TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) — Alabama cornerback Zabien Brown has a knack for making big plays. He's delivered so many during two seasons with the Crimson Tide that there's only one explanation: It's part of his DNA.
“It’s just that clutch gene,” Brown said. “I don’t know what it is. It’s just clutch.”
He's on the verge of becoming legendary and could get there when Alabama (10-3) plays No. 1 Indiana (13-0) and Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Fernando Mendoza in the Rose Bowl in the quarterfinals of the College Football Playoff on Thursday.
Brown, a sophomore, returned two interceptions for touchdowns this season, including a 99-yarder against Tennessee in the regular season and a 50-yarder against Oklahoma in the opening round of the CFP. Both were momentum-turning picks.
Throw in game-sealing interceptions against Georgia and Auburn in 2024 and a 68-yard fumble return for a score against Mercer, and it's clear Brown is in elite company in Alabama lore.
“That dude probably has more career-changing plays than (most),” Tide defensive coordinator Kane Wommack said. “We’ve had some phenomenal football players in these hallways but some special moments that he’s already created for this football team.”
Brown trails only All-American Minkah Fitzpatrick (2015-17) on the school's career defensive TD list.
Brown’s play helped the No. 9-seed Crimson Tide in the regular season and advance in the playoffs already. Now, the Santa Ana, California, native gets to return home to play in front of family and friends.
“It really means the world to me, honestly,” Brown said. “It’s countless people that haven’t seen me play in two, three years. Going back home, Rose Bowl against the Heisman — can’t get any better than this.”
Brown’s ascension was expected as a highly-ranked signee in the 2024 recruiting class. But his path to stardom is unique.
Brown was a part of Nick Saban’s final recruiting class and was only on campus for a few days before Saban's abrupt retirement. Brown decided to stay at Alabama, and after a mass exodus of players, was thrust into a starting role from his first spring practice. It didn’t take long for the new staff to see his potential.
“I think Zabien was as pro-ready as I had ever seen from a freshman,” Wommack said. “It’s amazing. The guys that are the most professional, detailed and disciplined tend to be the ones that make the biggest plays in the biggest moments.”
Two years later, Brown is the only player in Alabama’s secondary who has started every game over the last two seasons. And he's been in the right place at the right time more often than not.
Even for Brown, it’s hard to quantify. He just knows when he knows.
“It’s a gut feeling,” Brown said. “You may get a ‘Spidey sense’ or something like that, but it’s really just trust in pulling the trigger. That's it.”
Down 17-10 before halftime at Oklahoma earlier this month, Brown intercepted a pass from John Mateer and returned it 50 yards for a touchdown. The play gave Alabama a much-needed boost in a 34-24 win.
His other pick-6 was twice as long. It came as time expired in the first half against Tennessee and provided another spark.
The Tide might need his heroics against Mendoza and a Hoosiers offense that’s turned the ball over just eight times this season. Alabama has full confidence Brown can be a difference maker. After all, there's plenty of proof.
“You can call it the right place, but I think you make your own breaks, too,” coach Kalen DeBoer said. “I see what he does with his film study. I see what he does on the football field, in practice, whether it’s technically, just how important it is for him to be on the same page with the guys around him so he can take those calculated risks.
“He’s a really heady player and obviously a great athlete and playmaker.”
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Alabama defensive back Zabien Brown (2) celebrates his touchdown against Oklahoma during the first half in the first round of an NCAA College Football Playoff, Friday, Dec. 19, 2025, in Norman, Okla. (AP Photo/Nate Billings)
Talk to any golfer who played against Tiger Woods and there is sure to be at least one story about one shot so sublime they were certain it could not be hit by them or anyone else.
He was just different. Better.
The 2-iron Woods hit into the par-5 10th hole at the TPC Sugarloaf led Stewart Cink to say, “This is a skill set I don't have.” Padraig Harrington once saw Woods hit an 8-iron so majestic at Firestone that it got in his head and led to the Irishman making triple bogey.
Nick Price played the opening two rounds with Woods at St. Andrews in the 2000 British Open and felt the tournament already was over. Mark O'Meara played a practice round with him at Pebble Beach before the 2000 U.S. Open and told his wife before the championship started, “Tiger is going to win. And not only is he going to win, he's going to blow away the field.” Woods won by 15.
For all those years, so many greats in the game could never relate to Woods. And now, finally, they can.
Not even Woods can beat time. He turns 50 on Tuesday.
It’s a milestone for anyone, but it’s different in golf because the sport can be played well after the age when athletes have long retired in other sports. Phil Mickelson won a major at 50. Jack Nicklaus made an early Sunday charge at the Masters when he was 58.
With Woods, it's complicated.
He now is eligible for the 50-and-older PGA Tour Champions. He also has had more surgeries than the 15 majors he won. This is the first year he didn't play a single tournament, the result of a ruptured Achilles tendon in March and a seventh back surgery in September.
“I'm probably going to play 25 events on both tours and I think that should cover most of the year, right?” Woods quipped in the Bahamas when asked about turning 50.
He won the U.S. Open just eight days before reconstructive surgery on his left knee. He won the Masters two years after surgery to fuse his lower back. But he hasn't been the same since that 2021 car crash in Los Angeles. Woods has played 11 times the last five seasons, finished only four of those tournaments and hasn't been closer than 16 shots to the winner.
“Come back to what point?” Woods said. “I'd like to come back to just playing golf again.”
And so this celebration is more about looking back than forward.
Ernie Els was most prescient in 2000 at Kapalua when he was on the losing end again — no one finished second to Woods more than the Big Easy. They matched eagles on the 18th in regulation, birdies on the 18th in a playoff and Woods got him with a 40-foot birdie putt on the second extra hole. Vintage Tiger.
“I think he’s a legend in the making,” Els said that day. “He’s 24. He’s probably going to be bigger than Elvis when he gets into his 40s.”
That's up for debate, of course. Undeniable is the impact Woods has left on golf.
Popularity soared and prize money skyrocketed. Woods made golf look different and he made it cool. And perhaps his greatest legacy is he unwittingly trained a generation of players who wanted to be like him. Scottie Scheffler said nothing inspired him more than watching the intensity of Woods when he was out of contention at the 2020 Masters. Woods made a 10 on the 12th hole and followed with five birdies over his last six holes. He tied for 38th.
“Tiger was just different in the way he approached each shot. It was like the last shot he was ever going to hit,” Scheffler said. It was the only time they played together. Scheffler now is coming up on three years at No. 1 in the world, the longest stretch since Woods.
But it started with that skill set unlike any other.
“He's the only guy I've ever known who continually exceeded expectations,” Tom Lehman said. “No matter how much you heaped on him, he found a way to exceed them.”
Lehman recalls one moment at the Memorial on the 17th hole, a green so rock-hard it felt impossible to get it close. Lehman hit 5-iron as high and far as he could and was pleased to see it roll out 25 feet from the cup.
“He hits this shot way up in the air and it was coming down like a parachute,” Lehman said. "Lands by the cup and bounces 2 feet and stops. I figure he must have hit a 7-iron. I said, ‘Tiger, what club was that?’ He said, ‘That was a little, three-finger 5-iron.’ He just filleted it in there.
“When I think of him, that's what I think of. Only one guy could hit that shot. And he did it often.”
Woods had the career Grand Slam at age 24, the youngest of anyone. He had 50 wins worldwide and 10 majors before he turned 30.
It wasn't as easy as he could make it look. The late Dan Jenkins once said when Woods was in peak form, “Only two things can stop Tiger — injury or a bad marriage.” Turns out it was both. His path was derailed at the end of 2009 by revelations of multiple extramarital affairs, and the injuries kept piling up. He still made it back to No. 1 in the world in 2013 and he ran his PGA Tour victory count to 82, tied with Sam Snead.
“If he never got injured, he'd have 25 majors and 125 wins,” Fred Couples said.
Matt Kuchar saw it differently. He felt the injuries contributed to the legend of Woods, particularly that 2008 U.S. Open win at Torrey Pines.
Woods was playing that week on shredded ligaments in his left knee and two stress fractures in his left leg. Often overlooked is that Woods had not walked 18 holes since the Masters until the opening round at Torrey Pines.
“The legacy is bigger because of the injuries,” Kuchar said. “What he did at Torrey Pines, what he did at the (2019) Masters is sort of Hoganesque. At some point I, like most everybody, counted him out. And then he wins again.”
Woods is keeping plenty busy outside the ropes. He was appointed to the PGA Tour policy board without a term limit in 2023 as the tour was in the midst of its battle with Saudi-funded LIV Golf. He now heads up the Future Competition Committee charged with reshaping the tour model.
The next question is when — and where — he plays. Woods is the only player to have won the U.S. Junior Amateur, U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open. The U.S. Senior Open is at Scioto, the Ohio course where Jack Nicklaus learned to play.
April at Augusta isn't the same without Woods. He set the Masters record in 2024 by making the cut for the 24th consecutive time. How much more? How much longer?
“People want to see him,” Kuchar said. “And if he shoots 76, people still want to see him. He's unique in our sport.”
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
FILE - Tiger Woods of the U.S. gestures to the crowd at the end of his second round of the British Open golf championship on the Old Course, in St. Andrews, Scotland, Friday July 15, 2022. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison, File)
FILE - Tiger Woods wears his green jacket holding the winning trophy after the final round for the Masters golf tournament, Sunday, April 14, 2019, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum, File)
FILE - Tiger Woods, right and his son Charlie Woods bump fists on the ninth green during the first round of the PNC Championship golf tournament, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2022, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Kevin Kolczynski, File)
FILE - Tiger Woods watches his approach shot to the 18th green during the third round of the U.S. Open golf tournament Saturday, June 19, 2010, at the Pebble Beach Golf Links, in Pebble Beach, Calif. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)
FILE - Tiger Woods reacts as he wins the Masters golf tournament, Sunday, April 14, 2019, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)