
How new coaches at Michigan, Alabama and more are faring on the recruiting trail
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9 months agoon
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Eli Lederman
Jun 14, 2024, 08:00 AM ET
There were 11 head coaches in new jobs across the power conferences once the dust finally settled on college football‘s latest coaching carousel in mid-February.
From Alabama’s Kalen DeBoer, Michigan’s Sherrone Moore and Texas A&M’s Mike Elko in some of the biggest jobs in the country to intriguing fits for Syracuse’s Fran Brown, Michigan State’s Jonathan Smith and Houston’s Willie Fritz, the cast of newcomers won’t be properly judged until fall Saturdays roll around. Until then, early returns and insights into the newest faces in new places across the sport can be found in their work on the high school recruiting trail.
As of Thursday, 157 of the prospects ranked inside the 2025 ESPN 300 had made commitments, including 24 pledged to programs with coaches in their first cycle. That leaves 144 of the nation’s top prospects uncommitted with just under six months to the start of the early signing period on Dec. 4.
Auburn’s Hugh Freeze was the only first-year coach to land a top-10 class in 2024. However, we’re only two years removed from the 2023 cycle that saw a whopping six first-year coaches deliver top-10 classes to their new school. In 2025, both Alabama and Texas A&M appear poised to crack the top 10. Meanwhile, the likes of Syracuse and UCLA reach mid-June in position to secure their highest-ranked signing classes of the decade.
Let’s dive into how each of the new coaches have settled in on the recruiting trail, where they stand in the 2025 class and what’s left for them to do as the 2025 recruiting cycle hits full steam.
Nick Saban landed top five classes in 12 of the 13 recruiting cycles from 2012-24. DeBoer, conversely, never landed a class higher than 28th in two cycles at Washington before taking the Crimson Tide job in January.
Yet, if there were doubts in Tuscaloosa over his ability to maintain the momentum as an SEC newcomer operating in Saban’s wake, DeBoer has provided some early assurances.
DeBoer’s first recruiting win came when he kept five-star wide receiver Ryan Williams in the 2024 class just 13 days after he landed on campus. In the months since, DeBoer has pulled pledges from seven states on his way to refurbishing a 2025 class that initially lost all but one of its Saban-era commits, including top-50 prospects Jaime Ffrench (No. 16 in ESPN 300) and Zion Grady (No. 45).
The rebuild began in March when Alabama secured six commitments in 23 days, headlined by in-state athlete Derick Smith, No. 30 in the ESPN 300 and the top prospect in the Crimson Tide’s current class. That flurry of activity also saw DeBoer gain pledges from outside linebacker Darrell Johnson (No. 34 in ESPN 300), athlete Zymear Smith (No. 114), and defensive tackle Antonio Coleman (No. 177), a previous member of Saban’s class who had decommitted from the program late last year.
While DeBoer, 49, has hit familiar recruiting hotbeds in Alabama, Georgia and Texas, he’s also used his West Coast connections for a pair of commitments from Southern California power Mater Dei in inside linebacker Abduall Sanders Jr. (No. 153) and cornerback Chuck McDonald III (No. 166). Earlier this month, DeBoer gained his first quarterback commit, flipping Keelon Russell, an Elite 11 finalist and a dual-threat prospect, from SMU. Russell who has drawn comparisons to former Washington Heisman Trophy runner-up Michael Penix Jr.
All told, Alabama’s 2025 class now includes 11 ESPN 300 commits and could continue to grow.
The Crimson Tide are still in the mix for recent visitors: offensive tackle Ty Haywood (No. 17 in ESPN 300), running back Jordon Davison (No. 88) and outside linebacker Dawson Merritt (No. 100). Upcoming visitors include top offensive tackle David Sanders Jr. (No. 4) and Micah Debose (No. 71), and cornerback Dijon Lee Jr., No. 24 in the ESPN 300 and a potential class cornerstone as Alabama seeks to rebuild its depleted secondary depth.
Elite recruiting was a staple of Saban’s success across his 17 seasons. Six months into college football’s biggest coaching job, DeBoer is off to a strong start, likely on his way to securing his first top five class with the Crimson Tide.
Jedd Fisch started from scratch when he arrived at Arizona in 2021. Four years later, Brennan, a disciple of Arizona coaching legend Dick Tomey, finds himself in a similar position.
Fisch’s January departure triggered seven decommitments from the Wildcats’ incoming 2024 class, and a flood of players out of the program through the transfer portal. To boot, since Brennan’s Jan. 16 hiring, Arizona has seen leadership changes at athletic director and university president.
In the near term, Brennan, 51, has combated mass upheaval with two dozen incoming transfers for his 2024 roster. But, like Fisch in his three seasons, Brennan will have to find success in high school recruiting. For Brennan, that could prove an uphill climb in 2025 and beyond.
Arizona reaches the middle of June with just three commitments in the 2025 class, led by Spring Valley, California, tight end Kellan Ford, the 20th-ranked recruit at his position per ESPN rankings. The Wildcats’ most recent commitments have come at the quarterback position from in-state commit Luke Haugo and California’s Robert McDaniel, ranked as the No. 52 and No. 54 pocket passers in the 2025 class, respectively.
Up ahead, Brennan has pointed to the potential new recruiting footprint that will open up for the Wildcats as they join the Big 12 later this year.
“Now knowing that we’re going to be going to Texas and Oklahoma and Florida, that opens up some other areas where we know there’s a lot of talented football players,” he told reporters last month. “So that pushes us out a little bit more across the country.”
Perhaps it won’t be until the 2026 cycle that Brennan’s complete recruiting vision comes into frame. As things stand, it’s going to be a challenging road for Brennan and the Wildcats in 2025.
On paper, it’s all set up for Fritz to succeed with the Cougars on the recruiting trail.
The former Tulane coach has Texas ties, a track record of doing more with less and a history of developing lower-ranked prospects into stars. Houston offers updated facilities, a Power 4 conference alignment and — never to be overlooked — a home within one of the most concentrated areas of high school football talent in the nation.
The Cougars picked up the centerpiece of their 2025 class last month with a commitment from Missouri City, Texas, quarterback Austin Carlisle. Undersized at 5-foot-10, Carlisle threw for 3,115 yards and 35 touchdowns as a junior at Ridge Point High School last fall and ranks No. 6 among the dual-threat quarterbacks in his class.
Along with Carlisle, Houston has pledges from four other high three-star prospects in 2025, led by in-state recruits Travis Buhake (No. 44 DT per ESPN) and Zaylen Cormier (No. 60 ATH).
The Cougars have a busy slate of official visits in the coming weeks. ESPN 300 cornerback Micah Strickland of Brownsboro, Texas, a potential class-changer who holds interest from fellow in-state rivals Baylor, TCU and Texas Tech. The 6-foot, 175-pound defensive back is set to be on campus with the Cougars this weekend.
Cignetti waited only minutes into his opening news conference in Bloomington to offer his straightforward recruiting pitch with the Hoosiers.
“It’s pretty simple — I win,” he said. “Google me.”
Indeed, Cignetti’s 52-9 record across five seasons at James Madison speaks for itself. Now, can he do it in charge of a Big Ten minnow that’s recorded back-to-back winning seasons just once since the mid-1990s?
Cignetti offered early signs of recruiting promise with the 38-man signing class — 16 high school signees and 22 transfers — he inked weeks into the new job, complete with four-star signees Jah Jah Boyd (No. 30 ATH) and Josh Philostin (No. 40). A boosted NIL program should help the Hoosiers, too. The 10 prospects already committed in Indiana’s upcoming class indicate that Cignetti’s momentum has carried into 2025.
With four-star wide receiver LeBron Bond (Norfolk, Virginia — No. 42 WR) and three-star safety Byron Baldwin (Baltimore — No. 28 S), Cignetti has mined his old James Madison stomping ground for the top commits in his 2025 class. Chris McCorkle, the No. 43 cornerback in the 2025 class, stands as another high three-star prospect set to join the Hoosiers next year.
Cignetti’s latest class took hit Tuesday with the decommitment of three-star Travares Daniels II (No. 32 LB). Indiana will have opportunities to add more in the coming weeks with high three-star wide receiver JonAnthony Hall, the No. 7 overall prospect in the state in 2025, among the top visitors set to be on campus on June 21.
Michigan strung three consecutive wins over Ohio State and crafted an unbeaten national championship roster with only one ESPN top-10 signing class from 2020-23. Such was the developmental recruiting style of the Wolverines under Jim Harbaugh.
Moore’s staff features several new faces, most notably former Ohio State running backs coach Tony Alford and defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, but early results in the 38-year-old Moore’s first recruiting cycle suggest he’s not deviating from the blueprint in Ann Arbor.
Michigan’s success in recent years has started at the line of scrimmage. So it’s no surprise that four of the Wolverines’ six commits to date have come on either side of the line, led by four-star ESPN 300 prospects Nathaniel Marshall (No. 4 DT) and Avery Gach (No. 34 OT). Jaylen Williams, the No. 24 defensive tackle recruit in the nation, became the latest member of Michigan’s 2025 class with his commitment Tuesday afternoon.
The third ESPN 300 in the Wolverines’ upcoming class is four-star quarterback Carter Smith, the No. 14 pocket passer in 2025, who committed to Michigan under Harbaugh last fall. Between Smith and 2024 signee Jadyn Davis, the future of the quarterback position in Ann Arbor is fortified for the time being.
Moore & Co. entered June with only five commitments in the 2025 class, but high-profile additions could be on the horizon.
The Wolverines remain in the running for Bishop Gorman (Las Vegas) offensive linemen S.J. Alofaituli and Douglas Utu. The pair are ranked No. 10 and No. 11 respectively in the ESPN 300 and have each visited Michigan in recent weeks. The Wolverines are also in the hunt for four-star safety Kainoa Winston (No. 42 in ESPN 300) and are expected to host top 100 recruits including safety Jordan Young (No. 33), offensive tackle Andrew Babalola (No. 44), outside linebacker Nathaniel Owusu-Boateng (No. 73) and running back Jordon Davison (No. 88) this month.
Michigan’s current crop isn’t currently ranked in ESPN’s 2025 class rankings. With a productive summer, Moore’s inaugural recruiting class will surely climb.
If Mel Tucker’s recruiting classes in East Lansing were defined by initial flash, followed by thin depth and a lack of development, Smith should offer the Spartans something different in this part of the job.
In scope and in scale of resources, Michigan State is a bigger gig than the one Smith left at Oregon State. But parallels exist between the programs. It was in Corvallis that Smith showed he could win without recruiting top-tier talent, authoring back-to-back top-25 finishes in 2022 and 2023 with only six four-star signees over six seasons in charge of the Beavers. Perhaps he can return the Spartans to the talent development that carried Michigan State under Mark D’Antonio?
Smith has maintained his touch on the West Coast with pledges from quarterback Leo Hannan (No. 29 pocket passer) and offensive guard Drew Nichols (No. 24 OG), a pair of high-three-star prospects from California. He’s also beginning to establish himself in Michigan, too, most prominently with last month’s commitment from four-star rusher Jace Clarizio, the No. 1 in-state running back in 2025. Linebackers Di’Mari Malone (No. 24 ILB) and Charles White (No. 56 OLB) stand among Smith’s other in-state recruiting wins in his initial class.
Smith has pulled heavily from the transfer pool with 24 portal additions since his arrival in East Lansing. While challenges will persist competing with the likes of Michigan, Ohio State, Penn State, USC and Oregon in an evolving Big Ten, Smith appears to have his feet under him on the high school recruiting trail.
Lebby established himself as an effective recruiter during his time on Lane Kiffin’s staff at Ole Miss, then at Oklahoma where he helped secure the Sooners’ back-to-back top-10 classes and five-star quarterback Jackson Arnold in the 2023 class.
Since returning to Mississippi with the Bulldogs as a first-time head coach late last year, Lebby has made his claim in prioritizing the talent within the state. And while his inaugural recruiting class has only four players committed to date, Lebby already has a pair of in-state cornerstones and could have bigger additions later this summer.
Mississippi State’s current class is led by ESPN 300 linebacker Tyshun Willis. The four-star defender from Camden, Mississippi, committed to the Bulldogs in late April and ranks 27th among ESPN’s outside linebackers in his class. Alongside Willis is three-star dual-threat quarterback KaMario Taylor of Macon, Mississippi, who gave his pledge to the Bulldogs under the previous coaching staff. Taylor is one of 20 quarterbacks who will compete in next week’s Elite 11 finals.
The Bulldogs remain in the running for in-state ESPN 300 prospects Caleb Cunningham (No. 19), Cortez Thomas (No. 112) and Kevin Oatis (No. 127), with the latter pair slated for official visits later this month. ESPN 300 offensive tackle Dramodd Odoms is also expected to visit Mississippi State in the coming weeks.
Elko built impressive recruiting classes during his time at Duke. Now, the 45-year-old former Aggies defensive coordinator is back in College Station recruiting on one of the sport’s biggest stages.
The relationships Elko formed during his stint on Jimbo Fisher’s staff from 2018-21 have made for a smooth transition back into the insular world of Texas high school recruiting. And the results are promising with eight ESPN 300 prospects committed to Elko’s first class with the Aggies. Since securing early pledges from inside linebacker Kelvion Riggins (No. 171 in ESPN 300), cornerback Deyjohn Pettaway (No. 105) and running back Deondrae Riden (No. 273), Texas A&M has filled out its group of incoming recruits with some of the top prospects in the nation.
The Aggies nabbed an April commitment from four-star quarterback Husan Longstreet, an Elite 11 finalist and the No. 6 pocket passer in his class. Earlier that month, a pledge from four-star defensive tackle Landon Rink (No. 10 DT) gave Elko a foundational piece on the line of scrimmage, and four-star cornerback Adonyss Currie (No. 9 CB), who committed to the Aggies in May, could be the most talented newcomer in the bunch as Texas A&M chases down another top-10 class.
Where Elko’s first class finishes will depend on how the Aggies fare on the trail over the next several months. Texas A&M remains a strong contender for five-star recruits Jonah Williams (No. 1 OLB) and offensive tackle Michael Fasusui (No. 2 OT) and will host a slate of top 100 prospects including ATH Trey McNutt (No. 41 in the ESPN 300), linebackers Noah Mikhail (No. 53) and Riley Pettijohn (No. 63) later this month.
The former Georgia assistant took on one of the most challenging jobs in the Power 4 in late November. In the seven months since, Brown has put his reputation as one of the nation’s top recruiters and his connections in the tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut to work.
The impressive finish Brown crafted in the final weeks of the 2024 cycle has spilled into 2025. Buoyed by a series of high three-star commits, the Orange’s class is up to 21 commits.
Sharlandiin Strange, the No. 42 defensive end in the nation, was the first domino to fall in late January and he remains the top recruit in Syracuse’s incoming class. Alongside Strange, inside linebacker Antoine Deslauriers (No. 15 ILB), cornerbacks Ziyyon Bredell (No. 46 CB) and Javon Lawrence (No. 62) and defensive tackle Haleem Muhammad (No. 45 DT) fill out the top of a promising defensive class forming with the Orange.
On offense, Brown found his centerpiece close to home with Darien Williams, a skilled wide receiver from Syracuse’s Christian Brothers Academy. Julian McFadden, the No. 72 wide receiver in his class, stands as another promising skill position talent head to Syracuse in 2025.
ESPN 300 cornerback Dawayne Galloway, the No. 124 prospect in the 2025 class, will visit Syracuse this weekend and is one of the top prospects the Orange remain in the mix with. Brown is looking to secure the program’s best signing class of the ESPN rankings era (since 2006), topping Dino Baber’s 49th-ranked class in 2017.
As for 2026, Brown already has commitments from ESPN 300 prospects Izayia Williams (No. 41) and Demetres Samuel (No. 82).
Under Chip Kelly, the Bruins made a gradual, then swift move away from high school recruiting, with only 26 high school signees arriving on campus over Kelly’s final two complete classes.
Since taking over in February, Foster, a former UCLA running back and first-time head coach, has shifted the paradigm back, in the direction of the days of Jim Mora, when the Bruins landed four top-20 recruiting classes from 2013-17.
The window into Foster’s impact begins at the top of UCLA’s incoming class and the program’s lone ESPN 300 commit in 2025. With Madden Iamaleava‘s commitment on May 25, the Bruins secured the nation’s No. 7 pocket passer, the No. 83 overall recruit in the country and foundational piece for a transitional recruiting class under revamped approach to recruiting.
Clear, as well, from Foster’s early months on the trail is a renewed commitment to recruiting the state of California. Of the Bruins’ nine commits to date, six come from within the state, headlined by high-three-star running back Karson Cox (No. 33 RB), offensive tackle Garrison Blank (No. 55 OT) and outside linebacker Weston Port (No. 50 OLB).
In recruiting circles, early credit for UCLA’s hot run on the recruiting trail has gone to Foster and a recruiting team headed up by director of player personnel Stacey Ford, along with assistant general manager Chris Carter and director of player performance Keith Belton.
The Bruins face a stiff challenge jumping into the Big Ten in a state of transition and will only boost their recruiting by proving they can win in the new conference. But with Foster at the helm, UCLA has a direction on the high school recruiting front that’s been missing for some time.
As Fisch made clear while he constructed one of the nation’s most promising up-and-coming programs at Arizona, Washington’s first-year coach knows how he wants to build as the Huskies dive into the Big Ten fresh off a national title game appearance.
“I want to build [our roster] through high school recruiting,” he told reporters in February. “In order to do that, you have to have a little bit of patience and know that you have to play some young players and deal with some mistakes.”
The flow of former Arizona transfers and commits to the Huskies has been steady since Fisch’s arrival. But patience might be required in order for Washington to assemble the caliber of recruiting class Fisch expects to land in Seattle, where the Huskies have not secured a top-20 class since the 2020 cycle.
Washington hits mid-June with five players committed to its 2025 class. The most prominent name in that group arrived in April with four-star IMG academy wide receiver Raiden Vines-Bright, No. 45 in ESPN’s wide receivers rankings for the 2025 class.
Elsewhere in his inaugural class, Fisch has plucked high-three star offensive tackle Jake Flores (No. 46 OT), quarterback Dash Beierly (No. 27 pocket passer) and ATH Julian McMahan (No. 59 ATH) from California.
Another quarterback commit, three-star Treston McMillan (No. 30 pocket passer), comes from Hawaii’s Mililani High School, the same program that produced former UCF quarterback McKenzie Milton and Oregon transfer passer Dillon Gabriel.
It has been a slow start on the high school recruiting trail for Fisch, whose top class at Arizona reached No. 25 in ESPN’s team rankings in 2022. However, the Huskies’ class could heat up this summer with Washington linked with a handful of ESPN 300 prospects, including offensive guard Douglas Utu (No. 11) and Dijon Lee Jr. (No. 24), who visited late last month. In-state outside linebacker Zaydrius Rainey-Sale (No. 201) is scheduled for an official visit on June 21.
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Departing Buckeyes expect Sayin to be next QB1
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5 hours agoon
March 19, 2025By
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Adam RittenbergMar 19, 2025, 01:44 PM ET
Close- College football reporter; joined ESPN in 2008. Graduate of Northwestern University.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — At the NFL scouting combine last month in Indianapolis, Ohio State‘s draft hopefuls talked about Julian Sayin as the likely choice to be the team’s next starting quarterback.
“Julian’s that guy, to be honest with you,” cornerback Denzel Burke told reporters.
“Now it’s his time,” added quarterback Will Howard, the man Sayin and two others will try to replace for the defending national champions.
But Sayin isn’t viewing the starting job as his quite yet. The redshirt freshman is focused on spring practice, which kicked off Monday, and operating in a quarterback room that has been reduced by Howard’s exit and the transfers of Devin Brown (Cal) and Air Noland (South Carolina). Junior Lincoln Kienholz and freshman Tavien St. Clair, a midyear enrollee, were the other two quarterbacks practicing Wednesday.
“You have to block out the noise,” said Sayin, who transferred to Ohio State from Alabama after Nick Saban retired in January 2024. “I’m just focusing on spring practice and just getting better.”
Quarterbacks coach Billy Fessler said Ohio State is “a long way away” from even discussing the closeness of the competition. Fessler, promoted to quarterbacks coach after serving as an offensive analyst last season, is evaluating how the three quarterbacks handle more practice reps, and areas such as consistency and toughness.
He’s confident any of the three can handle being Ohio State’s starting quarterback and the magnitude the job brings, even though none have the experience Howard brought in when he transferred from Kansas State.
“A lot of that was done in the recruitment process,” Fessler said. “I’m confident all three of them could be the guy. Those guys already check that box. So now it’s just a matter of who goes out and wins the job. And again, we are so far away from that point.”
Sayin, ESPN’s No. 9 recruit in the 2024 class, has been praised for a lightning-quick release. He appeared in four games last season, completing 5 of 12 passes for 84 yards and a touchdown.
“We continue to work to build that arm strength, to strengthen his core, to work rotationally, because he is such a rotational thrower, to be able to maximize his movements, both between his lower half and his upper hats, so you can get that ball out with velocity and be successful,” Fessler said. “So he definitely has a quick release, but there’s so much more to playing the position.”
Sayin added about 10 pounds during the offseason and checks in at 203 for spring practice. He’s working to master both on-field skills and the intangible elements, where Howard thrived, saying, “There’s a lot that comes to being a quarterback here besides what you do on the field.”
Kienholz, a three-star recruit, saw the field in 2023, mostly in a Cotton Bowl loss to Missouri, where he completed 6 of 17 pass attempts. He also added weight in the winter, going from around 185 pounds to 207.
“The past few years, I’ve had older guys in front of me and just getting to learn from them on how to be a leader and how to take control,” he said. “Now I’m the oldest guy in the room, so I feel that now, and I kind of feel more confident.”
Buckeyes coach Ryan Day has challenged the quarterbacks to be the hardest workers on the team, and to sustain that ethic.
“I know every single one of them saw that quote by Coach Day, which is pretty awesome,” Fessler said. “It’s so real. It’s who we have to be — the toughest guys in the building, and the hardest-working guys in the building.”
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Defense Department pulls Jackie Robinson story
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5 hours agoon
March 19, 2025By
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The Department of Defense deleted a story on its website that highlighted Jackie Robinson’s military service, with the original URL redirecting to one that added the letters “dei” in front of “sports-heroes.”
The scrubbing of the page followed a Feb. 27 memo from the Pentagon that called for a “digital content refresh” that would “remove and archive DoD news articles, photos, and videos promoting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI).”
The Department of Defense did not respond to requests for comment by ESPN.
“We are aware and looking into it,” an MLB spokesperson said.
Robinson, who served as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army during World War II, broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947 when he debuted for the Brooklyn Dodgers. One of the most integral figures in American sports history, Robinson won the National League MVP and Rookie of the Year awards during a 10-year career that led to a first-ballot induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
The deleted story was part of the Department of Defense’s “Sports Heroes Who Served” series. Other stories, including one on Robinson’s teammate Pee-Wee Reese that references his acceptance of Robinson amid racial tensions in his first season, remain on the site.
Robinson was drafted into military service in 1942 and eventually joined the 761st Tank Battalion, also known as the Black Panthers. He was court-martialed in July 1944 after he refused an order by a driver to move to the back of an Army bus he had boarded. Robinson was acquitted and coached Army athletics teams until his honorable discharge in November 1944.
Robinson, who died in 1972, remains an ever-present figure in MLB, with his No. 42 permanently retired in 1997. On April 15 every year, the league celebrates Jackie Robinson Day, honoring the date of his debut with the Dodgers by having every player in the majors wear his jersey number. Last year, Rachel Robinson, Jackie’s widow, who is 102 years old, attended the April 15 game between the New York Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates at Citi Field.
Martin Luther King Jr. said Robinson’s trailblazing efforts in baseball made his own success possible, and Robinson joined King on the front lines of the Civil Rights Movement.
“The life of Jackie Robinson represents America at its best,” Leonard Coleman, the former National League president and chairman of the Jackie Robinson Foundation, told ESPN. “Removing an icon and Presidential Medal of Freedom and Congressional Gold Medal recipient from government websites represents America at its worst.”
The removal of Robinson’s story reflects other efforts by the Pentagon to follow a series of executive orders by President Donald Trump to purge DEI from the federal government. A story on Ira Hayes, a Native American who was one of the Marines to raise the American flag at Iwo Jima, was removed with a URL relabeled with “dei,” according to The Washington Post. Other stories about Navajo code talkers, who were lauded for their bravery covertly relaying messages in World War I and World War II, were likewise deleted, according to Axios.
The Department of Defense also removed a website that celebrated Charles Calvin Rogers, a Black general who received the Medal of Honor, but it later reestablished the site, according to the Post.
On Feb. 20, Trump announced plans to build statues of Robinson, boxing icon Muhammad Ali and NBA star Kobe Bryant in the National Garden of American Heroes, a sculpture park he proposed during his first administration.
ESPN’s Jeff Passan and William Weinbaum contributed to this report.
Sports
On Dodgers’ Japan trip, Shohei Ohtani is everywhere and nowhere
Published
7 hours agoon
March 19, 2025By
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Tim KeownMar 18, 2025, 05:29 PM ET
Close- Senior Writer for ESPN The Magazine
- Columnist for ESPN.com
- Author of five books (3 NYT best-sellers)
TOKYO — I have seen an image of Shohei Ohtani, wearing jeans and a white T-shirt, gazing out from a vending machine while standing in a field of green tea leaves, a bottle of Ito En iced tea in his left hand, and I have seen it roughly 4 million times. I have seen Ohtani — two Ohtanis, presumably both the same legendarily indulgent sleeper — sitting on a Sleeptech mattress pad. One Ohtani wears a short-sleeved shirt and holds a baseball bat like a right-handed hitter, the other wears a long-sleeved shirt but holds no bat. Both Ohtanis, whose eyes seem to follow me from the wall of the Tokyo Dome, wear the same expression, which is the same expression found in the field of tea, which can only be described as the look of a man who is dreaming of getting back in the batting cage.
Electronic-billboard Ohtani has looked down upon me from three different directions above the famous Shibuya Crossing, the busiest pedestrian intersection in the world, representing New Balance, DIP (a human resources and recruitment firm that stands for Dreams, Ideas, Passion) and a men’s fragrance called Kosé. He’s 100 feet tall on the side of a building in Shinjuku, wearing the same look next to a couple of Seiko watches. There are many Ohtanis, and so many of them bear the exact same look that it seems plausible that it is one stock image reconstituted to serve an endless number of purposes.
Convenience store Ohtani is draped on a banner across the front of nearly every FamilyMart store, promoting the MLB World Tour: Tokyo Series while holding up onigiri (a Japanese rice ball) and probably wondering how long this is going to take.
I have seen television Ohtani, wearing an apron, prepare and eat a bowl of ramen — chopping his own onion — on a commercial selling something food related that has blurred into all the others. Relaxed yet precise, it is some of his best work. I have seen him standing on a beach kicking a soccer ball for the green tea people, smiling like he’s unaware he’s being filmed. I have seen him morph from Dodger Ohtani to samurai Ohtani on a spot for Fortnite, and it’s hard to tell which one is more imposing. Television Ohtani is an unspoken presence on an ad for T-shirts featuring an artist’s image of his dog, Decoy. (Someone out there, it would seem, is intent on pushing the bounds of fame.)
Television Ohtani is not to be confused with taxi TV Ohtani, who seems to run on an endless backseat loop. On the first day the teams worked out in Tokyo, a massive screen in front of the Tokyo Dome played a mashup of commercials starring Ohtani interspersed with some promotional spots for the series, and a long line of people stood next to it, pointing their phones at the screen.
“Shohei’s impact in Japan is impossible to overstate,” Dodgers president Andrew Friedman says. “We thought we understood it, but until you see it and live it, you can’t fully grasp it.”
Ohtani carries himself like he’s aware that every eye in every room is hyperfocused on him, and him alone. Here, in his home country, is where that truth exceeds the bounds of exaggeration. He has existed here for seven years as nothing more than a figure on a screen — many, many screens — and yet his presence is never more than a street corner away. Baseball fans plan their summer days around Dodgers games, most of which start in the late morning. It feels like more fame than any one human seems capable of containing.
“Every time I go to Japan,” Friedman says, “I think, ‘Well, Shohei, I didn’t miss you at all. I see you everywhere.'”
Ohtani’s mother, Kayoko, handles his business dealings in Japan, and she is clearly killing it. The word is he is judicious with his choices for endorsement deals, but it’s hard to imagine he’s turning much down.
All of it emphasizes Ohtani’s value, not just to himself but to baseball in general and the Dodgers in particular. For six days, Tokyo was one massive ATM. MLB set up a 30,000-square-foot store at the Tokyo Dome to sell Dodgers and Cubs merchandise, everything from logo-printed cookies to Ohtani towels, and it was 10 deep just to get close enough to check the size on an Ohtani jersey. (You could have parked your car in front of the Cubs gear.) Topps put together a remarkably cool four-story baseball card exhibit in Shibuya, right around the corner from the three looming Ohtanis. It included two donations from Ohtani: the base he stole to complete his 50/50 season last year, and a bat he used during the World Series. His deal with Topps netted roughly $7 million for the company last season alone, a company source said, even though card collecting is relatively new in Japan. Stamp rallies, however, are tried-and-true crowd-pleasers, so Topps made sure to include one in the exhibit.
Japan Airlines has an Ohtani-themed plane, his face in triplicate on both sides of the fuselage, and travel agencies throughout Japan operate tours for fans to travel to Los Angeles to watch Ohtani play. Concession stands and signage at Dodger Stadium look vastly different than they did two seasons ago. And Ohtani’s estimated $65 million in annual endorsement income in 2024 — the most of any baseball player, and about $58 million more than the second-place player, Bryce Harper — made it much more palatable for him to defer nearly all of his $700 million contract, which is partly responsible for Friedman’s ability to spend whatever he wants (more than $300 million this season) on whomever he wants.
Ohtani’s fame is such that it can be imprisoning. He has a running feud with Fuji TV in Japan after it flew a drone over the house he bought in Los Angeles and aired the footage. He refused an interview with the network after the Dodgers won the World Series. But rarely has his fame been so stark and unforgiving as it was when the Dodgers’ plane arrived at Haneda Airport on March 13. Roughly 1,000 Japanese fans crowded outside customs to get a glimpse of Ohtani, but the airport had installed white walls that served as a tunnel to separate the players from the public, leaving Ohtani’s fans to settle with breathing the same air.
“It’s too bad, but it’s a security issue,” says Atsushi Ihara, an executive and former director of Nippon Professional Baseball. “If Ohtani walked out of his hotel and down the street, it would end up a police matter.”
The scene in and around the Tokyo Dome for the four exhibition games and the two regular-season games is probably best described as controlled, civil mayhem. Four hours before the first pitch on Opening Day, the crowds were so thick in the shopping areas outside the ballpark that it was difficult to move, which was fine with most people since they were happy to stand in clumps and raise their phones to take videos of the latest Ohtani commercial playing on the massive screens all around them.
(Inside the Dodgers’ clubhouse, a space with all the charm of a middle school locker room, the most prominent feature was a smoking capsule that resembled a phone booth and included a bull’s-eye on the wall showing smokers where to aim for maximum ventilation. No Dodgers appeared to be interested in using it.)
Before every pitch to Ohtani, it felt as if the entire building held its breath before releasing it in one massive exhale. The result was immaterial — foul ball, swing and a miss, take — the response was the same. And when Ohtani hit a homer in his second plate appearance in Tokyo, sending the ball halfway up the bleachers in right against the Tokyo Giants, a group of moms with their tiny daughters, all wearing Ohtani jerseys, danced in the concourse behind the lower deck.
After the game, Giants manager Shinnosuke Abe was asked if he had a chance to speak with Ohtani. “Yes,” he said. “I saw him in the batting cage.” He paused for a moment, as if deciding whether to plow forward. “Some people might not like this,” he said, “but I asked if I could get a picture with him.”
There were five Japanese players in the Tokyo Series, but it was sometimes hard to tell. Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto turns up on the occasional train station advertisement for an energy drink that sources on the ground say was initially targeted toward Japan’s middle-aged salarymen and their rigorous schedules. Yamamoto’s task, along with sidekick Ichiro Suzuki, is apparently to recruit the younger Japanese consumer to experience the joys of concentrated caffeine.
But really, there is Ohtani, always Ohtani and seemingly only Ohtani. “It’s hard to imagine him being more famous than he is in America,” Dodgers rookie reliever Jack Dreyer says, “but that’s certainly the case.” In Ohtani’s home prefecture of Iwate, in the far northeastern section of Honshu, I passed a gas station with a row of tire racks covered by tarps emblazoned with Ohtani’s photo. A sign nearby declared, “More than 300,000 tires sold.” It was unclear whether the seller was Ohtani or the station.
“What he is achieving and what he’s already achieved is something out of a comic book,” Ihara says. “Like a comic book superhero, you would think that nobody could do such things in real life. He’s showing us that there’s no limits for us as human beings, and that’s the inspiration that he is continuously providing for us.”
Ohtani played four games in Tokyo, two that counted and two that didn’t, a distinction that didn’t seem to matter. He was here, in the flesh, playing baseball in Japan for the first time in eight seasons, and he provided enough memories — his booming homer in the fifth inning Wednesday is the first that comes to mind — to remind everyone why they came. And then he headed back to his new life, back to being an image on a screen or a vending machine or above a convenience store, back to being nowhere and everywhere, somehow both at once.
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