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Florida QB DJ Lagway practices for the 1st time in camp while recovering from a calf injury

Florida QB DJ Lagway practices for the 1st time in camp while recovering from a calf injury

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Florida quarterback DJ Lagway practiced Saturday for the first time since camp opened, a sign of progress for the highly touted and oft-injured sophomore.
Lagway is dealing with a strained calf and was expected to take limited practice reps. He wore a sleeve on his left leg, the same one that caused him to miss a game and a half last season. He strained a hamstring against rival Georgia and missed the following week's game at Texas.
Coach Billy Napier has offered no timetable on his star player's return. It's the latest injury issue for Lagway, who missed spring practice with a shoulder injury after undergoing sports hernia surgery.
The Gators opened training camp Wednesday. Napier, unlike in previous years, closed viewing periods to media for the first three days.
Lagway, who went 6-1 in seven starts as a freshman in 2024, is widely considered a Heisman Trophy contender heading into this season. But he's barely been on the field at a time when he could be making significant strides.
He was limited during spring practice because of the right shoulder injury that could eventually need surgery. He resumed throwing in late April and said earlier this month at Southeastern Conference media days he would fully participate in camp.
But then he strained a calf muscle while running with the team last week.
Lagway completed 60% of his passes for 1,915 yards, with 12 touchdowns and nine interceptions in 2024. He took over the starting role after Graham Mertz tore a knee ligament at Tennessee in October.
Behind Lagway are journeyman Harrison Bailey and sophomore Aidan Warner. Bailey played at Tennessee, UNLV and Louisville before transferring to Florida earlier this year. Warner subbed for Lagway last year and was mostly ineffective.
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He's reuniting with his longtime offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb this season after he was with the NFL's Seattle Seahawks last year. That'll help out and should help projected starting quarterback Ty Simpson. He's a former five-star who has waited three years for this opportunity. Alabama will have stars all over the field, including two players I recently ranked in my top 10 for overall players in the country. The Crimson Tide defense was in the top 10 a year ago, so it should be fine on that side of the ball. The schedule is tough, but the bottom line is that DeBoer has to win at Alabama soon and this program has to reach the CFP. LSU hasn't accomplished as much as Alabama, but I trust Garrett Nussmeier more than I trust the Tide's quarterback situation. The urgency should be there for LSU and coach Brian Kelly. Kelly knows it as well, leading him to hit the portal hard and fill some holes with 247 Sports' No. 1 transfer class. Notre Dame can't be playing in the title game while LSU's not in the CFP. That's not why LSU paid Kelly. Linebacker Harold Perkins returns for the Tigers, and hopefully he can get back to the level he was at as a freshman. This should be a very good team that makes the CFP. This is an interesting team that's tough to project, but I'm giving coach Kirby Smart the benefit of the doubt. Gunnar Stockton is a question mark at quarterback, but Smart's teams have proven that they don't need an elite signal-caller to succeed. His teams just win, and there's never a shortage of talent there. The Bulldogs also got better at wide receiver, addressing that issue by adding Zachariah Branch and Noah Thomas after leading the country in drops last year. Georgia also gets most of its big games at home — where it never loses, as it hasn't fallen at home since 2019. This is a team that should play for an SEC championship. When I made these rankings, I separated the top 10 into two tiers. Notre Dame is at the top of Tier 2. The Fighting Irish just beat up Georgia in the CFP, and their talent is way better than you think. Coach Marcus Freeman has recruited and signed a player with an average rating of 91.5, up from the average player rating (90) of Kelly's recruits in his final years at Notre Dame. That makes a difference, as they've essentially gone from being outside the top 10 in recruiting to seventh in the nation. Notre Dame has the players to succeed, with running back Jeremiyah Love headlining that group. The schedule is favorable, and it should make it to the CFP if it just splits the Texas A&M/Miami games. I don't really have many questions about this team. Freeman knows what this team is and has embraced it. Oregon is replacing a lot from last year's team after losing 18 starters, but this is a team that's built itself on recruiting well and has one of the most talented rosters in the sport. Coach Dan Lanning has also hit the portal well to help fill in the gaps over his time in charge. At quarterback, Dante Moore takes over for Dillon Gabriel. He's not experienced, but I think he's talented. He got to sit behind Gabriel last year and learn, transferring in after starting as a freshman at UCLA in 2023 after being a five-star recruit. I don't love the injury to wide receiver Evan Stewart, however. Five-star freshman Dakorien Moore is going to have to produce right away. Still, Oregon isn't going anywhere this year. I wanted to put Clemson higher, but I'm going to pump the brakes just a bit. I've loved Clemson all offseason. Cade Klubnik is my No. 1 quarterback entering the year. The Tigers also return 16 starters, with four of them being offensive linemen. They have legitimate talent at wide receiver, but their defensive line should be stellar. Edge rusher T.J. Parker and defensive tackle Peter Woods joined Klubnik on my list of top 10 players in college football. Tom Allen is their defensive coordinator after holding the same position for an impressive Penn State defense last year. As for Clemson's schedule, its first and last games should be its toughest. It opens at home against LSU before closing the year at South Carolina. The Tigers avoid Miami in ACC play, so I think they will almost certainly play in their conference title game. Watch out for Clemson and the victory lap that might come from Dabo Swinney. I would've put the defending champions higher, but they're replacing so many stars. Fourteen players from last year's team were picked in the 2025 NFL Draft. Both coordinators left, with Brian Hartline taking over for Chip Kelly at offensive coordinator and Matt Patricia replacing Jim Knowles as Ohio State's defensive coordinator. I don't have many questions about Hartline, but I wonder how long it might take Patricia to acclimate to the college game. OSU made some nice pickups in the portal, though, adding tight end Max Klare (Purdue), running back CJ Donaldson (West Virginia) and two potential starting offensive tackles. At quarterback, we'll see if Julian Sayin or Lincoln Kienholz is the starter. I think it's going to be Sayin, but I keep asking Ryan Day who it's going to be, and he mentioned that Kienholz is still fighting for the job and doing great in practice. Whoever wins that job gets to throw to Jeremiah Smith and Carnell Tate. Can I win that job? My shoulder is toast and I can throw it to Smith. We know exactly what the standard is for Ohio State, even after winning a national championship. Ohio State's Week 1 opponent comes in right above it. Arch Manning mania has arrived. I think he'll be outstanding. He reminds me of the college version of Trevor Lawrence. As the noise is focused on Manning, though, Texas has a great chance to have the best defense in the country. Five of the last eight national champions had the best scoring defense in the country, and I think Texas has a chance to do that. The Longhorns have a star at each level, with Colin Simmons at edge rusher, Anthony Hill Jr. at linebacker and Michael Taaffe at safety. Texas hit the portal to address its needs at defensive tackle. Coach Steve Sarkisian has built something that is sustainable, but it's now time for him to cash in after falling in the CFP semis in each of the past two years. I think Texas will win the SEC and possibly steal the mantle of being the face of the conference from Georgia. In terms of the Week 1 matchup against Ohio State, I give Texas the edge in that game due to Manning. The Nittany Lions still have the No. 1 spot that I gave them in my post-spring rankings. I'm huge on blueprints, and I think Penn State best resembles the blueprints Michigan and Ohio State had when they won the national championship over the past two years. That blueprint is an experienced team with an experienced quarterback and a lot of guys who return rather than becoming an early-round pick in the NFL Draft. Just like those Michigan and Ohio State teams, those players are looking to rebound from a tough loss in the previous season. Alongside quarterback Drew Allar, running backs Nicholas Singleton and Kaytron Allen, four offensive linemen and defensive end Dani Dennis-Sutton are among the group of players returning. Offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki is in Year 2 and doesn't need to establish an offensive system. Knowles was a great replacement at defensive coordinator after Allen left. PSU brought in three wide receivers via the portal as well to address its biggest hole last year. USC's Kyron Hudson, Syracuse's Trebor Pena (All-ACC slot receiver) and Troy's Devonte Ross (All-Sun Belt) should all be solid pass catchers for quarterback Drew Allar. The big question is if coach James Franklin can beat a top-five opponent. Penn State has games against Ohio State, Oregon and possibly the Big Ten title game and the CFP. Whether Penn State and Franklin can match up with those teams will continue to persist until it wins one of those games. Joel Klatt is FOX Sports' lead college football game analyst and the host of the podcast " The Joel Klatt Show. " Follow him at @joelklatt and subscribe to the "Joel Klatt Show" on YouTube . Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily. share

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