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Washington star wide receiver Jalen McMillan practiced all week for the No. 5 Huskies and will start Saturday night against No. 11 Oregon State, a source told ESPN.

McMillan has battled a knee injury since getting injured against Michigan State in September. He left games against Stanford and Oregon early, but received a second opinion on his knee and returned against Utah last week.

McMillan, a redshirt junior, took a handful of snaps against Utah last week in his latest attempt to return. But there’s been progress this week, and a source pronounced him “good to go” for the undefeated Huskies as they are underdogs in Corvallis.

McMillan started the season on an tear, catching 20 passes for 311 yards and three touchdowns in the first three games. Last season, he caught 79 passes for 1,098 yards and entered this season as one of the country’s top wide receiver prospects.

McMillan’s season has been one of frustration, as he has not caught a pass since the Sept. 16 win at Michigan State.

His return to form would be an adrenaline shot to Michael Penix Jr. and the Washington offense, which leads the country in passing yards with 378 per game.

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Why Luis Robert Jr. could be MLB trade deadline’s most sought-after slugger

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Why Luis Robert Jr. could be MLB trade deadline's most sought-after slugger

CHICAGO — At 27, Luis Robert Jr. is already a relic of sorts, the last remaining player from the White Sox’s all-too-brief era of contention.

On the south side of Chicago, that era seems like a very long time ago. That’s how a pair of 100-loss seasons, including last year’s record-setting 121-loss campaign, can warp a baseball fan’s perception of time. In fact, it was only 3½ years ago when, on Oct. 12, 2021, Chicago was eliminated by the Houston Astros from the American League Division Series.

Seventeen players appeared in that game for the White Sox. Robert had a hit that day but had to leave early with leg tightness — one of a string of maladies that have bedeviled his career. He is the only one of those 17 still in Chicago.

The irony: If Robert was playing up to his potential, he wouldn’t be around, either. And if he regains his mojo, he’s as good as gone.

Robert has the chance to be the most sought-after position player in 2025’s in-season trade market. Pull up any speculative list of trade candidates and Robert is near the top. Executives around the league ask about him eagerly. Despite a lack of positive recent results — including a disastrous 2024 and a rough start to this season — it’s not hard to understand why.

“A player like Luis Robert always gets a lot of attention,” White Sox GM Chris Getz said when the season began. “We’re really happy where he’s at, and how he approached spring training and how he’s performing. We expect him to perform at a very high level.”

Robert’s tools are impossible to miss. His bat speed (93rd percentile in 2025, per Statcast) is elite. His career slugging percentage when putting the ball in play is .661, slotting him in the 89th percentile among all hitters. It’s the same figure as New York Mets superstar Juan Soto. Robert’s sprint speed (29.0 feet per second) is in the 94th percentile. When healthy, he’s a perennial contender to add a second Gold Glove to the one he won as a rookie.

Still, the allure of Robert is as much about his contract as it is about his baseline talent. Smack in his prime and less than two years removed from a 5.3 bWAR season, Robert will earn just $15 million in 2025 and then has two team-friendly club options, both at $20 million with a $2 million buyout.

No potentially available hitter has this combination: a recent record of elite production, a right-now prime age, top-of-the-charts underlying talent and a club-friendly contract with multiyear potential but plenty of off-ramps. That such a player toils for a team projected to finish in the basement has for a while now made this a matter of if, not when, he is moved.

“I didn’t think I’d be here,” Robert said through an interpreter. “But I’m glad that I’m here. This is the organization that made my dream come true. It’s the only organization that I know.”

The White Sox could certainly have dealt Robert by now, based on that contract/talent combination alone. But the luxury of the contract from Chicago’s standpoint is that it buys the team time to seek maximum return. First, Robert has to show he’s healthy — so far, so good in 2025 — then he needs to demonstrate the kind of production that would make an impact for a team in win-now mode.

“He’s just extremely talented,” first-year White Sox manager Will Venable said. “The one thing that I learned about him, and watching him practice every day, is he practices extremely hard. He’s extremely focused. He certainly has the physical ability, but he’s the type of player he is because he works really hard.”

Certainly, the skills are elite, but the production has been inconsistent and, for now, headed in the wrong direction.

When Robert broke in with Chicago a few years ago, he was a consensus top-five prospect. ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel ranked Robert fifth before the 2020 season, but in his analysis of the ranking, McDaniel noted one of the key reasons Robert is still on the White Sox five years later: “The concern is that Robert’s pitch selection is weak enough — described as a 35 on the 20-80 scale — that it could undermine his offensive tools.”

Since the beginning of last season, there have been 202 hitters with at least 450 plate appearances. According to the FanGraphs metric wRC+, only 15 have fared worse than Roberts’ 80. Only 10 have posted a worse ratio of walks to strikeouts (0.22). Only nine have a lower on-base percentage (.275).

Despite starting the season healthy, his superficial numbers during the early going are even worse than last year. As the team around him plunged to historic depths, Robert slashed to career lows across the board (.224/.278/.379 over 100 games). This year, that line is a disturbing .163/.250/.245.

There is real evidence that Robert is trying to reform. The most obvious evidence is a walk rate (10.3%) nearly double his career average. The sample is small, but there are under-the-hood indicators that suggest it could be meaningful. For example, Robert’s early chase rate (34.2%, per Statcast) is a career low and closer to the MLB standard (28.5).

For aggressive swingers well into their careers, trying to master plate discipline is a tall task. Few established players of that ilk have had a longer road to travel than Robert. During the wild-card era, there have been 1,135 players who have compiled at least 1,500 plate appearances. Only 17 have a lower walk-to-strikeout ratio than Robert’s career figure (0.21).

On that list are 133 hitters with a career mark of 0.3 W/SO or lower, who together account for 645 different seasons of at least 300 plate appearances. Only 26 times did one of those seasons result in at least a league-average ratio, or about 4%. Only one of those hitters had two such seasons, another 24 did it once and 108 never did it.

Still, 4% isn’t zero. To that end, Robert spent time during the winter working out with baseball’s current leader in W/SO — Soto.

“It’s no secret that one of the reasons why he’s one of the best players in the game is that he’s quite disciplined,” Robert said. “And that’s one of the things I want to improve.”

That’s easier said than done, and for his part, Soto said the workouts were mostly just that — workouts, though they were conducted with Robert’s hitting coach on hand. As with everyone else, it’s the sheer talent that exudes from Robert that caught Soto’s eye.

“Tremendous baseball player and tremendous athlete,” Soto told ESPN’s Jorge Castillo in Spanish. “He showed me a lot of his abilities that I didn’t know he had. That guy has tremendous strength, tremendous power. And he really surprised me a lot in everything we did.”

In this year’s Cactus League, Robert produced a .300/.386/.500 slash line, with four homers.

“If I’m able to carry on the work that I did during spring training, I’m going to have a good season,” Robert said. “Especially in that aspect of my vision of the whole plate. I know I can do it.”

Getz — who will have to determine if and when to pull the trigger on a Robert deal — lauded Robert’s efforts during the spring.

“Luis Robert is in an excellent spot,” Getz said. “The amount of three-ball counts that he had in spring training was by far the most he has had as a professional player. So that just speaks to his determination and focus to put together quality at-bats.”

It’s a bittersweet situation. The remaining vestige of the last good White Sox team remains the club’s most talented player. He’s in his age-27 season, often the apex of a hitter’s career. Yet if he reaches that apex, it’s only going to smooth his way out of town.

For the White Sox, all they can do is make sure Robert can stay focused on the field, while tuning out the trade chatter that isn’t going away.

“We’re going to support Luis,” Getz said. “I know that oftentimes he gets asked questions whether he’s going to be traded, but I’ve been really impressed with how he’s been able to remain focused on his craft. He’s very motivated to show the baseball world what he’s capable of doing.”

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Sources: Ex-Stanford WR Mosley heads to Horns

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Sources: Ex-Stanford WR Mosley heads to Horns

Stanford transfer wide receiver Emmett Mosley V signed with Texas on Monday, sources told ESPN.

Mosley, the No. 8 player in ESPN’s spring transfer rankings, chose to continue his career with the Longhorns after also visiting Virginia. He has three seasons of eligibility remaining.

The 6-foot-2, 205-pound wideout led all ACC freshmen with 48 catches last season and produced 525 receiving yards and six touchdowns in his debut season with the Cardinal. Mosley entered the transfer portal earlier this month after Stanford fired coach Troy Taylor.

Mosley, a former three-star recruit from Santa Margarita, California, earned a starting role with the Cardinal and became the team’s second-leading receiver as a true freshman. He enjoyed a strong finish to his debut season with two 100-yard performances in November and broke multiple program single-game freshman records in an upset win over Louisville with 13 catches for 168 yards and three touchdowns.

He’ll give new Texas starting quarterback Arch Manning another proven playmaker in a passing attack that must replace Matthew Golden, Gunnar Helm, Isaiah Bond and Silas Bolden. The Longhorns’ top two returning receivers, Ryan Wingo and DeAndre Moore Jr., have both been limited by injuries this spring.

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian has told reporters he’s also looking to add help at tight end and on the defensive line when the spring transfer portal window officially opens Wednesday. The Longhorns brought in five transfers this offseason as they look to build on their 13-3 season, which came to an end in the College Football Playoff semifinals.

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Sources: Cal RB Ott, ’23 All-Pac-12, enters portal

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Sources: Cal RB Ott, '23 All-Pac-12, enters portal

Cal running back Jaydn Ott entered the transfer portal on Monday, sources told ESPN.

Ott, a graduate transfer, is one of the top returning running backs in college football and is expected to be highly coveted in the spring transfer window.

The 6-foot, 205-pound rusher was a first-team All-Pac-12 selection in 2023 after leading the conference with 1,315 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns. Ott has produced 3,460 all-purpose yards over the past three seasons, third most among all FBS backs set to return for 2025.

Ott announced in December that he planned to return to Cal for his senior season, but sources said the Bears were fighting off significant SEC interest in recent weeks prior to his decision to officially enter the portal. Ott has one season of eligibility remaining.

Ott received preseason All-America recognition going into his junior season but suffered an ankle injury in the Bears’ season opener that limited his productivity over the rest of the season. He rushed for 385 yards on 3.3 yards per carry and caught 24 passes for 222 yards and another score in 2024.

As a true freshman starter in 2022, Ott earned Freshman All-America honors after finishing with 1,218 all-purpose yards — fourth best in the Pac-12 — and 11 touchdowns.

Cal has lost four running backs to the transfer portal this spring between Ott, Kadarius Calloway, Byron Cardwell Jr. and Justin Williams-Thomas. The Bears do return Jaivian Thomas, who led the team with 626 rushing yards and seven touchdowns last season.

College football’s spring transfer window officially opens Wednesday and closes on April 25.

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