LEXINGTON, Ky. — Rich Scangarello was sitting in the San Francisco 49ers‘ team hotel meeting room last season on the eve of their game against the Arizona Cardinals.
The LSU-Kentucky game was on the big-screen TV in the room, and Scangarello and others from the 49ers’ organization, including general manager John Lynch and assistant GM Adam Peters, were watching while waiting for meetings to start. Kentucky quarterback Will Levis was putting on a show, throwing for three touchdowns and running for two more in a 42-21 win.
Scangarello, then the 49ers’ quarterbacks coach, turned to Peters and said, “Who is this quarterback? He’s pretty good. I need to make sure he’s on my radar going into the offseason.”
Little did Scangarello know the offseason would lead to his hiring as Levis’ offensive coordinator at Kentucky, and it didn’t take Scangarello long to figure out what kind of talent he was inheriting in Levis, who has gone from a backup at Penn State to one of the NFL’s hottest draft commodities seemingly in a flash.
One NFL personnel director, who has scouted Levis extensively and seen him live this season, told ESPN he sees a lot of Josh Allen in Levis in terms of arm strength, athletic ability and physical size.
“He just needs to continue to work on his pocket poise, his timing and his accuracy under pressure, but he’s one of the more intriguing quarterback prospects in this class,” the personnel director said. “Josh Allen had some inconsistencies with accuracy and timing as well, but we’ve seen how that has played out.
“As [Levis] gets more comfortable and better rhythm in this scheme, I feel like he will be playing even better football at the end of the season than what he’s putting on tape right now. He has all the physical traits and a lot of upside.”
Scangarello is the fourth offensive coordinator Levis has played under in as many years, going back to his redshirt freshman season at Penn State in 2019. The systems have all been a little different, even the one Levis played in last season when Liam Coen was the Wildcats’ offensive coordinator. Coen left in February to become the Los Angeles Rams‘ offensive coordinator.
“Will is as talented as anyone I’ve evaluated the last five years. The only two guys I would compare him to, where you could see it clearly, would be Joe Burrow and Josh Allen,” said Scangarello, who spent the previous five seasons in the NFL and was the Denver Broncos‘ offensive coordinator in 2019.
“I think he will be the first overall pick in the draft.”
LEVIS’ ASCENT TO the top of NFL draft boards may surprise some, but not Levis. Even when he was relegated to being Penn State’s “running” quarterback and playing second fiddle to Sean Clifford, Levis never doubted he was going to get his shot — somewhere.
“I’ve always had confidence in myself. I always thought I was the best quarterback in the country, and nobody else was going to tell me otherwise,” said Levis, who attempted just 102 passes in two seasons at Penn State. “I just needed the platform to prove it. I needed the opportunity to get comfortable with playing the position at this level, and I feel like that’s something I didn’t have at Penn State.”
Levis has found that platform at Kentucky, which has won 14 of its past 17 games with Levis at quarterback and vaulted to No. 7 this week in the AP poll, the Wildcats’ highest ranking since 1977. They travel to No. 14 Ole Miss on Saturday (noon ET, ESPN).
“A guy like that makes everybody better. He elevates your program,” Kentucky coach Mark Stoops said. “The belief is there. The confidence is there every time he takes a snap, every time he drops back to throw. I get a chance to see him every day. I stand behind him, and you know how it can get here [in Kentucky]. It could be nasty, cold, rainy, windy, whatever, and it doesn’t matter.
“This guy just absolutely rips the ball. I mean, he throws the s— out of it.”
Which begs the question: How did Levis go from the bench at Penn State to somebody who wasn’t heavily pursued as a transfer to a quarterback NFL scouts are showing up in droves to watch play?
Even in high school, Levis was overlooked until Penn State lost out on Justin Fields and offered Levis a scholarship. Up until that point, Mid-American Conference schools were showing the most interest.
“We were all frustrated and scratching our heads because we thought one thing about him and were saying, ‘Why doesn’t anyone else see this? What are we missing?'” said Andy Guyon, who coached Levis at Xavier High in Middletown, Connecticut.
“The spring before his senior year, we had tons of colleges on campus checking him out, but he couldn’t get a bite. Sometimes, there’s that stigma that players from the Northeast get, that we don’t play football up here the way they do down South or in Texas or in California, and this guy can’t be that good.
“Well, actually, he can be that good.”
Levis attended a camp at Florida State the summer before his senior year of high school and began to turn heads after receiving a scholarship offer from then-FSU coach Jimbo Fisher. Levis attended a camp at Penn State soon after that, and the Nittany Lions were looking for a quarterback following Fields’ decommitment.
“He came in there and was lights out, and it was not hard to see how talented he was,” said Old Dominion coach Ricky Rahne, who was Penn State’s offensive coordinator in 2018 and 2019. “He didn’t miss a throw and was an incredible athlete.”
Rahne walked over to Joe Moorhead, who was then Penn State’s offensive coordinator, and said, “Joe, we’re crazy if we don’t offer this kid,” to which Moorhead responded, “Yeah, I was thinking the same thing.”
Levis redshirted his first season at Penn State in 2018, and Moorhead left for the Mississippi State head job after the season, with Rahne promoted to offensive coordinator. He said it was never a case of the Nittany Lions not believing in Levis, but rather that they were winning games with Clifford and he was more equipped at that time to be the starter.
“Everyone always asks what happened and why Penn State didn’t start Will over Sean,” Rahne said. “When we first picked Sean, Will wasn’t ready to start yet, and then it became hard to replace a guy who had won 11 games. People kind of forget that.”
Rahne’s only question about Levis, whom Kentucky coaches and teammates readily admit plays with a linebacker’s mentality, was whether he could harness his intelligence, competitiveness and will to succeed so he could play with the steadiness needed for an elite quarterback.
“That was sometimes his greatest detriment,” Rahne said. “He wanted to be so successful that he put so much pressure on himself that it made him play a little tight sometimes. At Kentucky, he seems comfortable in his skin, and they’ve done a really nice job of letting him be himself and play free. I’m happy to see it because the talent was always there, and he’s a great kid.”
After Rahne left for the ODU head job, Kirk Ciarrocca came aboard as Penn State’s offensive coordinator in 2020, and nothing changed for Levis. Most of his playing time came situationally as a runner from the quarterback position.
It seemed clear that a transfer was going to be his only chance to become a starter, and having taken on an accelerated academic schedule, Levis earned a degree in finance from Penn State in three years. He graduated magna cum laude with a 3.97 GPA.
Levis had personally informed Penn State coach James Franklin that he planned to transfer, and Levis’ parents, Mike and Beth — who were both athletes in college — met with Franklin to thank him for what he and the Penn State program had done for their son. But similar to the early stages of Levis’ high school recruitment, schools weren’t lining up for his services out of the transfer portal. Levis said he heard from Rutgers, UConn, UMass and several other smaller schools.
“Nobody had seen me throw it. All they’d seen me do is run,” he explained.
But Kentucky was looking for a quarterback, and Stoops had just hired Coen as his offensive coordinator. Coen was the assistant quarterbacks coach with the Rams, but he had seen Levis play in high school when Coen was coaching at UMass and then Maine and was recruiting in the New England area.
Even with that familiarity, Stoops said they had to dig through Levis’ tape at Penn State to find plays where he was making different throws.
“We knew we had to go get him, but because of the way he was utilized at Penn State, you really had to search for certain throws,” Stoops recounted. “There was the Nebraska game from the year before, throws we watched and saw and confirmed what we thought. It also helped that Liam knew him from high school.”
Levis didn’t graduate from Penn State until May 2021, so he didn’t have the benefit of going through spring practice his first year at Kentucky.
“Will bet on himself. He took a gamble and took a chance, and it’s worked out extremely well,” Mike Levis said. “He had to walk into that locker room and gain the respect and trust of his teammates and coaching staff in a relatively short time.”
Levis made an immediate impression. He was named one of eight team captains and helped lead Kentucky to 10 wins for only the fourth time in school history. Prospering in Coen’s pro-style system, Levis gave the Wildcats a dimension at quarterback they hadn’t previously had under Stoops and finished with 3,202 yards in total offense with 24 passing touchdowns and nine rushing touchdowns. He also threw 13 interceptions.
“A lot of times with the interceptions, it was trying to do too much, trying to fit it into a window I didn’t need to try and fit it in,” said Levis, who has thrown 10 touchdown passes with four interceptions through four games this season.
Levis has also taken a ton of hits and has been sacked 16 times. He has two rushing touchdowns, but has been limited to minus-37 rushing yards. That’s after finishing with 376 rushing yards a year ago.
“They’ve had trouble protecting him and haven’t been able to run the ball, and that’s hurt him,” one NFL scout told ESPN. “But he’s still found ways to spread the ball around. Look at the explosive plays he’s made.”
Levis is tied for second nationally with seven passes of 40 or more yards, and freshman receivers Dane Key and Barion Brown are starting to come on, along with Virginia Tech transfer Tayvion Robinson.
Also, senior running back Chris Rodriguez Jr. is set to return against Ole Miss after missing the first four games this season. He has rushed for 2,740 yards and 26 touchdowns in his career and should help balance out the Wildcats’ offense.
One of the adjustments Scangarello made with Levis this offseason was changing his footwork in the shotgun to receive the snap with his left foot forward instead of his right foot forward. Burrow made a similar adjustment when he was at LSU, Scangarello said, not to mention Matt Ryan when he was with the Atlanta Falcons.
Will Levis airs it out for 70-yard touchdown
Before Scangarello took the Kentucky job this offseason, he did a video call with Levis to talk to him about those plans and make sure he was onboard.
“It’s what I know and what I teach, and Will is so quick to pick up on every adjustment we make. He’s so precise in everything he does,” Scangarello said. “He does things that I haven’t seen many guys do. He has the best of Jimmy Garoppolo‘s ability from 15 yards in, which Jimmy is one of the best on the planet with the short, accurate, quick-twitch throws. Will can do all that, but he can also throw the ball 65 yards on a dime.”
Multiple scouts told ESPN they still want to see Levis be more consistent with the “touch and finesse throws” and not be so confident in his arm strength that he’s trying to force throws when he could check down a pass to a running back. Scangarello has also reminded Levis repeatedly not to take unnecessary hits.
“He’s gotten better at some of the layups and will keep getting better,” Stoops said. “The dude is just so amped in everything he does, in class, on the football field, in meetings. But as he plays and gets more reps, you just see that much more poise.”
TIM COUCH, KENTUCKY’S record-setting quarterback from 1996 to 1998 and the No. 1 overall pick in the 1999 NFL draft, sees somebody who is committed to his team and to getting better every time he steps onto the field. Couch spent some time with Levis this summer. They played golf together and still talk periodically.
“He’s like an old-school player out there,” Couch said. “We’ve struggled to protect him at times this year and I’ve seen him take some big hits, but he pops right back up, stands in there and slings it. He’s got a Brett Favre-type of feel to him, a gunslinger who’s not afraid to throw his body around and sacrifice for the team. He’s fun to watch.”
When it comes to arm strength, combined with the ability to get the ball out quickly and do so without much room to throw, Couch thinks Levis is in a class by himself.
“I watched him up close this summer, and you just don’t see that kind of accuracy and velocity,” said Couch, who set 14 SEC records and 26 school records. “If there’s a stronger arm in college football, I want to see it. He’s going to blow the scouts away. He’s athletic, tough, a great leader and has all the intangibles you look for in a quarterback.”
Kentucky’s toughest tests of the season remain. After the visit to Ole Miss this weekend, there are dates with top-10 teams Tennessee on the road Oct. 29 and defending national champion Georgia at home Nov. 19.
Those are big stages for the Wildcats and big stages for Levis, whose steely focus has remained firmly on what’s right in front of him and not what lies ahead.
“I’m not going to cheat my teammates or myself,” Levis said. “This season is what matters and helping bring Kentucky to new heights, a team that fans will remember forever.”
In the world of name, image and likeness, Levis has cashed in handsomely. He has deals with steakhouses, automobile dealerships, golf courses and has even been paired with a horse (War of Will) to promote Claiborne Farm’s breeding operation. He’s also helped with relief efforts in eastern Kentucky after flooding ravaged that area this summer and participated in a telethon last year to help raise money for those impacted by tornadoes that hit parts of western Kentucky.
“I’ve never been around somebody so driven to do everything the right way,” said Guyon, Levis’ high school coach. “He’s one of those people in life who succeeds because he knows what he needs to do, how he needs to do it and when he needs to do it.”
And yet, Levis remains fueled by those who doubt him. This summer, he was talking to a Pac-12 assistant coach who told him there was early interest in bringing him in as a transfer from Penn State.
“They were looking for a quarterback,” Levis said. “I won’t say which school it was, but they were like, ‘Nah, that kid can’t play.’ My reaction was, ‘Man, that’s awesome,’ because I couldn’t wait to get out and prove them and everybody else wrong.”
The spotlight will only get brighter for Levis, especially as the games get bigger. And as the NFL draft approaches, there will inevitably be another round of doubters.
He wouldn’t have it any other way.
Kentucky competing for an SEC football title? An under-recruited former Penn State backup going No. 1 in the draft?
It sounds hard to believe, but for the kid who did an eighth-grade solo of Hall & Oates’ ‘You Make My Dreams Come True,’ it all makes sense.
Levis has never stopped chasing his dreams, even when they might have seemed more like fantasy.
Los Angeles will receive a Competitive Balance Round A pick (around No. 37) and outfield prospect Mike Sirota in the deal for Lux, 27, who hit .251 last season with 10 home runs and 50 RBIs.
The Reds have been looking for infield help after they dealt second baseman Jonathan India to the Kansas City Royals in November. Cincinnati added veteran right-handed pitcher Brady Singer from the Royals in the India deal.
Lux played in 139 games for the Dodgers last season, and 129 the season before. In Los Angeles’ run to the World Series title last season, he had one home run and four RBIs in 12 games.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves will attempt to make his NASCAR debut in next month’s Daytona 500 with Trackhouse Racing.
Castroneves, one of the most popular drivers in IndyCar history, has been trying for two years to get a Daytona 500 seat and finally landed one Monday as part of Trackhouse’s “Project 91” designed to give renowned racers from outside of NASCAR a shot in a stock car.
He will attempt to qualify for the “Great American Race” in the No. 91 Chevrolet with sponsorship from Wendy’s. Darian Grubb will be his crew chief.
“Never in my wildest dreams did I think I would enter a NASCAR race and certainly not the Daytona 500 with a team like Trackhouse Racing,” Castroneves said. “This is an opportunity that nobody in their right mind could ever turn down. I am so thankful to Wendy’s for allowing me to wear their uniform and drive their car.”
Project 91 debuted in 2022 when former Formula 1 champion Kimi Raikkonen made his Cup Series debut at Watkins Glen. Project 91 then ran three times in 2023, once with Raikkonen at Circuit of the Americas and twice with three-time Australian V8 Supercars champion Shane van Gisbergen.
Van Gisbergen won in his NASCAR debut on the street course in Chicago and that led to last season’s move to full-time stock car competition. The New Zealander will be a full-time Cup Series driver this year.
Castroneves, meanwhile, is at the end of his driving career. One of only four drivers to win the Indy 500 four times, the Brazilian moved into an ownership role with Meyer Shank Racing last season and ran only three races.
His 2021 win at Indianapolis was with Meyer Shank, where he landed after his long career with Team Penske came to a close. Castroneves had been inquiring for the past few years about a chance to run the Daytona 500.
Castroneves is a three-time winner of the Rolex 24 endurance sports car race held on the road course inside Daytona International Speedway. NASCAR’s biggest race is held on the 2½-mile oval.
“Hélio is one of the greatest drivers of all time and exactly the type of driver we want to bring to NASCAR,” Trackhouse owner Justin Marks said. “I think race fans around the world will be excited to see Hélio in NASCAR’s most prestigious race. It also exposes our sport to a global audience and allows them to see just how great of a series we have in NASCAR.”
Castroneves won 31 races in IndyCar and finished second in the championship four times. The other four-time Indy 500 winners are A.J. Foyt, Rick Mears and Al Unser Sr.
Castroneves will need to qualify for the Feb. 16 race at Daytona with a fast time in trials or race his way in via a qualifying race. There are only four open spots in the 40-car field, as 36 are earmarked for teams that hold NASCAR charters. Trackhouse has two chartered Cup cars, but the Project 91 Chevrolet is not one of them.
If Castroneves wins the Daytona 500, he will join Foyt and Mario Andretti as the only drivers to capture that race and the Indianapolis 500.
“I know how much of a challenge this is going to be, but I also know the type of people and team Trackhouse Racing will bring to the effort,” Castroneves said. “I can’t wait to get to the Trackhouse race shop in North Carolina to meet everyone and prepare for Daytona. There is so much I must learn and I’m ready to get started.”
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — After some uncertainty, the Tampa Bay Rays now support a $55.7 million city plan to repair hurricane-shredded Tropicana Field in time for the 2026 season opener, while the team prepares to play this year at the New York Yankees‘ spring training home in nearby Tampa.
Matt Silverman, the Rays’ co-president, said in an email to the St. Petersburg chief administrator that the team wants to “clear up” any questions about its support for the reconstruction. The city must pay for the work under its current contract with the Rays.
“While we had been open to considering a scenario in which the city bought out of its obligation to rebuild the ballpark, the Rays support and expect the city to rebuild Tropicana Field in accordance with the terms of the current use agreement,” Silverman wrote.
Hurricane Milton tore the Trop’s fabric roof to pieces when it came ashore Oct. 9, causing water and other damage to interior parts of the now-exposed ballpark. Work has been ongoing to ensure no further damage is caused by weather but there had been questions about the full repair in part because it would eventually be torn down to make way for a new, $1.3 billion ballpark under current plans to keep the Rays in St. Petersburg another 30 years.
Time is of the essence, Silverman said in his Dec. 30 email to the city, which released it Monday. Even a partial 2026 season at Tropicana Field “would present massive logistical and revenue challenges for the team,” he wrote.
“It is therefore critical that the rebuild start in earnest as soon as possible” with a realistic construction schedule to be ready by Opening Day 2026, he added.
The city had no immediate comment on the email. Its own architect presented the repair proposal initially Dec. 12 but it has not yet been fully approved. Members of the city council have balked at the cost, especially with residents and businesses still recovering from Milton and Hurricane Helene before that.
St. Petersburg Mayor Ken Welch has said that insurance and Federal Emergency Management Agency funds should cover the bulk of the cost. Silverman said Major League Baseball has told the team it will hire its own adviser to monitor the repair work and timeline.
The planned new downtown Rays ballpark is part of a $6.5 billion project that will include affordable housing, a Black history museum, retail and office space, restaurants and bars. The project is known as the Historic Gas Plant District, which was once a thriving Black community displaced by the construction of the ballpark and an interstate highway.
The Rays are preparing to play 2025 home games at Steinbrenner Field, the Yankees’ 11,000-seat spring training location in Tampa. Once Tropicana Field is repaired, Silverman acknowledged the Rays are obligated to play there three more seasons under the contract with St. Petersburg.
“We look forward to a grand reopening,” Silverman said.