
Texas Longhorns QB Quinn Ewers was selected by the Miami Dolphins in Round 7 of the 2025 NFL Draft last weekend, suffering an unanticipated slide down the board.
Ewers would end up being the final quarterback taken in the draft, leaving many to wonder if his NFL future holds.
But according to his new head coach Mike McDaniel, Ewers is a tremendous fit with the Dolphins and could have an advantage as a rookie heading into camp thanks to his pre-existing knowledge and experience with Miami's offensive scheme.
"That is beneficial because you can evaluate a lot of nuances that you typically have to forecast," McDaniel said following the selection. "I think one of the things that gives him an advantage as a rookie, just getting started, is that overlap. I think the way that he orchestrates the offense from the motion timing and really anticipating things, there's a fit there, so we're excited to get him in the program and start working."
Ewers, of course, spent three seasons with Texas throwing for over 9,000 yards and 68 touchdowns, and finishing third in school history in both categories behind Colt McCoy and Sam Ehlinger.
And as McDaniel points out, he did so in an offense under Steve Sarkisian that is structured very similarly to what the Dolphins like to do. Whether it is the pre-snap motions, the timing, the route concepts, the protections, or anything in between, what Miami does is nearly identical to what Ewers has been doing with the Longhorns over the last three seasons.
That said, that is not the only reason that the Dolphins were drawn to Ewers either. According to Miami GM Chris Grier, they were also impressed with what Sarkisian had to say about his intangibles, such as his toughness, leadership, and competitive drive.
“Mike [McDaniel] and I, we met him the year before at the Texas workout and we spent some time with him,” Grier said after the draft. “We talked to coach Sarkisian about him, and Sark really likes and was high, and was talking about him playing through the injuries this year, which affected his play a little bit. But he talked about his toughness, his mental toughness, pushing through with the injury, the expectations, all the pressure with [Arch] Manning there coming in. He loved his competitiveness, how he plays, and how his teammates respond to him... He was someone that we always had an eye on looking at, and the opportunity at that point in the draft, it just made sense for us."
Time will tell whether or not Ewers gets his chance to shine in Miami.
But given the injury history of Tua Tagovailoa, the track record of backup Zach Wilson, and the familiarity that Ewers has with the concepts of the Dolphins offense, he should at least have an opportunity to prove himself.
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The hits keep coming to the Wisconsin Badgers 2026 recruiting class, and the biggest loss yet could still be on its way. After the Badgers only two scholarship offensive line recruits for next year de-committed this week, another potential flip may be in the works. On3 vice president of recruiting Steve Wiltfong issued a formal prediction Wednesday that Wisconsin's four-star wide receiver commit Jayden Petit will flip to the No. 8 Oklahoma Sooners. Petit took an official visit to Oklahoma over the summer and then another in-season visit with the Sooners last month. Wiltfong believes that recruiting push is trending toward a full flip. Petit is rated as a Top 100 player and a Top 15 wide receiver in the country by 247 Sports. He had a record-setting senior season in Southwest Florida, which only helped attract further recruiting interest despite his ongoing committment to Wisconsin. Related: Wisconsin Badgers prized WR commit finishes regular season with insane stat line He is one of the Badgers highest-rated recruits in the 2026 cycle, and losing him would be a major hit to a recruiting class that is already on the decline. Petit and running back Amari Latimer are Wisconsin's only four-star recruits committed for next year, and both have received strong interest from other programs. Wisconsin has one other wide receiver committed for 2026 in three-star prospect Zion Legree from Niceville, Florida.
Aaron Rodgers has always been a tough quarterback. He has dealt with several injuries throughout the course of his career, but he's always done everything he could to see the field. That's no different now that he's with the Pittsburgh Steelers and dealing with a fracture in his left (non-throwing) wrist. Rodgers injured himself against the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday, but he's already talking about trying to get back for Pittsburgh's Week 12 contest against the Chicago Bears. In fact, he revealed on Wednesday that he will try things out at practice before this week is over. "It feels better than it did Sunday, that's for sure," Rodgers said Wednesday afternoon, according to Brooke Pryor of ESPN. "... Was thankful to get today to work with [head athletic trainer Gabe Amponsah] and just focus on rehab for today. Trying to get back on the field tomorrow and see what I can do." Aaron Rodgers going to test out his wrist injury on Thursday Rodgers wants to be able to play against the Bears, a team he has owned throughout the years, but he's also saying that he'll be cautious. Remember, he is just weeks away from turning 42. A fractured wrist would be tough to play with at 24. As anyone who has ever gotten older would attest, things tend to hurt even more as you age. Throw in the fact that Rodgers is playing perhaps the most physical sport on Earth, and it makes sense that he does have a very specific standard that he must meet before he decides if he can play — and it has nothing to do with pain. "It's a safety thing," Rodgers said. Rodgers has played in 29 regular-season games against the Bears in his NFL career. Including two playoff wins, he boasts a 26-5 record against them. Since he last squared off with Chicago as the quarterback of the Green Bay Packers in 2022, he had won nine games in a row against the Bears. If he feels he can keep himself safe on Sunday, you can bet he's going to try to play.
Jayden Reed’s anticipated return to the practice field for the Green Bay Packers will have to wait a little longer. Despite some growing hope earlier this week that the dynamic wide receiver could begin the next phase of his recovery, head coach Matt LaFleur confirmed Wednesday that Reed will not open his 21-day practice window yet. “He’s not practicing today,” LaFleur said ahead of Sunday’s critical matchup against the Minnesota Vikings. When pressed for a clearer timeline on the second-year standout, who remains on injured reserve with collarbone and foot injuries, LaFleur deferred to the medical staff. “I don’t know. As soon as medical clears him, he’ll be out there,” LaFleur said. “I know he’s excited to get back. As am I.” The optimism had spiked in recent days. On Monday, LaFleur indicated there was a chance Reed and/or rookie running back MarShawn Lloyd could start their practice windows this week. Reed himself fueled the excitement Tuesday by sharing a photo of himself dressed in full uniform on social media. Those plans, however, are now on hold. Reed’s surgically repaired foot seems to have healed satisfactorily, but the collarbone—fractured on a diving attempt during the first half of Green Bay’s Week 2 victory over the Washington Commanders—still needs additional time. For a wide receiver whose job involves regular physical contact and the risk of landing hard on the shoulder, the medical staff is requiring clear imaging evidence that the bone is strong enough before green-lighting a return. The cautious approach echoes the Packers’ handling of Aaron Rodgers’ similar collarbone injury in 2017, when the former quarterback sat out seven games while waiting for full healing. Nearly 10 weeks removed from the injury and having already missed eight contests, Reed could still require another one to two weeks before doctors are comfortable clearing him for football activities. That timeline keeps a potential return for the Thanksgiving night clash with the Detroit Lions or the following week against the Chicago Bears realistically in play. Before the injury, Reed had established himself as Green Bay’s top receiving weapon. He paced the team in receiving yards in both 2023 and 2024, and in the two games he played this season while managing the foot issue, he recorded three receptions for 45 yards and a touchdown. The Green Bay Packers will continue their Week 12 preparations without their leading wideout on the practice field, with LaFleur and the organization prioritizing full recovery over a rushed comeback.
The fourth-ranked Arizona Wildcats are putting a strong resume together and it is just the third week of the college basketball season. After riding freshman Koa Peat's sensational debut to an opening-night win over then-No. 3 Florida, the Wildcats added another impressive win on Wednesday night with a 71-67 victory at No. 3 UConn. Although Arizona led by as many as 13 in the second half, a 17-5 run from the Huskies made it a one-point game with 4:41 to play. UConn even held a 64-63 lead with just over a minute to play before Arizona took charge and accomplished something rarely seen in the sport. Arizona joins exclusive list after latest win over top-three opponent According to ESPN's Jeff Borzello, Arizona (5-0) is just the third team in AP poll history to have multiple wins over top-three opponents in its first five games of the season and the first since Kansas in the 1989-90 season (h/t ESPN Research). As Borzello noted, UConn was without leading scorer Tarris Reed Jr., who was sidelined with an ankle injury. While that certainly was a tough break for UConn in a top-five matchup, Arizona still had to take advantage and it did just that. Although the Wildcats were terrible from long-range (2-of-10), they outrebounded the Huskies, 43-23, and outscored them, 42-24, in the paint. Senior guard Jaden Bradley led the way with 21 points (6-of-13 FG), including this clutch layup to extend Arizona's lead to three with 16.3 seconds left. The freshman Peat was not far behind with 16 points (7-of-14 FG) and 12 rebounds as Arizona appeared to be the aggressor for much of the game. Arizona continues to ace tough nonconference schedule Wednesday night marked the third of five scheduled ranked matchups prior to the start of Big 12 play. Along with wins over Florida and UConn, the Wildcats also took down then-No. 15 UCLA, 69-65, on Friday. The schedule lets up through the end of November, but back-to-back games against No. 22 Auburn (Dec. 6) and No. 11 Alabama (Dec. 13) will provide two more tests for Arizona before a grueling Big 12 slate takes shape in January. Arizona may not be the top team in the country at the moment, but if it continues to pile up signature wins and handle tough road environments like it did on Wednesday night, it will only strengthen its case.
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