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Alabama: Alabama Derrick McKey, Alabama Tony White, Tennessee 1988 Kentucky (vacated) Kentucky (vacated) Will Perdue, Vanderbilt 1989 Florida: Alabama Chris Jackson, LSU 1990 Georgia: Alabama Chris Jackson, LSU 1991 LSU Mississippi State: Alabama Shaquille O'Neal, LSU 1992 Arkansas: Kentucky Shaquille O'Neal, LSU 1993 Vanderbilt: Kentucky
The team's head coach was Anthony Grant, who was in his fourth season at Alabama after posting a 21-12 record in the 2011–12 season, where the Crimson Tide finished fifth in the SEC and received a bid to the 2012 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.
All 16 SEC members play women's basketball. Although the SEC began sponsoring women's basketball competition in the 1979–80 season, it was not fully integrated into the conference until the 1982–83 season, which was the first in which each team played the same number of conference games.
Each of Alabama and Georgia's SEC championship games have had national title implications. Here's a look back at the Crimson Tide-Bulldogs games:
In 12 years as head coach his teams averaged 21.8 wins a year, with a 267–119 record, and they won 4 SEC tournaments. They played in one NIT and eight NCAA tournaments making the "Sweet 16" five times. Sanderson is the only coach in Alabama history to win 200 or more games in his first 10 years.
The 2012 SEC Championship Game was played on December 1, 2012, in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, and determined both the 2012 football champion of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The game featured the Georgia Bulldogs, winners of the SEC Eastern Division versus the Alabama Crimson Tide, the winner of the SEC Western Division.
The 2012–13 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season began with practices in October 2012, followed by the start of the regular season in November. Conference play started in early January 2013, and concluded in March with the 2013 SEC men's basketball tournament at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville .
In this case, the conference championship game would be a rematch between Alabama and LSU, since the SEC would break the tie by relying on the combined winning percentage of all conference opponents.