Dave Wilson is a college football reporter. He previously worked at The Dallas Morning News, San Diego Union-Tribune and Las Vegas Sun.
Texas safety Andrew Mukuba lined up 7 yards off Arizona State receiver Melquan Stovall in overtime of the Longhorns’ College Football Playoff game at the Chick fil-A Peach Bowl. He read the play, accelerated in front of Sam Leavitt‘s pass, intercepted it and sent the Longhorns into hysteria — and the semifinals.
It was a long way to come for the Austin native who returned to Texas after three years at Clemson, becoming a hero in his hometown with a signature play that sealed the Longhorns’ road to Friday’s Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic against Ohio State.
“It feels like this whole thing was scripted for me,” Mukuba said after the game. “Coming home, playing my best ball, helping the team.”
If Mukuba’s trainer, Bernard “Bam” Blake, was actually going to write this movie, he says he already has the first page in his head.
“It would start with a kid who is going without electricity in Zimbabwe, then comes over here searching for a better life and a better opportunity — with an understanding that football is soccer and not what we call football,” Blake said.
That’s not fiction. That’s Mukuba’s story, beginning when he was nine years old, when he, his parents and seven siblings left Zimbabwe for Austin. His mother, Tshala Bilolo, got a job as a hotel housekeeper downtown, right across the street from the UT campus. After the kids started school, Andrew quickly made an impression on the playground.
In P.E., the class wanted to play football, and players lined up to pick teams. Nobody picked the new kid.
“I was like, ‘American football, are you familiar with it? Can you play?'” said Shannon Crenshaw, Mukuba’s fifth-grade P.E. teacher. “He was like, not really, but I will.”
Crenshaw took Mukuba off to the side to explain basic concepts. “Drew’s like 10 years old, and I throw the ball as far as I can,” Crenshaw said. “By the time the ball lands and someone catches it, he just form-tackles the kid.”
He does it again, and Mukuba does it again. Then, Crenshaw wants to see what else he’s got, and explains how to play wide receiver. He tells Mukuba to go long, and again, throws it as far as he can.
“I’m like, there’s no way he’s fixin’ to catch this ball,” Crenshaw said. “It was like Michael Irvin. He caught it. Within five minutes, I’m like, ‘You know what? I need to talk to you, Andrew.'”
Crenshaw and his wife ran a youth football organization, the Austin Steelers, and in Mukuba’s first five minutes on the playground, he got his first recruiting pitch. He became a Steeler.
Crenshaw knew how hard Mukuba’s mom worked. He knew his mom spoke almost solely Swahili. He knew the family was crammed into an apartment across from the school. He told Mukuba that football was going to change his life.
Mukuba’s mother was apprehensive about her son getting into football, but he fell in love with it. She hardly got to see him grow into a star at Austin’s LBJ High School — she worked so much that she only got to go to one of his games. But he became one of the country’s most-recruited defensive backs, with about 40 offers. His senior year, 2020, he couldn’t visit campus, but his brother, Vincent, who’s six years older, was a huge Clemson fan.
Mukuba wanted to stay close to home, but said he wanted to stay out of the tension of the coaching situation at Texas, where he was convinced Tom Herman was going to be fired. Meanwhile, he found a strong bond with then-Clemson defensive coordinator Brent Venables.
So he made a leap and went to Clemson, a place he’d never visited, and became the first player Dabo Swinney signed without meeting in person. Then, he became the first true freshman to start at safety for the Tigers since they started keeping records in 1972, and he became a freshman All-American.
“Anything he’s gone through bad growing up or seen family members go through, he’s allowed that to fuel him and develop him instead of destroy or define him,” Venables said during Mukuba’s first season at Clemson. “How many times he’s said thank you and gone out of his way to say, ‘Thank you, coach … thank you for bringing me. Thank you for believing in me.’ Like who does that when they’re 18 years old? It’s a breath of fresh air.”
The distance was hard. Venables left for Oklahoma. Mukuba suffered injuries in his sophomore and junior seasons, and his production dipped. He felt like he wasn’t as good a fit in Clemson’s new defense and felt he wasn’t progressing. He was right about Herman, who was fired after the 2020 season, and connected with his replacement, Steve Sarkisian. So Mukuba returned to Austin.
This year, he has found his swagger again. His big hits, like one on Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton in the SEC championship game — a game in which he had 11 tackles and a forced fumble — have made highlights. His interception against Arizona State was his fifth of the season, tied for the SEC lead with teammate Jahdae Barron, the Thorpe Award winner, and South Carolina’s Jalon Kilgore, after having one in 31 starts at Clemson.
“I feel like schematically, [Texas is] a good fit for me, just having the opportunity to play that true safety position,” Mukuba said this week. “I feel like that was my biggest thing, just getting comfortable and playing football the right way. How I feel like I’m playing now reminds me of my high school days where I’m just flying around and having fun.”
Part of his storybook season is fulfilling another dream of coming home and reuniting with fellow Texas defensive backs Barron and Michael Taaffe, friends from the Austin area he’s known for more than a decade. During the 2020 COVID shutdown, the three trained together with Blake for more than 100 straight days at parks or football fields for two hours a day, dreaming of days like Friday, when they could all start together for the Longhorns in a game that meant something.
None of them expected to be at Texas initially. Barron signed with Baylor until Matt Rhule left for the Carolina Panthers job, and he received a release, with Herman’s replacement, Sarkisian, and his new staff making Barron a priority. Taaffe initially committed to Rice before deciding to walk on at Texas. And then Mukuba arrived.
“Now seeing it coming to reality, it’s even crazier,” Mukuba said. “Us doing it this big, with Jahdae winning the Thorpe and playing some of his best football, and Taaffe, an All-American, playing some of his best football. It’s literally everything we’ve talked about.” And now Mukuba is an NFL draft darling.
“Coming into the season, he was seen as a late-round hopeful because of the injuries and inconsistencies,” ESPN draft analyst Jordan Reid said. “Texas is utilizing him in a variety of roles at safety. I’ve been really impressed with how much faster he’s reacted to offensive schemes this year. His ball production is a direct reflection of that. Scouts that I have talked to said he could go as early as the late second or early third round.”
In what could be his final college game, facing all-everything freshman wide receiver Jeremiah Smith and the Buckeyes’ prolific offense, Mukuba will have another chance to show how far he’s come.
“Football is an opportunity for Drew to change the dynamic of his family, and I think he weighs that on his shoulders, not as a pressure, a weight, but as a thing of pride,” Blake said.
Longhorns quarterback Quinn Ewers said Wednesday that one of the bonding experiences of this Texas team has been how they all share their stories and learn about everyone’s backgrounds and the roads they traveled to Austin. He said Mukuba has one of the most inspirational tales.
“I think he’s made a giant impact, not just on the defense, but the whole team,” Ewers said. “That’s been super special for everybody.”
Crenshaw thinks back to the kid on the playground and beams with pride to the road he’s taken.
“He deserves everything that comes to him,” said Crenshaw. “He’s done everything the right way. He hasn’t done it loudly. I’ve seen him grow, and it is just like growing through the concrete. He is here and his story is far from done.”
It’s a movie that would be hard to believe as a work of fiction. But for Texas and Mukuba, it’s real.
“We’ve got a bigger goal to reach,” Mukuba said of the semifinal matchup. “The story is not over.”
Rushing suffered a right lower leg contusion after he fouled off a pitch from Orioles right-hander Kade Strowd. Rushing was replaced by pinch-hitter Alex Call and then catcher Ben Rortvedt.
Starting catcher Will Smith is not available Saturday because of a right hand contusion.
Manager Dave Roberts said Rushing was in rough shape after the baseball hit the inside of his right knee. The catcher was seen on crutches in the clubhouse after the game.
“It got him pretty good,” Roberts said. “X-rays fortunately were negative. He’s going to get a CT scan tomorrow morning just to kind of dig a little deeper on it. He’s pretty banged up right now. I think until we know more, obviously he’s not going to be in there tomorrow. I guess it’s adding him to the day to day list.”
Roberts said Rortvedt will catch Saturday and the club will call up another catcher.
The Royals shortstop made two defensive plays, on ground balls, in the top half of the sixth inning, then exited before Kansas City took the field in the seventh.
“[It happened] sometime in that inning before we took him out,” Royals manager Matt Quatraro said. “He talked to [Royals head athletic trainer Kyle Turner]. As he sat there, it got worse.”
With the Royals leading 2-1, Witt was replaced in the lineup by Nick Loftin, who played third base while Maikel Garcia shifted to shortstop.
Quatraro offered no prognosis on Witt’s return.
“Right now, we just think it’s back spasms, low back spasms,” Quatraro said. “It locked up pretty good on him.”
ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.
NEW YORK — The New York Yankees never publicly established a target date for Aaron Judge‘s return to right field after he sustained a right flexor strain in late July. For weeks, manager Aaron Boone said he expected Judge to patrol grass again soon — and definitely again in 2025 — but never offered specifics.
Soon ended up being Friday.
Judge started in right field in the Yankees’ 7-1 series-opening loss to the first-place Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on Friday, marking the first time he patrolled grass since July 25. He played all nine innings and did not appear to aggravate his elbow injury. But questions surrounding his ability to throw immediately surfaced as the Blue Jays extended their lead over New York in the American League East standings to four games.
With Cam Schlittler on the mound and the bases loaded with two outs, Nathan Lukes looped a single to right field that one-hopped to Judge in the first inning.
While one run easily scored from third base, Daulton Varsho, the runner at second, had not yet reached third base when Judge fielded the ball. But instead of firing the ball home, Judge made a short throw to second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. at the edge of the outfield grass in front of him. Varsho crossed home plate without a throw, giving Toronto a 3-0 lead en route to its eighth win in 11 games against the Yankees this season.
Asked if he is capable of making that throw — from the middle of right field to home plate — at this juncture, Judge insisted it’s not an issue.
“I wouldn’t be in the outfield if I wasn’t able to make that throw,” Judge said.
Boone said Judge was “in position to make the throw.” When asked why Judge didn’t, Boone did not offer an explanation.
“We’re handling it how we handle it, OK?” Boone said.
Judge was placed on the injured list on July 27 after the flexor strain left him unable to throw a baseball. He was activated after the minimum 10 days to serve as the Yankees’ every-day designated hitter and started a throwing program soon thereafter. He batted .242 with six home runs and an 0.888 OPS in the 27 games at DH after being reinstated and remains the favorite to win his third AL MVP in four seasons with Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh challenging him for the crown.
He went 1-for-3 with a walk on Friday as Blue Jays right-hander Kevin Gausman stifled the Yankees offense over eight scoreless innings. Boone said he initially did not plan on having Judge play the outfield again on Saturday, but a decision would be made after speaking with Judge and Giancarlo Stanton, who had largely replaced Judge in the outfield before returning to his usual designated hitter role on Friday.
“Everything was feeling pretty good,” Judge said. “If you can throw, you gotta get out there.”
In the longer term, Boone said the 33-year-old Judge won’t play right field every day “initially.” Instead, he envisions Judge splitting time between right field and designated hitter, meaning Stanton will continue getting starts on defense to have both his and Judge’s bats in the lineup.
The decision comes with risks ranging from opponents testing Judge’s arm, potentially capitalizing on any reluctance to fire away, to Judge exacerbating the injury and jeopardizing his availability for the remainder of the season with the postseason a month away.
“He’s playing,” Boone said. “He’s in there. He’s in there so he’s good enough to be in there and hopefully it will continue to improve.”
The Yankees are willing to take the gamble because while Stanton remains an elite power hitter, he cannot play the outfield every day and is a defensive liability when he’s out there at this point in his career. Once a plus outfielder, nagging injuries in recent years have forced Stanton to miss substantial time and sapped his athleticism. The combination prompted the Yankees to build their roster with Stanton as their every-day DH the past two seasons.
Stanton, 35, returned to the outfield on Aug. 9, nearly two years after last playing defense. He started 12 games in right field before making three consecutive starts in left field against the Houston Astros this week.
The former National League MVP homered on Friday for the Yankees’ only run and is batting .287 with 19 home runs and an 0.987 OPS in 59 games after spending more than two months on the injured list with tendon injuries in both of his elbows to begin the season.
“There were days where we pushed it a little bit,” Boone said. “There were other days [where we were] going to be disciplined [in] having a day down. So, and I think all and all, it’s gone pretty well. Obviously, he’s performed. I think he’s done a nice job out there and now it gives us that added flexibility now that he’s in the mix out there moving forward.”