Connect with us

Published

on

One by one, the Florida Panthers skated with the Stanley Cup after winning Game 7 of last year’s Final. It was a familiar feeling for some of those who had lifted it before, such as Carter Verhaeghe. But for the majority of the roster, this was their first time touching the chalice.

One of them was Kyle Okposo. “I almost retired, and they’re a big reason why I didn’t,” he said of his teammates. “I wanted to have one more crack at it, and I just wanted to put myself in the best position to do this.”

So after 17 seasons, 1,051 regular-season games and 41 more in the postseason, the 37-year-old finally achieved his NHL dream.

As the Panthers pushed for the championship, Okposo had become the playoffs’ quintessential “Old Guy Without a Cup” whom fans rallied around. But simply having a work history and a long-ago draft year doesn’t always portend Stanley Cup worthiness. There are other factors to consider, from how those players performed in postseasons past to how close they have come to raising the Cup.

We take everything into account in our Cup Worthiness Ratings (CWR), which seek to define the veteran and in-their-prime players most deserving of raising Stanley.

We began by taking active skaters whose teams are still in the playoffs with the greatest number of regular-season games played without having won the Stanley Cup, with 850 as the cutoff. There were 21 in total at the start, and we reverse-ranked them to award points; i.e., Ryan Suter played the most games (1,526) without winning a Cup, so he received 21 points.

We did the same for career playoff games and playoff points. We then added the number of years they’ve been in the league to that score — something that also served as a tiebreaker between players with the same score.

It was Alfred, Lord Tennyson who wrote: “‘Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.” That love can also be bitter. Hence, we’re factoring into the CWR how close a player has come to drinking from the chalice.

If a player reached the conference final, they received five points for each appearance. If they reached the Stanley Cup Final, that was an additional 10 points. If they were traded by an eventual Stanley Cup-winning team (within the next two seasons) that was worth five points. (Please note that Claude Giroux‘s decision to leave the Panthers as a free agent before they won the Cup does not count.)

We wanted to factor in the prestige of a player in our rankings. Let’s face it, there’s more pressure on a star player to round out their “legacy” with a championship than there is for the rank and file. It was an issue for players such as Alex Ovechkin and Nathan MacKinnon before it wasn’t anymore. Players like Connor McDavid are now experiencing the weight of that expectation. So, to that end, we added five points to the score if that player ever won an NHL award, using that as a mark of stardom.

We also gave 10 points to any player who won the Conn Smythe for playoff MVP in a losing effort in the Stanley Cup Final. Could you imagine how heartbreaking that would be?

With that, here are the top 10 most deserving veteran players (minimum 850 games) still in the 2025 postseason based on their CWR.

Age: 34
Cup Worthiness Rating: 53

For a point-per-game player, Duchene has been well-traveled in his career, seeing playoff action with the Colorado Avalanche, Columbus Blue Jackets, Nashville Predators and the Dallas Stars. (His time in Ottawa, not so much).

The 16-year veteran would be higher in this ranking were it not for his lack of postseason action (56 games) and having had only one trip to the conference finals, last year with Dallas.


Age: 34
Cup Worthiness Rating: 57

History will judge Tavares’ decision to leave the New York Islanders for his beloved childhood team in Toronto back in 2018, and what that did to his proximity to the Stanley Cup. After all, the Islanders made the playoffs’ second-to-last round twice after Tavares left, while he hasn’t gotten out of the second round with the Leafs. But he had the fifth-most games played among those in this ranking over a 16-year NHL career.


Age: 35
Cup Worthiness Rating: 70

Few players on this ranking have had the postseason moment Henrique had in the 2012 Eastern Conference finals, scoring an overtime goal to send the New Jersey Devils to the Stanley Cup Final in a win over the archrival Rangers. The Devils failed to win the Cup that season.

Henrique would get his second chance at the chalice with the Oilers in 2024, only to lose in Game 7 despite the team’s rally from down 0-3. Factor in 993 regular-season games, and it has been a long wait for Henrique to have his name etched.


Age: 33
Cup Worthiness Rating: 72

He might still look 23 in some photos, but Coyle has 950 regular-season games to his credit. He played in the conference finals and Stanley Cup Final for the Boston Bruins in 2019, losing the latter series to the St. Louis Blues in seven painful games. He would play 75 playoff games with the Bruins, ranking him fourth among the players on this list.


Age: 33
Cup Worthiness Rating: 72

There’s no denying Kane has put in the time (930 regular-season games in 15 seasons) and has been within reach of the chalice multiple times: three trips to the conference finals with the San Jose Sharks and Oilers, and last season’s Stanley Cup Final ride with Edmonton.


Age: 32
Cup Worthiness Rating: 75

The Nuge is another player who seems more like he was just drafted rather than being a 14-year veteran who should break 1,000 games next season (959 so far). The Edmonton lifer watched as his franchise struggled to find its way before Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl started dragging the Oilers into championship contention.

The do-everything forward is exactly the kind of player who deserves to raise the Cup: one whom fans love and the rest of us slightly underappreciate.


Age: 36
Cup Worthiness Rating: 78

Thanks to a variety of injuries, Pacioretty has played only 939 regular-season games over the course of 17 NHL seasons. But his rating was bolstered by three trips to the penultimate round of the playoffs with Montreal (2014) and Vegas (2020, 2021).

But most importantly, he earned the rare “traded away before his team won a championship” bonus points, as the Golden Knights shipped him to Carolina in July 2022 and then lifted the Stanley Cup the following June.


Age: 40
Cup Worthiness Rating: 83

The active leader in games played (1,526, which is 19th all time), Suter actually isn’t in the top 15 in playoff games for active players. His teams — Nashville, Minnesota and Dallas — didn’t get out of the first round in nine of the 15 seasons in which the clubs qualified for the playoffs.

That said, he has played more postseason games than anyone else on this ranking (135) and made two trips to the conference finals with the Dallas Stars over the past two seasons.


Age: 35
Cup Worthiness Rating: 102

The Stars captain brings a win-at-all-costs physicality to the postseason, laying his body on the line — and laying out others — during some lengthy postseason runs in this career. Benn has played 1,192 regular-season games and another 107 in the playoffs.

He has made three treks to the conference finals, one of which ended in the Stanley Cup Final. Loved by his teammates and loathed by opposing fans, he would be the first to hoist the Cup should the Stars win it during his captaincy — and he’ll be a more-than-deserving recipient.


Age: 40
Cup Worthiness Rating: 110

There’s no one else in the NHL quite like Brent Burns. He has played 21 seasons, making the transition from forward to defense and then excelling on the blue line. He’s the current leader among active defensemen in points (910 in 1,497 games) during the regular season, and fourth in the playoffs (77).

He has been to the conference finals three times, and the Stanley Cup Final once. He has a year-round playoff beard and carries around a large bag filled with many mysterious items.

If he wins the Stanley Cup, it’ll be a moment to live out a hockey dream. And more importantly, it means he can introduce the Stanley Cup to the menagerie of animals at his 420-acre Texas ranch.

So those were the older guys looking to lift the Cup for the first time. What about the ones in their prime as far as games played who have yet to skate with Stanley?

Here are the top five players who are active in the playoffs, have appeared in under 850 career regular-season games and are seeking their first Cup win:

Age: 31
Cup Worthiness Rating: 51

The Vegas forward’s 791 games were the most among the players in his ranking, amassing most of them during 11 seasons with the San Jose Sharks. He made two conference finals and the 2016 Stanley Cup Final with the Sharks, a franchise still looking for its first Cup win.

Holding him back a little in his Cup Worthiness Rating: He has only 48 points in 74 playoff games (0.64), which is a lower points-per-game average than in his regular-season career (0.69).


Age: 25
Cup Worthiness Rating: 53

The Stars’ defenseman was the beneficiary of some deep Dallas playoff runs, having made the conference finals three times and the Stanley Cup Final in 2020. So it’s less about his time in the league — 475 games over seven seasons — and more about how close he has come to a title in his relatively short career.


Age: 34
Cup Worthiness Rating: 58

An under-the-radar player as far as Cup droughts go, but one whose career has had its share of heartbreak.

Schmidt has played 741 regular-season games with the Capitals, Golden Knights, Jets and now the Panthers. He made the conference finals twice and the Stanley Cup Final once in 81 career playoff games.

But Schmidt earned valuable bonus points by being jettisoned by his team right before they won the Stanley Cup: The Capitals left him exposed in the 2017 expansion draft and he was selected by Vegas … whom Washington would then defeat for the Cup the next season. Ouch! He also was traded by Vegas before it won the Cup, but that was out of range for consideration in our scoring.


Age: 29
Cup Worthiness Rating: 66

When the Oilers falter in the playoffs, it’s never because of Draisaitl. The 11-year NHL veteran is second in postseason goals (44) behind Nathan MacKinnon (51) since 2017, which was Draisaitl’s first playoff year. Few players can say they’ve been better than a point-per-game pace in every playoff season they’ve had, but Draisaitl can. Plus, he has earned the reputation for gutting through injuries in the playoffs and still excelling.

He received a points boost for last season’s trip to the Stanley Cup Final and his Hart Trophy win. He’s worthy … but someone else he knows is a bit more worthy.


Age: 28
Cup Worthiness Rating: 74

Heavy is the head that wears the crown. McDavid is considered to be the best hockey player in the world. He has multiple scoring titles and MVP awards. But he doesn’t have a Cup.

So that puts McDavid in the precarious position that Alex Ovechkin and MacKinnon most recently found themselves in: legendary players whose lack of team success threatens to put a asterisk on their likely Hall of Fame careers.

McDavid made the conference finals in 2022 and then made the leap to the Stanley Cup Final last season, rallying his team from trailing 3-0 to nearly taking the championship. He has more postseason points than anyone in this ranking (127 in 79 games). We even had to create a special category to underscore his frustration, awarding five points to the only active player who won the Conn Smythe Trophy for playoff MVP in a losing effort.

One day, he’ll lift the Cup. The best ones always do. And he’s the best of the best.

We’ve covered the veteran skaters and the younger skaters. That’s a lot of skaters. There’s another position on the ice that has some Cup-worthy competitors, and that’s in the crease.

Here’s a short list of the highest-rated goalies in CWR who are still active. For the netminders, we went with regular-season games, seasons in the league, playoff appearances, postseason wins, conference finals and Stanley Cup Final appearances, NHL awards and whether they were traded right before a team won the Cup.

Age: 35
Cup Worthiness Rating: 21

Andersen made us briefly wonder if there should be bonus points for anyone who suffered through multiple playoff runs with the Leafs. Four of his 10 playoff seasons were in Toronto, all of them ending in the first round and earning him the expected blame from fans.

In the end, there are a couple of goalies who have a little more hardware and late playoff appearances that tipped the scales in the ratings system, but there are few players more worthy of raising the Cup than Andersen, both in longevity but also in having played through a variety of ailments.


Age: 35
Cup Worthiness Rating: 25

Admittedly, it’s difficult to anoint a goalie as “Cup-worthy” when he has been seen as a liability for three straight postseasons. But Hellebuyck has 21 wins in 50 playoff games, and is fifth among active goalies in games played (568).

Put it this way: Given Hellebuyck’s struggles in the playoffs, if the Jets win the Cup he’ll probably have earned it.


Age: 26
Cup Worthiness Rating: 31

Oettinger is much younger and less experienced than the other goalies on this list, to be sure. But the comprehensive evaluation and inarguable methodology of the Cup Worthiness Rating puts him first because of his postseason heartbreak.

His NHL debut was in the 2020 playoffs, appearing in Dallas’s conference finals win over Vegas and their Stanley Cup Final loss to Tampa Bay. He appeared in two subsequent conference finals as well. What Oettinger lacks in experience he makes up for by the ring having been just out of his reach. Like the rest of the Dallas Stars, he’s Cup-worthy.

Continue Reading

Sports

Intel on college football’s top 2025 quarterbacks

Published

on

By

Intel on college football's top 2025 quarterbacks

Among the teams that reached the initial 12-team College Football Playoff, four brought back starting quarterbacks for this fall, and two others saw their QBs transfer but remain in the college game.

Normally, the focus of the sport would be on the returning signal-callers. Players such as Penn State’s Drew Allar, Clemson’s Cade Klubnik, Arizona State’s Sam Leavitt, SMU’s Kevin Jennings and an intriguing group of incumbents in the Big 12, SEC and elsewhere would be generating the most buzz.

But 2025 is different. The quarterback discussion is dominated by a 2024 backup who didn’t attempt a pass in four postseason games and had just 12 pass attempts after his first two career starts. Texas quarterback Arch Manning might be the biggest name in the sport as he prepares for his first season as QB1. The guy with the attention-grabbing name now has the platform to showcase his talents.

After a season in which the Heisman Trophy race came down to two non-quarterbacks — Travis Hunter and Ashton Jeanty — perhaps Manning will meet the outsized expectations. Or will another quarterback — Allar, Klubnik, LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier, South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers, Miami’s Carson Beck — step forward in the race?

I spoke with coaches and others around the sport to assess several of the more notable quarterbacks. Other than Manning, I focused on quarterbacks with a good amount of game experience, as we’ll see how things play out with freshmen such as Michigan’s Bryce Underwood, Ohio State’s Julian Sayin and Notre Dame’s CJ Carr.

Here’s a conference-by-conference look:

Jump to a conference:
SEC | ACC | Big Ten | Big 12

SEC

Nussmeier’s path through college used to be the norm but has become increasingly rare — a quarterback who waits his turn behind top players, then takes over the starting job when he’s more seasoned, both physically and mentally. Along with Clemson’s Klubnik, Nussmeier received the most consistently strong reviews from opposing coaches.

“Cade and Nussmeier are two studs,” an ACC coach said. “I love both of them.”

Added an SEC coach: “Garrett is a really talented quarterback. He’s obviously going to take a really good step second year as a starter, too.”

Nussmeier is the first LSU quarterback and just the fourth in SEC history to return to his team following a season with at least 4,000 passing yards.

“He’s in the top two or three in the whole country, without question,” said a defensive coordinator set to face Nussmeier this fall. “We’ve got to affect him somehow.”


Sellers grew up admiring Cam Newton and hopes to mimic Newton’s Heisman Trophy-winning breakthrough season of 2010. Like Newton, Sellers has physical gifts that jump out — a 240-pound frame and quickness that makes him difficult to tackle, as Clemson found out in last year’s rivalry loss to the Gamecocks. Sellers rushed for 166 yards and two touchdowns against Clemson, and showcased his dual-threat playmaking ability in games against Texas A&M, Missouri and LSU.

“Sellers really got hot down the stretch,” an SEC coach said. “He’s such a big, imposing, physical kid. Now, can he take the next step in the throw game?”

Other coaches echoed the review on Sellers, whose ability to make head-turning plays is unquestioned. He also showed better accuracy as the season went along, finishing at 65.6% completions.

The key is identifying the right run-pass blend and ultimately being at his best when surveying the field to pass.

“It’s run when you want to, not when you have to,” South Carolina offensive coordinator Mike Shula told ESPN. “We just want him to use [the running ability] as an added layer, icing on the cake. He’s moving toward that, but as he continues to get better on processing mentally and then timing-wise, where he’s trusting himself and the wideouts, that’s when he can really excel.”

Some coaches aren’t quite sold on Sellers.

“I can’t get behind the LaNorris Sellers hype,” an SEC coach said. “He reminds me of Anthony Richardson, and I know Anthony Richardson went fourth overall [in the NFL draft]. Physically, he’s a freak, but is he a great quarterback?”


Mateer has generated a lot of attention from opposing coaches as he makes the jump to Oklahoma from Washington State, alongside offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle. The lightly recruited Texan shined last fall as the Cougars’ starter, leading the FBS in touchdowns responsible for during the regular season (44), and producing the best rushing season for a WSU quarterback — 826 yards, 15 touchdowns — to go with 3,139 passing yards and 29 touchdowns on 64.6% completions.

“He’s a triple threat,” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “He can throw it, he can scramble and they can call runs for him. Those kinds of guys are the ones hard to defend. Very fearless. He’s got all the moxie and the intangibles to go with it.”

Mateer’s intrepid approach jumped out to those who faced him in 2024. But how will he transition to the SEC?

“He’s going to be one of the better quarterbacks in the SEC,” said a coach who faced him in 2024. “If he can stay healthy — because they run him like a running back — they’ll be a much better team. He’s the type of guy who can change your whole culture.”

Mateer’s durability could be the biggest factor in his performance. He’s solidly built at 6-foot-1 and 224 pounds. After setting a WSU record with 178 rushing attempts in 2024 — fifth among quarterbacks and tied for 53rd nationally — Mateer’s workload as a ball carrier will be closely watched.

“He doesn’t look very big,” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “The human body can only take so many hits, and if you’re not a big dude in this league, it’ll take its toll.”

play

3:34

John Mateer highlights the improvements of Oklahoma’s offense

Mateer joins SEC Now and discusses his plans of stepping up as a leader this season and the impact that offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle has already made on the Sooners’ offense.


Lagway played more than Manning did in 2024, but the two quarterbacks are often paired because of their relative youth and potential. Mississippi State coach Jeff Lebby, who saw both players in 2024 and will face them in consecutive weeks this fall, said of the tandem, “Those are both guys that have got a chance to be elite players, and probably guys that are going to have great control of the offense and their systems.”

After taking over for the injured Graham Mertz, Lagway went 6-1 as Florida’s starter and helped the team to signature wins against Ole Miss and LSU, while capping the season by winning Gator Bowl MVP honors against Tulane. Lagway’s overall arm strength and the variety of throws he makes, especially as a relatively inexperienced quarterback, jump out to coaches.

“He’ll throw off the weirdest platforms,” an SEC coach said. “His feet won’t be in the ground, and the guy still throws at 60 yards. Like, what the f—? It shouldn’t be humanly possible.”

The 6-foot-3, 247-pound Lagway enters the season with some injury concerns, as lingering shoulder issues limited him during the spring, and he sustained a calf injury shortly before training camp.

“With DJ, it’s being able to keep things alive, arm strength, arm angles, all the off-platform things that he can do,” Lebby said. “DJ’s just a great talent.”


Everyone around college football is buzzing about Manning, but coaches understandably are taking a more measured approach toward evaluating a quarterback who hasn’t logged significant snaps. So what do they know about him? He has handled the spotlight well so far, and he brings a new element of athleticism to Texas’ offensive backfield.

“I’ve been watching a lot of his press conferences, and he seems like a pretty level-headed kid,” said a coach who will face Texas this year. “Pretty low-key.”

The coach’s opinion echoes what Texas has seen internally with Manning, with one source there saying, “It’s not lost on him that he’s Arch Manning, that he’s a Manning, what the expectations are. None of that stuff is lost on him. He’s just learned to manage it internally.”

Another of his strengths is movement, which Manning showed last season when he received his most significant playing time against UTSA and Mississippi State. When starting quarterback Quinn Ewers returned from injury, Texas used Manning mostly as a running threat. A Texas source noted that although comparisons will be made to Manning’s uncles, Peyton and Eli, Manning plays more like his namesake, grandfather Archie Manning, who rushed for 2,197 yards in his NFL career, significantly more than Peyton and Eli’s combined total of 1,234 yards.

“He comes from a good bloodline,” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “I know he’ll have all the attributes, the want-to and how to work, all those things.”


Reed opened the 2024 season as Conner Weigman‘s backup but soon became Texas A&M’s starter, displaying impressive dual-threat skills that helped him lead SEC quarterbacks in both rushing yards per game (49.4) and yards per carry (4.7). He had a big performance at Florida and rallied Texas A&M past then-No. 8 LSU with three rushing touchdowns.

The redshirt freshman finished the season with 1,864 passing yards, 15 touchdowns and 6 interceptions. When training camp opened, Reed addressed the perception that he’s a run-first quarterback with limited passing ability, and there’s hope internally that he will display significant growth this fall.

“You’re hoping to see the natural development of him as a leader,” coach Mike Elko told ESPN. “This is his offense now. He’s had the ability to make those connections, to do the leadership things behind the scenes, and then him on the field, it’s him being fully comfortable in the schemes, in the progressions and the passing game. He got a little bit more comfortable, and we got more comfortable, too.”

Reed’s development has been consistent, and Texas A&M’s coaches think he can thrive in throwing the ball to NC State transfer KC Concepcion, among others.

“He threw the ball well,” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “They return a lot, offensive line, him. They had a bunch of receivers transfer out, but I think they did a good job in the portal.”


ACC

Coaches view Klubnik through a similar lens to Nussmeier, with respect for his talent level, experience and development.

The difference is Klubnik will be entering his third season as Clemson’s starter and third under offensive coordinator Garrett Riley. Klubnik has amassed 7,180 career passing yards and 57 career touchdowns, and made significant jumps for both yards (795) and touchdowns (17) from his sophomore to junior season.

“He’s gotten so much better,” an SEC coach said. “When you watch him versus Georgia [in the 2024 opener] to the Texas game, it’s incredible. What makes him dangerous is his ability to tuck the ball and get vertical. … Their best play is quarterback draw.”

Several coaches echoed that observation about Klubnik, who last fall had about the same number of carries as he did in 2023 but saw a nice jump in rushing yards to 463 and had seven rushing touchdowns.

“He’s not just like a pure dropback, that’s not him,” a Power 4 defensive coordinator said. “He’s good at that, but that’s not his strength. It’s when he has to create something, that’s what makes him dangerous.”

Klubnik has established himself as a top college quarterback, but coaches think there’s another step to his game.

“He’s good, but he ain’t Trevor Lawrence,” an ACC coach said. “I don’t think he’s a first-rounder. He’s a good player, but if it’s covered, he’s not throwing it. He doesn’t have the faith to do that.”

play

2:16

Cade Klubnik’s best TDs from this season

Check out some of Cade Klubnik’s best touchdowns from this season as he announces his return to Clemson.


Beck is one of the more fascinating quarterbacks to analyze, and also among the most polarizing for coaches. He had an undeniably great season in 2023, when he completed a blistering 72.4% of his passes for 3,941 yards and 24 touchdowns with Georgia. Without two-time John Mackey Award winner Brock Bowers and others last season, Beck looked shakier, throwing 12 interceptions during a six-game midseason stretch.

He completed at least 69.7% of his passes in four of the first six games but then eclipsed 65% just once the rest of the season. After surgery to repair the ulnar collateral ligament in his right (throwing) elbow, Beck joined Miami for his final college season.

“He always played well against us, and I thought a lot of him,” an SEC defensive coordinator said. “He maybe threw some balls he shouldn’t have, but he was super talented and he has a lot of confidence. It’ll be interesting [at Miami].”

Miami coach Mario Cristobal has been very pleased with Beck since his arrival this winter.

“You start observing practice and you see some of the things that he gets us into in an awesome way, and some of the things he can get us out of,” Cristobal told ESPN. “And then the autocorrect when we don’t have a positive play, the ability to bounce back from that and take ownership for it, even if it’s somebody else’s doing. He’s going to find a way to bring people together.”

Some coaches can’t get past Beck’s midseason struggles in 2024.

“He’s a turnover machine,” an SEC coordinator said. “There might have been some drops, but there might have been some dropped interceptions, too. The guy just throws it to the other team. He makes some good throws, but as a quarterback, that’s tough to overcome. He was just fortunate how good they were on defense.”

Beck averaged 1.62 yards per carry as Georgia’s starter, raising some questions about his mobility. “Beck’s good, but Beck can’t move,” an ACC coach said. But Cristobal has been surprised by how Beck moves around

“He’s athletic, man,” Cristobal said. “He can throw it, he can throw it on the run, he can run it. He’s a big cat. I didn’t realize how big he was until he got here. So there’s a lot of things to be excited about.”

play

1:57

Carson Beck’s best plays of the season for Georgia

Take a look at Carson Beck’s best plays of 2024 for Georgia after announcing his intention to enter the transfer portal.


Jennings is another interesting quarterback to evaluate, as he helped SMU to an unlikely playoff appearance in its first year as an ACC member but fell apart at Penn State in a first-round loss, throwing three interceptions, two of which were returned for Nittany Lions touchdowns. Jennings also was intercepted in an ACC championship game loss to Clemson and threw three picks in an overtime win at Duke.

He completed 65% of his passes for 3,245 yards and 23 touchdowns, and was a solid run threat, especially in the first half of the season.

“He’s unorthodox,” an ACC defensive coordinator said. “When you first watch him, you think, ‘OK, this kid’s not fundamentally sound, and his footwork is bad, and his mechanics aren’t great honestly,’ but then it’s like, dang, he just keeps making accurate throw after accurate throw on the move. He’s so unorthodox, but he’s so effective, and he can run. So I think he’s legit good.”

SMU coach Rhett Lashlee likes what he has seen from Jennings since the Penn State game, both from a physical approach and mentally.

“He’s probably put on 10 or 12 pounds in the offseason, which is great,” Lashlee said. “Just a bustle that helped his frame. And mentally, he’s an unquestioned leader of our team. He’s been awesome. He’s got a lot of confidence. He’ll be him, he’ll be fine.”


Moss had his breakout performance at USC against Louisville in the 2023 Holiday Bowl — 372 passing yards, six touchdowns — and now joins the Cardinals as the latest transfer quarterback under coach Jeff Brohm. He had some good moments with the Trojans, including the 2024 opening win against LSU, but struggled with interceptions and in road games.

A fifth-year senior, Moss follows NFL second-round draft pick Tyler Shough with Brohm, whose creative and aggressive offensive system gives Louisville a chance in every game.

“Miller Moss is good. I liked him, always, out of high school, and then Brohm’s really good,” an ACC coach said. “Miller is in a system that fits him.”

Moss is a smart and skilled quarterback, but some wonder about his ability to improvise.

“He’s a really good system guy,” a Big Ten defensive coordinator said. “Brohm will do really well with him because he’s such a quarterback-friendly coach. Moss is very systematic. If things get off schedule, he struggles. He can’t create with his legs. He doesn’t make a lot of creating-type plays, but if everything’s on schedule, he’s a machine. He’s a robot.”

Brohm told ESPN that Moss, like Shough in coming in from Texas Tech last year, is eager to prove himself. Brohm has tried to put Moss in pressurized situations against the starting defense to improve his decision-making and limit the mistakes that surfaced during the middle part of the 2024 season.

“He’s an intelligent quarterback,” Brohm said. “He can control where he’s throwing it, which not everyone can do. When he’s confident and things happen in rhythm and he knows where to go with the ball, he can produce. It’s the times when things aren’t in rhythm and the timing isn’t quite there and he’s got to adjust and he’s got to make decisions and be a quarterback who can handle a broken play here and there.”


Mensah wasn’t the biggest name on the quarterback transfer market, but his move to Duke — and the reported $8 million deal that came with it — generated significant attention. Duke went all-in to land Mensah, who has three years of eligibility left after an impressive redshirt freshman season at Tulane, where he completed 65.9% of his passes for 22 touchdowns and never had a multi-interception performance.

The Mensah move showed that “Duke is serious about football,” coach Manny Diaz told ESPN, especially coming off three consecutive seasons with eight or more wins. Diaz also liked how Mensah fits with offensive coordinator Jonathan Brewer’s vision. Duke was willing to part ways with quarterback Maalik Murphy, who had a team-record 26 touchdown passes last season.

“He can make the throws similar to what we have to have in our offense, but the mobility is key,” Diaz said. “Not just in terms of QB run game, but the ability to extend plays, make things happen, scramble to throw, scramble to run. Those things, you can already see the difference.”

Some coaches are curious about whether Mensah, who thrived in Tulane’s play-action passing attack, will perform in a Duke offense that has emphasized tempo and quick screens and other passes.

“He’s not a no-brainer,” a Power 4 coach said. “Maalik has a bigger arm than he does.”

“It was a head-scratcher for some that they invested what they did in him,” an ACC defensive coordinator added.


King turns 25 in January and has seen just about everything at the college level. He could be set for his last and best season this fall with Georgia Tech, which is hoping to eclipse seven wins for the first time since 2016 and become an ACC contender. King is among the toughest quarterbacks in the country, having fought through several significant injuries.

He showed much greater accuracy in 2024, throwing only two interceptions in 269 pass attempts and completing an ACC record 72.9% of his passes. King became the first FBS player since at least 1956 to record 2,000 passing yards, 10 touchdown passes, a 70% completion percentage and two or fewer interceptions in a season.

“The sky’s the limit for Haynes,” Georgia Tech offensive coordinator Buster Faulkner told ESPN. “The biggest thing we’ve hammered is: If we can make the routine plays all the time, we’re going to be really tough to handle. It’s continuing to shorten up his stride, shorten up his delivery. He’s a very conscious kid, great football player. We want to hone in the fine details of playing quarterback.”

The challenge for King is staying on the field without overly limiting his aggressive style of play. After recording 737 rushing yards and 10 touchdowns in 2023, King ran for 587 yards and 11 touchdowns last fall.

“Haynes is a tough sucker,” an ACC defensive coordinator said. “Just a great, great player, and a great fit for what they do.”


BIG TEN

Arguably no national championship contender has greater urgency than Penn State, and no quarterback carries a heavier burden than Allar. He looks like a top NFL draft pick at 6-foot-5 and 235 pounds. After two seasons as the starter, he ranks among the top 10 in team history in most statistical categories and in the top five in several, including first in career completion percentage (62.9) and interception percentage (1.19).

The knock on Allar, fair or unfair, is the same as the one against Penn State under coach James Franklin — the inability to win the biggest games. He’s still searching for his first win against Ohio State, Michigan or Oregon, and his struggles against Notre Dame in a CFP semifinal loss left him teary-eyed and determined to rewrite his story.

“He played so poorly against Notre Dame that he just got destroyed the whole offseason, but in some ways that can be good,” a Big Ten defensive coordinator said. “He’s got all the tools. Obviously he’s big, his body looks good. He’s got better receivers around him. The receivers have been so ineffective there.”

The additions of transfer wide receivers Trebor Pena (Syracuse), Devonte Ross (Troy) and Kyron Hudson (USC) should help Allar, who hasn’t seen an 800-yard wide receiver during his time at Penn State. Franklin told ESPN that Allar has “gotten better every single year,” and he should benefit from his best supporting cast.

“Whether it’s his understanding, whether it’s his command, whether it’s his athleticism, he’s made significant jumps,” Franklin said. “The other thing is going out and finding some guys that are going to make some more plays for him.”

New Penn State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles has a distinct perspective on Allar, having faced him the past two seasons at Ohio State, and now seeing him daily in practices.

“I didn’t know him as a person, but he’s got a great work ethic and wants to learn,” Knowles told ESPN. “It’s like when I first got to Ohio State and CJ Stroud was asking me all kinds of questions. You don’t know any of this when you play them, but he’s got those leadership skills and traits, and the team really follows him.”

play

0:58

How will Drew Allar respond to pressure this season?

A.Q. Shipley joins “The Pat McAfee Show” to discuss how Drew Allar will respond when his back is against the wall.


Altmyer grew up loving the SEC and began his college career in his favorite conference, but he has made a much bigger impact since leaving Ole Miss for the Big Ten and Illinois, where he enters his third season as the starter. He can go down as an Illini legend, as the team has a realistic chance for its first CFP appearance and consecutive 10-win seasons for the first time.

Despite receiving overtures from Tennessee to transfer, Altmyer is back with Illinois, where he went through some challenges in 2023 and nearly quit after the season, only to return and pass for 2,217 yards with 22 touchdowns and only six interceptions last fall.

“He’s a good player; he’s going to be third year in the system,” a Big Ten defensive coordinator said. “I think he’s a good athlete. He can throw it.”

Last season restored Altmyer’s confidence, and Illinois’ coaches expect him to adjust well to the inevitable ebbs and flows.

“The biggest difference in him is his volume [of play], which is reflected in his confidence, not just for him, but his players around him, and then just the experience,” Illinois coach Bret Bielema told ESPN.

Added Illinois offensive coordinator Barry Lunney Jr.: “You’re going to come up short and make mistakes, but he’s at the point of his career, he’s played enough ball that he knows how to navigate away from those.”


The Hoosiers have given themselves a chance to sustain success, in part because of key portal pickups including Mendoza, who started 19 games at Cal and last season had one of the school’s top 10 passing seasons (3,004 yards, 144.59 rating, 68.7% completions). Although Kurtis Rourke is a big loss, Mendoza brings Power 4 experience and had success despite some trouble spots around him at Cal.

“He’s a big, tall guy, very mobile, and has a quick release with a strong arm, throws the ball well from the pocket and on the move,” Hoosiers coach Curt Cignetti told ESPN. “He’s got a body of work from Cal. He’s got areas to improve and he knows that, but he certainly has a lot of talent. I feel really, really confident in him.”

The 6-foot-5, 225-pound Mendoza had only 191 net rushing yards during two seasons at Cal, but he can scramble to find space to throw. He cut down his interceptions total last fall and improved his completion percentage by 5.7 points. A Big Ten general manager said of Mendoza, “You’re watching a first-round quarterback when you watch that guy throw routes.”

“He’s very similar to the guy they had last year, Rourke,” a Big Ten recruiting director said. “They’re similar builds, they have similar games. They’re both not going to kill you with legs, they’re not going to be able to really drop it into a bucket from that far out. But they have the arm strength, there’s a big frame, they work well within the offense, and they play to their skill set.”


Williams is technically a new starter but gained valuable experience last fall, starting the rivalry game against Oregon and the Sun Bowl against Louisville, where he threw a pick-six on his first pass attempt, then proceeded to complete 26 of 31 attempts for 374 yards and four touchdowns, while adding 48 rushing yards and a score.

He also saw meaningful playing time against UCLA, Iowa and Penn State, and finished the season with 944 passing yards, completing 78.1% of his attempts.

“Starting those last two games was huge for him, and it was great that he played in all the games,” Washington offensive coordinator Jimmie Dougherty told ESPN. “You see those reps have added up. Now he has some experience to draw from, and he’s just getting rid of the ball. He’s making great decisions. And he’s always been a great decision-maker.”

Williams, who followed the coaching staff from Arizona to Washington, has become the “unquestioned leader of the team” this offseason, Dougherty said. While many quarterbacks with Williams’ athleticism lean toward running the ball when the opportunity arises, the redshirt freshman has shown an inclination to remain in the pocket. A Power 4 coordinator said he has some Kyler Murray in his style of play.

“It’s much harder to coach guys the other way, the guys who have relied on their feet most of their careers, to now get them to be comfortable sitting in the pocket and going through a progression,” Dougherty said. “We love the fact that he wants to get rid of the ball and hit his receivers on time, get the ball out of his hand. That’s been the biggest thing that I’ve seen in fall camp is how fast he’s getting rid of the ball now, making good, clean decisions in the pocket.”


Coaches outside of Eugene, Oregon, haven’t seen much of Moore since the 2023 season, which he opened as UCLA’s starter after arriving as the nation’s No. 2 overall recruit. He went through some predictable struggles that fall, and one coach who faced the Bruins said it “looked messy” back then.

But Moore transferred to Oregon and has had more than a year to prepare for the starting job, playing behind Dillon Gabriel last fall and attempting only eight passes in four games.

“I see the arm talent, the ability to operate, very similar to what Bo [Nix] and Dillon had done,” Oregon coach Dan Lanning told ESPN. “He can check plays. He’s probably more similar to Dillon from a pocket presence standpoint, but more similar to Bo in the ability to really put us in really advantageous plays.”

Lanning views Moore more in line with predecessors Gabriel and Nix, but opposing coaches don’t expect him to be nearly as mobile. Gabriel had 25 rushing touchdowns in his final three college seasons (one at Oregon), while Nix rushed for 20 scores during two seasons at Oregon.

“Dante is pro-style,” a Power 4 coach said. “If Dante ran a 40, he’d run a 4.9.”


UCLA made the biggest splash of the spring portal in adding Iamaleava, who helped Tennessee to a CFP appearance last season, his first as the Vols starter. A former top 25 national recruit, Iamaleava grew up not far from UCLA’s campus but went to Tennessee on a then-historic NIL deal.

The 6-foot-6, 215-pound Iamaleava has undeniable physical gifts and a full year as an SEC starter under his belt. But he had only the late spring and summer to connect with his teammates and absorb the offense under new coordinator Tino Sunseri. Iamaleava had 2,930 passing yards and 21 touchdowns at Tennessee, while throwing only five interceptions and adding 435 rushing yards and six scores.

“He’s a true leader and I just love how he approaches the day, how he just approached our players, how he approached coming into the team so late,” Bruins coach DeShaun Foster told ESPN. “It wasn’t just like, ‘I’m Nico’ and this. He wanted to really get in there and work. I wanted to see him in the huddle. I had already seen him in high school and all of that before, so that was good. It was just more, I wanted to see him command, and how is he around the other players? But he’s been great.”

The talent is there with Iamaleava, whose ability to adjust quickly will be tested.

“That’s a kid that is tough as nails,” said a defensive coordinator who will face UCLA this fall. “When he runs, he doesn’t look to slide. He can sling it. With development, he’s going to be one of the top dudes in the country. He’s 6-6, tough to take down, can throw every ball. Needs a little bit more accuracy in the deep ball, but can throw it wherever he needs to put it. His eye progression needs a bit of work, but my guess is with another year, he’s worked through that.”


BIG 12

Leavitt led Arizona State to an unlikely Big 12 title and CFP appearance in his first season as the Sun Devils’ starter last fall. He displayed a skill set that coach Kenny Dillingham expects will propel him to the NFL, setting a team freshman record with 3,328 yards of total offense, and posting a 21-4 touchdown-to-interception ratio during his final nine games.

His decision-making stood out for a young quarterback, and he didn’t shy away from shot plays, recording eight completions of 50 yards or more, most in the Big 12 and tied for second most in the FBS. Leavitt handled pressure well and was an effective scrambler with 435 yards, second most among FBS quarterbacks.

“The way this guy can make plays with his feet, he’s got great instincts,” said a coach who faced Arizona State in 2024. “He can diagnose. Really an elite player for them. The plays he was able to make on third down and create with his legs, it was all year long and pretty special.”

Arizona State finished 18th nationally in third-down conversion rate, as Leavitt moved the chains both with passes under pressure and scrambles. Leavitt told ESPN his goal this fall is “to get to the point where I feel like me and my coach are at the same spot in how we view the game.”

“All the football stuff, everybody sees, everybody sees the talent,” Dillingham said. “He cares. He’s intelligent, he’s competitive, he has the off-the-field X factors that allow him to achieve that level.”

A Big 12 defensive coordinator added of Leavitt: “If you’re going to say, ‘Who’s your top competitor?’ It’s probably that kid.”


Hoover has started the past season and a half for TCU and last fall set the team single-season passing record with 3,949 yards. He was a chunk-play machine, leading the Big 12 and ranking fifth nationally in completions of 20 yards or longer (61). His performance hasn’t generated much national attention, partly because of the team’s uneven starts.

But Hoover will be in the spotlight right away this fall as TCU opens at North Carolina in a standalone Monday game, the first of the Bill Belichick era with the Tar Heels.

“He’s really talented,” coach Sonny Dykes told ESPN. “He throws the ball as well as any of the guys I’ve coached, and we’ve been lucky to coach some good ones. He’s not as big as some of them, he’s not as fast as others, but just purely throwing the football, he’s really, really good. That can get you in trouble sometimes because he’s like, ‘I can make this throw,’ or he gets bored of checking it down and he wants to challenge himself a little bit more.”

If Hoover balances the wow plays with the mundane ones, he could be among the nation’s best quarterbacks this season.

“He does not take sacks,” a Big 12 defensive coordinator said. “He gets rid of the ball quickly, makes good decisions. I really liked him. He’s tough, good decision-maker, gets the ball out on time.”


When Will Howard transferred from Kansas State to Ohio State, there was a sense within some corners of the Big 12 that the Wildcats would upgrade at quarterback with Johnson. A blazing-fast top 100 recruit from the state, Johnson gave Kansas State a different dimension in the explosive run game. He set a team record with 25 passing touchdowns last fall, while throwing 10 interceptions and adding 605 rushing yards and seven touchdowns.

Johnson’s accuracy and efficiency fell off during the back half of the season, but he entered this fall with higher expectations as a passer. He accounted for all three touchdowns — two passing, one rushing — in Saturday’s season-opening loss to Iowa State in Ireland, completing 21 of 30 attempts for 271 yards with no interceptions.

“It’s just not trying to do so much,” Johnson told ESPN. “Getting the ball to playmakers, letting guys do their things with the ball, not trying to force things, taking checkdowns and then whenever you do get big-play opportunities, you’ve got to connect on them.”

Coaches see Johnson’s throwing ability but say he still must master the nuances of the passing game.

“Extremely athletic,” said a coach who faced Kansas State last year. “As a freshman, he still needed so much more polish, and then the ability to sit in the pocket and go through reads. Looks like he’s still needing some of that.”


Anyone who watched Iowa State’s Week 0 win against Kansas State in Ireland got to see the essence of Becht, who is in his third year as the starter. He had some early struggles on a slick field and would end up completing only half of his passes (14 of 28). But Becht avoided an interception and accounted for all three ISU touchdowns — two passing, one rushing — and the game-clinching pass to Carson Hansen on fourth-and-3.

Becht’s resolve to make winning plays might be his best trait.

“He is a really good quarterback, and he’s got escape-ability, he’s got an incredible feel for the game of football, he can use his feet to make the special play,” ISU coach Matt Campbell told ESPN. “But I think one of the things that makes him really special is that locker room. Boy, they believe in him, maybe as good as any football player that I’ve coached.”

Campbell added of Becht’s best on-field trait: “He’s never pressed to make the wild plays, always makes the right decision on every play. Can he keep doing that at an elite level?”

Becht’s numbers are solid but not league-leading. He was 10th in the Big 12 in completion percentage last season (59.2) and fifth in passing yards per game. But he has a lot of respect around the conference.

“I’m always impressed with what he does for Iowa State,” a Big 12 coach said. “He’s so consistent and steady. He’s kind of like [Brock] Purdy was for them. He just wins games.”

Added a Big 12 defensive coordinator: “I have so much respect for that kid. Tough kid.”

play

0:37

Rocco Becht dives into the end zone for a Cyclones TD

Rocco Becht scrambles his way into the end zone to put the Cyclones up 24-14.


After being recruited to Mississippi State by the late Mike Leach, Robertson transferred to Baylor and started four games in 2023 with shaky results. He then became Baylor’s QB1 in Week 3 last season and looked very much like the top-60 national recruit he was coming out of Lubbock, Texas. Robertson eclipsed 3,000 passing yards while throwing 28 touchdowns and only nine interceptions.

Despite only 14 starts at Baylor, Robertson ranks among the top eight in team history for categories like passing efficiency (fifth, 144.4), yards per pass attempt (sixth, 8.113) and completion percentage (eighth 60.8). He also has played in three offensive schemes with Leach and Baylor offensive coordinator Jeff Grimes and Jake Spavital.

“I’ve developed a lot as a quarterback,” Robertson said. “I learned a lot from Leach, mentally, how you approach the game, all that stuff, and getting to play for Grimes, pro-style, under center, getting reps at that were great for me. And then now playing for Spav, he’s such a good mental leader. … It’s not something I had on my bingo card playing for three different offensive coordinators, but I think it’s just helping me develop.”

Big 12 coaches are mixed on Robertson, as one said he’s “not as dynamic as the others” in the league’s top QB group. But his strong finish to the 2024 season, plus some long-awaited continuity under the same playcaller, should help his development.

“Just the variations of coverages and blitzes and stuff like that, I thought he handled it well,” a Big 12 defensive coordinator said. “He played pretty comfortably, so they’ve got a chance to be pretty good.”


Daniels is certainly a familiar name around the Big 12 after starting games in each of the past five seasons. He has been a big-play juggernaut when healthy but lost most of the 2023 season to injury and portions of others. Daniels finally made it through a season last fall and had solid passing (2,454) and rushing (439) yards totals, but his accuracy fluttered and he and the team didn’t really surge until later in the season.

He’s back for a sixth year, playing in an offense directed by longtime KU quarterbacks coach Jim Zebrowski. Daniels was near-flawless in Saturday’s season opener against Fresno State, completing 18 of 20 passes for 176 yards and 3 touchdowns, while adding 47 rushing yards.

“I really like the Kansas guy, he’s probably my favorite in the league,” a Big 12 coach said. “When push comes to shove, that guy knows how to just stay calm and make stuff happen.”

Other coaches need to see more consistency from Daniels, especially after last season.

“The Kansas kid is hit and miss,” a Big 12 defensive coordinator said. “He’s kind of hot and cold, but he’s a heck of an athlete.”


The Big 12 is heavy on returning starters, but the most intriguing quarterback transfer in the league arrives at Utah, where quarterback play cratered the past two seasons largely because of Cam Rising’s injuries. Utah went the package-deal route to repair the offense, plucking both Dampier and offensive coordinator Jason Beck from New Mexico, where they averaged 6.9 yards per play and finished No. 24 nationally in scoring on a shaky team.

Dampier earned first-team All-Mountain West honors in 2024 after finishing second in the league in passing yards (3,934) and third in rushing yards (1,116), while leading the league in yards per carry (7.5) and finishing second — behind Heisman Trophy runner-up Ashton Jeanty — with 19 rushing touchdowns. Although Rising had some mobility when healthy, Dampier will bring a dramatically different element to the offense.

“Having him here in spring was huge for us,” coach Kyle Whittingham told ESPN. “He was like another coach on the field because obviously he knows Jason’s offense inside and out. So being able to install a new offense with a new coordinator, with a quarterback who knows it, that’s a big advantage for us. He’s been a huge help for his teammates.”

The challenge for Dampier and Beck is how much to run the 5-foot-11, 210-pound junior, who had 15 or more carries in half of New Mexico’s games last season.

“With a running quarterback, you’ve got to stay healthy,” a Big 12 defensive coordinator said.

Another coach in the league added: “He’s going to see a different kind of athlete in the Big 12, and he was used to in the Mountain West. It’s hard to stay healthy when you’re playing like that.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Tide DL Keenan injured; status vs. FSU unclear

Published

on

By

Tide DL Keenan injured; status vs. FSU unclear

Alabama could be without team captain and starting defensive tackle Tim Keenan III for Saturday’s opener against Florida State after he suffered a lower-body injury in practice.

Coach Kalen DeBoer said Wednesday that Keenan would “probably not” be full go for the game and that he was still being evaluated.

“We’re waiting for the update,” DeBoer said. “I don’t know if I can give you a percentage (on Keenan’s status) and be confident on that. We’ll see.”

Keenan, a fifth-year senior, is one of the anchors of an Alabama defensive line that should be one of the strengths of the team. He’s a two-year starter and one of the strongest leaders on the team.

The Crimson Tide were already without starting running back Jam Miller, who dislocated his collarbone in a scrimmage and is expected to miss multiple games.

Offensive lineman Jaeden Roberts‘ status for Saturday’s opener is also uncertain, according to DeBoer. The fifth-year senior, who has started 21 games over the past two seasons, has been “very limited” in recent practices as he works his way through the NCAA’s concussion protocol.

“He’s making progress, but it’s slow and steady,” DeBoer said.

Continue Reading

Sports

Source: K-State RB Edwards out vs. N. Dakota

Published

on

By

Source: K-State RB Edwards out vs. N. Dakota

Kansas State will be without star tailback Dylan Edwards for Saturday’s matchup against North Dakota due to a left ankle injury, a source told ESPN.

He’s also considered “doubtful” for Kansas State’s game on Sept. 6 against Army, the source added.

Edwards appeared to suffer the injury in Kansas State’s season-opening loss to Iowa State in Dublin, Ireland, after he got hit in the wake of a fumble on a punt return early in the first quarter. He left the game after the play and did not return.

Kansas State coach Chris Klieman said on Tuesday that Edwards’ X-Rays came back negative, which he said was a “positive” for a Edwards’ eventual return to the field.

Edwards is key cog in Kansas State’s offense, as he averaged 7.4 yards per carry in 2024. He finished the season with eight touchdowns – five rushing, two passing and another on a punt return.

That diverse scoring ability epitomizes his value to Kansas State, as Edwards had 19 receptions for 133 yards last year. In his freshman year at Colorado, Edwards caught 36 balls for 299 yards, while adding 321 yards on the ground

Kansas State (0-1) plays at Arizona in a nonconference game on Sept. 12, which looms as a potential return date for Edwards. The Wildcats then have a bye week before hosting UCF the following week on Sept. 27.

Continue Reading

Trending