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Tide Hoops History

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Helping tell the story of Bama Basketball. Curated by the team @CrimsonXover and @msouthern17. Have a favorite memory, team, game, player or coach drop us a DM.

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As the Connecticut Huskies attempt to win another national championship tonight against Michigan, Alabama Men’s Basketball fans still hear the echos of two years ago when the Crimson Tide finally crashed college basketball’s biggest event for the first time on April 6, 2024. Inside State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz., the Crimson Tide’s breakthrough season reached its crescendo in its first Final Four appearance against the Huskies. As a No. 4 seed coming out of the West Region, the magical run ended with an 86-72 loss, but not before the Crimson Tide proved it belonged on the grandest stage. Mark Sears led the way with 24 points, five rebounds and three assists, continuing his March brilliance. Grant Nelson delivered a monster effort with 19 points and a season-best 15 rebounds for a double-double, while Aaron Estrada added 13 points as Alabama fought to keep within striking distance deep into the second half. Stephon Castle scored 21 points, Donovan Clingan had 18 and Tristen Newton controlled the game with 12 points and nine assists. When Alabama clawed back to tie it in the second half, UConn answered with a decisive run. “We got this program to its first Final Four, and I’m unbelievably proud of these guys,” Alabama head coach Nate Oats said. “We just went up against the best team in the country and they showed it.” Two years later, as Connecticut chases another title, that Saturday night in Glendale stands as more than a final score in Alabama history. It redefined the ceiling of a program and created an expectation to get back.

As the Connecticut Huskies attempt to win another national championship tonight against Michigan, Alabama Men’s Basketball fans still hear the echos of two years ago when the Crimson Tide finally crashed college basketball’s biggest event for the first time on April 6, 2024. Inside State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz., the Crimson Tide’s breakthrough season reached its crescendo in its first Final Four appearance against the Huskies. As a No. 4 seed coming out of the West Region, the magical run ended with an 86-72 loss, but not before the Crimson Tide proved it belonged on the grandest stage. Mark Sears led the way with 24 points, five rebounds and three assists, continuing his March brilliance. Grant Nelson delivered a monster effort with 19 points and a season-best 15 rebounds for a double-double, while Aaron Estrada added 13 points as Alabama fought to keep within striking distance deep into the second half. Stephon Castle scored 21 points, Donovan Clingan had 18 and Tristen Newton controlled the game with 12 points and nine assists. When Alabama clawed back to tie it in the second half, UConn answered with a decisive run. “We got this program to its first Final Four, and I’m unbelievably proud of these guys,” Alabama head coach Nate Oats said. “We just went up against the best team in the country and they showed it.” Two years later, as Connecticut chases another title, that Saturday night in Glendale stands as more than a final score in Alabama history. It redefined the ceiling of a program and created an expectation to get back.

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What was your favorite dunk by Alabama Men’s Basketball in Neville Arena? 1. Herbert Jones 2021 2. Brandon Miller 2023 3. Grant Nelson 2025

What was your favorite dunk by Alabama Men’s Basketball in Neville Arena? 1. Herbert Jones 2021 2. Brandon Miller 2023 3. Grant Nelson 2025

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Sometimes it’s important to understand the perspective from the other side.

Sometimes it’s important to understand the perspective from the other side.

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On this day 24 years ago, Coleman Coliseum witnessed one of the most unforgettable finishes in Alabama Men’s Basketball history that propelled the Crimson Tide to its first SEC regular-season championship in 15 years. With everything on the line and an SEC title within reach, Antoine Pettway delivered a moment that still echoes through Tuscaloosa — a glass-kissing layup that lifted Alabama past Florida, 65-64, on Feb. 23, 2002. Alabama had not won a SEC regular-season title since 1987, but on this memorable day inside Coleman Coliseum, destiny hung in the balance. It was fitting that head coach Mark Gottfried — himself a key contributor on the 1987 SEC championship squad — stood on the sideline. But the final chapter belonged to Antoine Pettway. After Florida’s James White missed a crucial free throw with 14 seconds left, Mo Williams chased the rebound into the corner, raced across midcourt and found Earnest Shelton. With the clock ticking under five seconds, Shelton drove the lane, drew the defense — and at the last instant spotted Pettway cutting free toward the rim. The pass was perfect. The timing, impeccable. Pettway softly laid it off the glass — and the net snapped as time stood still. Coleman erupted and the Mark’s Madness section spilled onto the court. Four days later, the Crimson Tide finished the job at Auburn to lock up the outright regular-season title, then powered its way to the SEC Tournament final. But it was that singular moment — Pettway gliding to the basket — that symbolized the grit and belief of that team. Twenty-four years later, the image remains timeless. A cut to the rim. A pass in stride. A layup immortalized on a Daniel Moore canvas.

Tide Hoops History

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On this date 22 years ago on March 20, 2004, Alabama Men’s Basketball delivered one of the most stunning NCAA Tournament upsets in program history, rallying from a 13-point second-half deficit to take down No. 1 seed Stanford, 70-67, in Seattle. The eighth-seeded Crimson Tide looked dead in the water midway through the second half. Stanford, powered by Pac-10 Player of the Year Josh Childress and carrying a dominant 30-1 record, had built a 53-40 lead with just 7:40 remaining. Everything pointed toward a routine closeout by the top seed. Then came the surge that Alabama fans still talk about today. The Tide flipped the game on its head with a breathtaking 16-0 run, turning a double-digit deficit into a lead in a matter of minutes. The momentum inside the arena shifted completely as Alabama’s defense tightened and Stanford suddenly had no answers. Kennedy Winston led the charge with 21 points, while Earnest Shelton poured in 14 to help ignite the comeback. Chuck Davis and Antoine Pettway each added 12 points, and Alabama showed poise at the line—knocking down 10 of 14 free throws in the closing minutes to seal the upset. Childress, held to 12 points, fouled out with 3:18 remaining and could only watch from the bench as the Tide completed the shocker. In the Alabama locker room afterward, a sign summed it up perfectly: “They weren’t overrated. We were underrated.” The victory sent shockwaves across college basketball, landing Alabama on the cover of Sports Illustrated and propelling the program to its first Sweet Sixteen appearance since 1991—a moment that still stands as one of the defining wins of the modern era of Crimson Tide basketball.

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Five years ago today Alabama Men’s Basketball changed forever. What unfolded on the night of Jan. 19, 2021 in Baton Rouge, La., wasn’t just a road win or a hot-shooting performance. It became the moment the rest of the SEC realized the Crimson Tide had entered a new era, one that would permanently alter the program’s trajectory. Under Nate Oats, the modern identity of Alabama basketball announced itself inside the Pete Maravich Assembly Center. Alabama demolished LSU, 105–75, setting a SEC record with 23 made three-pointers, a seismic shift that echoed far beyond the final buzzer. When a program ascends, fans can pinpoint the exact second when everything changed. For Alabama, the seminal moment had arrived. Bamalytics, Blue Collar basketball, layups, free throws and threes weaponized into a relentless, modern offensive system that the league wasn’t prepared to stop. “The 2021 team was really special,” Bryan Passink, the color analyst for Crimson Tide Sports Network, told Tide Hoops History. “Alabama fans knew we were good and everyone enjoyed our style of play, but that night in Baton Rouge, it all came together in a huge way. “We hoped it was a sign of things to come, and it absolutely was. Banners, championships, rings and long tournament runs were all to follow.” John Petty Jr. led the avalanche with 24 points, drilling 8-of-10 from deep. Jahvon Quinerly and freshman Joshua Primo each knocked down six threes and finished with 22 points, while Herbert Jones added 13. Alabama stormed out to a 60–32 halftime lead and at one point buried eight consecutive three-pointers in the first half. Which brings us to this question for our followers: Should Jan. 19 be celebrated as a Nate Oats holiday for the Alabama basketball nation? A day to remember the night the SEC record book burned, the blueprint revealed and Alabama basketball officially became something it had never been before.

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𝐴𝑛 𝑜𝑝𝑒𝑛 𝑎𝑝𝑜𝑙𝑜𝑔𝑦 𝑡𝑜 Alabama Men’s Basketball I want to apologize to a program that I have loved and embraced starting as a 12-year-old who became drawn to the sport by the greatness of Ennis Whatley. I want to apologize to all the former players, coaches, staff and fans who also share my passion for Alabama basketball. I want to apologize for almost losing faith, and today on Easter Sunday this seems the most appropriate time to ask for your forgiveness. I never stopped supporting every coach, every player and every season, but there were many times I questioned why the second-winningest program in the conference seemed sentenced to wander in college basketball purgatory. During those barren seasons of more than a decade with only one NCAA Tournament appearance, and a quick one at that, my crisis of faith occurred. I truly felt a once-proud program had become an afterthought, and in that brief moment I almost accepted that I would never see the Crimson Tide reach the Final Four in my lifetime. I had become numb to the mediocrity and I didn’t expect more. I had forgotten what the program could be, and actually achieved, when I grew up in the 80s and graduated from The University of Alabama in the early 90s. I wanted to take time to process the significance of last night’s 89-82 victory over Clemson in the very appropriate City of Angels. The basketball gods, who I cursed after every mis-seeding by the NCAA selection committee, after every unexpected postseason injury and after every agonizing loss in the Sweet Sixteen, knew. They knew a team and staff assembled together out of necessity but embracing “mudita” would be the one. They knew a team questioned about its physicality, about its defense, would be the one. They knew when the rest of the country laughed at Alabama and many penciled them as opening-round losers would be the one. They knew a team that ignores the criticism and puts its faith in themselves and the process would be the one. They knew this team would be the one. The one to offer salvation to a long-suffering fanbase that had paid its penance across all generations (Baby Boomers, Generation X, Millennials). Thank you 2023-24 for being THE one. Thank you Mark Sears for coming back to your home state. Thank you Rylan Griffen for signing with Alabama out of high school and staying for another season. Thank you Grant Nelson, Aaron Estrada, Latrell Wrightsell and Mohamed Wague for seeing something in Alabama. Thank you Nick Pringle for your fiery emotion and your gritty play last night with a bruised heel. Thank you Jarin Stevenson for sacrificing your senior year of high school and choosing Alabama over your home state Tar Heels. Thank you Sam Walters for your timely shooting and also choosing Alabama over your childhood Gators. Thank you Mouhamed Dioubate for always giving maximum effort every minute and never backing down against larger and physical opponents. Thank you Davin Cosby and keep the faith as you recover from your injury. Thank you Nate Oats, Austin Claunch, Ryan Pannone and Preston Murphy for restoring the faith in a fanbase when it seemed prayers would never be answered. Seeing Robert Horry in attendance to witness history warmed my heart. I wish all of us could have been together in person last night to cherish the moment, but I could feel the Crimson spirit as the seconds ticked off the clock. I’m grateful for meeting so many kindred spirits through this X account and again I thank Crimson Crossover, Gottfried Grant Johnson and Christian Sykes for inviting me to join the team and help promote the program on this platform. Alabama basketball I humbly ask for your forgiveness this Easter Sunday and I will never question my faith in you again. Roll Tide for eternity and Let’s Do This Bama! The Tide has risen. - 𝑀𝑖𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑒𝑙 𝑆𝑜𝑢𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑟𝑛, 𝑝𝑟𝑜𝑢𝑑 𝑎𝑙𝑢𝑚𝑛𝑢𝑠 𝑜𝑓 𝑇ℎ𝑒 𝑈𝑛𝑖𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑠𝑖𝑡𝑦 𝑜𝑓 𝐴𝑙𝑎𝑏𝑎𝑚𝑎 (Michael Southern)

Tide Hoops History

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𝑇𝑖𝑑𝑒 𝐻𝑜𝑜𝑝𝑠 𝐻𝑖𝑠𝑡𝑜𝑟𝑦 𝑖𝑠 𝑠𝑝𝑜𝑡𝑙𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑡𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑡ℎ𝑒 20 𝑚𝑜𝑠𝑡 𝑖𝑚𝑝𝑎𝑐𝑡𝑓𝑢𝑙 𝑤𝑖𝑛𝑠 𝑑𝑢𝑟𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑁𝑎𝑡𝑒 𝑂𝑎𝑡𝑠 𝐸𝑟𝑎. 𝐻𝑒𝑟𝑒 𝑖𝑠 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑡ℎ𝑖𝑟𝑑 𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑟𝑦 𝑖𝑛 𝑜𝑢𝑟 𝑠𝑢𝑚𝑚𝑒𝑟 𝑠𝑒𝑟𝑖𝑒𝑠. 𝐍𝐨. 𝟏𝟖 𝐀𝐥𝐚𝐛𝐚𝐦𝐚 𝟏𝟎𝟓, 𝐋𝐒𝐔 𝟕𝟓 Date: Jan. 19, 2021 Impact/History: SEC record 23 made three-pointers Where: Baton Rouge, La. (Pete Maravich Assembly Center) When an athlete or program ascends to a heightened level of success, fans can identify in a nanosecond that seminal moment in history when everyone realized things will never be the same. For the current Alabama Men’s Basketball era under Nate Oats, that seismic shift occurred on Jan. 19, 2021, inside the Pete Maravich Assembly Center in Baton Rouge, La., when the Crimson Tide unleashed an offensive barrage that set the SEC record for most made three-pointers with 23. In the wake of Alabama’s 105-75 thrashing of the Tigers, the rest of the SEC took notice. Bamalytics, Blue Collar basketball, layups, free throws and three-pointers had become the instruments of disruption. “The 2021 team was really special,” Crimson Tide Sports Network analyst Bryan Passink told Tide Hoops History. “Alabama fans knew we were good and everyone enjoyed our style of play, but that night in Baton Rouge, it all came together in a huge way.” John Petty Jr. led the scoring spree with a game-high 24 points that included a blistering 8-of-10 performance from beyond the arc. Transfer Jahvon Quinerly and freshman Joshua Primo each made six three-pointers and finished with 22 points apiece. Herbert Jones followed with 13 points. Behind the hot hand of Petty, Alabama built a commanding 60-32 halftime lead and at one point made eight consecutive three-pointers in the first half. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, Passink and his longtime media partner Chris Stewart had to broadcast the game remotely from Baumhower’s restaurant in Birmingham. With a partisan Alabama crowd inside the restaurant, the sounds of cheering every time the Crimson Tide scored confused the radio audience because the game was in Baton Rouge. “We hoped it was a sign of things to come, and it absolutely was,” Passink said. “Banners, championships, rings and long tournament runs were all to follow.”

Tide Hoops History

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Fifty years later… and it still hurts. On this date 50 years ago — March 18, 1976 — the Alabama Men’s Basketball program suffered one of its most painful NCAA Tournament losses, as the three-time SEC champions fell to the undefeated Indiana Hoosiers, 74-69, in Baton Rouge. For Alabama fans who remember, the heartbreak hasn’t faded with time. In an era before modern seeding, the 32-team NCAA Tournament was organized geographically, and it handed the Crimson Tide a brutal draw — landing in the Midwest Regional alongside the No. 1-ranked, undefeated Hoosiers. What should have been a later-round clash between heavyweights came far too early in a Sweet Sixteen showdown. Alabama didn’t back down and went basket-for-basket with one of the greatest teams in college basketball history, trading shots and momentum deep into the second half. With 5:11 remaining, Indiana clung to a 67-65 lead in what had become a classic. Then came the moment that still gets talked about five decades later. On a fast break, Alabama center Leon Douglas took a pass, lowered his shoulder and collided with Indiana’s Kent Benson. From nearly half court, referee Booker Turner whistled Douglas for a charge — a call that changed everything. Instead of a potential tying basket or momentum swing, possession flipped and Alabama never fully recovered. Indiana held on for the 5-point win, the closest game of its legendary postseason run. The Hoosiers won every other NCAA Tournament game by double digits, including an 86-68 victory over Michigan in the national championship, finishing a perfect 32-0 — the last undefeated champion in men’s college basketball history. T.R. Dunn led Alabama with 16 points, while Anthony Murray added 15, Douglas finished with 12 and Keith McCord chipped in 11. The Crimson Tide ended the season 23-5 overall and 15-3 in SEC play — a campaign that deserved a deeper March run. Two years later, the NCAA introduced seeding, a change that likely would have kept teams like Alabama and Indiana from meeting so early. But history doesn’t change — and neither does the feeling. Fifty years later… Tide fans still see that charge.

Tide Hoops History

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