Preseason All-American lists are starting to roll out, and for Alabama they’ve already delivered one obvious name and one head-scratching omission.
Senior safety Bray Hubbard landed on Walter Camp’s preseason All-American squad, a fitting nod for a player who projects as one of the best safeties in college football next season. He’s expected to pair with fellow senior Keon Sabb to give Alabama what could be the top safety duo in the country. The Crimson Tide’s secondary is loaded with talent and experience, with Zay Mincey, Ivan Taylor, Dre Kirkpatrick Jr. and freshman Jireh Edwards all in the mix for snaps.
Hubbard is also positioned to be a major presence for Alabama’s defense. He looks like a lock to serve as a team captain and wear the “C” on his jersey throughout the season before putting his hand and footprints into Denny Chimes at next year’s A-Day scrimmage.
But while Hubbard got his due, another Alabama defensive back was left off Walter Camp’s first- and second-team preseason All-American lists, and that absence stands out.
Zabien Brown wasn’t included, and that’s tough to square. Brown is already a two-year starter entering his true junior season, and he has built a reputation as a lockdown corner in Kane Wommack’s defensive backfield. He has also made the kind of big plays that force people to pay attention in All-American and Thorpe Award conversations.
As a freshman, Brown delivered the game-saving interception that sealed Alabama’s win over Georgia in Tuscaloosa. Last season, he added two huge pick-sixes.
He picked off Tennessee’s Joey Aguilar in the endzone just before halftime and took it 99 yards for a touchdown in Bryant-Denny. He also intercepted a John Mateer pass in the College Football Playoff to tie the game against Oklahoma right before halftime, helping complete a 17-point Alabama comeback in a 34-24 win that sent the Crimson Tide to the Rose Bowl.
Brown looks every bit like a future first-round pick, and the case for him is simple: he belongs among the nation’s best defensive backs. Leaving him off the first or second team is hard to justify.
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