Introducing Zyan Gibson, the 2026 Alabama football cornerback commit known for his quiet demeanor and ‘lock-down’ skills
When the Gadsden City basketball team took the court for its area championship game against Fort Payne on Tuesday, Gibson didn’t take mid-range jumpers or attempt highlight-reel dunks. He jogged to the hoop and, seamlessly, laid the ball up for a score.
On paper and on tape, Gibson is one of the best high school football players in the state of Alabama and a top-10 cornerback in the 2026 class. He’s the only current commit in Alabama football’s 2026 recruiting class, representing a program still looking to stake its claim as an in-state recruiting power with a new coaching regime.
But that’s how Gibson carries himself. He describes himself as a “lock-down” athlete, one who lets his play do the talking.
To Renza Avery, the Gadsden City recruiting coordinator and wide receivers coach, that’s what makes Gibson special.
“If you look at a crowd of kids and you said, ‘Hey, pick out the one who is Zyan Gibson,’ and you hadn’t seen a picture of him, you probably wouldn’t be able to tell,” Avery said. “That’s the beautiful part about it. It’s almost too good to be true.”
Michael Gibson knows what a Division I football player looks like.
Gibson was a first-team All-State defensive lineman at Litchfield High School before signing and playing for Ole Miss. As Michael Gibson’s son Zyan grew up, playing the same sport his father did, Michael said he saw the length, the speed, the long wingspan.
To Michael, Zyan Gibson was a Division I cornerback with a quick twitch and – at 6-foot-1 and 175 pounds – room to grow, an ability to turn, “smash the gas” and “run with the best of them.”
But Zyan Gibson, Michael said, wasn’t a showboat.
“He’s always been a hard worker,” Michael Gibson said. “He’s really quiet. He’s a quiet, laid-back type. He just really works. He’s not a big talker. He’s not one of those type (of) kids…. He’s just going to put his head down and work.”
To Zyan Gibson, that’s what it takes to be that “lock-down” cornerback, the one that got Alabama’s attention.
“You got to train,” Gibson said. “You got to work, you got to work out, you got to be disciplined.”
That’s the Gibson whom Gadsden City football coach Ali Smith saw, a quiet prospect with the “intangibles,” those things he couldn’t teach: the length, the speed, the “unbelievable athleticism,” the patience, the technique.
“As a player,” Smith said, “I knew the sky (was) the limit for him.”
What does that look like for Gadsden City wide receivers who face Gibson on the practice field each day in the fall?
It’s the typical adage: “Iron sharpens iron,” said Avery, who is also the team’s wide receivers coach. It’s a challenge he said his receivers don’t back down from, from big-bodied, aggressive ones to smaller and shiftier receivers.
But Avery didn’t sugarcoat what his receivers see when Gibson lines up across the line of scrimmage.
“It’s hell for us,” Avery said.
Why Zyan Gibson committed to Alabama football
Michael Gibson may have played at Ole Miss. But Zyan Gibson said he’s always been an Alabama fan.
It’s simple, he said. He’s from Alabama. His room was decked out in Crimson Tide gear. Michael Gibson remembers his son falling in love with the school’s background and tradition, turning into a player who feels he fits the mold.
“He feels like he’s an elite player and (can) go there and play,” Michael Gibson said. “Here in Alabama, that’s a big thing especially if a kid grows up a Bama fan.”
From head coach Kalen DeBoer’s arrival in Tuscaloosa, Avery said he and his staff made Gibson a priority.
Alabama general manager Courtney Morgan, Avery said, was “gold,” the “main, key cog” in Gibson’s commitment to Alabama, building relationships with the prospect and his family and giving them peace of mind and comfort surrounding all the changes with the Crimson Tide.
As Alabama’s only commitment, a decision he announced Dec. 24, Gibson said he, DeBoer and defensive backs coach Maurice Linguist are as close as ever.
“We got the best relationship ever,” Gibson said. “Every time I go down, I just build relationships with them.”
Knowing Gibson, Avery said he was not surprised the 2026 cornerback wanted to get his commitment “out of the way.”
“It helps when you have been rooting for the Tide for a very long time,” Avery said.
That has not stopped other schools from stopping at Gadsden City to talk to Gibson, schools like Ole Miss and Tennessee that are still making their pitches.
Smith has seen Gibson take that attention in stride.
“He’s very open when these people come in and very respectful,” Smith said. “And I think his family (is) as well too. But I think everyone knows that they have an uphill battle with Zyan and that he’s committed to Alabama.”