
How Mike Norvell keeps Florida State moving forward after a stunning CFP snub
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David Hale, ESPN Staff WriterDec 30, 2023, 07:00 AM ET
Close- ACC reporter.
- Joined ESPN in 2012.
- Graduate of the University of Delaware.
DANIA BEACH, Fla. — There’s a moment, a split second, really, just as the weight of the College Playoff Committee’s verdict takes hold for the rest of the Florida State team, that it seems as if the impenetrable wall of optimism and enthusiasm that is Seminoles head coach Mike Norvell might finally collapse.
In the video from the team’s watch party Dec. 3, which was broadcast on national TV following the committee’s most controversial decision in its 10-year history, Norvell is seated center frame, surrounded by his players, including injured QB Jordan Travis just a few feet away. The announcement is made. Groans echo through the room. Travis covers his face with a towel. Players turn to each other in disbelief. Norvell is still.
He taps the tips of his fingers together. He tilts his head downward. It’s instantly obvious he was completely unprepared for this eventuality, and it’s not hard to imagine a war of will roiling in his mind between the entirely reasonable furor that must’ve been his natural response and the measured determination that has become his stock-in-trade through four years leading this program.
This is the moment it should come — the eruption, the anger, the outrage, the flurry of epithets directed at a faraway group of people who upended his worldview, the worldview he’d sold to this team for years, the one that had carried Florida State to 19 straight wins and an undefeated season.
But Norvell catches himself.
He says nothing. He turns and looks at his players. He is still and silent for nearly 10 seconds, though it feels so much longer.
And then he stands up, and he addresses his players.
“This has been the most challenging couple of weeks of coaching I’ve ever had,” Norvell would say 17 days later, the emotion still raw in his voice.
The challenge got bigger after that moment. Nearly two dozen key contributors from this season have opted out, entered the transfer portal or been sidelined with an injury. Florida State won’t play for a national championship, but it will play the two-time defending champs in Georgia in the Capital One Orange Bowl (4 p.m. ET on ESPN) with a third-string QB and a host of new faces at the offensive skill positions. Moreover, Florida State will take the next step — the final step of the 2023 season — knowing the ethos that was the foundation of this year’s 12-0 season was dismantled in a single moment.
And yet, for those who remain at Florida State, the motivation to move forward came in those 10 seconds of silence when Norvell decided to meet the most difficult moment of his coaching career not with anger but with resolve.
In the aftermath of the lowest point of his coaching career, Norvell is doubling down on what he’s always preached.
“I haven’t seen Mike blink at all,” defensive coordinator Adam Fuller said.
HE’S STILL ANGRY. He’ll always be angry, he said.
But before FSU’s title hopes were dashed, Norvell started every day with a boisterous “Good morning!” and, more often than not, ended it the same way — a tongue-in-cheek “Good morning!” at 11 p.m., an in-joke to illustrate just how consistent he is.
So even if he’s still seething over the committee’s decision, each new day at FSU begins the same way.
“You get the ‘Good morning!’ because he’s the same Coach Norvell every day,” linebacker Kalen DeLoach said. “That’s him, 365 days a year.”
There are other quirks of the Norvell experience that have been repeated to the point of obsession over the past few years at Florida State.
There’s the “CLIMB” mantra — an acronym for commitment, little things, intensity, mental toughness, brotherhood — which is etched over a photo of a mountain’s peak that hangs in his office. It’s about growth and progress, with the implication that today’s improvement is more important than the place where yesterday ended.
There’s the tagline he’s applied all season — “for years, actually,” offensive lineman Maurice Smith said — that “all we got is all we need.” In the early days at Florida State, it was an insistence that Florida State was good enough to win, in spite of overwhelming evidence to the contrary on the field, but it’s evolved as the Seminoles have crept ever higher on their journey, and it now serves as a badge of defiance, less about convincing the guys inside the locker room that they’re enough and more about insisting to the world outside that it’s overlooked something essential.
And there’s the old trope about controlling what you can control. There’s probably not a coach in the country who hasn’t said it, but Norvell lives it. He didn’t rage against COVID restrictions that kept him from meeting with his team for the vast majority of his first seven months on the job, and he didn’t throw up his hands in disgust when FSU blew a coverage on a Hail Mary throw to lose to FCS Jacksonville State, and he even laughed off a viral “Fire Mike Norvell” social media campaign after he lost top recruit Travis Hunter to Deion Sanders and Jackson State.
That’s what made his silence in the aftermath of the committee’s announcement so significant. It’s as close as he’s ever come to letting his emotions win out, he said, but if he’d done that, it would be evidence that some things outside his reach could still dictate his actions, and he refuses to allow that to happen.
“There’s opportunity, and that provides choice,” Norvell said. “The thing we continue to hammer with our guys through this journey is this could be a defining moment for you. Focus on your improvement and being better than what you’ve been. It’s hard. A lot of them were hurt. But I believe we’re going to continue to build through our experiences.”
It all would seem like a convenient set of gimmicks to bolster a wounded team after the nadir of its season, except that Norvell has been preaching the same things every day all season long.
“Leadership is not about making a speech,” Norvell said. “It’s about what you do on the field and in meeting rooms and how you approach every single day. You can talk, but if your actions don’t back that up, then nobody’s going to listen.”
WHEN BRADEN FISKE first arrived at Florida State last spring, a highly regarded but unproven transfer from Western Michigan, he was nursing an injury and couldn’t practice fully. But each day before practice, his head coach would sprint the length of the field at FSU’s indoor facility. Occasionally other players would join in, racing Norvell — 20 years their senior — into the end zone. Fiske figured he’d give it a try.
“Fiske can run, man,” receiver Keon Coleman said. “He’s got these little legs he gets going and — it’s funny.”
If Fiske’s sprints were good for a laugh, they also turned heads. It was during those runs folks around FSU realized they might have a star in Fiske. But it was also when Fiske realized how much different his coach at Florida State really was.
“He never misses a race,” Fiske said. “I miss a couple every now and then, depending on how the hamstrings feel, but he never misses a race, and that’s just the person he is and the coach he is.”
Fiske’s racing days are over, he said. He’s got a boot on his foot now as he prepares for Saturday’s Orange Bowl. But he’s still playing, still driven to win, and that’s due, in large part, to his coach.
“You can’t lack motivation when [Norvell] is walking through the building,” Fiske said. “People on the outside only see snippets but if you’re in the program and around it every day, it’s different. It’s different being with a man like Coach Norvell. When I first got here I thought for sure he was going to crack. It never happens. He’s the same man every day no matter what’s going on in his life or his program. That’s why we’re headed where we’re going.”
It’s hard to know exactly what this game means for Florida State now. Is it the final chapter of 2023’s magical season? Is it the first chance to turn the page on the committee’s decision and move forward toward something new? Is it some strange purgatory that is neither an end nor a beginning, but rather a placeholder, a rote exercise that exists on its own timeline?
The oddsmakers certainly don’t think Florida State has much of a chance to win. Norvell and AD Michael Alford have downplayed any interest in celebrating a de facto championship even if the Seminoles do claim victory in the Orange Bowl. And either way, when the calendar turns to 2024 and Norvell surveys what remains of his roster, he will find little similarity to the team that marched off the field in Charlotte with an ACC title and assurances that they’d done enough to earn something more.
“The worst part about it is that [watch party] was the last time that this team — players, coaches, staff — that we’ll all be together in one setting,” Fiske said.
And that’s the true significance of Norvell’s restraint in that moment. What the world will remember is the immense disappointment on the faces of every player in the room, the sadness at Travis’ tweet in which he wished he’d been injured sooner, the outrage that followed from FSU officials apoplectic at being passed over.
But what Norvell hopes the men in that room will remember is that, in one of their last moments together as a team, their head coach was the same guy he’d been in all the other moments they were together.
“We’re still at the beginning of where we’re going,” Norvell said. “There are great days ahead for this program. It still doesn’t give it back for the guys who’ve played their last game here at Florida State, but ultimately we’re excited for our opportunity.
“There’s going to be times in life where things don’t go the right way. What you’ve earned, you don’t always receive the reward for that. But you control your response — what you do with it, the attitude you bring — and that’s what’s going to define your identity.”
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Sports
Infection linked to death of Grand National horse
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3 hours agoon
April 10, 2025By
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Associated Press
Apr 10, 2025, 12:15 PM ET
LONDON — A severe respiratory infection is likely to have contributed to the death of Grand National runner Celebre d’Allen, according to the findings of the postmortem released Thursday.
The postmortem also acknowledged that the 13-year-old horse’s immune system was “severely compromised” after running the grueling jumps race Saturday.
Celebre d’Allen, a 125-1 shot for the National, was pulled up by jockey Micheal Nolan after the last of the 30 fences. The horse then collapsed on the racecourse.
After receiving treatment on the course, he walked into the horse ambulance and was taken to the racecourse stables for further assessment. Although his owners were positive regarding his recovery on Sunday, his condition deteriorated and he died on Monday.
Celebre d’Allen was sent for a postmortem, which found that the bacterial infection — pleuropneumonia — developed after the race and led to the horse’s deterioration. The subsequent onset of sepsis or endotoxaemia — described as the release of harmful substances into the bloodstream from bacteria — is “likely to have been a key factor in the cause of death,” said the British Horseracing Authority, which said it was granted permission by Celebre d’Allen’s trainer and owner to publish the key findings.
The “exercise-associated episode” experienced by the horse after the race had concluded by the time of his death, according to the post-mortem, the BHA said.
“Further bloods taken on the Monday indicated a severely compromised immune system,” the BHA added. “These indications had not been present in the bloods taken on the day of the race. This indicates that this issue emerged subsequent to the race and the exercise-associated episode.”
Raceday stewards suspended Nolan for 10 days after concluding he “had continued in the race when the horse appeared to have no more to give and was clearly losing ground after the second-last fence.”
Iain Green, director of animal-welfare activist Animal Aid, described the length of the suspension as “pitiful.”
The Grand National has long been regarded as one of the most dangerous horse races in the world because of the size of the fences. A number of new measures — including reducing the field from 40 to 34 runners and bringing forward the race’s start time — were introduced last year in an attempt to make it safer.
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‘That’s just Ovi’: How a true original set a goal-scoring record
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5 hours agoon
April 10, 2025By
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NEW YORK — After Alex Ovechkin scored his NHL record-breaking 895th goal — in vintage Ovechkin fashion, from his “office,” on an old-school wrist shot — he skated to center ice and belly flopped.
The celebration, the Washington Capitals captain said, was unplanned.
“Ice was bad today,” he explained. “I fell.”
Carolina Hurricanes at Washington Capitals, 7:30 ET on ESPN+/Hulu
After the iconic moment, Ovechkin’s teammates swarmed him. The late-season game between the Capitals and New York Islanders paused for 25 minutes for an on-ice ceremony. Wayne Gretzky, the legend whom Ovechkin passed, made his way down; the Hall of Famer graciously followed the 39-year-old from one arena to the next as he closed in on his record, fulfilling a promise to be the first person to shake Ovechkin’s hand afterward — just as Gordie Howe, the previous record holder, had done for Gretzky in 1994.
As the league set up carpet on the ice, Ovechkin was focused on hugging each of his teammates. Ovechkin then fixated on finding his family, including his mother, wife and their two young sons. “Without them, it’s basically, I don’t know if I can reach this milestone,” he said.
All the while, a video tribute played on the videoboard at UBS Arena on Long Island.
Those congratulating Ovechkin included a who’s who of sports GOATs: Roger Federer, Michael Jordan, LeBron James, Sidney Crosby, Derek Jeter, Simone Biles, Michael Phelps and Katie Ledecky.
“To be honest with you, I didn’t see it,” Ovechkin said. “But the boys told me that lots of great people, great athletes support me and congratulate me. It’s huge.”
As teammate Tom Wilson said earlier in the week, the attention on Ovechkin was unparalleled for their sport. “To try to think about what he’s going through, the pressure, the entire game of hockey is on his shoulders right now. It’s bigger than hockey,” Wilson said. “And for him to handle that, to perform, to lead the top team in the league and still be such a fun teammate, it’s really remarkable.”
It’s what makes Ovechkin, the NHL’s new all-time leader in goals, a true original — and perhaps the last man who will ever hold the title.
“They say records were meant to be broken,” Gretzky told the crowd. “But I’m not sure who’s going to get more goals than that.”
WHEN GRETZKY ECLIPSED Howe’s mark 31 years ago, many around the sport believed that was it. Nobody would surpass The Great One, whose stat line was so outlandish over a 1,487-game career, that you could take away his final goal total (894) and he’d still be the league’s all-time leader in points.
Gretzky, over the years, was known to say he was sure “somebody, somewhere will come along and break it.” But few people believed it, especially as the game evolved. The average goals per NHL game during Gretzky’s career was 6.93. Since Ovechkin’s rookie season, the average is 5.72. But something was always different about Ovechkin, who was a surefire talent when the Capitals selected him No. 1 in 2004. Ovechkin scored two goals in his first NHL game and finished with 52 in his rookie season.
The “Alex Ovechkin Effect” in Washington, D.C., is undeniable. Since Ovechkin’s rookie season (2005-06), hockey players in the Potomac Valley region have increased by 71%, according to USA Hockey statistics. To help meet the growing demand for access, the Caps have helped build or refurbish 14 outdoor inline rinks. Ovechkin used his platform for charity; in March he pledged a dollar amount equal to his career goal total to pediatric cancer for every goal he scored for the rest of his career.
His reach expands well past Caps fandom. Utah Hockey Club center Logan Cooley, who was born in Pittsburgh a year before Crosby’s and Ovechkin’s debut seasons, cites Ovechkin as his favorite player growing up. Canadiens winger Patrik Laine grew up in Finland idolizing the Russian winger. Even Minnesota Wild defenseman Brock Faber admits he owned Ovechkin jerseys growing up.
“Ever since I was a young kid playing hockey,” Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews said, “he was always one of my favorite players to watch.”
Perhaps the most remarkable part of Ovechkin closing in on the record was how players around the league universally cheered for him. After nearly every game this season, players have asked Ovechkin for a stick swap. Ovechkin obliges, in large part because he is a collector himself; it’s believed he hopes to open a sports museum in Russia post-retirement. Ovechkin recently exchanged sticks with Sharks rookie Macklin Celebrini, who signed his stick for Ovechkin with the message: “Thanks for being a role model.”
Crosby has long been pitted as Ovechkin’s biggest rival; neither has won a Stanley Cup without eliminating the other. But the Penguins’ captain gets emotional when talking about Ovechkin.
“That was a record probably everybody thought wouldn’t be touched,” Crosby said. “It’s awesome for the game of hockey, and I’m loving the fact that I’m playing at this time and get to see it firsthand.”
OVECHKIN WAS OFF to a torrid start this season, in which the Capitals surprisingly emerged as the top team in the league after successfully undergoing a retool on the fly. He scored 15 goals through his first 18 games before things came to a screeching halt just before Thanksgiving. The Capitals’ captain had already scored twice against Utah in a Nov. 18 road game when Utah’s Jack McBain cut through Washington’s zone and got tangled with Ovechkin, who immediately fell to the ice.
The result: a broken left fibula. It was the first time in Ovechkin’s 20-year career that he broke a bone.
“When that happened,” goaltender Charlie Lindgren said, “everyone was kind of thinking to themselves whether or not it was going to be possible.”
But Ovechkin is built differently. As he famously declared after avoiding injury from an errant puck in 2006: “I’m OK, Russian machine never breaks.”
Within two days of the injury, Ovechkin rid himself of the walking boot. (The fibula doesn’t take on a substantial weight-bearing load.) Soon after, he was skating. Ovechkin remained around the team, getting electric stimulation to help with blood flow, and just had to wait it out until the bone healed enough to sustain contact. Ovechkin returned just after Christmas, scoring in each of his first two games back, naturally. Ovechkin’s unorthodox habits — in an age when many elite athletes view their body as a temple — have become legendary. Before arriving at the team plane for a road trip, Ovechkin always stops at the same Subway where he orders a spicy Italian footlong and Flaming Hot Cheetos. When the Capitals arrive at road arenas, there’s a request that the No. 8 water bottles on the bench be filled with Coke or Pepsi, whichever the arena has a deal with. His home pregame meal is a heavy one: a chicken parm and pasta Alfredo combination from a local joint, Mamma Lucia’s. Ovechkin won’t be the first or last player in the gym, and he’s judicious about how much time he spends on the ice. “At this point in his career, he knows exactly what he needs to do to get himself ready,” said his locker mate, Nic Dowd, who explained the two keep opposite hours. “A lot of it is mental. And it’s hard to argue against the results.” ANYONE WHO FOLLOWS the NHL has been keenly aware of Ovechkin’s chase for Gretzky’s record. What many fans don’t know: the details that allow Ovechkin to thrive. He’s a gear nerd. It’s not a secret that Ovechkin is an equipment free agent right now. Most players have deals with CCM, Bauer, Sherwood or True hockey. Last season, Ovechkin toyed with a few different sticks until he found a custom model around All-Star Weekend. Since switching to the new stick — which is wrapped in black, with no logos — Ovechkin has scored 64 goals in 96 games. Capitals coach Spencer Carbery has made an intentional effort to put Ovechkin in better positions to thrive. Ovechkin’s ice time was reduced to under 18 minutes per game this season for the first time in his career. He cut his 4-on-4 play, has sometimes swapped him from left to right wing, and gives him more shifts in the offensive zone. “It’s about quality shifts, not quantity,” Carbery said. “And with O, if you present him the information, if you explain here’s why we’re doing this and here’s how it will help you and the team, he always buys in. That’s never an issue.” The one nonnegotiable: Ovechkin isn’t missing any ice time during the two minutes the Caps are on the power play. Ovechkin has been on the ice for 97.3% of the Caps’ power-play time this season. Only four other players are in the 80% range or higher: Nikita Kucherov, Nathan MacKinnon, Leon Draisaitl and Quinn Hughes. Ovechkin is not resented in the locker room because he is emphatic about being a good teammate. “It really feels like he gets more excited, or just as excited for our goals than his goals,” said Dylan Strome, who assisted on No. 895. “He’s always keeping the mood light, with all of his pregame routines, handshakes with guys in the tunnel, screaming in the locker room. He’s very consistent like that.” When rookie Aliaksei Protas was first called up, he needed to return to the farm club in Hershey, Pennsylvania, to retrieve some personal items on an off day. And he needed to borrow one of his teammates’ cars. “The big man come up to me, and first he is mad because I asked [Evgeny Kuznetsov], and he said, ‘Why didn’t [you] come to me straight?'” Protas recalled. Ovechkin loaned Protas his car. “He told me to keep it for a few months,” Protas said. Washington signed its top prospect, Ryan Leonard, on March 31, the day before the Caps played in Boston. Ovechkin texted Leonard, the Boston College star who was already in town, and invited him to a sushi dinner that night with a few teammates. Afterward, Leonard told Ovechkin a few of his buddies would love to meet him, and they knew just the spot. So the night before Ovechkin scored No. 891, he was drinking a beer at Circle Tavern, a bar near the BC campus. “Everywhere we go lately, it’s been rock-star stuff the second he walks into a room, people grab their phones,” Wilson said. “And he doesn’t get fazed by it at all. He’ll go out walking in a Canadian city, doesn’t care who recognizes him. Will stop for fans. Most guys aren’t like that. But that’s just Ovi.” ON THE DAY Ovechkin tied Gretzky’s record, there was an aura surrounding him. He was smiling and laughing as he came off the ice. He was most excited to see his former Stanley Cup-winning teammates, such as Nicklas Backstrom, T.J. Oshie and Braden Holtby, who were being honored later that night as part of the Capitals’ 50th anniversary celebration. Backstrom and Ovechkin have always been instinctively linked, with the Swedish center assisting on more of his goals (279) than any other player. Backstrom (hip) and Oshie (back) have not had the same injury luck as Ovechkin. Both are still under contract but sidelined on long-term injured reserve, probably for the remainder of their careers. Ovechkin acknowledged both players in his on-ice speech. “There’s not many instances where someone has openly, in one instance or another, kind of thanked me in front of the world,” Oshie said. “So in that moment, I kind of assumed and knew that ‘Backy’ was going to get a shoutout. They go hand in hand and their bond is like no other of two teammates that I’ve seen. But for him to call my name in that moment was incredibly special and, honestly, very emotional for me inside to have him mention and give me a little shoutout during the biggest accomplishment that the world of hockey has seen in a very long time.” Now, everyone wonders whether there could be another moment like this. As for Ovechkin’s personal goals, he has been very coy. Though he once famously told ESPN’s Linda Cohn he’d retire as soon as he broke Gretzky’s record, that’s not a foregone conclusion. Ovechkin is under contract for one more season for $9.5 million. He’d love to win another Stanley Cup, and this Washington team has proved capable. The next question is: Will anyone come for Ovi’s record? Should Ovechkin play next season then retire, ESPN Research projects he will finish with 937 career goals. At his current goals pace (0.64 per game), it would take Matthews 848 games to surpass it; that puts him 11 seasons away. For Draisaitl (0.51), the projection is 1,066 games (13 seasons). David Pastrnak (0.52) and Connor McDavid (0.51) are each projected to get there in 14 seasons. Perhaps, they — or someone else — will get there one day. But for the foreseeable future, that record belongs to Ovechkin. “This is something crazy. I’m probably going to need a couple more days. Maybe a couple weeks to realize what it means to be No. 1,” Ovechkin said Sunday. “All I can say, I’m very proud. I’m very proud for myself. I’m really proud for my family, for all my teammates, that helped me to reach that milestone, and for all my coaches. It’s huge. It’s an unbelievable moment.”
Sports
CFB’s best receivers for 2025: Who lines up after the clear No. 1?
Published
7 hours agoon
April 10, 2025By
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Who will be the best receiver in college football in 2025? It seems that’s not a very hard question.
We asked a group of our reporters that question and the answer was unanimous: Ohio State phenom Jeremiah Smith. In fact of the five polls we conducted concerning the top players and coaches for the coming season, this is the only one that came back with an undisputed winner.
Our panel was asked to vote for their top 10 pass catchers for the 2025 season (tight ends included), and we distributed points based on their selections (10 points for a first-place vote, 9 points for second place and so on).
Besides Smith, only one other player appeared on all 10 ballots: Alabama’s Ryan Williams, another freshman who made an instant impact. But after that, the voting was wide open. The list includes players who bounced back from injuries, transfers from last season who hit it big with their new teams and some looking for similar breakthroughs after visiting the portal this offseason.
Here’s a look at our picks for the top 10 receivers in college football:
Points: 100 (10 of 10 first-place votes)
2024 stats: 76 receptions, 1,315 yards, 17.3-yard average, 16 TDs (1 rushing)
Rarely do incoming freshmen generate as much hype as Smith did, and then actually exceed it. He didn’t win the Biletnikoff Award as the nation’s top wide receiver, but good luck finding a coach who would prefer anyone over the Buckeyes star. He had three or more receptions in all but one game and reached the end zone in 12 of Ohio State’s 16 contests.
After earning Big Ten freshman and receiver of the year honors, the 6-foot-3, 215-pound Smith will enter his second season as a bona fide Heisman Trophy contender, and could be by far the best player at his position for two more years before he’s eligible for the NFL draft. It’s a rare spot for such a young player to occupy, but Smith is a rare talent. — Adam Rittenberg
Points: 82
2024 stats: 48 receptions, 865 yards, 18-yard average, 10 TDs (2 rushing)
Williams didn’t finish his freshman season the way he started it, but still proved to be one of the most explosive players in the nation. He had five touchdown catches in his first four games, including the game winner against Georgia, and finished the season with 10 touchdowns (8 receiving, 2 rushing).
Williams averaged 18 yards per catch and tied for fourth nationally with five receptions of 50-plus yards. Look for even more big plays in 2025, especially with Ryan Grubb coming in as Alabama’s new offensive coordinator. — Chris Low
Points: 68
2024 stats: 75 receptions, 1,101 yards, 14.7-yard average, 10 TDs
The former Colorado transfer returned from the knee injury that sidelined him for nearly all of the 2023 season and instantly became a key figure for the Sun Devils, emerging as the lead downfield target in an offense powered by 1,711-yard rusher Cam Skattebo. Tyson’s production earned him Big 12 offensive newcomer of the year honors. An upper-body injury kept him sidelined for the Sun Devils’ postseason run.
Tyson’s dependability was huge for ASU. He eclipsed 100 yards receiving five times, logged 12 third-down receptions (17th nationally) and had more red zone targets (16) than all but 22 wide receivers across the country. With Arizona State expected to shift its offensive balance without Skattebo in the backfield, Tyson should see even more of the ball as the go-to weapon for Heisman Trophy contender Sam Leavitt in 2025. — Eli Lederman
Points: 46
2024 stats: 53 receptions, 957 yards, 18.1-yard average, 8 TDs
Sarratt is a success story for the portal era. Overlooked out of high school, the 6-foot-2, 209-pounder became an immediate star for Saint Francis (Pa.) in FCS, catching 42 passes for 700 yards and 13 touchdowns. He parlayed that into success at James Madison in 2023 (82 catches, 1,191 yards, 8 TDs), then followed Curt Cignetti to Indiana, where he became the leading receiver on a playoff team.
He enjoyed four 100-yard performances last season, and among players with at least 80 targets he ranked eighth in yards per reception (18.1) and 10th in success rate (59.1%). He’s efficient and explosive, and if Indiana again plays at a high level, he’ll be one of the primary reasons. — Bill Connelly
Points: 40
2024 stats (with Georgia Tech): 56 receptions, 754 yards, 13.5-yard average, 3 TDs; 21 carries, 131 yards, 1 TD
Singleton, the No. 4 overall player in ESPN’s transfer rankings in December, was extremely coveted upon entering the portal. The former freshman All-American finished second in ACC Offensive Rookie of the Year voting in 2023 and has put up 1,849 all-purpose yards and 10 total scores over his first two college seasons.
Singleton also ran track at Georgia Tech, with a personal best of 10.32 seconds in the 100-meter dash. The speedster is hoping to play up to his early-round NFL draft pick potential in an Auburn offense that seriously reloaded with portal pickups this offseason. — Max Olson
Points: 30
2024 stats: 75 receptions, 904 yards, 12.1-yard average, 12 TDs (1 rushing)
There were growing concerns about what had happened to Clemson’s wide receiver room entering the 2024 season, but Williams helped put those to rest. A freshman All-America selection in 2022, he had injuries wipe out most of his 2023 season, but he returned last fall to record career highs in receptions (75), receiving yards (904), receiving touchdowns (11) and offensive snaps (727).
Williams was the first Clemson player to reach 75 or more receptions since Amari Rodgers in 2020, and the first with 10 or more touchdown receptions since Tee Higgins in 2019 (13). He also was a factor on punt returns, averaging 9.7 yards per runback. — Rittenberg
Points: 29
2024 stats: 48 receptions, 613 yards, 12.8-yard average, 5 TDs
Few returning wideouts bring more talent to the table than Stewart. The former five-star recruit went through ups and downs in two seasons at Texas A&M but really impressed Oregon’s coaching staff last season and is coming back for his senior year to prove he can become an elite playmaker.
Stewart has turned 139 career catches into 1,776 yards and 11 touchdowns with six 100-yard performances, including a career-best 149 yards in the Ducks’ regular-season win over Ohio State. Tez Johnson and Traeshon Holden moving on to the NFL creates plenty of opportunity for Stewart to see a ton of targets this fall. — Olson
Points: 21
2024 stats: 41 receptions, 708 yards, 17.3-yard average, 5 TDs
A midseason ankle injury tamped down his full-season numbers, but Wesco lived up to his blue-chip status both early and late in his freshman season. In September, he caught passes of 51 and 76 yards against Appalachian State and 70 and 34 against Stanford; after his return from injury, he starred in Clemson’s ACC championship game victory, catching eight passes for 143 yards and two scores.
On a team hungry for big plays, nine of his 41 receptions gained at least 34 yards, and as he bulks up a bit (he was listed at 6-foot-2, 180 pounds last season) and improves his short-route game, he’ll only become more dangerous on the long balls. Clemson enters 2025 with top-10 billing, and both Wesco’s production and his potential for even greater heights are a major reason for that. — Connelly
Points: 19
2024 stats: 52 receptions, 733 yards, 14.1-yard average, 4 TDs
One of the nation’s top receiver prospects when he signed out of high school, Tate was the No. 3 option last season for the Buckeyes and still caught 52 passes for 733 yards and four touchdowns. The 6-2, 191-pound junior will pair with Jeremiah Smith to give Ohio State one of the top pass-catching combos in the country.
Tate averaged 14.1 yards per catch last season and had five catches of 30 yards or longer. There was some chatter after the season that Tate might transfer, but he said he never thought about leaving Ohio State. He’s a tough, physical matchup for opposing cornerbacks and has the speed to make big plays down the field. — Low
Points: 19
2024 stats (with NC State): 53 receptions, 460 yards, 8.7-yard average, 6 TDs; 19 carries, 36 yards, 2 TDs
The 5-foot-11 pass catcher broke NC State’s freshman reception record (71 catches) and became a freshman All-American with 1,159 all-purpose yards and 10 touchdowns in 2023. The Wolfpack regressed last fall, and so did Concepcion’s production, but he should be a frequent target within an Aggies passing attack that finished 88th nationally and 12th in the SEC in completions of 20-plus yards a year ago.
Concepcion’s 16 touchdowns over the past two seasons are tied for 14th most nationally over that span. Stepping into a remade Texas A&M wide receiver unit alongside transfers Mario Craver and Jonah Wilson, Concepcion could be the key in turning around an offense that finished 87th in passing yards per game in 2024. — Lederman
Also receiving votes: Nic Anderson, LSU, 18 points; Cam Coleman, Auburn, 17; Eric Rivers, Georgia Tech, 14; Zachariah Branch, Georgia, 7; Makai Lemon, USC, 6; Barion Brown, LSU 5; Eugene Wilson III, Florida 5; Kenyon Sadiq, Oregon (TE), 5; Devonte Ross, Penn State, 4; Aaron Anderson, LSU, 3; Malachi Fields, Notre Dame, 3; Deion Burks, Oklahoma, 2; Oscar Delp, Georgia (TE), 2; Ryan Wingo, Texas, 2; Dakorien Moore, Oregon, 1; Max Klare, Ohio State (TE), 1; Nick Marsh, Michigan State, 1
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