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School Baseball Week 4: High 25 Rankings, High Moments and What to Watch

What a nightmare week it has been for the former No. 2 team in the country, the LSU Tigers.

Last year’s Men’s College World Series winners got off to a pretty solid start to the season, but last week was definitely one to forget. Earlier in the week, LSU lost a home game to Northeastern 13-10, then suffered another loss on the road at UL-Lafayette, this time 7-2. With a home series against Sacramento State, it seemed like the Tigers were going to get the game back in order in Baton Rogue, and they did in the first game with a dominant 15-4 Mercy Rule win in seven innings. But disaster struck again when Sacramento State’s Cameron Sewell hit a grand slam in the eighth inning of Saturday’s contest, cementing the Hornets’ 5-4 win. The Hornets then won the final game of the series with a 6-1 victory. After Weeks 1-4, the Tigers dropped to No. 13 in this week’s rankings.

Outside of LSU, the Florida Gators suffered an even bigger drop, from No. 9 to No. 23, and the North Carolina Tar Heels fell from No. 8 to No. 15.

Two teams fell out of the rankings, the Miami Hurricanes and West Virginia Mountaineers, making room for the Virginia Cavaliers, who entered at No. 14 – the week’s biggest mover – and the USC Trojans at No. 25.

Here are the entire top 25 rankings from March 9, plus our favorite moments and what we’ll see in the week ahead.

Top moments

We had to include Sewell’s Grand Slam here. There’s nothing better than playing in one of the more hostile environments in all of college baseball, in addition to winning, of course.

Do you see that too?👀@SacStBaseball with a GRAND SLAM to extend its lead over LSU in the 8th!#NCAABaseball x 🎥 SECN+ / @11point7 pic.twitter.com/GpUwd1YhcC

— NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball) March 7, 2026

Now let’s take a look at this super impressive throw from Kentucky’s Scott Campbell.

THAT’S A WORD, SCOTT CAMPBELL 😮‍💨🫨#NCAABaseball x 🎥 SECN+ / @UKBaseball

pic.twitter.com/cveujPSbeK

— NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball) March 8, 2026

Player to keep an eye on

Daniel Jackson, C/OF, Georgia

We have some big hitters this year and this week’s new home run leader is Georgia’s Daniel Jackson. He’s already hit a total of 14 home runs this year – five of them just last week – and has been a key reason Georgia continues to climb in the rankings. With conference play increasing, how will he fare against SEC pitchers? We’ll just have to wait and see.

THAT’S A WORD, SCOTT CAMPBELL 😮‍💨🫨#NCAABaseball x 🎥 SECN+ / @UKBaseball

pic.twitter.com/cveujPSbeK

— NCAA Baseball (@NCAABaseball) March 8, 2026

Series to watch

No. 3 Mississippi State at No. 5 Arkansas
Game 1:7 p.m. on Friday
Game 2: Saturday, 2 p.m
Game 3: 3 p.m. on Sunday

Conference play begins this weekend, and with multiple ranked teams competing, it was difficult to focus on just one with Clemson taking on Georgia Tech, Georgia hosting Tennessee and a midweek matchup between Florida and Florida State. But a top-five series between these two SEC heavyweights is hard to miss.

Although Mississippi State lost a close 7-6 game to Southern Miss last week, it responded with a series win against Lipscomb, but it wasn’t just any win. The Bulldogs scored 26 runs – yes, 26 – in the final game of the series and 43 runs throughout the weekend. Their clubs are hot right now and they should definitely take that momentum with them to Fayetteville. Meanwhile, Arkansas lost a weekend game against Stetson and expects to return to action on Monday for a fourth game against Stetson. The Razorbacks should certainly have plenty of time to prepare. And since this is a home series, the Razorbacks could have a slight advantage.

Updated Top 25

Here you will find the latest rankings from D1baseball.com as well as information about each team’s next game.

Always east.

1. UCLA Bruins

Previous rank: 1
Record: 13-2
Next game: vs. UC Irvine, Tuesday, 9 p.m

2. Texas Longhorns

Previous rank: 3
Record: 15-0
Next game: at Texas State, Tuesday, 7 p.m. (ESPN+)

3. Mississippi State Bulldogs

Previous rank: 4
Record: 14-2
Next game: vs. Tulane, Tuesday, 7 p.m. (SEC Network+)

4. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets

Previous rank: 5
Record: 14-2
Next game: vs. West Georgia, Tuesday, 6 p.m. (ACC Network Extra)

5. Arkansas Razorbacks

Previous rank: 6
Record: 12-4
Next game: vs. Stetson, 1 p.m. on Monday (SEC Network+)

6. Auburn Tigers

Previous rank: 7
Record: 13-2
Next game: vs. UAB, Tuesday, 7 p.m. (SEC Network+)

7. Southern Miss Golden Eagles

Previous rank: 10
Record: 14-2
Next game: vs. Ole Miss, Tuesday, 7 p.m. (ESPN+)

8. Georgia Bulldogs

Previous rank: 11
Record: 15-3
Next game: vs. Tennessee Volunteers, 6 p.m. on Friday (SEC Network+)

9. Oklahoma Sooners

Previous rank: 12
Record: 14-2
Next game: vs. UT Arlington, 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)

10. NC State Wolfpack

Previous rank: 13
Record: 14-2
Next game: vs. Elon, 3 p.m. on Tuesday (ACC Network Extra)

11. Clemson Tigers

Previous rank: 14
Record: 15-1
Next game: vs. Georgia Southern, 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday

12. Wake Forest Demon Deacons

Previous rank: 15
Record: 15-1
Next game: in Coastal Carolina, Tuesday, 6 p.m. (ESPN+)

13. LSU Tigers

Previous rank: 2nd
Record: 12-5
Next game: vs. Creighton, 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)

14. Virginia Cavaliers

Previous rank: NO
Record: 13-3
Next game: vs. William & Mary, Tuesday, 4 p.m. (ACC Network Extra)

15. North Carolina Tar Heels

Previous rank: 8
Record: 13-3-1
Next game: vs. Bucknell, 4 p.m. on Tuesday (ACC Network Extra)

16. Chanticleers on the Carolina Coast

Previous rank: 16
Record: 9-6
Next game: vs. Wake Forest, Tuesday, 6 p.m. (ESPN+)

17. TCU Horned Frogs

Previous rank: 17
Record: 9-6
Next game: vs. Kansas, Tuesday, 7 p.m. (ESPN+)

18. Oregon State Beavers

Previous rank: 18
Record: 10-4
Next game: against Xavier, 8:35 p.m. on Monday

19. Tennessee Volunteers

Previous rank: 19
Record: 12-4
Next game: vs. Tennessee Tech, 6 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)

20. Florida State Seminoles

Previous rank: 20
Record: 13-2
Next game: in Florida, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. (SEC Network+)

21. Kentucky Wildcats

Previous rank: 21
Record: 14-2
Next game: vs. Ball State, 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)

22. Texas A&M Aggies

Previous rank: 22nd
Record: 14-1
Next game: vs. SFA, Tuesday, 7 p.m. (SEC Network+)

23. Florida Gators

Previous rank: 9
Record: 14-3
Next game: vs. Florida State, 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday (SEC Network+)

24. UTSA Roadrunners

Previous rank: 25
Record: 13-2
Next game: at Texas Tech, 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday (ESPN+)

25. USC Trojans

Previous rank: NO
Record: 15-0
Next game: vs. Long Beach State, Tuesday, 9 p.m

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Sport

Lionel Messi paid $70-80 million a yr, Inter Miami proprietor says

Inter Miami co-owner Jorge Mas revealed that captain Lionel Messi is paid between $70 million and $80 million a year, including the player’s ownership shares, as Mas explained that the team needs to maximize sponsorship deals and additional revenue streams.

Earlier this week, Miami signed a deal with Brazilian financial services company Nu, which will have the naming rights to the team’s new stadium near Miami International Airport.

– Messi scores 899th goal in Miami’s win over DC
Messi, Miami honored by Trump at the White House
– Messi tracker: All goals, assists, key moments for Miami, Argentina in 2026

Nu Stadium, a 26,700-seat facility still under construction, is scheduled to host its first game on April 4.

“The reason I need sponsors and they are world class is because players are expensive,” Mas said in an interview with Bloomberg on Friday. “I’m paying Messi – worth every penny – but it’s $70 to $80 million a year. Above and beyond.”

Messi is the highest-paid player in Major League Soccer, earning a base salary of $12 million with guaranteed compensation of $20,446,667, according to the salary guide published by the MLS Players Association.

ESPN has reported that Messi also benefits from other sources of income, such as his endorsement deal with Adidas and a revenue-sharing agreement with league broadcast partner Apple.

After joining the club in the summer of 2023, Messi signed a contract extension with Inter Miami last October, which runs until the end of the 2028 season.

Lionel Messi scored his last goal for Inter Miami against DC United on Saturday. Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

In a recent interview with ESPN, Inter Miami president of business operations Xavier Asensi revealed that preparations to capitalize on the possible arrival of the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner began long before Messi announced his intention to join the club.

“I don’t believe in luck. I think the definition of luck is when preparation meets opportunity,” Asensi told ESPN.

“Things happen, or you can make them happen, but you have to be prepared when they happen. Well, I think that’s what we’re seeing here. Lionel’s arrival isn’t a coincidence; there’s work behind it, a strategy and a plan to make it happen. It’s the American concept: ‘Aim for the best, be prepared for the worst.’

“You strive for the highest level, and then once you get there, you try to do things before, during and after to maximize the impact it can have.”

“A real example is the signing of the main shirt sponsorship contract in 2021. I inserted a clause stating that if the club signs a player who has won at least five Ballon d’Or awards, the sponsorship costs would double.”

“It’s in the contract. This is a contract for 2021. So it’s proof. I mean, in 2021 there were already contracts with clauses that mentally prepared the club and the structure in the event that Lionel potentially came here.”

Inter Miami’s record deal with Messi is paying off. According to Sportico, the club is the most valuable MLS team, valued at $1.45 billion.

The outlet also reported that Inter Miami’s valuation increased 22% in a year.

“Why did we grow? Because we won,” Asensi said.

Asensi said Messi’s influence on the financial aspect of the team was “day and night, black and white” and stressed that without his contributions on the pitch the club would be in a different situation.

“Leo changes everything for the better in some ways,” he said. “Since Lionel’s arrival, we have reached the US Open Cup final, won the Leagues Cup, won the Supporters’ Shield, a record number of points, qualified for the Champions League, won the MLS Cup, reached another Leagues Cup final, reached the Champions League semi-finals and qualified for the Club World Cup.”

“I think it’s pretty obvious and obvious that Lionel’s presence on the pitch and everything that has surrounded him has allowed the club to perform better and I’ve already told you this: as a football club we depend on what happens on the pitch.

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Switch rumors, information: The following Tottenham teaching candidates emerge

Tottenham Hotspur could replace the coach Igor Tudor before the end of the season as Barcelona keep an eye on Spurs’ most promising young defender.

Stay with us for the latest transfer news and rumors from around the world.

Home page of transfers | Winter qualities for men | Women’s grades

TRENDING RUMORS

Igor Tudor has lost all three games as Tottenham Hotspur manager so far. Chris Brunskill/Fantasista/Getty Images

– Tottenham Hotspur are in the middle of a bitter relegation battle to stay in the Premier League, but that hasn’t stopped them from searching for their next manager. According to the Telegraph, Spurs have held talks with them Roberto de Zerbiand the return of Mauricio Pochettino was also discussed. However, there could be another short-term change in the coaching bench sooner. The Telegraph also reports that Spurs are weighing up their options as interim coach Igor Tudor has lost all three games in charge so far. TeamTalk reports that the former striker Robbie Keanewho is in charge at Ferencvarosi could be an option as a club legend Glenn Hoddle offered his services in the Daily Mail.

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– Barcelona are keeping a close eye on the Tottenham Hotspur defender Luka VuskovicSky Germany has revealed. The 19-year-old is on loan at Bundesliga club Hamburg, where he is a regular starter. While the German club are reportedly pushing for a second loan deal next season, Spurs want to integrate him into the first team instead. Barcelona have added Vušković to their centre-back shortlist.

– Trabzonspor are unwilling to meet Manchester United’s £40m valuation for the goalkeeper Andre Onanaaccording to the Manchester Evening News. Onana spent this season on loan at the Turkish club, where he has made 21 league appearances so far. As things stand, Trabzonspor would be unwilling to make the transfer permanent, meaning the Cameroon international is likely to return to Old Trafford this summer.

– Juventus is yet to finalize a deal to sign the RB Leipzig midfielder Xavier Schlager free transfer, according to Fabrizio Romano. The Austrian midfielder held talks with Juventus back in January, but even two months later a deal is still far from complete. The Italian giants are still exploring several midfield options, including Newcastle United Sandro Tonali also associated with a move in the last few weeks.

– Arsenal and Manchester United are “watching” the Hertha Berlin prodigy Knows Eichhornsaid journalist Christian Falk. The 16-year-old, who has been dubbed the “next Toni Kroos”, caused a sensation in the 2nd Bundesliga and is therefore sought after by numerous clubs across Europe. Numerous Bundesliga clubs also want to sign Eichhorn, including FC Bayern Munich, who have been following his development for a long time. The German youth international has a release clause in his contract which means he could be available for less than €10 million this summer.

Expert opinion

ESPN’s scouting expert Tor-Kristian Karlsen on Kennet Eichhorn, the prodigy being chased by the Premier League’s biggest clubs:

Eichhorn, who usually plays in a dual formation, has impressed most of all with how effortlessly he has transferred his composed, mature game from the academy to senior football. There is no panic in the obsession or feeling affected by the opportunity. He acts as if he had all the time in the world, scanning, receiving and distributing the ball with the same natural rhythm that made him stand out in the Hertha youth team.

Inevitably the Toni Kroos comparisons appeared. While Kroos was more advanced at the same age, Eichhorn has the same clarity of decision making, great first touch, ability to receive the ball on the half turn and innate sense of when to speed up or slow down the game.

He’s already averaging almost four progressive passes per 90 minutes, which shows how willing he is to move the game forward. However, his range of distribution is great, as he can move around possession under pressure, penetrate the halfway lines or change play with a diagonal of 35 to 40 meters, changing the attack dynamic in a split second.

OTHER RUMORS

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2:13

Nicol: Trent Alexander-Arnold doesn’t understand the art of defending

Steve Nicol talks about Trent Alexander-Arnold’s defensive performance for Real Madrid against Celta de Vigo.

– Napoli will quickly try to tie down the midfielder Scott McTominay up to a new super deal. The Scotland international continues to attract interest in the Premier League. (Goal)

– Juventus are monitoring Brentford’s right-back Michael Kayode. Scouts from the Serie A club were on site to watch his last two games. (Nicolo Schira)

– Aston Villa monitor Cagliari goalkeeper Elijah Caprile and could make a move for the Italy international in the summer. (Nicolo Schira)

– Greuther Fürth defender Reno coin The summer transfer period is something to “keep an eye on” as several Bundesliga clubs are showing interest in him. (Sky Germany)

– Arsenal lead the race for the signing Leon Goretzkaalthough the player held concrete talks with Atlético Madrid at the beginning of the year. (Christian Falk)

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Antoine Griezmann has decided to stay at Atletico Madrid for another season despite attracting interest from MLS club Orlando City. (L’Equipe)

– Manchester City will definitely offer England an international player Phil Foot a new contract when his existing contract expires at the end of next season. (The Athlete)

– Aston Villa and Manchester United are monitoring the Fulham left-back Anthony Robinson. (Ekrem Konur)

– Manchester United midfielder Mason Mount has “no intention” of pushing for a transfer at the end of the season. (Football Insider)

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Sources – Jayson Tatum of the Celtics is predicted to make his season debut

Multiple authors

Boston Celtics superstar Jayson Tatum is expected to make his 2025-26 NBA season debut against the Dallas Mavericks on Friday night at TD Garden, sources told ESPN’s Shams Charania on Thursday.

Tatum, whose return comes less than 10 months after tearing his right Achilles tendon in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals against the New York Knicks, has been described as ready to play, sources told ESPN, and is expected to inform the Celtics of his final decision before Friday’s action.

He has worked diligently to play this season since suffering the devastating injury against the Knicks. Less than 24 hours after the injury, he was seen by Dr. Martin O’Malley underwent surgery at the Hospital for Special Surgery.

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Tatum, who turned 28 on Tuesday, is a six-time All-Star, five-time All-NBA selection — including four consecutive first teams from 2022-25 — and two-time Olympic gold medalist. The potential for his return has been an ongoing story all season – one that has only been reinforced by Boston’s success this season.

The Celtics, led by longtime co-star Jaylen Brown who is in the thick of the MVP race, sit second in the Eastern Conference standings entering Friday and are on track for another 50-win season. They’ve received strong contributions from 2024 title veterans Derrick White and Payton Pritchard and impressive growth from young players like center Neemias Queta and wings Jordan Walsh, Baylor Scheierman and rookie Hugo Gonzalez.

It all confirms coach Joe Mazzulla’s approach since the preseason, when he dismissed any notion of a “gap year” for the Celtics with Tatum injured and several veterans leaving the franchise last summer – Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday via trade and Al Horford and Luke Kornet via free agency.

“Maybe I have to train a lot differently than I did the year before,” Mazzulla told ESPN in October. “In previous years you’ve had an older, more experienced roster and four or five All-Stars on the team. So your process is different.”

Now the process for Boston will focus on getting Tatum back into the mix and back up to speed after nearly a year off the court. It’s safe to assume he’ll start on some sort of minutes limit on his way back, but Boston will play its next 12 games without back-to-back games – its next game is March 29-30. That should give him a chance to get some consistent reps on the court and begin to prepare for the playoff push, in which the Celtics will once again be considered favorites to exit the Eastern Conference.

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Choose units Could retrial date in Miami soccer homicide case

Multiple authors

Prosecutors will retry ex-Miami Hurricanes football player Rashaun Jones on May 18, a judge ruled Wednesday after declaring a mistrial earlier this week because of a hung jury in the second-degree murder case.

Florida 11th District Court Judge Cristina Miranda also reduced Jones’ bail from $850,000 to $500,000 after denying his attorney’s request to lower it to $50,000.

Jones’ attorney, Sara Alvarez, said her client is still unable to come up with the money needed to be released under the reduced bond – about $50,000, or 10% of the bond.

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Miranda also asked Jones if he was interested in a plea deal, which Jones declined. He repeated an exchange the two had in a preliminary hearing in which Jones also said he would not accept a plea deal even if he was offered a sentence of 15 years to serve – less than the guidelines for second-degree murder convictions. If convicted, he could face life in prison.

Jones has been in custody since his arrest in August 2021 in connection with the murder of teammate Bryan Pata nearly 15 years ago. Pata was shot in the head outside his apartment complex on November 7, 2006, after returning home from training.

Murder in the U-Podcast

ESPN’s new seven-part podcast about the murder of Bryan Pata and the two-decade odyssey to find his killer is now available. Listen here.

Prosecutors relied heavily on witness testimony to show that jealousy of a woman and a history of physical altercations led Jones to murder Pata after Jones became distraught over receiving news that he had been suspended for two games for a failed drug test.

A former writing instructor at the University of Miami identified Jones as the man he saw leaving the apartment complex shortly after the murder.

Jurors who spoke to ESPN said the state didn’t have the evidence to prove Jones was the killer and said there were problems with the credibility of eyewitness testimony.

Under Florida law, prosecutors have 90 days to retry a case after a mistrial.

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Offers we would prefer to see earlier than the 2026 NHL commerce deadline

Multiple Authors

Mar 3, 2026, 07:00 AM ET

The NHL trade deadline is at 3 p.m. ET on Friday.

Though several blockbusters have already happened — including Quinn Hughes to the Minnesota Wild and Artemi Panarin to the Los Angeles Kings — there are some big names still reportedly available to contenders.

So, who will get traded next?

ESPN reporters Ryan S. Clark, Kristen Shilton and Greg Wyshynski devised logical trades that could happen before the deadline and benefit all teams involved, keeping salary cap implications in mind.

Let’s start with a deal that would have seemed improbable in the preseason:

Edmonton Oilers get:
G Sergei Bobrovsky

Florida Panthers get:
G Connor Ingram, F Isaac Howard

Why it works: If you can’t beat them, acquire them!

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This transaction would require some serious soul-searching by Edmonton general manager Stan Bowman and Florida GM Bill Zito. For Bowman, it would mean acknowledging that his previous plan to fix the team’s goaltending — acquiring Tristan Jarry from the Penguins — still puts the team’s postseason fortunes at risk. For Zito, it would mean that this Aleksander Barkov-less season is a write-off, and that Bobrovsky, who turns 38 in September, accumulated too much wear and tear during the past three seasons to get a multiyear contract.

The Oilers know they have a three-year window before Connor McDavid becomes an unrestricted free agent. Chances must be taken. Bobrovsky has been pretty bad in the regular season, but that’s not unusual for him. It’s his evolution into Playoff Bob every April that makes him intriguing for Edmonton. The Oilers have witnessed it first-hand for two straight Stanley Cup Finals.

The money could work with full 50% retention by the Panthers and Ingram (with an expiring contract) being shipped out. The acquisition of Connor Murphy on Monday complicates things — putting Mattias Janmark on long-term injured reserve was part of my Bobrovsky gambit, and they did so to make that trade with Chicago — so some other parts would have to move. The Oilers don’t want to give up Howard, but is there a player with the game and swagger who better fits the Panthers’ aesthetic?

Yes, Edmonton needed another defenseman and could use a third-line center. None of that matters if the Oilers don’t have someone who can stop the puck in the playoffs, and that’s what Bobrovsky does. — Wyshynski

Minnesota Wild get:
C Vincent Trocheck

New York Rangers get:
2027 first-round pick, 2028 second-round pick, D Carson Lambos and F Charlie Stramel

Why it works: Trading for one of the proven top-six centers at the deadline isn’t a question of need but rather what it will take to complete the deal and if it makes sense for the acquiring franchise. Wild GM Bill Guerin and his front office are facing that decision ahead of the deadline.

Trocheck is practically the perfect deadline addition for the Wild. As a two-way center, he fits within their defensive structure, and he can do what’s required in the offensive zone to score and set up others. He can be trusted to play in every situation, and on any special teams unit.

Above all, he gives the Wild someone who has experience playing against top-line centers — a skill that could prove useful in the daunting Western Conference playoff bracket. Trocheck told reporters Monday that there are teams in the West that are on his no-trade list, and The Athletic reported that the Wild are not on that list.

In this trade, the Rangers get two prospects, Lambos and Stramel, and they could play as soon as this spring, or possibly at some point next season. The Rangers, who have two first-round picks this year, would have multiple firsts in 2027 if they completed this deal.

The Wild weathered the buyouts of Zach Parise and Ryan Suter, and that has allowed Guerin and his staff to explore more options — but that comes with a few caveats. Are the Wild comfortable parting with two more prospects and a first-round pick when they’ve already moved on from Zeev Buium, Marat Khusnutdinov, Liam Ohgren and Marco Rossi within the past year? And though they have $11.4 million in deadline cap space, per PuckPedia, are they also comfortable having what would be an eighth player with more than three years remaining on their current deal worth more than $5 million annually?

If Guerin and his front office are comfortable saying yes to those questions, this deal makes a lot of sense. — Clark

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0:24

Vincent Trocheck’s lone shootout goal wins it for Rangers

Vincent Trocheck fires in a goal for the Rangers to win it in the shootout vs. Penguins.

Colorado Avalanche get:
C Ryan O’Reilly, 2027 sixth-round pick

Nashville Predators get:
2027 first-round pick, 2026 fourth-round pick (from Carolina) and F Nikita Prishchepov

Why it works: Colorado must strike now. The Avalanche have not advanced past the second round in a playoff series since winning the Stanley Cup in 2022. This is Colorado’s best team in the past four years, and the Avalanche have an excellent chance of making another championship run. Colorado already has a one-two punch down the middle with Nathan MacKinnon and Brock Nelson. What the Avalanche need is someone like O’Reilly to round out their center depth with scoring touch, physicality and, of course, winning experience (O’Reilly was part of St. Louis’ Cup victory in 2019).

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O’Reilly is also having a terrific season. The 35-year-old leads the Predators with 21 goals and 57 points in 59 games while playing over 20 minutes per contest. If the Avalanche can draw that kind of production out of their third-line center, it will make their offensive attack enviably formidable.

But O’Reilly does not want to be traded. His family is happy in Nashville, and he’d like to stay put. But O’Reilly has no trade protection in his contract, which carries a $4.5 million annual cap hit through next season, although there is a sense that Predators GM Barry Trotz would bring a trade proposal to O’Reilly before making anything official.

With that in mind, Colorado would have to give up quite a bit to land O’Reilly. The Avalanche don’t have a first-round pick in 2026 — that went to the New York Islanders in Colorado’s acquisition of Nelson at last year’s deadline. The Avalanche’s win-now mentality makes giving up next year’s top selection a calculated risk. It would be worth it, though, if O’Reilly puts them over the top.

The deal would also include Prishchepov, a 22-year-old center Colorado selected in the seventh round of the 2024 draft. He has played 10 NHL games, and his inclusion is a sweetener for Nashville, which is headed for a rebuilding phase. — Shilton

Carolina Hurricanes get:
C Robert Thomas

St. Louis Blues get:
2026 first-round pick (from DAL), C Jesperi Kotkaniemi, D Alexander Nikishin, F Ryan Suzuki

Why it works: It’s clear that St. Louis and Thomas could benefit from a clean break. Carolina would be an ideal trade partner.

The Hurricanes have had no problem making the postseason, but it’s their lack of playoff scoring that has repeatedly derailed Carolina’s recent opportunities to reach a Stanley Cup Final. The Hurricanes haven’t hesitated to take a big swing before — such as acquiring Jake Guentzel two seasons ago, landing Mikko Rantanen last season (before trading him again), and making a play for Mitch Marner last year, too.

Adding Thomas would give Carolina a 20-plus goal scorer to anchor one of its top two lines who can also be an asset on the power play. Thomas, 26, has five years remaining on his deal with an $8.125 million annual cap hit. The Hurricanes would be getting some of the best years of Thomas’ career.

The return is significant, and it has to be. The Hurricanes would be trading the first-round pick they received when they dealt Rantanen to Dallas. Sending it off to bring in another potential superstar center seems right, somehow. Koktaniemi hasn’t panned out into being the consistent scoring center Carolina hoped for, but he is still productive and could slide into the Blues’ lineup while providing good depth in a second- or third-line role. Nikishin is a burly defender who can contribute offensively, with seven goals and 22 points in 58 games this season. Carolina wouldn’t part with Nikishin easily, but he could swiftly elevate the Blues’ defense corps.

Suzuki. Carolina’s first-round draft choice in 2019, is a 24-year-old center who has played in only two NHL games, but has been excellent in the American Hockey League (he has 10 goals and 39 points in 47 games for the Chicago Wolves this season). St. Louis could give him an NHL spot soon. In Carolina, he hasn’t broken through because of its depth up front.

Blues GM Doug Armstrong might not get a perfect trade return for Thomas. A deal with Carolina makes sense for his club in the short and long term. — Shilton

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0:33

Robert Thomas scores goal vs. Wild

Robert Thomas tallies goal vs. Wild

Boston Bruins get:
C Robert Thomas, D Justin Faulk

St. Louis Blues get:
C Dean Letourneau, D Mason Lohrei, C Casey Mittelstadt, F Michael Eyssimont, 2027 first-round pick (unprotected)

Why it works: I’ve long felt that the Bruins were keeping their No. 1 center spot open in the hopes that either Connor McDavid or Leon Draisaitl could have filled it before both re-signed with the Oilers. But top-line centers in their prime don’t often become available, which is why it’s noteworthy that the Blues are listening to trade offers for Thomas. The Bruins could pull off that kind of blockbuster because they have a deep well of assets. But why stop at Thomas?

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The Bruins have been one of the teams mentioned to have interest in Faulk, who has 32 points in 60 games and is averaging 22:30 of ice time. Faulk, 33, has another year left on his contract at a $6.5 million annual cap hit, and the Blues have the retention slots to keep 50% of his contract to make this trade happen. It’ll cost the Bruins even more, but it could be worth it to slot Faulk behind Charlie McAvoy on the right-side defensive depth chart.

The Blues will, of course, not retain salary for Robert Thomas, who is signed through 2030-31 at an AAV of $8.125 million. To make the money work, the Bruins likely have to send back Mittelstadt ($5.75 million, signed through 2026-27) and Eyssimont ($1.45 million, signed through 2026-27) to go along with Lohrei ($3.2 million AAV, RFA after 2026-27), a player the Blues might want.

But if the Blues are going to move Thomas, they will move him for future assets. Boston won’t move 2025 first-round pick James Hagens. Letourneau is a 20-year-old center for Boston College who is 6-foot-7 and has scored at more than a point-per-game pace this season.

Toss in an unprotected first, and that’s a hefty price to pay. But it’s a deal that helps Boston in the short term as a playoff team, and the long term with Thomas at the top of its center depth chart. — Wyshynski

Anaheim Ducks get:
D Dougie Hamilton

New Jersey Devils get:
D Drew Helleson, 2027 second-round pick (from ANA), 2027 second-round pick (from DET)

Why it works: This one would work for both teams now and in the future.

The Ducks don’t need to make a trade, given what the group has accomplished this season. But getting Hamilton would fit their philosophy of adding veterans and blending them with a roster filled with young players to create a team that has a chance to be one of the NHL’s next long-term factors.

Hamilton would bolster the right side of the Ducks’ defense that already has Radko Gudas and Jacob Trouba. Hamilton’s arrival would also help the Ducks pair their younger defensemen, such as Jackson LaCombe, Pavel Mintyukov and Olen Zellweger, with a veteran.

Gudas and Trouba are both unrestricted free agents at the end of the season, while Hamilton still has two years left on his contract worth $9 million annually. Hamilton would provide the Ducks cost certainty entering what will likely be an expensive offseason, with Leo Carlsson, Cutter Gauthier, Mintyukov and Zellweger set to be restricted free agents. LaCombe’s contract extension begins in 2026-27, bumping his salary from $925,000 to $9 million annually.

The Devils moving off Hamilton’s salary would be a bonus for a team that is facing cap challenges going into the deadline. But it’s possible that the Ducks — or any team that’s interested in Hamilton — could use that as a bargaining chip, provided they have the cap space. That’s what makes assessing a potential return complicated.

It’s possible that Helleson, who will make $1.1 million next season, along with the draft capital, could push this trade through. — Clark

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“Dana White's Cons values Collection” Season 9 Matchups and Outcomes

The best pipeline of the UFC for talent is back because “Dana White's Contender series” returned on August 12 for August 9th. American Welterweight Ty Miller received the first contract in the season after his unanimous victory against Jimmy Drago. White then showed his appreciation for Khamzat Chimaev's Russian teammate Baysangur Susurkaev, who said White said the show when he excluded Murtaza Talha into the liver in the first round with a malignant kick.

Selection of the publisher

1 related

Susurkaev immediately put his UFC contract to work and only booked a place in UFC 319: Chimaev against Dricus du Plessis Undercard in Chicago just four days later. Susurkaev rode with the hype wave until his first victory, a second round naked throttle filing by debutantian Eric Nolan.

In week 2, four out of five fights ended early with four knockouts. The other, a unanimous decision by Jose Delano about Manuel Exposito in the main event, was an exciting three-round matter in which both fighters fought against the last bell. All five winners left the UFC APEX with UFC contracts.

How to watch the fights

See “Dana White's Contender Series” on Tuesdays at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN+: Get ESPN+ here.

FightCenter offers statistics and analyzes for every UFC and “DWCS” card.

“Dana White's Contender Series” Season 9 -Matchups and Results:

Week 1 results

Middleweight: Ilianan Bouafia Def. Neemias Santana from Dud
Welterweight: Ty Miller Def. Jimmy Drago from UD
Middle weight: Baysangur Susurkaev Def. Murthaz Talha from TKO1
Springweight: Radley da Silva Def. George Mangos from UD
Medium weight: Yuri Panferov Def. Christopher Ewert of UD

Miller and Susurkaev received UFC contracts.

Week 2 results

Spring weight: Jose Delano Def. Manuel Exposito from UD
Middle weight: Cam Rowston Def. Brandon Holmes from TKO1
Herrenroam: Lou Louis Scott. The SaudiMar of TKO3
Heavyweight: Josh Hokit Def. Guilherme Uriel from TKO2
Springweight: Ramiro Jimenez Def. Tommy Cuozzi from TKO1

Jimenez, Hokit, Scott, Rowston and Delano received UFC contracts

Week 3 matchups

Light heavyweight: Vitor Costa against Ryan Gandra
Springweight: Damon Wilson against Marico Barbosa
Light heavyweight: Abdul-Rakhman Yakhyaev against Alik Lorenz
Light weight: Cristian Perez against Manoel Sousa
Heavyweight: Elisha Ellison vs. Brando Perikic

Week 4 matchups

Welterweight: Jack Congdon against Jean-Paul Lebosnoyani
Middle weight: Theo Haig against Cezary Oleksiejczuk
Light weight: almond Nallo against Samuel Silva
Men's fly weight: a Tuan Ho against Frank Silva
Springweight: Tommy McMillen against David Mgoyan

Week 5 matchups

Heavyweight: Guilherme Pat against Anthony Guarascio
Springweight: Cam Teague against Lerryan Douglas
Light heavyweight: Felipe Franco against Ivan Gnizditskiy
Light: Chasing Blair against Samuel Sanches
Women's flying weight: Shanelle Dyer against Carol Foro

Week 6 Matchups

TBA

Week 7 Matchups

TBA

Week 8 matchups

TBA

Week 9 Matchups

TBA

Week 10 matchups

TBA

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Learn how to get essentially the most enjoyment from the 2025 school soccer season

  • Bill ConnellyAug 18, 2025, 07:15 AM ET

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      Bill Connelly is a writer for ESPN. He covers college football, soccer and tennis. He has been at ESPN since 2019.

The 1990 college football season kicked off with chaos off the field and a sense of familiarity on it. Miami and Notre Dame had gone a combined 22-1 against the rest of the nation in 1989, and the Hurricanes’ 27-10 win over the Irish on Nov. 25 had basically decided the national title. In 1990, they predictably began the season ranked No. 1 and 2, respectively; Florida State, the only team to beat either in 1989, began the year ranked fourth, and the others in the preseason top 10 had all finished the previous season 12th or better. Though each year produces its own upstarts, the sport’s balance of power seemed crystal clear heading into the 1990s.

Off the field, everything was as blurry as could be. With Penn State’s impending move to the Big Ten, the first major run of conference realignment was underway, and people were envisioning a world that might feature as few as three superconferences. Sports Illustrated’s Austin Murphy wrote about a possible Super SEC (with Florida State, Miami, South Carolina and the SWC’s Arkansas, Texas and Texas A&M) and a Pac-14 with Colorado, BYU, San Diego State and Utah. It began to seem as if anything were possible regarding the future of the sport.

Those vibes unexpectedly made their way onto the field. The season started with a wild 31-31 tie between No. 5 Colorado and No. 8 Tennessee — the Vols scored 21 points in the final eight minutes to erase a two-score deficit — and the temperature never went down. Miami lost to BYU in Week 2, Colorado suffered a second blemish the next week, and the upsets came so hot-and-heavy that Virginia found itself No. 1 for the first time by mid-October. By the end of the year, 18 teams had appeared in the AP top five, the most ever. Colorado ended up splitting the national title with Georgia Tech even though the Yellow Jackets hadn’t entered the polls until October and the Buffaloes had suffered the aforementioned multiple blemishes. Colorado had also famously benefited from the sport’s most famous clipping penalty and, of course, a fifth down.

(Charles Johnson didn’t score on fifth down either. The Missouri grad in me is obligated to endlessly remind you of this.)

The Buffaloes and Yellow Jackets didn’t play each other for the title, of course, because in 1990 we were still letting poll voters and half-informed and self-interested bowl officials decide who had a shot at a ring. Georgia Tech had to play No. 18 Nebraska in the Citrus Bowl because the Sugar Bowl had locked up Virginia in early November, right before the Cavaliers fell apart following a loss to … Georgia Tech. The Orange Bowl, having already landed Colorado, could have selected Tech for a 1-versus-2 battle but decided to go with big brand Notre Dame instead. Television ratings were more important than merit, after all.

Thirty-five years later, on the first Friday night of the season, Colorado and Georgia Tech will meet for the first time. That Sunday, Miami and Notre Dame will face off as well. The sport is facing unprecedented change off the field — so much so that I wrote a book about it — but any 1990 vibes we can channel on the field are welcome because in these parts we love chaos. College football is at its best when (again, on the field) it makes the least possible sense.

Messy seasons take on lives of their own, but really, college football’s superpower is that it’s far too big to contain. There are always messes, and there is always a close game on, a funky offense to watch and small-school madness to follow. Each year I create a road map for getting the most out of the season. Here’s how to enjoy yourself to the fullest this fall.

Watch the big games (duh)

Sometimes you have to search for the fun, and other times it’s staring you in the face. The spectacle of a big game is one of college football’s best draws. Here are three games from each week that feature (A) the highest combined projected SP+ ratings from the two teams and (B) a projected scoring margin (per SP+) of less than 10 points. (Games between teams in the preseason AP Top 25 are in bold.)

Week 1: Texas at Ohio State, LSU at Clemson, Notre Dame at Miami (Sunday)

Week 2: Michigan at Oklahoma, Baylor at SMU, Iowa at Iowa State

Week 3: Georgia at Tennessee, Texas A&M at Notre Dame, Florida at LSU

Week 4: Florida at Miami, Michigan at Nebraska, Auburn at Oklahoma

Week 5: Alabama at Georgia, Oregon at Penn State, LSU at Ole Miss

Week 6: Texas at Florida, Miami at Florida State, Kansas State at Baylor

Week 7: Alabama at Missouri, Oklahoma vs. Texas, Georgia at Auburn

Week 8: Tennessee at Alabama, Ole Miss at Georgia, Penn State at Iowa

Week 9: Alabama at South Carolina, Texas A&M at LSU, Ole Miss at Oklahoma

Week 10: Penn State at Ohio State, Florida vs. Georgia, Oklahoma at Tennessee

Week 11: LSU at Alabama, Oregon at Iowa, Texas A&M at Missouri

Week 12: Texas at Georgia, Florida at Ole Miss, South Carolina at Texas A&M

Week 13: Tennessee at Florida, Missouri at Oklahoma, Kansas State at Utah

Week 14: Ohio State at Michigan, Texas A&M at Texas, Alabama at Auburn

Granted, Week 2 is a bit of an alternative programming week — allow me to petition for “College GameDay” to pass on Michigan-Oklahoma in favor of the resumption of the Mizzou-Kansas Border War in Columbia — but big games are distributed nicely throughout the season.

Irish Farmageddon, baby!

Avery Johnson leads Kansas State against Iowa State in Week 0 as Farmageddon goes green, playing in Ireland. Reese Strickland/Imagn Images

We get a fun and important game even before Week 1 arrives: This Saturday, No. 17 Kansas State and No. 22 Iowa State will meet for the 109th iteration of Farmageddon — and in the farm-iest of locales: Ireland. ISU has won four of the past five to take a 54-50-4 lead in the series, and the winner of this one will enter Week 1 as a favorite to reach the Big 12 championship game. I really should have pushed to cover this game in person.

Week 5 is incredible

I’m not sure we’ve ever seen a September weekend as big as Week 5 might shape up to be. Preseason No. 2 Penn State hosts No. 7 Oregon, while No. 5 Georgia attempts revenge at home against No. 8 Alabama. Meanwhile, the undercard is endless. No. 9 LSU visits No. 21 Ole Miss in one of the SEC’s more spirited old rivalries, No. 7 Notre Dame visits Arkansas for the first time in a Lou Holtz Bowl of sorts, No. 3 Ohio State visits an ambitious Washington, and Auburn visits No. 19 Texas A&M in a rivalry that frequently produces silliness.

Plus, two Big Ten games that might not catch the eye in some years — USC at No. 12 Illinois, No. 20 Indiana at Iowa — take on a lot of playoff relevance, and I haven’t even mentioned TCU at No. 11 Arizona State on Friday night, a great Group of 5 showdown between Appalachian State and Boise State or an FCS top-five matchup between South Dakota and North Dakota State! There’s almost too much to keep track of in Week 5. Clear your schedule.

Bask in wild conference title races

In last week’s SP+ projections, the top eight teams in the Big 12 were separated by only 6.0 points, and 10 teams were within a touchdown of the projected top two. In the SEC, the top six were separated by 6.1 points. In the American, the top five were separated by 6.1. In the Sun Belt, Nos. 2 through 9 were separated by 6.7.

Editor’s Picks

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In the ACC, Big Ten, Conference USA, MAC and Mountain West, there are pretty clear hierarchies at the top. Surprises are always possible, but we know who should be (and is) favored. In these four other conferences, however, we could be in for spectacular plot twists. Irish Farmageddon should give us an early taste of this, followed by Georgia at Tennessee in Week 3, but things will kick into overdrive in Week 5 and include a good number of midweek games. Some particularly big weeks:

Week 8: Ole Miss at Georgia, Tennessee at Alabama, Texas Tech at Arizona State, Utah at BYU, Baylor at TCU, Army at Tulane, Coastal Carolina at App State, Texas State at Marshall

Week 9: James Madison at Texas State (Tues.), Marshall at Coastal Carolina (Thurs.), Texas A&M at LSU, Ole Miss at Oklahoma, BYU at Iowa State, Colorado at Utah, Kansas State at Kansas, South Florida at Memphis, Louisiana at South Alabama

Week 11: UTSA at South Florida (Thurs.), Georgia Southern at App State (Thurs.), LSU at Alabama, BYU at Texas Tech, Iowa State at TCU, Tulane at Memphis, James Madison at Marshall, Texas State at Louisiana

Week 14: Navy at Memphis (Fri.), Texas A&M at Texas, LSU at Oklahoma, Colorado at Kansas State, Utah at Kansas, Army at UTSA, James Madison at Coastal Carolina, South Alabama at Texas State, Georgia Southern at Marshall

Which new/young SEC quarterback takes control?

It was easily one of the most interesting storylines I pieced together as I was writing my conference previews: The SEC is overflowing with new or young starting quarterbacks with massive upside and incomplete résumés, so much so that they got their own section in my most important players of 2025 list. For that matter, six of the top eight teams in the preseason AP poll have new starting QBs.

Most of these guys are athletic and exciting, which is to say that they’re capable of making tons of big plays and/or taking lots of hits. A couple of them will underachieve or battle injuries that impact their teams significantly. A couple could break through and lead top-five charges. Figuring out who’s who will be both entertaining and integral to the playoff race.

Year 2 on Lake Michigan

Five Home Games at Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium. See you next Fall 🌊 pic.twitter.com/Mh2pHonQvJ

— Northwestern Football (@NUFBFamily) December 13, 2024

Northwestern is spending almost a billion dollars on its Ryan Field rebuild, and this is the last season the Wildcats will play in their temporary home at Martin Stadium on Lake Michigan. It’s an incredible, aesthetically pleasing venue, and it will host at least one pretty big-time game: the Wildcats’ Week 3 matchup against Oregon. (Their late-season home games against Michigan and Minnesota will be at Wrigley Field, unfortunately.)

The Pepto-Bismol All-Stars

Certain teams will be playing in an inordinate number of close games. According to my final preseason SP+ projections, there are a whopping 25 teams with at least eight games projected to finish within one score (approximately 7.5 points), including eight schools with nine such games. (Perhaps not surprisingly, four of these teams are from the Big 12.) You will be watching the fourth quarter of many of their games.

10 tight games: UTEP

9 tight games: Baylor, Colorado State, Iowa State, Middle Tennessee, San Diego State, TCU, West Virginia

8 tight games: Akron, Appalachian State, Delaware, Florida, Hawai’i, Houston, Iowa, Jacksonville State, Kansas, Louisiana Tech, New Mexico State, North Texas, Oklahoma, Pittsburgh, Sam Houston, Texas A&M, Utah

UTEP is a heavy underdog against Texas in Week 3 and a two-touchdown dog against Liberty in mid-October. But from the Utah State game in Week 1 to the trip to Delaware in Week 14, the other 10 games are projected within five points. Guhhhh. Stock up on antacid, Miners fans.

Embrace the option

Navy quarterback Blake Horvath is back, which should mean more fun for the Midshipmen. Andrew Dieb-Imagn Images

Army and Navy enjoyed sudden surges in 2024 thanks to new interpretations of their good, old option offenses. Army surged from a combined 12-12 in 2022-23 to 12-2 last fall — with an American conference title — thanks to a combined 2,794 rushing yards and 42 TDs from quarterback Bryson Daily and fullback Kanye Udoh. Navy, meanwhile, left behind four straight losing seasons with a 10-3 campaign and defeated both Army and Oklahoma in December. And although Daily and Udoh are gone, Navy quarterback Blake Horvath returns in 2025.

Neither service academy will sneak up on anyone this year, but they’re still going to run their own versions of sexy option offenses. Air Force has maintained its own variety of the option and has been rewarded with five 10-win seasons in 11 years, though the Falcons fell off course after heavy turnover in 2024.

I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. These three schools have long annoyed the hell out of opponents with their increasingly unique attacks. But we’re welcoming someone new to the FBS option party this year: Rice, which enjoyed a few winning seasons in the 1990s with Ken Hatfield’s option offense, decided to give it another go, hiring Davidson’s Scott Abell to replace Mike Bloomgren.

At Davidson, Abell’s Wildcats drew attention with gaudy rushing totals at the FCS level, and in his very first season, they pulled off one of the most unusual accomplishments you’ll ever see, rushing for 789 yards in one game … and losing. I don’t expect many wins from Rice in 2025, but the Owls are virtually guaranteed to find a rhythm against an insufficiently prepared opponent and produce some delightful numbers. You’ll want to keep an eye out for it.

Watch the midweek games

play

1:08

BYU fans go wild on late game-winning TD

BYU’s Darius Lassiter sends the crowd into a frenzy after hauling in a miraculous touchdown catch in the waning moments against Oklahoma State.

Midweek games are great for giving us opportunities to catch up on interesting teams, dive into fun locales (and maybe slide down a muddy hill) and, quite frequently, enjoy some silly football. Last season alone, the midweek slate gave us BYU’s incredible last-second win over Oklahoma State, Virginia Tech’s overturned Hail Mary against Miami, Duke’s overtime win over Northwestern on Lake Michigan, wild Arizona State wins and UNLV thrillers, Kennesaw State’s first win as an FBS team (a shocking upset of Liberty) and a number of zany comebacks. November’s MACtion slate gave us a weekly classic, and Week 4 gave us maybe the wildest Friday night of all time, featuring a big Stanford upset of Syracuse and two overtime games (Illinois over Nebraska and Washington State over San Jose State). Whew.

The 2025 midweek games have a high bar to clear. Not including Black Friday after Thanksgiving, here’s one Tuesday-to-Friday game to pay particular attention to each week. (I made an exception for the start of MACtion.) We’ll inevitably gravitate toward whichever wild games go down to the wire, but these will be worth paying attention to regardless.

Week 1: Georgia Tech at Colorado (Fri.)

Week 2: James Madison at Louisville (Fri.)

Week 3: NC State at Wake Forest (Thurs.)

Week 4: Iowa at Rutgers (Fri.)

Week 5: TCU at No. 11 Arizona State (Fri.)

Week 6: West Virginia at BYU (Fri.)

Week 7: East Carolina at Tulane (Thurs.)

Week 8: Louisville at No. 10 Miami (Fri.)

Week 9: California at Virginia Tech (Thurs.)

Week 10: James Madison at Texas State (Tues.)

Week 11: Miami (Ohio) at Ohio (Tues.), Northern Illinois at Toledo (Wed.), UTSA at South Florida (Thurs.), Tulane at Memphis (Fri.)

Week 12: No. 4 Clemson at Louisville (Fri.)

Week 13: Florida State at NC State (Fri.)

Week 14: Navy at Memphis (Thanksgiving)

Watch as much smaller-school football as you can

Think about it this way: As breathless as the 1990 season already was, it was even wilder if you followed the sport at all levels. In the I-AA (now FCS) playoffs that year, newcomer UCF upset Jim Tressel’s second-ranked Youngstown State team in the first round, and Nevada erased a 15-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat Furman in three overtimes in the quarterfinals before beating rival Boise State 59-52 in another three overtimes in the semis. Eventual champ Georgia Southern had to survive a 28-27 epic against Idaho in the quarters before hitting fifth gear.

At the Division III level, Allegheny and Lycoming, each making their first (and, for Allegheny, only) title-game appearances, played a Stagg Bowl epic, with Ken O’Keefe’s Allegheny Gators winning 21-14 in overtime. In NAIA, Billy Joe’s Central State Marauders embarked on one of the greatest modern runs by an HBCU program, winning three playoff games by a combined 127-40 to claim their first national title.

Connelly’s conference previews

Bill Connelly gets you ready for the 2025 season by breaking down a different conference every week of the summer. Previews

Small-school football is the ultimate world builder. On a given Saturday, there’s always a bitter rivalry you hadn’t heard of and an unforgettable finish you’d never seen before. Every week provides title stakes of some sort before the breathless beast known as the smaller-school playoffs gets underway in November. The more you see, the happier you become, and you can watch just about any game in the country via either a streaming service or a school’s website.

Here are three huge smaller-school games for each week of the regular season, plus a choice selection for Week 0. Top-10 matchups are in bold.

Week 0: No. 7 UC Davis vs. No. 11 Mercer (FCS Kickoff Classic)

Week 1: No. 9 Pittsburg State at No. 1 Ferris State (D-II) (Thurs.), No. 4 Morningside at No. 3 Benedictine (NAIA), No. 14 Sacramento State at No. 3 South Dakota State (FCS)

Week 2: No. 3 South Dakota State at No. 2 Montana State (FCS), No. 3 Benedictine at No. 1 Grand View (NAIA), No. 9 Pittsburg State at No. 5 Central Oklahoma (D-II)

Week 3: No. 3 Grand Valley State at No. 9 Pittsburg State (D-II), No. 2 Mount Union at No. 23 Grove City (D-III), No. 6 Colorado State-Pueblo at No. 22 Central Missouri (D-II)

Week 4: No. 3 Johns Hopkins at No. 4 Susquehanna (D-III), No. 8 Georgetown (Ky.) at No. 6 St. Thomas (Fla.) (NAIA), No. 4 Incarnate Word at No. 18 Northern Arizona (FCS)

Week 5: No. 5 South Dakota at No. 1 North Dakota State (FCS), No. 18 Ouachita Baptist at No. 2 Harding (D-II), No. 17 Jackson State at Southern (FCS)

Week 6: No. 1 North Dakota State at No. 6 Illinois State (FCS), No. 5 St. John’s at No. 12 Bethel (D-III), No. 17 Wheaton at No. 1 North Central (D-III)

Week 7: No. 8 Mary Hardin-Baylor at No. 6 Hardin-Simmons (D-III), No. 19 Northern Arizona at No. 7 UC Davis (FCS), No. 15 UW-Platteville at No. 19 UW-River Falls (D-III)

Week 8: No. 6 St. Thomas (Fla.) at No. 2 Keiser (NAIA), No. 4 Morningside at No. 10 Northwestern (Iowa) (NAIA), No. 5 Montana Western at College of Idaho (NAIA)

Week 9: No. 1 North Dakota State at No. 3 South Dakota State (FCS), No. 3 Grand Valley State at No. 1 Ferris State (D-II), No. 6 Illinois State at No. 5 South Dakota (FCS)

Week 10: No. 6 CSU-Pueblo at No. 10 Western Colorado (D-II), No. 8 Tarleton State at No. 16 Abilene Christian (FCS), East Tennessee State at Chattanooga (FCS)

Week 11: No. 3 South Dakota State at No. 5 South Dakota (FCS), No. 6 Hardin-Simmons at No. 8 Mary Hardin-Baylor (D-III), No. 7 UC Davis at No. 12 Idaho (FCS)

Week 12: No. 7 UC Davis at No. 2 Montana State (FCS), No. 6 Illinois State at No. 3 South Dakota State (FCS), No. 12 Valdosta State at No. 8 West Florida (D-II)

Week 13: No. 2 Montana State at No. 9 Montana (FCS), No. 14 Sacramento State at No. 7 UC Davis (FCS), No. 15 Lehigh at Lafayette (FCS)

Better yet, adopt a small-school team

Want the full smaller-school experience? Follow a team (preferably a good one) from start to finish. Here are five particularly choice options.

Incarnate Word. The Cardinals have averaged 39.5 points per game in the 2020s, and their defense has improved significantly of late. Third-year coach Clint Killough, still only 32, has been aggressive in the transfer portal, and with lots of powerful FCS teams in flux because of an increase in transfers to FBS, UIW might have a shot at a return to the FCS semifinals or better. A good team that doesn’t mind a track meet every now and then? Yeah, watch UIW.

Slippery Rock. The Rock made the Division II semifinals last year, and they were the only team to stay within 34 points of a rampant Ferris State in the playoffs, falling 48-38. They’ve been elite at both offense and defense at some point recently, they could have the best line play of any D-II team outside of Ferris, and the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference is really fun to follow. And, I mean, they’re called The Rock! You want to root for The Rock!

Pittsburg State. Division II’s MIAA is a blast, with at least two teams — Central Oklahoma and Central Missouri — thirsting for track meets on a weekly basis. Pitt State actually plays defense, but the Gorillas are on this list both because they should be very good and because they’re absolutely masochistic: They’re starting the season at No. 1 Ferris State, at No. 5 Central Oklahoma and at home versus No. 3 Grand Valley State. They could be toast by the end of September, or they could be a national title contender.

A Division III Wisconsin team of your choice. The 2024 WIAC race was one of the sport’s best, featuring weekly heart-stoppers and plot twists and finishing with six of eight teams within two games of the title. All six of those teams — UW-La Crosse, UW-Platteville, UW-River Falls, UW-Whitewater, UW-Oshkosh and UW-Stout — rank between 11th and 32nd in the national preseason poll at D3football.com.

River Falls and Stout haven’t won a conference title since the turn of the century; La Crosse was a 1980s and 1990s power but hasn’t made the D-III semis since 1996; Oshkosh came within three points of the 2016 national title but hasn’t won a playoff game since 2017; Platteville has beautiful orange-and-blue jerseys and is hunting for its first playoff win in 14 years; and Whitewater, the D-III standard-bearer for so long, has fallen off a bit but still defends like heck.

Pick your fighter and buckle in.

Montana Western. Last year I suggested adopting College of Idaho, and the Yotes were track meet kings until a late-season slump. This season your points-loving, NAIA team of choice in Big Sky country should be Montana Western. The Bulldogs topped 40 points seven times before dropping a 31-24 heartbreaker to NAIA power Morningside in the playoffs. Quarterback Michael Palandri has thrown for 6,213 yards and 58 TDs in the past two years. This team should be excellent and ridiculously entertaining.

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2025 NFL preseason Week 2: Takeaways, evaluation

  • NFL NationAug 17, 2025, 12:38 AM ET

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      NFL Nation is made up of 32 team-specific reporters who cover the NFL year-round across ESPN.com, ESPN television shows, ESPN Radio, ESPN+ and social media platforms. It was established ahead of the 2013 season.

The second week of the 2025 NFL preseason kicked off Friday as several teams prepared to give extended looks to their starters in a dress rehearsal for the regular season.

To keep you updated on how teams fared, our NFL Nation reporters summarized the games below.

Quick links:
Full schedule | Where to watch | Depth charts
Fantasy football draft guide | Sign up to play

Saturday’s results

Giants: Cue the Jaxson Dart hype. The first-round pick was again impressive in preseason action, especially while leading consecutive touchdown drives to begin the second half. He completed 5 of 6 passes for 62 yards on the first drive, which was capped by a 20-yard touchdown pass to tight end Greg Dulcich. Dart then capped the next drive with a 1-yard TD run. The rookie finished 14-of-16 for 137 yards with a TD passing and another rushing. This came on the heels of an impressive debut against the Bills. Even though Russell Wilson led a touchdown drive to start the game, Dart is showing he might be ready to start sooner rather than later. — Jordan Raanan

Next game: at New England Patriots (Thursday, 8 p.m. ET)

Jets: Quarterback Justin Fields and the passing offense were out of sync, which is not surprising. They’ve been sputtering throughout most of training camp, with Fields unable to get the ball downfield to his wide receivers. Fields completed his first throw — a 4-yard flare to tight end Mason Taylor — then finished with five straight incompletions in two series of action (a high snap and a QB pressure contributed to two of the errant throws.) Fields was 0-for-3 when targeting wideout Garrett Wilson, his old buddy from Ohio State. Yes, the Jets again showed potential in the running game, but it’s hard to be one-dimensional in the NFL. The lack of a legit WR2 to complement Wilson is one of the reasons they’re not clicking. — Rich Cimini

Next game: vs. Philadelphia Eagles (Friday, 7:30 p.m. ET)

Bucs: With quarterback Baker Mayfield sitting, Teddy Bridgewater hit running back Bucky Irving and wide receiver Emeka Egbuka for 15- and 5-yard touchdown passes. Wide receiver Jalen McMillan left the game with a back injury and will be evaluated for a concussion after a fall on his head/neck area. And while cornerback Zyon McCollum notched an interception (so did Kindle Vildor, along with a deep ball pass breakup), Jamel Dean surrendered a 42-yard reception to Roman Wilson, a 2-yard touchdown to Brandon Johnson and a pass interference call on a single drive. Tez Johnson’s splashy preseason debut included a 32-yard punt return. — Jenna Laine

Next game: vs. Buffalo Bills (Saturday, 7:30 p.m. ET)

Steelers: In a preseason game that wasn’t nearly as clean as the first, the Steelers’ run defense was dominant while the offensive ground game continued to look sluggish. The defense, playing without most of its starters, held the Bucs to 2.5 yards per carry in a first half featuring most of their starters. Juan Thornhill and Brandin Echols set the tone early, stuffing running back Bucky Irving on the first play of the game. The Steelers’ offense, however, had about as much success as Tampa Bay in running the ball. With starting RB Jaylen Warren sitting out for the second week in a row, rookie Kaleb Johnson saw plenty of action. Not counting his second-quarter 14-yard run, Johnson averaged just 0.5 yards per carry on four rushes. He had a better showing in the second half with a pair of 9-yard runs, but the second preseason game suggested the third-round pick still has room to grow. — Brooke Pryor

Next game: at Carolina Panthers (Thursday, 7:30 p.m. ET)

Rams: Third-string quarterback Stetson Bennett has looked much improved this preseason. Against the Chargers, Bennett completed 28 of 40 passes for 324 yards with three touchdowns and a fourth-quarter interception. Bennett’s first touchdown drive came against the majority of the Chargers’ starting defense. Bennett has started and played the majority of the Rams’ preseason games as coach Sean McVay does not play his first-stringers during the preseason.

Starting quarterback Matthew Stafford, who is dealing with an aggravated disk in his back, was scheduled to workout Saturday morning at the Rams’ facility. When asked to confirm that the workout took place, a Rams spokesperson declined to comment and said McVay would address the situation Monday. — Sarah Barshop

Next game: at Cleveland Browns (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET on NFL Network)

Chargers: The stars of Saturday’s game were the Chargers’ rookie receivers: KeAndre Lambert-Smith and Tre Harris. The rookies had the game’s best highlights, each with their own diving 30-plus-yard catches on the sideline. Lambert-Smith, a fifth-round pick who has been the star of training camp, finished with two catches for 66 yards. It was a breakout game for Harris, the Chargers’ second-round pick. Harris has struggled with drops and hadn’t had a catch in preseason until Saturday. He finished with six catches for 85 yards, leading the team in both categories. — Kris Rhim

Next game: at San Francisco 49ers (Saturday, 8:30 p.m. ET)

Ravens: Tyler Loop is officially the Ravens kicker to start the 2025 season, coach John Harbaugh announced after Loop’s impressive performance Saturday. The rookie sixth-round pick made 5 of 6 field goals, including kicks from 51 and 53 yards in Dallas. Ravens coach John Harbaugh said the decision at kicker would come in the preseason games, and Loop is now 6-of-8. Loop’s strong leg would provide a weapon that has been lacking lately in Baltimore. Former kicker Justin Tucker, who was cut in May, was 16-of-30 (53.3%) from beyond 50 yards over the past three years. — Jamison Hensley

Next game: at Washington Commanders (Saturday, noon ET)

Cowboys: Through two games, Joe Milton III has not done enough to convince the Cowboys he is the backup quarterback to Dak Prescott. Milton was intercepted in the second quarter forcing a deep ball into coverage. He took a sack on the first drive that led to a safety. He missed reads. It didn’t help that former Cowboys backup Cooper Rush started for the Ravens. Yes, Rush had two first-half picks and one was returned for a touchdown, but he also had a TD pass and smartly got the Ravens into field goal position late in the second quarter. The Cowboys have given Milton all of the second-team work this summer. It might be time to give Will Grier more work in the final week of the preseason. — Todd Archer

Next game: vs. Atlanta Falcons (Friday, 8 p.m. ET)

Broncos: The Broncos certainly flashed their depth Saturday night. With second- and third-teamers getting virtually all of the work, Denver scored on four of its first five drives and the Broncos’ defensive reserves held the Cardinals’ reserves to 126 yards through three quarters. Backup quarterback Jarrett Stidham is 30-of-38 passing for 376 yards with four touchdowns in 3½ quarters this preseason. Coach Sean Payton said the depth will make roster decisions far more difficult than last summer, with tough calls to make at wide receiver, running back and the defensive line in particular. — Jeff Legwold

Next game: at New Orleans Saints (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET)

Cardinals: Rookie cornerback Denzel Burke showed Saturday night that, while there’s work to do, he has what it takes to eventually be a piece of the Cardinals’ cornerback rotation. He had the kind of preseason game one would expect from a rookie: There were highs and there were lows. He played 33 snaps, was targeted six times and allowed three catches for 62 yards and a touchdown, but he flashed at times with plays that showed a natural talent. After fine-tuning his technique and learning more about the NFL game, Burke could work his way onto the field this season. — Josh Weinfuss

Next game: vs. Las Vegas Raiders (Saturday, 10 p.m. ET on NFL Network)

49ers: The 49ers didn’t have enough healthy starters on defense to give the first unit a full look against the Raiders, but the offense did. The good news? Quarterback Brock Purdy and receiver Ricky Pearsall carried their training camp connection into this one, connecting three times for 42 yards on the opening drive before Purdy & Co. called it a day. The bad news? Right guard Dominick Puni suffered a right knee injury on the field goal to cap that drive and was quickly ruled out. Suffice it to say, the Niners probably won’t use many of their projected Week 1 starters in the exhibition finale against the Chargers next week. — Nick Wagoner

Next game: vs. Los Angeles Chargers (Saturday, 8:30 p.m. ET)

Raiders: The Raiders’ run defense was stout against San Francisco compared with last week’s game in Seattle. In the first half, Las Vegas gave up an average of 2.8 yards on 18 carries. However, Las Vegas struggled to contain San Francisco’s passing attack, which was also a noticeable issue during Thursday’s joint practice.

Las Vegas’ first-team defense allowed 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy to complete 5 of 7 passes for 66 yards on the opening drive, which resulted in a field goal. After defensive end Maxx Crosby helped stop running back Patrick Taylor Jr. for a combined loss of 8 yards on two straight carries, the Raiders gave up a 21-yard reception to wideout Ricky Pearsall on third down, followed by an 11-yard catch from Isaiah Hodgins. Even though safety Jeremy Chinn picked off Mac Jones on the next drive, it was an inconsistent afternoon for the Raiders’ pass defense. — Ryan McFadden

Next game: at Arizona Cardinals (Saturday, 10 p.m. ET, NFL Network)

Texans: In what is likely the last we’ve seen of the Texans’ starting defense in preseason, Houston allowed only one first down through three series. That unit is primed to continue from where it finished in 2024: as a top-10 group in total defense. On the opening play, cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. intercepted Panthers quarterback Bryce Young off a scramble drill. The play was nullified because of a defensive holding call, but Houston just kept overwhelming the Panthers’ starting offense as it held Young to zero completions, and he took a sack. — DJ Bien-Aime

Next game: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers (7 p.m. ET, Thursday, NFL Network)

Panthers: A lot of work needs to be done. It was puzzling that Panthers coach Dave Canales didn’t give quarterback Bryce Young and the starters a third series. Young got only six plays, going 0-for-2 with a sack. He also had an interception negated by defensive holding. Young got a lot of good work in during the joint practice Thursday and looked solid. But after this effort, Canales has to consider giving the starters one more look in Thursday’s preseason finale against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Besides being outscored 7-0, they were outgained 68-2 in yards. Not exactly a confidence booster. — David Newton

Next game: at Detroit Lions (1 p.m. ET, Saturday)

Browns: Dillon Gabriel’s preseason debut was a mixed bag that leaves the Browns with continued questions at quarterback. The third-round pick completed eight of his first nine passes and led scoring drives on three of his five possessions in the first half. Gabriel, though, also threw a pick-six on a poor decision to force a pass and was later credited with a fumble on a botched handoff. Injuries have led to Joe Flacco being the likely starter for Week 1, but who could serve as the backup remains up in the air entering the preseason finale. — Daniel Oyefusi

Next game: vs. Los Angeles Rams (1 p.m. ET, Saturday)

Eagles: Rookie safety Andrew Mukuba made his case for cracking the starting lineup.

The second-round pick out of Texas had an interception return for a touchdown and a fumble recovery in the first half. The pick-six was off rookie QB Dillon Gabriel. Mukuba jumped in front of receiver Diontae Johnson to snag the pass and raced 75 yards down the right side for the score. Generating takeaways is nothing new for Mukuba, who led the SEC with five interceptions in 2024.

Mukuba got off to a hot start this summer before being slowed by a shoulder injury. Now back in action, he has resumed his competition with third-year player Sydney Brown for the starting spot opposite Reed Blankenship. It has been pretty even to this point, but this performance could move the needle in Mukuba’s favor. — Tim McManus

Next game: at New York Jets (7:30 p.m. ET, Friday)

Patriots: Undrafted free agent WR Efton Chism III (Eastern Washington) might have solidified his spot on the roster with six catches for 71 yards and a touchdown in the first half. The TD was a 12-yard catch-and-run on third-and-9 in which he evaded and/or broke tackles from six defenders.

The Patriots project to have Stefon Diggs, Kayshon Boutte and DeMario Douglas as their starting receivers, with Mack Hollins and 2025 third-round pick Kyle Williams also locks as complementary options. So Chism has essentially forced the team’s hand to keep six receivers and maybe even a seventh.

“Everybody is here for a reason, and he’s certainly made the most of his opportunities,” coach Mike Vrabel said at halftime on the WBZ-TV broadcast. “His play strength really shows up.” — Mike Reiss

Next game: at New York Giants (Thursday, 8 p.m. ET, Prime Video)

Vikings: The Vikings sat all of their starters and more than a dozen key backups, having prioritized the two days of joint practices with the Patriots over preseason playing time. That left two personnel groups to monitor: the backup quarterbacks and kick/punt returners.

Presumptive No. 2 quarterback Sam Howell had a shaky outing, completing only one of five passes for 13 yards with an interception. Rookie Max Brosmer played the entire second half and performed well enough, completing 15 of 26 passes for 156 yards, to make the backup competition interesting for the next few weeks.

Meanwhile, the return game offered interesting takeaways as rookie receiver Tai Felton took the first punt and kickoff returns, and rookie receiver Myles Price ripped off an 81-yard kickoff return in the fourth quarter. Felton fair-caught the only punt he saw, and he fumbled at the end of a 21-yard kickoff return. After the game, coach Kevin O’Connell said that the Vikings drafted Felton in part because of his kickoff return skills and that he simply needs more work in the role. There remains less clarity at the punt return position, however. — Kevin Seifert

Next game: at Tennessee Titans (Friday, 8 p.m. ET, CBS)

Packers: Penalties slowed down the Packers early; rookie second-round tackle Anthony Belton had five (FIVE!) by himself in the first half. But at least they got to see what second-year running back MarShawn Lloyd might be able to do after missing most of his rookie year because of injuries and illness. The 2024 third-round pick made the biggest play from scrimmage in the first half with a 33-yard catch on a wheel route from Malik Willis.

With Josh Jacobs and most of the first-stringers sitting, Lloyd started and played 11 snaps. He had six carries for 15 yards and was targeted four times with the one catch. The Packers like Lloyd’s explosiveness as a backup for Jacobs, but he needs to stay healthy. He has already missed time this summer (groin), and he appeared to get shaken up on his catch and did not play another snap. When asked after the game if Lloyd was OK, Packers coach Matt LaFleur said: “We’ll see.” — Rob Demovsky

Next game: vs. Seattle Seahawks (Saturday, 4 p.m. ET, NFL Network)

Colts: QB Anthony Richardson Sr. saw his most extensive preseason action yet after sustaining a dislocated finger in Week 1 against the Baltimore Ravens. He did little to hurt his bid to become the starting quarterback in his ongoing battle with Daniel Jones. Richardson completed 6 of 11 attempts for 73 yards, but his numbers were undermined by penalties. He started 5-of-6 for 64 yards, leading a methodical 90-yard touchdown drive with crisp passes before offensive penalties derailed his next two possessions (including a negated 38-yard completion). Jones started the game and led a field goal drive, completing 7 of 11 attempts for 101 yards. — Stephen Holder

Next game: at Cincinnati Bengals (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET)

Dolphins: This might be a quarterback battle, after all — backup quarterback, that is. Zach Wilson put together a solid start in the Dolphins’ second preseason game, completing 15 of 23 passes for 151 yards and a touchdown. But he looked hesitant to throw at times and missed a couple of would-be touchdowns, including a deep pass to a wide-open Dee Eskridge that he underthrew.

Rookie Quinn Ewers was markedly improved from his debut, completing 11 of 16 passes with a pair of touchdowns to fellow rookie Theo Wease Jr. Miami signed Wilson to be its backup quarterback this season, and the team will likely keep three passers, but Wilson has not run away with the job, and Ewers is steadily improving as he learns this offense. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

Next game: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars (Saturday, 7 p.m. ET, NFL Network)

Lions: Lions RB Sione Vaki made his preseason debut, contributing on offense and special teams. Vaki exited practice early after suffering a hamstring injury July 21, which sidelined him for a period, but he returned to practice this week prior to suiting up against Miami. Vaki displayed his versatility, forcing a fumble on a punt return, which the Dolphins recovered. He also gained 30 yards from five carries during the first half.

Despite playing in a loaded backfield, he could expand his role due to his ability to play multiple roles, Lions coach Dan Campbell has said. Detroit picked Vaki in the fourth round of the 2024 NFL draft out of Utah, and he appeared in 16 games as a rookie. — Eric Woodyard

Next game: vs. Houston Texans (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET)

Friday’s results

Seahawks: Zach Charbonnet continued to show why he’ll have a bigger role in the Seahawks’ backfield this season than you might expect. With Kenneth Walker III out again, Charbonnet carried five times for 45 yards on the opening drive, showing excellent vision and burst on a 15-yard touchdown run.

Walker has missed extensive chunks of time in the spring and summer after missing 11 games last year, and it’s enough to wonder not only about his availability but how crisp he’ll be in a new blocking scheme when he is on the field. The ever-reliable Charbonnet, meanwhile, hasn’t missed a day, and his production has been validating all the glowing praise he gets from teammates and coaches. Between Charbonnet’s strong offseason and Walker’s availability issues, it may be more of an even split in Seattle’s backfield than a typical starter-backup situation. — Brady Henderson

Next game: vs. Green Bay Packers (4 p.m. ET, Saturday, NFL Network)

Chiefs: All four of the Chiefs’ prominent rookies on defense — tackle Omarr Norman-Lott, end Ashton Gillotte, cornerback Nohl Williams and linebacker Jeffrey Bassa — struggled with extending playing time Friday. The Chiefs’ defense gave up huge chunks of rushing yards in the first half as Norman-Lott and Gillotte weren’t able to make much of an impact. Bassa, who was a star in the preseason opener against the Arizona Cardinals, was exploited by the Seahawks’ misdirection plays. Williams showed his physicality again, but he left the game in the third quarter with a concussion. — Nate Taylor

Next game: vs. Chicago Bears (8:20 p.m. ET, Friday)

Titans: Rookie receiver Elic Ayomanor had what he called his worst practice of training camp Tuesday when he went up against the Falcons’ defensive backs. Ayomanor bounced back with a solid practice Wednesday, and he carried that momentum over to game day.

Ayomanor caught two passes for 47 yards and is becoming a problem working the middle of the field. Fellow rookie Gunnar Helm is a playmaker, whether it’s finding holes in zone or running seam routes. Helm went up and grabbed a Brandon Allen pass over two defenders for a 25-yard touchdown, finishing with four receptions for 48 yards.– Turron Davenport

Next game: vs. Minnesota Vikings (8 p.m. ET, Friday)

Falcons: The Falcons’ wide receiver corps is not making things easy for the coaching staff with a little more than a week until cut day. Against the Titans, David Sills V, Chris Blair and Dylan Drummond all had moments. Blair caught a 52-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Easton Stick. Drummond has 12 catches in two preseason games.

Sills, who has been Kirk Cousins’ favorite target in practice, had two catches on the first series Friday and was then removed from the game, potentially indicating that the coaches have seen enough and Sills has a 53-man roster spot already. Casey Washington didn’t suit up Friday, meaning he’s a lock. — Marc Raimondi

Next game: at Dallas Cowboys (8 p.m. ET, Friday)

Sunday’s games

Jacksonville Jaguars at New Orleans Saints, 1 p.m. (NFL Network)

Buffalo Bills at Chicago Bears, 8 p.m. ET

Monday’s game

Cincinnati Bengals at Washington Commanders, 8 p.m. ET (ESPN)

Categories
Sport

Liverpool signal Giovanni Leoni: Scouting report, tactical match

  • Sam Tighe

  • What a Lindop

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    What a Lindop

    correspondent

      Beth Lindop in Liverpool is the Liverpool correspondent from ESPN and also covers the WSL and UWCL.

August 15, 2025, 12:31 p.m. one

After Liverpool had strongly invested her attack in the dramatic revision of her attack, she signed her defense line with the 26 million pounds, which was signed by Center Back Giovanni Leoni by the series -a -niebenparm. At the age of only 18, the Italy Youth International still immerses only his toes in the pool of high -ranking football at the highest level, but the red saw enough of 14 league to sanction a quick step.

Leoni started the 2024-25 campaign on the bench, but he had gained a foothold in the first team by Christmas. Then, in the course of the second half of the season, he helped build the defense and convert losses into draws – enough of protecting the Krociati from relegation.

How did Liverpool choose the goal with his Premier League -Switch and what will Leoni bring the defending champion?

How Liverpool Leoni identified and signed

For years, the signing of a promising young central defender has classified highly in Liverpool's list of priorities. Last summer, the Anfield Club was interested in signing Lilles Leny Yoro before finally coming to Manchester United. The Reds were also admirers from Dean Huijsen in Bournemouth, who made £ 50 million to Real Madrid in the early this summer.

In just 17 series -a appearances for Parma last season, Leoni was one of the most exciting young talents of Italian football and fits the profile that the Premier League master was looking for. It is understandably far from the finished article, but Liverpool is confident that the 6-foot 4 defender has all the physical attributes that are necessary to develop into a first-class center, especially with the possibility of learning from his Idol Virgil van Dijk.

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After Parma had made his breakthrough under the manager Cristian Chivu in the second half of the season, Leoni had spoken to Inter Milan after his coach this summer. Liverpool – supported by sports director Richard Hughes' extensive contacts in Italy – was able to quickly make a contract for the line. Sources said that despite the interest of several clubs in his home country and elsewhere in the Premier League, the player was in Anfield in the Premier League.

There were some suggestions that Liverpool could borrow Leoni this season, although this idea was quickly rejected by the club's hierarchy. Although Liverpool is still pursuing a deal for the English international Marc Guéhi, Leoni will join Van Dijk, Ibrahima Konaté and Joe Gomez under the manager of Arne Slot's First Team Center Back Options for the upcoming campaign. – Beth Lindop

What Leoni brings to Liverpool

Leonis sheer size and strength contradicts its tender age. He is still a teenager, but he cuts a hulking figure on the pitch and his shoulders seem to be made of steel. He clearly enjoys physical duels with equally powerful strikers; During the last section of the season, he dominated Juventus' Dusan Vlahovic on the way to a vital 1-0 victory, and Leoni was also brilliant with Romelu Lukaku in a 0-0 draw with Napoli and went for magic sayings and literally followed him around the field.

This ability to cope with strong No. 9 is by far its outstanding feature. He is aggressive on site and strong in the air – his 63% air victory last season was one of the best – and he lives to defend the box, and already showed a good awareness of where crosses and cuts could land.

Leoni is ultimately a prospect for the future, but the young defender showed last season in series A that he can immediately participate in Liverpool's first team. Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

Leoni is versatile in his position and is able to play as a right or left -handed middle in a back of four or anywhere over the line in a third line. When he is stationed in the center of a three-man setup, he escapes, roams and finds someone a duel.

There are coaching points for Liverpool to address. His passport selection in the last season tends to be extremely safe and either briefly played to the next man, back to the goalkeeper or played it in the general direction of a striker. That could have been more of a tactical instructions than a personal deficiency – Parma fought against relegation until the last day, which means that they were really able to commit to the risk structure – but the slot wants possession that the ball was more considering when the ball is at the feet of Leonis.

Leoni never wore the ball up and into space and opened and others the pitch. This could also have been of design, but in view of the fact that he joined an elite ball-dominant team, it is worth mentioning that he classified in series A for ball bearers and only the 6th percentile for progressive procedures in the first (i.e. lowest) percentile. – Sam Tighe

How Leoni will fit in Liverpool

In order to have the chance of success as a center in the Premier League today, they probably have to be big and strong. Take a look at the physical structure of the defensive corps, which Arsenal, Manchester City and Liverpool have gathered, for example. Leoni clearly ticks this box. It will be well suited for the Titanic fight, which is now taking place in set pieces, regardless of the opponent, and a good fit when it comes to facing the influx of really physical strikers that we see in the Premier League.

However, there could be little concern that Leoni should grow to a powerful player, but the type of top end speed and mobility that many of the best center reccruses have. According to gradients, its maximum speed lasted 31.82 km/h last season, only 54th under the back of the series -A -Mitte, which played 900 minutes or more. For a Liverpool comparison, van Dijk has registered 33.79 km/h and Konaté 33.57 km/h.

In view of the fact that Liverpool's full -back is probably extremely attacking fashion that work mobility features and mobility features in the center of the team, they will be more important than ever. The fact that Leoni is hardly fast jumps off the assembly line, and the statistics confirm it. It is also not the fastest over 5 meters and is not particularly smooth or slowing down.

The rest of his game can be easy to fesse through coaching, with better players and in a more expansive system. Take a player from a graded descent battle, and of course you will see that more qualities are in the foreground on the ball. From there, the slot should be able to hand over exactly how long Leoni is required before it can have a positive effect on the senior page. – Tighe