Alabama ahead 1-0. Kilcrease has retired 13 straight now.

Middle fifth: We finally have a score. Taylor Dugas slid past the tag at home on a Josh Rutledge single. Dugas walked again and stole second in spite of pitch out to put himself in position. Clay Jones stranded two with a fielder’s choice to end inning. Your score: 1-0 Alabama.

End fourth: Ole Miss goes down in order again. The score: 0-0. Alabama’s Kilcrease has now retired 10 straight.

Middle fourth: Ross Wilson led off by slapping a double down the left field line, followed by a Clay Jones walk to put runners on first and second. Kindred failed to get a bunt down, then popped out. Jake Smith struck out swinging and Jon Kelton grounded into a fielders’ choice. Long story short, still 0-0 in Regions Park.

End third: A quick 1-2-3 half inning, keeps nobody in the lead, 0-0 with Alabama’s 3-4-5 batters coming up.

Middle third: Andrew Miller came just feet from a home run. Instead it was a long foul to the right side followed by a ground out to first. Brock Bennett legged out an infield single. Taylor Dugas followed by a walk that extended his streak of games in which he’s reached base to 46 straight, but Josh Rutledge struck out to strand both and keep the score at 0-0. Who will blink first? Stay tuned.

End second: Miles Hamblin just struck out to end the inning, 0-0. There was a brief delay when the home plate umpire took a baseball to the throat after the pitch hit the dirt. He appears to be alright now.

Middle second: David Kindred hit into a double play to waste a Clay Jones lead-off single and a Jake Smith strike out keeps the shutout in tact. 0-0.

End first: A pair of two-out singles for Ole Miss were wasted by a grounder to second that ends the first. Still 0-0 in a very pro-Alabama Regions Park. Another pitchers’ dual? We will see.

Middle first: Ross Wilson nailed trying to steal second ends the top of the first with no damage for Ole Miss. 0-0.

Welcome back to Hoover

We’re about 30 minutes from first pitch between Alabama and Ole Miss in the second round of the SEC baseball tournament in Hoover. Quite a bit is at stake.

An Alabama loss would set up a rematch with Auburn at 3 p.m. Friday after the Tide thumped the Tigers 7-1 on Wednesday. Auburn finished off South Carolina 3-1 in 12 innings earlier today.

Check back later for updates.

Storm clouds on horizon for favorites at SEC tournament

 Photo by me

Lower seeds have certainly ruled the opening day of the SEC baseball tournament.

Of the three games already in the books, no favorites have succeeded. Seventh-seeded Alabama’s 7-1 beating of Auburn was followed by sixth-seeded Ole Miss’ win over No. 3 South Carolina.

The defending national champs, but No. 8 seed LSU just knocked off regular-season champion Florida in a spirited Game 3. Those LSU fans love them some LSU.

It’s now up to Arkansas, the four-seed, to keep it from being a white wash in the night cap against No. 5 Vanderbilt.

On a side note, let me say I’m not happy with the speed with which today’s action has been played. I didn’t leave Regions Park before 2:45 a.m. after covering Alabama in the last game of Day 1 last year. Mad maybe isn’t the word. More like bitter.

UPDATE: Vanderbilt completes the underdog sweep, 2-0 in the nightcap.