Latest news with #DeSmet


USA Today
23-06-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Michigan football predicted to land 4-star DT Titan Davis to 2026 defensive line
Michigan football has a bit of a different identity from most other schools in college football. While many try to build high-flying offenses with defenses that simply can stave off the opponent, the Wolverines are all about the trenches on both sides of the ball. On defense, the maize and blue already have an interior defensive lineman (Alister Vallejo) and two edge rushers (McHale Blade and Tariq Boney) committed, but they're looking to add more to the list. Is another coming soon? 2026 St. Louis (Mo.) DeSmet four-star defensive tackle Titan Davis officially visited Ann Arbor over the weekend. Thought to be deciding between Michigan and Alabama, it's been unclear which way Davis has been leaning. However, coming out of the visit, On3's Steve Wiltfong says that the Wolverines have all the momentum, and he predicted that Davis would wear a winged helmet. Michigan now has an 85.4% chance to land Davis via the On3 Recruiting Prediction Machine. Davis' scouting report from 247Sports' Andrew Ivins: Ascending defensive end with a prototypical frame that could fit into an odd or even front at the next level. Began his prep career playing quarterback before flipping to the other side of the ball and finding instant success in the trenches. Flashes the ability to separate and bypass base blocks with his lateral agility. Not the most destructive defender at this stage, but can find a flat back and shoot his hands to gain extension. Solid get-off frequently gives him an advantage in passing situations. Quick to unleash a bull-rush, but can also rip his way around the corner and has the stride length to finish. Enters senior year believed to be north of 6-foot-4, 265 pounds with adequate length in the arms. Must improve pad level and learn how to bring it every single snap, but appears to be rounding into form as he nearly doubled his production as a junior for Missouri's 6A champs. Projects as a potential multi-year contributor and possible impact player for a College Football Playoff contender. Should offer plenty of alignment flex and could very well end up finding a home on the inside depending on how the body matures. Davis is listed at 6-foot-4.5, 270 pounds and is rated the No. 101 player in the country according to the 247Sports Composite. It's currently not known when Davis will make a final decision. The Wolverines are also after several other defensive linemen, including edge rushers Carter Meadows, Julian Walker, Jackson Ford, and Trenton Henderson.
Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Hoefkens wants to shop in Belgium with hopes of bringing old acquaintance to NAC Breda
Hoefkens wants to shop in Belgium with hopes of bringing old acquaintance to NAC Breda NAC Breda are in the market for the signature of Liam De Smet. The 21-year-old midfielder is out of contract with Club Brugge NXT, and is said to prefer another challenge over a contract extension. NAC coach Carl Hoefkens hopes to bring De Smet to the Netherlands. NAC's interest in De Smet was mentioned on the D'n Hoefcast – Code Geel podcast. The Belgian can thus be reunited with Hoefkens, as the two previously worked together at Club Brugge. The coach hopes to welcome De Smet to Breda soon. Advertisement That said, there is no agreement between NAC and De Smet just yet. The midfielder can move over on a free transfer, with his contract with Club Brugge expiring at the end of June. There will be no contract extension. The midfielder went through the entire youth training of Club Brugge, and was also an important link at Club NXT, the development team. Last season, De Smet played 27 matches in the Challenger Pro League. The right-footed player scored one goal and provided three assists. GBeNeFN | Max Bradfield
Yahoo
09-03-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
WA pays $52M to run Pierce County school for adults with disabilities. Will it close?
The future of the Rainier School in Buckley is uncertain. Legislators in Olympia are considering shuttering its doors — a move that would impact dozens of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities who rely on the facility for housing, health care and treatment. Two bills from Democrats — one in the state Senate and one in the state House – would shut down both the Rainier School and a similar facility in Eastern Washington, the Yakima Valley School, on June 30, 2027, if passed. The facilities would have until then to relocate current residents and would not be allowed to accept new residents at either facility. The Senate bill is scheduled for a public hearing in the Senate Committee on Ways & Means on March 13. The Rainier School opened in October 1939 and serves people with disabilities by offering 24-hour residential care. This includes housing, medical care, occupational and speech therapies, employment, nutrition services, recreation facilities and more. The Washington State Department of Social and Health Services runs the school. Employees assess residents and make 'a care plan along with the person and their parent or guardian — the progression of skills that are important for that person to work on to become more independent,' Megan DeSmet, DSHS's Developmental Disabilities Administration director of facilities, told The News Tribune. DeSmet said 81 residents live at the Rainier School and that it costs $52 million to run each year. When The News Tribune asked what would happen to residents if the school shuts down, DeSmet said it would be different for each person. 'We would work with each individual to determine their preference to where they want to transition to,' DeSmet said. 'It could be supported living, it could be an adult family home, it could be a companion home, it could be a state-operated community residential, which is just like supported living. Depending on what their choice would be, we would work with them on a transition plan.' DeSmet also said they would work to keep residents as close as possible. '(We would) hopefully keep them within their area of people, not moving them too far away from their community, but it really would be person-dependent,' DeSmet said. DeSmet said 460 full-time employees work at the Rainier School. Courtney Brunell, the Buckley city administrator, confirmed to The News Tribune that the Rainier School is the largest employer in the city of 5,114 people. When The News Tribune asked where those employees would go if the school shut down, DeSmet said they can't decide that until a law passes — but she did note that most of the facility's employees are union-represented. Both bills order DSHS to offer employees 'opportunities to work in state-operated living alternatives and other state facilities and programs.' DeSmet told The News Tribune that DSHS believes the bills are dead. Olivia Heersink, communications specialist for two of the state senators sponsoring the bill, told The News Tribune that they're not. 'This bill is not subject to cutoff, so it isn't dead,' Heersink said. 'It's still under consideration.' The bills weren't subject to deadlines to pass out of committee, because they have been deemed necessary to implement the budget. Former Gov. Jay Inslee first proposed closing the two residential rehabilitation centers when he released his outgoing budget in December. A spokesperson for the Governor's Office told The News Tribune that his successor, current Gov. Bob Ferguson, has not weighed in on whether he wants to shut the schools down. Heersink said senators are still considering the closures, just like the 'many other options for budget reductions' that Inslee suggested before he left office. 'If a decision is made to pursue the [closures] in the Senate budget, a public hearing will be held on that policy,' Heersink said. The News Tribune sought interviews with Sen. June Robinson and Sen. T'wina Nobles — two of the Democratic senators sponsoring the bill — to ask why they support closing the school. Neither senator was immediately available for comment. In the bill itself, legislators say the proposal builds off of work the state has done in the past to decrease the number of residents in these facilities and instead send them to 'smaller supported settings.' 'The legislature finds that this has been successful because of intentional efforts to honor personal choice, deliberate and transparent work with residents, families and staff, and expanding supported living and state-operated living alternative settings,' the bill says. The News Tribune also reached out to The Arc, a disability rights organization in Washington state that has said it supports closing the facilities. The Arc did not immediately respond. Several tragedies have taken place at the Rainier School in recent years. In 2018, The News Tribune reported that a former supervisor was sentenced for sex crimes against residents. In 2020, a resident's family sued the state, alleging the Rainier School staff's neglect following her bunion surgery led to her death in 2017. The Washington Federation of State Employees published a news release, saying its members are worried about what would happen to both residents and employees if the school shuts down. '(Residential habilitation centers provide) round-the-clock care, access to skilled medical professionals, and behavioral support that community-based systems are ill-equipped to deliver,' the release said. 'Aside from uprooting fragile individuals who deeply rely on routine, moving residents into community care settings would put them at risk of neglect, inadequate treatment, or worse.' WFSE said many community-based providers are already 'stretched thin,' and said closing the school could result in residents losing access to skilled caregivers and put them at risk of ending up in unsafe living situations.