
Texas' Daniel Bennett wins 2025 Phil Mickelson Award, signifying nation's top freshman
The South African was named the winner of the 2025 Phil Mickelson Outstanding Freshman Award, the Golf Coaches Association of America announced last week. The award recognizes the best freshman in men's college golf each year. Last year, the award went to Auburn's Jackson Koivun.
He's the fifth Texas player to win the Mickelson Award, joining Cole Hammer (2019), Scottie Scheffler (2015), Brandon Stone (2013) and David Gossett (1999).
Bennett finished his season with a team-best 70.00 scoring average in 11 stroke-play tournaments. He tallied a pair of individual runner-up finishes, four top-threes and five top-10s. Twenty-four of his 34 rounds this year were par or better, including 15 rounds in the 60s.
Bennett tied for second at the Valspar Collegiate Invitational, finishing runner-up to Fred Haskins Award winner David Ford, shooting 16 under for the 54-hole event.
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This week, Bennett will represent the International team at the 2025 Arnold Palmer Cup. The event is a Ryder Cup-style tournament featuring the top men's and women's college golfers matching the United States against a team of International players.
The United States leads the Palmer Cup series 15-12-1. The 2025 Palmer Cup will be played June 5-7 at Congaree Golf Club in Ridgeland, South Carolina. The Americans won last year at Lahinch. Twelve men and 12 women comprise each roster.
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New York Times
8 minutes ago
- New York Times
Our 2025 College Football Playoff predictions model is live. Here are 5 key takeaways
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My ratings are based on an offensive and defensive projection for every college football team using various metrics, such as Expected Points Added and Success Rate, and I also created an algorithm to predict which 12 teams the Playoff committee will choose based on more than a decade of committee decisions. (A full explanation of the methodology can be found at the bottom of our predictor.) Using these projections, let's take a look at some surprising outputs as well as some storylines about why the model's outputs are what they are. I'm not going to sit here and say Ohio State doesn't have question marks heading into the season. The Buckeyes replace both coordinators — offensive coordinator Chip Kelly joined the Las Vegas Raiders, and defensive coordinator Jim Knowles left for Big Ten rival Penn State — in addition to 14 NFL Draft picks. The turnover includes a new quarterback (Julian Sayin) and a new defensive line. But although Ohio State will have a drop-off at the coordinator positions, this is still one of the most talented teams in college football, and the model sends the Buckeyes to the Playoff 80.33 percent of the time (just barely ahead of Clemson by 0.04 percentage points) with a 14.3 percent chance to win the national title (edging Penn State). Wide receiver Jeremiah Smith and safety Caleb Downs might be the best offensive and defensive players in the country, respectively, and players of that caliber can make your life easier when it comes to overcoming inexperience. Having a player like Smith leading a deep group of receivers and tight ends will help Sayin adjust. Advertisement All in all, Ohio State has had the highest floor in college football over the past few decades, so reloading shouldn't be much of a problem. Factor in that its two toughest games — Texas and Penn State — will be played in Columbus, and Ohio State is well-positioned to return to the Playoff. After all, the Buckeyes have won at least 10 games in the regular season in 17 of their past 18 full seasons (excluding 2020). Our bracket features the teams with the best chance to make the Playoff and to win it all, and Ohio State remains atop in both categories. Clemson hasn't felt like a true national title contender in several years, one could argue in the NIL era (post-2021). Sure, the Tigers won the ACC last season and got into the Playoff, but they went 0-3 against the SEC and were never seen as a true championship threat. I think this year is different. Clemson has the second-highest odds to make the Playoff at 80.29 percent, per my projections, and is sixth in my team ratings. Cade Klubnik ranks No. 1 in The Athletic's preseason QB Tiers and is firmly in the Heisman race to kick off the season, and our NFL Draft expert Dane Brugler has four Tigers defensive players in his preseason top 50 prospects. 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The issue is that the conference is too good, and the selection process really values records. The gripes from the SEC about strength of schedule not being valued enough are fair. If there is any indication through the committee's rankings in November that they're starting to value strength of schedule more — one day this will happen, maybe as soon as this season based on announced changes — then I will tweak my Playoff algorithm to reflect that. But for now, the SEC's depth, with nine teams boasting at least a 10 percent chance of a Playoff bid, makes it a greater challenge for any one team to get a bye, especially in the model's preseason projections. There are eight teams in my projections that have a greater than 64 percent chance of making the Playoff. The next team is Boise State at 50 percent, followed by a drop to 39 percent with LSU. Those 10 teams are followed by 20 teams with anywhere from a 10 to 38 percent chance to make the Playoff. 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USA Today
36 minutes ago
- USA Today
CBS Sports thinks Florida football is 'overrated' heading into 2025 campaign
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Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Seattle visits Dallas following Bueckers' 44-point performance
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