If you’re an investor and had plenty of your capital locked up in the Alabama Crimson Tide mutual fund, you’d be pretty happy overall. The team looked like a strong national contender this spring.

But parts of the team, just like the stocks in a fund, performed better than others. Let’s see who we should buy, sell and hold after spring practice.

Give us all the Jeremy Pruitt stock we can purchase.

Those shares will only rise. We’re talking Netflix, circa 2000.

The Tide D has looked good this spring, particularly shining on A-Day in a 7-3 defensive slugfest. How much of that was Pruitt and how much is the lingering effects of Kirby Smart is still to be determined. But Pruitt, who previously played and coached defensive backs at Alabama, has a proven track record.

After leaving Saban’s staff in 2012, Pruitt’s Florida State defense finished third in total defense as the team won the BCS National Championship. His Georgia defenses in 2014 and 2015 finished 17th and eighth, respectively.

It would be shocking for the Tide’s 2016 unit to not finish in the top 10 in yards allowed per game.

Sell the offensive line.

The losses from the 2015 offensive line showed on A-Day, as the two sides combined to give up 14 sacks. Quarterbacks, run for your lives!

Sack numbers are admittedly a bit skewed in the scrimmage since all it takes is a swipe of one of those black jerseys to tally one, but that’s still a whole lot of getting to the quarterback.

Saban and his staff have five months to figure out how to replace key losses like center Ryan Kelly and right tackle Dominick Jackson so we won’t dump all our offensive line stock.

Let’s hold the running game.

That’s only because last year’s effort was so great that even a stellar spring overall by the likely top two guys, Damien Harris and Bo Scarbrough, means the stock won’t drop from its lofty heights of 2015.

The Tide tallied 2,999 yards in 2015, with Heisman winner Derrick Henry getting 2,219 of those. That will be tough to top in 2016, but Bama has a stable of quality running backs that may be up to the challenge. Will the offensive line be able to open enough holes, however?

Buy some Jalen Hurts, an intriguing initial public offering.

Most indications point to Cooper Bateman as the starter entering the fall, but Hurts impressed on A-Day. He completed 11-of-15 with the game’s lone touchdown pass, while Bateman went 9-for-24 with a pick at the end of the game.

It was just one scrimmage, but it was on a big stage. Could those performances be indicators of who would fare better under the glare of 100,000 fans? Bateman’s only start in 2015 led to Bama’s lone loss against Ole Miss, as he got pulled from the game in favor of Jake Coker.

Load up on Rashaan Evans.

The junior linebacker must have cloned himself for the spring game. How else could he have amassed 17 tackles? He also nabbed the speedy Hurts for a sack.

He played on the second-team defense in the spring game, but Evans is making a clear case as a star on the always well-respected Tide defense after limited action in 2015.