Home Sweet (Parents’) Home: The States Where Young Adults Haven’t Moved Out
You'd need to be living under a rock not to know how expensive housing has…
You'd need to be living under a rock not to know how expensive housing has…
Quinton de Kock became the second batter to score a century in IPL 2026 against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai on Thursday, April 16.
The Protean batter reached his ton from 53 balls, including seven fours and seven sixes, completing the landmark with a reverse-ramp off Xavier Bartlett. He was featuring in his first match of the season, having returned the starting line-up due to Rohit Sharma’s injury.
This is de Kock’s third century in the IPL, having previously scored one for Delhi Dardevils and one for Lucknow Super Giants.
It is also the second century of the tournament, after Sanju Samson’s ton for Chennai Super Kings against Delhi Capitals.
Published on Apr 16, 2026
Quinton de Kock became the second batter to score a century in IPL 2026 against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai on Thursday, April 16.
The Protean batter reached his ton from 53 balls, including seven fours and seven sixes, completing the landmark with a reverse-ramp off Xavier Bartlett. He was featuring in his first match of the season, having returned the starting line-up due to Rohit Sharma’s injury.
This is de Kock’s third century in the IPL, having previously scored one for Delhi Dardevils and one for Lucknow Super Giants.
It is also the second century of the tournament, after Sanju Samson’s ton for Chennai Super Kings against Delhi Capitals.
Published on Apr 16, 2026
Quinton de Kock became the second batter to score a century in IPL 2026 against…
Apr 14, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Los Angeles Angels designated hitter Jorge Soler (12) hits a solo home run in the first inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images Los Angeles Angels outfielder Jorge Soler’s suspension was reduced from seven to four games by Major League Baseball following his appeal, multiple media outlets reported on Wednesday.
Soler, 34, reportedly will begin serving his ban on Wednesday as Los Angeles plays the third contest of its four-game series against the host New York Yankees. He will remain out until Sunday when the Angels conclude a three-game set versus the visiting San Diego Padres.
Soler was suspended following a benches-clearing incident involving multiple players from the Atlanta Braves and Angels during their game on April 7.
Soler belted a two-run homer off Reynaldo Lopez in his first at-bat before the latter hit him with a pitch on his left hand in his next trip to the plate. Soler then took exception to a high and inside fifth-inning fastball that glanced off the glove of catcher Jonah Heim and bounced to the backstop.
Soler stared at Lopez for several seconds before jogging to the mound. Both players then squared up and began throwing punches, none of which appeared to land squarely, as players from both teams rushed in. Lopez fended Soler off with his glove and threw punches with his right hand, which still held the baseball.
Braves manager Walt Weiss ended up tackling Soler on the first base line to help break up the fracas.
Soler was the 2021 World Series MVP for the Braves and is now on his third different team since that brief stint, plus a return to Atlanta in 2024.
Lopez reached a settlement with MLB, reducing his suspension to five games.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Los Angeles Angels designated hitter Jorge Soler (12) hits a solo home run in the first inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images Los Angeles Angels outfielder Jorge Soler’s suspension was reduced from seven to four games by Major League Baseball following his appeal, multiple media outlets reported on Wednesday.
Soler, 34, reportedly will begin serving his ban on Wednesday as Los Angeles plays the third contest of its four-game series against the host New York Yankees. He will remain out until Sunday when the Angels conclude a three-game set versus the visiting San Diego Padres.
Soler was suspended following a benches-clearing incident involving multiple players from the Atlanta Braves and Angels during their game on April 7.
Soler belted a two-run homer off Reynaldo Lopez in his first at-bat before the latter hit him with a pitch on his left hand in his next trip to the plate. Soler then took exception to a high and inside fifth-inning fastball that glanced off the glove of catcher Jonah Heim and bounced to the backstop.
Soler stared at Lopez for several seconds before jogging to the mound. Both players then squared up and began throwing punches, none of which appeared to land squarely, as players from both teams rushed in. Lopez fended Soler off with his glove and threw punches with his right hand, which still held the baseball.
Braves manager Walt Weiss ended up tackling Soler on the first base line to help break up the fracas.
Soler was the 2021 World Series MVP for the Braves and is now on his third different team since that brief stint, plus a return to Atlanta in 2024.
Lopez reached a settlement with MLB, reducing his suspension to five games.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Los Angeles Angels designated hitter Jorge Soler (12)…
They say age comes for everyone eventually, and the 2026 edition of the Indian Premier League is proving that to be ruthlessly true. Rohit Sharma will miss Mumbai Indians’ clash against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, marking a rare occasion that the 38-year-old will be absent from the five-time champion’s top-order.
Rohit is not the only one facing time on the sidelines. The seemingly untiring Virat Kohli was forced to play as an Impact Player in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s match against Lucknow Super Giants, while M.S. Dhoni – the famed lynchpin of Chennai Super Kings’ middle-order – has missed the side’s first five matches of the season.
The stalwarts of a generation of the IPL are now being confronted with the realities of playing the tournament while not riding the conveyor belt of international cricket year-round.
According to Ramji Srinivasan, former India and Mumbai Indians strength and conditioning coach, the physical challenge of the IPL is primarily about rest and recovery. “The challenge is more on recovery than the fitness aspect,” he told Sportstar. “The fitness aspect is more about tiring and traveling from one place to another.
Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG. | Photo Credit: K. Murali Kumar
Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG. | Photo Credit: K. Murali Kumar
“The matches finish by 11:00-11:30PM, by the time they start from the ground, it will be around 12.30-1:00AM. The next morning, if they have to travel again, everything changes again. It’s about how you manage your body with proper recovery and nutrition,” Srinivasan said.
The challenge of dealing with a hectic schedule is one that becomes tougher with age. “After 30 and beyond, the body starts to slow down physiologically. It is natural. So, what they need to do is train smart rather than train hard,” Srinivasan said.
According to Srinivasan, age does have some benefit to doing so. “By this time you know your body better, when you need to push, when you need to pull yourself back, when you need to recover, what type of recovery you need to adhere to.
“What you are adhering to when you are in your 20s and early 30s may not be as pertinent now, you know. Your body is changing every year, and you need to adapt to a particular stimulus,” he explained.
“You need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.”Ramji Srinivasan
Srinivasan suggested a focus on cognitive and neuromuscular training, an approach he likens to that of a Formula One driver, which focuses on training the cognitive skills of the player.
“It’s all about the neural training pathway because cognition is what your eye perceives, and how your body reacts. For example, you see a ball trajectory coming in, how your body reacts to that particular impulse. It can be reactive or it can be proactive.
“You focus on how you train those muscle groups, the smaller and the finer muscle rather than the gross muscles. That is how you get precision, and they are the thing which loses the neural response in the long run if you don’t train them.”
An inevitable part of aging as a player is the arrival of injuries, as the likes of Rohit and Kohli are experiencing now. While niggles are unavoidable for top-level athletes, the focus, Srinivasan said, should be on being proactive about identifying the underlying causes and treating them quickly.
“The idea is that preventive medicine is better than curative, and if you cannot prevent it, your curative measure has to be quicker,” he said.
“Any sportsperson will have niggles, but you have to identify the contributing factors. When you are doing.your assessment and screening you will know there are probabilities, especially as you get older. So if it is a hamstring injury, why has it happened, is it because of dehydration, or because of lack of fitness, or because of overstretching?”
He also emphasised that there is no one-size-fits-all approach. The training methodology for players like Kohli or Rohit, who have recently stepped off the Test and T20I bandwagons but still play a single format, will have a different approach to a player like Dhoni, for whom IPL is the only remaining form of professional cricket.
Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS. | Photo Credit: Emmanual Yogini
Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS. | Photo Credit: Emmanual Yogini
“When you are young and robust, if you eat iron you will be able to digest it. In the thirties even if you eat food it won’t digest,” he explained with a laugh. “So you need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.
“There has to be progression in anything. Suddenly coming and sprinting it’s not going to help you however fit you are. When you are in a competition your body and mind responds differently to when you are training.
“The essence is that the professional needs to understand when you are in a competition there are a lot of things happening which are not happening during your training. So, the idea is to prepare yourself through the training, it’s a simulation.
“You cannot do that because there are so many variables. But being very close to the reality in your training module really helps. For example, when you are in your 20s, you may take two weeks to get into the groove. When you are in your 30s, it may take three weeks. When you are in your 40s, it may take a month and a half.”
Published on Apr 16, 2026
They say age comes for everyone eventually, and the 2026 edition of the Indian Premier League is proving that to be ruthlessly true. Rohit Sharma will miss Mumbai Indians’ clash against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, marking a rare occasion that the 38-year-old will be absent from the five-time champion’s top-order.
Rohit is not the only one facing time on the sidelines. The seemingly untiring Virat Kohli was forced to play as an Impact Player in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s match against Lucknow Super Giants, while M.S. Dhoni – the famed lynchpin of Chennai Super Kings’ middle-order – has missed the side’s first five matches of the season.
The stalwarts of a generation of the IPL are now being confronted with the realities of playing the tournament while not riding the conveyor belt of international cricket year-round.
According to Ramji Srinivasan, former India and Mumbai Indians strength and conditioning coach, the physical challenge of the IPL is primarily about rest and recovery. “The challenge is more on recovery than the fitness aspect,” he told Sportstar. “The fitness aspect is more about tiring and traveling from one place to another.
Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG. | Photo Credit: K. Murali Kumar
Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG. | Photo Credit: K. Murali Kumar
“The matches finish by 11:00-11:30PM, by the time they start from the ground, it will be around 12.30-1:00AM. The next morning, if they have to travel again, everything changes again. It’s about how you manage your body with proper recovery and nutrition,” Srinivasan said.
The challenge of dealing with a hectic schedule is one that becomes tougher with age. “After 30 and beyond, the body starts to slow down physiologically. It is natural. So, what they need to do is train smart rather than train hard,” Srinivasan said.
According to Srinivasan, age does have some benefit to doing so. “By this time you know your body better, when you need to push, when you need to pull yourself back, when you need to recover, what type of recovery you need to adhere to.
“What you are adhering to when you are in your 20s and early 30s may not be as pertinent now, you know. Your body is changing every year, and you need to adapt to a particular stimulus,” he explained.
“You need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.”Ramji Srinivasan
Srinivasan suggested a focus on cognitive and neuromuscular training, an approach he likens to that of a Formula One driver, which focuses on training the cognitive skills of the player.
“It’s all about the neural training pathway because cognition is what your eye perceives, and how your body reacts. For example, you see a ball trajectory coming in, how your body reacts to that particular impulse. It can be reactive or it can be proactive.
“You focus on how you train those muscle groups, the smaller and the finer muscle rather than the gross muscles. That is how you get precision, and they are the thing which loses the neural response in the long run if you don’t train them.”
An inevitable part of aging as a player is the arrival of injuries, as the likes of Rohit and Kohli are experiencing now. While niggles are unavoidable for top-level athletes, the focus, Srinivasan said, should be on being proactive about identifying the underlying causes and treating them quickly.
“The idea is that preventive medicine is better than curative, and if you cannot prevent it, your curative measure has to be quicker,” he said.
“Any sportsperson will have niggles, but you have to identify the contributing factors. When you are doing.your assessment and screening you will know there are probabilities, especially as you get older. So if it is a hamstring injury, why has it happened, is it because of dehydration, or because of lack of fitness, or because of overstretching?”
He also emphasised that there is no one-size-fits-all approach. The training methodology for players like Kohli or Rohit, who have recently stepped off the Test and T20I bandwagons but still play a single format, will have a different approach to a player like Dhoni, for whom IPL is the only remaining form of professional cricket.
Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS. | Photo Credit: Emmanual Yogini
Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS. | Photo Credit: Emmanual Yogini
“When you are young and robust, if you eat iron you will be able to digest it. In the thirties even if you eat food it won’t digest,” he explained with a laugh. “So you need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.
“There has to be progression in anything. Suddenly coming and sprinting it’s not going to help you however fit you are. When you are in a competition your body and mind responds differently to when you are training.
“The essence is that the professional needs to understand when you are in a competition there are a lot of things happening which are not happening during your training. So, the idea is to prepare yourself through the training, it’s a simulation.
“You cannot do that because there are so many variables. But being very close to the reality in your training module really helps. For example, when you are in your 20s, you may take two weeks to get into the groove. When you are in your 30s, it may take three weeks. When you are in your 40s, it may take a month and a half.”
Published on Apr 16, 2026
They say age comes for everyone eventually, and the 2026 edition of the Indian Premier…
Every Situation Where I Would Literally Say, “That’s the Way the Cookie Crumbles” | Points…
Dec 5, 2009; Atlanta, GA, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide defensive lineman Luther Davis (96) celebrates after defeating the Florida Gators 32-13 in the 2009 SEC championship game at the Georgia Dome. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images Luther Davis, a member of Alabama’s 2009 national championship team, is expected to plead guilty in a $20 million case in which he is facing multiple fraud charges for reportedly impersonating NFL players, per The Guardian and court documents acquired by AL.com.
Charges were filed in federal court against Davis on March 19 in Atlanta, but had not come to light until The Guardian’s report on Wednesday. Among the charges against Davis are two felonies for conspiracy to commit wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.
Per the court documents, Davis worked with a partner, CJ Evins, to obtain 13 loans in the names of current and former NFL players, including Michael Penix Jr., David Njoku and Xavier McKinney, the latter who was part of then-Alabama coach Nick Saban’s 2017 signing class. The fraudulent loans obtained totaled more than $19,845,000, according to the documents.
Davis and Evins, according to the documents, “executed a scheme to fraudulently obtain millions of dollars in loans from multiple lenders … by impersonating football players and falsely claiming those players were seeking multi-million dollar loans.”
Davis is alleged to have worn a “durag-style head covering” to impersonate Penix and used online photos of players to carry out the impersonations. He and Evins also used wigs, makeup and fake IDs to disguise themselves during “virtual loan closings” in the names of players who had not consented.
According to federal prosecutors involved in the case, “Beginning no later than in or around May 2023 and continuing through in or about October 2024, the defendant, Luther Davis, and CJ Evins, executed a scheme to fraudulently obtain millions of dollars in loans from multiple lenders, including, but not limited to, Aliya Sports and All Pro Capital Funding, by impersonating professional football players and falsely claiming those players were seeking multi-million dollar Loans.”
Davis, who owns a sports management company in Georgia, was part of Saban’s first signing class at Alabama in 2007. The West Monroe, La., native is a former U.S. Army All-American who played 45 games on the defensive line over four seasons with the Crimson Tide.
A few years after leaving the school, Davis was viewed as a “runner” for advisers and agents looking to pay SEC recruits, Yahoo Sports reported in 2013. Former Alabama five-star offensive lineman D.J. Fluker was among those recruits.
–Field Level Media
Dec 5, 2009; Atlanta, GA, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide defensive lineman Luther Davis (96) celebrates after defeating the Florida Gators 32-13 in the 2009 SEC championship game at the Georgia Dome. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images Luther Davis, a member of Alabama’s 2009 national championship team, is expected to plead guilty in a $20 million case in which he is facing multiple fraud charges for reportedly impersonating NFL players, per The Guardian and court documents acquired by AL.com.
Charges were filed in federal court against Davis on March 19 in Atlanta, but had not come to light until The Guardian’s report on Wednesday. Among the charges against Davis are two felonies for conspiracy to commit wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.
Per the court documents, Davis worked with a partner, CJ Evins, to obtain 13 loans in the names of current and former NFL players, including Michael Penix Jr., David Njoku and Xavier McKinney, the latter who was part of then-Alabama coach Nick Saban’s 2017 signing class. The fraudulent loans obtained totaled more than $19,845,000, according to the documents.
Davis and Evins, according to the documents, “executed a scheme to fraudulently obtain millions of dollars in loans from multiple lenders … by impersonating football players and falsely claiming those players were seeking multi-million dollar loans.”
Davis is alleged to have worn a “durag-style head covering” to impersonate Penix and used online photos of players to carry out the impersonations. He and Evins also used wigs, makeup and fake IDs to disguise themselves during “virtual loan closings” in the names of players who had not consented.
According to federal prosecutors involved in the case, “Beginning no later than in or around May 2023 and continuing through in or about October 2024, the defendant, Luther Davis, and CJ Evins, executed a scheme to fraudulently obtain millions of dollars in loans from multiple lenders, including, but not limited to, Aliya Sports and All Pro Capital Funding, by impersonating professional football players and falsely claiming those players were seeking multi-million dollar Loans.”
Davis, who owns a sports management company in Georgia, was part of Saban’s first signing class at Alabama in 2007. The West Monroe, La., native is a former U.S. Army All-American who played 45 games on the defensive line over four seasons with the Crimson Tide.
A few years after leaving the school, Davis was viewed as a “runner” for advisers and agents looking to pay SEC recruits, Yahoo Sports reported in 2013. Former Alabama five-star offensive lineman D.J. Fluker was among those recruits.
–Field Level Media
Dec 5, 2009; Atlanta, GA, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide defensive lineman Luther Davis (96) celebrates…
Bayern Munich supporters have apologised after several photographers were injured when fans stormed over barriers at the end of Wednesday’s home Champions League quarter-final against Real Madrid.
With scores level in the tie, Bayern’s Luis Diaz and Michael Olise both scored late in the match to send the German champions through to the final four of the competition.
A group of fans from the Bayern ultras section climbed over barriers while celebrating, trampling pitch-side photographers.
Writing on social media, Reuters photographer Kai Pfaffenbach posted a picture of himself lying on the ground accompanied by a medical report saying he was “unconscious” after being overrun by fans at the end of the match.

“But one question: how could this have happened at a football match?” wrote Kai Pfaffenbach. | Photo Credit: Kai Pfaffenbach/Instagram
“But one question: how could this have happened at a football match?” wrote Kai Pfaffenbach. | Photo Credit: Kai Pfaffenbach/Instagram
“For those asking, I’m fine. A few bruises but no fractures or brain damage,” Pfaffenbach said alongside a series of photos.
“But one question: how could this have happened at a football match?”
Another photographer suffered a head laceration and another needed medical attention for back and shoulder injuries.
One of the injured photographers told AFP that fans had already climbed a barrier and were waiting “for several minutes” before advancing into the pitch-side photographer’s area.
“If security staff had reacted and implemented the security measures, if they had intervened beforehand and protected us, or sent them back, then this could certainly have been avoided.”
ALSO READ | Kompany lauds ‘total togetherness’ after Champions League comeback win
Bayern Munich has been in contact with the injured photographers, as well as with the supporters, who have apologised for the incident.
Bayern supporter organisation Club Nr. 12 told AFP the group “regret the injuries sustained by the media representatives” during the match.
“To our knowledge, an exchange has already taken place between FC Bayern Munich and at least some of the fans involved, in which they expressed their deep regret for the accidental injuries and apologised.
“We believe this is the right approach and therefore welcome this action and the swift communication. We wish all those affected a speedy recovery.”
Earlier in the competition, Bayern’s southern stand made headlines for repeated use of pyrotechnics and was partially closed by governing body UEFA.
UEFA told AFP subsidiary SID on Thursday the organisation was aware of the incident but did not indicate yet whether an investigation would be launched.
Published on Apr 16, 2026
Bayern Munich supporters have apologised after several photographers were injured when fans stormed over barriers at the end of Wednesday’s home Champions League quarter-final against Real Madrid.
With scores level in the tie, Bayern’s Luis Diaz and Michael Olise both scored late in the match to send the German champions through to the final four of the competition.
A group of fans from the Bayern ultras section climbed over barriers while celebrating, trampling pitch-side photographers.
Writing on social media, Reuters photographer Kai Pfaffenbach posted a picture of himself lying on the ground accompanied by a medical report saying he was “unconscious” after being overrun by fans at the end of the match.

“But one question: how could this have happened at a football match?” wrote Kai Pfaffenbach. | Photo Credit: Kai Pfaffenbach/Instagram
“But one question: how could this have happened at a football match?” wrote Kai Pfaffenbach. | Photo Credit: Kai Pfaffenbach/Instagram
“For those asking, I’m fine. A few bruises but no fractures or brain damage,” Pfaffenbach said alongside a series of photos.
“But one question: how could this have happened at a football match?”
Another photographer suffered a head laceration and another needed medical attention for back and shoulder injuries.
One of the injured photographers told AFP that fans had already climbed a barrier and were waiting “for several minutes” before advancing into the pitch-side photographer’s area.
“If security staff had reacted and implemented the security measures, if they had intervened beforehand and protected us, or sent them back, then this could certainly have been avoided.”
ALSO READ | Kompany lauds ‘total togetherness’ after Champions League comeback win
Bayern Munich has been in contact with the injured photographers, as well as with the supporters, who have apologised for the incident.
Bayern supporter organisation Club Nr. 12 told AFP the group “regret the injuries sustained by the media representatives” during the match.
“To our knowledge, an exchange has already taken place between FC Bayern Munich and at least some of the fans involved, in which they expressed their deep regret for the accidental injuries and apologised.
“We believe this is the right approach and therefore welcome this action and the swift communication. We wish all those affected a speedy recovery.”
Earlier in the competition, Bayern’s southern stand made headlines for repeated use of pyrotechnics and was partially closed by governing body UEFA.
UEFA told AFP subsidiary SID on Thursday the organisation was aware of the incident but did not indicate yet whether an investigation would be launched.
Published on Apr 16, 2026
Bayern Munich supporters have apologised after several photographers were injured when fans stormed over barriers…
छापेमारी कार्रवाई के ईओडब्ल्यू दवारा तीन अलग टीमों का गठन किया गया था। इन टीमों…
Mar 22, 2026; Tampa, FL, USA; Florida Gators forward Alex Condon (21) dunks the ball against the Iowa Hawkeyes in the second half during a second round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Benchmark International Arena. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images Alex Condon confirmed he will be back with the Gators for his senior season in 2026-27.
Condon was the team’s leading scorer last season, when Florida entered the NCAA Tournament as a No. 1 seed but fell in the Elite Eight against No. 9 seed Iowa in a bid to repeat as national champions.
The 6-11 forward shared the news Wednesday afternoon via Instagram with a photo inscribed “back to work.” Under the image, Condon wrote “one more.”
Condon averaged 15.1 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 1.4 blocks per game last season and was part of the 2025 national title team under head coach Todd Golden.
After the upset loss to Iowa, Condon said he was “50-50” to return for a final season. ESPN rankings placed him at No. 30 overall among potential 2026 NBA draft picks.
Florida has not received commitments to return from NBA prospects Thomas Haugh and Rueben Chinyelu. Haugh is projected as a top-20 pick in the draft if he chooses to declare.
Condon has 70 starts in three seasons (107 total games) since joining Florida from Perth, Australia, in 2023.
–Field Level Media
Mar 22, 2026; Tampa, FL, USA; Florida Gators forward Alex Condon (21) dunks the ball against the Iowa Hawkeyes in the second half during a second round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Benchmark International Arena. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images Alex Condon confirmed he will be back with the Gators for his senior season in 2026-27.
Condon was the team’s leading scorer last season, when Florida entered the NCAA Tournament as a No. 1 seed but fell in the Elite Eight against No. 9 seed Iowa in a bid to repeat as national champions.
The 6-11 forward shared the news Wednesday afternoon via Instagram with a photo inscribed “back to work.” Under the image, Condon wrote “one more.”
Condon averaged 15.1 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 1.4 blocks per game last season and was part of the 2025 national title team under head coach Todd Golden.
After the upset loss to Iowa, Condon said he was “50-50” to return for a final season. ESPN rankings placed him at No. 30 overall among potential 2026 NBA draft picks.
Florida has not received commitments to return from NBA prospects Thomas Haugh and Rueben Chinyelu. Haugh is projected as a top-20 pick in the draft if he chooses to declare.
Condon has 70 starts in three seasons (107 total games) since joining Florida from Perth, Australia, in 2023.
–Field Level Media
Mar 22, 2026; Tampa, FL, USA; Florida Gators forward Alex Condon (21) dunks the ball…
The 2026 NFL Draft class may not be loaded with premier talent at the top of the draft, but teams in need of pass rushers will find plenty of depth on the board next week. Five edge rushers are currently ranked in the top 32 spots on the Mock Draft Database consensus board, and several others could easily find their way into the first round mix.
Seven edge defenders came off the board in Round 1 of the 2023 NFL Draft, but that number fell off in 2024 (4) and 2025 (5). Still, this is undoubtedly one of the most coveted position in the NFL after quarterback, and scoring a difference-making edge rusher on a rookie contract is among the most valuable things a GM can add to their team.
But it also might be the most difficult position to scout accurately. The few no-brainers – Myles Garrett, Will Anderson, Nick Bosa, etc. – tend to work out as expected, but the bust rate has been high at this position too, and plenty of talent somehow still slips through to the later rounds. I recently compiled a rough ranking of my top 20 edge defenders in the NFL. Amongst the names, 10 were first round picks, and 10 were picked no. 64 or later in the draft.
In other words, it pays to be anti-consensus in your pre-draft rankings, because 3-4 years from draft day, edge defender classes are stacking up much differently than they were before the draft. Having said that, being different than consensus doesn’t automatically ensure you’ll be right either. So here is my best shot at ranking the 2026 edge defender class based on tape study and advanced stats.
Lawrence may not have the reputation of a top edge defender, but in a class where all of the top edges have flaws, I’ll take my chances with the long-armed, Central Florida pass rusher. Lawrence took some time to grow into the player he became in 2025, when he posted seven sacks and 11 tackles-for-loss. Lawrence has the burst off the ball, the cornering ability at the top of the arc and the sophisticated hand usage to battle through contact at the top of the arc.
Bain has been billed by many as a speed-to-power rusher, but while that is in the bag for him, he mostly wins as a high-side threat thanks to his pad level at the top of the arc. The Miami product’s forward lean into his rushes makes it very difficult for tackles to hit him squarely in pass protection. As for Bain’s short arms, I’m less concerned with that part of his profile than I am his limited overall athletic ability, which could hinder his ability to drop-and-cover, play in space against the run and change direction as a pass rusher.
If I was just ranking the best edge defenders in the class off of 2025 season tape, there is a great chance Mesidor would be no. 1. His explosiveness off the ball and shiftiness as a pass rusher resulted in a late-college breakout 12.5-sack, 17.5-tackle for loss season. Unfortunately, Mesidor has a history of injuries, turned 25 two weeks ago and provided no athletic testing during the pre-draft process by choice, not due to injury.
Bailey has the length, size and explosiveness you look for in a top pass rusher, erupting off the ball to win the edge repeatedly at the college level. Things will get harder in the NFL, where better tackles will force him to play with more nuance and consistency as a rusher. If Bailey improves his pass rush plan execution and efficiency against better competition, he’ll be in the conversation for best edge in the class despite his struggles at the point-of-attack in the run game.
If I could only pick a single player from this draft to win a pass rush rep with my life on the line, I would pick Howell. His speed up the arc and cornering ability are stuff that wins in the NFL, consistently threatening offensive tackles on their outside shoulder. Howell isn’t incapable when it comes to converting speed-to-power either, but his lack of length and mass make it more difficult to see a full-time role in his future.
Did you know that Keyron Crawford had more sacks, pressures, quarterback hits and a better pass rush win rate (PFF) than Keldric Faulk, despite 76 fewer opportunities to rush the passer? Crawford is a guy I’m betting on in this class, with the ability to drop and cover, move around the front, be a critical part of pressure packages and even win 1v1 at a budding rate off the edge.
Thomas fits into a similar bucket to Cashius Howell as players who may get stuck in a Nick Herbig-type of NFL role due to size/length concerns. But there are few more valuable roles for a defensive player than being able to rush the passer, which Thomas will have more chances to do 1v1 outside of Oklahoma’s scheme. The flashes of burst/bend/hand usage on tape are what you’re buying for a still fairly unproven player.
Give me players who compete with zero hesitation, top-notch explosiveness and extreme violence on the edge of the defensive front. Barham looked like a natural in his first year as a full-time edge for Michigan in 2025, dominating against the run while beginning to show real pass rush ability for the first time.
Jacas is a big riser for me over the past week, as I explored a few of his games I hadn’t studied yet. He needs to clean up his stance to maximize his get-off in the NFL, but the twitch off the ball, violent style of play and flashes of speed-counter rush plans eventually won me over. The best might be yet to come for Jacas in the NFL.
I’m lower on Faulk than consensus, even though I agree he can be better in the NFL with further development as a pass rusher. He’ll need to be, as Faulk barely made a statistical dent in college on passing downs. There are flashes of ability, but the explosiveness and high side rush ability to win the edge consistently are missing. Could Faulk be destined for a move inside, at least on passing downs?
Everyone has the same assessment of Moore — a solid player whose upside is limited, but can probably help any defense as a rotational player sharing the load up front. Moore is another player who needs to fix his pre-snap stance to ensure a better get-off at the snap, but his stop/start hesitation move rushes are some of the best in the class.
Josephs is an unbelievably talented football player with frustratingly little consistency, attention to detail or sound mental processing in his game. I love his explosiveness off the ball, violence into contact and elite physical tools, but he’s played less than 1,200 career snaps at Tennessee, often looks confused on the field and has an under-developed pass rush plan resulting in very poor career production (9.5 sacks).
Young’s last couple weeks of the season were encouraging, as he finally looked like he was figuring it out a little bit as a pass rusher. He has an unbelievable physical build, but is really athletically limited compared to most of the players above him on this list. Without elite burst off the ball, speed up the arc or bend around the corner, Young needs to be a bully who wins with pass rush savvy and power. He’s not there yet, but there is potential, especially as an inside rusher.
Try as I might, I can’t quit Romello Height. That’s been one of the themes of evaluating the 25-year old Height as I attempt to reconcile Height’s six years in four different college programs with very little to show for it until 2025. At Texas Tech his twitchiness and change-of-direction ability allowed him to blossom as a speed-counter rusher, but Height struggles to hold up physically in a big role at a lanky 239 pounds.
Parker is the edge rusher I’m lowest on compared to consensus, as I just don’t see the type of athletic profile or pass rush skill set to value highly off the edge in the NFL, in his 2024 or 2025 tape. Parker isn’t the type of player who will threaten offensive linemen with speed or quickness, which limits the effectiveness of his power game too. As a run defender he holds his own in the box, but won’t be a really impactful player outside of that space.
The 2026 NFL Draft class may not be loaded with premier talent at the top of the draft, but teams in need of pass rushers will find plenty of depth on the board next week. Five edge rushers are currently ranked in the top 32 spots on the Mock Draft Database consensus board, and several others could easily find their way into the first round mix.
Seven edge defenders came off the board in Round 1 of the 2023 NFL Draft, but that number fell off in 2024 (4) and 2025 (5). Still, this is undoubtedly one of the most coveted position in the NFL after quarterback, and scoring a difference-making edge rusher on a rookie contract is among the most valuable things a GM can add to their team.
But it also might be the most difficult position to scout accurately. The few no-brainers – Myles Garrett, Will Anderson, Nick Bosa, etc. – tend to work out as expected, but the bust rate has been high at this position too, and plenty of talent somehow still slips through to the later rounds. I recently compiled a rough ranking of my top 20 edge defenders in the NFL. Amongst the names, 10 were first round picks, and 10 were picked no. 64 or later in the draft.
In other words, it pays to be anti-consensus in your pre-draft rankings, because 3-4 years from draft day, edge defender classes are stacking up much differently than they were before the draft. Having said that, being different than consensus doesn’t automatically ensure you’ll be right either. So here is my best shot at ranking the 2026 edge defender class based on tape study and advanced stats.
Lawrence may not have the reputation of a top edge defender, but in a class where all of the top edges have flaws, I’ll take my chances with the long-armed, Central Florida pass rusher. Lawrence took some time to grow into the player he became in 2025, when he posted seven sacks and 11 tackles-for-loss. Lawrence has the burst off the ball, the cornering ability at the top of the arc and the sophisticated hand usage to battle through contact at the top of the arc.
Bain has been billed by many as a speed-to-power rusher, but while that is in the bag for him, he mostly wins as a high-side threat thanks to his pad level at the top of the arc. The Miami product’s forward lean into his rushes makes it very difficult for tackles to hit him squarely in pass protection. As for Bain’s short arms, I’m less concerned with that part of his profile than I am his limited overall athletic ability, which could hinder his ability to drop-and-cover, play in space against the run and change direction as a pass rusher.
If I was just ranking the best edge defenders in the class off of 2025 season tape, there is a great chance Mesidor would be no. 1. His explosiveness off the ball and shiftiness as a pass rusher resulted in a late-college breakout 12.5-sack, 17.5-tackle for loss season. Unfortunately, Mesidor has a history of injuries, turned 25 two weeks ago and provided no athletic testing during the pre-draft process by choice, not due to injury.
Bailey has the length, size and explosiveness you look for in a top pass rusher, erupting off the ball to win the edge repeatedly at the college level. Things will get harder in the NFL, where better tackles will force him to play with more nuance and consistency as a rusher. If Bailey improves his pass rush plan execution and efficiency against better competition, he’ll be in the conversation for best edge in the class despite his struggles at the point-of-attack in the run game.
If I could only pick a single player from this draft to win a pass rush rep with my life on the line, I would pick Howell. His speed up the arc and cornering ability are stuff that wins in the NFL, consistently threatening offensive tackles on their outside shoulder. Howell isn’t incapable when it comes to converting speed-to-power either, but his lack of length and mass make it more difficult to see a full-time role in his future.
Did you know that Keyron Crawford had more sacks, pressures, quarterback hits and a better pass rush win rate (PFF) than Keldric Faulk, despite 76 fewer opportunities to rush the passer? Crawford is a guy I’m betting on in this class, with the ability to drop and cover, move around the front, be a critical part of pressure packages and even win 1v1 at a budding rate off the edge.
Thomas fits into a similar bucket to Cashius Howell as players who may get stuck in a Nick Herbig-type of NFL role due to size/length concerns. But there are few more valuable roles for a defensive player than being able to rush the passer, which Thomas will have more chances to do 1v1 outside of Oklahoma’s scheme. The flashes of burst/bend/hand usage on tape are what you’re buying for a still fairly unproven player.
Give me players who compete with zero hesitation, top-notch explosiveness and extreme violence on the edge of the defensive front. Barham looked like a natural in his first year as a full-time edge for Michigan in 2025, dominating against the run while beginning to show real pass rush ability for the first time.
Jacas is a big riser for me over the past week, as I explored a few of his games I hadn’t studied yet. He needs to clean up his stance to maximize his get-off in the NFL, but the twitch off the ball, violent style of play and flashes of speed-counter rush plans eventually won me over. The best might be yet to come for Jacas in the NFL.
I’m lower on Faulk than consensus, even though I agree he can be better in the NFL with further development as a pass rusher. He’ll need to be, as Faulk barely made a statistical dent in college on passing downs. There are flashes of ability, but the explosiveness and high side rush ability to win the edge consistently are missing. Could Faulk be destined for a move inside, at least on passing downs?
Everyone has the same assessment of Moore — a solid player whose upside is limited, but can probably help any defense as a rotational player sharing the load up front. Moore is another player who needs to fix his pre-snap stance to ensure a better get-off at the snap, but his stop/start hesitation move rushes are some of the best in the class.
Josephs is an unbelievably talented football player with frustratingly little consistency, attention to detail or sound mental processing in his game. I love his explosiveness off the ball, violence into contact and elite physical tools, but he’s played less than 1,200 career snaps at Tennessee, often looks confused on the field and has an under-developed pass rush plan resulting in very poor career production (9.5 sacks).
Young’s last couple weeks of the season were encouraging, as he finally looked like he was figuring it out a little bit as a pass rusher. He has an unbelievable physical build, but is really athletically limited compared to most of the players above him on this list. Without elite burst off the ball, speed up the arc or bend around the corner, Young needs to be a bully who wins with pass rush savvy and power. He’s not there yet, but there is potential, especially as an inside rusher.
Try as I might, I can’t quit Romello Height. That’s been one of the themes of evaluating the 25-year old Height as I attempt to reconcile Height’s six years in four different college programs with very little to show for it until 2025. At Texas Tech his twitchiness and change-of-direction ability allowed him to blossom as a speed-counter rusher, but Height struggles to hold up physically in a big role at a lanky 239 pounds.
Parker is the edge rusher I’m lowest on compared to consensus, as I just don’t see the type of athletic profile or pass rush skill set to value highly off the edge in the NFL, in his 2024 or 2025 tape. Parker isn’t the type of player who will threaten offensive linemen with speed or quickness, which limits the effectiveness of his power game too. As a run defender he holds his own in the box, but won’t be a really impactful player outside of that space.
The 2026 NFL Draft class may not be loaded with premier talent at the top…