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Miller’s season has been shrouded in controversy for his connection to the shooting death of Harris that took place near campus on Jan. 15.
On Wednesday—nearly two months after the shooting death of 23-year-old Jamea Harris near Alabama’s campus—Crimson Tide guard Brandon Miller made his first public comments on the matter, describing the situation as “heartbreaking.”
Miller’s name had been mentioned in court testimony after a police officer testified that Miller had driven the gun used in the killing to former teammate Darius Miles.

If the Packers quarterback is headed to New York, the deal will be about much more than his talent alone—much like the Ravens’ choice not to tag Lamar Jackson.
You had a lot of questions. And we had a lot to get to after a wild couple of days coming off the NFL combine …
From Robert Dalton (@RobertDalton02): What would a Jets package for Aaron Rodgers look like?
Robert, let’s say this year’s second-rounder (43rd) and a conditional 2025 pick that’ll ride on how well Rodgers plays, and whether he plays in ’24.

As much as the mass-collusion argument by owners to not pay the 26-year-old QB a fully guaranteed deal makes sense, there are other arguments that make even more sense.
As a group, NFL owners deserve every bit of skepticism they receive. They have earned it. If you have a theory that they have conspired to inflate egg prices, then I want to hear it! But in the case of Lamar Jackson, as much as I want to believe there is mass collusion to avoid giving him a fully guaranteed deal, I just don’t.
I’m sorry. I really tried, I promise.
The argument sounds good.

Michael Irvin vehemently denied ongoing allegations of misconduct during an emotional press conference on Wednesday. In doing so, he compared his treatment by Marriott Hotels to a Black man being lynched.
Irvin, 57, was removed from his assignments with NFL Network just before Super Bowl LVII in Arizona. The decision came after a woman working at a Marriott hotel accused him of misconduct.
The Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver has since decided to sue the accuser, and the Renaissance Hotel (which is owned by Marriott) at which the alleged incident occurred.

As collectives across the country seek new, innovative ways to raise NIL funds for their respective programs, Ole Miss’ Grove Collective is teasing one of the most unique partnerships of the new era.
It’s perfectly Mississippi and extremely ironic based on the program’s recent history.
The Grove Collective, founded shortly before the new legislation was passed in 2021, serves as the primary NIL arm in Oxford. It has agreements with a large number of athletes on the football, baseball, basketball (men’s and women’s), volleyball, track & field, and golf teams.