Bengals met with Princeton WR Andrei Iosivas

Another WR meeting for the Bengals before the draft.

It hasn’t been uncommon for mock drafts to have the Cincinnati Bengals take a wide receiver after the first couple rounds have passed.

Andrei Iosivas, a wide receiver out of Princeton, said on the “Ross Tucker Podcast” that he visited the Bengals at the end of last week.

At 6’3” and 205 pounds, Iosivas had 66 receptions for 943 yards and seven touchdowns in his last year as a Tiger.

Iosivas said that he is meeting with a few different teams before the draft and seems to be drawing a lot of interest in the middle rounds.

The Bengals are looking great at wide receiver now, but with the future of the room uncertain having possible large contract extensions looming, it couldn’t hurt to add some depth there.

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Top 25 colleges and universities ranked academically by US News for 2022-23

Many you’d expect to see, perhaps a few you wouldn’t?

Few places are able to claim excellence in both academics and athletics quite like the University of Notre Dame. Like many of the top-ranked schools, Notre Dame has fewer than 9,000 undergraduate students. The university is widely regarded as one of the very best nationally each and every year.

U.S. News & World Report ranks colleges and universities every year and recently came out with its list for 2022-23. Not surprisingly, Notre Dame found itself in the top 20 nationally. Which schools ranked around Notre Dame? And which ranked ahead?

Below is how the U.S. News & World Report ranked the top 25 colleges and universities.

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2023 NFL draft: 6 small-school prospects Chargers should consider

Every NFL draft brings major contributors from smaller schools.

If the Chargers want to hit a home run in the 2023 NFL draft, they will have to consider all options when choosing who will make their draft board.

Every year a prospect from a small school becomes an NFL star in the making. Whether it’s the early rounds or undrafted free agency pool, there are plenty of players that always fly under the radar.

With that, I take look at six small school standouts that Los Angeles should consider based on positional needs.

Opinion: The beauty of March Madness is defined by underdogs

What is it about March Madness that gets fans hooked?

Every year in March, millions of fans are glued to their televisions and find themselves rooting for teams they have never heard of. Rooting for those teams as if they had followed them their whole lives.

This year, there were 20,056,273 brackets made on ESPN despite a 1-in-120 billion chance of a perfect bracket. What is it about March Madness that gets fans hooked?

The truth is that we all love an underdog story. People pull for Cinderella every tournament as they hope and pray the clock doesn’t strike midnight for those schools. Let me throw some teams at you: [autotag]Lehigh[/autotag], [autotag]Saint Peter’s[/autotag], [autotag]Oral Roberts[/autotag], [autotag]Florida Gulf Coast[/autotag], [autotag]UMBC[/autotag], and this year [autotag]Princeton[/autotag] and [autotag]Fairleigh Dickinson[/autotag].

These teams are a combined 15-15 in the NCAA Tournament since 2010. That doesn’t sound bad, but since 2010, there have been 868 tournament games in total. These seven teams make up only 0.03% of games in that time. The closest any of these teams have gotten to a national championship was Saint Peter’s, who went all the way to the Elite Eight last year. Princeton has a chance to tie that feat if it can beat Creighton this week.

What is it about the March Madness format that makes it so special? Why doesn’t that format work in other sports? I think it’s because the games are one-offs. The format doesn’t work in baseball and softball because the underdogs have to win a three-game series. It doesn’t work in football because there is too much parity.

This would be like lining Akron up against Georgia in college football. It wouldn’t work even in a one-off. It would be a cupcake game. They would lose by at least 28.

The thrill of victory, the agony of defeat. The “one shining moment” that endures the test of time. You may not know who these teams are when they enter the tournament, but you’ll never forget their magical run in March.

That is the beauty of March Madness.

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Yes, that really was Jesse Marsch at Princeton’s NCAA tournament upset over Arizona

It’s Marsch Madness!

In the midst of Princeton’s wild comeback against Arizona in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, a familiar-looking face was shown celebrating wildly in the stands.

If you squinted really hard, it sure looked like Jesse Marsch was in attendance at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, going nuts along with the rest of the Princeton fans as their No. 15-seeded team stunned the No. 2 Wildcats 59-55 in the tournament’s first round.

Marsch being there would makes some sense. The ex-Leeds coach is a Princeton alum, and he does, um, have some free time on his hands right now.

And then, there was the confirmation from the Princeton coach himself, Mitch Henderson.

Henderson, who was a point guard on the 1996 Princeton team that scored a famous upset over UCLA as a No. 13 seed, led his team to a shocking win on Thursday. The Tigers were down 10 points with eight minutes left before holding the heavily favored Wildcats scoreless for the last 4:43, going on a 9-0 run to close the game out.

Marsch was loving it.

It’s unclear if Marsch will be in attendance on Saturday when Princeton faces Missouri for a spot in the Sweet 16. After all, there is now another vacancy in the Premier League and he’s the bookies’ third favorite for the job.

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2023 NFL draft: Princeton WR Andrei Iosivas a name to watch for Chargers

The Chargers have the need for speed this upcoming offseason.

It’s no secret that the Chargers need speed at wide receiver. Justin Herbert’s average depth of target this season is a career-low 6.4, nearly a yard and a half lower than any other season of his career. Even with speedster Jalen Guyton in the lineup before he tore his ACL in Week 3, defenses were able to key in on the deep shot or quick pass: three of his four targets in 2022 came more than 20 yards down the field, and 34 of his 46 targets last season came either 20+ yards downfield or within 9 yards of the line of scrimmage.

Oh, and every other wide receiver on the team has also been injured at some point this season.

In short, LA needs to find another speedster to unlock their own creativity. Preferably, they’d have the jets to burn DBs while still possessing the ability to win at intermediate levels of the field.

Why not get creative in pursuing creativity?

Meet Andrei Iosivas:

Princeton is, admittedly, not an NFL hotbed. While the Ivy League school has produced 36 NFL players dating back an entire century, only four Tigers have been drafted since 2001. In fact, Princeton has never had a wide receiver drafted. The closest they’ve gotten are a tight end (Seth DeValve in 2016) and three running backs (Cosmo Iacavazzi in 1965, Hank Bjorklund in 1972, and Judd Garrett in 1990).

But Iosivas is different for one key reason: speed. The Hawaiian senior also competes for Princeton’s track team as a heptathlete, finishing fourth at the NCAA Indoor Championships last season after setting a meet record in the 60 meters with a time of 6.71 seconds. Iosivas is a decorated track athlete: he’s won Ivy League Most Outstanding Field Performer twice and was named an All-American in the heptathlon last season.

Oh, and in case you’re curious: a 6.71 60-meter dash translates to about a 4.22 40, which would tie John Ross’ combine record.

Iosivas isn’t just a straight-line burner, however. The senior has flashes of brilliance, making catches outside his frame:

Tracking the ball downfield for contested catches also presents little to no issue:

This is because Iosivas is 6-foot-3 and 200 pound. Consider that wide receivers who have run 4.3 or faster since 1999 are, on average, 5’11” and 186 pounds. Of the 16 receivers in that group, only Breshad Perriman and Darrius Heyward-Bey tipped the scales over 200 pounds. Both were first-round picks. Iosivas also boasts a vertical jump of 39 inches, higher than all but three members of this speedy group: Henry Ruggs III, Mike Wallace, and Mike Thomas.

Iosivas has already been visited by nearly 30 NFL teams on Princeton’s campus, so he’s no sleeper around the league, even if this is the first you’re hearing of him. Dane Brugler of The Athletic reported in October that scouts everywhere are bullish on Iosivas’ potential once football is his full-time focus, rather than pausing his football regimen to focus on track in winter and spring.

Whether you want to manufacture touches for Iosivas at the line, hit him on crossing routes over the middle, or hit the deep shot, the senior has shown he can win at every level – albeit against Ivy League competition. As of right now, I’d expect him to be a Day 2 pick, making him an exciting option for the Chargers if they miss out on a top target earlier in the draft.

However, Iosivas has accepted a Senior Bowl invite. If he shows the same level of ability he did at Princeton against the best of the best in Mobile, there’s no reason to think he can’t become the Tigers’ highest-drafted player since kicker Charlie Gogolak went in the first round in 1966. I thought Patriots rookie speedster Tyquan Thornton would be available much later than the second round, which is where New England ended up taking him after he ran a 4.28 and performed well at the Shrine Bowl. Who’s to say Iosivas won’t end up on the same path?

We won’t have those answers until late April, but one thing is clear this early in the process: Iosivas is not someone to sleep on.

Early Chargers 3-round 2023 mock draft

The Chargers get a couple of playmakers and a quarterback hunter.

The Chargers, currently 7-6, are in the thick of fighting for a playoff spot.

While most fans’ attentions are still on the season and entirely tuned out from the offseason, I’m here to lay out what Los Angeles could do when it comes time to retool the roster.

That said, here is a three-round mock draft based on the positions that the Bolts should look to address.

Watch: Notre Dame’s appearances in ‘One Shining Moment’

The Irish have made appearances in the annual NCAA Tournament montage.

When I was 14, I had the opportunity to visit the NCAA Hall of Champions during a family trip to Indianapolis. It was there when I was properly introduced to the annual video montage that has wrapped up TV coverage of every NCAA Tournament since 1987.

While I had seen “One Shining Moment” once before, I figured it was just a typical montage like any that played whenever the NBA Finals or World Series wrapped up. My discovery that this happened every year was my main takeaway from the museum that afternoon, and I’ve looked forward to it every year since.

Notre Dame has not appeared in “One Shining Moment” every year it has made the tournament since the montage began, but let’s not pretend it’s done something significant in every appearance. Case in point, the Irish were not featured prominently in any montage until the three straight years it qualified from 2015 to 2017, which included back-to-back Elite Eights. Take a look at all of them below:

Princeton vs Yale Prediction, Game Preview: Ivy League Championship

Princeton vs Yale prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might – or might not – win on Sunday in the Ivy League Championship.

Princeton vs Yale prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch: Sunday, March 13


Princeton vs Yale Game Preview, Ivy League Championship How To Watch

Date: Sunday, March 13
Game Time: 12:00 ET
Venue: Lavietes Pavilion, Cambridge, MA
How To Watch: ESPN2 & ESPN+
Record: Princeton (23-5), Yale (18-11)
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