logo
Former Notre Dame wide receiver enters the portal for the second time

Former Notre Dame wide receiver enters the portal for the second time

USA Today28-04-2025

Former Notre Dame wide receiver enters the portal for the second time
It was a bit odd that Tobias Merriweather wanted to transfer from Notre Dame, after his redshirt freshman season where he caught 14 passes for 284 yards and 2 scores, he opted to leave the program.
The Washington native would land a California, and proceeded to see him not getting nearly the same opportunities with the Bears as he did with the Irish. Merriweather caught 11 passes for 125 yards and a touchdown this past fall, but he wasn't happy.
On Monday, the 6-foot, 5-inch and 195-pound wide receiver entered the transfer portal once again, as he will eventually be on his third school in three years. While the grass may seem greener on the other side, Merriweather is a precautionary tale that leaving a program that fits your needs isn't always a good choice.
We still wish him the best at his next school, as we always like to see the majority of former Notre Dame players excelling wherever they land.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CdM's Max Douglass races to school record in 1,600 meters at state meet
CdM's Max Douglass races to school record in 1,600 meters at state meet

Los Angeles Times

time43 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

CdM's Max Douglass races to school record in 1,600 meters at state meet

The weather was a hot topic of discussion heading into the CIF State track and field championships, but in many cases, it was the athletes that brought the heat last weekend. Corona del Mar coach Bill Sumner looked at the temperature and saw it was a scorching 101 degrees when Max Douglass — the Sea Kings' distance running star — toed the starting line at Clovis Buchanan High on Saturday. Douglass had dug in during the state preliminaries on Friday to secure the school record in the boys' 1,600 meters. It could have been the last four laps of an illustrious high school career. That qualifying effort earned the Notre Dame commit a spot in the state final, a chance he took advantage of to drop his time to 4 minutes 7.65 seconds in a sixth-place, medal-winning performance. Sumner shared that he resorted to a trip to the hardware store to drive home race strategy during the postseason. He first utilized traffic cones and then string to make Douglass exercise patience in picking his desired spot on the field from the start. 'I put a string from the cut-in mark to the 200 lane one,' Sumner said. 'And I said, 'Max, you cannot cut in. You have to stay on the right side of that string for the whole workout.' … Sumner said that Douglass noticed a difference right away. The message was clicking. 'I said, 'That way, you get to pick your spot of where you want to be,'' Sumner recalled. 'When you get to the end of the first 180 [meters], you're going to say, OK, let me run there, and then you go there.' He's a strong enough kid, he gets to do that if he's fast enough. 'We practiced that for three weeks, I had put a string out, and he would not cross over that string. … Not the last meet, but the two meets before it, he stayed out there, came over, got third place or second place, whatever he wanted, and just tried to stay there as long as he could.' Douglass shed nearly two full seconds off his time from the day prior, creating separation between himself and Jim Robbins, who had held the CdM record in the event at 4:10.74 since setting the standard in the Southern Section Masters Meet in 1988. Sumner added that both Robbins and Brian Hunsaker, the Sea Kings' record-holder in the 3,200 at 8:53.7 since 1975, reached out to Douglass after the race. Douglass received an invitation into the Nike Outdoor Nationals at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. 'If you would have told me he was done Sunday morning, I was fine,' Sumner said. 'Every goal that he set, we reached — every single one. Everything that he wrote down, we did. It's like, 'You've got nothing to prove, you got the school record, you got a 1:53 [in the] 800, you got a sub-nine-minute two-mile [time].' That's it. That's a lot of stuff, but he still wants to give it one more try, man. One more try before he goes on to be a big college guy.' Ocean View's Jack Paavola also closed his career on the podium, claiming eighth in the boys' discus throw with a mark of 174 feet, 4 inches. The Seahawks senior's state performance was just half a foot off his career-best throw at the Masters Meet. Paavola has committed to Harvey Mudd.

Yorkshire collapse and Alex Davies knock kickstart Bears' T20 Blast campaign
Yorkshire collapse and Alex Davies knock kickstart Bears' T20 Blast campaign

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Yorkshire collapse and Alex Davies knock kickstart Bears' T20 Blast campaign

The Bears' T20 Blast campaign for 2025 creaked into life on Friday night as they secured a well earned six-wicket victory over Yorkshire Vikings at Edgbaston. Captain Alex Davies' knock of 65, as part of a century partnership with opener Tom Latham, ensured the Bears would ease to their target of 165 after wickets for Jake Lintott, Moeen Ali and Danny Briggs in the first innings. Advertisement The Bears had made two changes to this side who were taken apart by Durham; Hassan Ali, whose arrival was delayed, is finally here. Dan Mousley, who has had various commitments recently with County Club Select XIs and England Lions, was also involved. It looked a sensible bet to bowl first in the gloomy conditions and look to restrict Yorkshire. Davies, orchestrating as ever behind the stumps, switched up his bowling unit frequently, never allowing the opening pair to settle - although Dawid Malan eventually became accustomed to the conditions and played some typically authoritative shots. READ MORE: Tom Wagner explains why Championship quartet don't scare Birmingham City READ MORE: Aston Villa could help fund Man United transfer with move for Spain U21 prodigy Briggs, who has been frustrated and made to wait for his chance this season having not had a look in in the County Championship, has proved his worth time and again in this competition. This was a typical Briggs bowling performance, in which he clean bowled Will Luxton and later trapped wicket keeper Harry Duke in front. His four returned figures of 2/28. Advertisement George Garton was tight in his opening over, but Davies had options and favoured spin. Briggs, Mousley, Lintott and Moeen bowled 15 of the 20 overs between them, with Hassan making different contributions; he took a smart catch when wheeling backwards to remove James Wharton, who had mended the innings with Malan, and then ran out Matt Milnes off his own bowling. Lintott was a tad more expensive but made big breakthroughs in the middle order as Yorkshire rather collapsed 139/2 to 146/7. At one stage, with Malan well set and the foundations in place, the visitors were on for a big score well in excess of 180, but the flurry of wickets halted their momentum. This was an important fightback from the Bears, who couldn't defend 225 at Trent Bridge a week ago and who were well beaten by Durham at Edgbaston on Saturday. It could yet to be significant when they reflect on this campaign as a whole. While they couldn't get Malan, who carried his bat when posting 69 not out from 48 deliveries, they'll have been satisfied with what they left themselves to chase. It was a brilliantly negotiated powerplay from captain Davies and overseas Latham. Less than a week ago, on this very pitch, they were 4/3 - there'd be no such alarm bells here. What was a modest Edgbaston crowd were entertained with a flurry of boundaries - and admittedly poor fielding from Yorkshire players out on the rope, which incidentally was cleared unapologetically by both openers. Advertisement With Yorkshire ragged, the Bears cashed in. Davies passed 50, leading the charge but aptly complemented by the equally classy Latham. The pair put on 100 inside 11 overs, though Latham did fall short of his own half century when he whipped the ball straight to deep mid-wicket. Mousley was promoted to three and found the gaps on a couple of occasions to inch the Bears closer to victory, but he succumbed when Duke took a screamer of a catch off the bowling of Matt Milnes. It was a pity that Davies, who scored 65, couldn't see the Bears over the line either when he holed out to cow corner. Yorkshire dragged it back further when they removed Moeen, tempted into the deep when the Bears still needed 17 from 13. As per, Sam Hain and Ed Barnard came to the rescue at the death to see the Bears home. They're up and running.

Alex Davies reveals 'great addition' as more players return to aid Bears cause
Alex Davies reveals 'great addition' as more players return to aid Bears cause

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Alex Davies reveals 'great addition' as more players return to aid Bears cause

Bears captain Alex Davies paid tribute to his opening partner Tom Latham following the century partnership which laid firm foundations for their six-wicket victory over Yorkshire at Edgbaston on Friday night. Advertisement Davies himself scored a crucial 65, having been complemented for most of it by New Zealand international Latham, who helped himself to 44 as the Bears successfully chased down 165 with an over to spare. It was the Bears Men's first win of the 2025 T20 Blast campaign. "It was really enjoyable," Davies said. "I love Tom, he's been a great addition to the Bears. His wealth of knowledge, his experience and his helping the other guys behind the scenes. He's really calm out there, he talks about the game well and I'm glad we got off to a good start. READ MORE: Yorkshire collapse and Alex Davies knock kickstart Bears' T20 Blast campaign READ MORE: Jack Grealish to Aston Villa a 'strong possibility' on transfer condition "We still talk about the magical 200 mark. Today we were chasing so it's about pacing the chase, but it's a really strong batting line up. If you wanted to you could pick names out of a hat - similarly with the bowling, when you're captain and have that many options, it's a luxury, but I feel that way about the batting too. We bat all the way down to 11, really." Advertisement The Bears were more rounded a side here. A week ago, at Notts - and despite scoring 225 with the bat, of which Davies himself contributed 40 - the line-up was markedly different. The list of absentees was as long as your arm, but slowly players are returning. They were able to welcome into this side Hassan Ali, who is into his third season as a Bear, and Dan Mousley, who has been on various international adventures against touring teams in recent weeks. Jacob Bethell and Chris Woakes may be firmly rooted in the England camps, but Richard Gleeson and Beau Webster are others, too, who are still missing. A week on, the Bears look a more polished outfit, with experience and talent right the way through their batting and also as a bowling unit. They may have encountered a slow start, but there remain still 11 matches to play in the group stages, all the time in the world for a push towards the quarter finals. "We are staying calm," Davies continued. "A couple of years ago we lost the first couple of games and still topped the group, so we know it's possible. There's a lot of cricket to be played. Momentum is a big thing in T20 cricket, so once we have that template we can get on a roll, hopefully. Advertisement "We have a couple of guys coming back in. Adding Hassan and Dan Mousley, who bats three and bowls in the powerplay and bowls at the death, he's like three players in one. I have four spin options in Jake, Briggsy, Mo and Mouse, so it's a nice luxury to have. We always want to give opportunity to our own. There are so many moving parts on the international scene. "When we heard Beau Webster might be off, we were trying to bring someone else in but we weren't going to bring in someone who wasn't at the level because it blocks an opportunity for one of our own. They don't always come off, but that's how we want to operate - unless they're of a high, Warwickshire standard, quality."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store