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We’re now one week away from the NHL trade deadline on March 8, and teams will be making moves between now and then to either bolster their Stanley Cup chances or build for the future as we saw with this week’s Chris Tanev deal.

The Florida Panthers remain atop the Power Rankings this week, with some big moves elsewhere on the list. And this week, we’ve identified the most captivating game(s) in the month of March for each club.

How we rank: A panel of ESPN hockey commentators, analysts, reporters and editors sends in a 1-32 poll based on the games through Wednesday, which generates our master list here.

Note: Previous ranking for each team refers to the previous edition, published Feb. 23. Points percentages are through Thursday’s games.

Previous ranking: 1
Points percentage: 70.00%

Game of the month: March 26 vs. the Bruins. The Panthers shocked the sports world with their upset of the record-breaking Bruins in the 2023 playoffs. Boston won’t need Paul Revere to let it know the Panthers are coming this time around, and this will be the penultimate matchup between the two Atlantic Division powers prior to the 2024 postseason tourney.

Next seven days: @ DET (March 2), @ NYR (March 4), @ NJ (March 5), vs. PHI (March 7)


Previous ranking: 4
Points percentage: 69.17%

Game of the month: March 28 at the Avalanche. The Rangers have some big matchups against conference foes lined up this month, but this mile-high tilt could well be a Stanley Cup Final preview — featuring a number of superstars currently in the mix for season-ending awards. The Rangers won the first matchup between the clubs, 2-1 in OT on Feb. 5.

Next seven days: @ TOR (March 2), vs. FLA (March 4)


Previous ranking: 3
Points percentage: 69.17%

Game of the month: March 7 at the Golden Knights. “To be the man, you gotta beat the man.” Ric Flair’s famous quote isn’t entirely applicable to the NHL — teams won’t always have to play the defending champ en route to winning the Stanley Cup — but it certainly wouldn’t hurt the Canucks’ confidence to get a win against Vegas, particularly since they lost 4-1 in their lone matchup thus far.

Next seven days: @ ANA (March 3), @ LA (March 5), @ VGK (March 7)


Previous ranking: 7
Points percentage: 68.10%

Game of the month: March 9 at the Canucks. There has been a flurry of big news in the hockey world in recent weeks, but perhaps none as big as the announcement that international best-on-best competition is coming soon! The NHL and NHLPA will stage a Four Nations tournament in 2025, and NHL players will be participating in the 2026 Olympics. The U.S. team will have their best shot at gold in recent memory, and one of the reasons is goaltending. Two of the potential netminders involved will be participating — Winnipeg’s Connor Hellebuyck and Vancouver’s Thatcher Demko.

Next seven days: @ CAR (March 2), @ BUF (March 3), vs. SEA (March 5)


Previous ranking: 2
Points percentage: 68.85%

Game of the month: March 9 vs. the Penguins. Sure, the B’s will have some critical matchups when it comes to playoff positioning — including a back-to-back set against the Panthers and Lightning on March 26 and 27. But we’re highlighting this one because it’s the second edition of the “Big City Greens Classic!” Last season’s game was a blast, and this one will feature even more antics.

Next seven days: @ NYI (March 2), @ TOR (March 4), vs. EDM (March 5), vs. TOR (March 7)


Previous ranking: 5
Points percentage: 65.32%

Game of the month: March 12 vs. the Panthers. How about a Stanley Cup Final contested entirely in the proverbial sun belt? In adding Chris Tanev this week, the Stars appear poised to make a deep run this spring, while the Panthers look like a juggernaut in the East after a surprising run to the Cup Final last year. The two top contenders get a final pre-playoff look at one another in this one.

Next seven days: vs. SJ (March 2), @ SJ (March 5)


Previous ranking: 9
Points percentage: 64.41%

Games of the month: March 4, March 7 against the Bruins. The Leafs won a first-round series in 2023, which was an encouraging sign given the team’s string of prior disappointments. But that was against the Lightning; to truly slay the proverbial dragon, they must beat the Bruins in a postseason series. That’s a potential first-round matchup in the Atlantic Division bracket, so this home-and-home against Boston will serve as a measuring stick.

Next seven days: vs. NYR (March 2), vs. BOS (March 4), vs. BUF (March 6), @ BOS (March 7)


Previous ranking: 6
Points percentage: 64.75%

Game of the month: March 13 at the Canucks. Is this a Western Conference finals preview? That’s certainly the case in one possible future world. But if nothing else, this game will be a showcase for two of the league’s best young defensemen, Cale Makar and Quinn Hughes, both of whom have drawn some Hart Trophy consideration to say nothing of all the Norris Trophy love.

Next seven days: @ NSH (March 2), vs. CHI (March 4), vs. DET (March 6)


Previous ranking: 10
Points percentage: 65.00%

Game of the month: March 21 vs. the Flyers. As the standings lay today, the Canes and Flyers would square off in a first-round matchup in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Circumstances can change, but this contest will give us another clue to which club has the edge should such a series transpire. The Canes have won two of three against the Flyers this season.

Next seven days: vs. WPG (March 2), vs. MTL (March 7)


Previous ranking: 8
Points percentage: 63.16%

Game of the month: March 23 at the Maple Leafs. It is always an event when the world’s best hockey player appears in the Centre of the Hockey Universe, and this edition is no exception: The get-in price as of today, per Vivid Seats, is $171 USD. (Compare that to $45 the next night in Ottawa.) Connor McDavid has had some great performances at Scotiabank Arena, too, including this doozy which was his first career NHL goal at the Leafs’ home.

Next seven days: @ SEA (March 2), vs. PIT (March 3), @ BOS (March 5), @ CBJ (March 7)


Previous ranking: 11
Points percentage: 60.83%

Game of the month: March 17 vs. the Devils. The Knights could make an addition or two before the deadline — thus making a trade addition’s return to his old home their must-watch game of the month — but aside from that consideration, a return tilt against New Jersey should be a fun one. The two teams scored 11 combined goals in a 6-5 OT win for the Devils back on Jan. 22, and there’s obviously no shortage of star wattage on the two rosters.

Next seven days: @ BUF (March 2), @ CBJ (March 4), vs. VAN (March 7)


Previous ranking: 14
Points percentage: 60.00%

Game of the month: March 2 vs. the Panthers. The Red Wings are on a heater of late, and have a nice cushion in the first wild-card slot as a result. Saturday’s matchup against the Panthers will be an apt litmus test as to just how good they are, now that the playoffs seem like a more likely proposition. Plus, we’ll get to see Detroit’s Patrick Kane, the long-time standard-bearer as the best American NHLer, take on a player who is making an argument for that crown in Matthew Tkachuk.

Next seven days: vs. FLA (March 2), @ COL (March 6)


Previous ranking: 13
Points percentage: 57.50%

Games of the month: March 14-26. After some less-than-threatening matchups early on in the month, this stretch is the proverbial crucible that could sway the Flyers’ ultimate standings position more than any other: vs. Toronto, at Boston, vs. Toronto, at Carolina, vs. Boston, vs. Florida and closing it out at Madison Square Garden against the Rangers.

Next seven days: @ WSH (March 1), vs. OTT (March 2), vs. STL (March 4), @ FLA (March 7)


Previous ranking: 12
Points percentage: 59.32%

Game of the month: March 25 at the Canucks. As a wild-card team, the Kings will be matched up in the first round with one of the two Western division champs, a spot held down currently by the Canucks. By the final week of March, these two teams will look largely similar to their postseason editions, so this contest could be a preview of things to come in April.

Next seven days: vs. NJ (March 3), vs. VAN (March 5), vs. OTT (March 7)


Previous ranking: 18
Points percentage: 57.38%

Games of the month: March 5, 7, 9 against the Canadiens, Sabres and Blue Jackets. A win is a win, and as the Predators continue their push to secure a wild-card playoff spot, getting the full six points in this stretch of games against lottery teams would be of great benefit.

Next seven days: vs. COL (March 2), vs. MTL (March 5), vs. BUF (March 7)


Previous ranking: 15
Points percentage: 56.45%

Games of the month: March 14 vs. the Rangers, March 16 at the Panthers. Currently holding down a wild-card spot, the Lightning could match up against one of these clubs in the first round of the playoffs. We don’t need to dwell on how incredible another Battle of Florida series would be, but Rangers-Lightning would also be superb: Andrei Vasilevskiy against Igor Shesterkin in a duel of two of the best Russian netminders in recent history; sneakily valuable Cup contributor Barclay Goodrow taking on his former teammates; ESPN analyst Ryan Callahan not being sure who to root for. It has got it all, and these two games will serve as a preview.

Next seven days: vs. MTL (March 2), vs. CGY (March 7)


Previous ranking: 16
Points percentage: 54.24%

Game of the month: March 11 at the Rangers. After both eclipsing 100 points last season and staging an epic first-round playoff showdown, the Devils and Rangers were expected to both land in the postseason again, and both had their backers as legit Cup contenders. One of the two clubs has lived up to that billing. After the Rangers won 5-1 in the Devils’ building on Feb. 22, the visitors from New Jersey might have some extra motivation heading into this clash.

Next seven days: @ ANA (March 1), @ LA (March 3), vs. FLA (March 5), vs. STL (March 7)


Previous ranking: 21
Points percentage: 53.39%

Game of the month: March 30 vs. the Kings. Trading away Elias Lindholm in January and Chris Tanev this week are a sign that the Flames are perhaps looking to the future instead of a playoff race. We’ll certainly know more a week from now, with Noah Hanifin and Jacob Markstrom also potentially on the move. But, Calgary remains within striking distance of a wild card, so this late March matchup against a team currently holding one could have an outsized impact on their final result.

Next seven days: vs. PIT (March 2), vs. SEA (March 4), @ TB (March 7)


Previous ranking: 22
Points percentage: 54.39%

Game of the month: March 7 vs. the Capitals. The Penguins’ rivalry against the Capitals isn’t what it once was, with both clubs seeming like playoff long shots this season. But until Sidney Crosby and Alex Ovechkin are not on the ice against one another, this matchup will continue to have extra appeal.

Next seven days: @ CGY (March 2), @ EDM (March 3), vs. CBJ (March 5), vs. WSH (March 7)


Previous ranking: 23
Points percentage: 51.67%

Game of the month: March 2 at the Blues. The Wild are one of a handful of teams for whom the games of late February and early March could determine their plans ahead of next week’s trade deadline. And this one — against a Blues team that is also chasing a wild card — will be a strong measuring stick for that immediate future.

Next seven days: @ STL (March 2), vs. SJ (March 3), @ ARI (March 7)


Previous ranking: 20
Points percentage: 54.31%

Games of the month: March 1 vs. the Flyers, March 22 vs. the Hurricanes. At this point of the 2023-24 season, the most vital storyline for the Caps is Alex Ovechkin’s quest to catch Wayne Gretzky on the all-time goals list. Fun fact: in his career in the regular season, the two teams against whom Ovi has scored the most goals are, you guessed it, the Flyers and Hurricanes (47).

Next seven days: vs. PHI (March 1), vs. ARI (March 3), @ PIT (March 7)


Previous ranking: 19
Points percentage: 53.39%

Game of the month: March 5, at the Islanders. Goalie fights in the NHL are rare. This game will feature a netminder who is a candidate to be in one in the near future (Jordan Binnington) against a team coached by a former NHL goalie who had a fight in his Hall of Fame career (Patrick Roy).

Next seven days: vs. MIN (March 2), @ PHI (March 4), @ NYI (March 5), @ NJ (March 7)


Previous ranking: 17
Points percentage: 54.24%

Game of the month: March 17 at the Rangers. Although the postseason seems like less of a possibility for the Isles as the days dwindle before the end of the season, Rangers-Islanders games at Madison Square Garden are never a dull affair. Those in attendance should be in great spirits, too, given that this one falls on St. Patrick’s Day.

Next seven days: vs. BOS (March 2), vs. STL (March 5), @ SJ (March 7)


Previous ranking: 24
Points percentage: 53.39%

Games of the month: March 2-5. Like a few other teams around the league, the Kraken can make a logical argument to add or subtract ahead of the trade deadline. So perhaps the results of these games (home for the Oilers, then at the Flames and Jets) will sway GM Ron Francis one way or the other.

Next seven days: vs. EDM (March 2), @ CGY (March 4), @ WPG (March 5)


Previous ranking: 25
Points percentage: 50.00%

Game of the month: March 2 vs. Golden Knights. Will he or won’t he? Former Sabre Jack Eichel — who returned to a cacophony of boos in his first game back in Buffalo — is working his way back from a lower-body injury, skating this week in a no-contact jersey. Might he return to hear it again from the Buffalo faithful?

Next seven days: vs. VGK (March 2), vs. WPG (March 3), @ TOR (March 6), @ NSH (March 7)


Previous ranking: 28
Points percentage: 46.49%

Game of the month: March 1 vs. the Coyotes. This game will have more of an influence on the draft lottery standings than playoff positioning. But the reason we’re including it here is because it’s country music night, and the first 10,000 fans in the building will get a Senators cowboy hat! Just putting it out in the universe in the hopes it will happen: Let there be a Senators hat trick in this game, followed by 10,000 Senators cowboy hats hitting the ice.

Next seven days: vs. ARI (March 1), @ PHI (March 2), @ ANA (March 6), @ LA (March 7)


Previous ranking: 26
Points percentage: 45.83%

Game of the month: March 9 vs. the Maple Leafs. The Canadiens were not expected to mount much of a serious push for the playoffs this season, and that expectation has come to pass. But, there’s always something special in the air when the Habs take on the Leafs. Plus, given that this is a day after the trade deadline, we may be seeing a different Montreal roster than the one that exists as of this writing.

Next seven days: @ TB (March 2), @ NSH (March 5), @ CAR (March 7)


Previous ranking: 27
Points percentage: 43.22%

Game of the month: March 5 vs. the Blackhawks. Both of these teams were in the draft lottery last season — the Blackhawks won it, landing the right to draft Connor Bedard — and both are headed in that direction this season, with Macklin Celebrini as the likely No. 1 pick. But, this is also a reprise of the Coyotes’ biggest offensive outburst this season, an 8-1 win over Bedard & Co. back on Halloween.

Next seven days: @ OTT (March 1), @ WSH (March 3), vs. CHI (March 5), vs. MIN (March 7)


Previous ranking: 29
Points percentage: 40.68%

Game of the month: March 5, 28, 30 against the Penguins. Due to a quirk in the NHL schedule this season, three of the Jackets’ four games against the rival Penguins are this month. While Columbus has had better seasons, the games against Pittsburgh are usually contested with some extra snarl, so here’s hoping that’s the case (especially given that the latter two are so close together).

Next seven days: @ CHI (March 2), vs. VGK (March 4), @ PIT (March 5), vs. EDM (March 7)


Previous ranking: 30
Points percentage: 38.14%

Game of the month: March 1 vs. the Devils. Sure, it’s possible that this month could see the Ducks playing against someone they traded off of the roster — with Adam Henrique, Frank Vatrano and Ilya Lyubushkin among those potentially on the move. But we’ll throw it back all the way to 2003 to call this one a Stanley Cup Final rematch. Ready to feel old? Rookie standouts Leo Carlsson and Pavel Mintyukov hadn’t been born when that series was contested. Leading scorer Troy Terry was five years old.

Next seven days: vs. NJ (March 1), vs. VAN (March 3), vs. OTT (March 6)


Previous ranking: 31
Points percentage: 30.17%

Games of the month: March 17, 23 against the Blackhawks. Chicago’s rebuild was accelerated by winning the 2023 NHL draft lottery and the rights to draft Connor Bedard. San Jose, which has never won one, is hoping that the odds are in their favor in this year’s event, in the hopes of giving their rebuild a boost with the No. 1 pick this summer. The results of these two games will influence which team has the best shot in this spring’s lotto.

Next seven days: @ DAL (March 2), @ MIN (March 3), vs. DAL (March 5), vs. NYI (March 7)


Previous ranking: 32
Points percentage: 29.17%

Games of the month: March 19-23, at the Kings, Ducks and Sharks. The road trip through the Western Canadian NHL cities is typically a challenging one from a logistical (and sometimes on-ice) perspective. While the weather one experiences during the California swing is generally more pleasant, it can be another challenge, particularly for a young player like Connor Bedard getting used to the rigors of pro hockey. And, well, the games against the Ducks and Sharks will certainly have an impact on the draft lottery standings.

Next seven days: vs. CBJ (March 2), @ COL (March 4), @ ARI (March 5)

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Braves reinstate 2B Albies after 2 months on IL

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Braves reinstate 2B Albies after 2 months on IL

The Atlanta Braves returned three-time All-Star second baseman Ozzie Albies from his rehabilitation assignment and reinstated him from the injured list prior to Friday’s series opener against the host Miami Marlins.

Albies has been sidelined since fracturing his wrist during the Braves’ 6-2 loss to the visiting St. Louis Cardinals on July 21. He was trying to field a throw at second on a stolen-base attempt and bent his glove hand back when he collided with Cardinals outfielder Michael Siani.

He is batting .258 with eight homers and 46 RBIs in 90 games this season.

Albies, 27, has been a key player for the Braves since reaching the majors in 2017. He has smacked more than 20 homers on four occasions, including a career-best 33 last season. He has topped 100 RBIs twice and 100 runs three times.

Also on Friday, the Braves optioned infielder Cavan Biggio to Triple-A Gwinnett.

Biggio, 29, is 1-for-5 in four games with the Braves this season. He also has played for the Toronto Blue Jays and Los Angeles Dodgers this season.

The son of Hall of Famer Craig Biggio showed promise as a rookie with 16 homers, 48 RBIs and 14 steals in 100 games with the Blue Jays in 2019. He finished fifth in American League Rookie of the Year balloting.

But he has since failed to reach double digits in homers or even had as many as 70 hits in a season. Biggio has a .225 career average with 51 homers and 186 RBIs in 524 career games.

The Associated Press and Field Level Media contributed to this report.

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‘We’re young and all we want to do is win’: How the Tigers have roared into playoff contention

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'We're young and all we want to do is win': How the Tigers have roared into playoff contention

Minutes before the MLB trade deadline in July, the Detroit Tigers shipped out their fourth player of the week and arguably the best to move across the entire sport when they dealt right-hander Jack Flaherty to the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Tigers proceeded to lose six of their next nine games. At 55-63 with barely a quarter of the season left, Detroit looked more or less like it has every year since Tarik Skubal joined the team in 2020: entirely forgettable.

Six weeks later, after securing another victory in a season that will end with him winning his first Cy Young Award, Skubal craned his neck in a half-moon to survey the Tigers’ clubhouse. He saw the members of MLB’s youngest everyday lineup and a patchwork pitching staff that has made the bullpen game into art. He was staring at a team that’s now tied for the American League’s final wild-card spot, a rise that has stunned the game — and even one of the people at the heart of the surge.

“It’s not traditional, and maybe not sustainable, but who cares?” Skubal said. “We need to win now.”

The Tigers own a 25-10 record since Aug. 11, the best in baseball, with a major league-leading plus-62 run differential. The Tigers are winning close games (10-2 in one-run games), they are winning road games (12-5) and they are playing the sort of baseball that manager A.J. Hinch, who knows a thing or two about young, ascendant cores, has been preaching all season.

Left for dead at the deadline, still doubted and dismissed as signs of life turned into much more, the Tigers start their most consequential series in a decade Friday night in Baltimore, where they’ll take on an Orioles team that like the other two current wild-card holders, the Kansas City Royals and Minnesota Twins, has spent recent weeks on the struggle bus. Everything has conspired to give Detroit a real path to ending the longest postseason drought in baseball with its first berth since 2014: three games at Camden Yards, three at home against Tampa Bay and a season-ending three-game home set against the worst team in baseball history, the Chicago White Sox.

“We’re young and all we want to do is win,” said outfielder Riley Greene, who at 23 years old is among the most tenured Tigers. “We’ll do whatever it takes.”

What it takes is simple: finishing at least one game ahead of Kansas City or Minnesota, which both own tiebreakers over Detroit as determined by head-to-head record. The Royals and Twins did their damage before this incarnation of the Tigers materialized and started running roughshod through the sport. Detroit’s sweep of Kansas City this week and Minnesota getting walked off in Cleveland on Wednesday and Thursday left the Tigers and Twins tied at 80-73.

On the surface, none of it makes sense. While their upside made the Tigers a sneaky potential contender in the AL entering the season, they cratered in June. The deadline exodus illustrated Detroit’s priorities: As many signs as they had shown, as many we-got-something-here flashes as they had produced, gone were Flaherty, outfielder Mark Canha, reliever Andrew Chafin and catcher Carson Kelly. Generally speaking, teams do not get rid of productive players and then find the best version of themselves.

“I said in July that I thought we were going to get younger and we were going to get better,” Hinch said. “And that was not a knock on anyone. We believed in our young players.”

The rescue operation in August happened with an infusion of youthful talent over the course of about a week. Two days after a one-run win against San Francisco on Aug. 11, Kerry Carpenter (27), their slugging right fielder who had missed nearly three months with a stress fracture in his back, returned. Three days after that, Detroit called up shortstop Trey Sweeney (24) — a player they received in the Flaherty deal — and third baseman Jace Jung (23), another top prospect. A day later, Greene returned from the IL and Spencer Torkelson (25), the 2020 No. 1 draft pick they had demoted, rejoined a lineup filled with other 20-somethings: second baseman Colt Keith (23), outfielders Wenceel Perez (24), Justyn-Henry Malloy (24) and leadoff-hitting center fielder Parker Meadows (24).

“Then we started just rolling from there,” said Matt Vierling, who at 27 is regarded as a veteran. “And it hasn’t really stopped. This is the first time this group of guys has really tasted this. And I feel like we’re just playing with house money. Almost no one thought we’d be here. What have we got to lose? Let’s just see how far we can take this thing and keep it going. It kind of reminds me of a couple of years ago.”

A couple years ago, Vierling was with a Philadelphia Phillies team that blitzed its way to the 2022 World Series on a wave of talent and vibes. He senses similar juju on this team, a function, he said, of how Hinch manages the roster. Tigers players know that Hinch is going to pinch hit based on matchups (they have the third-most pinch-hit appearances in MLB this year) and use his pitching staff more as out-getters than as traditional starters and relievers.

During their 35-game stretch with baseball’s top record, the Tigers’ starting pitcher has gone two or fewer innings 40% of the time. The only constants in the rotation have been Skubal — who is 17-4 with an AL-best 2.48 ERA and has struck out 221 and walked 34 over 185 innings — and rookie Keider Montero. With right-handers Casey Mize and Reese Olson returning to the rotation from the injured list in the past two weeks, Hinch has not needed to white-knuckle his bullpen decisions quite as much. It has become a simple operation: Whoever is best suited to succeed in a particular spot, you’re up.

“We’re not trying to reinvent the wheel,” Hinch said. “We’re just focused on strengths. How do we use what we have best? And we have a lot of pitching. We have arguably the best pitcher in baseball, and we have creativity where we’re trying to just maximize what we’re doing. I’ve been there, I’ve done this, I’ve seen this. We just have chipped away. We talk about winning series and winning weeks. We generally play good defense. We’ve got athleticism.”

That dynamic ability was front and center in the finale of the Kansas City series, from Meadows tracking down everything in Kauffman Stadium’s spacious center field to Jung’s acrobatic slide at home to avoid a tag on a play where the ball beat him home by at least 10 feet. “It was just a freak play,” Jung said. “If you told me to do it again 100 times, I probably could only do it a couple.”

At this point, that’s all they need. A lockdown pitching performance here. A clutch hit there. A wild slide. Most of the Tigers are too young to know any different. What they do know is that if they secure that final wild-card slot, it’s likely to set up a matchup with the American League West champion Houston Astros, a franchise with which Hinch managed an upstart group of talented young players once upon a time.

“We just play hard every single day,” Vierling said. “That’s how these guys are brought up. That’s how I was brought up. And we’re never out of it because of that.”

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How five-star receivers at Bama, Ohio State and Texas were ready to be freshman stars

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How five-star receivers at Bama, Ohio State and Texas were ready to be freshman stars

JAMARCUS SHEPHARD COULDN’T be sure until he watched Ryan Williams burn past the Western Kentucky secondary in Week 1. But for Alabama‘s first-year wide receivers coach, there were signs in the summer of just how good the Crimson Tide’s 17-year-old, pass-catching wunderkind could be.

Days after arriving at Alabama, Williams told trainers that he wanted to be put on the same training plan as former Crimson Tide wide receiver DeVonta Smith. Soon, the five-star freshman was performing the flexibility and mobility regimen that powered Alabama’s 2020 Heisman Trophy winner.

And when Williams joined Alabama’s players-only training sessions weeks later, the reports of Williams’ playmaking that trickled back to Shephard were difficult to ignore.

“His teammates came off the field and they said, ‘Coach Shep, you should have seen that boy out there,'” Shephard told ESPN this week. “That was the veterans stamping him. That’s when you really started to think that he might have that magic.”

Like Williams, Ohio State freshman Jeremiah Smith‘s promise was clear upon his arrival in Columbus. Same for five-star Cam Coleman at Auburn. Breakout spring camp performances from TexasRyan Wingo, Clemson‘s Bryant Wesco Jr. and Michigan State‘s Nick Marsh proved early markers for what they would go on to contribute this fall.

Three weeks into the season, Williams and Smith lead their programs in catches, yards and touchdown receptions. At Texas, the top-ranked Longhorns are using Wingo early and often. Coleman and Wesco — leaders of respective youth movements within their programs — have each found the end zone in the early weeks. And Marsh, with 11 catches for 234 yards, has authored a more productive start to 2024 than all but four Big Ten pass catchers this season.

Together, they comprise a select group of first-year wide receivers making an immediate impact on college football in 2024. Among ESPN’s top-100 wide receivers in the 2024 class, just nine completed more than 10 routes across the first three weeks of the season. Within that same group, only 12 first-year pass catchers were targeted at least five times with just three eclipsing 10 total targets.

As first-year wide receivers at large are seeing limited opportunity, the elite of the elite are still breaking through at the highest level of the sport. In Williams, Smith, Coleman, Wingo, Wesco and Marsh, there are six of college football’s great outliers in 2024, standing within an exclusive group of talented freshmen pass catchers carving significant roles this fall.

“Wide receivers take time to develop, but you knew those guys would make an impact,” said one SEC general manager. “They were different at the high school level. Not just from an ability standpoint, but their bodies, too. They were all college-ready. We’re seeing that now.”


IDENTIFYING PRODUCTIVE FRESHMAN wide receivers is a multifaceted challenge for college programs.

A prospect has to meet the physical demands to compete against high-level defenses. But modern offenses also require crisp technique, sharp route running and a firm grasp of the playbook. Not many freshman wide receivers check all three boxes.

However, there was little question about Smith, the Buckeyes’ 6-foot-3, 200-pound phenom.

ESPN’s fourth-ranked prospect in 2024, Smith already possessed college-ready speed and measurables when he logged 88 catches for 1,376 yards and 19 touchdowns in his senior season at Florida’s Chaminade-Madonna Prep. One Power 4 talent evaluator who recruited Smith called him a “physical freak”.

During his early months at Ohio State, Smith showed the Buckeyes staff all the intangible elements they needed to see, too. In Week 1, he was one of only four freshman wide receiver starters across the country, and Smith hauled in six passes for 92 yards with two touchdowns in Ohio State’s Aug. 31 opener against Akron.

Smith has completed 45 routes, more than any other freshman pass catcher. Through two games, he leads Buckeyes receivers with 11 catches for 211 yards and three scores as the latest branch in Ohio State’s vast wide receiver tree.

“He’s built different,” Ryan Day said last month. “Just the way his approach is. You can see his size and speed and all that. But typically somebody with that type of talent doesn’t have the discipline, the focus that he does.”

With top-end physical talent and maturity beyond his years, Smith isn’t a typical freshman wide receiver. His fellow first-year pass-catching contemporaries are outliers, too.

Last fall, ESPN’s top-100 first-year wide receivers from the 2023 class averaged 13.1 total targets, 7.9 catches, 110.3 yards and 0.7 touchdowns in their debut seasons. A quarter of the way into 2024, Williams, Smith and Marsh have already reached 13-plus targets, and Coleman and Wingo — eight targets each — are more than 50% of the way there. Four members of the group have at least seven receptions through Week 3. All six newcomers have already eclipsed 110 yards.

Among the common advantages for these five freshmen: nearly all of them enrolled early.

“I think being able to come in in the spring gives them a leg up,” Auburn’s Hugh Freeze said during a recent SEC coaches teleconference.


OF THE NATION’S six breakout freshmen pass catchers, all but one was a midyear enrollee in January. Williams, who reclassified from 2025 into the 2024 class to land in college a year early, is the only one who waited until June to join his program.

Early enrollment is standard practice in 2024. But the spring semester is when Smith, Coleman, Wingo, Wesco and Marsh set themselves apart, laying the seeds for the respective fall breakouts.

When Coleman began spring practice, Auburn receivers coach Marcus Davis quickly noticed Coleman’s obsession with technique and his commitment to the small details.

“From the first to second practice, I saw how he picked up on stuff,” Davis told ESPN. “You tell him something in the meeting room and then he’s going to apply it. I don’t even have dang TikTok, but he’s sending me clips of guys in the NFL playing with certain route techniques at 11 o’clock at night. Once you get a guy like that all you’re doing is sharpening that toolbox up.”

At Clemson, Wesco established himself as a slippery playmaker who surprised the Tigers’ staff with his refined route running. Marsh, who Michigan State wide receivers coach Courtney Hawkins recently described as “program-changer,” settled in fast in East Lansing and had three catches, including a 75-yard score, during the Spartans’ spring scrimmage.

For Texas coach Steve Sarkisian, Wingo’s involvement in the Longhorns’ offense in the early weeks of the season — seven catches for 197 yards, including a 75-yard touchdown connection with Arch Manning in Week 3 — is rooted in what Wingo proved in February, March and April, then reinforced in fall camp.

“How you know a guy can play early is, does he make plays when opportunities come his way?” Sarkisian said before Texas’ Week 3 meeting with UTSA. “That showed up in the spring game. That showed up in our scrimmages and fall camp. And he [hasn’t] disappointed.”

With each of the early enrollees, the spring offered signs of Year 1 promise. From there, the next step on each campus was how to prepare the first-year pass catchers for the fall.

At Auburn, Davis pulled Coleman in for extra time in the film, reinforcing the fundamentals they’d honed together in spring camp. In Columbus, the Buckeyes’ staff challenged Smith to compete with the veterans in an elite wide receivers room, elevating himself through the daily battles.

But perhaps the most instructive immersion came with the wide receiver who got to campus last. It took only a handful of big plays and a few fall practices for DeBoer to see what Williams could do for the Crimson Tide. When planning began for Alabama’s Week 1 visit from Western Kentucky, DeBoer and his staff sought to strike a balance for Williams.

“You’re trying to not put too much on his plate but also make sure we give him opportunities to make plays” DeBoer said on the SEC coaches teleconference.

“It wasn’t like holding anything back for the most part when he was out there in Week 1. He’s comfortable pretty much in any spot. There’s packages to get him in certain positions, but really we’re just moving forward like he’s a second, third, fourth-year guy.”

Williams caught two passes against Western Kentucky in Week 1. The first: an 84-yard touchdown before halftime. The second: a 55-yard score after splitting a pair of Hilltoppers defenders.

“The more and more that he made plays, even within the first game, you just had him out there more and more comfortable,” DeBoer said.


THE FIRST SNAP of Wesco’s college career didn’t go well. Jammed straight into the turf at Atlanta Mercedes-Benz Stadium by a Georgia defender, the moment was reflective of everything about the 34-3 beatdown.

“His first college play was not good,” Dabo Swinney said. “They let him know this was big-boy football. But then he settled down.”

Wesco played another 11 snaps against Georgia. A week later against App State, Wesco made his first career reception on the Tigers’ third play and housed it for a 76-yard touchdown.

“He’s special,” Swinney said.

Resilience is part of what comes next for this class of ultra-talented freshman pass catchers. Each has now navigated an early, nonconference slate with much more difficult conference games ahead. Hence why durability is another point that comes up in projecting what’s next for this group.

Coleman missed Auburn’s Week 3 game with a shoulder injury and is questionable headed into this weekend’s visit from Arkansas. Shephard harps on the importance of rest and nutrition, a balance each freshman wide receiver needs to find as they prepare for first runs through a slate of SEC, Big Ten and ACC defenses.

“You’re going to see faster, stronger, more physical people,” Shephard said. “You’re going to take some extra hits. That’s where sleep and recovery and nutrition week-to-week is so important.”

At No. 4 in the latest AP Top 25, Alabama could be staring down another College Football Playoff run, potentially deep into December and January. Williams, who is up to 10 catches for 285 yards and four touchdowns through three games, will be an important part of that success.

No different from their early-season gameplanning, the Crimson Tide aren’t shielding Williams from much of anything. Prior to Alabama’s Week 3 trip to Wisconsin, the Crimson Tide made sure Williams understood the sort of physicality he’d encounter in Madison.

“Our scout defenders got more handsy,” Shephard said. “They yanked Ryan to the ground at one point and Ryan still made the catch. Those are the things that give you the confidence that he’s going to be able to do it in the games.”

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