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SUNRISE, Fla. — The line of Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Bennett and Carter Verhaeghe encapsulates everything that makes the Florida Panthers so dominant in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

The three players relentlessly forecheck opponents. Their offensive skill is elite, as they’re three of the top four scorers during the Panthers’ postseason run. They can shut down opponents, averaging 1.98 goals against per 60 minutes of play at 5-on-5. Thanks to Tkachuk and Bennett, they’re uniquely antagonistic, dishing it out and taking it, and then dishing out some more.

That combination of attributes makes them perhaps the most dangerous line in the playoffs. They could be the top-scoring trio on any team. Or a team’s checking line. Or its most annoying pests.

“It’s a deadly combination, all over the ice,” Florida winger Brad Marchand said.

Deadly for opponents. Fun for Tkachuk.

“It’s fun when we’re getting in on the forecheck and finishing hits and playing in their zone and getting good scoring chances,” he said after the Panthers’ 6-2 win in Game 3 against the Hurricanes, putting them one win from a third straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final. “I thought the building was electric. I credit my linemates for how they played, getting [the fans] going.”

Through 15 playoff games, this line has earned 65.4% of the shot attempts when on the ice at 5-on-5 and 57% of the expected goals. The trio is averaging 4.6 goals per 60 minutes, and its 70% goals-for percentage ranks third in the playoffs among teams that advanced past the first round.

Since Verhaeghe bounces between lines in the regular season, there’s not been the opportunity for the fans or Panthers players to formally name this line. Among the suggestions on social media — some more cynical than others — were “The Rat Pack,” the “Elbow Grease Line” and the “Immunity Line,” in reference to how they’re able to avoid NHL discipline while playing on the edge.

“We are kind of a line that can do everything,” Bennett said. “Chucky likes to hold pucks down low, he likes to slow the game down a little bit. Then, Carter is speeding the game up, he’s using his speed, he’s heavy and fast. Then, I’m kind of a mix of that. It’s just a line that we’ve found has been effective in the playoffs. I love playing with both of those guys.”

Three parts, three players and all of them bringing something different to the dominance.

“The diversity in style is actually a good thing for us,” Florida coach Paul Maurice said.


Sam Bennett: “Definition of a playoff player”

Bennett, 28, was acquired by the Panthers from Calgary in April 2021. Tkachuk was with the Flames at that point. He wasn’t thrilled about the trade.

“He’s always had the talent. He’s always had the work ethic. He’s always had the bite, the jam, everything,” Tkachuk said. “I think a lot of his success has to do with opportunity. He didn’t get the opportunity in Calgary that he has here. I don’t know why that is.”

What Tkachuk has seen from Bennett in Florida is someone he believes is “the definition of a playoff player.” Bennett has 43 points in 54 games over the past three postseasons, while playing a physical style that has, on occasion, crossed the line into illegal and injurious.

Or as Marchand put it: “He’s got a good right hook.”

Bennett appeared to sucker-punch Marchand during the Panthers’ playoff series win over the Boston Bruins in 2024. It knocked Marchand out of the series for two games and didn’t result in further discipline for Bennett.

At the trade deadline in 2025, they became teammates.

“I didn’t hold a grudge. Again, I know how this game’s played. I played a similar way,” Marchand said. “It’s something that we joke about. I can laugh it off. I joke about it all the time. I joke about it more than he does, but I definitely joke about it.”

But Bennett has jokes. That’s something Marchand didn’t anticipate before getting to know him.

“He’s not as serious of a person as I thought he was. When you see him on the ice and you see him kind of around the media, he just seemed like he was quiet and very reserved. Once you get to know him, he’s actually pretty vocal and really funny and a good guy to be around,” Marchand said. “But when you see him on the ice, he’s so intense. He doesn’t really chirp. You don’t hear him during the game. He’s all business.”

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Panthers in complete control after Sam Bennett’s power-play goal

Sam Bennett’s power-play tally fuels the Panthers to a three-goal lead over the Hurricanes in Game 1.

Marchand and Maurice praised Bennett’s speed and shot, but Marchand was especially enamored with his truculence.

“He brings a physical aspect to the game that, especially this time of year, you can’t have enough of it,” Marchand said of Bennett. “Those are the guys that make a huge impact on the game, when you have to be aware of them physically on the ice and know where they’re at.”

Marchand would know.


Carter Verhaeghe: “Shows up in the big games”

Verhaeghe, 29, signed as a free agent with the Panthers in 2020 after winning a Stanley Cup with Tampa Bay in the previous season. He has become one of Florida’s biggest postseason heroes, improving when the regular season ends. Over the past four playoff runs for the Panthers, Verhaeghe has 11 game-winning goals. No one else has more than six.

“He’s a guy that really shows up in the big games,” Bennett said.

Version 1.0 of this line last season was very effective, too; Bennett and Tkachuk skating with winger Evan Rodrigues, one of the Panthers with the strongest analytics. But Rodrigues doesn’t have the offensive game of Verhaeghe, who has a 0.90 points-per-game average over his past 70 postseason games.

Verhaeghe split his time last postseason between Bennett’s line and skating with captain Aleksander Barkov. Maurice was comfortable moving around Verhaeghe in the past. This season, he couldn’t find the right time to pair Verhaeghe with Barkov and have it stick.

“I got it wrong the entire year. The first two years, I thought I was really smart. Every time I changed it, the lines take off,” Maurice said. “This year, I was a dumbass.”

Though Maurice couldn’t stick with Barkov, Verhaeghe really clicked with Bennett and Tkachuk in the playoffs

“I think our line works because we all kind of bring a different element to the line. We read off each other really well,” Verhaeghe said. “Chucky makes really good plays, so smart, so physical. Benny’s the same thing, kind of makes plays so fast up the middle. We just stay on pucks, like to be close together.”

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Verhaeghe’s backhand shot finds the net for Florida

Carter Verhaeghe goes top shelf on a backhand to give the Panthers a 1-0 lead in the first period.

With Bennett and Tkachuk making space and making plays, Maurice sees Verhaeghe as the one who can cash in on the chances they create.

“It’s Carter’s speed and his release, and all of their ability to jump on broken plays,” Maurice said.

Verhaeghe is a name familiar to any NHL fan who has watched the playoffs in the past few seasons. Bennett is gaining notoriety through memorable acts — ask a Toronto Maple Leafs fan about his collision with Anthony Stolarz — as well as his play for Team Canada in the 4 Nations Face-Off and impending unrestricted free agency, where he’s expected to double the average annual value of his contract.

But neither of them has been a guest on “The Tonight Show.”


Matthew Tkachuk: “He’s a wonderful human being”

Tkachuk is a superstar. That was true when the Panthers traded star winger Jonathan Huberdeau and top defenseman MacKenzie Weegar for him in 2022, before inking him to an eight-year, $76 million contract extension.

That was true during Tkachuk’s performance in 2023, leading the Panthers in a shocking first-round upset of Boston and through the Eastern Conference playoffs before suffering a broken sternum in the Stanley Cup Final against Vegas.

That was true last postseason, when Tkachuk had 22 points in 24 games and then took the Stanley Cup for a swim in the Atlantic Ocean. And that was true at the 4 Nations Face-Off, when he and his brother created a sensation by dropping the gloves against Canada.

Tkachuk and Bennett have been partners on the ice for multiple seasons, establishing a second dominant line behind Barkov’s trio.

“He and Sam have similarities. They’re fearless in how they play. And then they’re exact opposites,” Maurice said. “But that’s truly how they complement each other.”

Tkachuk has 14 points in 15 games this postseason, which tells only part of the story. He has been his antagonistic self on and off the ice, like when he slammed a ball against a wall repeatedly during a Hurricanes news conference in Raleigh, with the media area separated from the Panthers’ workout area only by a curtain. And like when he slammed Carolina’s Sebastian Aho to the ice in Game 3 after Aho had taken out Panthers forward Sam Reinhart with a hit in Game 2.

“I don’t really look at it as intent or intimidation at all. It’s just sticking up for teammates,” said Tkachuk, who was given a roughing penalty and a 10-minute misconduct. “We’re a family in there. It could happen to anybody, and there’s probably 20 guys racing to be the guy to stick up for a teammate like that. That’s just how our team’s built. That’s why we’re successful. I don’t think any of us would be thrilled at that play in Game 2.”

After the game, the Hurricanes lamented not retaliating to the retaliation, worrying that Tkachuk would have gotten an opponent to take the bait again.

“They’re very good at goading you into penalties,” Carolina’s Taylor Hall said.

It’s frustrating, for sure. But Tkachuk has that effect on people. Even his coach.

“I hated Matthew when I was in Winnipeg,” said Maurice, who coached the Jets from 2013 to 2022. “And then you meet him and you go, ‘Oh my God, he’s a wonderful human being.'”

Maurice shared a story from after Game 3, when one of the Panthers invited a young fan who was battling cancer to the locker room area with his parents. Tkachuk left the team’s postgame celebration to say hello and chat with him.

“You need to see that because that’s real,” Maurice said.


ON-ICE PERSONAS can be much different than those away from competition. Maurice also points to “Benny’s Buddies,” a program that Sam Bennett launched with the Humane Society of Broward County. Every time he scores a goal, it raises money toward covering pet adoption fees.

“They’re really, really nice people. Then, the puck drops,” Maurice said of his Panthers. “They’re hard on guys. They are. And most of that is driven by how they feel about each other. They don’t want to let the other guy down.”

Marchand said that there’s a duality to hockey players. Their actions on the ice define them in public, in the media and reputationally around the league. But when they share a locker room, when they’re no longer opponents but teammates like him and Bennett, there’s a person you meet who’s at odds with the one on the ice.

“I think it’s just this respect we have for each other, understanding that what we do on the ice is our job. We’re competing for the same goal,” Marchand said. “At the end of the day, you’re willing to do things on the ice that aren’t typical of you as a person off the ice.”

Maurice, as he does, compared this duality with — of all things — shotgunning a beer in church.

“Have you ever shotgunned a beer? Have you ever been to church? Would you shotgun a beer if you’re in church? No, and that doesn’t make you a hypocrite,” he said. “There’s a context for all things.”

Within any context, Bennett, Tkachuk and Verhaeghe are one of the NHL’s most compelling trios — and an engine driving the Panthers to potentially repeat as champions.

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Haters’ guide to the Mannings vs. the Gators

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Haters' guide to the Mannings vs. the Gators

Between Archie, Peyton, Eli, and now, Arch, the Mannings have been a part of America’s football consciousness for nearly 60 years. Only one of the family’s college football rivalries, however, has included a spelling test, years of shade, and has spanned generations.

Within that lore, holding a spot that goes beyond merely an opponent, are the Florida Gators. First as haters-in-chief, then as part of the redemptive end to the family’s first college football run, Florida was there.

While Archie Manning never played Florida in three seasons with the Ole Miss Rebels from 1968-70, the Mannings are 2-3 as starters against the Gators. On Saturday, Texas Longhorns QB Arch Manning, with a lot of family history behind him, takes his turn in The Swamp (3:30 ET, ESPN).

It will be the next entry in what was once a salty family vs. school rivalry that featured an all-time hater.

A brief history lesson

The current Cheez-It Citrus Bowl was previously the Capital One Bowl and, before that, just the Florida Citrus Bowl. While the Orlando-based game annually hosted top-10 teams and was where the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets beat the Nebraska Cornhuskers to earn a share of the 1990 national title, it is a tier under the major bowl games. Secondly, this Manning-Florida rivalry began in the era before the BCS, let alone the College Football Playoff and the nascent days of conference championship games. So, one loss could doom a season, or at the least, keep a team from a conference title and a major bowl.

Arch Manning might already know this, but it’s important to the lore of this rivalry and will make sense later.


The visor’s world

Peyton Manning’s recruitment was a big deal. His father’s legacy in the SEC combined with Peyton’s ability made his college decision one of the biggest recruiting decisions ever in the sport. By the time Peyton landed with the Tennessee Volunteers in 1994, Steve Spurrier was going into his fifth season at his alma mater.

The Gators would win five of the first six SEC championships. That’s what Peyton Manning was stepping into. The Tennessee-Florida rivalry would become the SEC’s biggest game for much of the 1990s. Between 1990 and 2000, eight of the 11 meetings would be top-10 matchups.

Manning wasn’t a part of the Vols’ 31-0 loss to No. 1 Florida in 1994. In the 1995 game, Manning and the Vols bolted out to a 30-21 halftime lead only to see Florida outscore Tennessee 41-7 in the second half and lose 62-37.

“It’s a 60-minute game. They don’t stop the game after 30 minutes,” Florida tackle Mo Collins said after the game.

The refrain would be played more than “Rocky Top.”

Manning was solid in the game, going 23-of-36 for 326 yards and two scores. The problem: Florida’s Danny Wuerffel was better. He threw for 381 yards and six touchdowns.

It would be the only game Tennessee would lose that season, but it would keep the Volunteers out of the SEC title game and relegate them to the Citrus Bowl. An amazing Manning performance in an excruciating loss to Florida and a less-than-satisfying bowl trip.

Before the 1996 game, the trash talk went wild.

Florida defensive lineman Tim Beauchamp all but guaranteed victory.

“They look vulnerable, very vulnerable,” Beauchamp said before the game. “… It should get pretty ugly.”

Beauchamp also took a shot at Manning. “He gets rattled,” Beauchamp said.

Archie Manning offered advice to his son ahead of the game, saying “spend the week with a smirk on your face, have some fun,” Sports Illustrated reported at the time.

When the game between the No. 4 Gators and No. 2 Volunteers began, that smirk might have turned into a grimace. Florida went for it on fourth down on its first series and scored on a 35-yard touchdown pass. Manning was intercepted on Tennessee’s first series. He was intercepted once more in the half and the Gators built a 35-6 lead at the break.

Manning, who attempted 65 passes in the game, would lead a second-half rally. He threw for a school-record 492 yards and four touchdowns but also had two more interceptions, which came at the goal line when Tennessee was threatening to score.

“We would’ve liked to have been accused of running up the score, but it didn’t work out that way,” Spurrier said after UF held on for a 35-29 win.

The Gators would go on to win the SEC, go to the Sugar Bowl and win their first national title. Tennessee was off to the Citrus Bowl. Wuerffel, the first of many QB foils for Manning, threw for just 155 yards in the game against Tennessee, but had four touchdowns and, crucially, no interceptions. He would go on to win the Heisman Trophy that season as well.


How do you spell Citrus?

Just a reminder — the “Head Ball Coach” loved hating on his team’s rivals. Spurrier surely meant what he said about running up the score on Tennessee in 1996. In 1994, he called Florida State “Free Shoes U” for allegedly failing to monitor agent activity. He called Ray Goff, who coached the Georgia Bulldogs from 1989-1995 and never beat Spurrier, “Ray Goof.”

In 2015, after a fire at Auburn’s library destroyed 20 books, Spurrier said “the real tragedy is that 15 hadn’t been colored yet.”

“He’s the needler champion of the world,” former FSU coach Bobby Bowden told Mark Schlabach in 2014.

Give him a national title (that came in a rout of rival FSU) and a summer booster tour and he could be in his hating bag like he was when he uttered his most famous barb.

“You can’t spell citrus without U-T.”

The brevity. The sass. The deeper, historic context. It was Spurrier’s masterpiece of hating on Tennessee.

He also had something for Manning, who had announced he was returning for his senior season, as well.

“I know why Peyton came back for his senior year,” Spurrier said. “He wanted to be a three-time star of the Citrus Bowl.”

Despite being a No. 3 vs. No. 4 matchup, it wasn’t the wild shootout the previous two games had been. Manning was 29-of-51 for 353 yards and three touchdowns, but he also threw two picks. The Gators again shredded the Vols’ defense. Fred Taylor ran for 134 yards and Florida QB Doug Johnson threw three touchdowns in the Gators’ 33-20 win.

That was it. Manning would never beat Florida. He lost five games as a college starter. Three came to the Gators. Tennessee would go on to win the SEC in 1997 only to be crushed in the Orange Bowl by the Nebraska Cornhuskers. Ironically, due to losses to Georgia and LSU, Florida would land in the Citrus Bowl.

“It bothers me that we never did beat Florida, but hey, I can’t control the way other people view Tennessee or view my career,” Manning said after the game. “I’m sure Coach Spurrier will go make a few more jokes. That’s fine. He’s got a good ballclub.”


Eli’s coming

In the moments after Peyton Manning’s last game against Florida, Archie Manning was feeling the weight of watching his son’s very public athletic struggles.

”Everybody talks about how great and wonderful it is to be at all the games and see your son playing. But I’ll tell you something: It ain’t all it’s cracked up to be,” Archie Manning told The New York Times afterward.

”Sometimes I wish someone would just knock me out and tell me what happened when it was over. This wasn’t fun.”

Five years later, in 2002, Peyton Manning was going into his fifth season with the Indianapolis Colts, and Spurrier was about to start his ill-fated tenure as an NFL head coach. After being turned down by then-Denver Broncos coach Mike Shanahan and then-Oklahoma Sooners coach Bob Stoops, Florida hired Ron Zook, a longtime assistant in college and the NFL, to replace Spurrier.

After choosing the Ole Miss Rebels, his father’s school, and becoming the starter as a sophomore in 2001, this is what Eli Manning was stepping into for his first crack at the Gators in 2002.

While the game featured two eventual Heisman Trophy finalists and Super Bowl QBs in Manning and Florida’s Rex Grossman, it was not an aerial bonanza like those in which Peyton played.

Manning was 18-of-33 for 154 yards and no touchdowns, and Grossman was 19-of-44 with two touchdowns and four interceptions. One of those picks was returned for the winning touchdown.

The 2003 game allowed Manning to exact a bit of vengeance on his family’s nemesis. It would also mean a return to The Swamp for the Mannings. Following Peyton’s last game there, Archie Manning claimed he’d never go back. But he was there nonetheless.

“[Archie] had one last trip and he got to end it on a good one,” Eli Manning said after the game.

In the 20-17 Ole Miss win, Manning threw for 262 yards and led a 50-yard scoring drive to win the game. The lore of the family history and status of the Gators was, perhaps, not lost on Eli Manning who got a shot on Florida afterward.

“That team is beatable,” he said after the game. “They’re really not the team they were a couple of years ago when they had [Danny] Wuerffel and all of those other guys.”

That Manning ended 2-0 against Florida.


Next Manning up

Prior to the 2025 season, when Arch Manning was the preseason favorite for the Heisman, Spurrier found a little more hating in his heart.

“They’ve got Arch Manning already winning the Heisman,” Spurrier said on the “Another Dooley Noted” podcast. “My question is, if he was this good, how come they let Quinn Ewers play all the time last year? And [Ewers] was a seventh-round pick.”

Spurrier might have been right. Prior to putting up huge numbers against Sam Houston State, Manning was 124th out of 136 QBs with a 55.3% completion rate and struggled in his only other road start at Ohio State. On the other side, Florida is 1-3 after starting the season ranked No. 15 in the AP, and head coach Billy Napier is on the hot seat.

Saturday will mark 22 years to the day since a Manning played the Gators. While Arch Manning has not yet met the preseason hype, he will have his chance to continue the family winning streak and another rancorous chapter to the rivalry.

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Ole Miss’ Kiffin: Dynasties ‘over’ for bigger SEC

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Ole Miss' Kiffin: Dynasties 'over' for bigger SEC

OXFORD, Miss. — Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin said “dynasties are over” in the SEC after the league added Oklahoma and Texas and recently announced it will play a ninth conference game starting in 2026.

Kiffin, whose Rebels (5-0) are ranked No. 4 in The Associated Press Top 25 poll after last week’s 24-19 victory against LSU, said name, image and likeness rules and the transfer portal have also leveled the playing field in the 16-team SEC, making it harder for programs to stay on top.

He said SEC programs will no longer be able to stockpile talent as former Alabama coach Nick Saban did while winning six national championships from 2007 to 2023 and Georgia coach Kirby Smart did when capturing back-to-back CFP national titles at his alma mater in 2021 and 2022.

“In my opinion, the dynasties are over,” Kiffin told ESPN on Wednesday. “Alabama with Coach Saban and then Kirby at Georgia, where they had those rosters year in, year out and there would be a bunch of wins by 30 points in the conference, those days are done.”

Kiffin was Alabama’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach from 2014 to 2016, helping the Crimson Tide finish 14-1 and beat Clemson 45-40 in the CFP National Championship after the 2015 season.

“When I was at Alabama, they’d be like, ‘Go watch the outside linebackers,’ and there’s six of them over there that are first-round picks,” Kiffin said. “That’s not going to happen anymore because if they don’t play, then they’re going to leave. They can’t keep them all anymore.”

Under the SEC’s new schedule, teams will play three annual opponents to maintain traditional rivalries, and the remaining six games will rotate among the other 12 league members, so programs will face each other at least once every two seasons. Teams are also required to play at least one quality nonconference game against a school from the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12 and Notre Dame every season.

Kiffin, who is 49-18 in six seasons at Ole Miss, said he didn’t want the SEC to add a ninth conference game, which was done to increase revenue, improve fan experience with an additional game against a quality opponent and get the league in line with the Big Ten’s scheduling model.

“You’re going to have really good teams going 8-4 because we’re going to play nine conference teams, including five on the road,” Kiffin said. “The conference has never been this balanced, and it never used to have Texas and Oklahoma, two top-10 teams and two of the hardest places in the country to play.

“My concern for the programs and for the coaches is that fans aren’t going to be able to get used to the numbers being different, the wins and losses. If you’re a program that’s used to being a nine- or 10-win team and you go 7-5, your fans are going to think the team is terrible and the coach is terrible. But you might have lost four road games at Georgia, Florida, LSU and Alabama.”

Vanderbilt, traditionally the SEC’s worst program, went 7-6 last season and upset No. 1 Alabama 40-35. This year, the Commodores are 5-0 and ranked 16th heading into Saturday’s game at No. 10 Alabama (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC).

Commodores coach Clark Lea has relied heavily on the transfer portal to rebuild his alma mater’s roster, including bringing in star quarterback Diego Pavia and tight end Eli Stowers from New Mexico State in 2024.

Mississippi State went 7-17 in the two seasons after former coach Mike Leach’s death in December 2022, including 2-10 under current coach Jeff Lebby in 2024. The Bulldogs brought in 31 transfers with 168 career starts before this season. They are 4-1 and upset then-No. 12 Arizona State 24-20 on Sept. 6.

“If a team in the bottom half is down for a couple of years, they won’t stay down for long anymore because they can go buy and fix their problems,” Kiffin said. “There are so many kids that want to play and go to the portal. They want to play in the SEC, so they’ll go to what you would maybe call the bottom-tier programs. They’ll fix their problems and won’t stay bad.”

Going forward, Kiffin hopes more weight will be put on schedule strength and other analytics when teams are picked for the College Football Playoff. The CFP announced on Aug. 20 that enhancements were made to the tools it uses to “assess schedule strength and how teams perform against their schedule,” including adding “greater weight to games against strong opponents.”

Kiffin said he would have preferred that SEC teams play an annual game against a Big Ten opponent, rather than another conference game, to produce an additional data point that might have differentiated SEC teams from one another.

“It can’t be these people deciding who gets in the playoff,” Kiffin said. “We’ve got to get back to analytics and computers. Baseball and basketball have the RPI where they take into account margin of victory, who you play, where you play and all of that.”

Last season, Kiffin criticized the CFP selection committee for taking Indiana and SMU over three SEC teams that went 9-3: Alabama, Ole Miss and South Carolina. The Rebels thumped No. 3 Georgia 28-10 at home but fell to unranked Kentucky 20-17 at home and Florida 24-17 on the road.

“Are you better than the 10-2 Big Ten team or ACC team? Well, you took away 16 nonconference games, so you really don’t know,” Kiffin said. “It’s just like the records in college football are so burned into our heads that 11-1 is so much better than 10-2 and so much better than 9-3, but it’s so different because you’re in these different conferences.”

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PSU starting LB Rojas out with long-term injury

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PSU starting LB Rojas out with long-term injury

Penn State starting linebacker Tony Rojas will be sidelined long term because of an unspecified injury sustained in practice this week.

Rojas, a junior from Fairfax, Virginia, is tied for the team lead in tackles for loss with 4.5 and ranks second with 25 tackles. He became a starter last season, finishing with 58 tackles, 6 tackles for loss and 3 interceptions, returning one for a touchdown in a College Football Playoff first-round win against SMU.

Penn State did not specify how long Rojas would be out.

Nittany Lions coach James Franklin said Wednesday that senior Dom DeLuca will get increased playing time in Rojas’ absence, and the staff is discussing how to possibly use freshmen Cam Smith and Alex Tatsch.

“What’s helpful is we have these Sunday scrimmages, so we’ve had a chance to evaluate those guys each week,” Franklin said. “Early on, Tatsch was getting a little bit more time with the varsity. We’re giving Cam an opportunity now as well.”

Rojas played much of last season with a left shoulder injury, and underwent surgery following Penn State’s CFP run.

The seventh-ranked Nittany Lions, who lost their first game last week against Oregon, visit winless UCLA on Saturday.

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