Boise State is only Group of Five team ranked in preseason poll. Are they losing respect?New Foto - Boise State is only Group of Five team ranked in preseason poll. Are they losing respect?

Spencer Danielson is glad hisBoise Stateteam is back in the conversation, "which it should be." Following their first College Football Playoff appearance, theBroncosare No. 25 in thepreseason US LBM Coaches Poll, the first time they will start the season ranked since 2018. "It's awesome you know that people or writers or coaches think that we're going to be good. We should be," Danielson told USA TODAY Sports. "It's Boise State." But the Broncos' spot and admission reveals a noticeable fact about the Top 25: not only are they the last team in the poll, but are the only Group of Five team in it. That comes a year after no Group of Five teams started the season ranked, only the fifth time in the 35-year history USA TODAY Sports has administered the coaches poll. Which begs the question: Are the non-power schools not getting enough respect, in a world that is becoming far less catered toward them? It wasn't long ago when Boise State and others annually occupied higher spots in the preseason poll. In 2010, the Broncos started at No. 5 and TCU and Utah, then members of the Mountain West, were No. 7 and No. 24, respectively, marking the only time three Group of Five teams started the season ranked in consecutive years. In 2011, Boise State was seventh and the Horned Frogs were 15th. Since then, it's become rare for schools outside the power conferences to be ranked high in the preseason. Boise State in 2013 (19th), Houston in 2016 (13th) and Cincinnati in 2021 (No. 10) are the only times Group of Five teams have ranked in the top 20. After 14 consecutive seasons from 2000-13 of being represented in the poll, the non-powers have been left out in 2014 and 2024. It's not like Group of Five teams aren't doing bad either. At least one of them finished in the final top 25 in 33 of the 35 past seasons, and multiple were in 32 of them. So what happened? Danielson has seen this change unfold being with the Broncos since 2017, starting as a graduate assistant and rising to interim head coach during the 2023 season and then getting job permanently. He cited the impact of the transfer portal as a key factor. One thing you'll notice about those teams that crashed the BCS party were they were teams built on roster retention. Nowadays, successful Group of Five teams often get stripped with standout players getting lucrative offers to play for Power Four teams. "I think back with Boise State years ago, where it's like they would have these teams that would be really successful, and then you return all your players, right? So you're ranked in the top 10, top five, because of that," he said. "I think the transfer portal has something to do with that." It's worth noting many names that heavily populated the polls – Brigham Young, TCU, Utah, Houston, Central Florida and Cincinnati – all leveled up the power conferences. The Cinderella darlings are now with the big boys. Boise State is moving to the Pac-12 in 2026, but it's no longer considered a power conference. And the big boys dominate the 2025 preseason poll. Led by No. 1 Texas, the SEC makes up four of the top nine spots and nine in the Top 25, with the Big Ten owning six spots. The SEC nearly had 10 in the poll. Oklahoma had the most points of teams not making the Top 25. TheSoonerswere 25 points behind Boise State. Had their positions flipped, it would've meant the preseason poll didn't include a school from outside the power conferences in consecutive seasons for the first time since 1995-96. Even though the Broncos lost Heisman Trophy runner-up Ashton Jeanty, Danielson believes the success of last season is why the Broncos made the list. He'll congratulate his team about making it because it hasn't happened in seven years, but remind them "heavy is the crown." As the lone Group of Five team ranked, the Broncos have an early edge toward securing the automatic bid into the playoff should they win the Mountain West title again. But Danielson knows it doesn't guarantee anything. Last season, Boise State went from unranked to finishing No. 9, its highest spot in the final since 2011. Meanwhile, 13 teams in the 2024 preseason poll finished unranked. Danielson recalled after Boise State lost to Oregon in the second game of the season, "everybody knew we probably can't drop another one." They Broncose didn't en route to securing the No. 3 seed in the playoff by finishing ahead of Big 12 champion Arizona State and ACC champion Clemson in the final playoff rankings. However, the preseason poll illustrates the uphill battle the Group of Five teams have to prove they are worthy of national recognition, while Power Four teams will continue to fill up the rankings. Danielson is aware how strong of an impression his team has to make, even at Boise State where "there's always high expectations." "Group of Five, probably you got to lose less, right? It's just the reality of what you see how college football is," he said. For now, the Broncos are still carrying the flag for Group of Five teams, as they have done for 20 years. But while they present optimism for the level, there are plenty of teams that are hoping to take their place. Memphis, Army, Tulane, Navy, UNLV and Buffalo all received votes in the preseason poll. Others could get in the mix, including South Florida, which hosts Boise State in Week 1. "I think there's a lot of really good teams out there," Danielson said. "There's a lot of really good Power Four teams. There's a lot of really good Group of Five teams, but there's only room for 25 seats right now, and that's going to ebb and flow. "Every single one of us have an opportunity to play in the College Football Playoff. I think as long as that is always the case, that's what makes college football amazing." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Boise State made preseason poll. But is Group of Five getting respect?

Boise State is only Group of Five team ranked in preseason poll. Are they losing respect?

Boise State is only Group of Five team ranked in preseason poll. Are they losing respect? Spencer Danielson is glad hisBoise Stateteam is ba...
Athletics' Nick Kurtz 'shocked' to be MLB rookie sensation a year after collegeNew Foto - Athletics' Nick Kurtz 'shocked' to be MLB rookie sensation a year after college

WASHINGTON —Nick Kurtz's dominance has been so startlingly sudden, so consistent and enduring that it's challenging to pinpoint exactly when theAthleticsrealized just what they had on their hands. It'd be understandable if that moment came in spring training, when the 6-5, 240-pound Kurtz showed up just seven months after he was drafted fourth overall out of Wake Forest and immediately displayed a mindset beyond his years, and a plate approach more suited to a player a decade into his major league career. It'd be obvious if that ah-ha sequence came July 25, when Kurtz became the first rookie in major league history tohit four home runs in a game, a 6-for-6 night in which he also tied the major league record with 19 total bases. Or perhaps by month's end, when Kurtz had tallied 25 extra-base hits, one shy of Hall of Famer Jimmie Foxx's franchise record set in 1932, earning him American League rookie and player of the month honors. For Brent Rooker, though, the jaw dropped for good over two nights in June, when his young teammate's greatest attributes – the gorgeous swing, the inner calm, the prodigious power – came together in a manner that turns bad ballclubs good. The Athletics – housed in Sacramento for the moment – might have been swept in four games by the Houston Astros if not for Kurtz. He hit a pair of walk-off home runs in that four-game series, coming off Astros relief aces Bryan Abreu and Josh Hader, moonshots that sent thousands of fans gleefully into the Yolo County night. "He was good before that," Rooker, the A's two-time All-Star outfielder, tells USA TODAY Sports, "but everybody realized how good he could be. Those were two of the better relievers in the entire league. He had great at-bats against them in crucial situations and hit two home runs to win two games. "As impressive as he was prior to that, those two nights kind of shined a light on how special he is." How special? Special enough to debut April 23 yet still post 23 homers by early August, to go along with a .307 average, 1.035 ERA and 61 RBIs, leading all rookies. Special enough to mark that epic four-homer night in Houston (the kid doesn't like the Astros, it seems) not as an apex but rather the midpoint of a 20-game heater in which he batted .480 with nine homers and a 1.575 OPS. And special enough to earn the esteem of a young yet salty clubhouse with his quiet yet significant presence. "The joy of all of it," says A's manager Mark Kotsay, "is the humility that he shows day in and day out." It would be easy for Kurtz to carry the traits of an entitled young baseball bro. In short, he's always been elite, even after he left the snowy climes of Lancaster, Pennsylvania in search of greater competition. Kurtz made enough of a splash to earn a spot on Team USA's 12-and-under team in 2015, a squad that won eight of nine games to claim a WBSC World Cup title in Taiwan. Kurtz was a slugger and also the top pitcher on that team, but it was as much networking opportunity as it was youth baseball nirvana. A handful of teammates went on to attend Baylor School, a college prep boarding school and hothouse for baseball development in Tennessee. As Kurtz schlepped through the uncertain weather patterns of Central Pennsylvania in spring, his pals' recruiting efforts finally paid off. "I was playing in the snow and bad weather in Pennsylvania," says Kurtz, "so I decided maybe going south was the best thing for me as a player. It just kind of worked out that way." And what a squad.Christian Moorewent on to star at Tennessee and was chosen four slots behind Kurtz in the 2024 draft; he also made hismajor league debutthis season, for the Los Angeles Angels. Infielder Henry Godbout went on to Virginia, was drafted in the second round in July and signed with the Boston Red Sox. In his junior year, Kurtz said, almost the entire lineup was committed to Atlantic Coast or Southeastern conference schools. Kurtz went to Wake Forest, a school better known for its"pitching lab,"yet whose rep for churning out sluggers is about to grow significantly. It was there that Kurtz, under associate head coach Bill Cilento and assistant Matthew Wessinger, took both his mechanics and approach to a higher level. "That's stayed true from my freshman year in college," says Kurtz, "to where I am today." By his junior year, Kurtz's statistics were predictably video game variety – a .531 on-base percentage and 22 homers in 54 games, and the A's snagged Kurtz fourth overall, two picks after teammateChase Burns, a right-handed pitcher, was selected by Cincinnati. Yet consider this: Barely a year later, Kurtz has already hit one more home run in the big leagues (in just 75 games) than he did his senior season at Wake Forest. How has Kurtz made the game's highest level seem as simple as a weekend series at Duke? He points to the A's most recent draft pick – left-hander Jamie Arnold, chosen 11thoverall out of Florida State – as an example of how the college game is, perhaps more than ever, an express lane to prepare young players for the big leagues. "You see more and more guys getting called up earlier than you've ever seen before," says Kurtz. "More kids, very talented guys are going to college, especially with NIL – more guys are getting to school. "We picked Jamie Arnold this year. I faced him many times and that's as pro-ready an arm I've seen. I think he's one of the best. Every school in the SEC, ACC, they might have a guy or two like that. "The advancements we've made internally at the school have prepared all of us." The A's will certainly vouch for that. Kurtz is now the overwhelming favorite to earn AL Rookie of the Year honors, but until he suffered a fractured forearm, A's shortstop Jacob Wilson – drafted in 2023, debuted in 2024,an All-Star in 2025– was the choice. "Those guys, it seems like they fly through the minor leagues and are ready to compete at the big league level," says A's catcher Shea Langeliers, drafted ninth overall out of Baylor by Atlanta in 2019. "The college game is advancing and those kids are more mature. "The talent level is getting closer to the minor league level, so you're almost playing minor league baseball in college." Yet Kurtz, Langeliers says, is different. "Seeing him for the first time in spring training, being around him, thinking of when I was 22, compared to where he's at at 22, it's just a massive difference," he says. "Maturity-wise, how he sees the game, how quickly he's adaptable and adjustable, it's been really impressive." Kotsay, in his fourth season as A's manager, hints at an extremely high ceiling for Kurtz based on the dispatch with which he adjusts to pitchers. Kurtz's 11.4% walk rate is well above average, but as he matures as a hitter, he should cut into a 29.4% K rate. "It's really eye-opening to see a young player make adjustments almost pitch-to-pitch in an at-bat, and he's got that ability, which is really special," says Kotsay. "When we talk about classifying big league hitters, I always say, guys in the Hall of Fame make adjustments pitch-to-pitch. "Guys that are All-Stars make adjustments at-bat to at-bat, and guys that are everyday players, it can be a game or a series before the adjustment's made. "I think he's leaning on that top one - where he's got a knack to make an adjustment pitch-to-pitch." Kurtz is enjoying a big week in the Mid-Atlantic – he had roughly 40 family and friends roll down from Lancaster to Nationals Park; and no, despite Kurtz's "Big Amish" nickname teammates bestowed upon him, they did not travel by horse and buggy. A larger throng is expected this weekend at Baltimore's Camden Yards, where Kurtz attended countless games as a kid. Success came quickly then and, somehow, it's coming even faster now. "I would say I'm a little shocked, surprised," says Kurtz. "I knew I was a good hitter, but having a really good rookie year is pretty cool to see." And there's still two more months for Kurtz to expand what seems to be a limitless horizon. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Athletics' Nick Kurtz making MLB history just a year after college

Athletics' Nick Kurtz 'shocked' to be MLB rookie sensation a year after college

Athletics' Nick Kurtz 'shocked' to be MLB rookie sensation a year after college WASHINGTON —Nick Kurtz's dominance has been ...
Japan deploys its first F-35B fighter jets to bolster defenses in the southNew Foto - Japan deploys its first F-35B fighter jets to bolster defenses in the south

TOKYO (AP) —Japan'sfirst three F-35B stealth fighter jets arrived Thursday at an air base in the south of the country, its latest move to fortify defensesas tensions in the region grow. The new arrivals are three of the four F-35Bs scheduled for deployment at the Nyutabaru Air Base in the Miyazaki prefecture. The fourth jet is set to arrive at a later date, the Air Self-Defense Force said. The jets, which have short take-off and vertical landing functions, are to operate from two Japanese helicopter carriers, the Izumo and the Kaga, that were modified to accommodate the F-35B. The Defense Ministry has said four more F-35Bs will be delivered to Nyutabaru by the end of March 2026. Japan considers China as a regional threat and has accelerated its military buildup on remote islands in the southwest. Japan is currently constructing a runway on a new air base on the island of Mageshima, 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of the Nyutabaru base, for F-35B flight exercises. However, the drills will have to be conducted at Nyutabaru until around 2030 due to construction delays, triggering protests from local residents concerned about aircraft noise. Japan plans to deploy a total of 42 Lockheed Martin F-35Bs and 105 of the conventional take-off and landing, or CTOL, F-35As, making the country the biggest F-35 user outside of the United States.

Japan deploys its first F-35B fighter jets to bolster defenses in the south

Japan deploys its first F-35B fighter jets to bolster defenses in the south TOKYO (AP) —Japan'sfirst three F-35B stealth fighter jets ar...
Kuwait oil minister says OPEC monitoring market, Trump remarks on Russian oilNew Foto - Kuwait oil minister says OPEC monitoring market, Trump remarks on Russian oil

KUWAIT (Reuters) -Kuwait's Oil Minister Tariq Al-Roumi said on Thursday that OPEC is closely monitoring global oil supply, demand trends, and U.S. President Donald Trump's recent remarks on Russian oil. "Through OPEC, we are monitoring the market in terms of supply and demand, and we are monitoring the U.S. President's statements," Al-Roumi told reporters, adding that he expects oil prices to be below $72 per barrel. The minister described the market as healthy, with demand growing at a moderate pace. Oil prices slid about 1% to an eight-week low on Wednesday after U.S. President Donald Trump's remarks about progress in talks with Moscow created uncertainty over whether the U.S. would impose further sanctions on Russia. Trump has threatened additional sanctions on Moscow if no moves are made to end the war in Ukraine. Washington imposed on Wednesday an additional 25% tariff on Indian goods, citing New Delhi's continued imports of Russian oil. (Reporting by Ahmed Hagagy, Writing by Ahmed ElimamEditing by Louise Heavens)

Kuwait oil minister says OPEC monitoring market, Trump remarks on Russian oil

Kuwait oil minister says OPEC monitoring market, Trump remarks on Russian oil KUWAIT (Reuters) -Kuwait's Oil Minister Tariq Al-Roumi sai...
Injuries shake up Wallabies' flyhalf options ahead of Rugby ChampionshipNew Foto - Injuries shake up Wallabies' flyhalf options ahead of Rugby Championship

SYDNEY (AP) —Tom Lynagh's concussion andNoah Lolesio's neck injury leaves utility Ben Donaldson, 35-year-old James O'Connor or rookie Tane Edmed as Australia's flyhalf options for Rugby Championship tests in South Africa. Rugby Australia unveiled a 35-man squad Thursday for the two tests against the World Cup champion Springboks, making injury-enforced changes to the squad that won thethird testin a 2-1 series loss to the British and Irish Lions. Edmed went on as a replacement in his one and only test to date — a narrow loss to Ireland last November — and wasn't in the Wallabies squad for the series against the Lions. O'Connor, a 64-test veteran who played for the Super Rugby-winning Crusaders in New Zealand last season, wasin the wider Wallabies squadpreparing for the Lions series but not selected for test matches. He hasn't played for Australia since 2022. Donaldson went on as a replacement for Lynagh in the third test after the 22-year-old playmaker sustained a concussion from an illegal tackle from Lions hooker Dan Sheehan that resulted in afour-game suspensionfor the Irishman. An injury to Jake Gordon has delayed veteran scrumhalf Nic White's international retirement. White, regular finisher Tate McDermott and uncapped Ryan Lonergan were the scrumhalves picked for the squad to take on South Africa in two tests on Aug. 16 in Johannesburg and Aug. 23 in Cape Town. Lonergan is one of three uncapped players in the squad, along with winger Corey Toole and former New Zealand All Blacks prop Aidan Ross, who joined the Queensland Reds from the Chiefs following the Super Rugby final. Backrower Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, who played in three tour games against the Lions but wasn't part of the Wallabies set up, has returned to the top squad. "It's pleasing to be able to keep the core of the group together, while also leaning on some depth and fresh bodies,:" Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt said. "We're very conscious of how difficult it is going to be, playing South Africa on their home turf over two consecutive weekends. "The group has made some positive steps throughout the start of the test season but we all know there is a lot of hard work ahead of us." ___ Australia squad: Forwards: Angus Bell, Nick Champion De Crespigny, Nick Frost, Langi Gleeson, Tom Hooper, Fraser McReight, Josh Nasser, Zane Nonggorr, Brandon Paenga-Amosa, Billy Pollard, Tom Robertson, Aidan Ross, Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, Will Skelton, James Slipper, Carlo Tizzano, Taniela Tupou, Rob Valetini, Jeremy Williams, Harry Wilson. Backs: Ben Donaldson, Tane Edmed, Josh Flook, Len Ikitau, Max Jorgensen, Andrew Kellaway, Ryan Lonergan, Tate McDermott, James O'Connor, Hunter Paisami, Dylan Pietsch, Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i, Corey Toole, Nic White, Tom Wright. ___ AP rugby:https://apnews.com/hub/rugby

Injuries shake up Wallabies' flyhalf options ahead of Rugby Championship

Injuries shake up Wallabies' flyhalf options ahead of Rugby Championship SYDNEY (AP) —Tom Lynagh's concussion andNoah Lolesio's ...
Frankfurt signs Japan winger Ritsu Doan for its Champions League returnNew Foto - Frankfurt signs Japan winger Ritsu Doan for its Champions League return

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Eintracht Frankfurt has signed Japanese winger Ritsu Doan to strengthen a squad depleted by the sale ofHugo Ekitikéas it prepares to return to the Champions League. Doan joins on a five-year contract from fellow German club Freiburg, where he was top scorer with 10 goals as the team placed fifth in the Bundesliga. "I'm very happy and honored to be here," Doan said in a translated video message to Frankfurt fans. "I can't wait to play in front of the supporters." Frankfurt is heading back to the Champions League this season after a third-place Bundesliga finish but will have a new-look attack after striker Ekitiké was sold to Liverpool for a fee of 69 million pounds ($93.5 million). The 27-year-old Doan will be expected to team up with another new signing for Ekitiké's center-forward role, ex-Mainz striker Jonathan Burkardt. Doan won the Dutch Cup with PSV Eindhoven in 2022 and has played 57 games for the Japanese national team. That includes all of its games at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar and a role in securing qualification for next year's World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico. Doan could make his Frankfurt debut Aug. 17 in a German Cup game against fifth-tier Engers. Frankfurt's first Bundesliga game of the season is six days later at home to Werder Bremen. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Frankfurt signs Japan winger Ritsu Doan for its Champions League return

Frankfurt signs Japan winger Ritsu Doan for its Champions League return FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Eintracht Frankfurt has signed Japanese wi...
The American musician sending microphones from Russia to the worldNew Foto - The American musician sending microphones from Russia to the world

TULA, Russia (Reuters) -From a small factory in Tula, a city south of Moscow, American musician David Arthur Brown exports Russian-made Soyuz microphones to Europe, the United States, China and beyond. At a time when sanctions are squeezing Russia's trade in commodities and technology, Brown's company is one of the many non-sanctioned businesses with foreign connections battling geopolitical headwinds to maintain ties between Russia and the West. But unlike multinationals such as Nestle, PepsiCo and Procter & Gamble that have chosen to continue operating in Russia while hundreds of others have exited the country, Soyuz, which means Union in English, represents a much smaller niche. With a team of about 60 workers, the company makes microphones by hand and from scratch at its two-storey Soviet-era factory in Tula, a city also known for spiced gingerbread "pryaniki" cookies, traditional water-heating samovars and arms production. "You would have to be crazy to go into this business because it's both a tiny market and an extremely crowded market," Brown told Reuters. "But I believed that we had a strategic advantage because Tula has both very highly skilled labour here, because of the arms industry, and lower salaries than Moscow because it's a regional city." Brown launched Soyuz in 2013 and the company's microphones, some designed to evoke the distinctive onion domes of Russian Orthodox churches, retail for thousands of dollars. Having loved using Soviet-made Oktava condenser microphones in 1990s Los Angeles, Brown wondered whether he could create a high-end microphone with Russian character that was equally as good as those of Austrian and German competitors. Brown, frontman of the band Brazzaville, was touring in Russia when a visit to Oktava's production site in Tula sparked a new ambition in him. "The West made tanks, Russians made tanks, the West made rockets, Russia made rockets, microphones, cameras, everything," Brown said. "It's drawing from a long, rich tradition, it's not just inventing something out of the air." Soyuz is not under sanctions, but all businesses operating in Russia have to contend with the barriers to trade that sanctions have erected, such as more complicated payment flows and circuitous trade routes through third countries to access the European market. Asked whether sanctions against Russia had affected Soyuz or its shipping, Brown said that any business had to deal with multiple challenges. "But the ones that are able to succeed are the ones that are able to remain flexible and find ways to continue their business," Brown said. "We stay out of politics completely. I'm not a diplomat. I'm not a politician. I'm just a singer and a mic designer," he said. "But of course, we all have to deal with the geopolitical realities that we live in." (Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Alexander Marrow;Editing by Alison Williams)

The American musician sending microphones from Russia to the world

The American musician sending microphones from Russia to the world TULA, Russia (Reuters) -From a small factory in Tula, a city south of Mos...

 

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