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Draft grades for all 32 teams – Field Level Media – Professional sports content solutions

Tennessee Titans Grade: B+ Best Pick: QB Cameron Ward, No. 1 Overall What We Liked: An all-around good draft for the Titans, who are putting together a crack offense in an attempt to actually win some games this year. Ward was the clear QB1 this year. His confidence and ability to handle lots of responsibilities […]

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Tennessee Titans

Grade: B+

Best Pick: QB Cameron Ward, No. 1 Overall

What We Liked: An all-around good draft for the Titans, who are putting together a crack offense in an attempt to actually win some games this year. Ward was the clear QB1 this year. His confidence and ability to handle lots of responsibilities will make the lives of his coordinators easier. Wide receiver Elic Ayomanor (No. 136) and tight end Gunnar Helm (No. 120) will be great support for Ward and provide reliable hands to help him get his rhythm going at the professional level. Safety Kevin Winston Jr. (No. 82) headlines the defensive picks for me. Though he was injured last year, he gave his all in 2023 and kept a day three slot because of it.

Not Sure About: I’m still not convinced Oluwafemi Oladejo (No. 52) is a real edge rusher. He just feels like a square peg being pushed into a round hole. I’ve mentioned the idea of “positionless defenses” but this guy has a position: It’s just not the one he’s playing at the moment. It also felt like a stretch to take wide receiver Chimere Dike (No. 103) in the fourth round, another speedster who does not do a lot else to provide value to the team.

Jacksonville Jaguars

Grade: B

Best Pick: CB/WR Travis Hunter, No. 2 Overall

What We Liked: That Travis Hunter trade was incredible. Getting two top-end weapons for the price of one is worth any amount of pick capital you have to pay to get up there. James Gladstone is making an incredible splash in his first year as a general manager with this trade and did lots of draft maneuvering that worked to his advantage. The pickup of guard Wyatt Milum (No. 89) solidifies the offensive line well, and running back Bhayshul Tuten (No. 104) should be a really strong dynamic duo with Tank Bigsby to take pressure off Trevor Lawrence.

Not Sure About: Hmm, lots of announcing guys who aren’t going to play the
position they did in college, shifting over to somewhere else. Caleb Ransaw (No. 88) played all slot corner last year and is looking to be used at safety; Jalen McLeod (No. 194) got announced as a linebacker when his natural fit is as an edge rusher; and Milum is likely shifting from tackle to guard. If these guys don’t do well at their next position, the Jaguars’ depth class is pretty much toast.

New York Giants

Grade: C-

Best Pick: Edge Abdul Carter, No. 3 Overall

What we liked: Carter is a great player. Pairing him with Brian Burns will turn a middling edge rusher unit into a force to be reckoned with. Focusing on the defensive trenches was a good decision for the Giants, who despite having lots of talent, really only felt like they were getting halfway decent results. Picking up defensive tackle Darius Alexander (No. 65) to supplement Dexter Lawrence should play out well, too. That defense could easily become a top-10 unit next year with the added talent.

Not Sure About: I know when you see a guy who could be a franchise quarterback on the board, you should do anything to get him, but is Jaxson Dart (No. 25) really that guy? Not only did the Giants take a quarterback propped up by an incredibly friendly system, they traded up to get him. After the first read, Dart often crumbled. I’m not sure I can see a world where Dart takes the Giants any further than Daniel Jones did. At least Jones could push the ball all the way downfield.

New England Patriots

Grade: A+

Best Pick: C Jared Wilson, No. 95 Overall

What We Liked: Lots of rock-solid picks building in Mike Vrabel’s first year as the head coach. The offensive line is molding into more of a unit than a
series of disparate parts, the Patriots have a new running back in TreVeyon
Henderson (No. 38) who can hopefully carry the workload. Wide receiver Kyle Williams (No. 69) gives quarterback Drake Maye one more weapon. This feels like a draft driven by logic and smart team-building.

Not Sure About: It was a little early for safety Craig Woodson (No. 106) for my liking. Woodson has trouble run-stopping and struck me as more of a developmental player than a solution to a safety problem. Other than that, nothing to complain about.

Cleveland Browns:

Grade: B

Best Pick: Harold Fannin Jr., No. 67 Overall

What We Liked: Lots of talented guys made their way onto the Browns roster through this class. It’s a very productive group that isn’t lacking in potential. Defensive tackle Mason Graham (No. 5) plays with a fury that should scare opponents, the new running back duo of Quinshon Judkins (No. 36) and Dylan Sampson (No. 126) has a lot of athleticism and should create a nice one-two punch. Fannin adds a dynamic weapon to the receiving corps that can be used in a wealth of ways. The support system for whoever is playing quarterback is going to be boosted.

Not Sure About: There’s an old adage that if you have two quarterbacks, you have no quarterbacks. Forcing a Dillon Gabriel (No. 94) vs. Shedeur Sanders (No. 144) quarterback competition seems like a move that will ultimately cause distractions. It’s classic Browns, never able to quite solve the quarterback problem as they intend to, and always with more drama than necessary. Carson Schwesinger (No. 33) also got taken a little early for my liking, but the value at linebacker in the second round wasn’t there for anyone.

Las Vegas Raiders:

Grade: A+

Best Pick: RB Ashton Jeanty, No. 6 Overall

What We Liked: The Raiders got a blue-chip guy at six, hard to argue with
that. Jeanty is a big-time impact player for a team that never really had an
offense that chugged. However, one great pick does not make an A+ draft
class. The Raiders knocked it out of the park with virtually every pick. Their
new wide receiver room combines high-floor prospects like Jack Bech (No. 58) with big-upside swings like Dont’e Thornton Jr. (No. 108). Their two offensive linemen picks are both big-time athletes who could start early. Darien Porter (No. 68) may be old for a draft pick, but he’s the perfect Pete Carroll corner. Raiders fans, get excited.

Not Sure About: The two late defensive tackle picks don’t really have any
special skills and have limited upside. I would expect them to be rotational
players at best. If JJ Pegues (No. 180) starts getting reps at fullback, then get worried about these being wasted picks. I personally would have added a safety earlier, but that’s a nitpick on a top-tier draft class.

New York Jets

Grade: B

Best Pick: OT Armand Membou, No. 7 Overall

What We Liked: The Jets hit home runs with their first three selections. Membou can bring his athleticism to an offensive line that really needed only one more piece and create a rushing powerhouse for quarterback Justin Fields and running back Breece Hall. Tight end Mason Taylor (No. 42) sets Fields up with a quick dump-off weapon and with with good run-after-catch ability. Cornerback Azareye’h Thomas (No. 73) does great work in both zone and man and should quickly become part of the rotation. It’s now up to the free agent class to make it work.

Not Sure About: The day three selections were nothing to write home about. Wide receiver Arian Smith (No. 110) is very fast, but when it’s not game-breaking and it’s your main trait, it’s hard to be too impressed. Safety Malachi Moore is also a good athlete, but he doesn’t quite have the mental finesse to keep pass-catchers in his view consistently. Linebacker Francisco Mauigoa (No. 162) is good, but where will he play?

Carolina Panthers

Grade: B+

Best Pick: Edge Nic Scourton, No. 51 Overall

What We Liked: Getting two edge rushers (Scourton and Princely Umanmielen at No. 77) feels like a great maneuver to fill out the room. Especially adding Scourton to the mix, a crazy good power rusher whose hands will make waste to offensive lines across the southeast. The Panthers hit on all of their day three picks as well, especially Lathan Ransom (No. 122) and Cam Jackson (No. 140), who can make an immediate impact at safety and nose tackle. The depth on the team just got a lot stronger.

Not Sure About: It feels like the Panthers already have a lot of tall wideouts who can’t really separate consistently. Tetairoa McMillan (No. 8) does not add much to the room that quarterback Bryce Young doesn’t already have. Umanmielen doesn’t move me as an edge rusher, and while he isn’t a bad value in the third round, it doesn’t strengthen their bid for the NFC South. Running back might have been a higher priority.

New Orleans Saints

Grade: D

Best Pick: OT Kelvin Banks, No. 9 Overall

What We Liked: Banks is a good tackle who fits the mauling mold the Saints seem to look for. He feels a lot like Trevor Penning, but with more experience facing NFL talent and less frenzy. Jonas Sanker (No. 93) can fill a safety slot once their older guys age out, and he’s versatile enough where you can evaluate his strengths and slot a new guy in next to him pretty easily. Quincy Riley (No. 131) adds some speed to the cornerback room.

Not Sure About: Taking Tyler Shough (No. 40) is just begging to have the Brandon Weeden experience for yourself. If this is your plan at quarterback, you’ll be taking another big swing in 2026. It’s not like they have given him any support this year either. If the Saints had given him an earlier wideout, then perhaps it could be fine, but if the injuries return, it honestly could be an 0-17 season.

Chicago Bears:

Grade: A-

Best Pick: OT Ozzy Trapilo, No. 56 Overall

What We Liked: The Bears kept a good balance of need and overall player
value for much of the draft. Starting off with tight end Colston Loveland (No. 10) was a welcome surprise, as much of the buzz was around the inferior (sorry) Tyler Warren. Continuing to support Caleb Williams, the next two picks were another weapon in wide receiver Luther Burden III, who can really cook with the ball in his hands, and added protection from Trapilo. Their defensive picks mostly landed as well with defensive tackle Shemar Turner (No. 62) and cornerback Zah Frazier (No. 169) being high-floor prospects with decent athleticism and physicality.

Not Sure About: That pick of linebacker Ruben Hyppolite (No. 132) was an insane miscue. It was sort of like acing a history test and then writing gibberish on one of the essay questions. Does anyone outside of the Maryland fan base and obsessive pro day watchers like myself even know who Hyppolite is? Surely they could have gotten him later. The Bears don’t even really need a linebacker, which means they must have really loved this guy. Very odd pick from an otherwise very logical set of selections.

San Francisco 49ers:

Grade: C

Best Pick: LB Nick Martin, No. 75 Overall

What We Liked: Coach Mike Shanahan found some very good value outside of the first round. Martin was vastly underrated after getting injured early in the season, but he should bring sideline-to-sideline range that he couples with great instincts. Jordan Watkins (No. 138) has WR1 upside but at the very least projects as a WR2 for the offense. He was almost an Emeka Egbuka type in college who kept getting pushed by really impressive talents and not given a chance to shine.

Not Sure About: The first two rounds made me shrug. Edge Mykel Williams (11) is better on paper than on the field, but this isn’t a Strat-O-Matic game. Defensive tackle Alfred Collins (43) doesn’t have the strength or agility to be a game-wrecker, so the whole defensive line feels stagnant. There’s still a glaring hole at offensive tackle that needs more capital investment.

Dallas Cowboys:

Grade: C+

Best Pick: CB Shavon Revel Jr., No. 76 Overall

What We Liked: The Revel pick was impressive value for the spot. The once-incredible Cowboys cornerback room took a major step back, and Ravel should be able to make it afloat again. Guard Tyler Booker (No. 12) is a really good player who fits with the scheme of the Cowboys with his overwhelming power profile. The Cowboys addressed the majority of their needs and at least should have new competition at the spot.

Not Sure About: Can edge Donovan Ezeiruaku (No. 44) keep up his high production in the pros when he’s at an athletic disadvantage? The value is better in the second than his first-round projection, but it still is a worrying projection. Running back Jaydon Blue does not seem equipped to take on a bell cow role and feels like more of a special teams add.

Miami Dolphins:

Grade: C

Best Pick: DT Kenneth Grant, No. 13 Overall

What We Liked: Effort was made to replace the big-time players who have
left Miami for greener pastures. Grant is clearly meant to be the
next force up the middle, similar to how Christian Wilkins operated for the
Dolphins, and safety Dante Trader Jr. (No. 155) is kind of like if you got Jevon Holland from the 99-cent store: lots of strong play with a much lower paycheck attached. Guard Jonah Savaiinaea (No. 37) feels like one more step in the right direction to fixing an offensive line that has led to Tua Tagovailoa concussions. The needs are being addressed.

Not Sure About: Defensive tackle Jordan Phillips (No. 143) was a prospect that got first-round hype early in the cycle, but that tapered off when everyone realized that rumors of his athleticism were greatly exaggerated. Even the fifth round feels out of the range I would want someone of his production caliber. Cornerback Jason Marshall Jr. (No. 150) is a similar former high-upside project player who just never did much of anything. Miami needs some players who can actually make an impact —
outside of their offense, they lack star power.

Indianapolis Colts

Grade: B+

Best Pick: RB DJ Giddens, No. 151 Overall

What We Liked: The Chris Ballard strategy of taking exclusively pure athletes seems to have cooled off, as now Ballard is taking guys who also play good football. After a few years of middling draft classes, this is a group of guys you can feel confident in. Tight end Tyler Warren (No. 14) will provide more ways to ease Anthony Richardson’s quarterback responsibilities, and edge JT Tuimoloau (No. 45) and cornerback Justin Walley (No. 80) are good enough athletes but really excel in technical skill. The best pick, though, is Giddens in the fifth round. He has a balanced skill set that could make him a great supplement to Jonathan Taylor and even potentially be a full-time starter.

Not Sure About: Tim Smith seems to have been picked because he’s an Alabama defensive tackle. Really just another body for that rotation. I’m not
in love with the Warren pick, either. As dynamic as he was at the
college level, I’m not sure an offense can really be built around him in the pros without his athletic limitations showing through. Adding Riley Leonard (No. 189) to the quarterback room when he mostly just runs feels underwhelming for a team that’s sorely missing an actual passer.

Atlanta Falcons

Grade: B-

Best Pick: S Xavier Watts, No. 96 Overall

What we liked: The selections were impressive values in comparison to consensus. Edge Jalon Walker (No. 15) was seen by many as a potential top 10 pick thanks to his explosive nature; the testing numbers of edge James Pearce Jr. (No. 26) make his potential impressive, and getting Watts at the back half of day two after a slide could change their secondary. The values on these guys was impressive, and the Falcons betting on upside is a great choice in a weak division where any team could cement itself as the front-runner for the next five years. If these players pan out along with quarterback Michael Penix Jr., they could be a perennial playoff team.

Not Sure About: Trading up with a future first-round pick for a player at a position you already took in the top 15 feels like a poor use of resources. That defensive line certainly needed sprucing up, but it only matters so much if they’re not getting any interior pressure, and they certainly did not invest in defensive tackle as many expected. Not only that, they doubled up on doubling up. They took two safeties too! There are more holes on the roster than that! Solve your other problems!

Arizona Cardinals

Grade: A

Best Pick: CB Will Johnson, No. 47 Overall

What We Liked: Everything. The Cardinals went for the best football player available at every turn, from ending the surprising fall to the second round for cornerback Will Johnson (No. 47) to their first pick of Walter Nolen (No. 16), who got some of the best production of any defensive tackle in the SEC.

Even their day two and three selections were great choices, taking edge Jordan Burch (No. 78), who performed admirably at Oregon, and Cody Simon (No. 115), who led the linebacker corps for Ohio State. I had Burch as a top 50 guy, and Simon as one of the most underrated linebackers in the class. It solves a lot of problems for them very quickly.

Not Sure About: While these picks are great value, they all come with some caveats. Nolen has alleged character issues, Johnson has some grievous medical history, and Burch could accurately be described as a tweener. Plus, some earlier help for quarterback Kyler Murray would have been nice.

Cincinnati Bengals

Grade: B-

Best Pick: Edge Shemar Stewart, No. 17 Overall

What We Liked: Stewart has an impressive physical profile that should pair well with Trey Hendrickson coming off the line. The Bengals need a big splash after stagnating after their Super Bowl run, and they need more than a firecracker offense to get closer to the playoffs next year. Even their offensive additions should help keep Burrow stable, with guard Dylan Fairchild No. 81) as a high-floor guard prospect who has lots of experience. Linebacker Barrett Carter (No. 119) feels like a potential steal as well.

Not Sure About: Two linebackers feels like a bit much considering Germaine Pratt is a decent starter, although Pratt has requested a trade. Especially since I’m not sold on Demetrius Knight Jr. (No. 49), who was a late bloomer at South Carolina and does not appear to have much more room to grow as a player. Fairchild is a solid interior lineman, but he doesn’t project to be a long-term starter and may just continue the revolving door for the Bengals.

Seattle Seahawks

Grade: A-

Best Pick: S Nick Emmanwori, No. 35 Overall

What We Liked: Lots of jumping on the fallers, a strategy that will always get my approval. Emmanwori and tight end Elijah Arroyo (No. 50) specifically feel like players who fell more based on happenstance than actual inferior play. I like this as a landing spot for quarterback Jalen Milroe, too (No. 92) — give him a chance to learn behind Sam Darnold and get up to speed with NFL play, hopefully allow him to reach that untapped upside everyone was excited about. Getting guard Grey Zabel at No. 18 also feels like a good move for a team that was putting out turnstiles on the interior.

Not Sure About: I don’t feel particularly confident in most of the Day 3 flyers, even wide receiver Tory Horton, who was once considered a Day 2 guy. It feels like he’s a really big injury risk. The others just aren’t particularly talented, with tight end Robbie Ouzts (No. 39) and defensive tackle Rylie Mills (No. 142) being the least interesting of the bunch, two guys who have the build of NFL players but not really the skills to back it up. I don’t have confidence in any of these guys to be regular contributors.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Grade: A-

Best Pick: CB Jacob Parrish, No. 84 Overall

What We Liked: The Buccaneers are really ready to fix what didn’t work for them last year, investing heavily in a barren cornerback room and new edge rotational players. Cornerback Benjamin Morrison (No. 53) and Parrish could be a scary duo on the outside and slot, respectively. Emeka Egbuka (No. 19) brings a young face to an aging wide receiver room and could easily become the next Chris Godwin.

Not Sure About: Edge David Walker (No. 121) does not have extensive FBS experience and did not shine at the all-star games, so it feels like a major projection to picture him sticking around as a continuous edge rusher. Could an earlier edge pick and a later wideout selection have set the 49ers up more for immediate success? It’s something to think about for sure. They need only so much from Egbuka considering the capital they spent.

Denver Broncos

Grade: C

Best Pick: CB Jahdae Barron, No. 20 Overall

What We Liked: Barron is a stud. His extreme versatility along with high-end tackling skills and coverage ability should make him a cornerstone of that defense for a while. In an era that’s shifting more toward the idea of “positionless football,” the Broncos are charging forward into the future with a defensive back that is the shining example of that philosophy. I also think edge Sai’vion Jones (No. 101) could work in quickly as a third pass rusher.

Not Sure About: In theory, adding a couple skill players for Bo Nix should work for Denver, but these guys don’t have the juice. Running back RJ Harvey (No. 60) does not have a standout trait and plays slower than his tested speed. Spending a second-round pick on a guy who doesn’t elevate your running back room is a problem. Wide receiver Pat Bryant (No. 74) feels like a guy head coach Sean Payton over-drafted for his blocking ability, but in the third round, it feels like he should have focused on players that can also catch and run with the ball.

Pittsburgh Steelers

Grade: C-

Best Pick: DT Derrick Harmon, No. 21 overall

What We Liked: Lots of big, strong men in this draft. Harmon and Yahya Black (No. 164) shore up the defensive tackle room, giving quick fixes to one-tech and three-tech, hopefully opening up edge rusher T.J. Watt and linebacker Alex Highsmith to converting even more pressures into sacks. Kaleb Johnson (No. 83) feels like he provides the strength and vision coach Mike Tomlin loves from his running backs that he wasn’t getting from Najee Harris. The traits are there that we associate with the Steelers, and it seems like the team has found guys that fit their standards.

Not Sure About: This draft feels like it does not solve the Steelers’ problems. It’s one thing to tap out on quarterback despite having many chances to add a starting-level body to the room (see Shedeur Sanders), but to not add competition at nickel or another pass-catcher until well into day three feels like the team took “take the best player available” just a little too far. The organization lost sight of what was necessary by chasing gritty strength guys and lacked finesse. Do they really need edge Jack Sawyer (No. 123)?

Los Angeles Chargers

Grade: B

Best Pick: WR Tre Harris, No. 55 Overall

What We Liked: The Chargers picked up lots of talented players. The selection of running back Omario Hampton (No. 22) should help the Chargers offense play more toward Jim Harbaugh’s strengths as a coordinator who loves to pound the rock. Harris helps build out a wide receiver room for quarterback Justin Herbert, who I’m sure has been worried about a lack of support. The defensive line adds bring a
really high floor and good power profile to the defense that can hopefully
help the Chargers force more teams to lose yards instead of giving them
time to dink and dunk all over them.

Not Sure About: They have a lot of players I like, but no one in particular I
love. It feels like the Chargers have collected a bunch of low-end starters
here, but no stars that are going to truly elevate the team to the next level.
Edge Kyle Kennard (No. 125), defensive tackle Jamaree Caldwell (No. 86) and Harris all don’t really have the athletic juice to be game-breakers, and Harris seems more and more injured every season. Can Hampton’s lack of creativity survive behind a line that still doesn’t have a very strong interior?

Green Bay Packers

Grade: C-

Best Pick: WR Matthew Golden, No. 23 Overall

What We Liked: Golden at 23 was impressive value that would’ve had me salivating if I was a general manager. He should be the top target for quarterback Jordan Love instantly and finally provide an alpha presence to that room of complementary pieces. General manager Brian Gutekunst took need into account well and addressed nearly all the positions that were missing starting-level talent and injected youth into rooms that had lost veterans to free agency. The floor of that team at the very least has been raised.

Not Sure About: Nearly every pick after Golden felt like a reach. There was constantly better talent on the board, and it looks to me like Gutekunst was
more worried about scheme fit than actually getting the best players possible. Barryn Sorrell (No. 124) and Collin Oliver (No. 159) are good fits for how the Packers run their defense, but ultimately they just don’t have the same natural talent as edge rushers who came off the board later. Wide receiver Savion Williams feels like an attempt to recapture the brief Christian Watson magic, but he has a lot of development still to come.

Minnesota Vikings

Grade: B+

Best Pick: WR Tai Felton, No. 102 Overall

What We Liked: Felton should come in as a great WR3 to give J.J. McCarthy a really easy time finding open receivers. The two early picks put their new quarterback (coming off an injury last year) in a good space to continue the trajectory that Sam Darnold put to good use. Guard Donovan Jackson (No. 24) will help McCarthy stay upright and could flex between guard or tackle depending on what the Vikings need. Defensive tackle Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins (No. 139) provides a lot of athleticism and flexibility to a defensive line that needs more of it. They did the most with what they had.

Not Sure About: There should have been a stronger effort to get more picks in the class. The only trade made was a pick swap that still left them with only four picks. With the value as on point as it was this year, giving Kwesi Adofo-Mensah more darts to throw could have resulted in a boost to the team’s ceiling. The move to get quarterback Sam Howell feels a little underwhelming for a backup option to McCarthy, and securing another rookie might have been a better long-term play. Cornerback not being addressed early means the problems from last year will continue.

Baltimore Ravens

Grade: B

Best Pick: Malaki Starks, No. 27 Overall

What We Liked: Lots of good value early. The Ravens continued their strategy of taking advantage of teams not valuing safety and have now created an imposing secondary between Starks and Kyle Hamilton. Edge Mike Green (No. 59) is a good upside play that far down the board. If even half of his college production translates to the professional level, he’ll be an impact player for the Ravens. I like offensive tackle Emery Jones Jr. (No. 91) as well. He could secure a guard spot for the Ravens with a good training camp. Lots of potential impact here.

Not Sure About: There are too many guys here who haven’t performed
against top-level competition. Offensive tackle Carson Vinson (No. 141) and cornerback Bilhal Kone (No. 178) aren’t battle-tested and could really get exposed if they’re thrown into the fire too early. Even cornerback Robert Longerbeam (No. 212) didn’t have to handle too many top-end talents, and with his weight, I’m not sure his size outlier nature will be a positive at the next level. There are red flags to look out for here.

Detroit Lions

Grade: B-

Best Pick: OG Miles Frazier, No. 171 Overall

What We Liked: The Lions continue their emphasis on size after solid results. Defensive tackle Tyleik Williams (No. 28) is a big hog molly who can handle double teams with ease and should help build out a line that is hopefully less ravaged by injuries this year. Guard Tate Ratledge (No. 57) and Frazier build out a set of interior offensive linemen that could push to start as soon as the beginning of the season if Christian Mahogany doesn’t pan out. It feels like the Lions found their needs early and stuck to their size requirements.

Not Sure About: Trading up with a future third-rounder to get wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa (No. 70) feels like a classic Lions overthink. They love giving up lots of capital to get guys that weren’t even on my radar as potential possibilities, and TeSlaa is no exception. A raw, overaged wideout is not worth multiple Day 2 picks, and I don’t think he’ll do much with the limited time he’ll have at his disposal in the Lions’ wide receiver room. Nor is Ahmed Hassanein (No. 196) a great fix at edge rusher.

Washington Commanders

Grade: A-

Best Pick: Josh Conerly Jr., No. 29 Overall

What We Liked: Great players all the way down. Conerly’s explosive movement skills should make him a great fit for move-blocking and keeping a clean pocket for Jayden Daniels whether he chooses to scramble or not. Cornerback Trey Amos (No. 61) deserved to be taken in the first round and should boost the secondary and help them recover from their early 2023 choice of Emmanuel Forbes. Even their late-round picks of wide receiver Jaylin Lane (No. 128) and linebacker Kain Medrano (No. 205) stand to make an impact with their impressive athleticism.

Not Sure About: The Commanders could have paid a little closer attention to need, as they neglected an empty edge room and did not address the back end of their secondary. While I love Conerly, he may be getting thrown into the fire here before developing as an anchor, which could come back to bite the Commanders as they plan for the future, especially if they move him from his natural position of offensive tackle.

Buffalo Bills

Grade: A-

Best Pick: DT T.J. Sanders, No. 41 Overall

What We Liked: Incredible value outside the first round. Their three players
after their first pick all had first-round buzz at some point in the draft cycle
and will go a long way in rebuilding a defensive line that lacked intensity and sack production last season. Going heavy on defense feels like a particularly bright move; much of their core from the beginning of Josh Allen’s career is aging. That said, tight end Jackson Hawes (No. 173) and offensive tackle Chase Lundt (No. 206) are nice pickups to provide depth in that offense as well.

Not Sure About: Cornerback Maxwell Hairston (No. 30) is fast, but choosing him over Trey Amos feels like it could be an error akin to the Commanders picking Emmanuel Forbes over Christian Gonzalez in the 2023 draft. He lacks consistent tackling skills and has some stiff footwork that will likely give him fits early in his career even though he’s blazing fast. Jordan Hancock (No. 170) and Dorian Strong (No. 177) are good value adds, but did they need to address cornerback THAT bad? I would’ve loved to see a wideout or a safety go earlier for them instead.

Philadelphia Eagles

Grade: B+

Best Pick: LB Jihaad Campbell, No. 31 Overall

What We Liked: Days one and two felt like a coup. Letting the Eagles get a weapon like Campbell in their second level, and maybe even get some reps on edge, feels like we’re asking them to run back a second Super Bowl in a row. Pair him with Andrew Mukuba (No. 64), a lightning-quick safety who is an absolute ballhawk, and it seems like the highlight reel is ready to be replayed. I also dig the value on Drew Kendall (No. 168), a very athletic center prospect who could push Tyler Steen and Cam Jurgens for starting reps.

Not Sure About: Perhaps we were expecting too much, but this doesn’t feel quite like the collection of steals we’re used to from the Eagles, especially in day three. Mac McWilliams (No. 145) was not a draftable talent on our board and does not add meaningful depth to the cornerback room, though he may play on special teams. Linebacker Smael Mondon Jr. (No. 161) is a Georgia guy whom general manager Howie Roseman clearly loves, but this time, the fifth round almost feels like pushing it for a guy who is more of a downhill run-stopper with a lacking mind for coverage. The team also doesn’t feel like it’s building for the near future anymore.

Kansas City Chiefs

Grade: A-

Best Pick: WR Jalen Royals, No. 133 Overall

What We Liked: The Chiefs managed to solve their offensive tackle problem thanks to the fall of Josh Simmons (No. 32), which feels reminiscent of the Trey Smith pick from 2021. As usual, the Chiefs are playing to consensus, picking up talented fallers such as Royals and edge Ashton Gillotte (No. 66), who have the production and athleticism to become quick starters. The Chiefs are sticking to the strategy that turned them into perennial Super Bowl contenders. Good stuff.

Not Sure About: Taking defensive tackle Omarr Norman-Lott (No. 63) feels like a disaster waiting to happen. It’s hard to trust a player who isn’t taking a majority of the snaps for his defense, and to take him on Day 2 is suspect. Also, linebacker Jeffrey Bassa (No. 156) strikes me as a nothing burger player with limited upside, not someone who projects to have a role starting anytime soon or even a role on special teams.

Houston Texans

Grade: B+

Best Pick: WR Jayden Higgins, No. 24 Overall

What We Liked: The Texans kicked off the draft incredibly well, getting the
dynamic wide receiver from Iowa State and offensive tackle Aireontae Ersery (No. 48), two players who could immediately earn starting time on the Texans and will help quarterback C.J. Stroud return to rookie form. Jaylen Reed (No. 187) is also a sneaky good safety pick on Day 3 who picked up a lot of responsibilities after Kevin Winston Jr. got injured. Also, from a comic standpoint, I like that the Texans picked three Jaylin variations and a Jayden.

Not Sure About: The two USC players, cornerback Jaylin Smith (No. 97) and running back Woody Marks (No. 116), were a bit overdrafted, with Marks being traded up for with crazy levels of capital. I don’t see either of them getting many early reps, even Marks, who I’m not sure is ready for prime time. It feels like the offensive line needed to be fortified a bit more since Stroud was running for his life a lot of the year. The Texans’ shift toward more weapons feels like they misunderstood the issue.

Los Angeles Rams

Grade: D+

Best Pick: LB Chris Paul Jr., No. 172 Overall

What We Liked: Really great pick for Paul, who projects as an early starter and is adept in pass coverage. That’s an absolute steal deep into day three. Jarquez Hunter profiles as lightning to Kyren Williams’ rumbling thunder. Coach Sean McVay clearly has a vision for his scheme that involves getting highly productive college players and letting them do reprise their success from the NCAA level. McVay is sticking to his guns.

Not Sure About: Tight end Terrance Ferguson (No. 46) and edge Josaiah Stewart (90) didn’t make for an inspiring day two haul. I felt Stewart could reasonably have gone undrafted after a heinously bad 40-yard dash, considering his size combined with his limited length. The college pressure rates are good, but you have to think about his comparison to NFL competition. And I just never saw any game-wrecking moments or any sections of Ferguson’s tape that popped out to me. He really seemed like an ordinary tight end, which isn’t how you want to start your draft.

–Dean Bruce, special to Field Level Media





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Champions League and Euro Cup water polo draws set for Monday

The Champions League men’s trophy on display in Malta in June. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi/European Aquatics Water polo fans are eagerly-awaiting the first draws of the 2025/26 European club competitions, which will take place on Monday, 28 July. The draws will be streamed live on the European Aquatics YouTube channel, with the men’s draw starting at […]

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The Champions League men’s trophy on display in Malta in June. Photo: Istvan Derencsenyi/European Aquatics

Water polo fans are eagerly-awaiting the first draws of the 2025/26 European club competitions, which will take place on Monday, 28 July. The draws will be streamed live on the European Aquatics YouTube channel, with the men’s draw starting at 10:30am CET, and the women’s draw at 12:30pm CET.

Participants for 2025/26

Champions League Men

Group Stage: FTC-Telekom (HUN), Pro Recco (ITA), Zodiac CNAB (ESP), Olympiacos SFP (GRE), CN Marseille (FRA), VK Jadran Split (CRO), SPD Radnicki (SRB), CSM Oradea (ROU), Waspo Hannover 98 (GER), Jadran m:tel Herceg Novi (MNE)

Qualification Round: VK Novi Beograd (SRB), AN Brescia (ITA), KEIO CN Sabadell (ESP), Vasas SC (HUN), Vouliagmeni NC (GRE), Steaua Bucharest (ROU), Spandau 04 (GER), HAVK Mladost (CRO), Primorac Kotor (MNE), Pays d’Aix Natation (FRA)

Euro Cup Men

Group Stage: RN Savona (ITA), Jug AO Dubrovnik (CRO), CN Barcelona (ESP), BVSC-Manna ABC (HUN), Sabac Elixir (SRB), Panathinaikos AC (GRE), Duisburg (GER), Dinamo Bucuresti (ROU), Buducnost Podgorica (MNE)

Qualification Round: Dinamo Tbilisi (GEO), Crvena Zvezda (SRB), Szolnoki Dozsa-Praktiker (HUN), Apollon Smyrnis (GRE), Pallanuoto Trieste (ITA), VK Solaris (CRO), ZV De Zaan (NED), CN Terrassa (ESP), Montpellier Water Polo (FRA), OSC Potsdam (GER), Rapid Bucuresti (ROU), A-Polo Sport Management (GEO)

Champions League Women

Group Stage: Astralpool Sabadell (ESP), Olympiacos SFP (GRE), CN Sant Andreu (ESP), Vouliagmeni NC (GRE), Ekipe Orrizonte (ITA), FTC-Telekom (HUN), UVSE (HUN), SIS Roma (ITA)

Qualification Round: CN Mataro (ESP), CN Terrassa (ESP), Alimos NAC Betsson (GRE), Dunaujvaros (HUN), ANC Glyfada (GRE), ZV De Zaan (NED), Pallanuoto Trieste (ITA), Lille UC (FRA), ONE-Eger (HUN), Spandau 04 (GER), Grand Nancy AC (FRA), Rapallo Pallanuoto (ITA)

Euro Cup Women

Group Stage: Ethnikos (GRE), Antenore Plebiscito Padova (ITA), BVSC-Manna ABC (HUN), EPlus CN Catalunya (ESP)

Qualification Round: Polar Bears (NED), Panionios GSS (GRE), III. Keruleti TVE (HUN), ZAVK Mladost (CRO), VK Vojvodina (SRB), Galatasaray (TUR), Hapoel Yokneam (ISR), Zodiac CNAB (ESP), ASD Bogliasco (ITA)

Click here for a link to the live draws

The national water polo teams have already landed at home after the conclusion of the thrilling World Championships in Singapore.

While the players and coaches look for some well-deserved rest, European Aquatics is gearing up to stage the first draws for the upcoming club water polo season in the four top competitions – the Champions League and the Euro Cup, for both men and women.

For the upcoming season, the entry system has been reshaped. In the men’s Champions League, the respective champions of the top 10 nations have been offered a place in the Group Stage, and 10 more teams are eligible to play in the Qualification tournament.

While nations are only eligible to enter two clubs from this season, the number of qualifying spots for the Group Stage has been increased from four to six.

In the Qualification tournament, there will be one round with two groups of three and one group of four.

The top two ranked sides from each group will advance to the Group Stage, while the remaining four will join the Euro Cup qualifications.

The Euro Cup Men also has a new entry system. The third-ranked clubs from the top nations will have guaranteed berths in the Group Stage (nine teams), while the other 12 eligible teams will play in the Qualification tournament alongside the four teams that drop from the Champions League qualifiers.

As for the Champions League Women, the best two teams of the top four nations – Spain, Greece, Hungary and Italy – shall start their respective campaigns in the Group Stage.

Eight more sides will join them from the Qualification tournament where four groups of three shall battle for a place in the main event.

The four teams not making the cut will directly qualify for the Euro Cup Group Stage.

In this competition, clubs from the top four nations will also have a guaranteed spot, and four more berths are available as the Group Stage will run in four groups of three.

For the Euro Cup Women Qualification tournament, three groups of three will be drawn and the respective winners and the best runners-up will progress.

Gergely Csurka for European Aquatics



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Bliss resets Bucknell school javelin record at FISU World University Games | Olympics

The Daily Item RHINE-RUHR, GERMANY — With mid-morning fully engaged in the scenic Rhine landscape Friday, Evelyn Bliss, clad in her Team USA jersey, began her run for her first throw of the 2025 FISU World University Games Qualifying Round Group A. The Team USA thrower took a deep breath, revved her engine, installed the […]

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The Daily Item

RHINE-RUHR, GERMANY — With mid-morning fully engaged in the scenic Rhine landscape Friday, Evelyn Bliss, clad in her Team USA jersey, began her run for her first throw of the 2025 FISU World University Games Qualifying Round Group A.

The Team USA thrower took a deep breath, revved her engine, installed the javelin in its locked-and-loaded position, set a determined face, galloped down the runway, and heaved it across the sky. She stopped inches short of the fault line and watched the trajectory. As she backtracked to the bench, the spotters arrived for the measurement, while Bliss carried a cautiously optimistic smile. The result arrived: 199 feet, 5 inches.

Bliss let loose a triumphant “LET’S GO!,” knowing she advanced to Saturday’s final by easily surpassing the qualification benchmark. After that throw, she declined to take her remaining two.

The mark reset her school record that the rising junior established at this year’s NCAA East First Round, nabbed her first place in the qualifying round, and slotted into tenth in USA women’s javelin history. The distance held up after Qualifying Round Group B as the supreme mark of the morning.

“Going into qualifying rounds I had a good feeling, practices all week felt very strong,” said Bliss. “(Bucknell throws coach Ryan) Protzman and I worked on being consistently in the 50m for practice. I was excited to compete today. Having the chance to compete internationally against these very competitive women is always a blessing. Looking towards tomorrow I want to replicate what I did today and I think that will put me in a very nice place.”

Protzman, Bliss’ mentor, was unable to make the expedition. He and his wife recently celebrated the birth of their firstborn child — a baby boy, but he was up at 3:35 a.m. to watch his protege.

“60 meters is such a massive benchmark in women’s javelin,” said Protzman. “I’m so happy for her. The challenges I’ve presented her with the last couple of years haven’t been all technical. Recently, we have just been pushing training throws a little more. Never has she focused on how far she threw a javelin in training with me until after NCAAs a month and a half ago. Today was special, and I think there is much more to go chase tomorrow in the final.”

Bliss was the only thrower to hit 60 meters in the qualifying round. Lianna Davidson (Australia) placed second, throwing 57.83, and Turkey’s Esra Turkmen finished third at 57.48. The best thrower in Group B, Australia’s Mia Gordon, hit 56.39.

Twelve throwers advanced in all to the finals. Group A was more top heavy but Group B sent seven to the final round.

Bliss has carved a name for herself in the javelin community, despite recently turning 20 years-old. Appropriately, the USA thrower shares her birthday with the United States Army on June 14 — which is also Flag Day. She has reached the part of the hike where her heroes have become rivals and realistic goals to surpass. American legend Kara Winger represents that mark in Bliss’ journey.

Winger holds the American record for women’s javelin when she threw 68.11m (223-5) at the 2022 Diamond League and has won the USA Outdoor Track & Field Championships eight times. She and Bliss shared the stage at the 2024 United States Olympic Trials where Winger finished second and Bliss, threw, at the time, a personal best of 55.82m (183-2), placing sixth.

Winger, like all great athletes, understands and cultivates the importance of building the sport for the next generation. She sees those same qualities in Bliss and offered her thoughts on the rising star’s best traits:

“The thing that stands out to me about Evie is her focus, joy, and community building in her javelin career,” said Winger. “Whenever I’ve seen her, she’s sharing enthusiasm about the sport and event with someone in her camp, growing her love for the process alongside someone she cares about. Today, watching her celebrate with those people means to me that she’s here to stay: She’s building a foundation, and I look forward to watching her continue to thrive! I’ll always be glad I got to share the runway with her once.”

The finals begin tomorrow at 2:20 p.m. and will be streamed on FISU TV.

© 2025 The Daily Item (Sunbury, Pa.). Visit www.dailyitem.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Copyright 2025 Tribune Content Agency.



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Beth Alford-Sullivan – Penn State

After 13 years and 106 NCAA All-Americans on the women[apos]s side, as well as six years and 32 All-America honorees with the men[apos]s squad, Beth Alford-Sullivan enters her 14th year at the helm of the Nittany Lion women[apos]s program and her seventh campaign as the Director and Head Coach of Track and Field/Cross Country, overseeing […]

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After 13 years and 106 NCAA All-Americans on the women[apos]s side, as well as six years and 32 All-America honorees with the men[apos]s squad, Beth Alford-Sullivan enters her 14th year at the helm of the Nittany Lion women[apos]s program and her seventh campaign as the Director and Head Coach of Track and Field/Cross Country, overseeing both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s programs.

Sullivan[apos]s decorated resume is undoubtedly among the most impressive in the country, as it includes two NCAA [quote]Trophy[quote] Team finishes, six Big Ten team titles, one Big Ten [quote]Triple Crown,[quote] as well as three individual NCAA Champions, and one NCAA Champion relay.

Since taking the reigns of both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s programs in 2006, Sullivan has remained steadfast to the vision of having two programs in the top tier of the conference and the NCAA, with both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s squads making outstanding statements during the 2011-12 campaign, highlighted by the Nittany Lions[apos] haul of 12 USTFCCCA First Team All-America finishes on the year.

Sullivan continued to coach the Nittany Lions to countless milestones in 2011-12, including a head-turning performance of 3:01.52 by the men[apos]s 4×400-meter relay at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. The relay rewrote the record books on numerous occasions in 2012, setting the indoor school record at 3:05.22 at the Alex Wilson Last Chance, and following up with a second-place standing at the NCAA Indoor Championships – the highest-ever finish by a Nittany Lion relay at NCAA Indoors. The Lions clipped off the own record little by little over the outdoor season, beginning the year at 3:07.19 – all the way down to 3:01.52, with the foursome of Aaron Nadolsky, Brandon Bennett-Green, Casimir Loxsom, and Brady Gehret on both All-America squads.

Sullivan would also oversee an outstanding effort from the Nittany Lion throws contingent at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, with underclassman duo Laura Loht, and Lauren Kenney providing a three-four finish in the women[apos]s javelin, to go along with a fourth-place showing from Joe Kovacs in the men[apos]s shot put.

Through the course of the 2011-12 campaign, Sullivan also coached a grand total of eight individual Big Ten Champions, and two conference champion relays. Kicking off the conference accolades was then-senior Caitlin Lane, who captured top individual honors at the Big Ten Cross Country Championships, and parlayed the effort into the 16th-place and All-America standing at the NCAA Cross Country Championships. Lane[apos]s finish – which was the second highest in Sullivan[apos]s Penn State tenure – paced the Lions to a 13th-place finish in the team standings – the best finish from the PSU program in nearly two decades.


Penn State Track and Field/Cross Country
Under Beth Alford-Sullivan …


* 138 NCAA All-Americans
* 78 Big Ten Individual Champions
* 16 Big Ten Champion Relays
* 24 Coach of the Year Awards
* 27 USTFCCCA Regional Athletes of the Year
* 8 Big Ten Championship Records
* 4 NCAA Champions
* 5 Big Ten Athletes of the Year
* 6 Big Ten Team Titles
* 7 Big Ten Freshman of the Year
* 3 Olympians
* 2 World Championship Qualifiers
* 2 IAAF World Junior Medalists
* 2 NCAA Trophy Teams
* 4 Penn Relays Wheels
* 1 Big Ten Triple Crown

Program Success …

Under Sullivan, the Nittany Lion women[apos]s team has become a national mainstay, scoring at the national meet in last 11 NCAA Outdoor Championships, and 10 of the last 11 NCAA Indoor Championships. The women[apos]s squad has also recorded top four [quote]trophy team[quote] finishes in two of the last four years, placing fourth at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in 2008 and 2010.

Since taking over the women[apos]s program in the fall of 1999, Sullivan has guided the Nittany Lions to a grand total of 13 top 25 finishes at the NCAA level, including top 10 efforts from the women[apos]s team in 2003, 2008, 2009, and 2010. The men[apos]s program has followed suit, earning top 25 standings in the last six NCAA track and field competitions, including an 11th-place standing at the 2011 NCAA Indoor Championships – the second-highest indoor finish in men[apos]s program history.

The Nittany Lions success under Sullivan does not end on the track, however, as the Nittany Lion women[apos]s track and field and cross country teams have earned United States Track and Field/Cross Country Coaches[apos] Association (USTFCCCA) All-Academic honors in each of her 13 seasons at the helm of the program. Both the Nittany Lion men[apos]s and women[apos]s cross country squads earned the academic standing, via grade point averages of 3.0 or better for the 2011 fall semester, while the women[apos]s program once again achieved the feat in the spring of 2012. In fact, the 2009-10 version of the women[apos]s squad was named USTFCCCA [quote]Scholar Team of the Year[quote] for the outdoor season, which is awarded to the team with the highest NCAA finish with a 3.0 GPA.

The Nittany Lions also been consistently recognized as one of the most successful programs in the NCAA, with the men[apos]s team earning 11th place in the 2010-11 [quote]John McDonnell Program of the Year[quote] standings. The award honors the institution that has achieved the most success in each academic year (spanning the cross country, indoor track & field, and outdoor track & field seasons) based on the institution[apos]s finish at the NCAA Division I Championships. Sullivan[apos]s women[apos]s squad has also been heavily recognized nationally, placing 17th in the [quote]Terry Crawford Program of the Year[quote] rankings for the 2010-11 seasons.

In 2010, the Nittany Lion women placed third in the Program of the Year standings, following only perennial stalwarts Oregon and Florida. The men have also been consistently mentioned in the rankings, as Sullivan[apos]s men[apos]s squad was recognized for the honor in 2009, finishing 14th.

A Record-Breaking 2012 …

Led by the 4×400[apos]s sizzling NCAA performance, the Nittany Lions once again laid claim to numerous Penn State records. In fact, Sullivan-coached athletes now hold all but six school records on the women[apos]s side, with then-sophomore Bekka Simko taking down the Nittany Lions[apos] long-standing record in the women[apos]s 800-meters this past spring, running 2:03.09. The women[apos]s squad would also reset several additional school bests during the 2012 campaign, with Lane running 2:44.24 to better her own indoor 1000 record, and the women[apos]s DMR of Lane, Ije Iheoma, Simko, and Kara Millhouse going 11:05.16.

Sullivan and the Nittany Lions continued to excel outdoors, thanks to Simko[apos]s effort, as well as a school-record 32:57.33 from Millhouse in the 10,000. Simko and Millhouse were also the bookends on the record-setting DMR during the outdoor season, along with teammates Iheoma, and Marta Klebe. The squad ran 11:08.41 on their way to the top of the charts.

The records continued to roll in on the men[apos]s side in 2012, with Creese leading the charge indoors with his Collegiate, American Junior, and Penn State record 2:19.53 for the 1,000-meters. Casimir Loxsom also took hold of the men[apos]s 600-meter school standard at 1:16.66. The men[apos]s 4×400 (Nadolsky, Bennett-Green, Loxsom, and Gehret) would end the season at 3:05.22 – also an all-time Penn State best.

Kovacs, who tore through the competition during the 2012 outdoor campaign, launched a lifetime-best 69-2 (21.08) at the most opportune time, finishing fourth in the shot put at the US Olympic Trials – finishing as the top collegiate in the field, and just inches shy of a spot on the US Olympic Team.

A Banner 2010 …

In 2010 Sullivan[apos]s men[apos]s and women[apos]s squads experienced unparalleled success, highlighted by a fourth-place finish from the women[apos]s team at the NCAA Outdoor Championships – the squad[apos]s second [quote]Trophy Team[quote] finish in the last four years. The NCAA effort also included a national-title victory from then-senior Bridget Franek in the 3,000-meter steeplechase.

The Nittany Lion women were just as successful on the Big Ten stage, capturing team titles in cross country, and indoor and outdoor track and field to earn the coveted conference [quote]Triple Crown.[quote] The cross country victory was the first in program history, led by an individual victory from Franek. Meanwhile, the women[apos]s outdoor victory not only completed the 2009-10 [quote]Triple Crown,[quote] but was the program[apos]s third-straight outdoor conference victory.

Along with the women[apos]s fourth-place effort at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, Sullivan[apos]s men[apos]s squad also made a splash nationally, claiming a pair of top 25 standings, including a 14th-place finish at the NCAA Indoor Championships – the program[apos]s highest finish in nearly two decades. The men would go on to tie for 23rd outdoors, which was also the first top 25 finish since 1993. Individually, the Nittany Lion men earned a trio of bronze-medal finishes at the NCAA Championships, with Ryan Foster (800-meters) and Joe Kovacs (shot put) each earning third-place standings indoors, and Blake Eaton taking third in the shot put at the outdoor championships. The women were also consistent members of the nation[apos]s upper echelon a year ago, placing 14th in cross country, and 13th indoors.

International Acclaim …

Internationally speaking, Sullivan added a pair of IAAF World medalists to her coaching resume in 2010 as Casimir Loxsom earned silver-medal honors while representing the United States at the IAAF World Junior Championships in Moncton, Canada. Loxsom[apos]s second-place standing was the highest-ever finish by a U.S. athlete in the distance event since the meet[apos]s inception. Meanwhile, rising sophomore Evonne Britton claimed second-place status in the 400-meter hurdles.

More recently, Loxsom and teammate Gehret represented the United States in international competition, competing at the NACAC Under-23 Championships. Both Loxsom and Gehret qualified for the final in their respective events, with Loxsom leading the way with a fourth-place finish in the 800.

Current junior Kirsten Nieuwendam also represented the Nittany Lions as well as her home country of Suriname this summer, competing in the 200-meters at the Olympic Games in London.

Sullivan also boasts a tremendous amount of international experience in her own right. Most notably in 2004, Sullivan was named a member of the Olympic coaching staff for the Athens Games, where she helped the United States squad to nearly 25 medals in the sport of track and field. More recently, Sullivan served as the Head Coach for the United States women[apos]s team at the 2011 Pan Am Junior Championships.

She was also selected to represent the United States as an assistant coach at the 2003 World Championships in Paris where she guided the middle distance runners for the world[apos]s top ranked track and field team. She also has served as an assistant on the 2001 U.S. World Championships Team, guiding middle-distance and distance team members throughout the trials and the championships held in Edmonton, Canada. Prior to that appointment, Sullivan guided the U.S. Junior Team to the 1997 World Cross Country Championships in Turin, Italy. She was also the coach for the 1994 U.S. team that competed in the Beijing International Ekiden and was an assistant coach for the 1995 U.S. Olympic Festival staff in Colorado Springs.

NCAA Accolades …

Throughout her tenure in Happy Valley, Sullivan has overseen the successes of four of the most-prolific NCAA careers in program history in Connie Moore, Shana Cox, Aleesha Barber, and Bridget Franek. All sensational sprinters, Moore, Cox, and Barber each totaled 11 All-America finishes throughout their Nittany Lion careers, with Cox claiming the 2008 NCAA Outdoor title at 400-meters – the first victory by a Nittany Lion woman in the track event in the NCAA era – and Cox and Barber, running as members of the 2008 NCAA Champion 4×400-meter relay. Sullivan coached Franek, who totaled 10 All-America finishes over her career, to top honors in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the 2010 NCAA Outdoor Championships – marking the fourth NCAA victory by a Nittany Lion under Sullivan[apos]s watch. Franek also achieved a rarely matched feat over her Penn State tenure, qualifying for every NCAA opportunity in cross country, and indoor and outdoor track and field over her career – a perfect 12-for-12 appearances.

Sullivan[apos]s first NCAA title at Penn State came in 2003, when Deshaya Williams claimed national gold in the discus. The Lions have had quite a presence in both the 4×400 and the steeplechase on the NCAA stage under Sullivan[apos]s watch, with a Penn State mile relay making the NCAA field during both the indoor and outdoor seasons over the past five years, and earning All-America standing on six of those occasions. Sullivan has also coached at least one NCAA qualifier in the steeplechase in seven NCAA meets since the event was added to the women[apos]s program in 2001.

In her six years with the men[apos]s program, Sullivan has coached at least one entrant in the NCAA track and field meet on the men[apos]s side in 11 of 12 opportunities, including graduate Ryan Fritz, who earned a grand total of four All-America certificates during his Penn State career. Sullivan also coached Tyler McCandless to an All-America finish in the 10,000-meters in 2010, becoming the first Nittany Lion to earn the honor in the event since 1994. The Nittany Lion men have also achieved six bronze-medal finishes under Sullivan, including two from Kovacs in the shot put in 2010 and 2011, and third-place efforts from Foster in the 800 in 2010, and the mile in 2011. The 4×400 added to the haul this past academic year, placing second indoors and fourth during the outdoor season.

Sullivan has also overseen multiple recipients of USTFCCCA regional awards on a yearly basis. Most recently, freshman sensation Robby Creese was named Mid-Atlantic Men[apos]s Track Athlete of the Year during the 2012 indoor season, while Joe Kovacs garnered the [quote]Field Athlete of the Year[quote] nod and former sprints, hurdles and relays coach Chris Johnson earned Men[apos]s [quote]Assistant Coach of the Year[quote] nomination during the outdoor campaign. Sullivan has been recognized by USTFCCCA on numerous occasions, and was named Mid-Atlantic Men[apos]s Coach of the Year in 2009, becoming the first woman to win the award at the helm of a men[apos]s program.

Big Ten Success …

The Nittany Lions have also been highly successful in Big Ten competition under Sullivan[apos]s guidance, with the Penn State women totaling 50 individual victories, as well as 13 relay wins over the past 11 years. Conversely, the Nittany Lion men have earned 21 individual titles, and two relay wins in Sullivan[apos]s tenure. Under Sullivan, the Nittany Lion women have been at the top of the heap at the conference level for nearly a decade, having finishing no worse than fourth at any Big Ten track and field championship since 2003.

Cox, a 2008 graduate, remains at the top of the charts, with an outstanding total of 15 victories, while 2011 graduate Shavon Greaves stands with 14 total titles, including sweeps of the short sprints during both the indoor and outdoor championships in 2009 and 2010. Sullivan has also overseen a pair of wins in the men[apos]s javelin throw, including a Big Ten record 239-9 (73.09) effort by Allen Pettner in 2007. 2012 graduate Kara Millhouse also rose to prominence in the Big Ten record books under Sullivan, capturing two-straight conference victories in the 10,000.

The Lion have been recognized throughout the years for their conference success, including a pair of Big Ten [quote]Freshman of the Year[quote] citations for Creese in 2012. Also earning conference accolades last year was Lane, who won Big Ten [quote]Athlete of the Year[quote] honors on the heels of her victory at the Big Ten Cross Country Championships. Kovacs rounded out the year with a conference [quote]Field Athlete of the Year[quote] nod during the outdoor season.

The conference honors rolled in in 2009-12, with Franek earning Athlete of the Year honors in cross country, along with a Freshman of the Year citation for Nicole Lord. Sullivan would also be voted Big Ten Coach of the Year, thanks to the Lions[apos] cross country success. Sullivan would earn another conference Coach of the Year award indoors, while Franek was named Athlete of the Meet, and then-junior Shavon Greaves took Athlete of the Year status. Outside, Fawn Dorr was declared Athlete of the Meet, while Sullivan earned yet another Coach of the Year citation. On the men[apos]s side, Loxsom would earn Freshman of the Year status outdoors.

On the Big Ten stage, Sullivan[apos]s Nittany Lions claimed a combined total of 14 individual victories, to go along with three relay wins. Franek got the ball rolling in cross country, taking top honors at the conference meet – becoming the first Nittany Lion to win the conference cross country title since Kim McGreevy in 1994.

The Nittany Lions had a banner afternoon at the conference meet in 2009, highlighted by an individual victory from then-senior Franek. The Nittany Lions would put all five scoring finishers in the top 25 for a winning total of 71 points, with Franek in first, Lord in ninth – good for second-team all-conference honors – freshman Brooklyne Ridder in 16th, sophomore Caitlin Lane in 22nd, and sophomore Kara Millhouse in 23rd.


On the Cross Country Course …

Penn State squads have enjoyed outstanding success in cross country under Sullivan[apos]s watch. Last season was no different, highlighted by a 13th-place standing by the women[apos]s team at the NCAA Championships – the highest finish in nearly two decades. Caitlin Lane paved the way, finishing 16th overall to earn her first-career All-America citation. Lane[apos]s hot streak started at the Big Ten Championships, where she took top honors, becoming the second Nittany Lion to win the Big Ten crown in the last three years.

Also running well at the conference meet was then-senior Kara Millhouse,

Regionally, speaking Sullivan[apos]s Nittany Lions more than held their own in a field of national-caliber teams at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships, with the women[apos]s team scoring a third-place standing, to go along with the men[apos]s fourth-place effort. Individually, the Nittany Lions garnered a grand total of seven all-region citations, led by a two-three finish from then-juniors Kyle Dawson and Vince McNally on the men[apos]s side. Then-junior Caitlin Lane was tops for the women in 12th place, followed by a quartet of Nittany Lions in the top 25, including Kara Millhouse, Natalie Bower, Maura Ryan, and Brooklyne Ridder.

Sullivan[apos]s charges were just as successful on the conference level, as the Nittany Lions turned in fourth-place finishes in both the men[apos]s and women[apos]s races. Dawson, who Sullivan coached to Big Ten Freshman of the Year honors in 2008, was the top finisher, earning all-conference second team honors via an eighth-place effort individually. McNally was on his heals in 13th, earning his second-career all-conference citation. Another duo of Nittany Lions mounted all-conference efforts in the women[apos]s race, led by then-sophomores Ridder, and Bower, who placed ninth and 14th, respectively.

A year prior, Sullivan coached the women[apos]s cross country team to a 14th-place effort at the 2009 NCAA Cross Country Championships, to go along with the program[apos]s Big Ten victory. The Nittany Lions would also receive representation on the men[apos]s side at the national level, with sophomore Vince McNally making his second-straight appearance at the NCAA meet.

Sullivan[apos]s Lions shined in the NCAA field, paced by Franek[apos]s 26th-place finish, which was also good for her second-career All-America effort in cross country. Ranked as high as 11th during the season, the Lions[apos] 14th-place effort was the highest since the 1996 campaign. Penn State advanced to the Championships via an at-large bid, thanks to in-season wins over outstanding programs such as Florida State, Illinois, Minnesota, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Providence, and SMU, earning more than enough qualifying points to make the field.

A year prior, Sullivan coached Franek to a 23rd-place effort and All-America honors at the 2008 NCAA Cross Country Championships. Sullivan also led the men[apos]s squad to its first appearance at the NCAA meet since 1994, thanks to a second-place finish at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional. The Nittany Lion men notched a 25th-place standing at the NCAA Championships.

The Nittany Lion men engineered an outstanding 2008 campaign, thanks to a group of seasoned veterans, two talented freshmen, and homegrown Pennsylvania work ethic, as six of the eight Nittany Lion men that traveled to the NCAA Championships are former Pennsylvania high school standouts.

The Nittany Lions continued to impress at the Big Ten Championships, posting a fourth-place effort in the team standings – the highest conference finish in nearly a decade. Dawson was also voted Big Ten Freshman of the Year following his effort at the conference championships, becoming the first athlete in Nittany Lion history to earn the honor in cross country.

The Nittany Lion cross country squads have been a strong factor at both the conference, regional, and national levels since Sullivan[apos]s arrival in 1999, as the Penn State women have made NCAA appearances in 2002, and 2003, 2009, and 2010 while earning top five finishes in the Mid-Atlantic region on eight occasions. In 2000, Sullivan led Suzanne Heyer to a 14th-place finish at the NCAA Cross Country Championships – the highest-ever finish by a Nittany Lion woman in the NCAA era.

Before Penn State …

Prior to her tenure at Penn State, Sullivan was the Women[apos]s Coordinator for the Stanford track and field and cross country teams from 1995-99. During those four years, Sullivan coached over 30 NCAA All-America athletes including one NCAA individual champion (Monal Chokshi in the 3,000 meters), led numerous Pac-10 team and individual championship performers and led the team into national prominence. Under her coaching, Stanford placed in the top 10 at the NCAA Cross Country Championships all four years of her tenure including winning the NCAA championship in 1996. The Cardinal also took home runner-up honors in 1997 and a strong third place finish in 1998. In return, Sullivan was named Pac-10 Coach of the Year three times, NCAA Regional Coach of the Year twice and NCAA Division I Coach of the Year in 1996. Before her years at Stanford, Sullivan served as the head coach at Mankato State University from 1993-95 and as the assistant coach at Southeast Missouri State University from 1991-93. She earned conference-coaching honors and produced over 20 conference champions for these schools.

In 2007, Sullivan was inducted into the Minnesota Classic Lake Conference and the Hopkins High School Hall of Fame, both in Minnetonka, Minn. As a high school athlete at Hopkins High, Sullivan competed in track and field and cross country and was a member of the state championship cross country team in 1983, and the fourth-place 4×800-meter relay at the state level.

Sullivan earned a bachelor[apos]s degree in Social Work in 1989 from the University of Minnesota. As a Golden Gopher, she ran cross-country and track and field and captained her cross-country team her sophomore through senior years. She later completed a Master of Science degree in Sports Administration at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale in 1993. While at SIU, she began her college coaching career serving as assistant coach from 1989-91. During her time at SIU, she met and married her husband, Jim Sullivan. Jim is a full-time instructor with the Department of Kinesiology at Penn State and continues to be an important resource in developing training methodology. Dr. Sullivan volunteers his time as the Penn State pole vault coach. The couple lives in Boalsburg, Pa.

Sullivan[apos]s Coaching Awards and Honors

* 2010 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2010 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2010 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2010 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2009 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country
* 2009 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2009 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2009 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Men[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2008 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2008 Penn State Achieving Woman Award || Pennsylvania State University
* 2008 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach for the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2007 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2004 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach for the Year || Outdoor Track and Field
* 2004 USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Women[apos]s Coach for the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 2004 Big Ten Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field
* 1998 Pac-10 Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1997 Pac-10 Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1997 USTFCCCA West RegionWomen[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1996 NCAA Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1996 Pac-10 Women[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1996 USTFCCCA West RegionWomen[apos]s Coach of the Year || Cross Country (Stanford)
* 1995 North Central Conference Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field (Mankato State)
* 1995 Regional Coach of the Year || Indoor Track and Field (Mankato State)
* 1992 Ohio Valley Conference Coach of the Year || Cross Country (SE Missouri State)
* 1992 Missouri T&F/CC Coaches[apos] Association Coach of the Year || SE Missouri State



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Ntekpere honored as Second Team Academic All-American | APG State News

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Training sessions at World Aquatics Masters Championships cancelled due to Sentosa’s water quality issues

SINGAPORE – The water quality issue that affected the World Aquatics Championships open water swimming events at Sentosa earlier in July has also struck the World Aquatics Masters Championships, with the morning and afternoon open water training sessions cancelled on July 25. World Aquatics sent a message to participants and explained that the decision was […]

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SINGAPORE – The water quality issue that affected the World Aquatics Championships open water swimming events at Sentosa earlier in July has also struck the World Aquatics Masters Championships, with the morning and afternoon open water training sessions cancelled on July 25.

World Aquatics sent a message to participants and explained that the decision was made because of “water quality levels exceeding acceptable thresholds”.

The world governing body added that a technical meeting is planned for 4.45pm and that it will “continue monitoring water quality” and provide more information, before the competition starts on July 26 with the women’s 3km race in the waters off Palawan Beach. The men’s 3km event is scheduled for a day later.

The July 26-Aug 22 World Aquatics Masters Championships is expected to feature about 6,000 athletes from around 100 countries and territories aged 25 and above, competing in swimming, diving, water polo, artistic swimming and open water swimming.

The Straits Times has contacted the local organising committee for comment.

At the World Aquatics Championships, the men and women’s 10km open water swimming events were postponed due to “unacceptable water quality results”.

The women’s 10km initially scheduled for July 15 was moved to July 16, 10.15am, about three hours after the men’s 10km, because water samples drawn at the race site two days earlier showed “exceeding levels” of the Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria.

However, results from a July 15 sample showed that the levels were still above acceptable thresholds, causing the men and women’s flag-offs to be further delayed to 1pm and 4pm respectively on July 16. The competition proceeded as scheduled from then on.

E. coli is a bacteria commonly found in the intestines of people and animals. While most strains are harmless, some can cause serious illness such as diarrhoea, urinary tract infections, pneumonia and sepsis.

According to World Aquatics regulations, E. coli levels in ocean and transitional (tidal) waters must not exceed 250 colony-forming units per 100 millilitres.

ST understands that World Aquatics adopts stricter water quality standards compared to guidelines set for recreational swimming, given the prolonged exposure faced by athletes during competition.

Earlier, World Aquatics executive director Brent Nowicki had noted that water quality disruptions were not unprecedented, with the Paris 2024 Olympics men’s triathlon postponed hours before the scheduled start due to pollution levels in the River Seine.

ST also reported that while the National Environment Agency does not usually assess marine water quality based on E. coli levels, it has started monitoring the bacteria levels at Sentosa’s beaches following the recent incidents.



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Here are all the winners from the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards

Saturday marked another moment of recognition and pride across Black College athletics with the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards presentation. Hosted by HBCU Sports Founding Publisher and Editor Kenn Rashad alongside Jarrett Hoffman and Chris Stevens, the annual virtual event spotlighted the very best in HBCU sports. It honored athletes in 23 categories, coaches in 12, […]

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Saturday marked another moment of recognition and pride across Black College athletics with the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards presentation.

Hosted by HBCU Sports Founding Publisher and Editor Kenn Rashad alongside Jarrett Hoffman and Chris Stevens, the annual virtual event spotlighted the very best in HBCU sports. It honored athletes in 23 categories, coaches in 12, and administrators in 10 from institutions across the Division I, Division II, and NAIA landscape.

In addition to celebrating competitive excellence, the show also recognized extraordinary service by presenting this year’s Lifetime Achievement Awards to two iconic contributors, Patricia Cage-Bibbs and Rob Brodway.

Below is the complete list of winners from the 2025 HBCU Sports Awards:

2025 HBCU Sports Awards Winners

Women’s Track & Field Athlete of the Year
Spirit Morgan, North Carolina A&T

Men’s Track & Field Athlete of the Year
Joseph Briscoe, Virginia State

Women’s Track & Field Runner of the Year
Shaneal Clarke-Giddings, Lincoln (Mo.)

Men’s Track & Field Runner of the Year
Brian Kemei, Morehouse

Women’s Track & Field Sprinter of the Year
Kevell Byrd, Dillard

Men’s Track & Field Sprinter of the Year
Jamarion Stubbs, Alabama State

Women’s Volleyball Player of the Year
Kiersten Eggleton, West Virginia State

Women’s Tennis Player of the Year
Sofya Chursina, South Carolina State

Men’s Tennis Player of the Year
David Jeanne-Grandinot, Alabama State

Softball Player of the Year
Taylor Ames-Alexander, South Carolina St.

Baseball Player of the Year
Cardell Thibodeaux, Southern

Women’s Golfer of the Year
Paris Fieldings, Howard

Men’s Golfer of the Year
Jose Berenguel, Arkansas-Pine Bluff

Bowler of the Year
Maya Avilez, North Carolina A&T

Women’s Soccer Player of the Year
Olivia Ankrom, Shaw

Women’s Cross Country Runner of the Year
Shamia Jones, Alabama State

Men’s Cross Country Runner of the Year
Brian Kemei, Morehouse

Women’s Basketball Player of the Year
Diamond Johnson, Norfolk State

Men’s Basketball Player of the Year
Blake Harper, Howard

Defensive Football Player of the Year
Elijah Williams, Morgan State

Offensive Football Player of the Year
Jada Byers, Virginia Union

Lifetime Achievement Award: Female
Patricia Cage-Bibbs

Lifetime Achievement Award: Male
Rod Broadway

Baseball Coach of the Year
Jonathan Hernandez, Bethune-Cookman

Bowling Coach of the Year
Tiffany Clark, Prairie View A&M

Cross Country Coach of the Year
Clyde Duncan Sr., Texas Southern

Football Coach of the Year
Chennis Berry, South Carolina State

Golf Coach of the Year
Sam Puryear, Howard

Women’s Basketball Coach of the Year
Larry Vickers, Norfolk State

Men’s Basketball Coach of the Year
Tony Madlock, Alabama State

Soccer Coach of the Year
Brent Leiba, Howard

Softball Coach of the Year
Vernon Bland, Prairie View A&M

Tennis Coach of the Year
Anuk Christiansz, Alabama State

Track & Field Coach of the Year
Allen Johnson, North Carolina A&T

Women’s Volleyball Coach of the Year
David Brooks, Delaware State

Best Social Media Presence
Grambling State

Broadcaster of the Year
Charles Edmond, Alcorn State

Band of the Year
Jackson State

Sports Information Director of the Year
Derek Bryant, Howard

Conference Media Relations Director of the Year
Andrew Roberts, SWAC

Conference Commissioner of the Year
Jacqie McWilliams, CIAA

Athletic Conference of the Year
Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC)

Female Student-Athlete of the Year
Kesmat El Tawil, Alabama State

Male Student-Athlete of the Year
Christopher Flippin, Maryland-Eastern Shore

 

Athletic Director of the Year
Ashley Robinson, Jackson State

Athletic Program of the Year
Alabama State



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