Pos. |
# |
Name |
Height |
Weight |
Year |
Home town |
5.0 !C |
4 |
Engstrom, CarlCarl Engstrom |
85 !7 1 (2.16 m) |
285 (129 kg) |
3.0 !Jr |
Ystad, Sweden |
1.5 !G |
5 |
Lacey, TrevorTrevor Lacey |
75 !6 3 (1.91 m) |
215 (98 kg) |
2.0 !So |
Huntsville, Alabama |
1.5 !G |
12 |
Releford, TrevorTrevor Releford |
73 !6 1 (1.85 m) |
195 (88 kg) |
3.0 !Jr |
Shawnee Mission, Kansas |
3.5 !F |
13 |
Goode, JulianJulian Goode |
79 !6 7 (2.01 m) |
225 (102 kg) |
3.0 !Jr |
Atlanta, Georgia |
5.0 !C |
14 |
Gueye, MoussaMoussa Gueye |
84 !7 0 (2.13 m) |
255 (116 kg) |
3.0 !Jr |
Dakar, Senegal |
3.5 !F |
15 |
Jacobs, NickNick Jacobs |
80 !6 8 (2.03 m) |
265 (120 kg) |
2.0 !So |
Atlanta, Georgia |
1.5 !G |
20 |
Randolph, LeviLevi Randolph |
77 !6 5 (1.96 m) |
205 (93 kg) |
2.0 !So |
Madison, Alabama |
3.5 !F |
21 |
Cooper, RodneyRodney Cooper |
78 !6 6 (1.98 m) |
215 (98 kg) |
2.0 !So |
Seale, Alabama |
1.5 !G |
22 |
Steele, AndrewAndrew Steele |
76 !6 4 (1.93 m) |
225 (102 kg) |
4.5 !RS Sr |
Birmingham, Alabama |
3.5 !F |
23 |
Johnson, CadeCade Johnson |
78 !6 6 (1.98 m) |
185 (84 kg) |
1.0 !Fr |
Madison, Alabama |
1.5 !G |
24 |
Pollard, DevontaDevonta Pollard |
80 !6 8 (2.03 m) |
200 (91 kg) |
1.0 !Fr |
Porterville, Mississippi |
3.5 !F |
25 |
Blackledge, KeonKeon Blackledge |
75 !6 3 (1.91 m) |
205 (93 kg) |
3.0 !Jr |
Hoover, Alabama |
1.5 !G |
32 |
Obasohan, RetinRetin Obasohan |
73 !6 1 (1.85 m) |
210 (95 kg) |
1.5 !RS Fr |
Antwerp, Belgium |
3.5 !F |
33 |
Wilson, IsiahIsiah Wilson |
75 !6 3 (1.91 m) |
180 (82 kg) |
1.0 !Fr |
Troy, Alabama |
3.5 !F |
35 |
Slaughter, DakotaDakota Slaughter |
78 !6 6 (1.98 m) |
215 (98 kg) |
2.0 !So |
Fishers, Indiana |
|
- Head coach
- Assistant coach(es)
- Dan Hipsher (Bowling Green)
- John Brannen (Marshall)
- Tony Pujol (Sterling College)
Read more about this topic: Alabama Crimson Tide Basketball
Famous quotes containing the word players:
“Yeah, percentage players die broke too, dont they, Bert?” —Sydney Carroll, U.S. screenwriter, and Robert Rossen. Eddie Felson (Paul Newman)
“People stress the violence. Thats the smallest part of it. Football is brutal only from a distance. In the middle of it theres a calm, a tranquility. The players accept pain. Theres a sense of order even at the end of a running play with bodies stewn everywhere. When the systems interlock, theres a satisfaction to the game that cant be duplicated. Theres a harmony.” —Don Delillo (b. 1926)
“I do not like football, which I think of as a game in which two tractors approach each other from opposite directions and collide. Besides, I have contempt for a game in which players have to wear so much equipment. Men play basketball in their underwear, which seems just right to me.” —Anna Quindlen (b. 1952)
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