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Quarterback Darian Mensah, the top-rated player in ESPN’s transfer portal rankings, has committed to Duke, he told ESPN on Wednesday.

Mensah is a redshirt freshman who will have three years remaining. He entered the portal in recent days after leading Tulane to the AAC title game in his first year as the starter.

It marks a distinct transfer portal statement for Duke, which saw starting quarterback Maalik Murphy transfer out after a 9-3 season. Mensah was one of the country’s most sought-after players, and he shut down his recruitment after visiting Duke’s campus Tuesday.

Mensah shined for the Green Wave in 2023, throwing for 2,723 yards and 22 touchdowns while completing 65.9% of his passes. He led the American Athletic Conference in completion percentage and efficiency, leading Tulane to a 9-4 mark.

Mensah said he hung out with Duke’s offensive line during his visit Tuesday night and came away impressed by the group. He also went to Duke’s basketball game at Cameron Indoor Stadium that night.

Mensah said Duke coach Manny Diaz has made a strong impression in a short period of time.

“He gets you going; he’s legit,” Mensah said. “They have a legit defensive line. He’ll take this team as far as we want to go.”

Mensah’s rise proved to be one of the most unexpected star turns in college football. He redshirted in 2023 and entered Tulane’s fall camp projected as the No. 3 quarterback behind Oregon transfer Ty Thompson and veteran Kai Horton.

Mensah won the job during camp and kept it, leading Tulane to an eight-game winning streak that ended Nov. 8 in a loss to Memphis. Tulane lost the AAC championship game to Army the following week.

He joins a Duke team that also went 9-3 during the regular season and will play Ole Miss in the Gator Bowl. (Mensah will not be eligible for the bowl game.)

He said the allure of a Duke degree also was a factor in his decision.

“It’s a prestigious university, and a great education is also important to me,” Mensah said. “It’s just a family out here. I wanted to be part of that.”

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QB Mendoza entering portal after strong Cal year

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QB Mendoza entering portal after strong Cal year

Cal quarterback Fernando Mendoza is entering the NCAA transfer portal, he announced on social media Wednesday.

The 6-foot-5, 225-pound redshirt sophomore is expected to be one of the most coveted quarterbacks in the portal. He has two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Mendoza addressed his decision in a post on X, writing, “for the sake of my football future this is the decision I have reached,” and thanking his teammates and coaches, among others.

Miami is expected to be in the market for a transfer quarterback after Heisman Trophy finalist Cam Ward moves on to the NFL, but Mendoza also has ties to Indiana. His younger brother, Alberto, is a freshman backup quarterback for the Hoosiers. Indiana is also expected to bring in a transfer as the successor to senior starter Kurtis Rourke.

Mendoza was the third-leading passer in the ACC this season with 3,004 passing yards on 68.7% passing, 18 total touchdowns and 6 interceptions over 11 games. He has made 19 starts over the past two seasons.

The Miami native was a three-star recruit in the Class of 2022 and initially committed to play in the Ivy League at Yale before Cal extended a late offer. Mendoza redshirted during his first season in the program and has developed into one of the top young passers in college football.

This season, Mendoza threw for 233 yards and two touchdowns in a 21-14 road win at Auburn and put up 285 passing yards and two touchdown passes in a 39-38 loss to then-No. 8 Miami. In his final game with the Bears, he led a 98-yard, game-winning touchdown drive in a 24-21 victory over rival Stanford.

Cal went 6-6 in its first season as a member of the ACC and will face No. 24 UNLV in the Art of Sport LA Bowl on Dec. 18.

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U-M CB Johnson, No. 2 prospect, to enter draft

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U-M CB Johnson, No. 2 prospect, to enter draft

Michigan Wolverines junior cornerback Will Johnson has declared for the NFL draft, he announced on social media Wednesday.

Johnson is the No. 2 prospect in ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper’s latest Big Board rankings.

Johnson played in only six games this year because of a foot injury but still returned interceptions for touchdowns in wins over Fresno State and USC.

Michigan defensive tackle Mason Graham also declared for the draft this week. He’s projected to be a high first-round pick as well.

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Bill would make flag planting at Ohio St. a felony

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Bill would make flag planting at Ohio St. a felony

If an Ohio lawmaker gets his way, teams attempting to plant their flags in the middle of Ohio Stadium during Ohio State games will be dealing with more than just pepper spray.

Ohio state Rep. Josh Williams introduced a bill Tuesday that would classify flag planting at Ohio Stadium around Buckeyes football games as a felony.

The O.H.I.O. Sportsmanship Act, authored by Williams, comes in response to Michigan‘s attempt to plant its flag after a Nov. 30 win at Ohio State, which set off a brawl between the teams. Police employed pepper spray to separate players and other team personnel. Ohio State University police are investigating the incident, which involved multiple law enforcement agencies and resulted in an injury to an officer.

According to Williams’ bill, “No person shall plant a flagpole with a flag attached to it in the center of the football field at Ohio stadium of the Ohio State University on the day of a college football competition, whether before, during, or after the competition. Whoever violates this section is guilty of a felony of the fifth degree.”

A fifth-degree felony is the least severe in Ohio and carries a penalty of six to 12 months in prison, up to a $2,500 fine and up to five years’ probation.

Williams, a Republican, represents Ohio’s 41st district, near Toledo and the Ohio-Michigan border, where many Buckeyes and Wolverines fans intermingle. He told ESPN that the Ohio Stadium incident, along with several other college football scuffles around flag planting during rivalry weekend, caught his attention.

“After it happened at five separate games during Rivalry Week, and seeing that there was no immediate movement, I thought it was necessary to send a signal to our institutions of higher learning that they need to come up with policies to prevent this in the future so it doesn’t risk harm to our law enforcement officers or student-athletes or fans,” Williams told ESPN. “[Ohio State-Michigan] is the No. 1 rivalry in all of sports, not just college sports, and to see it devolve all the way down to this level, it just disrespects not only the institution, but the college programs themselves. More importantly, it provided a true safety hazard.”

Ohio’s two-year General Assembly closes next week, so the O.H.I.O. Sportsmanship Act likely will need to be reintroduced in the next cycle. Williams plans to do that if he doesn’t see further steps from the Big Ten, NCAA or individual schools to curb flag planting, describing the bill as “a shot across the bow, putting our institutions on notice.”

NCAA president Charlie Baker told ESPN’s Dan Murphy that there have been conversations in committees and by conferences about flag planting.

“I think the conferences are pretty serious, and so are the schools about taking a look at how they might create a more aggressive approach to dealing with that,” Baker said Wednesday.

The Big Ten issued $100,000 fines to both Ohio State and Michigan following the incident, but no other individual discipline has been specified. In reference to the fines, Williams said: “That’s pennies, that’s nothing.”

Michigan coach Sherrone Moore also mimicked flag planting while appearing on the videoboard at the school’s men’s basketball game Saturday at home against Iowa as the crowd roared.

“That indicates that that institution is not taking this incident seriously,” Williams said. “We’re bragging about it, and it’s going to continue in the future, and that’s going to cause increased risk, increased security costs and potential for violence, as a result of a college football game.”

Baker told Murphy that the safety of athletes is a major priority for the NCAA, which wants to have policies that discourage such incidents in the championships it oversees, adding that he hoped the rules would be similar across the board.

Williams said a criminal penalty was needed because those who travel across state lines and violate university policies likely would avoid any significant repercussions. Williams, who said he coached youth sports for 15 years, is a strong advocate of sportsmanship and noted that the bill would apply to Ohio State players planting flags after home games.

Williams earned his law degree from the University of Toledo. He described himself as “a Buckeye, through and through,” while adding that his family has a mix of Ohio State and Michigan fans.

“We have a great rivalry. I enjoy the rivalry, win, lose or draw,” Williams said. “That was a tight game. It wasn’t a blowout victory. You know, Michigan should have taken its victory, and we take our loss on the chin and live to fight another day, concentrate on the next week and the next year, the next recruitment period. But instead, we have to have this conversation.”

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