If USC-Michigan is a passing contest, the Trojans might have the upper hand.
CBS Sports college football analyst Blake Brockermeyer is clearly concerned about Michigan’s quarterback situation. Brockermeyer doesn’t know what to expect when Michigan faces USC and the other teams on its 2024 schedule. USC’s Miller Moss is a higher-rated quarterback than Michigan’s Alex Orji.
“Although Michigan’s coaches are confident in his running skills, his passing ability remains largely untested. Former coach Jim Harbaugh praised Orji’s arm talent, noting his high school stats of over 2,000 passing yards, a 51% completion rate, 28 touchdowns, and eight interceptions. Michigan is expected to use heavy formations to emphasize the run, as Orji’s passing capabilities are still unknown outside the team. He may either continue in his situational role from last year or be surpassed by a more traditional passer.”
Moss threw six touchdown passes for USC in the Holiday Bowl against Louisville. We haven’t seen Orji do anything of the sort at Michigan. Maybe Orji will be a dynamic runner who doesn’t need to throw the ball that much, but if the Michigan-USC game on Sept. 21 comes down to which quarterback throws the ball better, the Trojans will like their chances.
Mason Graham is a massive interior defender who would help the Steelers defensive line.
By the time the next offseason comes around, the Pittsburgh Steelers defensive line could be in real trouble. It isn’t clear what Cam Heyward’s future is and the only big-time player on the depth chart aside from Heyward is Keeanu Benton.
The folks at Pro Football Network seem to agree and in their new 2025 mock draft, they addressed this need as well. PFN gave the Steelers Michigan defensive tackle Mason Graham with the No. 14 overall pick.
Here’s what they had to say about Graham:
Mason Graham is a mauler forged in the Michigan trenches who has pocket-pulverizing power and remarkable pass-rush potential due to athleticism that belies his stout 6’3″, 318-pound frame.
The Steelers should have their pick of multiple interior defensive linemen in the 2025 NFL draft and could even opt for another Michigan prospect if they see Kenneth Grant as a better fit. Either way, Pittsburgh couldn’t go wrong with a player like Graham.
Watts is ranked by 247Sports as the No. 217 player in the class of 2025, No. 12 interior offensive lineman and No. 1 recruit from his home state of Massachusetts. He is coming off visits to Clemson and Wisconsin on June 2 and June 7 respectively, and still has a trip planned to Michigan for June 21.
While the Badgers appear to still be in the running to land the top-ranked lineman, 247Sports does have one crystal ball prediction logged for him to choose Clemson. That prediction came on June 12 from Clemson insider Austin Hannon.
BREAKING: CO/25 4 ⭐️ OL Hardy Watts ( @HardyWatts2 ) has cut his list down to 3️⃣ Schools‼️ – Watts is a 6’6 ( 305 LBS ) OL out of Brookline, MA. He ranks as the number #1 recruit in Massachusetts according to rivals. – Which fanbase can show him the most love?! ⬇️🤔 pic.twitter.com/a9XEspLP4Q
Wisconsin’s class of 2025 recently took a big step forward after the additions of four-star LB Mason Posa and four-star WR Eugene Hilton Jr. It now has 19 total commitments, five of which from blue-chip players. The class is an impressive follow-up performance by Luke Fickell and his staff after finishing the 2024 cycle with a top-25 class.
The group could rise even further in the Big Ten and national rankings with a possible commitment from Watts. He is one of the program’s highest-ranked remaining targets in the class.
It’s worth monitoring the top lineman’s recruitment as he nears a decision between the three finalists. Wisconsin should still have a late chance at landing a commitment.
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If you ask a Michigan fan, they’ll say the team down south.
However, if you ask them about each other, most things that will be said aren’t going to be very complimentary. Heck, the two dislike each other so much that they’ve both gone extended time refusing to schedule the other.
The two longtime rivals aren’t set to play each other again until a home-and-home together in 2033 and 2034.
Andy Staples of On3 put together his 12-team College Football Playoff projection on Tuesday, and what do you know, he has Notre Dame earning the ninth seed and traveling to take on No. 8 Michigan in the first round.
Perhaps even better is he gave Ohio State the No. 1 seed, which means the Notre Dame-Michigan winner would take on the Buckeyes.
And with that alone you can see why the intrigue for this expanded College Football Playoff is so great, even if it continues to decimate many of the game’s traditions.
The Saints picked Michigan cornerback Will Johnson in this 2025 mock draft. Either Marshon Lattimore or Paulson Adebo (or both) may not be on the team next year:
Just how many cornerbacks do the New Orleans Saints need? The team selected Alabama’s Kool-Aid McKinstry in the second round of the 2024 draft, but Doug Farrar’s latest 2025 mock draft at Touchdown Wire has them adding another corner next offseason.
Johnson has NFL size at 6-foot-2 and 202 pounds, and he was arguably the best player on a Michigan team that saw 13 Wolverines drafted in April. He’ll be a hot commodity in next year’s draft. And while the Saints run deep at cornerback right now, that might not be the case in 2025.
Starting corner Paulson Adebo will be a free agent in the spring. It will be easier for the Saints to trade Marshon Lattimore in 2025, too, in case that option is still on the table. McKinstry and Alontae Taylor are both starting-quality corners, but the Saints like to have three or more, and they might be looking for reinforcements next April. The secondary will remain a priority so long as Dennis Allen is their head coach.
So what is so special about Johnson? He’s shown tremendous ball skills with seven interceptions through two years at Michigan, and he tied for the second-most forced incompletions (6) on the Wolverines defense last season, per Pro Football Focus charting. He moves very well for someone his size and should clear whichever athletic thresholds the Saints look for. If either (or both) Lattimore or Adebo are playing elsewhere in 2025, he could be a smart pick for New Orleans.
Tears were welling in his eyes as this columnist wrote about the end.
BENTON HARBOR, Mich. — When the final putt dropped in the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship at the Golf Club of Harbor Shores on May 26 — ironically, the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend and won by England’s Richard Bland — there might have been a few tears running down cheeks of golfers and golf fans in the Michigan and Indiana region known as Michiana.
You can count mine among them. Tears are already welling in my eyes as I write.
On and off since 1963 — with some breaks in between — driving any compass point in Michiana into southwestern Michigan’s glorious fruit belt to watch this grand game has been a relaxing and enjoyable experience.
Watching future greats play in the Western Amateur at Point O’Woods Golf & Country Club near Millburg and then seeing many of them return many years later to compete in the Senior PGA at Harbor Shores in Benton Harbor — two great courses in Berrien County separated by a little under eight miles — have provided wonderful bookends to almost a half-century of golf memories.
It doesn’t matter whether the trip lasted 42 miles from South Bend via M-140 and then down Territorial Road into Millburg and a short jaunt north up Roslin Road to Point O’Woods, the tree-lined design of noted architect Robert Trent Jones Sr. that was home to 41 Western Amateur championships, 38 in a row beginning in 1971.
The same is also true of the 40-mile drive from South Bend via the St. Joseph Valley Parkway (U.S. 31) through acres and acres of farmlands to Harbor Shores in Benton Harbor. Situated on reclaimed Whirlpool Corporation properties through which the Paw Paw River meanders and with three holes built along the dunes of Lake Michigan, this Jack Nicklaus design hosted its sixth and final Senior PGA May 23-26. Whirlpool, parent of Kitchenaid, announced they would not continue their sponsorship of the event.
Now, our future golfing springs and summers will never be the same. To paraphrase “Caddyshack” greenskeeper Carl Spackler (actor Bill Murray): “Au Revoir, Golfers.”
My first visit to Point O’Woods occurred during the “Sweet Sixteen” weekend of the 1975 tournament when another assigned staffer at the Niles Daily Star could not work. The winner was the late Andy Bean, a 6-foot-4 recent Florida graduate who, we all learned, once bit the cover off a golf ball after three-putting during a college match against Jay Haas.
Bean, who beat Randy Simmons 1 up for the Western title, enjoyed a memorable PGA Tour career as did others from the “Sweet Sixteen” that year — Peter Jacobsen, Mike Reid and Curtis Strange. Another “Sweet Sixteen” member that year was Fred Ridley, a Gators teammate of Bean who later won the U.S. Amateur, became a lawyer and is now the chairman of Augusta National and the Masters.
The late Tom Weiskopf won the first Western Amateur at the Point in 1963, and Strange’s 1974 “double” — he won 72-hole stroke-play medal before winning four 18-hole matches for the overall title — followed Ben Crenshaw’s 1973 title sweep.
That “double” would later be matched by Rick Fehr (1982), Scott Verplank (1985), Phil Mickelson (1991), Joel Kribel (1996), Steve Scott (1999), Bubba Dickerson (2001) and Danny Lee, whose 2008 “double” coincided with the end of the Point’s 38-year run. When the Western Golf Association returned in 2019, Canadian Garrett Rank, a 31-year-old NHL referee, beat Daniel Wetterich, 3 and 2, for the title.
Mickelson, an Arizona State golfer who won on the PGA Tour earlier in 1991, completed his Western Amateur “double” by beating 19-year-old University of Texas up-and-comer Justin Leonard, 2 and 1. Leonard, who later won the 1997 Open Championship and made the winning putt for Capt. Crenshaw’s winning 1999 U.S. Ryder Cup team, completed a Western Amateur “double” of a different sort – back-to-back titles, matching Hal Sutton’s effort in 1979 and ’80. Leonard won titles in 1992 and ’93, and in 2018, he was named a special honorary member of the Point.
In 1994, the Western Amateur was won by an 18-year-old recent high school graduate – Eldrick Tont “Tiger” Woods, who then was told by father Earl to sign autographs for the dozens of African-American youngsters who followed him.
You just never knew who you would encounter walking “The Point.” In 1991, NBA great Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls was paired for the first two rounds with Mickelson and local Chris Smith of Rochester, Ind., a former Western Junior champion. Baseball home-run smasher Mark McGwire played the first two rounds of the 2004 tournament with current PGA Tour member Kevin Kisner.
And, yes, that was former Masters champion Craig Stadler, a 1973 “Sweet Sixteen” qualifier, carrying the bag for son Kevin during the hot and humid days of the 1998 tournament.
Johnny Miller, then NBC’s lead golf analyst, shared his microphone skills for WSJM radio’s broadcasts during son Andy’s “Sweet Sixteen” championship matches in 1997 and ’99.
And who can forget the 1985 sighting of a Golden Bear? Nicklaus, then on a diet, flew up daily from Dublin, Ohio, to watch son Jackie play that year. While in Millburg, Jack cheated on his diet, enjoying the homemade butter pecan ice cream sold by the first tee. The following spring, Nicklaus donned the Masters green jacket for a sixth time.
Nicklaus later returned to design Harbor Shores, and for its grand opening on Aug. 10, 2010, he invited Miller, Tom Watson and Arnold Palmer to tour the course for a charity skins event. When Miller pulled out a wedge instead of a putter on the multi-tiered, 10,500-square foot green on the 10th hole to execute his remaining 102 feet to the pin, Nicklaus stomped down the hill, dropped a ball and, without lining it up, putted it up the terrain and into the cup — much to the delight of Palmer, Watson and the more than 5,000 fans in attendance.
Two years later, England’s Roger Chapman totaled 13-under 271 to beat John Cook, Hale Irwin, Bernhard Langer and others for the first Senior PGA Championship title at Harbor Shores. In 2014, Scotland’s Colin Montgomerie totaled the same score for a four-stroke victory over Watson, who edged out Langer and Jay Haas by two more.
In 2016, Rocco Mediate of Greensburg, Pa., shot 19-under 265 to beat Montgomerie by three strokes and Langer and Brandt Jobe by five, reinforcing Mediate’s love affair with southwestern Michigan golf courses that dates back to 1983; That year he pre-qualified for the Western Amateur at Dowagiac’s Hampshire Country Club and then made the 36-hole cut. The following summer, Mediate would lose the final to John Inman with both golfers wearing plus-fours.
England’s Paul Broadhurst would match Mediate’s winning total in 2018 to beat Tim Petrovic by four shots as nine golfers, including Montgomery, Miguel Angel Jimenez, Jerry Kelly and Scott McCarron, shot 10-under or better for four rounds.
Two years after the 2020 return to Harbor Shores was canceled by the COVID-19 pandemic, New Zealand’s Steven Alker shot an 8-under 63 in the final round for a 16-under 268 total that was three strokes better than Canada’s Stephen Ames and six ahead of Langer.
Steve Stricker, a 1989 “Sweet Sixteen” qualifier at the Western Amateur, was expected to play in that 2022 Senior PGA after captaining the U.S. Ryder Cup team to victory in 2021 over the European team captained by Ireland’s Padraig Harrington. But Stricker tested positive for COVID-19 and had to withdraw.
Last year at the Senior PGA held at Fields Ranch East in Frisco, Texas, the 57-year-old Stricker and Harrington renewed their rivalry as players, shooting 18-under 270s before Stricker won his sixth senior major title on the first playoff hole. The Top 10 included Alker, Jimenez, Stewart Cink, Y.E. Yang, Darren Clarke and Vijay Singh. All of them — and many others from past Western Amateurs at the Point — were in this year’s farewell field at Harbor Shores.
Wide receiver with offer from Wisconsin set for Big Ten tour
The Wisconsin Badgers football team offered Rico Blassingame, a three-star class of 2026 wide receiver from Tolleson, Arizona, on Tuesday.
News also broke Tuesday that the talented wide receiver is set for unofficial visits to Michigan, Michigan State and Ohio State this June.
The 6-foot-3, 180-pound athlete reeled in 60 receptions for 593 yards and a touchdown during his sophomore year at Tolleson Union, garnering attention from programs across the country. Blassingame has now received 15 Division 1 offers, including Indiana, Minnesota, Purdue and Wisconsin within the Big Ten.
With Wisconsin’s offense going through a complete facelift under offensive coordinator Phil Longo and his “Air Raid” offense, athletes like Blassingame will have an eye on the Badgers this season. If Luke Fickell’s squad can show improvement in the passing game in particular, it will certainly increase their odds of landing Blassingame and others in 2026.
Considering he’s a member of the class of 2026, it’s unlikely that Blassingame will be making a decision on his college destination any time soon.
After landing four Big Ten offers in the last week, Tolleson (Ariz.) Union class of 2026 receiver Rico Blassingame has plans to head back to the Midwest next month: https://t.co/2vcKRW79XCpic.twitter.com/ZINqZyWawN
The year is 2024 and the grip that television executives have on college football has never been tighter. They are largely to blame for the chaos that is conference realignment and they are definitely to blame for the scheduling decisions made each season, but they have decided to bless Ohio State football with the most recent news.
The Buckeyes will not be playing any Friday night football games and this may not be a big deal for fans or the viewer, but this is a very important thing for the Ohio State coaching staff. It is much easier to recruit and bring kids in to Saturday games than Friday games considering that most high school games around the country are on Friday night.
Fox made its announcement of Big Ten Friday night schedule today and Ohio State was one of the few that missed the cut along with Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Penn State and Wisconsin.
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A big development in the recruiting battle for top transfer DL Jay’Viar Suggs:
Wisconsin made the final four schools for top transfer defensive line target Jay’Viar Suggs on Thursday.
The Badgers are included along with LSU, Michigan and Kentucky. The list was cut down from six just two days ago, with Arkansas, USC and Florida State now no longer involved. LSU was a late addition after offering him a scholarship on Wednesday.
Suggs entered the portal last month after several years as a starter at D-II Grand Valley State. His stats in that time include 14.5 tackles for loss and eight sacks. He is currently ranked by 247Sports as a three-star transfer and only the No. 704 player in the transfer portal and No. 71 defensive lineman
Despite the ranking, the veteran plays a position in defensive line that is a need for nearly every team in the nation. A final four list of Wisconsin, Michigan, Kentucky and LSU tells a different story than the recruiting ranking.
Wisconsin has a connection to the transfer. Current OLBs coach Matt Mitchell and CB Nyzier Fourqurean both came from Grand Valley State after the 2022 season. Those relationships play a big role in the program’s chance at a commitment.
Jay’viar Suggs will be officially visiting Wisconsin tomorrow (former teammate of current badger Nyzier Fourquean) #Badgerspic.twitter.com/Q4G92NlzTq
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The Chargers added their third wide receiver in the draft with the selection of Cornelius Johnson.
The Chargers wrapped up their 2024 draft class with the selection of former Michigan wide receiver Cornelius Johnson with the No. 253 overall pick.
Johnson was the third wideout that Los Angeles took in this draft, with the other two being Ladd McConkey and Brenden Rice.
Johnson is also the second former Wolverine, joining linebacker Junior Colson in Los Angeles.
Johnson, who played for Michigan for five seasons, had career highs in receptions (47) and receiving yards (604) this past season. He finished his college career with 138 receptions for 2,030 yards and 14 touchdowns.
At 6-foot-3 and 212 pounds, Johnson is a big-bodied deep threat with raw athleticism and good playmaking ability to make contested catches. He is also physical in the run-blocking department.