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Indianapolis Star
5 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Charlie Woods, Tiger Woods' son, competes in Junior PGA Championship at Purdue
Charlie Woods lines up a putt Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods carries back a chunk of grass Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods walks through the golf course Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods tees off Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Purdue basketball player Raleigh Burgess watches Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods reacts to a putt Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods watches after teeing off Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Spectators walk along the path Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Spectators watch as Charlie Woods hits the ball Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods tees off Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods lines up a putt Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods prepares to tee off Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods lines up a putt Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier A fan wears a sweatshirt featuring a tiger golfing Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Spectators watch as Charlie Woods hits the ball Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Spectators watch the ball after Charlie Woods tees off Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods reacts to a putt Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods looks down the golf course Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods lines up a shot Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods hits the ball Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods, Ronin Banerjee and Sam Carrier walk not the green Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods prepares to tee off Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods hits the ball onto the green Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods watches his ball after teeing off Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier Charlie Woods hits the ball Thursday, July 31, 2025, during the Junior PGA Championship at the Purdue Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex in West Lafayette, Indiana. Alex Martin/Journal And Courier

Indianapolis Star
10 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Purdue football preseason camp Day 1: Depth charts, big plays, other takeaways
WEST LAFAYETTE -- Purdue football coach Barry Odom said his team made palpable strides between the end of spring practice and Thursday's start of preseason camp. Now, the Boilermakers must find the sense of urgency to keep building upon that momentum. "We've got plenty of time, but zero time to wait," Odom said after Purdue completed the first of 20 preseason practices leading up to the Aug. 31 season opener against Ball State. "... The opponent through fall camp is the mental preparation and the mental toughness and the strain and the consistency. How good can we get between now and tomorrow morning, and can we have a much better practice Day 2 than we did Day 1." Steady rains forced the team inside the Mollenkopf Athletic Center. A rundown of what we saw and what it means as the heavily turned-over roster prepares for Odom's first season. No hand to be tipped, really, on which quarterback has an early lead in this process. Ryan Browne donned a familiar No. 15 gold jersey -- the same one he wore throughout practices last season. Odom said he enjoyed watching and hearing how last year's part-time starter handled a practice for the first time. He and Malachi Singleton generally took more reps with the No. 1 offense during 11 on 11 drills. Tahj Ra-El notched the first interception of the spring against Singleton. Newcomer Hershey McLaurin picked off Browne later. Perfect summer read: Our book on Purdue men's basktball's 2024 Final Four run Bennett Meredith, Evans Chuba and Garyt Odom also rotated through drills. Odom cited improved decision-making from Singleton and better ball security from Chuba as evidence of progress. "The leaderhip qualites -- coach (Darin) Hinshaw as well as coach (Josh) Henso will get those guys game-ready," Odom said. "Then we'll see how it plays out in the next couple of weeks." Wide receiver Nitro Tuggle made a couple of nice plays in his first practice as a Boilermaker. The former Georgia receiver is one of a handful of post-spring transfers meant to bolster the receiver room. Ahrmad Branch led the Day 1 highlight reel with a one-handed grab against cornerback Tony Grimes. After practice, more people around the program kept bringing up Branche's name unprompted as someone who has built momentum with his summer performance. Grimes had done the same last week at Big Ten media day. Malachi Thomas also finally had the chance to practice in full. An ankle injury sidelined the Virginia Tech transfer throughout the spring. This was a notable day for the secondary, including the interceptions mentioned above. This group, in addition to being potentially one of the more talented units, is also arguably the most veteran unit on the roster. There are more players in that room who are approaching the end of their careers. Could that urgency spill over onto the field? "I thought the communication, listening to them talk, was at an elite level," Odom said. "Now, it's fairly easy to do on Day 1. Can you do it on Day 30? Can you do it when the scoreboard is not in your favor?" Odom liked the totality of athleticism and experience in the secondary. He said some positional analysis continues -- who fits better at corner than safety. which safeties can play nickel, which corners are more comfortable to the field side or the boundary? In the era of extreme transfer turnover, those determinations more often linger into preseason. Speaking of Branch, his was the first name out of strength and conditioning coordinator Kiero Small's mouth when highlighting the biggest gains of the summer. Others name-dropped included Grimes, Jalen St. John, Jamarrion Harkless, Sterling Smith and Mani Powell. "There's a plenthora of guys," Small said. "You have guys up 20 pounds. You have guys down in fat mass. It's been very, very impressive what the young men have done." The first-team offensive line was the one Purdue used the most during the spring: LT Joey Tanona, LG Jalen St. John, C Ciordano Vaccaro, RG Ethan Trent and RT Bakyn Coly. Odom predicted that group would shuffle as early as Friday. Purdue did bring in a trio of former SEC linemen -- Marques Easley (Georgia), Marc Nave Jr. (Kentucky) and Bradyn Joiner (Auburn) who will compete for snaps. A pair of players from the post-spring transfer group jumped right into the first-team defense. Charles Correa lined up next to his former UNLV teammate Mani Powell. Odom said that prior connection enchances what has already been positive communication on defense. Former Arkansas and Colorado safety Myles Slusher lined up deep next to Tahj Ra-El. That position exemplifies that secondary experience, with seniors Crew Wakley and Richard Toney Jr. running with the 2s. Another Georgia transfer receiver, Michael Jackson III, made nice diving sideline catch at the expense of nickel Sterling Smith. The Indy native and Holy Cross transfer bounced back quickly to lay a solid hit to stop receiver EJ Horton Jr.'s slip screen at the line of scrimmage. Another practice on Friday, then Purdue holds its Fan Day practice inside Ross-Ade Stadium on Saturday. Admission to the 8:15 a.m. practice is free, and players and coaches will sign autographs afterwards. That event precedes the men's basketball alumni game inside Mackey Arena.


Miami Herald
12 hours ago
- Miami Herald
UM QB Emory Williams makes some surprising admissions, explains how he changed
If Canes fans' confidence in backup quarterback Emory Williams was shaken by his disappointing play in the bowl game loss to Iowa State, Williams has news for you: His confidence was shaken too. That surprising admission, which Williams revealed Wednesday, was accompanied by more blunt self-evaluation. 'That was a wake-up call,' Williams said of his poor second half, which included just five completions in 14 attempts and an interception, after replacing Cam Ward at halftime of the Pop Tarts Bowl. It was his first game appearance since Sept. 14 against Ball State, but he didn't use rust as an excuse. That 'was by by no means the result of what I was looking for,' he said of the bowl game. Was his confidence shaken? 'To be honest, yeah,' he said. But it also made Williams realize that his game wasn't good enough. 'That,' he said, 'is what lit the fire' and propelled 'me to change.' As a freshman, he showed moxie and poise, completing 62% of his 71 passes, with three touchdowns and an interception in five games, including impressive work in a dramatic overtime win against Clemson. 'That freshman year I had a little bit of that [moxie],' he said. 'I kind of lost it last year. Sometimes you need a wake-up call and I believe that was my wake-up call. I needed that. This year, I'm not going to let that happen again.' So Williams committed to change. He altered his throwing motion, with the assistance of Texas-based quarterback coach Jeff Christensen. He tinkered with his footwork and delivery. He committed to improving his scrambling ability (he has seven career rushes for minus-17 yards). The 'overhaul' even included changing his number, from 17 to 8. 'That [8] was the number I wore when I was young,' he said. 'Sort of a throwback to the past, a fresh change.' And I dedicated a whole lot more time this offseason to enhancing my football intelligence and just growing up. It was a complete overhaul.' After the bowl game, offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson encouraged him to get 'faster, get stronger,' Williams said. Message received. He added 13 pounds and is now 223. Nevertheless, 'this is the fastest I've ever been,' he said.. He also was determined to quicken other aspects of his game. 'Speeding up everything,' he said. 'My footwork has gotten faster, my straight sprinting has gotten faster, my motion has gotten faster. Everything is just quicker. I no longer want to be the guy that feels like I don't belong on the field because of my athletic abilities. I want to feel like I can make a difference with my legs, with my body.' This past offseason, he studied tape of NFL quarterbacks Josh Allen, Matthew Stafford and Baker Mayfield, 'guys that can rip it but can also make plays and extend plays.' Several FBS schools reportedly would have pursued Williams if he had entered the transfer portal in April. Asked about a report that he considered Alabama, he said: 'Nah,' and then changed the topic. Why did he decide to stay? 'I have a great relationship with the coaches here. It always felt like home. I love the university in general, love all the classes, love the people I've met here.' He played well in the spring — while starter Carson Beck was out recovering from elbow surgery — 'but I know I can play better.' He appreciated sharing a quarterback room with Cam Ward, the No. 1 overall draft pick, but said starter Beck's game is more similar to his. 'One thing I love about having Carson in the room — you know what an NFL quarterback looks like,' he said. 'Cam... his style is a little different than mine. Carson's is more similar to mine; his body fits mine. Seeing Carson, the anticipation he plays with, the knowledge of the game he has, learning from that has really been a help.' Williams said UM coaches haven't told him if he's No. 2 on the depth chart. But that seems likely. Freshman quarterback Luke Nickel also was impressive in the spring game, but Williams seems back on track after the hiccup in the bowl game. If UM doesn't go portal shopping for a quarterback next winter, the Williams-Nickel starting battle is shaping up to be a fascinating one for 2026. Judd Anderson and Class of 2026 quarterback Deron Coleman also will have a chance to make their case.