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Former Missouri football DL coach Al Davis hired as assistant at local high school

Former Missouri football DL coach Al Davis hired as assistant at local high school

Yahooa day ago
Former Missouri football defensive line coach Al Davis is back in coaching, and he's staying in Columbia.
Davis has been hired as an assistant coach at Rock Bridge High School, per a social media post from Bruins head coach Matt Perkins on Wednesday night. The news comes a little less than three months after Davis stepped away from Mizzou for personal reasons.
'Welcome (Al Davis) to the Bruins Family,' Perkins wrote on X/Twitter. 'Coach Davis brings a wealth of expertise in the game of football and a passion that will drive us to a new level. Fired up to have you join the staff coach!'
'I'm excited about and thankful for this opportunity (Coach Perkins),' Davis wrote on X, 'and I look forward to being apart of the Bruin family.'
After Davis' resignation, Missouri promoted David Blackwell from his role as the defensive tackles coach to oversee the full defensive line, and the Tigers added Sabbath Joseph as an assistant defensive line coach.
Davis was a big part of the Tigers' back-to-back double-digit-win seasons. Shortly after joining the team as a defensive analyst in 2021, Davis took over as an assistant coach on the interior of the defensive line after Jethro Franklin was fired midseason. The Tigers saw near-instant improvement after Davis took over the room, especially defending the run.
The assistant coach was also an active recruiter for the Tigers, particularly in his home state of Georgia.
'I've made the decision today to resign from my coaching position at the University of Missouri due to personal reasons to focus on family matters,' Davis wrote in a statement posted to his X account May 16. 'I was to thank Coach (Eli) Drinkwitz for giving me the opportunity to coach here over the last few years, and (I) wish the program well. They have a bright future under his leadership.'
'Today I accepted Coach Davis' resignation, as he is stepping away from our program," Drinkwitz said in a release May 16 announcing Davis' resignation. "I want to thank him for his time with us and wish him the best moving forward.'
No further details about Davis' resignation have become available. In his most recent publicly available contract with Mizzou, he was expected to earn $430,000 in total compensation this year. Because his resignation was accepted and Davis is not leaving for another job, it is unlikely that either party is owed money in damages.
More: Missouri football corner Toriano Pride wants to be a 'brainiac.' Can he earn starting role?
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Davis began his career as a graduate assistant at Arkansas, which is his alma mater. He also spent time as the co-defensive coordinator at Hutchinson Community College and had one season coaching defensive tackles at Illinois.
Rock Bridge, where Davis seemingly also will coach the defensive line, begins its season Aug. 29 against Park Hill in Columbia.
This article originally appeared on Columbia Daily Tribune: Former Missouri football DL coach Al Davis hired at Rock Bridge
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A UFC fight at the White House? Dana White says it's happening
A UFC fight at the White House? Dana White says it's happening

CNN

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  • CNN

A UFC fight at the White House? Dana White says it's happening

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‘Unguardable' with ‘freaky lateral quickness': Hunter Renfrow returns to where he broke out
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New York Times

time3 minutes ago

  • New York Times

‘Unguardable' with ‘freaky lateral quickness': Hunter Renfrow returns to where he broke out

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Hunter Renfrow breaks a tackle and runs 65 yards for his first career TD! @Raiders @renfrowhunter #OAKvsHOU 📺: CBS📱: NFL app // Yahoo Sports appWatch free on mobile: — NFL (@NFL) October 27, 2019 According to Thielen, Renfrow's skill set is hard to describe and almost defies physics. While receivers are taught at a young age to keep their feet underneath them so they don't slip when making cuts, that somehow doesn't apply to the 5-10, 185-pound Renfrow. 'When he's changing direction, his strides are far away from his body,' Thielen said. 'So you've got to have some serious body control and center of gravity stability to do that.' Advertisement But after being drafted in the fifth round after the Tigers' second national championship in three years, Renfrow was playing tentatively as a rookie. Through the Raiders' first six games, Renfrow caught 14 passes for 115 yards. 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Miguel Andujar, acquired to crush left-handed pitching, delivering big for Reds
Miguel Andujar, acquired to crush left-handed pitching, delivering big for Reds

New York Times

time3 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Miguel Andujar, acquired to crush left-handed pitching, delivering big for Reds

CINCINNATI — The Cincinnati Reds' trade deadline didn't make headlines, with three small moves to tweak the team's roster rather than overhaul it. Chief among the team's moves was its last, as the team completed a deal for Miguel Andujar from the Athletics in the final hour leading up to the deadline. Advertisement Andujar wasn't one of those names bandied about in trade rumors, nor was he more than a footnote nationally, but he's already made a difference for the Reds in a key category targeted at the deadline by president of baseball operations Nick Krall and general manager Brad Meador: hitting against left-handed pitching. Tuesday, the Reds battered Philadelphia Phillies lefty Ranger Suárez, posting six runs on 10 hits in Suárez's 5 1/3 innings. Suárez's ERA rose from 2.94 to 3.28, partly due to Andujar's second home run as a Red and his first against a lefty, in Cincinnati's 6-1 victory at Great American Ball Park. 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Tuesday, Andujar launched his first home run against a lefty as a Red, a solo homer in the fourth inning off of Suárez to give the Reds a 3-0 lead. Before Andujar joined the Reds, the team was 19th in OPS (.690) against left-handed starters, hitting .226/.307/.383 against lefty starters overall. Since then — in just 53 total plate appearances as a team, including Tuesday's game — they're 11th in OPS (.798) against left-handed starters, with a .320/.358/.440 slash line. Advertisement Tuesday, Francona rolled out a lineup with just one left-handed hitter, leadoff man TJ Friedl, against Suárez, with Andujar in the cleanup spot. '(Andujar) has 1.000 OPS against left-handers, that might be the best in baseball,' Francona said. 'That's a big bat to have in the middle of your order.' Andujar is now 2-for-6 against lefties since joining the Reds, but more than that, he's 8 for 23 (.348) overall in a Reds uniform, with half of his hits going for extra bases. 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That helps me contribute.' Friedl not only earned his way into the lineup against left-handed pitching, but has also stuck in the leadoff spot against pitchers of either persuasion. Friedl is better against right-handers this year with a .797 OPS, but two years ago, when facing left-handers, he had a .962 OPS. From his spot atop the lineup, Friedl said Andujar has helped the team's lineup overall. Advertisement 'He's a well-disciplined, high-contact guy, but he's got thump,' Friedl said. 'You saw that in Pittsburgh and today where he just gets the head (of the bat) out, and I think his plate discipline and his sights of where he wants to put a ball is so advanced, it helps him know when he can let it rip like today or if he wants to just take his hit the other way — that's a special thing.' With the right-handed Noelvi Marte's transition to the outfield, which was possible because of the team's addition of Ke'Bryan Hayes on deadline eve, Francona has enough right-handed bats to stack them against left-handed pitching. He could even use the right-handed-hitting Santiago Espinal at third base for the left-handed-hitting Hayes, and then late in the game, remove Espinal, a fantastic defender, to put in a transcendent fielder in Hayes as a defensive replacement. The result is a more potent lineup against lefties with seven right-handed bats in addition to Friedl and the switch-hitting Elly De La Cruz. Was Tuesday just a good night against a good lefty, or have the Reds found a way to improve against lefties? They won't have to wait long to find out, as left-hander Cristopher Sánchez, who is 11-3 with a 2.36 ERA on the season, takes the mound in Wednesday's series finale. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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