Everything Alabama coach Nate Oats said at SEC Basketball Media Days

Here’s everything Alabama basketball coach Nate Oats said at SEC Media Days.

Expectations for the Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball program have never been higher.

Just months after making their first Final Four appearance, the Crimson Tide are ranked No. 2 in the preseason AP Top 25 Men’s College Basketball Poll and are a strong pick by national analysts to win the SEC, which featured eight teams represented at last season’s NCAA Tournament.

Alabama will be returning top scoring guard Mark Sears as well as forward Grant Nelson, both huge contributors to the Tide’s March Madness run that included an 89-87 victory over No. 1 seed North Carolina in the Sweet 16 and a hard-fought 89-82 win over a gritty, experienced Clemson Tigers squad in the Elite Eight.

But Oats wasn’t focused on last season’s trip to the Final Four during his appearance at SEC Media Days in Birmingham on Tuesday. To him, that Final Four run is already “old news.”

“We obviously used it in recruiting to get some of them here,” Oats said. “But I don’t really want to talk about it that much with the team. We had the celebration Friday where we raised the banner and gave out the rings. The issue is that eight out of our 13 scholarship guys weren’t here last year.

Alabama head coach Nate Oats speaks during SEC Media Day at the Grand Bohemian Hotel in Mountain Brook Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. Gary Cosby Jr.-Tuscaloosa News / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

“That was last year. It’s kind of old news,” Oats added. “It was great for the program, for the fans, for the university to be able to celebrate it, but it has nothing to do with what we’ve got going on this year. So, we’re trying to flip the page, move on, and not really address it. It was nice. It was good for our league, it’s good for our school and good for our program, but we’ve got to focus on what we’ve got to do this year, and that’s where we’re trying to get our guys’ minds at.”

Alabama will open the 2024-25 regular season against UNC Asheville on Nov. 4 at Coleman Coliseum. Tipoff is set for 8 p.m. The game will be televised on ESPNU.

Here’s everything Oats said at SEC Media Days entering his sixth season in Tuscaloosa.

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Top ranked center in 2025 class commits to Dan Hurley and UConn

4-star center Eric Reibe committed to Dan Hurley and the UConn Huskies on Wednesday.

The UConn Huskies secured a commitment from 4-star prospect Eric Reibe on Wednesday, the program’s second commit in the 2025 recruiting class.

The 7’0 center from Maryland chose UConn over Kansas, Creighton, Indiana, Oregon, Iowa, and others, citing the program’s track record of player development and in particular the way the team utilized center Donovan Clingan last season.

Reibe also mentioned perhaps the most obvious factor for choosing to go to Storrs and play for Hurley – back-to-back national championship victories.

The big left-hander is the 27th ranked prospect in the 2025 class at 247Sports, coming in at No. 33 in the composite rankings.

He joins Darius Adams in UConn’s 2025 recruiting class. Adams is a 4-star shooting guard from Indiana who is ranked No. 22 in the class, and the duo combined gives Hurley among the top rated classes in the early stages of the 2025 cycle.

Hurley and the Huskies are set to tip-off the 2024-25 season, and a quest at a third straight national championship, on Wednesday, November 6th at home against Sacred Heart.

See which college team is ranked top 10 in football and men’s and women’s basketball

Iowa State is the lone college program ranked in the top ten in football, men’s basketball, and women’s basketball in the AP polls.

The preseason AP Poll for both men’s and women’s basketball went live this week with the college hoops season getting underway in less than three weeks.

With both polls live, and of course the football poll chugging along as Week 8 draws near, there is one team that is ranked inside the top ten in all three polls: the Iowa State Cyclones.

Iowa State moved up to No. 9 in the football poll after going on the road and taking down West Virginia on Saturday, moving to 6-0 on the year and a perfect 3-0 in Big 12 play. The Cyclones have a favorable remaining schedule, only facing one ranked team in Kansas State and not until November 30th, and could realistically be in the 12-team College Football Playoff at this rate.

T.J. Otzelberger’s program is ranked No. 5 after going 29-8 and 13-5 in conference play last year, earning a two seed and advancing to the Sweet 16 before losing to Illinois. The Cyclones retained most of their core this offseason, including guards Tamin Lipsey and Keshon Gilbert and forward Milan Momcilovic, and should compete for a Big 12 title and another deep run in March.

Lastly, the women’s team came in at No. 8 overall, first among Big 12 programs. The Cyclones finished sixth in the Big 12 last year with a 21-12 overall record, earning a No. 7 seed and losing to Cameron Brink and Stanford in the second round.

Few programs can boast about having even two elite programs out of these three, and for fans in Ames a potentially all-time great sports season is already underway.

The football team hosts Central Florida on Saturday at 7:30 PM ET, while the men’s team will open up against Mississippi Valley State on November 4th and the women’s team the same day against Chicago State.

It’s not too early to say the haters were wrong about Zach Edey

Zach Edey looked every bit the part of a well above average NBA big man in a 23 point preseason performance for Memphis on Monday.

Even after winning the college basketball National Player of the Year Award – two years in a row – few truly believed former Purdue Boilermakers big man Zach Edey’s success would translate at the NBA level.

Many argued he should be a second round pick – if picked at all – due to the fact that his playstyle is a remnant of a previous era: calling for the ball on the block, reading the defense, making a post move or two, and going up for a little hook shot in the paint.

Even after going No. 9 to the Memphis Grizzlies and playing well in a short stint in the Summer League, the doubters persisted. But now, after a dominant preseason performance – playing against legitimate NBA competition – Edey is finally starting to sway those same doubters.

Edey dropped 23 points with nine rebounds and one steal on 10-of-15 shooting in just 18 minutes of action, coming off the bench for the Grizzlies on Monday against the Pacers.

His otherworldly size, standing 7’4 and weighing 300 pounds, and remarkable durability forces opposing teams to adjust to his presence on the court, else he make quick work of defenders who can’t prevent him from catching the ball on the block.

Edey is also a quality free throw shooter who draws a ton of contact, and while he can be exploited in certain matchups defensively – his lateral mobility and incredible wingspan give him more of an advantage on that end of the floor than many realize.

The era of back-to-the-basket bigs dominating in the NBA – guys like Hakeem Olajuwon, Patrick Ewing, David Robinson, and Shaquille O’Neal – passed nearly two decades ago, replaced with versatile bigs who can also step out and space the floor and orchestrate an offense from the high post, a la Nikola Jokic, Joel Embiid, Karl-Anthony Towns, and Domantas Sabonis.

However, that doesn’t mean there isn’t a spot at all for more traditional bigs, especially ones as skilled, durable, cerebral, and frankly, as huge as Edey is. On a team that has more mobile bigs in Jaren Jackson Jr and Brandon Clarke, Edey is a perfect change of pace big man who can dominate certain matchups while taking a backseat in others.

Edey is already the favorite to win the NBA Rookie of the Year award, and in a draft class most felt was weak, it would not be a surprise to see the Purdue big man end up being the best player to come out of the class when all is said and done.

Caleb Foster: ‘I came to Duke to win, and I’m living out my dream’

Caleb Foster, currently ranked No. 44 on ESPN’s Top 100 for the 2025 NBA Draft, made an immediate impact in his freshman season at Duke. Foster’s role as sixth man fit him perfectly, stepping in as the primary ballhandler when Tyrese Proctor was off …

Caleb Foster, currently ranked No. 44 on ESPN’s Top 100 for the 2025 NBA Draft, made an immediate impact in his freshman season at Duke. Foster’s role as sixth man fit him perfectly, stepping in as the primary ballhandler when Tyrese Proctor was off the court. He maintained a solid 2.0 assist-to-turnover ratio and shot 40.6 percent from deep. His season was cut short by an ankle fracture, but he started 15 games, helping Duke to a 13-2 record in those contests.

Despite missing the postseason, the 6-foot-5 guard’s efficiency and shooting made him a crucial part of the team.

During the 2024 ACC Tip-Off, Foster spoke with HoopsHype, reflecting on his offseason improvements, praising the incoming freshman class, and discussing season expectations and more.

Kentucky basketball is number 23 in the preseason AP Top 25 Poll

Kentucky basketball is ranked 23rd in the preseason AP Top 25 poll.

Just how the 2024-25 Kentucky basketball season will play out is a mystery at this point. After Mark Pope was hired as the new head coach, he had to build an entire roster from scratch, and had to rely on transfers to do so.

Still, it’s Kentucky, and they attracted some of the top players in the transfer portal, and have assembled a veteran team with plenty of players that fit Pope’s system. They have enough talent that the voters for the AP put the Wildcats in the preseason top 25.

Related: Kentucky predicted to land 2025 guard Acaden Lewis

Kentucky is ranked 23rd in the preseason AP Top 25, and they’re the eighth highest SEC team in the rankings. The Alabama Crimson Tide are the top SEC team, ranked second. John Calipari’s new team, Arkansas, comes in at number 16.

The preseason poll is a fun look at how teams are perceived, but they’re no indication of how the season will go. Kentucky hopes to finish much higher than they’re starting, but being ranked after a tumultuous offseason isn’t bad.

Clemson basketball ranks Top 25 in first 2024-25 KenPom ratings

Check out where Clemson landed in the initial 2024-25 KenPom ratings, released Monday.

The Clemson Tigers are hoping to build off a historic season in 2023-24. Coach Brad Brownell’s squad made the NCAA Tournament as a No. 6 seed and reeled off three straight wins to reach the Elite Eight for the first time since 1980. The Tigers fell 89-82 to the Alabama Crimson Tide with a trip to the Final Four on the line.

How far the Tigers can go after a deep NCAA Tournament run is anyone’s guess, but the 2024-25 Pomeroy College Basketball Ratings (KenPom) were released Monday.

Clemson landed at No. 24 with a net plus rating of +18.62. The Tigers are rated one spot ahead of John Calipari and the Arkansas Razorbacks and one spot below the Illinois Fighting Illini.

RELATED: Clemson unranked in preseason AP Top 25 Men’s College Basketball Poll

Coach Kelvin Sampson’s Houston Cougars topped the KenPom ratings at +29.45, followed by the Duke Blue Devils (+26.67) at No. 2 and the Auburn Tigers (+26.21) at No. 3.

Alabama (No. 4, +25.66) and the two-time defending national champion UConn Huskies (No. 5, +25.58) rounded out the top five. Aside from Duke and Clemson, the only other ACC team that cracked the Top 25 KenPom ratings were the North Carolina Tar Heels (+22.14) at No. 14.

KenPom explains their ratings this way:

“The purpose of this system is to show how strong a team would be if it played tonight, independent of injuries or emotional factors. Since nobody can see every team play all (or even most) of their games, this system is designed to give a snapshot of a team’s current level of play.”

Clemson opens the 2024-25 regular season Nov. 4 against Charleston Southern at 7 p.m. ET at Littlejohn Coliseum.

Contact/Follow us @Clemson_Wire on X, and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions. 

Tyrese Proctor: ‘I don’t think basketball is all about scoring, I’m just out there trying to make winning plays’

Tyrese Proctor, currently ranked No. 28 on ESPN’s Top 100 and No. 30 on HoopsHype’s latest Aggregate Mock Draft, has rapidly established himself as one of the best lead guards in college basketball. The Australia native is known for his playmaking, …

Tyrese Proctor, currently ranked No. 28 on ESPN’s Top 100 and No. 30 on HoopsHype’s latest Aggregate Mock Draft, has rapidly established himself as one of the best lead guards in college basketball. The Australia native is known for his playmaking, defense, and leadership on the court.

Proctor’s sophomore campaign saw him named a team captain, only the fourth sophomore to achieve this in Duke’s history. His 2.95 assist-to-turnover ratio ranked 25th nationally, showcasing his ability to control the game while minimizing mistakes. He averaged 10.5 points per game and led his team in assists, asserting his role as the lead guard for the Blue Devils, who at times ran a three-guard lineup last year.

Recently, Proctor spoke with with HoopsHype to reflect on his basketball journey, his time in Australia’s NBA Global Academy, his thoughts on the modern game, his college basketball experience and more.

TV info, start time announced for Clemson basketball vs. South Carolina

Here’s when Clemson will take on South Carolina in the annual matchup between the Tigers and Gamecocks on the hardwood.

Tipoff time and TV information for the Clemson Tigers’ annual men’s basketball contest with the rival South Carolina Gamecocks was announced on Friday.

The Tigers and Gamecocks’ Dec. 17 matchup in Columbia will be a 7 p.m. ET tipoff. The game will be televised on SEC Network.

Clemson won last year’s meeting, 72-67, on Dec. 6 at Littlejohn Coliseum. That was part of a 9-0 start to the 2023-24 season that saw the Tigers climb to No. 11 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

Brad Brownell’s team went on to finish the season 24-12 and made the NCAA Tournament as a No. 6 seed. The Tigers then defeated No. 11 seed New Mexico, No. 3 seed Baylor, and No. 2 seed Arizona to advance to the Elite Eight for the first time since 1980.

South Carolina went 26-8 last season and also made the NCAA Tournament as a No. 6 seed. The Gamecocks fell 87-73 in a first-round loss to the Oregon Ducks in the Midwest Region in Pittsburgh.

Clemson has won five of the last seven meetings in the series against South Carolina dating back to 2016.

RELATED: College basketball expert offers projected ACC order of finish for Clemson Tigers

The 2024-25 season will be Brownell’s 15th as head coach of the Tigers. Clemson opens the regular season at Littlejohn Coliseum against Charleston Southern on Nov. 4. Tipoff is set for 7 p.m. ET.

Contact/follow us @Clemson_Wire on X, and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions. 

College basketball expert offers projected SEC order of finish for Kentucky Wildcats

With less than a month until the start of the regular season, here’s where this college basketball expert projects Kentucky to finish in the SEC standings.

Only 24 days remain until the Kentucky Wildcats men’s basketball team opens the 2024-25 regular season at Rupp Arena.

Kentucky will be in Year 1 of the Mark Pope era with a brand new roster following last season and John Calipari’s flip from the Blue Grass State to the Ozarks of Fayetteville, Arkansas.

On Friday, CBS Sports college basketball expert David Cobb made his SEC predictions for the season ahead, including the conference’s projected order of finish. Cobb projects the Alabama Crimson Tide to finish first in the SEC this season with the Auburn Tigers second.

The Tennessee Volunteers were picked third with Texas A&M Aggies picked to finish fourth.

Kentucky was picked to finish sixth in the conference, one spot behind Calipari’s Razorbacks at No. 5 and one spot ahead of the Florida Gators at No. 7

Per Cobb’s projections:

“Not a single scholarship player is back from Calipari’s final team, and scoring wing Jaxson Robinson is the only player coming with Pope from BYU. Thus, nearly everyone is both new to the school and new to each other. What the roster lacks in high-end sizzle it makes up for with depth and diversity. The Wildcats are a deep group of veterans with well-refined skill sets. Robinson is the most dynamic offensive weapon of the bunch after proving his chops as a three-level scorer for the Cougars last season. Former San Diego State point guard Lamont Butler and bombastic ex-Arizona guard Kerr Kriisa will handle the ball quite a bit.”

RELATED: Kentucky basketball ranked in Top 25 in ESPN’s preseason poll

Cobb included Robinson on his list of Players to Watch in 2024-25.

“Robinson won Sixth Man of the Year in the Big 12 last season while playing under Mark Pope at BYU. Now he’s following Pope back to the SEC after spending time at Texas A&M and Arkansas earlier in his career. UK’s roster is constructed in a way that clears the path for the lanky wing to be a primary scoring option.

Kentucky opens the regular season at Rupp Arena against Wright State on Nov. 4. Tipoff is set for 7 p.m. ET.

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