Alabamas SEC Media Days Picks May Have Revealed DeBoers Leaders

Could Alabama's media day selections be a crystal ball for predicting team captains under Coach DeBoer's leadership?

Alabama’s trip to SEC Media Days is more than a summer formality. For the Crimson Tide, it has also been a pretty reliable preview of who ends up wearing the captain label.

With 2026 SEC Media Days set for Tampa one week from now, Kalen DeBoer will be there to represent Alabama as the program enters his third season. The school also announced Tuesday that wide receiver Ryan Coleman-Williams, cornerback Zabien Brown and safety Bray Hubbard will attend as player representatives.

That group immediately invites a familiar question around Tuscaloosa: how often do the SEC Media Days representatives wind up as team captains a few weeks later?

At Alabama, the answer has been: often.

Since 2015, the players chosen for Media Days have repeatedly shown up again when the captains are selected, and the pattern has been strong enough to stand out. The Crimson Tide’s captains are now voted on by the players shortly before the season under DeBoer. Under Nick Saban, the team voted on captains after the season ended.

The tradition at Denny Chimes gives those captain selections extra weight. Since 1948, Alabama football captains have left their handprints and footprints in the concrete around the clock tower in the middle of campus, a permanent marker of their place in program history.

The recent list of Media Days representatives who later became captains is a long one.

In one season, Reggie Ragland, Kenyan Drake and Ryan Kelly were the Media Days faces for Alabama, and Ragland, Kelly, Jake Coker and Derrick Henry later became captains. That team finished 14-1, beat Clemson 45-40 in the CFP National Championship Game and ended No. 1 in the final AP Top 25.

Another year brought Jonathan Allen, O.J. Howard and Eddie Jackson to Media Days.

Allen and Jackson were later joined by Cam Robinson and Reuben Foster as captains. That Alabama team also went 14-1, but lost to Clemson in the CFP National Championship Game and finished No. 2 in the final AP Top 25.

Bradley Bozeman, Minkah Fitzpatrick and Calvin Ridley were the representatives one season, and all three eventually joined the captain group with Rashaan Evans and Shaun Dion Hamilton. That team went 13-1, beat Georgia in the CFP National Championship Game and finished No. 1 in the final AP Top 25.

The trend kept rolling. Damien Harris, Anfernee Jennings and Ross Pierschbacher were the Media Days trio, and Harris, Pierschbacher, Christian Miller and Hale Hentges became captains. Alabama went 14-1 that year, lost to Clemson in the CFP National Championship Game and finished No. 2 in the final AP Top 25.

Then came Jerry Jeudy, Dylan Moses and Tua Tagovailoa. Tagovailoa later joined DeVonta Smith, Anfernee Jennings and Xavier McKinney as captains. That season ended with an 11-2 record, a Citrus Bowl win over Michigan and a No. 8 finish in the final AP Top 25.

Phidarian Mathis and John Metchie III were the representatives in another year, and Mathis later became a captain alongside Bryce Young, Evan Neal and Will Anderson Jr. Alabama finished 13-2, lost to Georgia in the CFP National Championship Game and landed at No. 2 in the final AP Top 25.

The next season’s Media Days group was Will Anderson Jr., Jordan Battle and Bryce Young. Alabama finished 11-2, beat Kansas State in the Sugar Bowl and came in at No. 5 in the final AP Top 25.

JC Latham, Kool-Aid McKinstry and Dallas Turner were the representatives after that. Alabama went 12-2, lost to Michigan in the CFP Semifinal in the Rose Bowl and finished No. 5 in the final AP Top 25.

More recently, Jalen Milroe, Tyler Booker and Malachi Moore represented the Crimson Tide at Media Days, and all three later became captains with Deontae Lawson. That team finished 9-4, lost to Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl and was No. 17 in the final AP Top 25.

Last season, Kadyn Proctor, Tim Keenan III and Deontae Lawson were the Media Days representatives, and the captain group included Ty Simpson, Parker Brailsford, Tim Keenan III and Deontae Lawson. Alabama went 11-4, lost to Indiana in the CFP Quarterfinal in the Rose Bowl and finished No. 9 in the final AP Top 25.

Now the question turns to Coleman-Williams, Brown and Hubbard. If the recent pattern holds, one or more of them could be headed for Denny Chimes a few weeks after Tampa.

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