Why 2026 Indiana guard Baron Walker committed to Butler basketball

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USA Today
13 hours ago
- USA Today
Why 49ers top draft pick has already impressed his new coach
The 49ers are banking upon a defensive talent infusion from the 2025 NFL draft. San Francisco used all five of its first 2025 NFL draft picks on the defensive side of the football, including its first-round selection at No. 11 overall on Georgia defensive lineman Mykel Williams. Williams tallied 67 tackles, 21.5 tackles for loss, 14 sacks, three passes defensed, three forced fumbles and one fumble recovery across 40 games in three seasons with the Bulldogs. The 6-foot-5, 267-pound defensive end started 17 games during his Georgia career. Now, Williams is tasked with fortifying the 49ers' defensive edge and its pass rush. On Thursday, 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan was asked if Williams is pretty well advanced for a rookie. "Yeah, I would say so. Just watching the style of how he played in college, he's just technical and stuff. I thought that jumped out on his tape the most, how good he is with his hands. A lot of pass rushers coming out of college who are talented like him and just use their talent, but he's as good with his hands as anyone I've seen coming out. And it's transferred over to practice too," Shanahan said. San Francisco is getting a good early look at Williams with some of its one-on-one pass rushing drills. Shanahan shared what the staff can glean from its one-one-one pass rushing drills during training camp. "The same as all one-on-ones, just it's able to isolate it. You can really see how a guy blocks with no help around him and you can really see how a guy's just teeing off and all he has to worry about is going to the quarterback. "Then you get out there on 11-on-11 and there's a lot more scheme involved, there's a lot more other guys, knowing what play's happening and there's so much that goes into it. But you get a situation where you can just truly focus on blocking and rushing and that's the hardest time to do it for a blocker and the best time for a pass rusher. And same with one-on-ones for receivers/corners, should be the best time for a receiver and the toughest for a corner without a pass rush, but it truly can show what guys are capable of doing in their total level of talent," Shanahan said. Williams has been impressing early during his time in San Francisco. The former Georgia Bulldog has garnered some first-team work opposite five-time Pro Bowler Nick Bosa. Williams has already drawn praise from future Hall of Fame left tackle Trent Williams, which is another positive sign as his rookie season approaches.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Georgia's biggest playoff question in 2025 isn't Gunner Stockton
Everyone's focused on Georgia's new quarterback. But if the Bulldogs fall short of another College Football Playoff run, it won't be because of Gunner Stockton. It might be the guys catching the ball. Georgia enters the 2025 season with one of the strongest rosters in the country and the second-highest national championship odds behind Ohio State. ESPN Analytics gives the Bulldogs a 78.6 percent chance to reach the playoff and a 17.9 percent shot to win it all. But last season, Georgia led the entire Power Four in dropped passes. That stat crushed drives, stalled momentum and showed up in the worst moments. If that trend doesn't flip quickly, it won't matter who is under center. This team will need cleaner execution to survive the SEC. Georgia's toughest test is already circled Nov. 15 against Texas is the only game where Georgia is not favored, according to ESPN's Football Power Index. The Longhorns visit Athens late in the season in a potential top-five matchup, and it could decide which team claims one of the top two playoff seeds. If Georgia wins, it could still make the playoff even with an SEC title game loss. But a loss to Texas may mean Georgia has to win out to have any chance at a bid. Why Georgia still controls its path The Bulldogs have a huge opportunity early. A 4–0 start with wins over Tennessee and Alabama would put them in the driver's seat nationally. If both teams finish inside the CFP Top 25, those wins would be remembered by the committee through Selection Day. That means Georgia could still make the playoff even if it finishes without a conference championship. Where things could fall apart The schedule looks manageable on paper, but it has landmines. Georgia plays true road games at Tennessee, Auburn and Mississippi State. None of those are guaranteed wins. The neutral-site game against Florida is another key spot for Georgia to prove it can win away from Athens. And with three of the Bulldogs' home games coming against Marshall, FCS opponent Austin Peay and Charlotte, there won't be much room to slip up. Georgia doesn't need to be perfect. But if the receivers don't clean up last year's mistakes and the run game can't support Stockton, then perfect might be the only way in. This team still has the talent to win the SEC and return to the playoff, but the margin is thinner than it looks.


USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
Colts sign familiar face at cornerback to bolster depth while working through injuries
While working through injuries at cornerback, the Colts sign a familiar face to boost their depth. In need of cornerback depth, the Indianapolis Colts announced that they are signing a familiar face, bringing back Chris Lammons, who was in for a workout on Thursday. The Colts also announced that they released cornerback Corey Ballentine, who was signed in free agency this offseason. Currently, the Colts are without Jaylon Jones and JuJu Brents, both of whom are working through hamstring injuries. The team also placed David Long Jr. on injured reserve with a groin injury, which effectively ends his 2025 season with the team. 'I think Jaylon's is a little more severe than JuJu's, but I don't have a timetable on their return,' Steichen said via the Indy Star. Lammons has spent the last two seasons with the Colts. In 2024, he appeared in five games defensively, where he lined up in the nickel. According to PFF, Lammons allowed 10 receptions on 11 targets at 13.0 yards per catch. Most of Lammons' playing time while with Indianapolis has come on special teams. This includes playing 190 snaps across five of the six different phases last season. Along with signing Lammons, the Colts also added cornerbacks Tre Herndon and Duke Shelley to the roster recently as well.