
A 2028 quarterback prospect with a very familiar name will visit Notre Dame tomorrow
A 2028 quarterback prospect with a very familiar name will visit Notre Dame tomorrow
The name Brady Quinn is synonymous with Notre Dame football, and for 2028 Florida quarterback recruit Brady Quinn, no relation, it could be a good match and not just due to his name.
The 6-foot, 1-inch and 180-pound signal caller is coming off an impressive freshman season, where he threw for 2,549 yards with 33 touchdowns and 9 interceptions. While he doesn't currently have an Irish offer, Quinn is still planning on checking out South Bend tomorrow, as he announced the trip on his social media account.
He isn't ranked at the moment, not many class of 2028 prospects are, but Quinn already holds 10 offers, and more will assuredly be on the way. Could Notre Dame be the next one? It very well could happen as the Irish coaching staff will get a good look at him during the visit.
Getting in early with big-time quarterback is never a bad idea, and it looks like Notre Dame is trying to accomplish just that.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
3 hours ago
- Washington Post
Miami Marlins join efforts to restore defaced Jackie Robinson and Minnie Miñoso mural
MIAMI — The Miami Marlins are joining efforts to restore the defaced mural of baseball legends Jackie Robinson and Minnie Miñoso in Miami's Overtown neighborhood, which was marked with racist graffiti last week. City of Miami Chairwoman Christine King announced Wednesday that she along with the Marlins, Urgent, Inc., Omni Community Redevelopment Agency, Southeast Overtown/Park West Community Redevelopment Agency and other community activists will lead the restoration at Dorsey Park, where community leaders said a 7-year-old boy first discovered the vandalism last Sunday and asked his mother what the words and the Nazi symbols meant.


Washington Post
3 hours ago
- Washington Post
Healthier Panthers are nearing full strength in the Stanley Cup Final against the Oilers
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The bumps and bruises and worse started to pile up midway through the Florida Panthers' third consecutive trip to the Stanley Cup Final. Matthew Tkachuk only returned for the playoff opener after sitting out the final two months of the regular season with the injury he suffered at the 4 Nations Face-Off in February and seems to still be gutting through it. Sam Reinhart and Niko Mikkola each missed time during the Eastern Conference final, and A.J. Greer's injury he tried playing through eventually sidelined him.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Former Chicago Sky guard Allie Quigley officially retires after 3-year hiatus, will have jersey retired
After a three-year hiatus from the WNBA, 3-point shooting star Allie Quigley made her retirement official in The Players Tribune on Tuesday. She last played for the Chicago Sky in 2022, which will now go down as the guard's 14th and final season in the W. "I just took the 2023 season off … then I took the 2024 season off … then I took the 2025 season off….. you get the idea," Quigley wrote. "But all jokes aside, I never actually meant to do an Irish goodbye." Advertisement On Wednesday, the Sky announced they will retire Quigley's No. 14 jersey on July 9 against the Dallas Wings. It's the first jersey Chicago will retire in its 20-year franchise history. Quigley played for the Sky from 2013-22 and became a four-time 3-point shootout champion, three-time All-Star and two-time Sixth Woman of the Year along the way. The former DePaul standout also helped Chicago win its first WNBA championship in 2021, alongside Kahleah Copper, Candace Parker and her wife Courtney Vandersloot. Following that season, Quigley considered riding off into the sunset. "But after thinking about it a little more, I realized I actually wanted to savor the end of my career," Quigley wrote in The Players Tribune. "I wanted the experience of walking into each arena and knowing it might be the last time I'd ever play there. And I wanted the experience of trying to defend our championship that we worked so hard for, for so long. So that's what I did. I didn't tell a lot of people, but I played in 2022 thinking it would probably be my last season. I really, truly soaked it all in." Courtney Vandersloot and her wife, Quigley, warm up ahead of a matchup in 2022 — Quigley's final season. (Photo by) (Ethan Miller via Getty Images) In 2022, her hometown Sky posted a 26-10 record, and Quigley averaged 11.4 points per game while shooting 42.8% from the field. Chicago bowed out in the WNBA semifinals to the Connecticut Sun that season. Advertisement Even then, Quigley didn't officially retire. Quigley shifted her focus to motherhood, initially thinking that she'd have a child and then leave the door open to play one more season. Quigley wrote in The Players Tribune that it took her longer to get pregnant than she first expected. She eventually gave birth to her and Vandersloot's daughter Jana Christine in April this year. It was then that she was ready to finally say goodbye to the WNBA. Before finding her place in the league with the Sky, Quigley went from one WNBA team to the next, spending time in Phoenix, Indiana, San Antonio and Seattle. Quigley averaged 10.9 points per game during her career, plus shot a blistering 39.4% from deep. She was the Sky's all-time leading scorer until last month when who else but Vandersloot surpassed her on that list. Vandersloot, however, suffered a season-ending ACL tear over the weekend.