
CFB Player Rank: Who should’ve made the list? Who could’ve been ranked higher?
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4 months agoon
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adminESPN’s college football postseason player rank is here, and it’s time to analyze the list.
With the caliber of talent on Ohio State’s roster, it comes as no surprise that the Buckeyes claimed 10% of the spots on this postseason list. The question: Should the Buckeyes have had more players on the list?
As this season showed us, anything is possible over the course of the four-month season. Who was projected to be a standout player this past season and didn’t live up to the hype? Which unranked players should have made the list?
Our college football reporters give their feedback on the postseason top 100 list and take a look at what the selection committee got right and where it went wrong.
(ESPN’s selection committee included Bill Connelly, David Hale, Chris Low, Max Olson, Adam Rittenberg and Paolo Uggetti.)
Jump to a section:
Changes to top 10 | Changes to top 25
Who could rise next season?
Unranked players | Biggest surprises
Who should have made the top 10?
Adam Rittenberg: Bowling Green‘s Harold Fannin Jr., who appears at No. 12, had one of the best seasons for a tight end in college football history. Knock him for playing in the MAC if you’d like, but he lit up Penn State for 137 receiving yards and a touchdown on 11 catches, and then put up similar numbers at Texas A&M (8 catches, 145 yards, 1 TD). Fannin led the FBS in receiving yards with 1,555, well ahead of San José State wide receiver Nick Nash (1,382). He also led the nation in receptions with 117. Penn State’s Tyler Warren has truly unique skills, played in a tougher league and deserved to win the Mackey Award, but Fannin should have been a finalist for both the Mackey Award and the Biletnikoff.
Chris Low: What Xavier Watts has meant to Notre Dame this season, the way he has spearheaded the Irish defense, is hard to describe. He has 13 interceptions over his past two seasons, the most of any FBS player, and has been even better this year than he was a year ago when he won the Bronko Nagurski Award as the best defensive player in the country. Watts is a top-10 player nationally all day long.
Jake Trotter: I don’t know who Caleb Downs would replace in the top 10. But he has been the difference-maker for a defense that, since the Oct. 12 loss at Oregon, ranks No. 1 in a multitude of categories. The Buckeyes have unleashed Downs as a playmaking center fielder from the secondary. And as defensive coordinator Jim Knowles noted, Downs “sees the play before it happens.” The Buckeyes shut down everyone in the playoff. Downs, a unanimous All-American, is a major reason for that.
Mark Schlabach: There might be 10 more talented players than Tennessee running back Dylan Sampson, but he was definitely among the most valuable this season. He set UT single-season records for rushing yards (1,491) and touchdowns (22), earning him SEC Offensive Player of the Year honors. The Vols wouldn’t have reached the College Football Playoff if they had had to rely on their inconsistent passing game.
Ryan McGee: Diego Pavia is the face of modern college football. Vanderbilt won seven games, won a bowl game, beat a top-five team for the first time in 61 tries and was ranked in the Top 25 for the first time in 12 years. And he came from New Mexico State and did all of that I just listed in a stadium that was an active construction zone. I don’t understand why Disney+ hasn’t made a movie about him yet.
Max Olson: You can make a strong case that LSU offensive lineman Will Campbell (No. 23) is one of best and most valuable players in college football, and it wouldn’t be surprising if Campbell becomes a top-10 pick in the NFL Draft in April. The consensus All-American was a dominant force at left tackle throughout his run as a three-year starter for the Tigers.
Kyle Bonagura: Arizona had a tough year, but watching Tetairoa McMillan still felt like was watching an NFL player all season. Put him on a good team — like last season when Arizona was rolling — and he would have been universally celebrated as one of the best players in the country.
What changes would you have made to the top 25?
Rittenberg: I helped craft the list, so not surprisingly I have fewer gripes, but I would have liked to see both Group of 5 pass catchers, Fannin and Nash, a bit higher. I could make a case for another Group of 5 star, Marshall defensive end Mike Green, who led the FBS in sacks with 17 and had 22.5 tackles for loss, three forced fumbles and 15 quarterback hurries. Green had a sack in all but three games and a tackle for loss in all but one.
Low: Ohio State defensive end Jack Sawyer would have been higher than No. 22 after the way he played in helping to steer Ohio State to the national championship. A senior and one of the strongest leaders on the team, Sawyer took his game to another level in the postseason, and the rest of the team followed. As the top interior defensive lineman in the country, Michigan’s Mason Graham belonged solidly in the top 10, and Ole Miss quarterback Jaxson Dart (No. 36) was ranked too low. He led the country in total offense (4,279 passing yards and 495 rushing yards).
Schlabach: I can’t believe we couldn’t fit a few more Ohio State players on the list. There are only 10, and I’m sure we could have squeezed a few more in. Seriously, how did that Buckeyes team lose to Michigan in the regular-season finale?
McGee: I am very much with Adam on Fannin and Nash. If either one of them played for a Power 4 program, or even just east of the Mississippi, everyone would know their names. Then again, I also think that somehow Tyler Warren is still underrated and he checks both of those boxes. He’s the Swiss Army knife of college football.
Olson: I agree with Kyle that McMillan finished too low in these rankings at No. 28, and Jake is right that No. 18 feels a little too low for Downs and the impact he made for the No. 1 defense in college football. But the most egregious problem with this top 100 that we ended up with 16 quarterbacks ranked ahead of Texas’ Quinn Ewers. While I didn’t expect Ewers to lock up a spot in the top 25, putting him all the way down at No. 91 is just straight-up disrespectful.
Bonagura: Bryson Daily broke the FBS touchdowns record for a quarterback with 32, was fourth in the country in rushing and led Army to a school record 12 wins. It would have been completely justified to have him at No. 25, not No. 39.
Which player could jump up in next season’s preseason rank?
Rittenberg: Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love (No. 27) has provided enough highlights, especially during the team’s College Football Playoff run, to bolster a significant national profile entering the 2025 season. I would be surprised if he isn’t in or closer to the top 10, although the fact he shares carries with two other running backs set to return — Jadarian Price and Aneyas Williams — might limit how much he moves up. Quarterback John Mateer finished 37th in our rankings at Washington State, but if he can replicate his production at Oklahoma under the same coordinator (Ben Arbuckle), he will be much closer to the top 10.
Low: Anthony Hill Jr. was one of the country’s most impactful and well-rounded linebackers in 2024 as a true sophomore and an absolute force on a Texas defense that finished third nationally in scoring (15.3 points) and fourth in yards per play allowed (4.4). The 6-foot-3, 235-pound Hill is poised to be a high selection in the 2026 draft, as his best football is ahead of him. That’s even more impressive when you consider how productive he was this season with 113 total tackles, 16.5 tackles for loss, eight sacks and four forced fumbles — all team highs. Hill will easily be one of the top three returning defenders in college football in 2025.
David Hale: The player I loved this season who I think has been woefully underappreciated is Pitt linebacker Kyle Louis. He put up numbers that rivaled any LB in the country, did everything well, and was, at times, a complete game-changer for the Panthers. Unfortunately, after a 7-0 start to the season, Pitt fell off a cliff amid a host of injuries on the offensive side of the ball, losing six straight. While that wasn’t reflective of a cratering of Louis’ game, he tends to be lumped in with the rest of the team as a second-half disappointment. But make no mistake, Louis is a beast, and he’ll be given a chance to build on his fantastic 2024 season with a potentially better supporting cast in 2025.
Trotter: Texas quarterback Arch Manning obviously didn’t crack the top 100 as the backup to our 91st-ranked player, Longhorns quarterback Quinn Ewers. But next year Manning will be the man behind center in Austin. Given his talent, potential and recruiting pedigree, he could jump all the way into the top 10 if he meets lofty expectations.
Schlabach: Can we just start the 2025 preseason rankings with Manning at No. 1? If you had told me back in late September that Alabama receiver Ryan Williams would finish the season at No. 71, I would have laughed. After Williams hauled in six catches for 177 yards with one touchdown in a 41-34 victory against Georgia, he looked like the next great Alabama wideout. But then Williams seemed to hit the freshman wall, and quarterback Jalen Milroe couldn’t figure out a way to get him the ball. If the next Alabama quarterback is a better passer, Williams will finish the 2025 in the top 25.
Paolo Uggetti: Quarterback John Mateer got a big bump from all of us given the season he had at Washington State (over 4,000 all-purpose yards and 44 touchdowns) and he could be bound for an even bigger encore next year on a bigger stage. The sophomore entered the portal after the season finished and soon after committed to Oklahoma. The Sooners needed a sure thing at quarterback heading into next season and Mateer, aided by the hire of West Virginia‘s Ben Arbuckle as offensive coordinator, could shoot up the rankings as the hype around his versatility continues to build.
McGee: When South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers is at his best, there aren’t much better. He is shockingly big in person. If we see the guy we saw from the second half of the Clemson game on the regular, he’ll be part of the national conversation very quickly. But if we get a lot of the guy who was stuck in second gear for most of the Citrus Bowl loss versus Illinois, ranked 65th will feel pretty spot-on.
Olson: I wouldn’t have been shocked if Oregon wide receiver Evan Stewart had declared for the draft, but he’s coming back for another season with the Ducks. Stewart had a big showing against Ohio State (seven catches for 149 yards and a TD) but only one other 100-yard performance on the year, and he missed the Rose Bowl loss with a lower back injury. Tez Johnson and Traeshon Holden going pro should clear the way for Stewart to have a breakout season as Dante Moore‘s No. 1 target.
Bonagura: BYU linebacker Isaiah Glasker was only an honorable mention All-Big 12 player as a sophomore this season. However, BYU had the best defense in the conference and he led the team in tackles (70), tackles for loss (14.5), interceptions (3) and was second in sacks (3.5). He had at least a shared TFL in every game this season. Look out for him next year.
Which unranked player should’ve made the list, and who should they have replaced?
Rittenberg: We were heavy on running backs, so while I would have loved to have seen Kansas‘ Devin Neal and Oregon’s Jordan James make the list, we needed to cut things off at some point. Several defensive linemen just missed the cut — Michigan’s Josaiah Stewart, South Carolina‘s Dylan Stewart and Georgia‘s Mykel Williams. I could have seen one or more sliding in for perhaps Auburn‘s Jarquez Hunter.
Low: We always sleep on the big guys. Western Michigan‘s Addison West was one of the nation’s top offensive guards, even if he didn’t play for a blue-blood program. He has started every game since the 2022 season and didn’t give up a single sack this season. He’s as dominant a run-blocker as he is skilled as a pass-protector. There are six running backs among the final 20 selections on the list. West could replace any one of those.
Trotter: Oklahoma State receiver Brennan Presley didn’t get the love he deserved because he played on the worst team in the Big 12. Presley still had 90 receptions, and with 315 in his career, he broke the Oklahoma State receptions record (the same school that produced Biletnikoff winners James Washington and Justin Blackmon). With a better team (and with far better quarterback play) around him, Presley would’ve been on this list and probably supplanted one of the last receivers to make it.
Schlabach: It’s difficult to figure out why Texas safety Michael Taaffe isn’t on the list. The former walk-on was one of the top three or four safeties in the FBS — and certainly one of the best stories. According to Pro Football Focus, Taaffe’s 91.3 PFF coverage grade led all safeties. He allowed only 12 catches with 78 tackles, two sacks, a forced fumble, fumble recovery and two interceptions. He was the leader of a UT defense that ranked fourth in the FBS in scoring defense, allowing just 15.3 points per game.
Olson: Neal was the one who stood out to me. If you watched the Jayhawks’ all-time leading rusher absolutely destroy Colorado‘s defense in November, you know he’s the real deal. He burned the Buffs for 207 rushing yards, 80 receiving yards and four total TDs and closed out his senior season with a career-best 1,520 yards from scrimmage. Neal was truly a program-changing player for Kansas and just as deserving as the playmakers who grabbed the final spots on the list.
Uggetti: Far be it from me to make a case for a punter, but here I am doing just that. USC’s Eddie Czaplicki was just that good. It’s never a good sign for a team if your punter is getting as much attention as Czaplicki was, but he was the Ray Guy award winner after all. Every time Czaplicki lined up to punt, there was almost no doubt that USC would be able to flip the field and give its defense a leg (pun very much intended) up. And yes, I want to live in a world where the best punter in the country can be celebrated as one of the best 100 players of the year in college football.
What was the biggest surprise from the preseason player rank to postseason?
Hale: There were a number of guys whose talent clearly marks them as top-10 or top-20 players, but because of injuries, didn’t see enough action this season to make the cut, including Michigan’s Will Johnson, Eastern Carolina’s Shevon Revel or Notre Dame’s Benjamin Morrison. Then there were guys who are NFL talent but who didn’t produce big-time numbers this season, including Missouri‘s Luther Burden III, Georgia‘s Mykel Williams or Notre Dame’s Howard Cross III. Then some players who made the list — Ole Miss’ Tre Harris or Arizona State‘s Jordyn Tyson, for example — aren’t ranked nearly as high as they would’ve been had they played a full season. It’s all a good reminder that the best ability is availability.
Trotter: Arizona State running back Cam Skattebo went from unranked to the No. 4 player. The bruising rusher showed why he was one of college football’s top playmakers in the CFP quarterfinal loss to Texas. Against a defense loaded with future pros, Skattebo rushed for 143 yards on 30 carries with two touchdowns while leading the Sun Devils with 99 receiving yards and eight catches. He also tossed a 42-yard touchdown pass, which fueled Arizona State’s fourth-quarter comeback that sent the game to overtime. Skattebo went from relative anonymity to absolute superstar.
Rittenberg: Georgia quarterback Carson Beck went from No. 7 on the preseason list to unranked. He projected as the top draft-eligible quarterback but instead will spend another season in college — with another team in Miami. Beck didn’t have an awful season, but 10 interceptions during a four-game stretch set off alarms. The Tennessee contingent is interesting, too, as preseason No. 1 player James Pearce Jr. was No. 41st, quarterback Nico Iamaleava (No. 92 preseason) didn’t finish in the top 100, while running back Dylan Sampson went from unranked in the preseason to No. 16 after an excellent performance.
Low: Cam Ward was on the plus side of what happened to Beck. In his only season at Miami after transferring from Washington State, Ward vaulted from No. 56 on the preseason list to No. 3. And, yes, it’s hard to believe that he had nine quarterbacks ranked ahead of him back in August. Among them: Cam Rising, Jalon Daniels, Quinn Ewers, Jalen Milroe and Beck. There’s no such thing as a sure thing in the portal, but Ward wound up being about as close as it gets. He put up monster numbers and was one of four finalists for the Heisman Trophy. He set a Miami record with 4,313 passing yards and tied for the FBS lead by accounting for 44 touchdowns.
Schlabach: Along with Beck, Missouri receiver Luther Burden III is proof that sometimes it’s not all about you. Beck was plagued by dropped passes and poor protection. Burden was ranked No. 5 in the preseason, and deservedly so after he finished with 86 catches for 1,212 yards with nine scores in 2023. But Burden wasn’t nearly as productive in 2024, hauling in 61 passes for 676 yards with six scores. Quarterback Brady Cook threw only 11 touchdown passes in 2024, as he was plagued by pressure.
Bonagura: Remember when there was a real conversation about whether Ewers would declare for the 2024 NFL draft? Now, here we are with the 2025 NFL draft upcoming. and it’s debatable whether Ewers should have been on this list at all, and the general consensus is that Texas is better off moving on from him. He is a good player. Texas had a great year. That doesn’t change the perception that he hasn’t lived up to his billing.
Olson: It’s still hard to believe how badly Oklahoma State fell apart during the 2024 season. We had Cowboys running back Ollie Gordon II in the No. 8 spot in the preseason top 100, after putting up more than 2,000 yards from scrimmage as a sophomore for a team that won 10 games and played for a Big 12 title. Gordon finished ninth in the Big 12 in rushing this season (880 yards, 13 TDs) at the end of a brutal 3-9 season.
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Stanley Cup playoffs daily: Who wins Game 7 of Panthers-Maple Leafs?
Published
59 mins agoon
May 18, 2025By
admin
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Multiple Contributors
May 18, 2025, 08:00 AM ET
It all comes down to this for the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Florida Panthers. Sunday’s game marks the conclusion of a wild roller coaster of a series that included two wins to start for Toronto, then three straight for Florida, followed by a hard-fought win in Game 6 by Toronto that provided one more matchup.
Who moves on to face the Carolina Hurricanes in the Eastern Conference finals? Who begins their offseason vacation a bit earlier than they’d hoped?
Read on for a game preview with statistical insights from ESPN Research, a roundtable debate with key players in Game 7 and final score picks, a recap of what went down in Saturday’s game and the three stars of Saturday from Arda Öcal.
Matchup notes
Florida Panthers at Toronto Maple Leafs
Game 7 | 7:30 p.m. ET | TNT
The Maple Leafs have lost six straight Game 7s and are 12-15 all-time in Game 7s. The Panthers are 3-1 all-time in Game 7s, including a win in last year’s Stanley Cup Final.
Auston Matthews‘ first goal in 11 career postseason games against the Panthers came at an important time, technically serving as the game-winner of Game 6. He became the second Maple Leafs captain in history to score the winning goal in a contest when facing elimination, joining Darryl Sittler in 1976.
Teammate Mitch Marner assisted on Matthews’ goal and is the second player in Toronto franchise history with 50 playoff assists — Doug Gilmour has 60.
Joseph Woll had his first career playoff shutout, becoming the first Leafs goaltender to register a shutout when facing elimination since Curtis Joseph in the 2002 Eastern Conference finals.
Florida’s Brad Marchand will appear in his 13th career Game 7, which will be most among active players. He’s the fifth all-time to hit that benchmark, joining Scott Stevens (13), Patrick Roy (13) and his former Bruins teammates Patrice Bergeron (14) and Zdeno Chara (14).
Sergei Bobrovsky has a 2-0 career record in Game 7s, including last year’s Cup finals win over Edmonton. He is looking to join a group of eight goaltenders who have won their first three Game 7s.
Who is the one key player you’ll be watching?
Ryan S. Clark, NHL reporter: Joseph Woll. There are a few reasons here. It starts with the obvious: whether he can replicate what he did in Game 6, or at least carry several elements of that performance over into Game 7. Another reason stems from the conversation around tandem goaltenders, and the need for depth at that position. We’re so used to seeing teams have one primary option in net who’s expected to play every second. But this postseason has shown the value of having at least two — if not three — goalies who can be trusted. Woll getting a Game 7 victory would further emphasize that reality.
Victoria Matiash, NHL analyst: William Nylander. The most productive player for the Leafs this playoff run, Nylander has been scoresheet-silent this past week. After posting six goals and nine assists through nine games against Ottawa and Florida, Toronto’s most dynamic performer all regular season long has posted an egg in three straight.
If one of the coolest cucumbers in the game manages to break loose and rifle one past Bobrovsky, he’ll give his side an excellent chance to clear a hurdle not enjoyed by Leafs fans for many, many years.
Arda Öcal, NHL broadcaster: Auston Matthews. The Leafs captain scored his first career playoff goal against the Panthers in Game 6, which was also his first career goal beyond the first round of the playoffs. We hear it all the time: The superstars need to show up and show out when it matters the most. He got it done in Game 6. Can he do the same on Sunday when it’s winner takes all?
Kristen Shilton, NHL reporter: Mitch Marner. Now that Matthews got the monkey off his back with that critical goal in Game 6, it’s time for Marner to have his own series-defining moment in Game 7. Marner had four points in the Leafs’ first three games against Florida, but he has registered just one assist since then. And after that ill-fated spin-o-rama turnover move Marner pulled in the Game 5 debacle, this is his opportunity for a little redemption on home ice, too.
Marner is, like Matthews, among the most criticized players in the league for poor postseason performances when it matters most. Well, the stakes have never been higher. It’s now or never for Marner to put his mark on this one.
Greg Wyshynski, NHL reporter: Brad Marchand. Even in a moment of pure elation — a Game 6 victory on the road, with your two most maligned players combining for the winning goal — the prevailing thought among Maple Leafs fans is whether this is just another mechanism to eventually deliver maximum anguish. Marchand powering the Panthers to a Game 7 victory on Toronto’s home ice would be maximum anguish.
It has to be Marchand who twists the dagger. He has a 4-0 record against Toronto in Game 7s, all with the Boston Bruins, and can become the first player in NHL history to defeat the same opponent in at least five winner-take-all games. Factor in that the Leafs wanted to trade for Marchand before he chose Florida as his deadline destination, and now we’re talking an ironic level of pain. Brad Marchand being the reason that the Panthers win this Game 7 would cement his status as the Toronto Maple Leafs‘ greatest tormentor — perhaps second only to themselves.
The final score will be _____.
Clark: 4-3 Panthers in OT. Think about how this current iteration of the Panthers really started making its mark. It was that Game 7 win against the Boston Bruins back in 2023 that set the stage for the Panthers to become one of the NHL’s preeminent powers.
They have shown a comfort level with playing in Game 7s, which was the case last season when they won the first Stanley Cup in team history. Tapping into that experience in Game 7 could be the difference between a third consecutive Eastern Conference finals appearance or starting their offseason earlier than they would like.
Matiash: 4-2 Maple Leafs. Never mind the Leafs’ depressing losing record in Game 7s with the Core Four in action. Disregard Paul Maurice’s impeccable history in carbon-copy essential winner-take-all contests. Losers are only losers until they win.
If Toronto adheres to Berube’s system, utilizes its advantage in speed, counters Florida’s physicality reasonably enough, and doesn’t commit ridiculous infractions — silly penalties, dumb giveaways — they can finally flip the script on what’s been a tired and gloomy narrative in a town that’s craved better for much too long. If this central crew of bona fide stars truly wants to keep the elite band together for years ahead, this victory is essential. Marner scores the empty-netter to seal it.
Öcal: 3-1 Leafs. Here’s how I see it going: Toronto gets the first goal in the first period from Marner, then weathers the Cats’ onslaught in the second. Marchand scores early for Florida in the third, followed by a John Tavares quick response, then Auston Matthews pots home the empty-netter. The Leafs head to the Eastern Conference finals for the first time since 2002. And then 300,000 people celebrate this second-round victory at Nathan Phillips Square.
Shilton: 3-2 Leafs in OT. If not now … when? Toronto knows exactly what to do in order to shut Florida down. It won’t be easy. Paul Maurice is 5-0 in Game 7s. The Panthers know how to win big games. But the blueprint to beating them is also there for the Leafs to execute.
Joseph Woll was at his best in Game 6. Toronto’s top line got rolling. The Leafs look stout defensively, and there’s a collective effort there that’s been lacking before. This chance to reach a conference finals for the first time since the early 2000s is too good to let slip away and for once, Toronto won’t let it. And that last appearance in 2002 came off a Game 7 win over Ottawa — with a chance to play Carolina. Coincidence? Maybe not!
Wyshynski: 2-1 Panthers. Auston Matthews has been eliminated from the playoffs eight times. Three of the past four eliminations were by one goal, with two of the games going to overtime. This is to say that even when they fall short, these Leafs usually don’t go out with an effort like their Game 5 embarrassment at home.
But they will go out. Florida just has too many guys that have done this before. Carter Verhaeghe and Sam Reinhart have been huge in Game 7s. Sergei Bobrovsky is 2-0 in them. Another team might be rattled by squandering a chance to close out their opponents. Florida squandered it three times in the Stanley Cup Final last season against Connor McDavid — and still pulled it together to win the Cup in Game 7. The Panthers win, the Leafs finish the series valiantly and another offseason of critical decisions begins in Toronto.
Öcal’s three stars from Saturday
Upon hearing of the unexpected death of Winnipeg forward Mark Scheifele‘s father, the Stars’ fan base mobilized online and began a campaign to donate $55 (Scheifele’s jersey number) to charities that the veteran supports. Add that to the list of reasons why hockey fans are the best.
The overtime hero who sends Dallas to the Western Conference finals for the third straight year — a rematch from 2024 against the Edmonton Oilers. Harley became the fourth defenseman in franchise history to score an OT winner in the playoffs, joining John Klingberg (2019), Mattias Norstrom (2008) and Paul Cavallini (1994).
Scheifele had an incredible game, including the opening goal, hours after finding out his father had passed away. It was Scheifele’s first road playoff goal in the past 13 games.
0:34
Mark Scheifele strikes first for Winnipeg
Mark Scheifele scores the opening goal of the game for Winnipeg just a day after his father’s death.
Saturday’s recap
Dallas Stars 2, Winnipeg Jets 1 (OT)
DAL wins 4-2, plays EDM in conference finals
Multiple games of this series ended with multi-goal victories. That was not the case on Saturday, as these two heavyweights played a tight contest that would eventually go to OT. Winnipeg’s Mark Scheifele scored the game’s opening goal 5:28 into the second period (the day after his father unexpectedly died), followed by the equalizer by Dallas’ Sam Steel. That’s where the score would remain until the end of regulation. It did not take long in OT for Thomas Harley to send the fans in Dallas into a frenzy and his team into the Western Conference finals for a rematch from last year with the Edmonton Oilers. Full recap.
0:24
Jake Oettinger makes remarkable save to keep score level
Jake Oettinger does his best attempt at acrobatics in the crease, making a lights-out save for the Stars in the third period.
Sports
‘He turned his back on us’: What it was like watching Juan Soto’s Bronx return with the Bleacher Creatures
Published
60 mins agoon
May 18, 2025By
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Jorge CastilloMay 18, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- 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 first sustained jeers of the 2025 Subway Series, a raucous and crude chorus of pent-up resentment, were unleashed 20 minutes before first pitch of Game 1 on Friday, when Juan Soto emerged to stretch in center field in his New York Mets grays.
“F— Juan Soto!” reverberated from the bleachers beyond the right-field wall amid boos all around Yankee Stadium. Soto, ever the showman, did not directly acknowledge the greeting. But he subtly tugged at the bill of his cap toward the bleachers, surely in the direction of at least some people who had showered him with love last summer into autumn as the New York Yankees rode Soto and Aaron Judge‘s historic tandem production to the franchise’s first World Series appearance in 15 years before Soto ditched them during the winter.
This was a battle between first-place teams 10 miles apart, a fact that alone would have provided more juice than usual to the weekend series. The addition of Soto’s perceived betrayal, one of the sport’s biggest storylines, made it perhaps the most anticipated meeting between the clubs since the 2000 World Series.
Marc Chalpin took his usual bleacher seat in Section 203 behind right field, surrounded by his Bleacher Creature brethren, at approximately 6:30 p.m., anticipating the inevitable. If he had it his way, fans wouldn’t have greeted Soto in his return to Yankee Stadium with vulgarity. “F— Juan Soto!” was, to Chalpin, both over-the-top in its obscenity and underwhelming in its creativity.
Chalpin, tasked to initiate the Bleacher Creatures’ famous Roll Call since 2016, didn’t believe Soto warranted the vitriol, because he was a Yankee for only one season and, above all, didn’t win a championship. But he knew the three-word melody was coming for the man who spurned the home team for the — gulp — Mets.
“You’ll hear it from non-regulars,” Chalpin said, “but it won’t be us.”
Daniel Cagan was one of the non-regulars in attendance Friday. A die-hard Yankees fan from Los Angeles, Cagan happened to be in town for work, bought a ticket and attended the sold-out group therapy session by himself. Wearing a No. 68 Dellin Betances jersey, with a beer in hand before getting to his seat in Section 204, he predicted what he expected to ensue.
“Mayhem.”
With Soto’s decision to spurn the Yankees for the Mets over the offseason, the “Re-sign Soto!” pleas he heard from the bleachers in 2024 morphed into the crude taunt repeated dozens of times over the next three-plus hours. They were interspersed with rounds of boos and occasional fresh, less crass chants. It was a reaction stemming from Yankees fans’ introduction into how other fan bases have often felt about their ballclub.
For years, the big, bad, richer-than-everybody-else Yankees snatched stars, via free agency or trade, from other teams. This time — and probably for not the last time — the roles flipped: Mets billionaire owner Steve Cohen, refusing to be outbid, lured Soto from the Bronx to Queens after the Yankees offered a 16-year, $760 million contract. Soto opted for the Mets’ 15-year, $765 million deal, which includes an option to increase the total value to $805 million, free use of a luxury suite at Citi Field, up to four tickets behind home plate for all home games, and personal security for him and his family for both home and away games.
“Seeing him go to the Mets, it’s just, like, it rubs you the wrong way,” said James Roina, a 22-year-old Yankees fan who was sitting in Section 204.
Roina wore a white pinstriped Soto No. 22 Yankees jersey that he customized to read “SELLOUT” on the back using packing tape and a marker. A few brave Mets fans were sprinkled throughout Sections 203 and 204 behind Soto, proudly wearing his No. 22 in blue and orange. Fans of both teams wore Dominican-flavored caps and jerseys.
“F— Juan Soto” chants and middle fingers flew every few minutes as fans from the two sides sporadically exchanged pleasantries over the nine innings. It was so boisterous during the first inning that the Bleacher Creatures were drowned out for some of the Roll Call. Most interactions were light-hearted. On occasion, a security guard intervened to defuse a situation. Nothing escalated to a physical altercation.
“[Soto] was only here for one year,” Chalpin said. “It was a very, very good year, but it was just one year. So he’s not an all-time Yankee great or anything like that. This isn’t Paul O’Neill. He never won here. He had a great year. But there is a distinction between a guy who won here and a guy who didn’t.”
In the days leading up to the game, Chalpin knew how he wanted the Bleacher Creatures to welcome Soto.
“You know, he turned his back on us,” Chalpin said. “My attitude is we should turn our backs on him. I don’t wish him harm, but I don’t wish him success either.”
So Chalpin and dozens of Bleacher Creatures in Section 203 turned their backs on Soto when he ran out to take his spot in right field for the first time. After the game, Soto said he didn’t notice the gesture.
Joe Lopez, a Bronx native and Bleacher Creature regular since 1987, joined in on the silent treatment.
“I knew he wasn’t coming back,” Lopez said. “Because the idea is to make as much money as you can. So how are you gonna dog Soto for going after the money? I mean, come on. He got everything he wants. He got the money. He got the suite. So you’re going to hate him for that? He’s not Aaron Judge. Aaron Judge could’ve gone home to San Francisco for more money. But he wanted to be here.”
Other chants occasionally surfaced. “MVP” chants for Judge were louder than usual, an effort made to remind Soto he wasn’t even the best player on the Yankees anyway.
Another favorite was “We got Grisham!” in reference to Trent Grisham, the other player the Yankees received with Soto from the San Diego Padres and who was buried on the Yankees’ bench last season but is now enjoying a breakout campaign. Fittingly, the praise came almost a year after they chanted “We want Soto!” when Grisham replaced an injured Soto in a weekend series against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Yankees fans yelled, “You can’t field!” at Soto in the first inning. They called him, in rhythmic unison, an “a–hole”. With his monster contract in mind, they chanted, “Soto, greedy!” Later on, they unearthed the classic “Overrated” chorus.
All along, Soto did his best to ignore them. He jokingly acknowledged the sentiment at-large before his first plate appearance when, smiling, he took off his batting helmet, tipped it to the crowd, tapped his chest twice and mouthed, “Thank you.”
The bleachers, however, did not get that level of acknowledgement — until the eighth inning, when a “you miss Judge!” taunt erupted and Soto appeared to outline a heart toward the bleachers. Moments later, Soto caught the inning’s final out and threw the ball into the bleachers behind him without looking. A fan, after some peer pressure, threw the ball back, igniting another roar from the crowd.
“We finally got to him,” said Milton Ousland, another Bleacher Creature staple. “He knew the F-him chants were coming. We had to do something different.”
Ousland has been sitting in the bleachers since the 1980s, back when home games were at the old Yankee Stadium and the Mets were, in a blip in the franchise’s 63-year history, the best team in town. He became the section’s cowbell man in 1996, in time for the first of four Yankees championships in five seasons. Back then, Ousland insisted, Friday’s reaction to Soto would’ve been G-rated.
“This is nothing,” Ousland said. “We used to be so bad that [opposing right fielder Jose] Canseco used to DH. We used to look up bad words in Japanese. We used to chant curse words at Ichiro [Suzuki] the whole game in Japanese. We would look it up and hand out a paper to everybody, as they walked in, that had all the curse words in Japanese.
“We’ve really been on top of players before. This is nothing new. The only thing that’s new is that a guy chose the Mets over us.”
There was a point late in Friday’s game, with the Yankees holding a five-run lead, when the two fan bases momentarily coalesced to become one. It happened when the score of Game 6 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, played at Madison Square Garden, was shown on the video board. The hometown New York Knicks were thrashing the Boston Celtics 46-27 en route to an easy series-clinching win.
Ousland, who wore a Knicks cap, banged his cowbell in celebration as the bleachers went wild around him. Pinstriped people high-fived the brave blue-and-orange souls. A light “Jalen Brunson!” chant broke out. But the truce was fleeting. It was quickly back to business until Soto, who finished 0-for-2 with three walks in a 6-2 Yankees win, made the game’s final out.
Sports
Happy at DH, Devers stays hot with walk-off HR
Published
60 mins agoon
May 18, 2025By
admin
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ESPN News Services
May 18, 2025, 12:22 AM ET
BOSTON — Rafael Devers has settled into his role as the designated hitter for the Boston Red Sox and said recently that he wasn’t changing his mind about moving to first base.
If he keeps going like this, why bother trying.
Devers hit his first career walk-off Saturday night, leading off the bottom of the ninth inning with a solo shot against Pierce Johnson to send the Red Sox to a 7-6 comeback win over the Atlanta Braves that snapped their four-game losing streak.
“Obviously, very excited because of the type of game,” Devers said through a team interpreter. “For us to be able to come back and win this type of game means a lot. And also to get it going with the team to get everybody excited.”
After Devers shared his feelings about not wanting to play first, Red Sox owner John Henry flew to share his opinions with the disgruntled slugger.
Henry, team president Sam Kennedy and chief baseball officer Craig Breslow flew to Kansas City to meet with Devers and manager Alex Cora on May 9.
But after a historically slow start to the season, Devers has been hot at the plate. He has reached base in 19 of his past 20 games, hitting .397 with six homers and 20 RBIs in that stretch.
“I feel very comfortable right now,” Devers said. “I have my routine and go out there every day and do my routine to get ready and I feel very comfortable as a DH.”
Said Cora: “He’s been swinging the bat well, taking his walks. That first weekend, whoever has an explanation of what happened there, give me a call and explain it because it was hard to see it, and then he just changed. He’s been really good.”
The Red Sox had tried to talk Devers into moving to first after regular first baseman Triston Casas was lost for the season following surgery on his left knee.
“He has his routine down,” Cora said. “He cares about us, he cares about the team and he wants to win. Right now, like I said before, he’s our DH and he’s done an outstanding job. … He’s probably the best DH in the American League right now.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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