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  • Usain Bolt didn’t hold back when asked if anyone would break his world records

    Usain Bolt didn’t hold back when asked if anyone would break his world records

     

     

    Usain Bolt had a sharp response when asked about the ‘inconceivable’ prospect someone could one day be faster than him.

     

    The Jamaican sprint king holds the world record for the men’s 100m and 200m events.

     

     

    Bolt collected gold medals and world records like it was nobody’s business

    Bolt collected gold medals and world records like it was nobody’s businessCredit: Getty

    In the 100m, Bolt crossed the line in a staggering 9.58 seconds at the 2009 World Championships in Berlin, Germany.

     

    To underline Bolt’s dominance in the 100m event, he also boasts the second-fastest time and is part of a three-way tie for the third-fastest alongside countryman Yohan Blake and Tyson Gay.

     

    Bolt set the 200m record at the same event in 2009 when he clocked a time of just 19.19 seconds.

     

     

    The Jamaican called it quits on the sport in 2017 after a career in which he snared eight Olympic gold medals and was an 11-time world champion.

     

    Read more athletics news

     

    At present, Bolt’s 100m record looks rather safe.

     

    The winning time for the event at the 2024 Paris Olympics was 9.79 seconds, clocked by Noah Lyles.

     

    The Jamaican is extremely confident his world records will remain intactCredit: The Graham Norton Show

    However, Lyles has plenty of belief he is the man to break Bolt’s 200m record and came close to doing so in July 2022 when he finished with a time of 19.31 seconds at the World Athletic Championships in Oregon.

     

     

    But the one individual who may pose the biggest threat of all is Australia’s 17-year-old sensation Gout Gout.

     

    British sprinter Divine Iheme shows he is ‘quicker than Noah Lyles and Usain Bolt’ and is set to rival Gout Gout as he smashes 100m record

    Gout broke Bolt’s under-16 200m record last year as well as the Australian national record, held for 56 years by Peter Norman, when he set a time of 20.04 seconds.

     

    The teen’s record-breaking time of 20.04 seconds would have placed him sixth in the 200m final at the Paris Olympics.

     

    Gout now looks destined to showcase his talents on the global stage at the World Championships in September, which will be held in Tokyo.

     

     

    He is not shy of confidence either, warning Lyles in a podcast episode he was ready to make a statement in Japan.

     

    Gout Gout will hope to eclipse Bolt’s feats in the 200m

    “I’m trying to show you what’s up,” Gout told Beyond the Records.

     

    “Whatever I’ve got to do to show Noah I’m coming for that spot.

     

    “Obviously it’s a learning experience, but deep down I’m trying to get a medal for sure, be in that final and running up Noah or trying to chase Noah down.”

     

    Responding with a smile, Lyles said: “That’s what I love to hear.

     

    “I want you to come up to me and say, ‘Yeah, I am going to take your spot.’”

     

     

  • Ipswich Town: David Stockdale appointed Farsley Celtic manager

    Ipswich Town: David Stockdale appointed Farsley Celtic manager

     

     

    David Stockdale spent time on loan at Ipswich Town in 2011.

    Former Ipswich Town loanee David Stockdale has been named the new manager of Farsley Celtic.

     

    The 39-year-old becomes the National League North side’s fourth new boss of the 2024/25 season, replacing Neil Redfearn, who left his role after just 20 days in charge.

     

    It has been an eventful year for the West Yorkshire outfit as they have been forced to play their home games at Buxton FC, 64 miles away from their Citadel home, which is unavailable due to issues with its surface.

     

    This has seen senior players and staff leave the club, with supporters boycotting matches. They have also launched a campaign to raise £25,000.

     

    The former goalkeeper Stockdale returns to the management for the first time since leaving his role at Blyth Spartans back in October.

     

    He took charge of his first game for the Celt Army on the weekend as they lost 3-0 at Leamington. They are 22nd in the sixth tier, five points adrift from safety.

     

    On his new role, he said: “I’m a local lad and I want to help. I’ve been coming here for a long time.

     

    “I’ve spoken to the directors and I was impressed with what they are aiming to do with the club. It’s about being competitive. I don’t quit and I always keep going until the end.

     

    “Football is unpredictable, we’re going to do everything we can to improve. Plans are in place for moving forward and I’m looking forward to helping the club get back to its former self.”

     

    Stockdale spent the first half of the 2011/12 season with the Blues on loan from Fulham, making 11 appearances during his spell at Portman Road.

  • Worth more than Hutchinson: Ipswich have struck gold on “remarkable” star

    Worth more than Hutchinson: Ipswich have struck gold on “remarkable” star

     

    Kieran McKenna will have seen enough from his Ipswich Town troops on the road at Aston Villa to think they could still pull off an escape from relegation.

     

    The Premier League relegation favourites managed to pick up a battling point at a daunting away stadium in Villa Park despite Axel Tuanzebe being given his marching orders late into the first half, with the Tractor Boys now hopeful they can surprise Tottenham Hotspur up next at Portman Road.

     

    Ipswich Town’s Liam Delap applauds fans after the match

    McKenna will know any positive result that’s likely to come about will be spearheaded by Liam Delap having another lethal game in front of goal, alongside knowing that Omari Hutchinson has the quality to hurt some of the top-flight’s best on his day.

     

    Hutchinson’s positive season so far

    After all, both Delap and Hutchinson would combine to devastating effect when Ipswich opened the scoring against Unai Emery’s men to silence the rocked home masses.

     

    The ex-Manchester City man’s flicked finish was a joy to behold for those packed into the away end, but the crucial goal was all the former Chelsea attacker’s work, with Ian Maatsen unable to get a firm grip on the 21-year-old before he then played Delap into space.

     

    This isn’t the only time this season the exciting attacking pair have combined to strike fear into a top-flight defence, with this lightning-quick counterattack against Hutchinson’s ex-employers, Chelsea back in December seeing Delap turn provider for the midfielder to stylishly slot a chance away.

     

    McKenna and Co will hope another Chelsea-like scalp is on the cards when a potentially complacent Spurs side travels to Suffolk, with Hutchinson wanting more goals and assists to justify his high £20m price tag and to keep his team afloat in the Premier League.

     

    Omari-Hutchinson

    But, whilst Hutchinson has that punchy value next to his name, there is another under-the-radar performer in McKenna’s camp that boasts a higher value, having originally cost the Tractor Boys a meagre £1m to obtain.

     

    The “remarkable” star now worth £21m

    Ipswich, even if they do succumb to relegation, should be commended come the end of the season for the loyalty handed out to players who have been at the club since their League One days, with the likes of George Hirst and Massimo Luongo who came off the bench versus Villa situated at Ipswich during their third tier stay.

     

    Leif Davis also falls into this conversation of loyal servants who have managed to constantly keep up with the times, with a first-team spot nailed down throughout his three campaign stint to date.

     

    Last season is where the former Leeds United reject would really come into his own in Suffolk, with defence-splitting passes like this assist for Hirst becoming a regular trademark move, as the expansive full-back went on to amass a stunning 21 assists come the end of the jubilant promotion-winning campaign.

     

    Davis’ heroics would even see football pundit Jobi McAnuff label the explosive 25-year-old as “remarkable”, with his constant creativity no doubt helping boost his transfer value all the way up to a bumper £21m, as per Transfermarkt. The £20m Hutchinson, for instance, is valued at around £18m.

     

    Davis’ rising transfer value over the years

     

    Date

     

    Value

     

    Now

     

    £21m

     

    October 2024

     

    £12.4m

     

    March 2024

     

    £4.9m

     

    December 2023

     

    £3.3m

     

    July 2022

     

    £1m

     

    Sourced by Transfermarkt

     

    Looking at the table above, it’s clear that Davis’ value could end up rising far above its current £21m value, with the Newcastle-born defender potentially the club’s next big sale – similar to Delap being touted to move away for a steep fee of £40m.

     

    Ipswich will hope they can keep a firm grip on their star number three past this season regardless of his price tag potentially rising higher and higher, having already got three assists out of the 25-year-old this campaign when making the leap up to the top-flight.

     

    Leif-Davis-Ipswich

    McKenna and Co would be facing a losing battle to keep Davis around if relegation was confirmed, but whether he stays or goes, it’s undeniable that the Suffolk underdogs hit gold with this shrewd purchase back in 2022.

     

     

  • One of the best in this country’ – Leeds United hero hailed by Daniel Farke after huge Sunderland impact

    One of the best in this country’ – Leeds United hero hailed by Daniel Farke after huge Sunderland impact

     

     

    Leeds United boss Daniel Farke has labelled Joe Rothwell as one of the country’s best players with the ball after his impact in the Sunderland win.

    Leeds United fought from 1-0 down to claim a huge win against Sunderland on Monday night. LUFC emerged 2-1 victors after a dramatic comeback at Elland Road.

     

     

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    The Whites came up against a stern Sunderland side that defended brilliantly before being undone by two late goals. Both goals were scored by substitute Pascal Struijk and both assists were provided by midfielder Joe Rothwell, who also came on with around 20 minutes to spare.

     

     

    AFC Bournemouth loanee Rothwell has slipped out of the starting XI in recent weeks but he’s been a big asset for Daniel Farke’s side this season. He’s produced no bigger contribution than Monday night’s efforts, and that drew the highest of praise from his LUFC manager.

     

    As quoted by the Yorkshire Evening Post, Leeds United boss Farke waxed lyrical over Rothwell’s impact and ability, labelling the ‘pure baller’ as one of the best on-the-ball players in the country. He said:

     

    “We don’t have to speak about his quality, he’s a pure baller – with the ball probably one of the best in this country.

     

    “What he does in terms of passing, his technique and tidy touches is outstanding. Sometimes in this position you need a few different skills or you would win Premier League title after title and have 150 caps for England.

     

    “But when it comes down to dominate the game and be there with tidy touches, to drive the game forward, if you enjoy football you enjoy him playing. It’s great we have him as a really good option.”

     

     

  • Potential Lewis Hamilton eighth title given ‘greatest that ever happened’ claim

    Potential Lewis Hamilton eighth title given ‘greatest that ever happened’ claim

     

     

    Lewis Hamilton has now taken in his first laps as a Ferrari driver.

     

    Gerhard Berger has said a World Championship for Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari would be “the greatest thing that has ever happened in Formula 1 in terms of marketing.”

     

    Hamilton made the move to the Scuderia from Mercedes after a 12-season stint in time for the 2025 season, where he is looking to win a record eighth Drivers’ title.

     

    Lewis Hamilton Ferrari title would be ‘greatest thing that has ever happened in F1 in terms of marketing’

    This move already sees the sport’s most statistically successful driver head to its most storied and historic team, with Ferrari seemingly on the rise once again, having gone close to last season’s Constructors’ Championship.

     

    The scores are reset to zero once again, however, as the new cars prepare to be rolled out for the 2025 season, and Hamilton starts to drive for only his third team in his Formula 1 career.

     

    Given the huge interest in this move from both within and outside the Formula 1 paddock, former Ferrari driver Berger believes that a Hamilton title as a Ferrari driver would go beyond what happens on track.

     

    When asked if it would be possible for the seven-time champion to be crowned again at his new team, Berger told Auto Motor und Sport: “Yes. If Hamilton could become World Champion in a Ferrari, it would be the greatest thing that has ever happened in Formula 1 in terms of marketing.”

     

    Berger highlighted the influence of Fred Vasseur and how he has helped reshape the Scuderia since taking on the role of team principal.

     

    While it remains that Ferrari have not won a title since the 2008 Constructors’ Championship, the former Ferrari driver believes they should be involved in at least one of the fights this season, particularly by bringing Hamilton in to partner Charles Leclerc.

     

    “I would put my money on Ferrari this season,” he said.

     

    “I can’t say whether Hamilton or Leclerc will win the Drivers‘ or Constructors’ World Championship, but they will win a title. That’s my personal impression.

     

    “Ferrari was almost always fast last year, with a few slip-ups. I trust Fred Vasseur to get this volatility out of the system. It took a while, but I think they are very close.

     

     

    “They are well positioned in terms of engine and chassis and have top drivers. Vasseur makes a good impression. He is calm, thoughtful, always on point, and he delivers.

     

    “That has been the case at all the stations in the motorsport world where he has been so far. It was a good decision by Ferrari to sign him. And it was clear that it would take a year or two for his work to pay off.

     

    “Now I have the feeling that it’s starting to work. I also think it’s great that he got Hamilton. Vasseur will bring Ferrari back to the top.”

  • Hill declares who he thinks has more ‘natural talent’ between Hamilton and Verstappen

    Hill declares who he thinks has more ‘natural talent’ between Hamilton and Verstappen

     

    It’s been more than three years since Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen regularly battled each other on track for supremacy in Formula 1.

     

    The 2021 Formula 1 season will forever go down as one of the most intense fights for the drivers’ championship in the sport’s history.

     

    Hamilton and Verstappen had some spectacular on-track clashes and produced some remarkable wheel-to-wheel action, although it occasionally went over the line.

     

    Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff regretted not talking to Verstappen’s father after his huge crash at Silverstone that year.

     

    The pair ran into each other at Monza and in Saudi Arabia, but the championship ultimately came down to the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

     

    Red Bull’s star came out on top after a controversial final lap, but it ended up being a turning point in both of their careers.

     

    Verstappen is now a four-time champion and hoping to match Michael Schumacher’s record of winning five titles on the bounce.

     

    Hamilton has won just two Grand Prix since that day and now embarks on his latest challenge at Ferrari.

     

     

    Separating both drivers, as well as F1 legends Schumacher and Ayrton Senna isn’t an easy task.

     

    However, 1996 F1 champion Damon Hill was posed this question on Lucas Stewart’s YouTube channel and gave a very diplomatic answer.

     

    Damon Hill gives verdict on who has more natural talent between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen

     

    Hill was asked to rank Senna, Schumacher, Hamilton and Verstappen and said: “I think it’s very difficult to actually just make an order, you have to have a criteria next to that.

     

    “In what way are they better than the others?

     

    “Sheer speed, Ayrton. Unbelievable natural talent, just innate natural talent is Lewis.”

     

    Hill was challenged on whether he would put Verstappen’s ability down to natural talent and clarified, “Max has got natural talent and he’s got very few weak spots as well.

     

    “Michael was someone who, he built himself. I think he just became a machine, a winning machine through hard work and knowledge, and that can be said of Max as well.

     

    “I’m not saying the others didn’t work hard, they worked hard as well.”

     

     

    Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton could be racing again in 2025

    The 2025 Formula 1 season has the potential to reunite Hamilton and Verstappen at the front of the grid.

     

    Red Bull fell away as last season progressed, but Verstappen still managed to comfortably win a fourth championship.

     

    Although Hamilton struggled at times at Mercedes, particularly in qualifying, he showed signs of still being the driver that has the most wins in the history of the sport.

     

    Hamilton was praised for his recovery drive in Abu Dhabi and would have likely won in Las Vegas had he not made mistakes during qualifying that saw him start P10.

     

    Ferrari have a very good chance of having the fastest car in 2025 considering how they ended last year.

     

    If that’s the case, then Hamilton and new teammate Charles Leclerc will be up against Verstappen, both McLaren drivers and George Russell every weekend.

     

    It’s set to be an unbelievably tight season unless one team exposes a loophole in the ruleset, although resources will quickly be shifted towards the 2026 car when the regulations change.

  • Painful decisions punished by Leeds & Farke’s different idea – Graham Smyth’s Verdict

    Painful decisions punished by Leeds & Farke’s different idea – Graham Smyth’s Verdict

     

    Life is all about decisions, as those making for a quick get-away from Elland Road on Monday night so painfully discovered.

     

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    With the score 1-1 between Leeds United and Sunderland, some decided to beat the traffic. Daniel Farke, meanwhile, quite literally decided to beat Sunderland. Some decisions pay off and others really do not.

     

    It’s never as simple as that of course. There will have been some very good reasons to head for the exits before full-time and so much had to go right for Farke’s decisions to result in three points for the Championship leaders. But for some time now there has been an inevitability about this Leeds team, who have proved they can win in all manner of ways in what is now a compelling case for automatic promotion, if not a title. And with Farke going for it in a different, specific way, his reward was a 2-1 stoppage time victory that for the first time created some real daylight between first-placed Leeds and Burnley in third, and a whole stadium of light between the Whites and Sunderland.

     

     

     

    Gaps of seven and 10 points respectively feel significant with 13 games remaining and that much was reflected in the celebrations, both wild and calculated, in the late stages of the most dramatic night.

     

    There was little hint of the madness to come in the first half an hour or so. Illan Meslier was presented with an immediate chance to put the previous meeting and its late drama behind him, pulling off a solid double save from Jobe Bellingham and Patrick Roberts as Sunderland worked a nice opportunity inside the opening two minutes. The risk Dan Ballard took to run the ball out under pressure from centre-half and the way Sunderland flooded forward to crash the box was an indicator that an opposition side had come to actually play.

     

    Yet that was as much as they were allowed to play for half an hour as Leeds set about them with a real intensity, winning the ball back, winning corners but creating little in the way of actual chances.

     

    Unsurprisingly given the stakes, there was bite to the game and a little needle. Trai Hume thundered into Manor Solomon, getting the ball, leaving the winger in pain and throwing some scornful word or another over his shoulder at his prone opponent. Brenden Aaronson, of all people, went in late on Enzo Le Fee and bent the Frenchman’s leg unnaturally. And wind-up merchant Luke O’Nien did what he does, tangling unnecessarily with Dan James after the whistle. The game’s first yellow, though, went to Ao Tanaka for a challenge of impossible-to-determine contact on Dan Neil.

     

     

     

    And from that free-kick, which came on the edge of the Sunderland box after a spell of Leeds pressure, came the opener. It was entirely against the run of play and entirely avoidable. A ball over the top took Junior Firpo out of the equation and left Wilson Isidor in a one-v-one tussle with Ethan Ampadu. The striker rolled his man, who tried in vain to hold him, and rolled the ball in off the far post.

     

    The rest of the half bore little but frustration for Leeds. James had a tame shot saved and a header cleared from the goalmouth and O’Nien was back at it, holding Meslier down and drawing Joe Rodon into a confrontation.

     

    Farke joked before the game about Rodon never wanting to start attacks because he’s such a defender by nature but it was the centre-back storming forward with the ball and screaming at his team-mates over the lack of options as half-time approached with the score 1-0. For all their play and time spent in the Sunderland half, Leeds had precious little to show for it and the prevailing feeling was that Sunderland were doing a job on them.

     

    The second half began as the first had with Meslier being tested. Hume ran onto Patrick Roberts’ clever curling scoop and volleyed straight into the keeper’s arms. Once again Leeds took over. They pressed high, they won the ball in good areas and kept the pressure on. Once again they struggled to create clear-cut chances from open play or a plethora of corners and free-kicks. The officials decided not to award penalties for a rugby challenge on Ao Tanaka and a debatable handball shout.

     

     

     

    With 20 minutes to go it was decision time for Farke. Nelson Mandela once said ‘may your choices reflect your hopes, not your fears’ and on 71 minutes Farke turned to his bench as per usual. But his hope was for something different to the Leeds norm. On came central midfielder Joe Rothwell and centre-back Pascal Struijk, one with set-piece brilliance in his boots and the other with size and strength in the air.

     

    Seven minutes later Rothwell curled in a beautiful free-kick and Struijk rose to glance home a header to make it 1-1. It was everything Farke had hoped for. But he wanted more. Having lined up Largie Ramazani and Mateo Joseph immediately prior to the goal, Farke had a decision to make. Stick or twist? Consolidate the point with Josuha Guilavogui and Sam Byram or go for the throat with the attackers primed and ready. On came Ramazani and Joseph.

     

    The duo played their part in keeping Leeds up the pitch and getting the ball into areas where a chance might be created. Leeds had played so much football in the second half that it asked for a huge physical investment from the visitors. Jayden Bogle and James on the right relentlessly ran at Sunderland and probed for openings. The ball just kept coming back towards the men in red and white. By stoppage time they were punting the ball clear or simply into touch and hoping for a final whistle that, due to their own earlier time wasting, was not yet to come.

     

    On and on Leeds pressed, camping in the Black Cats’ half and though the ball refused to drop on so many occasions, Sunderland finally ran out of lives. Rothwell’s corner from the right came all the way to Ramazani on the left and he shanked the ball right back to the taker. Rothwell shaped to cross with his right, decided to drop the shoulder and bring the ball onto his weaker foot and curled the ball beautifully to the back post where, inevitably, Struijk got up to head in a winner. Elland Road became the Stadium of Noise. Farke, his staff and substitutes danced on the pitch.

     

     

     

    It had been a pugnacious affair and even the full-time celebrations had a hint of ugliness and confrontation but, like the game, it just about stayed within acceptable bounds. As Sunderland went off, Farke, his players and his staff gathered in a huddle and deliberately, collectively recognised the importance of the moment.

    After the game Farke put the credit squarely on the shoulders of his players but he too must accept his fair share. For a substitution to work out that spectacularly says something. But for a team to persist in a plan with such patience says even more. It was Farkeball that exhausted Sunderland and kept the ball moving into the right areas, at the right times, to earn the set-pieces from which the goals came.

     

    It was a night to remember, if you stayed to the brilliant end.

  • Georgia Received Good News This Weekend From Multiple Star Players

    Georgia Received Good News This Weekend From Multiple Star Players

     

    Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart received a boost over the weekend. The Dawgs are preparing to host multiple star recruits in the coming months.

     

    As Georgia plans for the 2026 recruits to make a visit to Athens, Ga., Smart already has five players committed for the upcoming college football recruiting class. The current group is headlined by a trio of four stars in safety Zech Fort, wide receiver Vance Spafford and tight end Lincoln Keyes, based on 247Sports’ rankings.

     

    According to On3.com’s Jake Reuse, Georgia received plans for official visits from three top recruits in the 2026 class. Four-star linebacker Nick Abrams out of Owings, Mills, Md., is among those who is heading to Athens on March 15.

     

    Georgia Football News

    Georgia coach Kirby Smart leads his team onto the field. Joshua L. Jones /

    Four-star offensive tackle Ekene Ogboko, who 247Sports has ranked inside their top-25 for all 2026 recruits, out of Garner, N.C., will visit Georgia. Finally, Ogboko’s teammate Ebenezer Ewetade is also heading to Athens. Ewetade is a three-star pass rusher in the 2026 recruiting class.

     

    Abrams labeled Georgia’s ability to build “one of the greatest defenses” as a strong selling point. Georgia will look to fight off a number of top programs in pursuit of Abrams, including SEC foes like the Alabama Crimson Tide.

     

    “Over the years Georgia has built not only one of the best programs in the nation but one of the greatest defenses,” Abrams told On3.com’s Steve Wiltfong in an interview on Saturday. “A defense where linebackers thrive in.

     

    “They put guys in the league and that’s something you can’t ignore. I would be foolish not visit and see more of what [defensive coordinator] Coach (Glenn) Schumann is talking about.”

     

     

  • Texas QB Arch Manning Rejects ‘Visit’ to Major College Football Campus

    Texas QB Arch Manning Rejects ‘Visit’ to Major College Football Campus

     

     

    After joining the Texas Longhorns in 2023, quarterback Arch Manning instantly became one of the biggest names in all of college football.

     

    Whether it was for his play or his relation to NFL legends Peyton and Eli, Arch Manning was the top prospect in the class of 2023 (247Sports). He received many different offers from major college football programs across the country, but the top three contending teams came down to Texas, the Georgia Bulldogs and the Alabama Crimson Tide.

     

    Now, with Quinn Ewers leaving for the 2025 NFL draft, Arch Manning is expected to take over under center to begin the 2025 season. This has only raised his popularity and the hype surrounding him.

     

    Texas Longhorns QB Arch Manning.

    Texas Longhorns QB Arch Manning. Jerome

    In an online interview with Sprung that was posted on TikTok, Arch Manning revealed some problems he has been dealing with on campus. He was then asked if it might be different at smaller schools before the quarterback admitted that he had to reject a “visit” to Alabama due to his popularity.

     

    “It’s like my buddies who go to Alabama, they want me to come visit,” Arch Manning said. “I don’t know if that’s the best idea. Tuscaloosa. But Austin is nice. You can go to parts of it where you can kind of get away, and nobody knows about football. You’re just another guy.”

     

    Ultimately, Arch Manning chose Texas over Alabama and Georgia, crediting coach Steve Sarkisian for helping him come to a decision.

     

    “I can relate to [Sarkisian] because he’s younger,” Arch Manning told 247Sports in 2021. “It seems like we’re friends almost. I like him a lot. He’d be a cool guy to get to play for. Hopefully, he doesn’t get too many job offers and stays there. He’s a good guy. I really like everyone I’ve met and have enjoyed building relationships and meeting different guys.”

     

    The Arch Manning era for the Longhorns will begin on Saturday, August 30, when they face the Ohio State Buckeyes in a Cotton Bowl rematch.

     

     

  • Lions free agent profile: Will Khalil Dorsey be back?

    Lions free agent profile: Will Khalil Dorsey be back?

     

    Lions’ cornerback and special teams ace Khalil Dorsey was having a strong year before an injury cut things short. Did he show enough to be brought back for 2025?

     

    Next up in our Detroit Lions free agent series we have cornerback and special teams ace Khalil Dorsey.

     

    Khalil Dorsey

    Expectations heading into 2024

    When Lions coach Dan Campbell talks about players buying into the culture that has been cultivated in Detroit, Dorsey is a great example of what he is talking about. Since signing to the practice squad back in December of 2022, Dorsey has steadily improved during his time with the organization.

     

    After the 2022 season wrapped up, he signed a futures deal to stick around with the Lions. In 2023, he carved out a role on special teams—logging 295 snaps on the year, with another 80 snaps as a reserve cornerback.

     

    With newcomers like cornerbacks Carlton Davis III, Amik Robertson, and rookie Terrion Arnold being added to the room, the expectation was for Dorsey to compete for a depth role at corner, while also serving as a core member of all special teams units.

     

    Actual role in 2024

    Note: PFF grades combine regular season and playoffs and reflect a minimum 20% snaps at that position

     

    14 games (1 start)— 73 defensive snaps/270 special teams snaps. 8 tackles, 1 pass breakup, 5 special teams tackles.

    PFF defense grade: 47.7 (did not meet minimum snap criteria for defensive rankings)

    PFF run defense grade: 54.6

    PFF tackling grade: 62.9

    PFF coverage grade: 46.8

    PFF special teams grade: 70.2

     

    Before injuries took their toll all over the Lions’ defense, Dorsey’s role was very similar to his 2023 season. In year two with Detroit, he established himself as a certified special teams demon—particularly as a gunner on the punt coverage unit.

     

    “Dorsey I think is, if not the best, one of the best gunners in this league,” Campbell said this year. “He’s always causing some type of disruption or a penalty.”

     

    Along with All-Pro punter Jack Fox, Dorsey and the rest of that unit were frequently able to help the Lions flip the field on opponents when they opted to kick it away. Thanks in part to Dorsey, Fox set the NFL record for net punting yard average (46.2).

     

    Defensively, Dorsey reprised his depth role, and earned one start during a Week 13 win over the Chicago Bears. Unfortunately, Dorsey suffered a fractured leg in Week 15 that ended his season early, and further complicated the already dreadful injury-situation for the Lions’ defense.

     

    “Yeah, I mean, obviously crushed for him,” said special teams coordinator Dave Fipp. “I mean, this guy’s an incredible player for us, obviously. Just watching the film this morning, even a rep of him on punt return holding up one of their gunners, did a great job for us. But he was a great player for us all year long obviously.”

     

    Outlook for 2025

    Contract status: Unrestricted free agent

     

    Pros of re-signing

    Dorsey is a proven commodity on special teams, and at 26 years old, someone who I still believe has some untapped upside as a defensive back. At the very least, if Dorsey can fully recover from the aforementioned leg injury, the Lions would know what they are getting from a productivity standpoint. A player that is a proven difference-maker on special teams, and someone that can provide quality depth at a position that seemingly always has a high attrition rate.

     

    Cons of re-signing

    This is another low-risk decision that Lions general manager Brad Holmes will have to make in the near-future. It is clear that the Lions like what Dorsey brings to the table, but could his roster spot go to someone who could potentially offer more on defense? These are a lot of the decisions that Holmes and his staff will have to make when filling out the last dozen or so spots on the roster.

     

    Is there interest from both sides?

    There hasn’t been anything said from Dorsey’s party, but given the role he has carved out for himself in Detroit, I have to imagine he would like to be back in 2025.

     

    Cost?

    In all likelihood, this would fall under the scope of a veteran-minimum salary, although it’s certainly possible Dorsey gets a small bump after a strong special teams year. Of course, that may depend on the status of his injury, too. Still, we’re talking somewhere likely in the $1-2 million range.

     

     

    This is another player that I believe has done enough to earn a shot to compete for his prior role. Likely nothing will be guaranteed for him come August, but Dorsey worked himself from the practice squad to a core piece of this team when given the opportunity. And for a coaching staff that prides itself on competition being a major driving force behind their success, I would think a player like Dorsey will get the chance to continue his development.