Here are two things we have to watch for in Alabama-
#1. Let's say the line is moving much slower than expected and is only a line of broken supercells, that is going to cause much less contamination of the warm sector for storms later in the morning...as the main forcing moves in closer, which would cause lapse rates to steepen and while shear is still strong...there is a morning-midday window for that to happen.
#2. Let's say the line moves in quicker and is a fairly solid line of storms, it will cap into the limited CAPE and then slow down a bit with time...causing the warm sector to become messy and greater CAPE doesn't line up with the shear as it just doesn't have time to build in.
Yesterday's 18z NAM suggested to me #1 is possible, or least closer to #1, than #2, which caused me more concern. Most of the model guidance has been suggesting #2.
If you just take the line itself moving in during the pre-dawn hours, sure there may be a tornado or two, but I think the threat is fairly limited due to CAPE/lapse rates....if it slows down or doesn't really behave like a line/or line of supercells and does little to the warm environment, then we have a much larger threat window.