Dax Hill cleared for Bengals camp after torn ACL
It will be the first practice in a long time for Hill. He tore his ACL in the fifth game of the 2024 season, but has been cleared to take part in practice this summer. That puts him on track to be ready to play in the season opener.
"That's the plan," Hill said on Monday, via the team's website. "They'll ease me into things once everyone is back. No rush. It seems like I'll be able to perform. We'll see how training camp goes."
Hill was playing well enough before his injury that the Bengals opted to exercise their fifth-year option on his rookie deal this offseason. If he picks up where he left off, a longer deal may be in the cards in Cincinnati.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bruce Carrington favors Terence Crawford to upset Canelo Alvarez: 'He has that dog mentality'
The clock is ticking down for one of the biggest fights in recent years between pound-for-pound greats Saul "Canelo" Alvarez and Terence "Bud" Crawford at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Sept. 13. While the matchup was long considered a mismatch due to the two-division gap between the pair, as fight night is edging closer, more and more voices in the industry have come out in support of Crawford. Surprisingly, the size gap appeared negligible at their first faceoff, with Bud a +140 underdog at BetMGM. "I think Terence beats Canelo," featherweight contender Bruce "Shu Shu" Carrington predicted during an in-studio appearance on Uncrowned's "The Ariel Helwani Show." "The size, that never bothers me because Canelo, on fight night, he just seems like he's so much bigger than the [opponent] because of stature. It's not height, it's his back. His back is very wide and cobra-like. When it comes to Canelo, it's just his natural physicality that is very imposing. For me, that size is always going to be a problem." Crawford won undisputed titles at super lightweight and welterweight, but when he moved up to super welterweight this past August, he had perhaps the hardest fight of his Hall of Fame career against then-WBA champion Israil Madrimov. "[I think] the [Crawford vs. Madrimov] fight was as competitive as it was because of the style," said Carrington, who will fight Mateus Heita in New York on Saturday for the interim belt in the final Top Rank Boxing card on ESPN. "But Bud said in an interview that it was the power that was kind of the issue that made him hesitant on certain things. If the power is an issue, Canelo is stronger than Madrimov. So what are you going to do with that? "I do feel like overall, Crawford is the better, [more] well-rounded fighter. He has the better footwork, he has the speed, he is a switch hitter, he's more versatile. He has what it takes to win, and I do feel like the mentality as well. He has that dog mentality. If Canelo hits him, he's going to want to get it back, but still be smart about it. I think that's one of the main things that makes me feel that Crawford is going to be able to take the victory." Alvarez vs. Crawford is the next major boxing event U.S. fans can look forward to after this past weekend's spectacle, which saw 46-year-old Manny Pacquiao controversially fall short in his bid to become the second-oldest boxing champion of all time. Pacquiao fought to a draw with WBC welterweight champion Mario Barrios in Las Vegas, with many believing the Filipino legend had done enough to leave with his hand raised. "Manny looked great," Carrington remarked. "I was kind of worried about him at first because obviously, his age and then his last outing — he didn't really look his best. He didn't really look that good [against Japanese kickboxer Rukiya Anpo in a 2024 exhibition bout], but what I was told was that he didn't train that much for that specific fight. "The way he trained for this fight — I have some friends that went out there in the Philippines with him, and they were right alongside with him training. They were like, 'Manny looks really good. His legs look strong, he trained like he's turning back the clock.' Me watching him fight, it was like me being a teenager again watching Pacquiao fight and just being in awe." Both Barrios and Pacquiao said they were open to a rematch — and with the controversy stemming from their first encounter, a lucrative second meeting seems inevitable. The event received significant criticism from boxing fans beforehand due to Pacquiao's inactivity and age, but Pacquiao defied expectations. A man who has earned comparisons to "PacMan" is undisputed super bantamweight champion Naoya Inoue. Inoue has held world titles in four weight classes and was even mentioned as a possibility to jump up to lightweight eventually for a Gervonta "Tank" Davis bout — much like how Pacquiao jumped up three weight classes from super featherweight to welterweight in 2008. After becoming undisputed champion at 122 pounds in December 2023 with a win over Marlon Tapales, a move to featherweight felt inevitable for the Japanese monster, but Inoue seems to be in no rush to make that jump, much to the disappointment of Carrington, who shares a promoter with Inoue and was hoping to stand across the ring from him. "I don't think he wants to [move up to featherweight]," Carrington said of Inoue, Uncrowned's No. 2 pound-for-pound boxer. "[I've been banging the drum to fight Inoue] since like 2023 at this point. Back when he wasn't getting knocked down, when no one was calling him out, I was there calling him out. I don't think he wants to fight at 126 right now, especially after his last fight. I was there at his last fight [against Ramon Cardenas]. He got dropped obviously. "[I wasn't surprised Inoue was dropped because] it's boxing. Anybody can get caught, anybody can get clipped. Especially with his style, sometimes he gets overexcited, and he just runs into shots. That's what happened with Luis Nery as well. He got clipped against Nonito Donaire. He didn't get dropped, but he still got clipped. I think he's hitting a ceiling, or we're starting to see chinks in the armor when it comes to Inoue." Inoue was in attendance for Carrington's eighth-round TKO over Brayan De Gracia in June 2024. The undisputed champion left the arena after Shu Shu fought, choosing not to stay for the main event, fueling speculation he was at the ESPN-televised New York event for only one purpose — to scout Carrington. Inoue has made four defenses of his undisputed crown in the past 18 months since unifying the titles and is already planning three more defenses. A move to featherweight seems at least a year away, which is enough for Carrington to believe Inoue isn't really interested in jumping up another division, especially after tasting the canvas twice in 12 months. With Inoue out of the picture for now, Carrington is instead focused on becoming world champion and facing the best fighters featherweight has to offer — but that is proving to be just as challenging. Carrington says his promoter, Top Rank, made Nick Ball a significant financial offer to defend his WBA title against him, but Ball's team isn't interested in the fight. Ball will instead defend his featherweight crown against super bantamweight contender Sam Goodman next month in Riyadh. "My team reached out to his team," Carrington said of negotiations for a Ball fight. "At first, they were like, they would need a number like $2 million to even look our way. We didn't have it on the table at the moment, so we put it to rest for some months. We come back later and we're like, 'All right, we have that number that you want.' And then his team just makes another excuse. [I understand Ball's team wanting to be paid fairly for the fight]. [But] now we have that [money], and you're making another excuse? Something not right, bro. [Somebody's] not confident, or you don't believe in yourself, or [your team] doesn't believe in [their] fighter. I don't know what that's about. That lets me know it's more than just the money." With WBC featherweight champion Stephen Fulton expected to step up to 130 pounds for his next fight and challenge WBC title holder O'Shaquie Foster, Carrington is biding his time. "At this point right now, I'm at a certain level where I don't want to fight certain people anymore," Carrington explained. "I want to fight champions now. I'm very hungry. I'm very ambitious about it. I see myself being the first undisputed featherweight world champion in the four-belt era." If Fulton doesn't return to featherweight, Carrington is expecting to fight the winner of the Rey Vargas-Carlos Castro bout for the full WBC featherweight crown. But for now, Carrington is forced to play a waiting game — until the big fights finally align for the rising Brooklyn star.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Four-Star Jaden Upshaw Commits to 2026 Navy All-American Bowl
Wide receiver Jaden Upshaw (Leesburg, GA/ Lee County High School), the four-star prosect has officially accepted his invitation to the 2026 Navy All-American Bowl. Having been selected to play in the twenty sixth edition of the Navy All-American Bowl, Upshaw will play in the annual East vs. West matchup on Saturday, January 10, 2026, in the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. The Bowl will be nationally televised, live on NBC at 1:00 PM ET, and will feature the nation's top 100 high school football players. Upshaw was selected by the Navy All-American Bowl Selection Committee, comprised of the All-American Bowl, 247Sports, and NXGN. Navy All-Americans are eligible for the Navy All-American Bowl Player of the Year Award, Anthony Muñoz Lineman of the Year Award, Navy All-American Bowl Defensive Player of the Year Award, Navy All-American Bowl Man of the Year, and Navy All-American Bowl Game MVP Award. Only 100 football players receive the honor of wearing the Navy All-American Bowl jersey each year. The 2026 Navy All-American Bowl from the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, will be presented live on NBC and Peacock. About the All-American Bowl As an NBC Sports-owned property, the All-American Bowl is part of a marquee lineup of elite events that includes the Olympics and Paralympics, the Premier League, and primetime's #1 show for an unprecedented 13 consecutive years: Sunday Night Football. The All-American Bowl is annually the most-watched, most-talked about, and most-prestigious high school all-star event with more than four million unique television viewers and more than 25,000 fans in attendance. The history and tradition of the All-American Bowl is unparalleled, as it features: 631 draft picks; 103 Super Bowl champions; 274 Pro Bowl selections; and 18 Heisman finalists. For more information, visit or follow us on Facebook, X, and Instagram (@AABonNBC).
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Arizona's Burke, Arizona State's Miller enter rivalry with mutual respect
As new coaches at opposite ends of a rivalry, Arizona State's Molly Miller and Arizona's Becky Burke could easily hold animosity toward the other. Far from it. Both coaches admire the way the other has worked through the coaching ranks, winning at every stop, and how their infectious enthusiasm seeps onto the floor through their players. They also have a common connection: Stephanie Norman. The current associate head coach on Miller's inaugural staff was once at Louisville, where she coached Burke as an assistant under Jeff Walz. 'She's funny because coach Norman is like, Becky is kind of like my boss in a way, being a head coach,'' Miller said. 'She's (Burke) really competitive and comes from a great program in Louisville. It'll be fine because I have a lot of respect for how she's kind of climbed and been there." Arizona and Arizona State have new women's basketball coaches for the first time — outside of the programs' first season in 1981 — since the Wildcats hired June Olkowski and Maura McHugh took over the Sun Devils in 1987. Miller and Burke have the same goal — winning — yet will come at it from different starting points. Burke takes over an Arizona program that's on firm standing, earning trips to the NCAA Tournament four of the past five years under previous coach Adia Barnes, including a run to the 2021 national championship game. When Barnes left for SMU during the offseason, Arizona turned to Burke and her resume full of winning. She played in the NCAA Tournament three times as a sharpshooting guard, reaching the 2009 national title game and the Sweet 16 two years later. After stints as an assistant coach, Burke had winning records as a head coach at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott, Arizona, the University of Charleston in West Virginia and USC Upstate. Burke spent the past three seasons at Buffalo, leading the Bulls to a 30-win season and a WNIT title last year. The transfer portal era wreaked havoc on Arizona's roster — Montaya Dew is the only returner on scholarship — but Burke has a foundation in place with recent successes and strong fan support in Tucson. 'The momentum in the brand and the fact that she (Barnes) did a great job building this is extremely helpful, but ultimately we're starting from scratch,' Burke said. 'We walk into a locker room that has one player and it doesn't help you in the moment, but it's nice to say on recruiting calls that you coach at Arizona and they know what it is and what it's about.' Miller's task will be to rebuild a brand at Arizona State that's struggled to regain relevancy since the end of longtime coach Charli Turner Thorne's tenure. The Sun Devils have not been to the NCAA Tournament since reaching the Sweet 16 in 2019 and went 29-62 in three seasons under Natasha Adair after Turner Thorne's retirement in 2022. Like Burke, Miller brings a history of winning with her. Miller was one of the top scorers in Drury University history as a player and spent two seasons as an assistant following a stint at a neurological and spine institute in her hometown of Springfield, Missouri. She became the head coach at her alma mater in 2014 and won 180 games over six seasons before becoming Grand Canyon's coach. Miller led the Antelopes to a 32-3 record last season, including a 30-game winning streak, and took the program to its first NCAA Tournament. She went 117-38 at GCU before moving across town to Arizona State. 'I think with any good program to have a quick turnaround, you have to have buy-in,' Miller said. 'That's the biggest piece and I think we've gotten our teams to buy in pretty quickly the last few years.' Burke has done the same everywhere she's been. Now the two coaches will try doing it on opposite ends of a rivalry. ___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP women's college basketball: and John Marshall, The Associated Press