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Maxwell Moldovan, Green High School alum, sinks eagle at U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club

Green High School alum Maxwell Moldovan has one of the early highlights at Oakmont Country Club. On the first hole of his first round at the 2025 U.S. Open Golf Championship, former Green and Ohio State golfer needed just two strokes to get his ball into the cup, earning him an eagle on the par-4 […]

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Maxwell Moldovan, Green High School alum, sinks eagle at U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club

Green High School alum Maxwell Moldovan has one of the early highlights at Oakmont Country Club.

On the first hole of his first round at the 2025 U.S. Open Golf Championship, former Green and Ohio State golfer needed just two strokes to get his ball into the cup, earning him an eagle on the par-4 hole.

Moldovan, who turned pro in June 2024 and in April won his first pro event at the PGA Tour Americas Brazil Open, was one of four players in a field of 83 to qualify out of Springfield Country Club, located in Springfield, Ohio. He put together rounds of 69-65 to go 5 under, which sent him to the U.S. Open.

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This is his fourth straight year competing in the event.

Dispatch reporter Rob Oller contributed to this report.

Breaking and Trending News Reporter Nathan Hart can be reached at NHart@dispatch.com and at @NathanRHart on X and at nathanhart.dispatch.com on Bluesky.

This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Maxwell Moldovan sinks eagle at U.S. Open

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Pistons' NBA Cup schedule 2025

The Detroit Pistons‘ 2025 NBA Cup schedule was released Wednesday, Aug. 13. The Pistons, one of five teams in East Group B, will visit the Brooklyn Nets on Nov. 7 to start their in-season tournament schedule, host the Philadelphia 76ers on Nov. 14, play in Boston for a nationally-televised game against the Celtics on ESPN […]

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Pistons' NBA Cup schedule 2025

The Detroit Pistons‘ 2025 NBA Cup schedule was released Wednesday, Aug. 13.

The Pistons, one of five teams in East Group B, will visit the Brooklyn Nets on Nov. 7 to start their in-season tournament schedule, host the Philadelphia 76ers on Nov. 14, play in Boston for a nationally-televised game against the Celtics on ESPN on Nov. 26, and then conclude group play with a home game against the Orlando Magic on Nov. 28.

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The Pistons have three known national games ahead of the full NBA schedule release Thursday. Both are home games, against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Oct. 27 (Peacock) and against the Celtics on Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Jan. 19 at 8 p.m. (Peacock, NBC).

TRENDING: NBA experts are high on Pistons win total for 2025-26

They will also face the Dallas Mavericks in Mexico City, Nov. 1. It will be the Pistons’ third time playing in Mexico, with the two teams last facing each other in the city in 2019.

The Pistons tip off their four-game preseason slate Oct. 6 on the road against the Memphis Grizzlies.

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The Pistons have a four-game schedule comprised from East Group B for the third year of the NBA Cup, an in-season tournament. All group games are among each team’s 82-game regular season.

  • Nov. 7: at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 p.m.

  • Nov. 14: vs Philadelphia 76ers, 7:30 p.m.

  • Nov. 28: vs Orlando Magic, 7:30 p.m.

There are six groups split evenly across both conferences, and the best team in each group plus two wild-card teams will advance to the single-elimination quarterfinals, scheduled for Dec. 9, followed by the semifinals and then the championship game in Las Vegas on Dec. 16. The championship game does not count in the regular season standings.

[ MUST WATCH: Make “The Pistons Pulse” your go-to Detroit Pistons podcast, listen available anywhere you listen to podcasts (AppleSpotify) ] 

Follow the Pistons all year long with the best coverage at freep.com/sports/pistons.

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Submit a letter to the editor at freep.com/letters, and we may publish it online or in print.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Pistons NBA Cup schedule 2025: Celtics on ESPN highlights 4 games

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Inaugural HBCU Hoops Invitational coming to ESPN Wide World of Sports

ORLANDO, Fla. — The inaugural HBCU Hoops Invitational is coming to ESPN Wide World of Sports December 4-7. Florida A&M highlights the four-team men’s bracket. The Rattlers just hired former Heisman Trophy winner Charlie Ward as their 16th head coach. Tuskegee University, Florida Memorial University and Barber-Scotia College are the other three teams in the […]

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Inaugural HBCU Hoops Invitational coming to ESPN Wide World of Sports

ORLANDO, Fla. — The inaugural HBCU Hoops Invitational is coming to ESPN Wide World of Sports December 4-7.

Florida A&M highlights the four-team men’s bracket. The Rattlers just hired former Heisman Trophy winner Charlie Ward as their 16th head coach.

Tuskegee University, Florida Memorial University and Barber-Scotia College are the other three teams in the men’s bracket.

Bethune-Cookman University, Hampton University, Edward Waters University and Cheyney University are the four women’s programs in the HBCU Hoops Invitational.

The teams will compete inside the State Farm Field House at ESPN Wide World of Sports in a single-elimination format with the chance to claim the inaugural HBCU Hoops Invitational titles.

“The HBCU Hoops Invitational is far more than a basketball tournament—it’s a powerful celebration of heritage, excellence and the limitless future of HBCU athletics,’’ said HBCU Hoops Global vice president Haywoode Workman, who spent nearly a decade playing in the NBA before becoming an NBA referee. “We are building a legacy that extends well beyond the court to open doors to academic achievement, career readiness and financial opportunity for our scholar-athletes.”

“We are excited about the opportunities to bring thrilling, family-friendly events to ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex and this HBCU Hoops Invitational adds to our lineup of high-caliber youth and college events,’’ said Jorge Senior, Disney’s Director of Sports Planning and Development. “If you’re a college basketball fan, there’s no better place to be during the holidays than at ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex.’’

Click here to download our free news, weather and smart TV apps. And click here to stream Channel 9 Eyewitness News live.

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10 storylines to watch heading into the 2025 Utah high school football season

With the 2025 high school football season getting underway this week, here’s a look at some of the most intriguing storylines to watch throughout the season. Effects of region realignment Last December, the UHSAA finalized the new regions for the next two school years. Class 6A didn’t see much change, but the little that did […]

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10 storylines to watch heading into the 2025 Utah high school football season

With the 2025 high school football season getting underway this week, here’s a look at some of the most intriguing storylines to watch throughout the season.

Effects of region realignment

Last December, the UHSAA finalized the new regions for the next two school years. Class 6A didn’t see much change, but the little that did shook things up in a big way.

Corner Canyon moved back to Region 3, while Cedar Valley and Westlake moved to Region 2. The move allows a wide-open Region 2 as the Chargers dominated the region during its reign.

Meanwhile, Region 3 looks to be the toughest region in the state, filled with heavy hitters like Corner Canyon, Lone Peak, Lehi, Skyridge and American Fork.

In 5A, 2024 4A runner-up Spanish Fork moves up to Region 7. Region 7 looks to be a tough league filled with eight Utah County schools, including newcomer Pleasant Grove.

Despite losing East, Region 6 has a strong argument as the toughest region in 5A as it lost its two lowest-placing teams in Highland and Skyline. It replaced its departing members with Woods Cross, 5A quarterfinalist Viewmont, and defending 5A champion Bountiful. It retained its top three members in Brighton, Olympus and West.

Region 5 gained 2024 Region 1 co-champion Fremont.

Class 4A has a few new members with 3A’s Juan Diego and 5A’s East both joining 4A’s Region 10. Deseret Peak will have its first year of competition as a member of Region 11.

The bottom of Regions 9 and 11 have a chance at new beginnings with Logan and Cedar each making the move to 3A. Cedar moved to 3A South and Logan joined 3A North.


Transfers aplenty, again

As the 2025-26 school year gets underway, this will be the second year with the UHSAA transfer rule that requires student-athletes to sit out the first half of the regular season without a transfer waiver.

A waiver includes things like a full-family move or documented bullying, but without it a player must sit out the first 50% of that season’s varsity or sub-varsity competition, or 30 days, whichever is greater.

The transfer rules were put in place for several reasons, one of which was to deter student-athletes from bouncing around from school to school year after year. The results are mixed if it’s having that impact.

Just prior to the start of last season, the UHSAA confirmed that 217 football players transferred without a waiver, forcing them to sit out the first five weeks of the season.

For the 2025 season, as of Tuesday the UHSAA reported that approximately 245 athletes have transferred without a waiver, approximately a 10% increase.

On the surface five regular-season games is a lot, but if someone transfers to a team expected to make a deep playoff run they’d still get to play in 8-9 games.

The bigger deterrent is if a player seeks a second transfer without a waiver. Under that scenario, that player would have to sit out a full season.


Timpview wide receiver Jaron Pula (5) makes a catch while guarded by Skyridge defensive back Jernaro Gilford (7) during a game held at Timpview High School in Provo on Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. | Isaac Hale, Deseret News

New home for Pula twins

Twin brothers Jaron and Kennan Pula were key contributors to Timpview’s state championship run as sophomores in 2023 and then last year’s semifinal appearance.

They’ll be donning new uniforms for their senior season.

The Pula twins transferred from Timpview to Lone Peak in the offseason, a big loss for their old team and a huge addition for the Knights.

Jaron and Kennan Pula recently committed to the University of Utah after de-committing from UCLA earlier this summer.

Jaron Pula hauled in 77 passes for 1,209 yards and eight TDs a year ago for Timpview, and was named first team all-state. Kennan Pula made a bigger impact on the defensive side of the ball and was named a second team all-state safety.

The brothers both rank in the top 10 in 247Sports composite rankings of Utah’s top high school football prospects from the class of 2026.

Lone Peak quarterback Kepa Niumeitolu, an Idaho State commit, will benefit with arrival of the Pula brothers and will have the two great offensive weapons at his disposal this fall.


Year of the QB

Generally, when you look at the top recruits from the state, its most often filled with linemen with the occasional skill position player sprinkled in.

That changes in a big way in 2026 as four of Utah’s top 20 recruits are quarterbacks.

Corner Canyon’s Helaman Casuga is the top-rated QB in the state, and is fifth in 247 Sports’ composite state ranking. Casuga has been a varsity starter since his freshman year at Timpview. Last year, Casuga led Corner Canyon to arguably the biggest win in Utah high school football history when the Chargers defeated Florida’s IMG Academy, 35-34.

In that game, Casuga threw for 330 yards and four touchdowns. He is listed as a four-star recruit and is currently committed to Texas A&M.

Timpview’s Helaman Casuga runs to score a touchdown as Maple Mountain’s Kavika Bringhurst tries to tackle him during a varsity football game at Maple Mountain High School in Spanish Fork on Friday, Oct. 6, 2023. Timpview won 42-20. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Just below Casuga is another four-star recruit in Orem’s Tayden Kaawa. Kaawa led the Orem offense last year with 2,825 passing yards with a completion percentage of .663 and scored 26 touchdowns. Kaawa is committed to Alabama.

Three-star Skyridge QB Kaneal Sweetwyne is listed as the 18th-best recruit in the state and recently de-committed from BYU. He led Skyridge to a 6A semifinal finish last year while scoring 19 touchdowns through the air and 10 on the ground.

Davis’ Tradon Bessinger is the last QB in the top 20, finishing at 19. In 2024, with Bessinger at the helm, Davis’ offense generated 38.42 points per game. The Darts had the second-best offense in 6A. Bessinger earned a spot on the 2024 6A all-state first team and is committed to Boise State.

If you look to the 2027 class, Utah has yet another top-ranked quarterback in West’s Kamden Lopati. The four-star quarterback is currently listed as the second-best recruit in Utah in 2027.

As a sophomore last season, Lopati threw for 3,050 yards on a .668 completion percentage, scoring 25 touchdowns with only four interceptions. Lopati is currently committed to Illinois.


Utah schools take on powerful neighbors

With a few of the regions thinning out in the new region realignments, teams were eager to fill up their non-region schedule. A few of Utah’s top teams took that opportunity to go head-to-head against the best that the surrounding states have to offer.

Skyridge will get its fill of tough out-of-state competition. In week two, it will host Nevada’s Liberty. Liberty is ranked as the third-best team in Nevada. In week four, the Falcons travel to Idaho to face Highland, which is ranked eighth in the state.

Finally, in week five, Skyridge finishes off its non-region gauntlet against Colorado’s top team, Cherry Creek, on the road. The Falcons faced Cherry Creek last year in late August and won 24-14.

Idaho’s top two teams, Rigby and Rocky Mountain, will face a few Utah opponents.

Rigby, Idaho’s top team, will host Woods Cross in week three. Rocky Mountain gets back-to-back road games against Utah County schools in weeks three and four at Orem and Provo.

Week four will feature three big games for Utah schools. First, Bingham travels to take on California’s Centennial, which is ranked third in the state and 12th in the country. Centennial beat both Timpview and Lone Peak in 2024.

Secondly, we’ll get the battle between the top of Arizona and Utah teams as Corner Canyon hosts Arizona’s Liberty. Liberty is listed as the top team in the state according to Max Preps. Just like the Chargers, Liberty is coming off its second consecutive state championship.

Thirdly, week four also features arguably the biggest game of the year, as Lone Peak takes on high school football giant Bishop Gorman in Nevada. Bishop Gorman is the top team in Nevada and currently ranked third in the country.


Rich High School plays Monticello High School in the 1A 8-player football state championship at Southern Utah University in Cedar City on Saturday, Nov. 11, 2023. | Megan Nielsen, Deseret News

Deseret Peak opens doors, 8-player league expands

For the second straight season, a new school is joining the 4A ranks while two others begin play in the 8-player league.

Deseret Peak High in Tooele opens its doors this fall and will begin play this season in Region 11, a league that now consists of three Tooele Valley teams and five northern Utah teams.

Cooper Buchhammer, a former assistant coach at Stansbury High, will lead the school into its first season.

“We are a program full of underclassmen ready to prove themselves. Our kids have worked hard over the summer. Our numbers are great for a first-year program and only three classes. It has been a fun offseason watching our kids learn, build a culture, get to know each other and compete,” said Buchhammer.

In the 8-player league, Panguitch and Escalante are joining the league which raises the total number of teams to 12 with the addition of Milford as it drops down from 1A football for this season with its decreasing numbers.

Last season the two Utah Military Academy schools joined, which increased the total to nine teams.

“In the return of football to Panguitch High School, we aim to reestablish a successful football culture that builds for the future. Each week we will see improvement as we gain experience,” said Panguitch coach Luke Allen.


Annual coaching shakeup

The sidelines will look quite a bit different for 24% of the teams across the state this fall.

A total of 29 teams will have a new head coach in 2025, which includes first-year schools Deseret Peak, Escalante and Panguitch.

The 29 new coaches fits with the trend of a 20%-25% turnover rate over the past decade. Last year, 32 schools a new coach.

Of this year’s 29 new coaches, 26 are first-time head coaches.

Among the three new coaches with head coaching experience is North Sanpete head coach Dave Peck. He has 24 years of head coaching experience at Cyprus and Bingham, with a career record of 197-79.

The other two coaches with prior head coaching experience are Bonneville coach Taylor Walkenhorst and Maple Mountain coach Harry Schwenke.

Among the coaches who hung it up after last season are Dixie’s Blaine Monkres, Lehi’s Ed Larson and Ogden’s Erik Thompson. They departed with a combined 71 years of heading coaching experience, which is more than the combined 64 years of experience of all of this year’s 6A coaches.


San Juan players celebrate after their victory over Emery in the 2A state football championship at Eccles Coliseum on the campus of Southern Utah University in Cedar City on Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024. | Brice Tucker, Deseret News

Are more repeats in the cards in 2025?

As the high school football season gets underway this week, five of the seven state champs from a year ago begin ranked No. 1 in their respective classifications in the Deseret News preseason coaches rankings.

There’s a very, very good chance at least one of them will win again, and most likely several will. There has been at least one repeat high school football state champ in Utah for the past 40 years.

The last time there wasn’t was in 1985, when Weber, Springville, Delta and Kanab were all new state champs.

Last season, there were a state-record five repeat state champs (Corner Canyon, Crimson Cliffs, San Juan, Beaver and Rich). For San Juan, last season’s title was its fourth straight. The previous record of repeat state champs was four in 2014 and 2020.

San Juan will look to make it five straight, something that has only been done three times in state history: West (1898-1905), East (1919-1923) and Skyline (1995-1999).


Bounce-back seasons, perhaps?

Fourteen high schools in Utah won either one or zero games last season, and all 14 head into the 2025 season with very little external expectations. Early August, however, is a time for optimism, and there’s plenty of it at those 14 programs.

Only three of the 14 schools made a coaching change after last season (Pleasant Grove, Ben Lomond, Grand). For the other 11, they’re hoping continuity within the coaching staff allows them to build on the foundation established a year ago despite the lack of wins.

Stark turnarounds aren’t common, but every year there’s one or two teams that do improve dramatically, which gives last year’s bottom 14 hope for 2025.

Fremont made the biggest improvement last season, bouncing back from a 2-9 season in 2023 to an 8-4 record in 2024, earning a share of the Region 1 championship.

The season before, Canyon went 10-4 and reached the 4A state championship game a year after the program went a dismal 1-9.


Skyridge quarterback Kaneal Sweetwyne (13) jumps into the end zone for a touchdown during a game against Timpview held at Timpview High School in Provo on Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. | Isaac Hale, Deseret News

Spread offenses rule the gridiron

The glow of high school football stadiums will be seen across the state of Utah over the next four months. If you pop into a random stadium, don’t be surprised if what you see from game to game looks pretty similar.

Based on information coaches submitted on their Deseret News preseason questionnaires this summer, roughly 75% of coaches listed spread offense as their team’s base offense, which included air-raid concepts. Another 15% listed multiple formations as their base offense, which inevitably includes some spread offenses too.

Breaking those offenses down by classification, nearly 90% of 6A/5A/4A teams will run spread offenses. However, there are still some who run traditional offenses from decades gone by. Clearfield and Hurricane run the Wing-T, Woods Cross is using the triple option, while new school Deseret Peak is also running an option offense.

Hunter listed its option as “smash mouth.” Herriman’s base is also power football, no surprise considering that head coach Matt Rickards is a Hunter alum.

While the larger schools definitely prefer spread offenses, the distribution among smaller schools leans more toward the traditional run-based offenses like the Wing-T and triple option. Two-time 1A state champ Beaver has found a lot of success with the Wing-T. There are quite a bit who prefer spread though, including four-time 2A state champ San Juan, which has dominated with the offense in recent years.

Lone Peak fans cheer before Skyridge plays Lone Peak in a varsity football game at Lone Peak High School in Highland on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024. Skyridge won 21-16. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News
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Georgia high school football live blog

link copied *]:pointer-events-none [&.is-paywalled>*]:blur-[7px] is-last mb-0″ data-start=”2″ data-end=”6″ data-size=”4″ readability=”10.523917995444″> And while the Corky Kell games are underway, plenty of football around the state will undoubtedly produce insights and highlights. The most notable game in Week 1 is Buford hosting defending state champion Milton in the Wolves’ new $62 million facility. Follow below for the […]

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Georgia high school football live blog

Georgia high school football is back.

The season kicks off Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. with Prince Avenue and Callaway opening the Corky Kell Classic, which concludes with four games Saturday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

And while the Corky Kell games are underway, plenty of football around the state will undoubtedly produce insights and highlights. The most notable game in Week 1 is Buford hosting defending state champion Milton in the Wolves’ new $62 million facility.

Follow below for the latest highlights, notable moments and other standout information from all games in Week 1.

To see live scores for all games, go to ajc.com/sports/varsity/scores.

Jack Leo

Jack Leo is a sports writer and reporter for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Jack worked for the AJC throughout his four years studying journalism and sports media at Georgia State University and the University of Georgia. He’s now focused on telling stories in the grassroots: bringing comprehensive coverage of high school sports for AJC Varsity.

Caitlyn Stroh-Page

Caitlyn Stroh-Page is the senior sports editor high school sports and college football at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Her resume includes stops at Sports Illustrated Kids, Scout.com, The (Macon) Telegraph, the Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader and the Athens Banner-Herald. A South Georgia native, Stroh-Page lives in the Athens area.

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Four major storylines to follow during the 2025 high school football season

With football practice starting this week and opening night barely two weeks away, let’s dive into some of the season’s more compelling storylines: Can Loyola make history? No team has won four straight titles in the state’s largest class since the IHSA playoffs debuted in 1974. East St. Louis had the first big-school three-peat from […]

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With football practice starting this week and opening night barely two weeks away, let’s dive into some of the season’s more compelling storylines:

Can Loyola make history?

No team has won four straight titles in the state’s largest class since the IHSA playoffs debuted in 1974.

East St. Louis had the first big-school three-peat from 1983-85 in Class 6A and Maine South accomplished the feat from 2008-10 in 8A.

No one else did it until Loyola won 8A the past three years. The Ramblers started 1-2 last season with losses to East St. Louis and St. Francis, and had close calls in the playoffs against Marist and Lincoln-Way East. But no time has been better in November in recent years.

To keep the run going, the Ramblers will need big performances from a pair of sophomores already reeling in Power Four scholarship offers: quarterback Matthew Lee and receiver Jordan McKinley.

Will Mount Carmel and Nazareth four-peat?

Like Loyola, Mount Carmel and Nazareth also are chasing four-peats. Unlike the Ramblers, they’ll be doing so in larger classes.

The Loyola-Mount Carmel regular-season finale Oct. 24 in Wilmette might not be the teams’ only meeting this fall. Both will be in Class 8A along with some other heavyweight contenders, including Lincoln-Way East and 2024 runner-up York.

The Caravan, who have won the past three 7A championships, graduated one of the state’s most productive quarterbacks in Jack Elliott (now at Vanderbilt). But they have more top-end talent than any program in the state, led by three seniors: offensive lineman Claude Mpouma, a Nebraska commit; defensive lineman Braeden Jones (USC) and edge Joey Quinn (Vanderbilt).

Nazareth has won three straight titles in 5A and moves up to 6A, where the competition includes East St. Louis (three) and Cary-Grove (two), who have combined to win the past five championships.

Quarterback Logan Malachuk, who set the state’s career record for passing yardage, has graduated. But 14 starters return for the Roadrunners, led by receivers Jake Cestone and Trenton Walker.

More defending champs move up

Mount Carmel and Nazareth aren’t the only defending private-school champs stepping up in class.

Also making the jump are DePaul Prep all the way from 4A to 7A, Montini from 3A to 4A and Chicago Christian from 2A to 3A.

Jumping three classes as DePaul is doing is virtually unheard of. But the North Side school’s enrollment has been surging along with its football fortunes. The Rams will have plenty of new faces on both sides of the ball after graduating 17 starters.

Montini looks well-positioned for another deep playoff run with 13 starters back. The best of the bunch is junior quarterback Israel Abrams, a four-star prospect with 10 offers from Big Ten or SEC schools.

Chicago Christian will be even more inexperienced than DePaul Prep after graduating 20 of 22 starters. But second-year coach CJ Cesario has raised the bar at a program that never got past the quarterfinals before he arrived.

Who’ll be the Player of the Year?

The top candidates usually have big numbers and play for teams that make deep playoff runs.

Two senior quarterbacks who could fit that profile are a pair of Big Ten commits: Lincoln-Way East’s Jonas Williams (USC) and Fremd’s Johnny O’Brien (Northwestern). Williams had a staggering 8,859 passing yards and 112 touchdowns in his first three seasons as a starter, while O’Brien threw for 3,442 yards and 39 TDs last fall.

Another quarterback to watch is Maine South junior Jameson Purcell, an Indiana commit who passed for 2,572 yards and 30 TDs after taking over the starting job in Week 4 last year.

Two more players who could be in the mix are Warren running back Aaron Stewart, who ran for 2,475 yards last year, and Morgan Park receiver Nasir Rankin, who’s committed to Illinois for both football and basketball.

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St. Johns County traffic stop arrest highlights new Florida law cracking down on excessive speeding

According to the law, a driver commits excessive speeding if they exceed the speed limit by 50+ mph and drive 100+ mph while changing lanes. Author: firstcoastnews.com Published: 8:23 AM EDT August 13, 2025 Updated: 8:23 AM EDT August 13, 2025 7

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St. Johns County traffic stop arrest highlights new Florida law cracking down on excessive speeding

According to the law, a driver commits excessive speeding if they exceed the speed limit by 50+ mph and drive 100+ mph while changing lanes.

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