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Gov. Kay Ivey salutes new Miss America from Alabama: ‘Incredibly deserving of this honor’

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey offered her congratulations to the new Miss America, Abbie Stockard, in social media posts this week. Stockard, who competed for the national title as Miss Alabama, won the national crown on Sunday, Jan. 5, in Orlando, Florida.

“Our very own Miss Alabama, Abbie Stockard, has won the title of Miss America!” Ivey said in a Sunday night post on X (formerly Twitter). “I’ve had the pleasure of meeting Abbie, and I know firsthand what an outstanding young woman she is. She is incredibly deserving of this honor. Congratulations, Abbie!”

Ivey also trumpeted Stockard’s win with the same message in an Instagram reel and Facebook story.

Stockard, who grew up in Vestavia Hills, is the fourth Miss Alabama to become Miss America and the first Miss America from Alabama in 20 years. She’s following in the footsteps of previous winners Deidre Downs, Miss America 2005; Heather Whitestone, Miss America 1995; and Yolande Betbeze, Miss America 1951.

READ: Who is Abbie Stockard? Miss America 2025 is the fourth winner from Alabama

Ivey and Stockard share a kinship as sorority sisters, through Auburn University and Alpha Gamma Delta. Stockard, 22, is a nursing student at Auburn University and a member of Alpha Gamma Delta. Ivey, 80, an Auburn alum, pledged the sorority in the 1960s.

Stockard traveled to Montgomery to meet Alabama’s governor in October 2024, about four months after her win as Miss Alabama. “What an honor it was to meet with Alabama’s Governor, Kay Ivey!” Stockard said in an Instagram post. “We had a wonderful time discussing my work for Cystic Fibrosis advocacy across the state and giving a glimpse into the next few months as I prepare for Miss America!”

Stockard’s philanthropic platform as Miss Alabama, and now as Miss America, is Be the Change: Find a Cure — Cystic Fibrosis Awareness.

Another Miss Alabama winner with Auburn ties, Lauren Bradford, met Ivey in Montgomery after her win in the state pageant. Bradford, Miss Alabama 2021, is an Auburn University alum and a member of Alpha Gamma Delta. She was named first runner-up at Miss America 2022.

“I had a great visit with Miss Alabama 2021 Lauren Bradford today discussing her historic win as the 100th Miss Alabama, our @auburnalphagam sisterhood, our beloved @auburnu & most importantly #COVID19 vaccinations,” Ivey said in an Instagram post on Aug. 5, 2021. She and Bradford can be seen in a video clip saying, “Get vaccinated, Alabama!”

The Miss Alabama organization posted about Bradford’s meeting with Ivey on Facebook, saying “Thank you, Governor Ivey, for your hospitality.”

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Tuberville’s bill to block transgender athletes from women’s sports expected to get floor vote

U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R- Ala., has reintroduced a piece of legislation to ban transgender athletes from participating in women’s sports with the support of 23 Republican colleagues this year.

The bill, known as The Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act, has moved forward under new Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and a vote could come within the next week or so, according to a report from Fox News Digital.

The act defines gender under Title IX to be “recognized based solely on a person’s reproductive biology and genetics at birth,” rather than how an individual chooses to identify.

If passed, it would ban federal funding from going toward athletic programs that allow transgender athletes to participate in women’s and girls’ sports.

Tuberville has been pursuing this legislation since The Biden Administration proposed new Title IX regulations for the 2023-24 school year to include:

  • Protections for transgender and nonbinary students
  • Expanded definition of sexual harassment
  • New standards for determining the outcome of sexual assault cases
  • More protections for pregnant and parenting students

Although the updates were ultimately scrapped, Tuberville said “Congress has to ensure this never happens again.”

“President Trump ran on the issue of saving women’s sports and won in a landslide,” he said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

“70% of Americans agree—men don’t belong in women’s sports or locker rooms. I have said many times that I think Title IX is one of the best things to come out of Washington. But in the last few years, it has been destroyed.”

In 2021, Alabama passed a law that bans transgender athletes from competing on public school sports teams if the sex on their birth certificate does not match the rest of the team.

The state high school sports association told AL.com at the time that it was not aware of any student athletes impacted.

Several states have sought to ban trans participation in women’s sports, despite low numbers of transgender student athletes.

Roughly 30 trans athletes competed in high school sports during the 2020-21 academic year in the 14 states that recorded such data, a USA Today investigation found.

Tuberville’s cosponsors include U.S. Sens. James Risch and Mike Crapo of Idaho, Ron Johnson, R-Wis., Thom Tillis and Ted Budd of North Carolina, Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., Cindy Hyde-Smith and Roger Wicker of Mississippi, Tom Cotton, R-Ark., James Lankford, R-Okla., Steve Daines and Tim Sheehy of Montana, Roger Marshall, R-Kan., Mike Lee, R-Utah, John Kennedy, R-La., John Barrasso and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, Katie Britt, R-Ala., and Pete Ricketts, R-Neb.

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Irondale to honor police officer killed while directing traffic at church: ‘He faithfully served’

A Circle of Prayer will be held tonight in memory of an Irondale police lieutenant who was fatally struck while directing traffic for Church of the Highlands.

Lt. Mark Meadows, 60, was killed Monday morning.

He was putting out cones at the intersection of Grants Mill Road and Overton Road as the church’s 21 Days of Prayer was preparing to let out when he was struck by an oncoming motorist shortly before 7 a.m.

He was pronounced dead at Grandview Medical Center at 7:39 a.m.

Alabama State Troopers said the Chevrolet Colorado that struck Meadows was driven by 32-year-old Evan N. Sullivan of Leeds. The driver stopped at the scene.

The investigation is ongoing, and additional details have not yet been released.

Mayor James Stewart said the memorial will be held at 5 p.m. at the flagpole out Irondale City Hall.

Irodale police and ALEA investigate a fatal crash involving a police officer who was directing traffic for Church of the Highlands on Grants Mill Road.(Carol Robinson)

Meadows’ patrol car will be displayed as a memorial.

“Lt. Mark Meadows was a treasured member of our Irondale family for over 30 years,’’ Stewart said. “He was a man of few words but always led by example and embodied the heart of a public servant.”

There has been an outpouring of grief for Meadows.

“Throughout his over 30-year career in law enforcement, Lt. Meadows was a committed law enforcement professional who always put the safety and well-being of his community first,’’ said Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall.

“He faithfully served his country, state and city and we all owe him and his family our gratitude,’’ Marshall said.

“My heart is heavy as I have learned of the tragic loss of Irondale Police Lt. Mark Meadows, a veteran and true public servant,’’ said Gov. Kay Ivey. “I join all Alabamians in lifting up his family, the Irondale Police Department and the Church of Highlands in prayer.”

“My prayers are with the family of Lt. Mark Meadows and the entire Irondale community as they grapple with the tragic loss of this true pillar of the community,’’ said U.S. Sen. Katie Britt.

Meadows served four years in the U.S Army 3rd Ranger Battalion, 10th Mountain Division at Ft. Benning in Georgia.

Originally from Jacksonville, Florida, he began his law enforcement career with the Mountain Brook Police Department in 1992, before transferring to the Irondale Police Department.

Meadows, a husband, father and grandfather of two, became an FBI instructor certified in pistol and rifle in 2001. He then became an NRA Instructor certified in pistol in 2017.

Meadows worked at Church of Highlands for more than decade, helping to coordinate traffic security.

The 21 Days of Prayer started Jan. 5 and runs through the 25th. People gather at the various church campuses to pray each morning beginning at 6 a.m. on weekdays.

On Tuesday, Pastor Chris Hodges addressed Meadows’ death as the second day of the prayer services began.

Hodges called Meadows a longtime friend and public servant.

“I’m going to tell you guys, it was a tough day yesterday,’’ Hodges said.

Hodges said he and others went to Grandview to pray with the officers after Meadows’ death.

He said Meadows’ wife “has the peace of God,” and asked those in attendance to pray for all law enforcement officers.

Funeral arrangement have not yet been announced.

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Former Alabama WR staying in SEC, will transfer to Tennessee

One of Alabama football’s outgoing transfers is staying in the SEC. Wide receiver Amari Jefferson, who spent his true freshman season with the Crimson Tide before entering the transfer portal, is heading to Tennessee.

Jefferson shared the news on social media Tuesday morning. The move returns him to his home state, where he played high school football at Baylor School in Chattanooga.

The 6-foot-0, 197-pound Jefferson joined the Crimson Tide in the 2024 recruiting class as a four-star prospect. He did not see the field his freshman season in Tuscaloosa.

Crimson Tide head coach Kalen DeBoer had praised Jefferson at SEC media days before the season.

“Amari just came in this summer and just extremely talented, highly touted,” DeBoer said in Dallas. “Just versatile. You see with the other sports and things that he can do. You can see that he’s gonna become a really good player in our program.”

Jefferson flipped to the Crimson Tide after initially being committed to Tennessee as a baseball player. It is not clear whether he will attempt to play both sports in Knoxville.

Alabama was thin at wide receiver in its ReliaQuest Bowl loss after a slew of injuries and transfer portal entries. The Crimson Tide pulled a top receiver out of the portal for the 2025 season, bringing in Isaiah Horton, who previously played at Miami.

The portal is now closed for Alabama players, following a five-day window that came after the Tide’s season ended with the loss to Michigan.

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TGL, a golf league featuring PGA Tour stars, debuts on Tuesday night

TGL tees up for its first match on Tuesday night, but fans of Justin Thomas will need to wait two weeks before the former Alabama All-American makes his debut in Tomorrow’s Golf League.

The new golf venture from Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy features six teams of four PGA Tour golfers competing in a league format at a high-tech venue with seating for 1,500 spectators in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. Golfers will hit shots off tee boxes with real grass, fairway, rough and sand into a 64-by-53-foot simulator screen until they’re within 50 yards of the cup on 15 named holes, including the Spear, Riptide and Serpent.

After that, the virtual golf switches to shots played at the GreenZone, an adaptable green featuring 600 underground devices to change the slope of the putting surface from hole to hole.

Thomas plays for Atlanta Drive Golf Club. The Drive will play its first match at 6 p.m. CST Jan. 21 against New York Golf Club.

The league debuts with New York playing Bay Golf Club at 8 p.m. Tuesday. ESPN will televise the TGL matches.

The other teams are Boston Common Golf, Jupiter Links Golf Club and Los Angeles Golf Club. The regular season will continue through March 4, with each team playing five two-hour matches.

Each match will feature three players from each team. They’ll compete in an alternate-shot format for nine holes, then switch to singles competition for the final six, with each golfer playing two holes.

Each hole is worth one point, unless a team uses the hammer, which puts the value at two points and also passes control of the hammer to the other team.

The TGL team rosters include:

Atlanta Drive Golf Club: Patrick Cantlay, Lucas Glover, Billy Horschel, Justin Thomas

Bay Golf Club: Ludvig Aberg, Wyndham Clark, Min Woo Lee, Shane Lowry

Boston Common Golf: Keegan Bradley, Hideki Matsuyama, Rory McIlroy, Adam Scott

Jupiter Links Golf Club: Max Homa, Tom Kim, Kevin Kisner, Tiger Woods

Los Angeles Golf Club: Tommy Fleetwood, Collin Morikawa, Justin Rose, Sahith Theegala

New York Golf Club: Matt Fitzpatrick, Rickie Fowler, Xander Schauffele, Cameron Young

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

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Woman charged with felony murder in abuse death of 13-year-old boy in Calera

A Calera woman has been charged in the abuse death of a young teen boy in her care.

Jacqueline Adams, 58, is charged with felony murder and aggravated child abuse, Calera police announced Tuesday.

Shelby County Coroner Lina Evans identified the victim as 13-year-old Ledarius Johnson.

Ledarius was taken to Shelby Baptist Medical Center on Aug. 8. He was pronounced dead at the hospital the same day.

His cause of death, and additional details have not yet been made public.

The indictments against Adams made public Tuesday state the undisclosed abuse took place on multiple occasions at the family’s Ivy Hills Circle home between July and August in 2024.

Calera Police Chief David Hyche said Adams was taken into custody Monday in Gardendale by U.S. Marshals.

The Pelham and Alabaster police departments, the Shelby County District Attorney’s Office, the Shelby County Multi-Disciplinary Team and the U.S. Marshals Service helped in the investigation.

“Protecting the most vulnerable members of society is a crucial responsibility,’’ Hyche said. “Children, the elderly, and individuals with special needs often lack the means to defend themselves, making them particularly susceptible to exploitation and harm.”

Shelby County District Attorney Matthew Casey thanked investigators for their work.

“The Shelby County District Attorney’s Office will vigorously prosecute this case,’’ Casey said.

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Birmingham’s Bob Veale, All-Star pitcher with Pittsburgh Pirates in 1960s, has died at 89

Bob Veale, the towering, hard-throwing left-hander from Birmingham who was an All-Star pitcher with the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 1960s, has died. He was 89.

Veale’s death was confirmed to AL.com by Gerald Watkins, executive director of the Friends of Rickwood Field and a longtime friend of Veale’s. Watkins said Veale — who continued to make his post-baseball home in Birmingham — died suddenly over the weekend.

Veale was a two-time All-Star and World Series champion during a 13-year MLB career spent with the Pirates and Boston Red Sox, but his roots in the sport went back to the heyday of Black baseball in his hometown. Born Oct. 28, 1935, as one of 13 children in his family, he was a batboy and concession worker for the Birmingham Black Barons in the 1940s and even pitched batting practice for the team on occasion as a youngster.

“I used to pitch batting practice for the white Barons and come back and do the same for the Black Barons,” Veale told author John Klima for his 2009 book Willie’s Boys, the story of Willie Mays and the 1948 Birmingham Black Barons championship team. “When the game started, I went to the concession stands and did the things I normally did.”

Blessed with a blazing fastball on his 6-foot-6 frame, Veale played for various industrial league and sandlot teams around Birmingham before attending Benedictine College in Kansas on an athletic scholarship. Veale played baseball and basketball in college, and for a time appeared ticketed to join the famed Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro American League.

However, the Major Leagues had almost fully integrated by then, and Veale signed with the Pirates prior to the 1958 season. He spent five seasons in the minor leagues — a time highlighted by a 14-strikeout, 9-walk no-hitter for the Wilson Tobs of the Class B Carolina League in 1959.

After two seasons with the Triple-A Columbus Jets, Veale made the Pirates out of spring training in 1962. He was sent back down to Columbus after mostly good 45 innings, but set an International League record with 22 strikeouts in a game against Buffalo that August.

Bob Veale of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitches against the Baltimore Orioles during Game 6 of the World Series on Oct. 6, 1971, at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore. Veale died this week at age 89. (Photo by Focus On Sports via Getty Images)Focus on Sport via Getty Images

Veale made the big club for good in 1963, and after one season as a valuable member of the Pirates’ bullpen — he posted a 1.04 ERA with 68 strikeouts in 77.2 innings that year — he joined the starting rotation full-time in 1964. Veale won 18 games and led the league in strikeouts that season, and was an all-star in both 1965 and 1966 (Veale also led the NL in walks four times from 1964-68).

Veale was noted as one of the hardest-throwers of his era, with his prime in the National League coinciding with that of Hall-of-Famers Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals and Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Pirates teammate Willie Stargell said after one 1966 Veale start that “I could see the blue flame rising from his fastball way out in left field,” while Cardinals star Lou Brock once remarked that Veale’s fastball was often even more overpowering than Koufax’s.

Veale struck out at least 200 batters four times in six years from 1964-70, twice struck out 16 in a game, posted a 2.05 ERA in 1968 and won at least 10 games for seven straight seasons. He was beset by elbow problems beginning in 1968 and moved to the bullpen full-time in 1971, but won a World Series ring that season when the Pirates beat Baltimore in seven games (Veale made just one appearance in the Series, allowing a run in two-thirds of an inning in a 3-2 loss in Game 6).

That September, Veale was part of baseball history when he pitched in relief in a game in which Pittsburgh started an entirely African-American or Afro-Latino lineup, a first for MLB. Veale relieved starter Dock Ellis (who was also Black) in the third inning of a game in which the Pirates beat the Philadelphia Phillies 10-7 at Three Rivers Stadium.

Veale’s contract was purchased by Boston toward the end of the 1972 season, and he finished his career with two more seasons as a reliever for the Red Sox. In 397 big-league games (255 starts) spread over 13 seasons, Veale posted a 120-95 record with a 3.05 ERA and 1,703 strikeouts in 1,926 innings.

Veale married his high school sweetheart, Eredean Sanders of Graysville, in 1973. He told a newspaper reporter that year that he’d waited on marriage until he had helped all 12 of his siblings attend college.

“You’ve got to have a real fine, tolerant wife — one who understands the problems of baseball,” Veale told the Boston Globe in 1973. “If you’re not fortunate enough to get the right one, she can pull you down. But, thank God, I’ve got the right one.”

Veale worked as a scout for the Atlanta Braves for a time in the 1970s, and later spent several seasons as a scout and minor-league coach with the New York Yankees’ organization. In his late 50s, he worked two days a week as a groundskeeper at Rickwood Field, where he’d begun his baseball life some 40 years earlier.

Veale was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 2006 and remained close to and passionate about baseball for the remainder of his life. He was instrumental in the construction of the Negro Southern League Museum, which opened adjacent to Regions Field in downtown Birmingham in 2015.

“We want kids to come and learn, so the history of the Negro Leagues will not have been in vain … and the people who come behind us will learn about it as we go past,” Veale said at the time.

Funeral arrangements were incomplete as of Tuesday morning.

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Auburn football expected to bring back familiar face as outside linebackers coach, reports say

Three weeks on from Josh Aldridge officially leaving Auburn and becoming East Carolina’s next defensive coordinator, Auburn reportedly filled his role on Tuesday.

Matt Zenitz of 247Sports was first to report that Roc Bellantoni is expected to become Auburn’s next outside linebackers/edge coach.

It’s a position he held on Auburn’s staff in 2022, coaching outside linebackers along with special teams. He won’t coach special teams this time around, but he’ll be returning to both a familiar place and role.

Bellantoni spent the last two seasons as Florida Atlantic’s defensive coordinator, working for head coach Tom Herman.

Prior to his most recent stint at FAU, Bellantoni made stops at Utah State, Washington State, Buffalo, FAU, Villanova, Eastern Illinois and Drake. His most successful stop was at Eastern Illinois where he held titles of defensive line coach, defensive coordinator and associate head coach, helping lead the program to five Ohio Valley Conference Championships.

During his earlier stint as defensive coordinator at FAU, Bellantoni coached now NFL All-Pro defensive end Trey Hendrickson, who finished the 2024 season as the NFL’s leader in sacks.

At Auburn, he’ll work with a relatively promising group of outside linebackers that includes Keyron Crawford, Chris Murray, Jamonta Waller and incoming freshman Jared Smith.

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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Kirk Herbstreit defends ESPN against SEC bias claims

Kirk Herbstreit thinks claims that ESPN champions SEC football team over any other are just ridiculous.

The “College GameDay” analyst sounded off recently against those that believe the network is playing favorites.

“We could not have paid for a better final four with Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn State and Texas,” Herbstreit told On3. “The only one missing is Michigan …

“So, this idea we want Alabama, Texas A&M and Auburn. Are you kidding me?”

Herbstreit said it really is all about ratings.

“If you are asking us, who would we want, we’ll take Ohio State every year, Notre Dame every year. This is a ratings bonanza,” he explained.

Penn State and Notre Dame play in the CFP semifinal at the Orange Bowl on Thursday, while Texas meets Ohio State on Friday in the Cotton Bowl.

“If you are going to accuse us of anything, you should accuse us of wanting Notre Dame and these big brands. If you know anything about ratings, that’s what you want. You don’t want these small little Clemsons, small little southern schools.”

Herbstreit declared Big Ten brands result in ratings.

“If you get Notre Dame-Ohio State in the national championship, you think we’re going to be, ‘Dog gon it. If only we could’ve gotten a couple of good brands in the championship? It just didn’t work out this year.’”

Mark Heim is a reporter for The Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Mark_Heim. He can be heard on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5 FM in Mobile or on the free Sound of Mobile App from 6 to 9 a.m. daily.

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Left ‘alone’ by father, Birmingham trainer guides young elite athletes in whom he sees himself

Inside the cavernous gym sitting inconspicuously off Sixth Avenue North just west of downtown Birmingham, athletically gifted young men and women sprint intensely through drills, jump atop ridiculously high wooden boxes, crack pitches inside a netted batting cage, and squat, deadlift and power thrust bars laden with iron.

Leonard Stephens, owner of the massive Step-by-Step Sports Training facility, sees himself in each of them. He sees what was once his journey in their dreams.

Coach L, as he’s known by everyone, is a 34-year-old married father of three children. Yet you’re likely to find him at his gym any day the door is open because he doesn’t want any “Stepper,” as he calls those who train with him, to experience the kind of loneliness he endured in his youth.

“I see myself in every last one of them,” Stephens says. “That’s why it’s tough for me to take a day away from them. “I’m scared that they feel alone, too. Even if mom and dad are there, I don’t leave it up to mom and dad to be there for them. I feel like I owe it to them to be there, too.”

Stephens sees their life challenges because of his own, as the son of a 16-year-old mother who gave up a promising basketball future to care for him and an 18-year-old father who was “more or less in the streets.” Growing up, he yo-yo’d between mom in Collegeville and dad on the south side of Bessemer and in the Brown Springs and Gate City communities.

“She did the best she could to raise me,” Stephens tells me one recent afternoon inside his office at the facility. “She worked two jobs. I grew up with my mother, but I also feel like I grew up with a big sister.”

He sees the athletic potential of those there, sees their possibilities and promise because he once possessed them, too. Until he didn’t.

Until, as a speedy freshman running back at Jacksonville State, Stephens shredded his knee in 2011. He was the first in his family to go to college directly out of high school without obtaining a GED. Which is maybe why, in part, the 73-mile journey from home was still a leap.

“Football was my outlet,” Stephens says. “Being the first person in my family who had success at that level in sports, I don’t think I had the push I needed. I wasn’t as locked in as I should’ve been and ended up tearing my ACL, MCL and meniscus all at the same time.”

Stephens sees, too, the pain in his young clients — physical and emotional. Because he held onto his own for so long.

“A lot of people looked at football as a place for pain, I looked at it as a place to release pain,” Stephens says, quietly. “I was an angry kid, and I would either fight or take it out on somebody on the football field.”

Because he sees himself in them, maybe they see themselves, too, in Stephens.

He is perhaps the region’s preeminent trainer of young athletes — a true influencer in this unique time of seismic change in collegiate sports. Starting as young as five years old, clients train with him and his staff for football, basketball, baseball, volleyball, soccer, track and field and even boxing.

Last year, Stephens and his staff trained most of the starters for the Alabama 6A state champion A. H. Parker Thundering Herd, as the Birmingham school won its first-ever state title.

Coaches and recruiters from top football programs nationwide regularly pilgrimage to the facility. Kalen DeBoer (Alabama) and Hugh Freeze (Auburn) have visited, as have Kirby Smart (Georgia), Brent Venables (Oklahoma), Josh Heupel (Tennessee), Butch Jones (Arkansas State and Eddie Robinson (Alabama State).

Step-by-Step football clients are peppered throughout most major conferences and some have drawn teammates to Birmingham to train with Stephens. Four years ago, a talented group helped elevate the program on social media as players from the gym earned college commitments. Coaches started posting about the gym on social media: #StepbySteptoAuburn, #StepbySteptoTennessee.“It became a thing,” Stephens recalled.

Twelve members of that group are prepping for the upcoming National Football League draft. Among them are Auburn defensive tackle Jayson Jones, Colorado safety Cam’ron Silmon-Craig, Southern Methodist defensive tackle Mike Locket, and Alabama State teammates safety Amon Scarbrough and cornerback James Burgess.

“My guys,” Stephens says. “Guys who’ve been with me at least from high school through college. Guys who truly embody Step-by-Step, from how they help people, how they handle business every day, how they handle academics, how they handle everything.”

AN ABSENT FATHER

Some debts are hard to repay. Almost impossible.

Stephen’s pain and loneliness stem from his relationship with his father, from the man’s sporadic presence in his son’s youth. From broken promises. If he retrieved Leonard for the occasional weekend, the boy would spend most of those days with his paternal grandmother.

“I’d wake up on Saturday mornings, and see him laying next to me, but two hours later he’s out the door and I’d see him the following day before it’s time for me to go back to mom.”

Grandmother was a praying woman. She took her grandson — “I was a little red-headed boy” — to the first service at First Baptist Church in East Lake, to Sunday School, then to the second service. They ate dinner at church, then went to Bible study, Sunday School prep or choir rehearsal.

“I was at church from about 7:30 Sunday morning until about 3:30 in the afternoon because she had to get me back to my dad and he’d take me to my mom,” Stephens says with a laugh. “My first introduction to God was through my grandmother.”

Stephens’ maternal grandmother was also a “heavy prayer.” He credits his success “as a businessman, as a father, as a husband” to her answered prayers.

She died at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Her death was officially attributed to pneumonia contracted following quadruple bypass surgery. “We think it was COVID,” he says.

She lived directly across the street from Leonard and his mother and cared for him while her daughter worked. It was a dangerous community, Stephens told me.

“Shooting and different stuff would be going on,” he said. Once someone tried to kick in the door. Stephens, his siblings and his grandmother pushed the couch and other furniture against the door. He recalled “leveraging some furniture on my back and my foot against the sofa so nobody would kick the door in.”

Some debts are hard to repay. Almost impossible.

Last year, Stephens paid in full.

Paid with a multiplicity of emotions, with growth, understanding and “a lot of wins I didn’t realize were wins until moments of death forced me to reflect,” he said.

His clients’ success didn’t prevent Stephens from being hard on himself. “I’m always looking at what I didn’t do or what I could have done to make this better, and don’t look at the reward of what I’m actually doing to help kids.”

Because he had so little help himself. Even as his father sought to reconnect in his son’s later years, Stephens wasn’t always receptive. When Step-by-Step opened on the west side six years ago in a neglected building that needed much work, his father occasionally dropped by to help paint.

“I couldn’t process it then as help,” Stephens says. “I was looking at it like, ‘You need to do this because you didn’t help me do nothing else.’ I also viewed it as being his neighborhood where he got respect from the drug game.”

In more recent years, his father often reached out again. “Can you bring me some food?” he would ask.

“Most of the time I would take him something to eat, but didn’t stay because I was busy at work, taking kids on college visits,” Stephens told me. His father also became more intentional with his grandchildren — Stephens’ children — sitting on his back porch with them when his son brought them over.

When his son felt he had the time.

“A lot of it wasn’t because I didn’t want to, but a lot of it was because I didn’t want to,” Stephens confessed. “I was a 33-year-old man holding on to stuff for 33 years.”

He began to see the need to let go last June when his father went into the hospital. Over the next months, his health precipitously declined. A seizure. Brain surgery. There were some good days, some worse. Then pneumonia.

“It’s probably one of the most traumatic things I’ve ever experienced,” Stephens says. “I went from having communications with somebody in the last two weeks of their life to someone who wouldn’t talk at all.”

Before his father stopped speaking, Stephens walked into the hospital room. “You looking good,” his father said, though struggling to breathe. Stephens thought dad was flirting with the nurse behind him. “Pop, you trippin’,” he said. “I’m talking to you,” the father said.

“You never told me that before,” Stephens quickly replied and almost immediately regretted.

“I felt guilty for telling him how I felt,” he said. “Sometimes somebody can try to express an emotion or do something for the very first time, and if it’s not received the right way, it can make them put a guard up and feel like they don’t want to ever say it again. In that moment, he was saying, ‘I’m proud of you.’ I was like, ‘In 33 years I’ve never heard this.’”

Later that day, Stephens’ father said to his son: “Don’t leave me.” A tear rolled down the man’s cheek. “I love you,” he added.

“That’s the first time he ever told me he loved me sober,” Stephens says, “and I felt it.”

Later Stephens’ father was sedated and put on a ventilator. He never woke up.

In the room soon thereafter, the son spoke to the father. “I know you can hear me,” Stephens said. Then he paused. “I told myself, ‘You’ve got to forgive him. Not just for him, for you.”

“Man, I forgive you,” he said to his father. “You’ve been the best dad you know how to be. Your dad wasn’t there for you. I love you.”

“For me to say I love you to him,” Stephens told me, “I was like, ‘Dude, you spent 33 years of your life holding onto anger of the little boy. You couldn’t even realize that over the last three years of his life, he’d been trying to spend time with you. So, all of that not feeling wanted, feeling abandoned, feeling like he didn’t love you, that he didn’t care about you — he was trying to show you that. But you were so stuck on pain from your past that you blocked yourself from it.’

“In that moment, I learned a life lesson: Try to have way more grace for people. Have grace for people that mean something to you and try not to hold a grudge because it’s not worth it.”

His father died on August 31, after 33 days in the hospital.

“I’m just like, ‘Jesus, 33’….L, you’re 33.”

Stephens didn’t cry for his father, not until later, after telling his grandmother and her brother, “He’s gone.”

“Thank you,” the uncle said, “for being strong enough to be there by yourself and handle it.”

By yourself.

That’s when Stephens broke. “My problem has never been what to do or not do,” he said. “It’s always feeling abandoned and feeling alone. In that moment, I felt like I did my whole life — when playing with cousins who were with their dads — I’m alone. I just have Granny.

“I have an abandonment issue, feeling abandoned by people I feel are supposed to have my back.”

“Alone” reared again at the funeral. Stephens comforted his grandmother as she broke down over her son’s casket — her “baby boy,” he told me. Once she returned to her seat, Stephens remained standing by the casket. “In front of everybody just watching me stand there,” he remembers. “Alone.”

Following the funeral, Stephens’ grandmother told him her son had called her every day. “You gonna call me?” she asked.

He did, every day. On Thursdays, he called from the Hueytown cemetery where his father was buried. She was the only person he spoke to while there. “She was the only one who made me feel comfort when I was there,” he said.

In his last years, Stephens’ father, who had not attended day-long church with his mother and son, often carried a Bible. “Sickness,” Stephen says, “brought him closer to God because God knew He wanted him with Him.”

Two-thousand-twenty-four wasn’t done.

Two weeks after her son’s death, the Saturday after her grandson’s October birthday, she had a stroke. “Granny missed her boy,” Stephens says.

Every year, she had called and sang “Happy Birthday” to her grandson. Last year, the rendition was shorter. Stephens chalked it up to age. “Not realizing,” he says now, “it was short because that was the end.”

For about a month, she was nonresponsive. Nonetheless while visiting her, Stephens said he spoke to her while rubbing her hand. “I kept saying, ‘Granny, Granny,’” he recalls. Once, she squeezed his hand, scrunched her shoulders, moved a little, then stopped. “That was her last time moving,” he said. “I’m the last person she responded to.”

Stephens cried more for her than for his father. “That sucks to say,” he admits.

THE NEGOTIATOR

Not surprisingly, because they do see so much of them in him, the Stephens trainees trust him. Trust him beyond developing their physical skills to help them navigate the new, ever-evolving economics and revolving door of college sports.

While not an agent, he’s negotiated with several college collectives — donor piggy banks that raise funds and pay athletes.He’s also launched Step-by-Step Sports Management and the Step-by-Step Foundation. So far he’s taken on two clients: Jones from Auburn, and Alabama defensive freshman lineman Jeremiah Beaman.

“Because my guys are my guys, I utilize information that I know to help them,” he said. “One leverage I have as a trainer is schools are going to want to have a relationship with me for years to come because I’m not going to stop having kids. We’re producing kids every year and our guys are top five, top ten in the country, it creates enough leverage for me so when I call a school to see how one deal worked out for a guy we can grow from there.”

Step-by-Step doesn’t receive any portion of an athlete’s collegiate payments, Stephens told me, but earns fees from management clients to produce events such as camps, charitable giveaways and other appearances.

The foundation has also hosted “Let’s Talk” mentoring events and a podcast to convey lessons for Steppers’ lives beyond the gym or playing field — lessons layered by his faith.

“If you don’t have true faith, if you don’t actually believe, if you don’t actually process things, then you won’t have clarity,” he says. “People pray for clarity, but they don’t always want to take the necessary steps to gain clarity.

“In this season of my life, God has said, ‘I’m gonna let you go through this storm, because ain’t nothing else I’ve done been able to get your attention, to show you that you can’t do this on your own.”

Last Christmas, the Step-by-Step Foundation produced the Big Beaman Bike Giveaway on behalf of Beaman, whom Stephens has trained since ninth grade.

“He’s like, ‘Coach you do that stuff; let me just play football,” Stephens says. “I called his mom and daddy. They said, ‘You do that stuff. We’re Just gonna be parents.’ I’m like, ‘Whoa, hold on. This is my first client.’”

BLOODLINE

Stephens only has one photograph with his father, taken when he was a toddler. Before his grandmother died, he asked for a photo of her husband, whom he’d met only briefly when a young child. His name was not Stephens. That was the last name of her first husband.

Bloodlines can be complicated, we all know. Stephens learned in the last couple of years that his biological grandfather was Eugene Jones. “Everybody knew Eugene,” Stephens says with a laugh. “Eugene was a big-time running back in his day, my dad was a running back. I come from a generation of running backs.”

He keeps the photo on his nightstand. He’s grateful that his grandmother remained alive long enough to “complete a puzzle nobody else could complete.”

A puzzle whose pieces he often sees now in the lives of those who train and dream with him just west of downtown.

Let’s be better tomorrow than we are today. My column appears on AL.com, and digital editions of The Birmingham News, Huntsville Times, and Mobile Press-Register. Tell me what you think at [email protected], and follow me at twitter.com/roysj, Instagram @roysj and BlueSky.

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