London Jemison Is Getting Real Breakout Buzz At Alabama

Sophomore sensation London Jemison is set for a standout season as Jon Rothstein tips him as one of the SEC's breakout stars.

Alabama spent the offseason stacking talent through the transfer portal and on the recruiting trail, but one of Nate Oats’ most important wins came from keeping London Jemison in Tuscaloosa.

Jemison, who announced in April that he was returning, looks positioned for a much bigger role as a sophomore. He was in the rotation all season as a freshman, making 13 starts and averaging 6.2 points and 3.4 rebounds in 15.5 minutes per game while shooting 34.8% from three-point range.

That production came while Alabama leaned on him in a way that didn’t exactly fit his game. Jemison is more naturally a wing, but last season he was pushed into minutes at the four and even the small-ball five.

That should change now. With Brandon Garrison, Jamarion Davis-Fleming and Drew Fielder added in the frontcourt, plus the returns of Keitenn Bristow and Collins Onyejiaka, Jemison should spend almost no time at center and only limited time at power forward when Oats goes small.

The buzz around Jemison is real enough that Jon Rothstein included him among his five breakout candidates in the SEC for 2026-27.

5 SEC Breakout Players. pic.twitter.com/pZ6Xlelapj

  • Jon Rothstein (@JonRothstein) July 1, 2026

In a projected starting five, Jemison is slotted in at small forward alongside Amari Allen and Aden Holloway in the backcourt, with Fielder and Garrison in the frontcourt. That would give Alabama a noticeably bigger lineup than Oats has been able to deploy in recent seasons.

Jemison’s path to that role won’t be automatic. True freshmen Qayden Samuels and Jaxon Richardson will push hard for minutes, and Richardson has already been turning heads in summer workouts. Even so, Jemison has the edge in experience, and that matters.

However the rotation settles, Alabama is expected to need him. Oats has put together a deep, versatile roster, and Jemison’s sophomore jump could be a big part of what raises the ceiling. Better finishing at the rim and improved three-point shooting would go a long way toward making that happen.

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