By Ken Rogers
TUSCALOOSA — Richard Hendrix, the 6-foot-9 junior power forward who led Alabama in scoring and rebounding this year, on Wednesday announced he would enter the NBA Draft this June.
That doesn’t mean he will be in the NBA this fall. Hendrix said he will not sign with an agent and will seek feedback from league evaluators in the months leading up to the draft. If those evaluations urge him to stay in school, he can change his mind before June 16 — 10 days before the draft — and return to Alabama for his senior season.
Still, Hendrix sounded committed to the NBA and said his focus will be earning a place in the draft.
“I’m going into this procedure with the highest hopes and best expectations,” said Hendrix, who was dressed in a blazer and tie. “... It’s always been a goal of mine to play at the next level. If the opportunity presents itself then I’ll give it a try.”
Hendrix has NBA-type credentials. He was the only player in the Southeastern Conference to average a double-double this season — at 17.8 points and 10.1 rebounds per game. The junior from Athens, Ala., the SEC in rebounds with Ole Miss’ Dwayne Curtis. He made the first team all-SEC in coaches and media ratings in both preseason and postseason voting.
Asked if he had a draft number in mind as determining factor in whether he returns, Hendrix said, “Mainly, that’s a decision I’ll have to make as I get more feedback. I’m hoping for the best. I think I have a good opportunity to become a pretty good draft pick, hopefully, and I’m going to work as hard as I can to make it happen.
“You don’t want to make a decision you wind up regretting. It’s all on me. I just have to make good choices from here on out.“
Posted by Ken Rogers on 03/26 at 01:37 PM
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By Ken Rogers
To call it a busy weekend for Alabama athletics is understating things.
The Crimson Tide baseball team will play host to fourth-ranked Vanderbilt for its SEC home opener this weekend. Alabama is 9-10 with a five-loss losing streak. The Tide was swept at Kentucky last weekend and dropped a pair of midweek games to new Orleans at Sewell-Thomas Stadium in Tuscaloosa. Vandy is 13-4. Game times are Friday at 6:35, Saturday at 4:05 and Sunday at 2:06 for a game to be televised on CSS.
That’s hardly the only game in town, though.
Alabama’s gymnasts wrap up their regular season at 7:30 Friday night against Auburn at Coleman Coliseum.
The Tide gymnasts had a tough trip to the West Coast a couple weeks ago, but bounced back with a season-high score of 197.3 against Penn State last week.
Alalbama has earned 93 consecutive wins against Auburn since 1979. Last year’s victory, by less than half a point, came down to the final rotation.
The team has Senior Night ceremonies and will honor scholastic all-American Kaitlin White and two-time Olympic silver medalist and two-time NCAA champion Terin Humphrey.
Five Alabama swimmers are competing at the NCAA Championships in Columbus this weekend.
Agustina de Giovanni, Erin Sparks, Ida Persson, Vanessa Von der Heyde and Brooke Baldi will be competing in individual and relay races.
The Alabama golf team won its fifth tournament championship last Sunday and moved to No. 1 in this week’s Golfweek/Sagarin rankings. They already were No. 1 in the Golf World/Nike Coaches’ poll. Senior Michael Thompson (No. 7), junior Matthew Swan (15) and senior Mark Harrell (43) are all ranked in the top 50 for individuals by Golfweek.
Alabama softball player Jordan Praytor and Tide golfer Joseph Sykora were nominated by the school for the SEC’s prestigious Boyd McWhorter scholar-athletic post-graduate scholarship. The scholarship has been awarded by the SEC to the league’s top male and female athletes since 1986. The scholarship winners will be announced April 6, in conjunction with National Student-Athlete Day.
Even basketball has some news. Alabama, which will be participating in the Maui Invitational this fall, will be in good company in Hawaii this Nov. 24-26. Six of the seven Division I teams who will play in the event, hosted by Division II Chaminade, have made the NCAA Tournament. Those teams are North Carolina, Texas, Notre Dame, Indiana, Oregon and St. Joseph’s. Last fall’s championship game of the Maui Invitational featured Duke against Marquette, two other NCAA Tournament teams.
Oh, yeah. Football starts back Monday. The Crimson Tide was off this week for spring break after getting in two of their allowed 15 practices.
Posted by Ken Rogers on 03/20 at 08:58 PM
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By Ken Rogers
The season Tide fans would like to forget ended on a night everyone connected with Alabama basketball will remember.
You know what? A tornado really does sound like a train as it barrels through.
The tornado—officially it’s being called strong winds, but if that wasn’t a twister I don’t want to be around when the real thing hits—disrupted a lot more than a college basketball game Friday night at the Georgia Dome.
Much of this area, CNN Center, the Dome and the Georgia World Congress next door, were damaged. Homes, too. Atlanta TV is reporting injuries, but not from the Dome.
If Mykal Riley played his last game for Alabama Friday night, it’s unfortunate no one will remember it. He put the game into overtime with a 3-pointer at the buzzer, and his 3-point attempt with 0.5 seconds left rattled in and out.
Mark Gottfried, who noted Riley’s improvement weeks ago, before it was apparent to everyone else, said that’s what seniors do.
“I think (Chris) Lofton made one today late in the game for Tennessee,“ Gottfried said. “That senior year everything is a little different. I think even Mykal Riley here coming down the stretch, you know the clock is ticking down on you and everything matters more. Practices are a little more important. Games. Everything. He stepped up for us and I thought was just absolutely terrific. He carried us here, I thought, in the last five or six games.“
At the end of regulation, he gave Alabama new life.
“Our guy stepped up there again I thought in a tough situation. He had a lot of courage, stepped up there and made it.“
Riley nearly had another magical moment at the end of the game. His 3-pointer would have won it.
“When the shot left his hands on the last shot, I watched the ball, and my heart said, that is in the basket. We’re winning the game. We’re playing tomorrow,“ Gottfried said.
“It seems like the ball went down in the net and came out of there. That’s kind of been our year. It’s been in and out.“
Posted by Ken Rogers on 03/14 at 10:17 PM
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By Ken Rogers
Alabama went from the team that couldn’t shoot straight to the team that couldn’t miss.
As a result, the Crimson Tide overcame a 10-0 deficit and took a 36-29 lead into halftime.
It took less than two and a half minutes for the West-champion Bulldogs to take a double-digit lead. MSU used its powerful inside game to dominate early.
Alabama, outmatched inside, simply went outside and seemed to find a soft spot in the State zone. Brandon Hollinger, Mykal Riley, Rico Pickett and Alonzo Gee all buried 3-pointers in the final 10 minutes of the half. The Tide was 8-for-15 on 3-pointers and just 12-for-30 from the field. State helped by rushing things with its lead. The Bulldogs were just 1-of-10 in 3-pointers in the first half.
Alabama capitalized on 10 State turnovers to build the lead. Alabama enjoyed a 15-3 advantage on points after turnovers in the first half. State continued to pound Alabama inside, outscoring the Tide 18-4 in the paint.
Posted by Ken Rogers on 03/14 at 06:27 PM
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By Ken Rogers
While Alabama rested Friday afternoon before its meeting with Mississippi State, the SEC Tournament rolled on with a pair of first-rate games.
It wasn’t easy, but Tennessee, the regular season champion, won for the first time in this tournament since 2005. The Vols survived a gutty effort South Carolina and edged the Gamecocks 89-87. Chris Lofton, who had shot just 1-for-9 from 3-point range, buried a wide-open three with 11 seconds remaining.
The lead changed four times in the final minute. Dominique Archie’s jam put the Gamecocks up 85-84 with 51 seconds to play. Tennessee’s Tyler Smith, who scored 11 straight for the Vols, finished that streak with a layup with 37 seconds left. Carolina’s Archie made a layup at the 23-second mark.
Then Lofton, who scored just 10 points, came off a backscreen set by Wayne Chism and coolly buried the 3-pointer with 12 seconds left.
“There’s several options on every play,“ Vols coach Bruce Pearl said. “Chris was going to get the ball. JaJuan (Smith) was the first option ... but Chris was going to get that touch.“
Devan Downey missed a 3-pointer for the Gamecocks, who couldn’t get another shot off an inbounds play with 1.4 seconds remaining.
“I wanted to go for the kill. I wanted to to beat them,“ said Downey, who led Carolina with 26 points. “The shot fell a little short, but it felt good. If I had to do it again, I would take the same shot.“
Instead, it fell to Lofton to save the Vols an embarrassing loss to a team they had blown out twice in the regular season.
“As a shooter, you always think the next one is going in,“ Lofton said of never hesitating to take the shot despite a subpar performance.
Dave Odom, who had earlier announced his retirement effective at the end of the season, had hoped his career wouldn’t end Friday.
“I could be happier had we won, but I don’t know that I could be any prouder,“ Odom said. “Tennessee is the odds-on favorite. They’re close to a double-digit favorite over anybody they play. Today will help them. They were close to losing today, and that will get their attention.“
Pearl said that South Carolina “gave us everything we wanted tonight.“ But he also noted his team’s offensive production overcame its defensive lapses.
“Don’t be too hard on the Vols,“ Pearl said. “We shot 57 percent. We had 35 field goals and had 27 assists.“
The Vols reached the semifinals for the first time since 1991.
Posted by Ken Rogers on 03/14 at 03:11 PM
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