Alabama’s defense has enough returning talent and added pieces to make a strong case as one of the nation’s elite units again, but On3’s J.D. Pickell didn’t even put the Crimson Tide in his Top 10 for 2026.
That’s the kind of preseason snub that turns heads fast, especially with Kane Wommack’s group coming off a season in which Alabama finished 11th in defensive SP+ and spent much of the year keeping the Tide afloat while the offense struggled. The expectation around Tuscaloosa is that this defense should be even better in 2026, not worse.
The back end is the biggest reason why. Alabama returns almost every meaningful piece from a secondary that was already one of the best in the country last season.
Domani Jackson is gone, but Dijon Lee stepped in as a co-starter at corner and is set to pair with Zabien Brown, giving Alabama what looks like one of the top cornerback duos anywhere. At safety, Keon Sabb and Bray Hubbard are back, and Red Morgan returns at the Husky spot.
There’s also real depth behind that starting group. Zay Mincey, Ivan Taylor, Dre Kirkpatrick Jr., Carmelo O'Neal, and others give Alabama options if injuries hit, and the Tide also have 5-star freshmen Jorden Edmonds and Jireh Edwards in the mix. On paper, it’s hard to find a secondary deeper than this one.
The questions are more concentrated at off-ball linebacker, where Alabama lost its top three options from last season. Even so, the Tide brought in Caleb Woodson from Virginia Tech, and there’s a clear battle shaping up for the spot next to him. Reese, Luke Metz, and CJ Jones look like the main contenders there.
Up front, Alabama has plenty to like as well. Yhonzae Pierre flashed as a pass rusher after Qua Russaw’s injury, and he could be one of the best edge players in the country. Justin Hill is poised for a larger role, while Desmond Umeozulu and 5-star Xavier Griffin add more potential off the edge.
The defensive line should also move forward even after losing Tim Keenan and James Smith. Alabama brought in Devan Thompkins from USC, Terrence Green from Oregon, and Kedrick Bingley-Jones from Mississippi State, and they join a group that includes London Simmons, Edric Hill, Steve Bolo Mboumoua, and Jeremiah Beaman. That combination gives the Tide a chance to look more like the dominant Alabama fronts of old.
So while Pickell left Alabama out of his Top 10, the case for the Tide is pretty straightforward: this is a defense loaded with returning production, high-end talent, and enough depth to survive the bumps that come with a long season. If anything, the argument is that Alabama belongs comfortably in the Top 5, not on the outside looking in.
In Other News...
Dante Moore Just Put The Iron Bowl In Rare Company
A little rivalry talk from Oregon quarterback Dante Moore has a familiar Alabama angle to it, and it is the kind of answer that always gets attention in this part of the country. Moore, one of the cover athletes for EA Sports College Football 2027, named Alabama vs. Auburn among his top three college football rivalries, putting the Iron Bowl in the same conversation with Michigan vs. Ohio State and Oregon vs. Washington.
Moores inclusion of the Iron Bowl only adds to the sense that the game still sits in a tier all its own, even for a player whose own rivalry stock has risen after Oregons recent win over Washington. The Ducks and Huskies are set to meet again on November 28, and for Alabama fans, it is another reminder that when people start ranking the sports biggest showdowns, Auburns annual collision with the Tide remains impossible to ignore. [Read more 🡒]
The 5 In-State Recruiting Misses Alabama Fans Still Hate Most
Alabamas recruiting footprint has long been strong enough that every major in-state miss still feels like a what-if worth revisiting, especially when the player in question ends up starring somewhere else. Over the past decade, the Tide have watched a handful of high-profile Alabama prospects leave the state for other powers, and those decisions have only grown more frustrating in hindsight because of the roles those players went on to play on the biggest stages.
The list gets even more painful when you trace where some of those talents landed and how their careers unfolded. One ended up at Clemson before becoming a first-round pick by the Kansas City Chiefs, while another chose Oregon and gave Alabama fans yet another reminder that the in-state battle can still slip away even when the Tide are involved from the start. [Read more 🡒]
