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ESPN projects significant regression for Oregon Ducks in 2025
ESPN projects significant regression for Oregon Ducks in 2025

USA Today

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

ESPN projects significant regression for Oregon Ducks in 2025

In 2024, the Oregon Ducks had one of the best football seasons in program history, going 13-0 in the regular season with a win in the Big 10 Championship as first-year members of the league. While the season ended with a frustrating loss to the Ohio State Buckeyes in the College Football Playoff's Rose Bowl quarterfinals, that shouldn't detract from what was a successful season. Going into 2025, however, there are numerous changes in Eugene. The Ducks return just four total starters from that 2024 team and will rely on a long list of young and unproven players to lead the way. While there are some questions about who will take over as the biggest difference-makers on Oregon's roster, the team still has high expectations with the season just a couple of weeks away, ranked as the No. 7 team in the nation in the preseason US LBM Coaches Poll. However, ESPN thinks that there could be some regression this season due to the influx of new talent and the lack of returning production. According to ESPN's Bill Connelly, Oregon's SP+ rating has decreased by 3.7 points this year. "The Ducks are 115th in returning production, 125th on offense. We'll find out just how healthy Dan Lanning's program is this season with that amount of turnover," Connelly writes. While there might be a lot of new faces on the field for the Ducks this season, the level of recruiting that Lanning has done in Eugene over the past few seasons has many fans excited for what's to come for the Oregon program. The Ducks have had three-straight recruiting classes ranked inside the top 10 nationally, and the roster is loaded with former 5-star and 4-star players. Young guys like Ify Obidegwu, Dakorien Moore, Aydin Breland, Kingston Lopa, and Jeremiah McClellan may not have a lot of experience on the field. Still, they are expected to be among the best players on the roster this year, poised for major breakouts. On top of that, the Ducks hit the transfer portal hard this offseason, bringing in top-ranked guys like Dillon Thieneman, Makhi Hughes, Isaiah World, and Bear Alexander, all of whom are projected to be among the top players in the conference. The numbers may spell "regression candidate" when examining the Ducks' roster in 2025, but the coaching and roster makeup have Oregon looking as strong as ever heading into the new season. Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.

Ohio State scores redemption win at NGI; Utah State's Enrique Karg earns indy title in playoff
Ohio State scores redemption win at NGI; Utah State's Enrique Karg earns indy title in playoff

USA Today

time19-05-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Ohio State scores redemption win at NGI; Utah State's Enrique Karg earns indy title in playoff

Ohio State scores redemption win at NGI; Utah State's Enrique Karg earns indy title in playoff Had Ohio State's season ended last month, it would have been on a sour note indeed. The Buckeyes, in a rebuilding year, finished fifth at the Big 10 Championship and missed an NCAA Championship bid. But three weeks after their year could have been over, head coach Jay Moseley and his team are carting a postseason trophy back across the country to the heartland, and that's something Moseley has never done. On Sunday, Ohio State finished off a seven-shot victory in the third National Golf Invitational at Ak-Chin Southern Dunes in Maricopa, Arizona. Ohio State made an NCAA semifinal run a year ago this time, but that was with four distinguished seniors on the roster. After failing to score an NCAA regional bid earlier this month, Moseley's team committed to some areas of improvement and bought into a different side of the postseason: the NGI. This win amounts to a huge shift in momentum, especially considering that Ohio State's only two team wins this season, as Moseley noted, came in their backyard. 'To come out where we're unfamiliar with the desert golf conditions, to come out on top and get a win with a little bit of a target on our back was really good,' he said. National Golf Invitational: Scores The Buckeyes trailed Utah State by a shot on the first day, had leapfrogged them by the end of 36 holes and slowly pulled away over the course of Sunday's final round. Three Ohio State players finished in the top 7 individually, and the Buckeyes led the field in birdies ''Fight' has been our mentality all spring, so they did a good job hanging in there, taking advantage of the chances when we got them and making some birdies down the stretch was really cool,' Moseley said. 'It was a great team win.' While Ohio State, on the other side of its senior exodus, spent the week finding out what its next chapter can look like, a similar transition period awaits Utah State in the fall. The NGI amounted to the final ride for graduates John Cook, Julio Arronte and Esteban Jaramillo. The Aggies made six team birdies in the first three holes on Sunday and hung within a few shots of Ohio State all day. 'We beat them on Day 1, so I think they were like, 'OK we can do this,'' Utah State head coach Dean Johansen said. That sophomore Enrique Karg was the man to lead them is a good sign for Utah State. Karg, of Guadalajara, Mexico, only finished inside the top 20 in one start during the regular season. At Southern Dunes, he came out of the gate with a bogey-free 7-under 65 and parlayed that into a Sunday playoff victory for his first individual title in a year. Karg is a player who struggled with a lot on his plate this past year – from school to golf to family. 'I had a rough spring this year,' Karg said. 'I had a lot on my mind, and it was a lot of up and down so playing good in this event, it was very good for me.' Karg felt he took advantage of his distance all three rounds and put himself in favorable positions, reaching several par 5s in two and leading the field in par-4 scoring. The week wasn't all smooth sailing, however, and Johansen watched Karg fight for a second-round 70 to stay in the tournament. 'The mark of a true human being is how they handle adversity, and you couldn't tell from 5 feet to 500 yards if he was making a bogey or a birdie,' Johansen said, 'and I love that.' Karg, who finished the week at 12-under 204, had to play an extra hole with Richmond's Carson Baez for the individual title, and nearly holed his 70-foot birdie putt on that extra trip down the 18th to do it. His tap-in par was good enough. He Facetimed his family back home in Mexico right away. As a result of his win, Karg earns an exemption into the Southeastern Amateur, which he'll add to the lineup of other amateur events (the Memorial Amateur in Sacramento, California, the Mexican International Amateur in Guadalajara and a U.S. Amateur qualifier) he has planned for the summer. As this Utah State team scatters, Cook, Arronte and Jaramillo are headed for professional careers. Johansen knew early week it would be emotional to see them go. This team's international makeup is largely thanks to the work of assistant coach Erik Skinner, who took Johansen's idea to expand the roster globally and 'found some of the best young men – phenomenal kids,' Johansen said. He has always been interested in the whole player, not just level of golf talent. Johansen began his day on Sunday with an early workout before driving a couple miles down the road for a protein shake. When he pulled into a gas station, he met Cook, one of his three seniors. Cook, who has committed himself to getting healthy these past three years, was out on a morning run before the round. Cook, as a runner, demonstrates exactly the level of commitment this senior class gave to Utah State. Nevermind that they all reassembled post-graduation for a final tournament – Cook ditched a full cycle of marathon training, skipping the Ogden (Utah) Marathon on Saturday to be here with his team instead. And that, funny enough, was how Johnson lost it, three hours before his team ever hit a shot. 'I was driving back to the hotel and he was running alongside the road and I just started tearing up,' said Johansen, who has praised the character of his whole squad this week. 'I'm so proud of the young man he has become.'

Breaking down the resumes of the Annika Award front runners heading into the postseason
Breaking down the resumes of the Annika Award front runners heading into the postseason

USA Today

time15-04-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Breaking down the resumes of the Annika Award front runners heading into the postseason

Breaking down the resumes of the Annika Award front runners heading into the postseason After a few years of runaway performances in the Annika Award race, there are numerous players in contention for the women's college golf Player of the Year award with a month left in the season. The last four winners – Rachel Heck, Rose Zhang (x2) and Ingrid Lindblad – had dominant seasons and all but locked up the award heading into the postseason, and their performances down the stretch just cemented their name on the award. But in the 2024-25 season, there has been no player to separate from the field. There are, however, numerous players still in contention for the award, and there are a handful more who could make their case with dominant performances in conference championships, NCAA Regionals and the NCAA Championship. There's about a month left in the season, with the NCAA Women's Golf Championship concluding May 21 at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa. Voting for the Annika Award ends on the Monday of stroke play, May 19. More: 2025 NCAA women's college golf conference championship dates and results The three frontrunners for the Annika Award: Kary Hollenbaugh The junior at Ohio State has been dominant this spring. Hollenbaugh has won four of her five events in 2025, coming at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge, Spartan Suncoast Invitational, Clemson Invitational and the Therese Hession Buckeye Invitational. The only tournament she didn't win, the Darius Rucker, she tied for 13th. Hollenbaugh's worst finishes this season are a pair of T-22s coming in the fall. But this spring, Hollenbaugh has been arguably the best in college golf, and she's riding a hot streak heading into the Big 10 Championship. Jasmine Koo If the college golf season had ended in the fall, the freshman at USC would've won the Annika Award by a landslide. She has had a stellar debut in college golf, collecting four wins at the Windy City Collegiate Classic, Stanford Intercollegiate, East Lake Cup and Juli Inkster at Meadow Club Invitational. Although Koo has only one win this spring, she has finished in the top six in four of her five starts. Her and Hollenbaugh in the Big 10 Championship will be fun to watch. There have been numerous standout freshmen this season on the women's side, but none have four wins like Koo. Mirabel Ting Ting, a junior at Florida State, has had a season for the ages. On the same squad as top-ranked amateur Lottie Woad, Ting has risen to the top of the NCAA golf rankings and No. 2 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. She has collected five victories this season, coming at the Folds of Honor Collegiate, Schooner Fall Classic, Collegiate Invitational at Guadalajara, Briar's Creek Invitational and the Florida State Match Up. The five wins are the most in Power 4 Conferences, and Ting has lost to only five golfers all season in stroke-play events. She has put together a dominant resume that can become stronger with postseason success. Note: Just because a player isn't mentioned here doesn't mean they're not in contention for the award.

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