| FTBL šŸ˜ Alabama Roster and Portal Management Chart (Domani Jackson is back for 2025.)

2025 Alabama Roster Outlook

PositionSeniorsJuniorsSophomoresFreshmen2025 SigneesDepartures
QuarterbackTy Simpson*Austin Mack*Keelon RussellJalen Milroe*^
Running backJam MillerDaniel Hill
Richard Young
Kevin Riley*AK Dear
Tight EndJosh CuevasDanny Lewis Jr.Jay Lindsey*Kaleb Edwards
Marshall Pritchett
CJ Dippre#
Robbie Ouzts#
Wide ReceiverGermie BernardIsiah Horton+Ryan Williams
Cole Adams
Jaylen Mbakwe

Jalen Hale*
Rico Scott*
Bubba Hampton*
Derek Meadows
Lotzeir Brooks
Offensive Line Jaeden Roberts*
Geno VanDeMark*
Kam Dewberry+
Parker Brailsford*
Kadyn Proctor
Wilkin Formby*
Roq Montgomery*
Olaus Alinen*
Arkel Anugwom*+
Casey Poe*
William Sanders*
Joseph Ionata*
Micah DeBose
Michael Carroll
Mal Waldrep
Jackson Lloyd
Tyler Booker^
Defensive FrontTim Keenan III*
LT Overton
James SmithEdric Hill*
Jordan Renaud*
Keon Keeley*
Jeremiah Beaman*
Isia Faga*
London Simmons
Steve Mboumoua~
Tim Smith#
Jah-Marian Latham#
Edge LinebackerKelby Collins+Qua Russaw*
Yhonzae Pierre*
Noah Cater*Justin Hill
Kevonte Henry~
Que Robinson#
Inside LinebackerDeontae Lawson*
Justin Jefferson
Nikhai Hill-Green+
Cayden JonesQB Reese*Darrell Johnson
Abduall Sanders
Luke Metz
Jihaad Campbell^
SafetyKeon SabbBray Hubbard
Kameron Howard
Red Morgan
Zay Mincey

Dre Kirkpatrick Jr
Ivan TaylorMalachi Moore#
CornerbackDomani Jackson
DaShawn Jones*
Zabien Brown
Cameron Calhoun+
Dijon Lee
Chuck McDonald

This chart will be updated regularly to reflect the most up to date roster outlook.

Players in Red were either starters or significant contributors (120+ non-special teams snaps) in 2024.
* Player has used his redshirt
# Player is out of eligibility
^ Player is entering the NFL Draft
+ Player is transferring in for 2025
~JUCO signee
-Jaylen Mbakwe is listed as a WR instead of CB

-Winter Transfer Portal Dates are December 9th - December 28th (bowl and playoff teams have a 5 day extension following final game)
-Spring Transfer Portal Dates are April 16th - April 25th.
-A 30 day transfer portal window will open any time a head coach leaves their program for any reason.

Players Transferring from Alabama

DL Jehiem Oatis (to Colorado)
DL Hunter Osborne (to Virginia)
DL Damon Payne (to Michigan)
Edge Keanu Koht (to Vanderbilt)
Edge Jayshawn Ross
LB/Edge Jeremiah Alexander
LB Serling Dixon
LB Justin Okoronkwo
DB Jahlil Hurley (to Kansas)
S DeVonta Smith (to Notre Dame)
S King Mack

QB Dylan Lonergan (to Boston College)
RB Justice Haynes (to Michigan)
OL Miles McVay (to North Carolina)
OL Elijah Pritchett
TE Ty Lockwood
WR Kobe Prentice (to Baylor)
WR Caleb Odom (to Ole Miss)
WR Kendrick Law (to Kentucky)
WR Emmanuel Henderson (to Kansas)
WR Jaren Hamilton
WR Amari Jefferson


Players Transferring to Alabama
EDGE Kelby Collins (from Florida)
LB
Nikhai Hill-Green (from Colorado)
CB
Cameron Calhoun (from Utah)
OL
Kam Dewberry (from Texas A&M)
OL Arkel Anugwom (from Ball State)
WR
Isaiah Horton (from Miami)
 
I don't have specialists listed on the page 1 chart, but for those that care or are keeping count, that latest portal entry by Jefferson puts Bama at the 85 or 86 count best I can tell. And that includes a guy like Booker who will officially declare soon.
Booker released on Instagram, that heā€™s gone, as expected.
 
I don't have specialists listed on the page 1 chart, but for those that care or are keeping count, that latest portal entry by Jefferson puts Bama at the 85 or 86 count best I can tell. And that includes a guy like Booker who will officially declare soon.
Are you counting the latest roster addition with Jefferson? I understand he's good to go for another year this fall. 87...could be wrong either way (+ or - 1.)
 
On a different note:

In the fall of '20 and spring of '21 I mentioned I didn't like what I was seeing with one position group and a specific position coach. I didn't like the recruiting (missing too many) and didn't like the development.

With Keenan on his way ... a legit concern is the interior line on defense next season. A legit concern is that position (DL) from top to bottom.
 
Are you counting the latest roster addition with Jefferson? I understand he's good to go for another year this fall. 87...could be wrong either way (+ or - 1.)

Yes, just not sliding him back over on the chart until there is a release/statement on it. I'm trying to stick to the rules I made for myself. LOL
 
On a different note:

In the fall of '20 and spring of '21 I mentioned I didn't like what I was seeing with one position group and a specific position coach. I didn't like the recruiting (missing too many) and didn't like the development.

With Keenan on his way ... a legit concern is the interior line on defense next season. A legit concern is that position (DL) from top to bottom.

It's a big concern. My hope they can pluck from the portal soon or in spring. And will Roach take another offer??? Could see that as a possibility as well.
 
It's a big concern. My hope they can pluck from the portal soon or in spring. And will Roach take another offer??? Could see that as a possibility as well.
Another "bump in the road" we saw this season and I believe we'll see it fade in the rear view mirror over the next two years with the roster.

Over the last year or so there have been several conversations where I've pondered about the COVID year of 2020 having a direct effect. If we look at a normal timeline of a football player, we should be seeing the class of '19 and '20 coming into their prime, right?

We have seen the affect of that period on the field and off the field. In sports, and in life.

Now, I try to put all of that in context with Bama's 2020/'21/'22 classes and how many upperclassmen we're going to see move on. It's a small number; a couple on both sides of the ball, here and there.

'20, 1 leaving (others, gone.)
'21, 3 leaving (others, gone.)
'22, about 3/4's of that class is no longer in Tuscaloosa.

It's a "young, core" that's in town ... and, we've seen quite a few of those "others, gone" on Sunday's.
 
NYTā€™s take on those declaring for the draft:
Bookerā€™s decision means that Alabamaā€™s most dependable offensive lineman has departed, but thereā€™s experience at guard. Rising seniors Jaeden Roberts and Geno VanDeMark are projected returners, and Alabama added senior guard Kam Dewberry from Texas A&M via the transfer portal.

As it stands now, inside linebacker is in a pretty healthy position for the Crimson Tide. Alabama signed Colorado linebacker Nikhai Hill-Green, an All-Big 12 selection, from the transfer portal, and expects senior Justin Jefferson back in 2025 after the recent ruling that allows extra eligibility for former junior college players. Junior Deontae Lawson, a starter who suffered a season-ending injury, has yet to make his NFL decision. ā€” Kennington Smith III, Alabama beat writer

How does Milroe rate as a draft prospect?​

Now this one is interesting.

At 6-foot-2 and 225 pounds, Milroe might be the most physically gifted quarterback in the 2025 NFL Draft class. His burst, explosion and speed give him the potential to be a souped-up version of Jalen Hurts. Milroeā€™s impact on an NFL run game, when ready, could be as big or bigger than what weā€™ve seen from Jayden Daniels.

However, and this is big: Milroe simply is not ready to run an NFL offense right now. With Cam Ward and Shedeur Sanders (and maybe even with Penn Stateā€™s Drew Allar), you can squint and see a scenario in which it works out OK for them as starters next year, if need be. You canā€™t reasonably do that today with Milroe.

Another year in college wouldā€™ve helped him. Same time, there are at least three QB-desperate NFL teams with what should be top-10 picks.

Every QB in this class needs time. Milroe might need the most. His footwork is bad, heā€™s not an accurate passer by any measurement, and his confidence as a processor ā€” as we saw vs. Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl ā€” is low. Milroe absolutely has first-round talent, but heā€™s a complete wild card right now. Teams interested in him not only have to do all of their homework, but also make sure they have a long-term plan that doesnā€™t involve immediately starting him. ā€” Nick Baumgardner, NFL Draft writer

Dane Bruglerā€™s scouting report​

Milroe might be the most fascinating evaluation in the 2025 draft. Some will immediately dismiss him as a legitimate quarterback prospect because of his inconsistencies as a passer ā€” and I get it. His lack of precision and timing were major issues at times this season, most notably in Alabamaā€™s losses.

But he is also one of the best pure athletes in this draft class. His on-field GPS numbers reflect a 4.3 40, which is even more impressive considering his size. Milroe has high-level arm strength with plenty of impressive throws on his tape, and NFL scouts speak highly about his intelligence and makeup.

The NFL is a traits league, and Milroe has a rare package of skills that several teams will be willing to bet on somewhere in the top-50 picks.

What do the departures mean for Alabama?​

The draft decisions were expected but leave holes at premier positions on Alabamaā€™s 2025 team.

At quarterback, it will be a three-man race between rising junior Ty Simpson, rising sophomore Austin Mack and incoming freshman Keelon Russell, a unanimous five-star recruit. Simpson, a two-year backup to Milroe, enters the offseason as the early favorite.


Bookerā€™s decision means that Alabamaā€™s most dependable offensive lineman has departed, but thereā€™s experience at guard. Rising seniors Jaeden Roberts and Geno VanDeMark are projected returners, and Alabama added senior guard Kam Dewberry from Texas A&M via the transfer portal.

As it stands now, inside linebacker is in a pretty healthy position for the Crimson Tide. Alabama signed Colorado linebacker Nikhai Hill-Green, an All-Big 12 selection, from the transfer portal, and expects senior Justin Jefferson back in 2025 after the recent ruling that allows extra eligibility for former junior college players. Junior Deontae Lawson, a starter who suffered a season-ending injury, has yet to make his NFL decision. ā€” Kennington Smith III, Alabama beat writer

Another year in college wouldā€™ve helped him. Same time, there are at least three QB-desperate NFL teams with what should be top-10 picks.

Every QB in this class needs time. Milroe might need the most. His footwork is bad, heā€™s not an accurate passer by any measurement, and his confidence as a processor ā€” as we saw vs. Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl ā€” is low. Milroe absolutely has first-round talent, but heā€™s a complete wild card right now. Teams interested in him not only have to do all of their homework, but also make sure they have a long-term plan that doesnā€™t involve immediately starting him. ā€” Nick Baumgardner, NFL Draft writer

Dane Bruglerā€™s scouting report​

Milroe might be the most fascinating evaluation in the 2025 draft. Some will immediately dismiss him as a legitimate quarterback prospect because of his inconsistencies as a passer ā€” and I get it. His lack of precision and timing were major issues at times this season, most notably in Alabamaā€™s losses.

But he is also one of the best pure athletes in this draft class. His on-field GPS numbers reflect a 4.3 40, which is even more impressive considering his size. Milroe has high-level arm strength with plenty of impressive throws on his tape, and NFL scouts speak highly about his intelligence and makeup.

The NFL is a traits league, and Milroe has a rare package of skills that several teams will be willing to bet on somewhere in the top-50 picks.
 
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I thought the defensive backs performed pretty decent this year considering how green they were. Was this in fact more of a lack of recruiting ability or something else I'm missing?

Linguist is awesome. Hitschler struggled some on and off the field with coaching and recruiting. Certainly wasn't good enough at 1 to overcome the other.
 
My $0.000002 worth... out of all of the departures, I'm really only going to truly miss maybe 2. There's some great talent leaving, but I don't think any of them lived up to their potential for whatever reason. The O players rarely touched the ball, the D players weren't household names, so I think we'll be fine.
 
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