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  • Badgers redshirt freshman cornerback enters the transfer portal

    Badgers redshirt freshman cornerback enters the transfer portal

     

    The Badgers are losing a cornerback for the spring transfer portal.

     

    The Wisconsin Badgers are losing a cornerback to the transfer portal, as redshirt freshman Jay Harper announced his intentions to leave the program on Wednesday.

     

    Harper, a three-star recruit in the Class of 2024, did not see any game action as a true freshman in 2024. He was competing to be a reserve cornerback with the Badgers this offseason on the field side behind Ricardo Hallman, rotating in with Miami transfer D’Yoni Hill and fellow redshirt freshman Omillio Agard.

     

    Standing 5’10, 176 pounds, Harper had offers from Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Louisville, Mississippi State, Georgia Tech, and West Virginia, among others, before committing to Wisconsin.

     

    He was a part of a three-cornerback class in 2024 alongside Agard and four-star Xavier Lucas. He now becomes the second to depart behind Lucas after just one season at Wisconsin.

     

    The Badgers could now be in search of a scholarship cornerback in the transfer portal. They’ve already looked at options at wide receiver, offensive line, and tight end, where they’ve either lost players to the transfer portal or to injury.

     

     

  • Kyle Walker explains ‘nobody here is Lionel Messi’ comment after angry blast at Joao Felix during AC Milan defeat to Napoli

    Kyle Walker explains ‘nobody here is Lionel Messi’ comment after angry blast at Joao Felix during AC Milan defeat to Napoli

    During the half-time interval of that contest, which the Rossoneri lost 2-1, England international Walker was caught in conversation with fellow loan star Felix – with both men currently at San Siro after bidding farewell to the Premier League at Manchester City and Chelsea respectively.

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    • Joao Felix AC Milan 2024-25
      Getty

      THE BIGGER PICTURE

      Portuguese forward Felix was, in Walker’s mind, overcomplicating matters with some of his play. He was advised to keep things simple in the second half, with the 25-year-old being told “pass the ball, nobody here is Messi”.

    • WHAT KYLE WALKER SAID

      On The Kyle Walker Podcast, the experienced defender who uttered those words said: “It wasn’t me saying to Joao ‘you’re not Messi, pass the ball’. It was saying ‘let’s make sure we have a process’. He agreed with me and said we need to have more passes and a bit more control.

      “I didn’t just say it to Joao. I didn’t know there was a camera there. But I still wouldn’t have changed anything I did say.”

    • Getty

      DID YOU KNOW?

      Walker added: “The comment I said was nobody is Messi. That’s in every team in the world bar certain individuals who can turn a game on its head when they want to. I give them their plaudits – it’s Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Jr, Mo Salah and Ousmane Dembele, who has been on fire since the start of the year. Apart from that you say it’s a team game.

      “What I was saying to Joao is [Rafael] Leao is fantastic. One of the players who you can give him the ball and he can go past three, four, five players and put it in the top bin. At [Manchester] City most of our joy over the last number of years was from a process. Everything was the process of working out where you were on the pitch. That was with passes.

      “If you have a player like Messi he can take on four players and put it in the back of the net. It makes the game so much easier. But against good-level opposition like Napoli I feel you need a process of passing the ball and wearing them down. Then the gaps appear. That was the conversation with Joao.”

    • WHAT NEXT?

      Milan had cause for celebration in their latest outing, as they claimed a 3-0 victory over arch-rivals Inter and a place in the Coppa Italia final. Walker, who has been nursing an injury, played no part in that contest while Felix was only introduced as an 87th-minute substitute.

  • All-star cast to light up Diamond League season opener in Xiamen

    All-star cast to light up Diamond League season opener in Xiamen

     

     

    Ten world record-holders and 23 reigning global individual champions lead the star-studded fields for the first Wanda Diamond League meeting of the year in Xiamen on Saturday (26).

     

    Mondo Duplantis, Grant Holloway, Faith Kipyegon, Yaroslava Mahuchikh and Gudaf Tsegay are among the athletes who will be looking to kick off their campaigns in style when they head to the Egret Stadium in the Chinese city.

     

    Duplantis returns to the scene of the eighth of his now 11 world pole vault records. The Swedish 25-year-old, who on Monday was named the Laureus World Sportsman of the Year, cleared 6.24m in Xiamen last year and went on to set another world record of 6.25m in Paris, where he retained his Olympic title.

     

    He has achieved another two world records since – 6.26m in Silesia later in August and 6.27m in Clermont-Ferrand in February. The meeting in Xiamen will be his outdoor season opener as Duplantis competes for the first time since winning his third consecutive world indoor title in Nanjing last month. Emmanouil Karalis of Greece improved his national record to 6.05m to secure silver and is also in action this weekend, along with world silver medallist Ernest John Obiena and two-time world champion Sam Kendricks.

     

    Competition is set to be fierce in the women’s high jump. Ukraine’s Mahuchikh improved the world record to 2.10m in Paris last year and went on to claim Olympic gold, but she was third behind Australia’s Nicola Olyslagers and Eleanor Patterson at last month’s World Indoor Championships. Those three athletes clash again in Xiamen, with the field also featuring Mahuchikh’s compatriot Yuliya Levchenko.

     

    Five women who have surpassed 70 metres will renew their rivalry in the women’s discus. Leading the field is USA’s Olympic champion Valarie Allman, who improved the North American record to 73.52m in Ramona earlier this month. She faces world champion Laulauga Tausaga, multiple global gold medallist Sandra Elkasevic, Yaime Perez and Jorinde van Klinken, as well as Olympic silver medallist Feng Bin, competing on home soil.

     

    The women’s shot put also offers a top-class battle, as USA’s two-time world champion Chase Jackson faces Canada’s two-time world indoor champion Sarah Mitton, Olympic silver medallist Maddi Wesche, two-time world medallist Jessica Schilder and home favourites Gong Lijiao and Song Jiayuan.

     

    Season debuts for Kipyegon and Warholm

    Kenya’s Kipyegon claimed her third Olympic 1500m title in Paris last year and in Xiamen she will make her 2025 debut by dropping down to the 1000m. The 31-year-old holds world records in the 1500m and the mile, and she sits second on the world all-time list for the 1000m following her 2:29.15 run in Monaco in 2020 – that performance just 0.17 shy of Svetlana Masterkova’s world record set in 1996.

     

    The Xiamen 1000m will be Kipyegon’s first race since the Athlos meeting in September last year. Earlier that month she won her fifth Diamond League title at the final in Brussels.

     

    She will be joined in Xiamen by athletes including Ethiopia’s world U20 champion Saron Berhe and Olympic 800m silver medallist Tsige Duguma, plus Australia’s Abbey Caldwell, Uganda’s Halimah Nakaayi and Benin’s Noelie Yarigo.

     

    The women’s 5000m will feature a clash of global champions – both of them world record-holders. Kenya’s Beatrice Chebet achieved an Olympic 5000m and 10,000m title double in Paris and is the world record-holder in the longer distance as well as for 5km on the roads, while Ethiopia’s Tsegay is the world 5000m record-holder who more recently won the world indoor 1500m title in a championship record in Nanjing.

     

    Their head-to-head record in 5000m track finals stands at 3-2 in Tsegay’s favour and in Xiamen they will clash for the first time since last year’s Olympic Games. Among those joining them on the start line are Ethiopia’s two-time world indoor champion Freweyni Hailu, Birke Haylom and world U20 steeplechase champion Sembo Almayew, making her 5000m debut.

     

    Following its introduction as an official event, the meeting will feature the 300m hurdles with world 400m hurdles record-holder Karsten Warholm using the race to open his season. The Norwegian three-time world champion has held the world 300m hurdles best of 33.26 since 2021 and the race will close the competition in Xiamen, where he will go up against Kyron McMaster and CJ Allen.

     

    The women’s 100m hurdles pits world indoor 60m hurdles champion and world record-holder Devynne Charlton of The Bahamas against world 100m hurdles record-holder Tobi Amusan of Nigeria, Jamaica’s two-time world champion Danielle Williams, USA’s early world leader Grace Stark and home star Wu Yanni.

     

    In the men’s 110m hurdles, USA’s Olympic and three-time world champion Holloway will want to return to winning ways after finishing second in Gainesville last weekend following his third world indoor 60m hurdles title triumph in Nanjing. His competition includes his compatriots Cordell Tinch, Freddie Crittenden and Olympic silver medallist Daniel Roberts.

     

    Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson continues her comeback in the 200m. The two-time world champion last raced the distance in Szekesfehervar in July but pulled up injured and did not run at the Olympic Games. She clocked 36.13 for 300m earlier this month after opening her year with two 60m races and in Xiamen she will face world indoor 60m champion Mujinga Kambundji, Jenna Prandini and Tamara Clark.

     

    The entry list for the men’s 100m stars Botswana’s Olympic 200m gold and 100m silver medallist Letsile Tebogo as well as all three world indoor 60m medallists – champion Jeremiah Azu, Lachlan Kennedy and Akani Simbine – plus Christian Coleman and Ferdinand Omanyala.

     

    The men’s 400m features USA’s world indoor champion Christopher Bailey, Olympic and world gold medallist Kirani James and Bayapo Ndori, while Morocco’s multiple Olympic and world champion Soufiane El Bakkali goes in the 3000m steeplechase – his first race since last year’s Diamond League final.

     

    World indoor medallists Wayne Pinnock and Liam Adcock are in long jump action, while the non-Diamond League triple jump includes Hugues Fabrice Zango and the javelin features Olympic silver medallist Jo-Ane van Dyk.

     

     

  • The Next Julien Alfred: Saint Lucia’s Jady Emmanuel rises to Olympic champion’s history-making status at CARIFTA Games

    The Next Julien Alfred: Saint Lucia’s Jady Emmanuel rises to Olympic champion’s history-making status at CARIFTA Games

     

     

    Saint Lucia birthed a new sprint princess in Jady Emmanuel at the 2025 CARIFTA Games, where she blazed to history-making feats to be highly rated as The Next Julien Alfred.

    Saint Lucia may have already found the next Julien Alfred in Jady Emmanuel after the 16-year-old talent blazed to sprint double gold medals at the just concluded CARIFTA Games in Trinidad and Tobago.

     

    The sprint sensation made history in the girl’s U-17 category by winning Saint Lucia’s first-ever gold medal in the 100m event with a personal best (PB) time of 11.50 seconds.

     

     

    Jady Emmanuel after winning 100m Gold at CARIFTA Games

    She also set a new Saint Lucian U-18 record with her mark, breaking Alfred’s previous time of 11.53s from 2017.

     

    We did expect it – Julien Alfred reveals after blistering world-leading 21.88s at Tom Jones Invitational

    We did expect it – Julien Alfred reveals after blistering world-leading 21.88s at Tom Jones Invitational

    Not resting on her oars, Emmanuel was back in the 200m event and stormed to glory again, clocking a new National U18 Record of 23.47s (-0.4m/s) to claim the double sprint titles, thus becoming Saint Lucia’s first-ever double CARIFTA Games sprint champion.

     

    Emmanuel’s double gold medals at the Games took Saint Lucia’s tally to four, placing the nation sixth on the medal table. It’s the fourth time the Caribbean nation has had as many as four medals, but only the third time the team has claimed as many as two gold medals.

     

    The remaining two medals were from Naya Jules, who won silver in the girl’s pole vault. She set a new personal best and also showed commendable performance in the Javelin throw event; however, she was left behind with the bronze position in the next to last round.

     

    Another medal was achieved by Destinee Cenac – a 15-year-old student of Joseph’s convent. She participated in the under-17 girl’s high jump and won the bronze medal behind Jamaica’s Sackoya Palmer and Barbados’ Shia Mottley.

     

    Since Alfred’s Olympic success in Paris last summer, many young athletes in Saint Lucia have taken up the sport and now believe they can achieve great things with dedication, just like their star icon, Alfred.

  • World Athletics Championships in Tokyo to return to RTÉ for the first time this century

    World Athletics Championships in Tokyo to return to RTÉ for the first time this century

    Rhasidat Adeleke of Team Ireland competes in the Women’s 400m Final at the World Athletics Championships in 2023. Photograph: Hannah Peters/Getty

    World Athletics Championships will return to RTÉ television for the first time this century, the nine-day event taking place in Tokyo in September, and the biggest sporting stage in the world this year.

    About 2,000 athletes from some 200 countries will compete in the 20th edition of the championships, which take place from September 13th-21st – the second time Japan has hosted the event after Osaka in 2007, and Tokyo previously in 1991. The National Stadium, rebuilt for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, will be the venue.

    RTÉ have not secured any television rights in Ireland since the 1999 World Athletics Championships in Seville, but this time the national broadcaster is set to schedule live coverage of each of the nine evening sessions in Tokyo, which take place between 10.30am and 2.30pm Irish time.

    There will also be studio analysis from Sonia O’Sullivan, Rob Heffernan and Derval O’Rourke, and it continues from RTÉ’s extensive coverage of the European Indoor Championships in Apeldoorn last month, and the European Championships in Rome last June.

    READ MORE

    RTÉ did provide live coverage of the event throughout the 1990s, when O’Sullivan was at the peak on her running powers, including the 1997 World Championships in Athens, the last time RTÉ had full coverage, with studio analysis by Bill O’Herlihy with John Treacy and Eamonn Coghlan. For the 1999 championships in Seville, there was a 30-minute highlights package with commentary from Jimmy Magee.

    Virgin Media broadcast live coverage of the last World Athletics Championships in Budapest in August 2023, returning the event to Irish terrestrial television for the first time since Seville.

    After securing the Irish rights to the Diamond League last year, Virgin will again provide live coverage of the 15 meetings this summer, starting in Xiamen in China this Saturday. The second meeting in Shanghai on May 3rd is set to feature Rhasidat Adeleke, who will then lead the Irish team at the World Relays in Guangzhou in China, on May 10th-11th, where Adeleke is named in both the mixed 4x400m and women’s 4x400m.

    The top 14 in each event in Guangzhou are automatic qualifiers for Tokyo. Six Irish athletes have already secured automatic qualifying times for Tokyo: Adeleke (200m/400m), Sharlene Mawdsley (400m), Sarah Healy and Sophie O’Sullivan (both 1,500m), Sarah Lavin (100m hurdles) and Andrew Coscoran (1,500m).

    The qualification cut-off date for most events is not until August 24th, at which point Ireland could have its largest number of qualifiers in World Athletics Championships history. The Tokyo schedule includes four morning sessions, reduced from previous championships, which take place in the early hours of the morning Irish time, but with the evening sessions featuring all the major finals.

    Ian O'Riordan

  • 100 metres in 9 seconds? Usain Bolt’s record may be beaten thanks to Hongkonger

    100 metres in 9 seconds? Usain Bolt’s record may be beaten thanks to Hongkonger

     

    Time could soon be 20 per cent quicker, according to entrepreneur Alvina Chen, whose company has made ‘world’s fastest running surface’

     

     

    Jamaica’s Usain Bolt (centre, in yellow) crosses the finish line in a new world record time to win global 100m gold in 2009. Photo: AFP

    No one has bettered Usain Bolt’s 100 metres world record of 9.58 seconds since he clocked it 16 years ago, but that could change if an athlete-turned-entrepreneur from Hong Kong has her way.

     

     

    Groundbreaking speeds could be just around the corner, if a high-performance running track developed by Feldspar Sport – a UK-based technology company founded by Hongkonger Alvina Chen – is accepted for use by governing body World Athletics.

     

    Months on from what was said to be the fastest track yet being used at the Paris Olympics, Feldspar is getting ready to launch one Chen claims could see the world’s fastest 100m sprinters dip below the nine-second mark.

     

    The company is developing a track that has a rubber and composite top surface instead of just rubber, and boasts energy loss of less than 10 per cent when athletes run on it – compared with roughly 30 per cent on traditional track surfaces.

     

    Alvina Chen, Feldspar’s founder and CEO. Photo: Feldspar

    Alvina Chen, Feldspar’s founder and CEO. Photo: Feldspar

    “Increasing track compliance, track energy return and altering the direction of energy return are three ways to improve the speed of a track,” said Chen, the mastermind behind what is touted as the world’s first smart running track.

     

     

  • New Lewis Hamilton evidence found after clever McLaren trick emerges

    New Lewis Hamilton evidence found after clever McLaren trick emerges

     

    Lewis Hamilton looks tense as he faces the media while wearing a red Ferrari cap

    Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari career has failed to live up to the hype so far

     

    Untelevised team radio footage from the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix has revealed the moment Oscar Piastri was warned about Lando Norris’s struggles to overtake Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton.

     

    It comes after Andrea Stella, the McLaren team principal, told media including PlanetF1.com of his pride that the race engineers of Piastri and Norris worked together to see off Hamilton during the race in Jeddah.

     

    Lando Norris, Oscar Piastri race engineers worked together to see off Lewis Hamilton

    Additional reporting by Thomas Maher

     

    McLaren’s impressive start to the season continued in Saudi Arabia last weekend as Piastri claimed his third victory in the last four races to take the lead of the World Championship for the first time in his career.

     

    Piastri currently holds a 10-point lead over team-mate Norris, who recovered to fourth on race day after an accident in the final stage of qualifying.

     

    Norris’s recovery was briefly held up by Hamilton, who after being overtaken at the final corner, used DRS to repass the McLaren on consecutive laps in the early stages of the race.

     

    Speaking to media including PlanetF1.com after the race, Stella estimated that the time Norris lost in his battle with Hamilton ultimately cost him the chance of passing the lead Ferrari of Charles Leclerc for third place in the closing laps.

     

    Stella went on to reveal that Norris’s race engineer Will Joseph took it upon himself to warn Tom Stallard, Piastri’s engineer, of the challenges of passing Hamilton.

     

    And an untelevised team radio snippet from the race has uncovered the moment Stallard passed the message on to Piastri after rejoining behind Hamilton following his only pit stop on Lap 19.

     

    As he closes in on the yet-to-stop Ferrari, Piastri is told: “Against Lando, Hamilton was letting him through into [Turn] 27 and passing back into 1.

     

    “Best to overtake into 1.”

     

    Piastri soon took matters into his own hands, using DRS moments later to make a bold pass on Hamilton into Turn 22, arguably the fastest and most challenging part of the Jeddah circuit, rather than waiting until the start of the following lap to make a move.

     

    Asked how important it was for Piastri to get past Hamilton quickly after his stop, Stella revealed the teamwork at play between Joseph and Stallard on the McLaren pit wall.

     

    He told media including PlanetF1.com: “You’ve given me the opportunity here to actually tell you a story.

     

    “The story is that Lando’s race engineer proactively told Oscar’s race engineer: ‘We struggled to pass Lewis because we attempted twice in Corner 27 and he passed us back in Corner 1, so make sure that Oscar knows that and he gives it a go directly in Corner 1.’

     

    “I was very proud while on the pit wall to hear that. I didn’t need to prompt anything.

     

    “I was just a spectator to an example of the great team spirit and team work that we have at McLaren.

     

    “So well done to Will Joseph, well done to Tom Stallard, well done to the team of people.”

     

    He added: “I think for a podium finish today [Norris] would have needed not to lose the time with Hamilton.

     

    “Obviously, Hamilton is Lewis Hamilton. He knows very well how to race and for a couple of laps he managed to pass Lando.

     

    “And I think this cost us the time that ultimately means that we could not give it a go at trying to overtake Leclerc.”

     

    Hamilton went on finish a distant seventh, four places and a massive 30.969 seconds behind Leclerc in the same car.

     

    The seven-time World Champion revealed after the race that he has been forced to “cancel some plans” this week in order to get to the bottom of his current issues ahead of the next race in Miami on May 4.

     

    Hamilton’s revelation came after he let slip that the Ferrari team and his bosses “are not happy” with his performances so far this season following his blockbuster move from Mercedes last winter.

     

    Speaking after the race, however, Ferrari team principal Fred Vasseur insisted that Hamilton retains his unwavering support.

     

    And he described the suggestion that Hamilton’s performances have waned alarmingly over recent times as “****ing bull***t.”

     

    He told media including PlanetF1.com on Sunday in Jeddah: “I will be 2,000 per cent behind him.

     

    “I will give him support and we will start from tomorrow morning to try to find solutions and reasons and to work on it early in the morning.

     

    “If you have a look on what he did in China or what he did in the race in Bahrain last week, or even on the first part of the session in this weekend, the potential is there for sure.

     

    “We just have to adjust the balance because we are, collectively, Lewis and us, we are struggling with the balance of his car and [how] he is working the tyres.

     

    “It’s a kind of negative spot but I think the potential of the car is there and we will try to solve that.”

     

    Put to him that Hamilton’s form has dropped off dramatically, he responded: “It’s not dramatically.

     

    “We did five races so far. I know that you want to have the big headlines tomorrow that ‘Fred said this.’

     

    “But this is f***ing bull***t. At the end of the day, we are in competition. You have ups and downs.

     

    “When we have ups, we are not World Champions. When we have downs, we are not nowhere. It’s just a competition.

     

    “I’m not sure that you draw the same conclusion with Max [Verstappen] last week when he was seventh [in Bahrain].

     

    “It is like it is. The competition is tight.

     

    “You have 10 cars and a couple of tenths. Have a look at Max. He won in Japan. He finished 30 seconds behind Piastri in Bahrain and in Saudi Arabia he was P2 and had pole position.

     

    “We just have to stay calm. You can do whatever you want. I don’t want to worry for you. At least for us as a team, we have to work step by step.

     

    “I think it paid off last year to do hundredths of seconds and hundredths of seconds and we need to keep the same approach.

     

    “I will never be the guy who says we are World Champions or we are nowhere.”

  • Noah Lyles Taken Aback As Fans Struggle To Recognize Him After Random Meetup

    Noah Lyles Taken Aback As Fans Struggle To Recognize Him After Random Meetup

    Olympics champion Noah Lyles was left surprised following a meetup with random fans who could not agree that it was indeed him they were seeing.

    Olympics 100m champion Noah Lyles should have by now gotten used to being mobbed by fans thanks to his huge following.

    Lyles is considered the most popular active sprinter in the world and his popularity has earned him admiration among fans.

    With that, Lyles has had to deal with photo and autograph requests everywhere he goes but one incident on Wednesday left him surprised.

    Harambee Stars Coach Benni McCarthy Snubbed as South African Tactician Gets Nod for Orlando Pirates Job

    Lyles had a meetup with two random fans who haggled over whether they were actually seeing the Olympics champion, leaving the sprinter in stitches.

    “Not me watching these 2 guys sitting across from me trying to figure out if I’m actually Noah Lyles,” Lyles posted on X, accompanying the comment with a laugh emoji.

    The fans seem to have perhaps been surprised at how easily they met up with a superstar.

    3 Americans Set to Stop Shericka Jackson's Bid for Redemption in 200m Season Debut

    3 Americans Set to Stop Shericka Jackson’s Bid for Redemption in 200m Season Debut

    Lyles is coming from a humbling experience in the 400m race at the Tom Jones Memorial in Gainesville, Florida last Saturday when he clocked a personal best 45.87 seconds but failed to make the podium, finishing 14th in a competitive field of 26 runners.

    In what was not his specialty of 100m and 200m, Lyles was using the race to build his endurance and improve his speed but his ego must have been bruised following his lowly 14th place finish in a race he has claimed he can still do well in.

    Lyles is looking forward to defending his world titles at the 2025 World Championships in Tokyo where he will be the man to beat in both 100m and 200m.

    Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce Begins 2025 With Win as Shericka Jackson, Sha’Carri Richardson Await Battles Ahead
  • Georgia’s Projected $823,000 Quarterback Has ‘Inside Track’ To Be Named Starting QB

    Georgia’s Projected $823,000 Quarterback Has ‘Inside Track’ To Be Named Starting QB

     

     

    After Carson Beck’s move to the Miami Hurricanes in January, the QB1 role in the Georgia Bulldogs camp is up for grabs. In the recent G-Day game, the Bulldogs seem to have found their starting signal-caller for this fall.

     

    Gunner Stockton, the $823,000 quarterback, was the starter for the winning team during the scrimmage, completing 17-of-34 passes for 309 yards and two touchdowns.

     

    Ryan Pulgisi, his rival for the position, playing for the opposition, tallied 224 yards with 23-of-49 completions and two touchdowns. He is a redshirt, whereas Stockton has had a chance to play in the championship last season.

     

    Stockton is reportedly head coach Kirby Smart and his management’s first choice for this season’s QB1 role.

     

    Kirby Smart

    Georgia coach Kirby Smart looks on during the first half of the SEC championship game against Texas in Atlanta © Joshua L.

    “Stockton spent the better part of three seasons waiting his turn in Athens—first behind Stetson Bennett and then behind Carson Beck.” Andy Staples wrote on April 22. “Stockton’s chance came in the SEC title game against Texas when Beck injured his elbow. He helped Georgia finish off the Longhorns, but he lost his first career start to Notre Dame.”

     

    “Coach Kirby Smart hasn’t named a starter between Stockton and redshirt freshman Ryan Puglisi, but Stockton has the inside track on the job.” He added. Georgia could have pried some other school’s starter loose from the portal, but when the Bulldogs didn’t do that, it signaled faith in Stockton.”

     

    Stockton’s experience and leadership give him the edge over others. Georgia has yet to make any official announcement.

     

    Carson Beck

  • Boston Marathon results 2025: Korir takes glory despite bad fall while Lokedi wins women’s race in record time

    Boston Marathon results 2025: Korir takes glory despite bad fall while Lokedi wins women’s race in record time

     

    John Corir overcame a bad fall at the start to claim a spectacular victory in the men’s race as Sharon Lokedi took the plaudits in a thrilling women’s event on what was a Kenyan double at the Boston Marathon.

     

    Corir was the brilliant winner of last year’s Chicago Marathon but had to overcome the worst possible start to the race in Boston when he took a bad tumble.

     

    But he bided his time superbly, moved ahead in the second half and crossed the line in 2:04:45 to win by 19 seconds from Alphonce Felix Simbu (TAN) who just held off Cybrian Kotut (KEN) in a sprint finish for second.

     

    The drama in the women’s race all came in the closing stages as it turned into a three-way battle between Lokedi, defending champion Hellen Obiri (KEN) and Yalemzerf Yehualaw (ETH).

     

    A late kick from Lokedi finally shook off Obiri and denied her a third straight win as she had to settle for second place, 19 seconds behind, with Yehualaw in third.

     

    All three were well inside the previous course record of 2:19:59, with Lokedi stopping the clock in 2:17:22.

     

     

    Men’s race – Korir overcomes tumble

    Korir was fourth at Boston last year but, 12 months on, he had to pick himself up off the tarmac just after the start.

     

    And the extent of the fall was underlined by the fact he lost his front bib number which he picked up and put in his shorts.

     

    But he didn’t panic and as others cut out the pace at the front he calmly moved into contention and was among a group of 16 by the halfway point.

     

    The decisive move came just after the 10km to go mark and no one was able to respond.

     

    With 5km to go, Korir’s advantage was up to 41 seconds and he was able to soak in the victory down the long finish straight, in so doing matching his older brother Wesley Korir who won the race in 2012.

     

    Korir John wins Boston Marathon 2025 Photo credit: Boston Athletic Association / Boston Marathon

    Korir John wins the men’s race at the Boston Marathon. [Photo credit: Boston Athletic Association / Boston Marathon]

    But the three behind him were left to battle for the other two podium places and their cause wasn’t helped when they were sent to a right-hand finishing straight rather than following Korir.

     

    Nonetheless Simbu and Kotut crossed the line virtually together, with the verdict going to the former.

     

    American favourite Conner Mantz was the unlucky one to miss out on the podium as he finished four seconds back in fourth but there was some consolation in the fact that his time of 2:05:08 was a PB by over two-and-a-half minutes.

     

    Women’s race – Lokedi proves strongest

    The women’s race was an absorbing one – and an attritional test as the course record was shattered.

     

    At halfway it looked between a group of five, the eventual first three and Irine Cheptai (KEN) and Amane Beriso (ETH).

     

    Cheptai was the first to just lose touch at around the 30km mark and then Beriso dropped away with 5km to go.

     

    It was then down to two in the final few kilometres but Lokedi kicked with 2km left and the elastic snapped dramatically as she powered clear to win by just under 20 seconds.

     

    John Korir Sharon Lokedi Boston Marathon 2025 photo credit Boston Athletic Association / Boston Marathon

    The 2025 Boston Marathon champions [Photo credit: Boston Athletic Association / Boston Marathon]

    Boston Marathon 2025 results

    Monday 21 April, 26.2 miles / 42.2 kilometres

     

    MEN:

     

    1. John Corir (KEN) – 2:04:45

    2. Alphonce Felix Simbu (TAN) – 2:05:04

    3. Cybrian Kotut (KEN) – 2:05:04

    4. Conner Mantz (USA) – 2:05:08

    5. Muktar Edris (ETH) – 2:05:59

    WOMEN:

     

    1. Sharon Lokedi (KEN) – 2:17:22

    2. Hellen Obiri (KEN) – 2:17:41

    3. Yalemzerf Yehualaw (ETH) – 2:18:06

    4. Irine Cheptai (KEN) – 2:21:32

    5. Amane Beriso (ETH) – 2:21:58

    Jonathan Turner

    Written by

    Jonathan Turner

    Jonathan Turner is News Director for both TRI247 and RUN247, and is accustomed to big-name interviews, breaking news stories and providing unrivalled coverage for endurance sports.