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Landon Dickerson shotguns a beer during Jalen Hurts’ appearance on ‘The Tonight Show’

Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts and running back Saquon Barkley became NFL champions in a 40-22 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday in Super Bowl LIX. On Tuesday, their celebration tour reached “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”

And they brought along the Eagles starting offensive line, including guard Landon Dickerson, who, like Hurts, is an Alabama alumnus.

They celebrated by shotgunning beers with Fallon, although Hurts did not shotgun his, but sprayed it onto Dickerson.

The offensive linemen also got to appear in a musical skit with Hurts and Barkley.

Barkley got the biggest laugh as he and Hurts chatted with Fallon when he described his role on Philadelphia’s quarterback sneak, which produced the first touchdown in Super Bowl LIX. The play has widely come to be known as the Tush Push, although Hurts said he doesn’t call it that.

“I have the easiest job,” Barkley said when asked his assignment on the play. “I’m the one who pushes the tush.”

Fallon asked Hurts what he felt as the confetti was falling around him after the Eagles’ victory on Sunday.

“I’ve just been telling people I was trying to process it,” Hurts said. “I think when you go into that, you don’t know how you’re going to feel. You watch as a fan sports and championship games and these iconic moments, and you see the greats and how they handle it in their excitement and the rush of emotions. All I could think about was all of the hard work, all of could think about was all of the effort.

“And to see my reflection on the chrome trophy, in that mirror, it was a pretty good feeling.”

The Eagles lost to Kansas City 38-35 in Super Bowl LVII two years ago. Hurts has kept a photo that shows him walking off the field through red and yellow confetti as the wallpaper on his phone since that game. The MVP of Sunday’s game, Hurts told Fallon he felt “no urgency to change it” after the victory.

“Every time I open my phone,” Hurts said, “I don’t just sit there and have this flashback of a moment. It’s not some psychotic thing or anything like that.”

FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE

Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.

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3 takeaways from Alabama basketball’s dominant win over Texas

Alabama men’s basketball managed not to get hooked in the Texas trap.

It would have been easy to let happen, and even understandable. The No. 2 Crimson Tide has the biggest regular-season game of the season approaching Saturday against No. 1 Auburn. The matchup has already been talked about plenty, even with a game first against Texas on the road looming Tuesday night. Any team in Alabama’s spot could have easily looked past a lesser team in the Longhorns and focus more on the rivalry game this weekend.

But the Crimson Tide didn’t. Alabama walked into the Moody Center and dominated. The Crimson Tide beat the Longhorns 103-80 in Austin, Texas.

Here are takeaways from the game between No. 2 Alabama (21-3, 10-1 SEC) and Texas (15-10, 4-8).

Only turnovers stop Alabama early

If not for the turnovers, Alabama might have grabbed a 30-point lead at halftime. That’s about the only thing that slowed the Crimson Tide down in the opening frame.

Alabama had nine first-half turnovers, giving the ball up on 26.5% of possessions.

Otherwise, the Crimson Tide rolled. Alabama didn’t miss much, draining 7 of 12 triples (58%) and 17 of 26 overall shot attempts (65%), fueling a 49-31 lead at the break.

Meanwhile, the Alabama defense kept Texas from doing much. The Longhorns couldn’t even get to 30% shooting on either field goals or 3-pointers. Texas averaged .886 points per possession, a measly number while Alabama averaged 1.441.

A variety of players contributed to the strong efforts. Labaron Philon led the way with 10 points in the first half over 11 minutes.

Nate Oats called turnovers a “major problem” after the Georgia game, and they continued to be. Yet they don’t seem to stop Alabama from cruising. At least not against Texas.

Triples fly from Alabama backcourt and otherwise

Alabama flexed the full power of its backcourt. The guards lit up Texas from beyond the arc.

Labaron Philon drained triples. Aden Holloway did, too. Mark Sears also joined the multiple 3-pointers club. Chris Youngblood also had one of his own.

The group combined to run Texas out of the gym as the Longhorns struggled to keep up with the high clip of 3-pointers.

The guards weren’t the only ones making triples, but they played a big part in the strong percentage Alabama logged. The Crimson Tide finished the day 59% from beyond the arc.

From deep, Philon finished 3 for 5, Holloway went 3 for 6 and Sears went 2 for 5. The guards overall made nine of Alabama’s 17 triples on 29 attempts.

The Crimson Tide backcourt made plays in other ways, too. Plenty of field goals, rebounds, assists and otherwise. But the high number of 3-pointers jumped out on a day the group shined overall.

Jarin Stevenson emerges

The second-year player has experienced some bumps along the road of the 2024-25 season. His impact has often been limited. The game against Texas wasn’t one of those nights, though. Far from it.

Stevenson, with only one double-digit scoring game in SEC play prior to Tuesday, almost reached that mark in the first half alone. In the first five minutes, Stevenson scored five points and grabbed three rebounds.

His efforts continued in the second half. Stevenson hit triples, grabbed rebounds and blocked a shot. The Chapel Hill native played a key role in the victory, scoring 22 points with four triples and four rebounds. Stevenson far surpassed his previous season-high scoring total of 11 points.

Nick Kelly is an Alabama beat writer for AL.com and the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X and Instagram.

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Bruce Pearl says Florida loss had ‘no effect’ on Auburn basketball against Vanderbilt

Winning on the road in the Southeastern Conference is hard. Doing so against an unpredictable Vanderbilt team in Memorial Gymnasium after a tough loss is an underrated challenge that Auburn conquered Tuesday night.

The No. 1-ranked Tigers beat Vanderbilt 80-68, avoiding the classic trap game ahead of a showdown with No. 2 Alabama on Saturday.

Not only did the matchup with Vanderbilt have the makings of a trap game with the Iron Bowl of Basketball on the horizon, but it came directly after Auburn suffered its first loss of SEC play against Florida. The Tigers lost that game by nine, but trailed by 21 during the second half, looking emphatically like the second-best team for the final 25 minutes of the game.

It was enough for head coach Bruce Pearl to point toward Auburn’s effort, specifically when asked about stopping Florda guard Walter Clayton Jr., who finished the game with 19 points.

Concerns of a letdown against Vanderbilt may have diminished slightly after the result against Florida, but Pearl pushed back on the idea of that loss affecting the next game.

“I honestly don’t think it had any effect,” Pearl said after beating Vanderbilt. “So far, this team has done a pretty good job of taking it one at a time, and we’ve learned a lot from our wins. Florida beat us because they were better.”

The win over Vanderbilt wasn’t a perfect performance, but a double-digit win at Memorial Gymnasium won’t be taken for granted by anyone in the Auburn locker room. The Tigers started hot, opening the game on a 15-0 run, but found themselves trailing early in the second half.

But the response was there, something that never quite came — or at least not for long enough — against Florida. Auburn outscored Vanderbilt 32-19 in the final 13:51, finishing the game close to how it started.

The Tigers also got performances that showed their depth, highlighted by 21 points from Denver Jones, a game after finishing without a field goal on four attempts. Chaney Johnson also stepped up, scoring 20 points on 9-for-10 shooting, providing a dominant frontcourt presence on a night in which star center Johni Broome was inefficient offensively by his standards.

“Denver Jones had an unbelievable first half, just carrying us. Bounce-back game from the last one‚” Pearl said on Auburn’s postgame radio show. “Second half, Chaney Johnson absolutely took over. Mike Burgomaster dialed up some really good looks. But at the end of the day, all it was, was the wisdom to recognize Chaney had the advantage on the inside. He took advantage of it.”

Pearl has talked all season about the team’s emphasis on respecting each opponent, whether its Vermont on Night 1 or Vanderbilt on a Tuesday in February before arguably the biggest regular season game in program history.

Even in the days after the Florida loss, Pearl acknowledged where Auburn can improve, but also credited the loss mostly to how well the Gators played.

“Florida played outstanding. They played like a Final Four team,“ Pearl said Monday. ”There were definitely some things we could have done. We missed 40 shots. We missed seven free throws in the second half.”

Next is the highly anticipated Iron Bowl of Basketball, a fierce, evolving rivalry that will for the first time pit the No. 1 and No. 2 team in the country against each other.

That one will be hard to look past, but Pearl wouldn’t have worried about that anyway.

Peter Rauterkus covers Auburn sports for AL.com. You can follow him on X at @peter_rauterkus or email him at [email protected]m

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NW Regional Boys: ‘King’ Malone scores in final seconds, Tanner upsets Class 2A No. 6 Red Bay

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19-year-old charged with capital murder in death of Birmingham man who was expecting first child

A suspect has been charged in the September shooting death of a 26-year-old man in southwest Birmingham.

Deionya Saki Harley, 19, is charged with capital murder in the shooting death of Isaiah Tyson Anthony.

Anthony, who family said was expecting his first child in the coming months, was found unresponsive just after 5 p.m. Sept. 18, 2024, in the 1700 block of Laurel Avenue S.W.

Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service Pronounced him dead on the scene.

Police at the time said the preliminary investigation suggested the victim was involved in a verbal altercation with an unknown suspect before the fatal shots were fired.

The suspect was gone by the time officers got to the scene.

Authorities have not disclosed a motive or said why the charge is a capital crime.

Harley, of Birmingham, has been in the Jefferson County Jail since Feb. 2 on unrelated charges of attempted murder and first-degree robbery.

He is being held without bond.

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UAB Blazers rusty in 82-75 conference loss at East Carolina

UAB Blazers head coach Andy Kennedy admitted pre-game that an eight-day break was a good chance for his team to recover physically, but worried there would be some rust to shake off upon their return to play.

The latter proved more accurate for UAB, who dropped an in-conference road game at East Carolina 82-75 in a second half implosion. The Blazers are now 15-9 on the season. The loss at ECU snapped the Blazers three-game winning streak, but the Blazers are 8-2 in their last 10 outings.

It was evident early in the game UAB was going to need some runway to get back into form, with sloppy passing and an uncharacteristic inability to grab rebounds on the defensive end. The Blazers appeared to have fixed things, leading by as many as 12 points behind a big second half from Yaxel Lendeborg who finished the game with 22 points, 10 rebounds and three assists, all of which led UAB.

Guards Tyren Moore (16 points) and Alejandro Vasquez (10 points), along with forward Christian Coleman (12 points) all scored in double-digits, but where UAB faltered late in the game was their defense, getting slashed inside the arc by Pirates’ forward CJ Walker who finished the game with 29 points on 10-of-15 shooting. Complementing his performance was a 23-point game from guard RJ Felton, who hit five of his 11 three-point attempts.

The Blazers, down 75-77 with 30 seconds left, had a chance to take the lead, but a turnover by Alejandro Vasquez followed by a Flagrant 1 foul where he grabbed and held onto the shorts of guard Jordan Riley resulted in the Pirates putting the game out of reach.

UAB’s next game is Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m., when they take on USF at Bartow Arena in their second matchup of the season.

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Man wanted for questioning in reports of person shooting at people in Birmingham arrested after Bessemer chase

A 41-year-old Birmingham man is in custody following a brief car chase and foot chase in Bessemer.

Demario Ladell Keith, who has a lengthy history of drug crimes, is facing multiple charges in Bessemer and is also wanted for questioning in a series of incidents in Birmingham.

Bessemer police Det. Justin Burmeister said they received a public service announcement from Birmingham police saying they were looking into multiple social media posts claiming a man in a black sedan was randomly shooting at people on the city’s east side.

There were conflicting reports on social media as to whether the suspect vehicle was a Nissan Maxima or a Nissan Altima.

Burmeister said Birmingham detectives spotted the black Nissan Maxima in the parking lot of the Bessemer Walmart about 4:30 p.m. and called Bessemer police and Jefferson County sheriff’s deputies to assist.

When officers arrived, the vehicle fled. After a short pursuit, the driver bailed and fled on foot.

Police from Bessemer, Birmingham, Hoover, Fairfield and Jefferson County deputies all responded to the area and set up a perimeter. Star 1 helicopter also helped in the search.

Keith was taken into custody in the 300 block of Deola Road, which is a residential area near Interstate 20/59 and the West Town Shopping Plaza.

“Our success in apprehending this dangerous individual was the result of dedicated teamwork between law enforcement agencies,’’ Burmeister said.

“This should serve as a reminder that when agencies come together, we can bring violent offenders to justice and make our communities safer.”

Birmingham police said earlier Tuesday they were looking into multiple social media posts claiming a man in a black Nissan Altima was randomly shooting at women on the city’s east side.

As far back as Feb. 2, social media posts began to warn of the man, who they said was in the Nissan with silver trim and heavily tinted windows.

“He’s riding around shooting at people,’’ one woman wrote. “It seems like he is targeting women. Ladies be aware of your surroundings – the man is a real psycho.”

The social media post claiming someone was shooting at women post was shared nearly 2,000 times. Multiple other Facebook posts since then have surfaced with similar incidents.

Another woman posted this several days ago: “Y’all please be careful. The car that’s going around shooting people was literally just behind me trying to get on the side of me. I swear he came out of nowhere.”

More warnings surfaced Tuesday when one person posted that another shooting incident happened on Carson Road and yet another said he was spotted in the Tarrant area.

Tarrant Police Chief Wendell Major said he was not aware of any reports Tuesday in the Tarrant area.

There have been no reports of anyone injured in the incidents.

Birmingham police also released a statement Tuesday night about the arrest but did not mention the suspect by name or link him to any specific crime or crimes.

Here is BPD’s statement:

“During a fast-moving and dynamic investigation, Birmingham Police Department’s Special Enforcement Division diligently pursued multiple leads, ultimately tracking the person of interest, believed to be involved in multiple road rage incidents in Birmingham, vehicle to the Bessemer area. Recognizing the urgency of the situation, BPD swiftly coordinated with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department and Bessemer Police Department to ensure a strategic and safe resolution.

“Thanks to the seamless collaboration between agencies, officers successfully apprehended the suspect before he could pose any further threat to our community. His determination to evade law enforcement at all costs was met with the unwavering commitment of our officers and partners.

“BPD is grateful for the strong working relationships we share with our local law enforcement partners, whose support was instrumental in bringing this case to a swift and safe conclusion.

“The suspect was armed with a weapon and will face multiple felony drug charges.”

Anyone with information is asked to call Bessemer police at 205-481-4366, 205-425-2411 or the anonymous tip line at 205-428-3541.

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White House fires USAID inspector general after warning about funding oversight, officials say

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House fired the inspector general for the U.S. Agency for International Development on Tuesday, U.S. officials said, a day after his office warned that the Trump administration’s dismantling of USAID had made it all but impossible to monitor $8.2 billion in unspent humanitarian funds.

The White House gave no reason for the firing of Inspector General Paul Martin, one of the officials said. The officials were familiar with the dismissal but not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Inspectors general are typically independently funded watchdogs attached to government agencies and tasked with rooting out waste, fraud and abuse. The Trump administration earlier purged more than a dozen inspectors general.

On Monday, Martin’s office issued a flash report warning that the Trump administration’s freeze on all foreign assistance and moves to cut USAID staff had left oversight of the humanitarian aid “largely nonoperational.”

That includes the agency’s ability to ensure none of the funding falls into the hands of violent extremist groups or goes astray in conflict zones, the watchdog said.

The dismissal, which was first reported by CNN, is the latest action by the Trump administration affecting the aid agency, including efforts to pull all but a fraction of its staffers worldwide off the job. Trump and ally Elon Musk say its work is out of line with the president’s agenda.

American businesses partnering with USAID sue

A lawsuit filed Tuesday alleged that the unraveling of USAID is stiffing American businesses on hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid bills for work that has already been done.

The administration’s abrupt foreign aid freeze also is forcing mass layoffs by U.S. suppliers and contractors for USAID, including 750 furloughs at one company, Washington-based Chemonics International, the lawsuit says.

“One cannot overstate the impact of that unlawful course of conduct: on businesses large and small forced to shut down their programs and let employees go; on hungry children across the globe who will go without; on populations around the world facing deadly disease; and on our constitutional order,” the U.S. businesses and organizations said.

An organization representing 170 small U.S. businesses, major suppliers, the American Jewish group HIAS that aids displaced people abroad, the American Bar Association and others joined the legal challenge.

It was filed in U.S. District Court in Washington against President Donald Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, acting USAID Deputy Administrator Peter Marocco, a Trump appointee who has been a central figure in hollowing out the agency, and Russell Vought, Trump’s head of the Office of Management and Budget.

It is at least the third lawsuit over the administration’s targeting of USAID and its programs worldwide. A lawsuit brought by federal employees associations has temporarily blocked the administration from pulling thousands of USAID staffers off the job.

The funding freeze and other measures have persisted, including the agency losing the lease on its Washington headquarters.

The new administration terminated contracts without the required 30-day notice and without back payments for work that was already done, according to a U.S. official, a businessperson with a USAID contract and an email seen by The Associated Press. They spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal by the Trump administration.

For Chemonics, one of the larger of the USAID partners, the funding freeze has meant $103 million in unpaid invoices and almost $500 million in USAID-ordered medication, food and other goods stalled in the supply chain or ports, the lawsuit says.

For the health commodities alone, not delivering them “on time could potentially lead to as many as 566,000 deaths from HIV/AIDS, malaria, and unmet reproductive health needs, including 215,000 pediatric deaths,” the lawsuit says.

The filing asserts that the administration has no authority to block programs and funding mandated by Congress without approval.

Marocco defended the funding cutoff and push to put thousands of USAID staffers on leave in an affidavit filed late Monday in the lawsuit brought by the workers’ groups.

“Insubordination” and “noncompliance” by USAID staffers made it necessary to stop funding and operations by the agency to allow the administration to carry out a program-by-program review to decide what U.S. aid programs could resume overseas, he wrote.

USAID workers deny insubordination, and call the accusation a pretext to dismantle the agency.

GOP lawmakers aim to save food aid program

Seven Republican lawmakers from farm states introduced legislation to safeguard a long-running $1.8 billion food-aid program run by USAID, aiming to move the Food for Peace program under the Department of Agriculture.

Farmers, a politically important bloc for the Trump administration, have been affected by the administration’s funding freeze as well.

Kansas Republican Sen. Jerry Moran, who announced the legislation, over the weekend thanked Rubio for interceding to allow delivery of $560 million in U.S.-grown commodities intended for hunger programs worldwide that had been stuck in ports because of the administration’s abrupt cutoff of foreign assistance spending.

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By Ellen Knickmeyer Associated Press

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington and Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Missouri, contributed reporting.

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3 takeaways from Auburn basketball’s 80-68 victory at Vanderbilt

Coming off its first conference defeat against Florida, it looked like Auburn basketball was coming out with a vengeance against Vanderbilt.

After four lead changes and two ties, Auburn redeemed themselves leaving Nashville with an 80-68 victory over the Commodores.

Auburn is now 22-2 this season and 10-1 in SEC play.

The Tigers now prepare for their biggest game of the year, heading to Tuscaloosa for the first of two matchups against No. 2 Alabama.

“There was not going to be one ounce of looking past Vanderbilt to Saturday,” Auburn coach Bruce Pearl said postgame.

Here are three takeaways from Tuesday’s contest at Vanderbilt:

Season-high first half for Auburn’s Denver Jones

After scoring two points against Florida, Denver Jones came out firing with 14 points at halftime.

Entering the contest, Jones had a season-high five made 3-pointers in a game for Auburn. He drilled four in one half as the Tigers led by as many as 15 points.

Vanderbilt closed out the half on a 15-5 run against Auburn cutting the deficit to a one score game. Despite the team-high from Jones, the Tigers shot 2-of-9 from the floor in the final 3:59 of the first half.

Chris Moore inserted in starting lineup, Auburn depth not 100%

Chris Moore got his first start Tuesday night after starting 16 games for the Tigers a season ago. Pearl reported Monday that Chad Baker-Mazara was ‘banged up’ resulting in him coming off the bench.

Mazara was not his usual self with a scoreless first half. Leading scorer Johni Broome was held to just two points in the first half shooting 1-of-6 from the floor.

In typical Broome fashion, he scored double digit points in the second half closing out with 17 points and seven rebounds. He finished 6-of-16 from the floor while still favoring his ankle throughout the game.

This was Mazara’s first scoreless game for Auburn this season. In his two years with the Tigers, he only finished with zero points scored once in the 2024 NCAA Tournament against Yale.

Auburn closes out another tight road contest

Vanderbilt took its first lead of the game with 17 minutes to go in the second half. The Commodores only missed one free throw and outrebounded Auburn 37-29

Chaney Johnson was doing it all for the Tigers on both sides of the court. He knocked down several big shots down the stretch scoring 16 points in the second half alone.

Johnson’s late surge gave the Tigers a lead they would not relinquish for the remainder of the contest. Johnson finished his night with 20 points as Jones added 21 points matching Auburn career high.

Tahaad Pettiford and Miles Kelly combined for 12 points for the Tigers. Dylan Cardwell added six points shooting 100% from the free throw line.

“We’re taking it one game at a time,” Denver Jones said postgame. “We know we have Alabama coming up…We just follow the coach’s game plan.”

All eyes will now be on the IBOB as ESPN College Gameday will host a special two-hour show live from Coleman Coliseum Saturday.

Auburn’s matchup with Alabama will tipoff at 3 p.m. and will be televised on ESPN.

Jerry Humphrey III covers Auburn sports for AL.com. You can follow him on X at @Jerryhump3 or email him at [email protected].

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NW Regional Girls: Class 2A No. 1 Decatur Heritage rolls past Belgreen into regional final

The Decatur Heritage girls basketball team faced a first-period deficit but ramped up the defensive acumen as the top-ranked Eagles surged to a 57-34 victory over Belgreen in Tuesday’s Class 2A Northwest Regional semifinal at Wallace State’s Traditions Bank Arena.

“We started off with a lot of energy,” Decatur Heritage coach Johnny Jones said. “I think we had too much and didn’t know how to control it. Everybody was very anxious and we have to do a better job of channeling the energy when the game starts.”

Decatur Heritage (25-7) jumped out to an early 6-2 lead but fell behind 14-12 at the end of the period following a 12-6 run by the Bulldogs, powered by a pair of 3-pointers from Dacota Green and Makenna Fisher.

Lilliana Willingham scored the first bucket of the second period for Belgreen but the Eagles clamped down defensively and forced 10 straight misses from the field. Decatur Heritage surged ahead to 6-point advantage at the break on the strength of an 11-1 run, led by McGhee, who scored six straight points to jumpstart the rally.

The Eagles opened the second half with a game-clinching 23-5 run, fueled by a trio of 3-pointers, and led by as many as 24 points in the third period.

Belgreen (23-9) cut the lead down to 14 points with six minutes remaining, ending a 10-0 run that saw Fisher knock down a pair of triples, but the Eagles responded with a 9-0 run to end any hope of a final rally.

Did you know? Decatur Heritage advanced to its fourth regional final in five seasons and sixth overall.

By the numbers: The Eagles shot 45.1 percent overall and dominated the paint with a plus-24 advantage on inside scoring. Belgreen was 33.3 percent from the field and gave up 26 turnovers — 18 of which were steals by Decatur Heritage — that resulted in 25 points,

Stat sheet: Decatur Heritage – McGhee finished with a game-high 24 points on 10-of-16 shooting, and added 9 rebounds, 4 assists and 8 steals. Leslie Hames had 16 points, 4 rebounds and 3 steals, and Bri Tyson and Emma Eastman each had 5 points and combined for 5 boards. Belgreen – Green led the Bulldogs with 14 points and 3 rebounds, and Lilliana Willingham had 8 points and 6 rebounds. Fisher contributed 9 points and a pair of boards.

Coachspeak: “I think once we found our rhythm, we got to rolling. You saw how we play defense. We’re going to guard you and play hard defense. We can get down and defend, and that defense wears on you as the game goes on.” — Decatur Heritage’s Johnny Jones

“We knew coming into the game that Decatur Heritage…they ain’t No. 1 in the state for nothing. We knew we had to come in and play Goliath. They had a lot of mismatches on the floor. They had good athletes, length around the basket and some great shooters. They are a hard team to guard.” — Belgreen’s Chad Green

They said it: “Attacking and reading the ball before it happens, we’ve been practicing that and putting it into the game really helps.” — Genie McGhee

What’s next? Decatur Heritage will face No. 2 Cold Springs in the Northwest Regional final, 9 a.m., Monday, Feb. 17, at Wallace State’s Traditions Bank Arena.

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